Drake & Future - Digital Dash (What A Time To Be Alive Mixtape) Nickleback have cancelled the remainder of their "No Fixed Address" tour, after lead singer Chad Kroeger revealed he"ll need a more extended period of rest following his recent vocal cord surgery.
The cancellation includes eight planned UK dates for November, as well as dozens of others throughout Europe between September and December of this year.
The band revealed the news through their website, releasing the following statement:
"Kroeger was diagnosed with an intracordal cyst on his voice box in June, recently underwent surgery and must remain on vocal rest as ordered by doctors for the next six to nine months in order to fully recuperate. The medical team is pleased with the results of the surgery, but Kroeger will need an extended period to recover properly."
Most of all, we are sorry to miss our fans out on the road this fall, but Chads health, healing and full recovery are what is most important right now."
"With the proper amount of time, we hope to have him back stronger and better than ever before. We thank everyone for their support and understanding during this time and look forward to getting back out on the road and playing music for everyone again real soon.
Getty
The North American dates on the same tour had been cancelled for similar reasons back in June. The UK events affected are as follows:
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As more rankings come in, they"ll be included and combined for a composite once final.
That"s more like it! After two weeks with a few upsets and a whole lot of blowouts, we were treated to some excellent football Saturday in Week 3 of college football.
Ohio State and TCU had relative struggles with unranked Northern Illinois and SMU, while Alabama and USC both lost for the first times this season (to Ole Miss and Stanford, respectively). Notre Dame survived its first post-Malik Zaire test, beating Georgia Tech by a touchdown, while UCLA beat BYU 24-23 (and yes, it once again came down to the last play for the Cougars).
The biggest story coming into Sunday"s poll unveilings: how high will the SEC"s two biggest performers rise? Ole Miss has a legitimate claim to the No. 1 spot after its terrific first three weeks, while LSUmollywhopped Auburn 45-21 on the legs ofnew Heisman frontrunner Leonard Fournette.
Well, here we are:
AP
Coaches
Massey
1
Ohio State (42)
Ohio State (61)
Ohio State
2
Michigan State (7)
TCU
Alabama
3
TCU (tie)
Michigan State (3)
Georgia
4
Ole Miss (tie) (11)
Baylor
Ole Miss
5
Baylor
Ole Miss
Michigan State
6
Notre Dame
Georgia
TCU
7
Georgia
Florida State
Baylor
8
LSU (1)
Notre Dame
Florida State
9
UCLA
LSU
UCLA
10
Florida State
Clemson
LSU
11
Clemson
UCLA
Notre Dame
12
Alabama
Alabama
Georgia Tech
13
Oregon
Oregon
Clemson
14
Texas A&M
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
15
Oklahoma
Texas A&M
Texas A&M
16
Arizona
Arizona
Oregon
17
Northwestern
Utah
USC
18
Utah
USC
Stanford
19
USC
Northwestern
Arizona
20
Georgia Tech
Georgia Tech
Utah
21
Stanford
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
22
Wisconsin
Oklahoma State
Northwestern
23
BYU
Missouri
Kansas State
24
Oklahoma State
Stanford
BYU
25
Missouri
Auburn
West Virginia
The four rankings we use:
The Associated Press Top 25: The longest-running and best-respected human poll. Didn"t have any official bearing on the latter years of the BCS, and won"t have any official bearing on the Playoff. Expect it to set the course for the committee, however, as most outlets (including SB Nation) will use the AP"s rankings as the standard until the committee takes over in November. Usually comes out on Sundays about 2 p.m. ET.
The USA Today Coaches Poll: Formerly part of the BCS, and now just a poll. It tends to be more conservative than the AP"s. Though polling athletic departments in order to rank other athletic departments is dubious, we still want multiple human polls in here, and it"s the other big one. Releases early Sunday afternoons.
The Massey computer composite: A collection of ... every rating out there, that will be included as soon as it is updated. By including it here, we"re giving extra weight to the two human polls, since they"re already two of the dozens of ratings included in the Massey. It changes over the course of the week as more rankings arrive.
Football Outsiders" F/+ rating: A synthesis of ratings by smart persons Bill Connelly and Brian Fremeau and our personal go-to overall team stat. It tends to come out later than the others, and also will be added as soon as it is updated.
Get all kinds of NCAA Football stories, rumors, game coverage, and pictures of Puddles in your inbox every day.
Jason Edwards had only a few minutes on top of Mount Everest when he reached the 29,035-foot summit in 2001.
He looked around, taking mental photographs from the highest point on the planet. He gave a thumbs up for an actual camera as he posed for the obligatory summit shot. Then it was time to descend.
What he saw Tuesday night on a massive IMAX screen at the Pacific Science Center reminded him of that moment like no other Hollywood film hes seen.
That is about as close as you could probably get to emulating what the summit looked like and would feel like without being there yourself, said Edwards, an accomplished mountaineer whos climbed the highest point on every continent. It is incredibly realistic. I was very impressed.
Edwards was watching Everest, the latest recounting of the 1996 Everest disaster that saw eight people killed when they were caught in a storm during their summit attempt.
I literally couldnt tell which shots werent taken on the mountain, Edwards said. I know the mountain pretty well. Im sure if I sat there with some buddies and studied it, we might be able to figure it out, but it is really realistic.
Edwards says he looks forward to the next time he sees his friend David Breashears, a co-producer on the film, so he can learn more about how they filmed the movie.
Its magnitudes more powerful (in IMAX 3-D) than watching it on a flat screen, Edwards said. You were immersed in the experience. I think for me it was like, wow, I was feeling a lot of the same emotions I would have been feeling if I was there myself.
Edwards, 56, has a lengthy rsum that includes more than 300 Mount Rainier summits, numerous international trips and four trips to Everest. He guided on Everest in 1991, 94, 97 and 2001 for Ashford-based International Mountain Guides.
During those four years, he made five summit attempts, having to turn back the first four times for various reasons, including a frozen cornea in 1997.
He never regretted turning back and hed never second-guess those depicted in Everest who some have argued should have turned back sooner.
You shouldnt armchair quarterback if you arent there to witness it yourself, Edwards said. It was obviously a collision of bad weather and a challenging mountain that created the proverbial perfect storm.
Edwards has the decades of experience that allow him to pick apart climbing movies. He recalls seeing Cliffhanger, the 1993 Sylvester Stallone movie, and its laughable portrayal of rock climbing.
A bolt gun used to set anchors in solid rock was a particular annoying departure from reality.
I would love one of those guns, that would be just magnificent, he said. It made me laugh, and I realized I should just sit back and enjoy the film.
Thats what hes learned to do over the years. He doesnt let minor inaccuracies keep him from enjoying the movie.
But this film (Everest) is different, Edwards said. It is very realistic. It pulls you right in, even as an experienced climber.
Sure he could nitpick if he wanted. Some of the tents and gear appeared to be newer models than climbers would have had in 1996. Climbers likely would have worn overboots (neoprene covers for their plastic climbing boots) more often than they did in the movie.
There were things like not wearing sunglasses a lot, but I think that was for the benefit of the movie, Edwards said. But only little details like that that most people wouldnt pick up on.
As for the emotions whipped up by the storm, a storm that killed people Edwards knew, including one of his former clients, those were unmistakably real. They are emotions he doesnt want to share publicly.
The movie creates a feeling of loss and compassion for the climbers that were killed and for the survivors and their families, Edwards said. A few minute later he added, Its not a positive movie. It is a chronicle of human endeavor, challenge and loss. Really, thats what we all yearn to experience and overcome if possible.
Everest - Movie Review Everest movie review: The film is shot beautifully, and in 3D, the dips and highs of the glorious peak are eminently watchable.
THE biggest star of this film is the worlds highest peak, as it should be. The script inspired by several accounts (including Jon Krakeurs bestseller, Into Thin Air) of what happened atop that mountain on the fateful days of May 10-11 1996 resulting in the highest number of casualties Everest had seen in one day till then, 8 is clear that surmounting Everest is about endurance above all else. Everest throws everything the way of the climbers, from storms and avalanches to treacherous ice falls and mind games, and by the time you get up there, it is time to come down.
However, at the heart of any adventure lie stories of the men and women who embark on it. Kormkurs challenge lay in making these worth the Everest, and it is here that the film limply fails. Apart from worrying wives back home (a horribly misused Knightley and Wright), almost none of the climbers here some legendary, other novices, almost all brave get any context about what brings them to conditions not meant for the living.
A journalist for Outside magazine who is also climbing with the mountaineers as part of a story, Krakeur (Kelly), even asks them helpfully Why?. But nobody has any real answers. Perhaps the only actor who stands out as a character is mailman/carpenter Doug, and that is largely on the strength of Hawkess acting, who makes even a mushy tale about schoolchildren a real motivator.
Clarke plays Rob Hall, the tour leader who has earned a name for conducting successful Everest expeditions. There is a hint of a rivalry here with more upstart contenders, but Clarkes valiant efforts cant make Hall rise above being a heroic, one-dimensional figure who says repeatedly that he is there not just to take his team up but to bring them down safely. And then there is Gyllenhaal, the other, less-successful team leader, who is more cool, laid-back, high-on-something Gyllenhaal than Scott Fischer.
Still, they fare better than the others, especially the only woman climber, Yasuko from Japan, and Brolin as Beck, who hovers just on the edge of getting a hold on his character.
The film is shot beautifully, and in 3D, the dips and highs of the glorious peak are eminently watchable. Shot partly in Nepal, and partly at the Alps, it tries to make each of the halts on way to 8,848 m (or rather 29,029 feet, here) count be it the Camps, the Balcony, the South Summit and Hillarys Step. How precarious near traffic jams on that Step could be as famously happened in May 2012 is terrifyingly evident.
Cleary Kormkur has read those stories, as well as on the trash left by humans even on one of the worlds most inaccessible spots. But like the sherpas who only hang on the tangents of these stories despite providing the steps (literally) for others to rise to the top these aspects are never fleshed out.
One such sherpa, Lopsang (played by Pemba Sherpa), packs the best punch-line of Everest. Asked if he speaks English by Beck, he shoots back, while barely giving Beck a glance, Better than you, you American.
Is Lopsang saying what we think he is? Because, its there.
Cast: Jason Clarke, Jake Gyllenhaal, Josh Brolin, John Hawkes, Michael Kelly, Emily Watson, Keira Knightley, Robin Wright, Sam Worthington Director: Baltasar Kormkur
According to our voters, consider yourself lucky -- for the past 20Tour seasons you"ve been paying witness to the greatest putter of all time, Tiger Woods. As you sit, you can probably peel off half a dozen highlight-reel putts Tiger has made in his career: The finger-pointing bomb at Valhalla on the first playoff hole against Bob May at the 2000 PGA Championship; the double-fist-pumping birdie on the 72nd hole of the 2008 U.S. Open to force a Monday playoff against Rocco Mediate; the hat-throwing downhill slider to s****h the 2008 Bay Hill Invitational from Bart Bryant; or the original-Tiger-fist-pump-inducing 14-footer on the island green at TPC Sawgrass to finish off his improbable comeback against Trip Kuehne at the 1994 U.S. Amateur.
It only comes once a year, so hopefully you skipped breakfast and plan to celebrate.
Sept. 18 is National Cheeseburger Day; get out there and enjoy. (Not that you need an excuse for a great burger on a Friday).
According to Wikipedia, some genius decided to begin adding cheese to burgers in the 1920s or 30s, though there is debate as to who did it first.
More from Wilmington Patch
A popular theory, according to Wikipedia, is that 16-year-old Lionel Sternberger was working in his dads restaurant, The Rite Spot, in 1926 in Pasadena, Calif., when he decided to experiment by dropping a slab of American cheese on a hot hamburger. It wasnt until 1935, however, that a trademark for the name cheeseburger was awarded to Louis Ballast of the Humpty Dumpty Drive-In in Denver, Col.
We say, Thank you, Cheeseburger Pioneers, whoever you are.
A few national chains are offering deals for National Cheeseburger Day, including:
McDonalds locations in western Massachusetts and Connecticut are offering $.69 cheeseburgers today.
Burger King locations offer a deal on Fridays (not just National Cheeseburger Day) that offers you two sandwiches for $5 if you download the BK app.
But what about closer to home? Wheres the best place to grab a cheeseburger in Wilmington?