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The release date for Episode 7 of Fire Country Season 3 , along with its schedule and viewing details, has been announced. Release Date and Plot Episode 7 of Fire Country Season 3, titled False Alarm, will air on December 6, 2024. There is a one-week delay due to the Thanksgiving holiday. In this episode, a false alarm escalates into a hostage situation, adding tension to the storyline. Jared Padalecki, known for his roles in Supernatural and Gilmore Girls, will continue his role as Camden, a temporary character in a three-episode arc. Camden is a boss figure with unconventional methods, creating friction with other characters. Viewers in the U.S. can watch new episodes of Fire Country on CBS every Friday. Episodes are also available on Paramount Plus the day after airing. For international viewers, Season 3 is not yet officially available. Also Read : Lioness Season 2: See Episode 7 release date, time, upcoming episode schedule and where to watch Leadership Building Your Winning Startup Team: Key Strategies for Success By - Dr. Anu Khanchandani, Startup Coach with more than 25 years of experience View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Tabnine AI Masterclass: Optimize Your Coding Efficiency By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Office Productivity Zero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guide 2024 By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Office Productivity Mastering Google Sheets: Unleash the Power of Excel and Advance Analysis By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Office Productivity Microsoft Word Mastery: From Beginner to Expert By - CA Raj K Agrawal, Chartered Accountant View Program Marketing Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel By - Neil Patel, Co-Founder and Author at Neil Patel Digital Digital Marketing Guru View Program Web Development JavaScript Essentials: Unlock AI-Driven Insights with ChatGPT By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Web Development Intermediate C++ Skills: Master Pointers, Structures and File Stream By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Basics of Generative AI: Unveiling Tomorrow's Innovations By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Generative AI for Dynamic Java Web Applications with ChatGPT By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Astrology Vastu Shastra Course By - Sachenkumar Rai, Vastu Shashtri View Program Web Development Java 21 Essentials for Beginners: Build Strong Programming Foundations By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Strategy ESG and Business Sustainability Strategy By - Vipul Arora, Partner, ESG & Climate Solutions at Sattva Consulting Author I Speaker I Thought Leader View Program Marketing Digital marketing - Wordpress Website Development By - Shraddha Somani, Digital Marketing Trainer, Consultant, Strategiest and Subject Matter expert View Program Web Development Intermediate Java Mastery: Method, Collections, and Beyond By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) Java Programming with ChatGPT: Learn using Generative AI By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Finance A2Z Of Money By - elearnmarkets, Financial Education by StockEdge View Program Leadership Business Storytelling Masterclass By - Ameen Haque, Founder of Storywallahs View Program Marketing Performance Marketing for eCommerce Brands By - Zafer Mukeri, Founder- Inara Marketers View Program Web Development Master RESTful APIs with Python and Django REST Framework: Web API Development By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Marketing Digital Marketing Masterclass by Pam Moore By - Pam Moore, Digital Transformation and Social Media Expert View Program Artificial Intelligence(AI) ChatGPT Mastery from Zero to Hero: The Complete AI Course By - Metla Sudha Sekhar, IT Specialist and Developer View Program Upcoming Episode Schedule Fire Country Season 3 premiered on October 18, 2024, and is expected to conclude its 10-episode run on December 20, though this is unconfirmed. The episodes follow a weekly release pattern, airing every Friday at 9 p.m. EST/PST on CBS. The upcoming episode schedule is: Episode 7 – “False Alarm”: December 6, 2024 Episode 8 – “Promise Me”: December 13, 2024 Details about Episodes 9 and 10 remain unconfirmed. Also Read : Victoria Beckham has eaten the same thing for 25 years; here's what her diet consists of and why she has eaten it for such a long time FAQs When will Episode 7 of Fire Country Season 3 air? Episode 7, titled False Alarm, will air on CBS on December 6, 2024, at 9 p.m. EST/PST. How to watch new episodes of Fire Country? Viewers in the U.S. can watch new episodes of Fire Country on CBS every Friday. (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel )
Bella’s Bartok takes the stage at the Stone Church for the third annual New Year’s Eve “Strange Ones Ball – Babylon in Brattleboro” on Tuesday, Dec. 31. “ We're excited to host Bella's Bartok's 7th Annual Strange Ones Ball for the third consecutive year! This will be their 8th show at the Church and every one is always a highlight of the year,” says Robin Johnson, owner and manager of the Stone Church. Johnson continues, “Their wild and exuberant genre-fluid carnival of sounds is a perfect match for our rock ‘n’ roll church of misfits. The New Year’s show always takes the church to another level and this year will be no exception — with the addition of the incredible Hayley Jane Band.” Bella’s Bartok’s current lineup includes: Julia Posin on lead vocals/washboard; Chris Whearty on lead guitar; Kade Parkin on drums; Zach Effman on bass; Vida Cripps as the puppeteer and Asher Haidak-Putnam on lead vocals and rhythm guitar. The Sentinel caught up with musician and founding member Asher Haidak-Putnam by phone recently at his home in Northampton, Mass. to talk about all things band and New Year’s Eve Ball at the Church. Here’s an excerpt of the conversation. V.C.: Hey Asher, good talking to you! Usually Bartok does two nights at the Church for New Year’s Eve, why only one show this year? A.P.: NYE fell on a Tuesday, so we weren’t sure we could get people out on a Monday night. V.C.: What’s the theme of the Strange One’s Ball this year? A.P.: It’s Babylon in Brattleboro — an all-night cacophony of cabaret that puts the roar back into the roaring ‘20s. Given the political dimensions of the country and the world at large, it feels a bit like 1925. There is a lot of progressive movement going forward and outright fascism — one step forward two steps back. Moving us back — like to the 20s — and I think people are picking up on that. We’re getting loud about it. V.C.: You started Bartok in 2008 and met as UMASS students, now you’re in your third lineup. What’s the band’s origin story? A.P.: We all met playing music in the Northampton area and on the scene in Albany, N.Y. and Brattleboro, Vt. I’m promoted to singer now! Back then I was just a guitarist. Given our lineup change which has settled since Covid, we found a group of folks that we have known or met through music. We’re jamming in different ways. We meet every Monday and work on new tunes. All of us are within a block of each other in Northampton which is really convenient. V.C.: So what’s the real story of how you started in 2008? A.P.: The myth or the truth? I think I’ll tell you the myth. I was back from school on break, playing with my brother and some other family members and started playing on the street in Great Barrington, Mass. to get some beer and gas money. It went from there. It was magnetic — people coming out and dancing around — we were playing our old Balkan, eastern European folk songs or punk rock songs acoustically. That was our gateway into folk punk. That’s what we were then. Now we are more dance punk. V.C.: Your band is named for Hungarian ethnomusicologist and composer Béla Bartók? A.P.: Yeah. My grandfather is from Romania and we grew up listening to that stuff. My grandmother was very interested in folk music of the mountains. Are you familiar with the music by Alan Lomax from the 1920s? He brought to the fore ethnomusicology and that is what Bela did with Roma, Jewish and mountain people, it was folk music. V.C.: This is your 8th time playing at the iconic Stone Church in Brattleboro. What should the audience expect at the NYE Strange One’s Ball at the Church this year? A.P.: Before Covid our themes would be “The Muppets” or post-apocalyptic and people were dressed to the nines! The Muppet show was amazing. We had so many pigs in space characters, I was blown away. “Very well done, Kermit!” Post Covid, no one is dressing up; the audience is not getting into costuming. No one dressed up for our heaven and hell theme last year. We are going for the roaring ‘20s, cabaret style. If you have something to dress up with, do it and come and dance! We are finally playing with our comrade in arms Hayley Jane and her crew. We’ve been playing festivals with her since 2015 but we’ve never shared a bill together. She’s opening the show with her band. I’ve known her since my early 20s. She is great. She has the same vibe and same sound and same message as we do. V.C.: You are really a band of street performers at heart who are passionate about social justice and other current events. Say more. A.P.: Absolutely! We are very passionate about lots of issues of the day. We are kids or grandkids of immigrants, a lot of us are queer or gay. A lot of us have partners or family members who are black, brown, Muslim or Jewish. The mainstream of this country doesn’t tend to like us. It’s a passionate thing when you love someone and you see that there are government policies or social norms that are enacted to ensure their discomfort or death and “that just ain’t right.” V.C.: What was your first instrument and how did you start playing music? A.P.: Piano at age 8 or 9. My dad is a musician, and his siblings are all musicians. I grew up in it. He was in a touring band for a long time. V.C.: Who were some of your early musical influences? A.P.: System of a Down, TV on the Radio, definitely Nirvana, Nine Inch Nails and Weird Al. V.C.: What is the most important aspect of a live performance? A.P.: No one has ever asked me that. That’s cool. Wow. It’s the people. That’s it. The back and forth; it’s the symbiosis. V.C.: Where are you touring next year? A.P. : We tour extensively from January to November. We have every weekend booked out. We never made it past the Rockies before. We go from Detroit to New Orleans, from Boston to Colorado, Southeastern Canada into Ontario. We haven’t hit Texas or California yet. V.C.: What is your favorite part of being in this band? A.P.: I can hold the boss accountable! We lean on the collective end of things. We are each other’s bosses, so we hold each other accountable and get things done. It’s the healthiest relationship that is celibate. Imagine being a nun except a little wilder and perhaps later nights. I look at us like an emotion processor machine for the masses. We are so tuned into creative aspects of our lives and other people have a more difficult time engaging with that, so we can help them do that. They say, “Hey, this performance really got me through a hard time in my life!” That is the ultimate high, really. SHOW DETAILS Join Bella’s Bartok for an evening of joy, revelry and defiance for the 7th Annual Strange One's Ball, with special guest Hayley Jane Band and LJ as Emcee, on Tuesday, Dec. 31 at the Stone Church, 210 Main St., in Brattleboro, Vt. Doors open at 8 p.m. and the show is at 9 p.m. Open to all ages. For more information, visit www.stonechurchvt.com/#/events/109807 . For more information on Bella’s Bartok, visit www.bellasbartok.com/home , their Facebook page www.facebook.com/bellasbartok or on Instagram @BellasBartok. Steve Rice piece
A northwest Las Vegas pickleball complex in development was singled out this week by U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, who listed the project in a yearly report in which he chastises what he considers wasteful spending. The city is developing the 30-court complex at Wayne Bunker Park through a $12 million grant from the Bureau of Land Management, which also is providing a few acres of federal land for the park’s expansion. “There’s irony in a city synonymous with high-stakes gambling investing $12 million American tax dollars in pickleball — a sport often associated with retirees looking for a low-stakes, leisurely pastime,” Paul, R-Ken., wrote in his 2024 “Festivus Report” released this month. “In short, you’ve been pickled!” It’s the tenth year Rand has produced the report, which takes its theme from Festivus, a Dec. 23 secular holiday popularized by the TV show “Seinfeld” that includes an “airing of grievances.” Paul modifies the idea to share his “airing of (spending) grievance.” Construction of the courts in Ward 4 is slated to begin next year, according to the city. “The BLM sets these grant funds aside for outdoor recreational projects to benefit communities,” a city spokesperson wrote to the Las Vegas Review-Journal Tuesday. “The pickleball complex at Wayne Bunker Park is an outdoor recreational facility and meets the requirements.” In 2023, the City Council voted to accept the BLM grant with pushback from several residents who’d raised issues related to the noise created by the growing and popular racket sport. “We do need more pickleball. We just don’t need it 50 feet from my house, to where I’m going to be exposed to this 24/7,” said resident Steven Priedel at the time. The city said that the grant was awarded through a competitive process that pitted Las Vegas with other Nevada jurisdictions, adding that the funds were raised though the sale of public lands that go toward public projects. “The 2024 Festivus Waste Report shines a spotlight on a grant that’s bouncing its way into the hearts of pickleball enthusiasts everywhere: the grand vision of a 30-court regional pickleball complex in Las Vegas, Nevada,” Paul wrote. “Apparently, Las Vegas has more pickleball players than Elvis impersonators, and these racket-wielding enthusiasts are running out of places to play.” Local governments are racing to keep up with building courts to keep up with public demand. Other projects criticized The pickleball complex was one of more than 30 items listed in Paul’s report. Also highlighted were: $8 million of pandemic-related dollars allegedly stolen by a man who bought an island, more than $15 million in funding for the Internal Revenue Service and more than $15 billion “to push Americans toward electric vehicles they don’t want.” Paul placed blame on rising national debt on “everyone.” He added: “This year, members of both political parties in Congress voted for massive spending bills, filled with subsidies from underperforming industries, continued military aid to Ukraine, and controversial climate initiatives.” Paul said that the debt had surpassed $36 trillion. “No matter how much money the government has wasted, politicians keep demanding even more,” Paul wrote. He complimented billionaires Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy’s Department of Government Efficiency, an unofficial government-aligned agency established for the upcoming President-elect Donald Trump’s administration. “I’ve been fighting government waste like DOGE before DOGE was cool,” Paul wrote. “And I will continue my fight against government waste this holiday season.” Paul noted that Las Vegas officials and enthusiasts are aiming to bring pickleball tournaments to the city. “Move over ‘World Series of Poker,’ there’s a new game in town,” Paul wrote.
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams met with President-elect Donald Trump's incoming “border czar” on Thursday, with the Democratic mayor expressing an enthusiasm to work with the incoming administration to pursue violent criminals in the city while Trump promises mass deportations. The mayor's meeting with Tom Homan, who will oversee the southern and northern borders and be responsible for deportation efforts in the Trump administration, came as Adams has welcomed parts of the president-elect's hardline immigration platform. Adams told reporters at a brief news conference that he and Homan agreed on pursuing people who commit violent crimes in the city but did not disclose additional details or future plans. “We’re not going to be a safe haven for those who commit repeated violent crimes against innocent migrants, immigrants and longstanding New Yorkers," he said. “That was my conversation today with the border czar, to figure out how to go after those individuals who are repeatedly committing crimes in our city.” The meeting marked Adams' latest and most definitive step toward collaborating with the Trump administration, a development that has startled critics in one of the country's most liberal cities. In the weeks since Trump’s election win, Adams has mused about potentially scaling back the city’s so-called sanctuary policies and coordinating with the incoming Trump administration on immigration. He has also said migrants accused of crimes shouldn’t have due process rights under the Constitution, though he eventually walked back those comments. The mayor further stunned Democrats when he sidestepped questions last week on whether he would consider changing parties to become a Republican, telling journalists that he was part of the “American party.” Adams later clarified that he would remain a Democrat. For Adams, a centrist Democrat known for quarreling with the city's progressive left, the recent comments on immigration follow frustration with the Biden Administration over its immigration policies and a surge of international migrants in the city. He has maintained that his positions have not changed and argues he is trying to protect New Yorkers, pointing to the law-and-order platform he has staked out throughout his political career and during his successful campaign for mayor. At his news conference Thursday, Adams reiterated his commitment to New York’s generous social safety net. “We’re going to tell those who are here, who are law-abiding, to continue to utilize the services that are open to the city, the services that they have a right to utilize, educating their children, health care, public protection,” he said. “But we will not be the safe haven for those who commit violent acts.” While the education of all children present in the U.S. is already guaranteed by a Supreme Court ruling, New York also offers social services like healthcare and emergency shelter to low-income residents, including those in the country illegally. City and state grants also provide significant access to lawyers, which is not guaranteed in the immigration court as they are in the criminal court. Still, Adams’ recent rhetoric has been seen by some critics as an attempt to cozy up to Trump, who could potentially offer a presidential pardon in his federal corruption case. Adams has been charged with accepting luxury travel perks and illegal campaign contributions from a Turkish official and other foreign nationals looking to buy his influence. He has pleaded not guilty. Homan, who was Trump’s former acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement director, also met this week with Republicans in Illinois, where he called on Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, both Democrats, to start negotiations over how Trump's mass deportation plans, according to local media. Separately, New York City officials this week announced continued efforts to shrink a huge emergency shelter system for migrants because of a steady decline in new arrivals. Among the planned shelter closures is a massive tent complex built on a federally owned former airport in Brooklyn, which advocates have warned could be a prime target for Trump's mass deportation plan. Elsewhere, Republican governors and lawmakers in some states are already rolling out proposals that could help him carry out his pledge to deport millions of people living in the U.S. illegally. Izaguirre reported from Albany, N.Y.
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