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México se renueva de cara al Mundial. Pero no todos están contentos

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

Por Valeria León, CNN en Español

Desde el zaguán de su casa, Jairo Geovanni acomoda una pequeña parrilla. Ahí prepara hamburguesas y alitas. El negocio que antes operaba en la banqueta, ahora debe atenderlo desde el interior de su vivienda, como parte de las nuevas medidas que autoridades de la Ciudad de México implementan para “limpiar” los accesos hacia el Estadio Banorte.

“Ni bancos, ni mesas. Entonces la gente comiendo parada es un nuevo reto. No es lo mismo disfrutar que comer rápido e irse al estadio”, dice.

El negocio lo heredó de su abuela, quien durante años vendió comida dentro del Estadio Azteca.

“De ahí viene el amor por el negocio. Mi abuela ha sido comerciante desde hace 45 años vendiendo dentro del Estadio Azteca”, cuenta.

Su historia se desarrolla en la colonia Santa Úrsula Coapa, en la zona perimetral del estadio, donde la transformación urbana es visible desde hace meses. De acuerdo con el secretario de Obras de la capital, autoridades han entregado varias de las 40 obras de infraestructura previstas, con una inversión cercana a los US$ 10 millones.

En la Ciudad de México, los alrededores del Estadio Azteca, rebautizado como Estadio Banorte para el torneo, han cambiado rápidamente. Uno de los puntos clave es el puente peatonal de Huipulco, acceso principal para los asistentes, que forma parte de este paquete de obras de movilidad.

Las cifras reflejan la magnitud de la intervención: más de 300 escalones construidos, más de 3.000 metros cuadrados rehabilitados, además de nuevas banquetas, áreas verdes y espacios públicos.

Para las autoridades, el Mundial ha sido un catalizador.

“Recibir el Mundial para nosotros fue un acelerador de obras”, dijo la jefa de Gobierno, Clara Brugada.

Además, el CETRAM Huipulco, un importante nodo de transporte en el sur de la ciudad, fue completamente remodelado, incorporando torniquetes modernos y sistemas de accesibilidad para personas con discapacidad visual. Cada día, alrededor de 50.000 usuarios transitan por este punto.

También se estrenó la ciclovía más larga de la ciudad, con 34 kilómetros, que cruza cinco alcaldías.

A un mes del Mundial, las ciudades sede en México avanzan a contrarreloj en una transformación urbana que busca recibir a millones de aficionados. Pero, mientras autoridades destacan mejoras en movilidad e infraestructura, no todos celebran la transformación.

La jefa de Gobierno de la CDMX, Clara Brugada, anunció que el 2026 será el año del reordenamiento del comercio informal y planteó como meta retirar a 4.500 comerciantes de la vía pública.

“Esa es la gran tarea que le toca a la Secretaría de Gobierno, porque todos sabemos que no es nada sencillo”, dijo el 27 de enero. También resaltó que el Mundial es un “acelerador” de obras.

Con las nuevas regulaciones, la venta de comida en la vía pública ha sido restringida. Ahora, muchos comerciantes solo pueden operar desde sus domicilios.

“No sé qué vamos a hacer los comerciantes… no va a haber nada de puestos”, lamenta Patricia Carrillo, vecina de Santa Úrsula Coapa.

Como alternativa, autoridades han propuesto reubicar a parte de los vendedores en un nuevo mercado público en la zona. Sin embargo, este espacio aún se encuentra en construcción, lo que deja a muchos comerciantes en un limbo, sin claridad sobre cuándo podrán instalarse ni bajo qué condiciones operarán.

Para algunos vendedores, el objetivo es claro: mejorar la infraestructura y la imagen urbana de cara al evento. Pero también implica cambiar una dinámica económica y social profundamente arraigada.

“Todo se lo quiere llevar la FIFA con los precios excesivamente caros”, dice Jairo, aludiendo al contraste entre la oferta informal y los costos dentro de los recintos.

Para muchos trabajadores, la modernización implica una pérdida directa de ingresos y visibilidad, en una ciudad

Weather conditions dependent on micro climates Monday

Kraig Pakulski 0 29 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.- Weather conditions Monday will be very dependent on micro climates. The valleys and interior areas will be experiencing warm and toasty temperatures today, marking the warmest day of the next seven days.

For the coasts and beaches morning mist will be expected with dense marine layer for places like Lompoc and Santa Maria. Temperatures today will be in the 80s and 90s for the valleys and inland areas, while the beaches will be in the 60s and 70s. Winds will be rather calm through out the region, with slight breezy conditions in the afternoon. Models are showing wind speeds about 10-15 mph.

Coastal clouds will develop every night and morning as your First Alert Weather Center tracks an increase of onshore flow and a trough of low pressure expected to move through the Northern part of California by Wednesday.

By Thursday, the trough will move out of the region, and temps will slightly warm for the region once again.

The post Weather conditions dependent on micro climates Monday appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

In the middle of America, there’s a place that still believes in the middle of America

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating
Location

By Barry Neild, CNN

Lebanon, Kansas (CNN) — To find the very middle of America, you have to drive a long way — but it’s worth every undulating mile of blacktop.

It’s a journey that perfectly captures the dream of the American road trip. Wide-open highways stretch across vast acres of arable emptiness. Pit-stop towns crouch under towering skies. Lonely radio transmitters broadcast into the constantly shifting air.

What awaits you when you get there is surprising. Not some bombastic monument to the mighty nation that spreads out in all directions, but a modest set of landmarks and a sentiment so positive in a world of turmoil that it’ll stick with you all the way home.

The exact location of America’s center is open to debate. Metaphorically, “Middle America” covers the cultural experiences of more or less everyone living between New York and Los Angeles, or just the average American — whoever that may be.

Geographically, there are several contenders. Various formulations set down after Alaska and Hawaii were added to the mix in 1959 have the center hopping all over the Dakotas. But, as the US Department of the Interior dryly noted in a 1964 report: “There is no generally accepted definition of geographic center, and no completely satisfactory method for determining it.”

For decades, however, there was. Back near the start of the 20th century, when the United States was confined to 48 states stretching from sea to shining sea, enterprising experts at the US Coast and Geodetic Survey figured it out by the scientific method of cutting out a cardboard map of the country — and balancing it on the head of a pin to find its center of gravity.

That pivot point was in northern Kansas, just outside a town called Lebanon. And over the next half century, a place that raised the same corn, wheat and livestock as every other community for days in any direction, enjoyed a small and unexpected tourism boom.

A homecoming

There’s no easy way to get there, but the 260-mile drive west from Kansas City, the closest major population center, is a trip back in time. Past Topeka, I-70 passes a historical marker sign informing motorists that the next eight miles were the first section of interstate in the United States. Its 1956 opening kicked off President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s program to shrink America with highways.

If they were intended as a teaser for what was to come, those eight miles do the job. Kansas may have a reputation for being flat, but this section rises and falls in a straight line to the shimmering horizon. Above, depending on the day, the sky is stacked with impending weather, the meteorology changing faster than the 75 mph speed limit.

I-70 only takes you so far. The route dives deeper into the grid of country roads that cover rural Kansas, passing through the river town of Manhattan or “the Little Apple,” and then Clay Center — another mid-point, this one marking halfway between Los Angeles and New York.

Smaller communities fly by, with grain elevators, water towers, red-sided barns, shuttered Texaco gas stations and fields as far as the eye can see. For anyone who has long idealized the American heartlands, this feels like a homecoming.

There’s a classic US road trip attraction just short of the main event. In Cawker, about 25 minutes’ drive from the geographical center, a gazebo by the side of Route 24 shelters the unlikely spectacle that puts this tiny town on the m

Explained: The four-minute wait that could decide the Premier League title race

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
Arsenal fans react during the VAR review.

By Ben Church, CNN

(CNN) — It was over four minutes of pure, unadulterated cinema. A total of 266 seconds that put soccer fans across the world through the entire spectrum of emotions.

If you missed it live, you’ve likely seen the fallout debated across your social media platforms over the last 24 hours. We are, of course, talking about the VAR decision at the end of Arsenal’s Premier League match against West Ham. A moment so dramatic that it could define the entire season.

First to set the scene. A game between these two clubs is already enough to get the blood pumping. The London rivals have locked horns countless times over the years and things always get a little tasty when teams are from the same city.

But then you add the context of this season’s Premier League. Arsenal needed a win to keep up its push for a first league title in 22 years. West Ham needed a result to boost its hopes of avoiding relegation from the top flight. The stakes could barely have been higher.

So, to the game. Arsenal scored in the 83rd minute to take the lead, a goal that put the Gunners on the brink of becoming champions. It just needed to hold out for the remainder of the game and it would be firmly in control of its destiny with just two games left in the season.

But then, in added time, West Ham looked to have equalized. It all came from Arsenal failing to clear a corner, with Callum Wilson waiting to smash the rebound towards goal after 94 minutes and 18 seconds of the game. The referee then took around two seconds to check the ball had indeed crossed before awarding the goal with just over a minute left to play. Cue bedlam inside the London Stadium.

West Ham fans and players celebrated what could have been a pivotal point in their survival, as Arsenal’s fans fell silent. A draw would have opened the door for Manchester City to storm back into the title race once again and reignite the narrative that Arsenal always “bottles it” when the pressure is on.

‘Biggest moment in VAR history’

But then came a moment that most soccer fans dread. With celebrations still ongoing, referee Chris Kavanagh put his hand to his earpiece, signalling that the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) had started checking the goal.

As viewers watching on television started seeing replays, it became clear that the VAR was checking for a foul on Arsenal goalkeeper David Raya. As the corner before the goal was swung in, the Spaniard had attempted to catch the ball but was seemingly hampered by West Ham defender Pablo, who put his arm across Raya’s outstretched hands.

As the replays continued to loop over and over on televisions around the world, fans inside the stadium could only wait for a decision, huddling around phones to try to find more information about what the VAR was looking at.

Then, as the clock ticked toward 97 minutes, a moment that sparked yet more contrasting emotions. The on-field referee signaled that he had been sent to the VAR screen at the side of the pitch to watch the incident again, an act that usually means the on-field decision is about to be overturned.

After watching the replays himself and having a discussion with the VAR official Darren England, Kavanagh announced his decision over the microphone as the clock ti

Martin Short speaks for first time about ‘nightmare’ of his daughter’s death

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating
Martin Short is pictured with his daughter Katherine

By Lianne Kolirin, CNN

(CNN) — Martin Short has spoken publicly for the first time about the “nightmare” of losing his daughter Katherine earlier this year.

The “Only Murders in the Building” star told CBS in an exclusive interview aired Sunday that Katherine’s death by suicide back in February has been devastating. Katherine Short was 42 when she died, according to media reports at the time. She was one of three children the now 76-year-old comedian adopted with his wife, Nancy Dolman, who died of ovarian cancer in 2010.

Speaking ahead of the release of a new Netflix documentary about his life, Canadian-born Short said that “it’s been a nightmare for the family,” but he explained that it has helped him to understand that “mental health and cancer (like my wife) are both diseases, and sometimes with diseases they are terminal.”

He went on to tell interviewer Tracy Smith about his daughter’s long-term struggles. “My daughter fought for a long time with extreme mental health, borderline personality disorder, other things, and did the best she could until she couldn’t. So Nan’s (Nancy’s) last words to me were ‘Mart, let me go’ and she was just saying ‘Dad, let me go.’”

The loss has led Short to become involved with a nonprofit organization called “Bring Change to Mind,” started by actress Glenn Close as a result of mental illness in her own family, he said.

Short said he had a “deep desire” to be involved with the organization, which is “taking mental health out of the shadows, not being ashamed of it, not hiding from the word suicide, but accepting that this can be the last stage of an illness.”

The documentary movie “Marty, Life is Short” goes behind the scenes of Short’s long career as a much-loved comic actor with the help of never-before-seen archive footage. Directed by Lawrence Kasdan, it’s dedicated to the memory of Katherine and to Short’s good friend Catherine O’Hara, the “Schitt’s Creek” star, who died just weeks before his daughter.

Short is no stranger to grief, as he discussed in the interview. By age 20 he had lost both his parents and his older brother David, who was killed in a car crash. “What it developed in me is this muscle of survival and handling grief and a perspective on it and it stayed with me,” he told Smith.

He said his experience gave him “an understanding from my childhood that the end of life was going to happen to all of us.” He said that while it comes too early for some, keeping their memory alive is all -important. “They’ve just gone into the next room for a while, (and eventually) you’ll be in that room,” he said.

Short said he had never been in therapy, instead preferring his own coping mechanisms. “You just have to breathe in, breathe out,” he said. “What I do is I dictate into my phone and I transcribe it. And I look at it and rewrite it and put it away.”

He added: “I think we are all in denial about our limited time on this Earth. It’s very difficult to accept it.”

“The more you accept it, I think, it does lift you and make you feel that thi

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