Category: Covid-19

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April 14: Iowa reports zero new COVID-19 deaths and over 17,000 more completed vaccinations – kwwl.com

April 14, 2021

EDITORS NOTE: The daily numbers that we report do not line up with the numbers the state is reporting for each day. Every day at 10 a.m. we take the previous days numbers from 10 a.m. and subtract them with the current numbers from the state at 10 a.m. Rather than reporting a day behind, we wish to give you the most updated information.For Black Hawk and Linn Counties,we are reporting numbers from their county COVID-19 websites. For Johnson and Dubuque counties,we are reporting numbers from the states website.

IOWA

(KWWL) There were 655 new, confirmed cases from 10 a.m. Tuesday to 10 a.m. Wednesday,according to the states dashboard,bringing the states total number of cases to 358,139.

The states website says that of the 358,139 people who have tested positive, 339,094 have recovered. This is 510 more recoveries than what the state reported Tuesday.

The state is reporting 0 additional COVID-19 death, with a death toll of 5,857.

Subtracting the number of recoveries (339,094) and the number of deaths (5,857) from the total number of cases (358,139) shows there are currently 13,188 active positive cases in the state.

As of Wednesday morning, there were 46 patients hospitalized in Iowa within the last 24 hours and the total number of hospitalizations is 218, which is down from 220. Of those, 57 are in the ICU (up from 56), and 14 are on ventilators (down from 20).

In Iowa, there were 3,018 people tested in the last 24 hours, and a total of 1,671,928 people have been tested for COVID-19.

As of Wednesday morning, according to the statesCOVID-19 vaccine dashboard, 1,836,707 total doses have been administered to Iowa residents and 798,577 individuals have completed the series. This is 17,353 more completed vaccinations than Tuesday. You can view thedashboardfor more data. You can find more vaccine information and storieshere.

BLACK HAWK COUNTY

As of 10 a.m. Wednesday, theBlack Hawk COVID-19 dashboardis showing 15 new cases since 10 a.m. Tuesday, leaving a total of 16,588 cases. There have been 12 additional recoveries, leaving a total of 14,813. There have been no additional deaths, leaving a total of 306 deaths. In Black Hawk County, 34,115 residents have been fully vaccinated.

LINN COUNTY

As of 10 a.m. Wednesday, theLinn County COVID-19 dashboardis showing 17 new cases since 10 a.m. Tuesday, leaving a total of 20,219 cases. There have been 21 additional recoveries, leaving a total of 18,737 recoveries. There have been no additional deaths, leaving a total of 339 deaths in the county. There are currently 8 patients currently hospitalized in the county. In Linn County, 57,311 residents have been fully vaccinated.

JOHNSON COUNTY

According to thestates dashboardat 10 a.m. Wednesday, there are 43 new positive cases reported in Johnson County since 10 a.m. Tuesday. This brings the total to 13,940 reported cases. There have been a total of 13,192 recoveries, 13 more reported than yesterday. There were no additional deaths reported, leaving a total of 80. In Johnson County, 44,578 residents have been fully vaccinated.

DUBUQUE COUNTY

According to thestates dashboardat 10 a.m. Wednesday, there were 17 additional positive cases reported in Dubuque County since 10 a.m. Tuesday. This brings the total to 13,093 reported cases. There have been 13 additional recoveries reported, leaving a total of 12,323. There were no additional deaths reported, leaving a total of 202. In Dubuque County, 28,013 residents have been fully vaccinated.

View COVID-19 numbers fromTuesday here.

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April 14: Iowa reports zero new COVID-19 deaths and over 17,000 more completed vaccinations - kwwl.com

Mental Health Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Update – Kaiser Family Foundation

April 14, 2021

Introduction

The coronavirus pandemic in the U.S. and the changes in the daily lives of Americans that ensued have taken a toll on peoples mental health and created new barriers for those seeking mental health care. Stress and worry about contracting the virus, coupled with job losses, loss of childcare, as well as the devastating loss of loved ones due to COVID-19 are just a few ways in which the pandemic may be having an effect on mental health. Previous KFF analysis of the Census Bureaus Household Pulse Survey from earlier this year shows the economic downturn has led to mental health issues and increased substance abuse in the U.S.. The analysis also found school closures and lack of childcare had an even larger impact on parents with children in their home under the age of 18 who either have transitioned to working from home during the pandemic or have been required to go into work throughout the pandemic. This analysis from the March KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor finds that those hardest hit by the mental health impacts of the coronavirus pandemic have been younger people and women, including mothers.

In the first few months of the coronavirus pandemic, the share of U.S. adults who said worry and stress related to the coronavirus was having a negative impact on their mental health increased from about one-third (32%) in March 2020 to roughly half (53%) in July 2020. With the end of the pandemic in sight as millions of Americans are getting vaccinated against the disease, the mental health impact seems to have leveled off. The March 2021 KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor finds that about half of adults (47%) continue to report negative mental health impacts related to worry or stress from the pandemic.

Younger adults and women, including mothers with children under 18 years old in their households, are among the most likely to report that stress and worry related to coronavirus has had a negative impact on their mental health. Nearly half of Black adults (49%), White adults (48%), and about four in ten Hispanic adults (43%) say the coronavirus has had a negative impact on their mental health, including three in ten Black adults (31%) and one-fourth of White (23%) and Hispanic (25%) adults who say it has had a major impact. Smaller shares of adults ages 65 and older and men (including fathers with children in the home) say they have experienced mental health impact from the coronavirus. It is notable that some previous studies have shown that men, older adults, and Black adults may be less likely to report mental health difficulty and more likely to face challenges accessing mental health care.

More than half of women overall (55%) report a negative impact on their mental health related to the coronavirus pandemic, compared to about four in ten men (38%) who report the same. While a larger share of women across age groups under age 65 report a negative impact on their mental health, the youngest group of men and women are most likely to report negative mental health impacts, compared to their older counterparts. Nearly seven in ten women ages 18 to 29 (69%) report a negative impact on their mental health.

Direct experience with COVID-19 has a role in reported mental health impacts of the pandemic. The March 2021 KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor finds one in four (24%) U.S. adults report having a close friend or family member who has died of complications related to COVID-19. An additional 12% say they have someone less directly connected to them who has died, and about six in ten (63%) say they do not know anyone who has died of COVID-19.

Among those with the closest connections to a COVID-19 related death (having a close friend or family member who died), three in ten say stress related to coronavirus has had a major impact on their mental health. Smaller shares of those who do not know anyone who has died from complications related to COVID-19 say their mental health has been impacted in a major way (23%). Half of those who know someone close who has died, or indirectly, say their mental health has been impacted in at least a minor way (53% each), while more than four in ten who have not had a personal experience with knowing someone who has died say the same (44%).

One potential contributor to negative mental health impacts may be the fear of contracting COVID-19 or having a family member get sick from the disease. When asked how worried they are they or someone in their family will get sick from COVID-19, some of the same groups that are most likely to report negative mental health impacts are also the most likely to report being worried, including women, and younger adults.

A relationship between worry and self-reported mental health impacts is also evident. Among those who say they are either very worried or somewhat worried they or a family member will get sick from coronavirus, six in ten (61%) say worry or stress has had a negative impact on their mental health. This is compared to two-thirds of those who say they are either not too worried or not at all worried about their family getting sick who say that stress has not negatively impacted their mental health regarding the pandemic.

Many adults who reported worsened mental health due the pandemic also report forgoing mental health treatment. About one third (32%) of those who reported a negative impact on their mental health (representing 15% of all adults) say there was a time in the past year where they thought they might need mental health services or medication but did not get them. Nearly half of mothers (46%) who report a negative mental health impact due to the pandemic (27% of all mothers) say they did not get mental health care that they needed. In addition, about one in five adults under age 50, Black adults and women say they have experienced worsened mental health due to the pandemic and have not gotten mental health services or medication they thought they might need.

Access to providers and affordability appear to be the biggest barriers for those who felt they needed mental health care because of the pandemic but did not receive them. One in four adults who did not get the mental health care say the main reason why was because they could not find a provider (24%) or could not afford the cost (23%). An additional one in five (18%) say they were too busy or could not get the time off work to receive treatment. One in ten say they had problems with insurance covering their treatment while 5% said they were afraid or embarrassed to seek treatment.

Read more:

Mental Health Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Update - Kaiser Family Foundation

No, the COVID-19 vaccine will not change your DNA – MLive.com

April 14, 2021

The COVID-19 vaccine wont change your DNA.

None of the three vaccines between Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson actually enter the nuclei in a persons cell, according to the CDC, meaning none of them actually interact with DNA or a genome.

The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines are mRNA vaccines, which teach our cells how to make a protein that triggers an immune response, according to the CDC. The mRNA from a COVID-19 vaccine never enters the nucleus of the cell, which is where our DNA is kept. This means the mRNA cannot affect or interact with our DNA in any way.

Regarding the Johnson & Johnson shot, the material it delivers to a persons cells does not integrate into a persons DNA, the CDC states. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was temporarily halted in Michigan following guidance from federal regulators after six people nationwide reported rare, but serious blood clots.

Infectious disease and biology experts however said none of the vaccines access or change DNA, refuting a series of conspiracy theories circling around social media.

The concern over DNA alteration was perhaps most prominently voiced in an April 8 article in The Defender, a publication run by the anti-vaccination group Childrens Health Defense. The post cited a preprinted research paper from Harvard and MIT scientists that asserts that mRNA from the virus can very rarely persist in an individuals body tissue even after infection.

Richard Young, a co-author on the paper and an MIT professor of biology, told MLive its terrible his teams research is being used in anti-vax circles, since his teams findings only address the COVID-19 virus and not any of the vaccines.

It is possible that the (COVID-19) virus might integrate on a rare instance into a human genome into tissue culture itself, Young said. But the vaccine is just a tiny piece of spike protein in an mRNA molecule. So when the vaccine mRNA goes into the cell, it only goes into the cytoplasm where it can be made into proteins by ribosomes. So it doesnt even go into the nucleus.

Spike proteins, according to the CDC, trigger our immune system cells to recognize the COVID-19 virus and begin producing antibodies to fight the infection.

Young said he and his colleagues research should be seen as more reason to avoid natural COVID-19 infection, not to avoid the vaccine. Compared to the virus, the vaccine carries less than 1% of the molecules used to replicate viral mRNA that can lead to very rare genetic alteration, Young said.

If you were weighing a concern, Id be very concerned about being infected with the virus, he said, because the virus is giving some people long COVID, whereas the vaccine doesnt seem to be hurting anyone.

Read more: Long Covid continues to stump doctors and exhaust those fighting months-long battles

While the Johnson and Johnson vaccine works differently than its counterparts, it accomplishes the same goal of creating proteins to catalyze the creation of antibodies, said Dr. Anthony Ognjan, infection disease doctor with MacLaren Macomb hospital.

Its called a viral vector vaccine, he said. Similar to AstraZeneca, what it does is it takes the virus and creates a kind of infection in people, but not really...it attaches spike proteins to the virus, the viruses are naturally taken up by the cells and then the cells process automatically an immune reaction.

The bottom-line: the COVID-19 vaccines does not get incorporated into human DNA, Ognjan said. Vaccines that treat herpes are examples of ones that can alter DNA, but the COVID-19 shots dont follow the same method.

The genetic alteration concern picks up on a fear some people have about how changed DNA leaves some individuals susceptible to cancer down the road, Ognjan said. While altered DNA does carry those risks, that fear is being conflated with the COVID-19 vaccine in a frustrating way, he said.

People who dont understand the science, anti-vaxxers and pseudoscientists are taking advantage of peoples naivety and not understanding the basic science of whats going on, he said. You see that stuff get scattered over the internet, and it drives me crazy.

Read more from MLive:

As Michigans coronavirus cases surge, experts say its hard to pinpoint an exact cause

Whitmer on CNN: Michigan could shed COVID-19 restrictions, fully reopen this summer

Michigan hospital to study COVID-19 vaccine in people with severe allergies

COVID-19 risk from touching contaminated surface is less than 1 in 10,000, new CDC study says

Originally posted here:

No, the COVID-19 vaccine will not change your DNA - MLive.com

Las Vegas is set to come out of Covid-19 better than ever – CNN

April 14, 2021

(CNN) More than a year into the Covid-19 pandemic, this desert city is looking bigger, bolder and better than ever.

New casino resorts, innovative restaurants, expanded convention space and one-of-a-kind cultural destinations characterize the latest iteration of Las Vegas, which continues to reinvent itself in the face of adversity.

Heck, Elon Musk even built an underground tunnel and transport system that's opening soon.

"There's not only pent-up demand for travel, there's pent-up demand for the unrivaled Vegas experience," said Lori Nelson-Kraft, senior vice president of communications for the LVCVA. "We anticipate visitation to Vegas growing stronger with each passing month."

Virgin Hotels Las Vegas opened this March.

Courtesy Virgin Hotels

Pandemic casino boom in Vegas

Any discussion of the latest and greatest in Las Vegas must start with the city's newest casino resorts.

This property has more than 1,500 rooms, a 60,000-square-foot casino, a 4,500-seat concert hall and an expansive pool area with a resort pool, a Mykonos-themed day club and an event lawn. While the resort retained Nobu and some of the same restaurants as its predecessor, it also added a lineup of new ones, including One Steakhouse from brothers David and Michael Morton.

If these aren't enough reasons to check out the new resort, Richard "Boz" Bosworth, president and CEO of parent group JC Hospitality, noted that Virgin has no resort fees, free parking and free Wi-Fi, all rarities in this market.

"We really wanted to establish ourselves from the beginning as doing something totally different," he said. "I think we've achieved that goal."

The pool at Circa Resort & Casino is called Stadium Swim.

Rum Tongue Media/Courtesy Circa Resort & Casino

This 35-story, 777-room resort represents the first new casino in downtown Las Vegas in more than 40 years. The highlights: an iconic steakhouse, one of the largest and most spectacular sports books in town and a pool deck with stadium-style lounging terraces. (The pool actually is called "Stadium Swim.")

Circa is the brainchild of Derek Stevens, a casino magnate who also owns Golden Gate Hotel & Casino across Fremont Street and the D Las Vegas a few blocks east. Stevens was the first local hotelier to put a Bitcoin ATM on his casino floor (at the D). He was one of the first casino operators to open sports books 24/7. Most nights, he dons a shiny blazer and spends a few hours hanging out with customers at his bars.

When the pandemic caused Las Vegas to shut down last March, Stevens said his lenders became concerned about how the shutdown would affect progress on the project. Then, in April, his project manager presented him with an unexpected choice.

"Downtown was a ghost town, nobody was around, and [the project manager] comes to me and asks, 'We can probably work on this thing day and night and open ahead of schedule; is that something you'd want us to do?' " Stevens remembered. "Of course, I said yes. And we did it. We were able to open two months earlier than planned, get the cash flow going, and work out kinks in the operation. All in the middle of a pandemic."

The new West Hall vastly expands the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Courtesy LVCVA

Other new attractions

While new casinos represent the most exciting developments in Las Vegas over the past year, the city has debuted other attractions during the pandemic as well.

First, in December, the LVCVA completed a $989-million expansion to the Las Vegas Convention Center that adds 1.4 million square feet of new space to the existing 3.2-million-square-foot campus.

The new digs, dubbed the West Hall, sit on Strip-side real estate formerly occupied by the Riviera and Landmark hotels, and boast 328,000 square feet of column-free space, the largest such space in North America. The facility will officially open to the public this June at the World of Concrete, the first large-scale convention to return to Las Vegas since the shutdown.

The Las Vegas Convention Center Loop is an underground shuttle featuring all-electric Teslas.

Stephen Morgan/Courtesy LVCVA

The pedestrian shuttle will whisk convention attendees from one facility to the other in two one-way tunnels 40 feet beneath the ground. The chariots: all-electric Tesla vehicles that will run at speeds around 35 mph.

The city has approved plans to expand the Loop throughout the destination and connect the convention center with Strip resorts and the airport. No timetable has been announced yet.

Area15 is a new entertainment district on the west side of I-15.

Peter Ruprecht/Courtesy AREA15

Put differently, AREA15 CEO Winston Fisher said he sees his new venture as a "content box" where visitors can come for "memory creation" and an outing they can't get elsewhere in town.

"We have created this imperfect space with a mishmash of incredible art and interactivity that comes together and just hums," he said. "These days, originality is important, and that happens to be something we do well."

Dining scene growth

Surprisingly, the food scene in Las Vegas has grown during the pandemic.

Trees, a James Beard award finalist last year for his work at Esther's Kitchen in the city's Arts District, opened Al Solito in the suburban neighborhood of Tivoli Village as a place for Las Vegas residents to get classic Italian dishes such as the chicken parmesan and rigatoni alla vodka they might find on the East Coast.

Al Solito Posto is the newest restaurant from chef James Trees.

Sean Jorgensen

"For a lot of my customers with ties to the East Coast, the food [at Al Solito] is like the stuff their grandmother used to make," said Trees. "In a lot of cases, these are people who haven't gone out to a restaurant in a year. They're ready. They're resilient. They're hungry to get back to lives they had before."

Even more new eateries are on the way.

In May, when the Las Vegas Pinball Hall of Fame relocates to the Las Vegas Strip north of the "Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas" sign, it will feature a food truck park.

Finally, later in the year, chef and (sometimes polarizing) restaurateur Nusret Gke is expected to open a Las Vegas outpost of his Salt Bae steakhouse in The Park between New York-New York and Park MGM.

On the horizon

The trend toward development in Las Vegas isn't stopping any time soon.

This property, situated northwest of Wynn and Encore, is scheduled to open this summer, and will feature an Asian theme. It also will feature several standout food and beverage options, including a Singapore-style Hawker food market (with a restaurant from Trees) and an outpost of Wally's Wine and Spirits, a celebrity favorite wine bar with locations in Beverly Hills and Santa Monica.

The lesson here is simple. No matter what the world throws at humanity, don't ever bet against Las Vegas.

Top photo by Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images

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Las Vegas is set to come out of Covid-19 better than ever - CNN

Reflecting On COVID-19 And A Growing Public Health Threat – Texas A&M Today – Texas A&M University Today

April 14, 2021

People are seen at a protest against masks, vaccines, and vaccine passports outside the headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on March 13, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Getty Images

As the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines continues, Peter Hotez, a faculty fellow with the Hagler Institute of Advanced Studies at Texas A&M University, says hes optimistic that we are going to vaccinate our way out of the epidemic.

At the same time, hes concerned about another growing problem public distrust of vaccines and anti-science ideology. Hotez, a dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine who co-directs a vaccine-development center at Texas Childrens Hospital, argues that its a dangerous movement reaching the level of nuclear proliferation, terrorism and other issues the United States has put infrastructure in place to combat.

In a recent virtual talk hosted by the School of Public Health, Hotez drew on lessons from the his work in tropical infectious diseases and his time as an envoy focusing on vaccine diplomacy initiatives during the President Barack Obama administration. In the past year, hes been prominently featured in the national media as an expert on the pandemic.

Hotez spoke frankly about his role in combatting anti-science, which has become a major focus of his.

As public health experts, this is becoming a bigger and bigger problem, Hotez said.

For Hotez, the anti-vaccine movement in particular is personal. In 2018, he wrote and published a book titled Vaccines Did Not Cause Rachels Autism about his adult daughter, Rachel, who has autism and intellectual disabilities. Hotez said his attempts at dispelling claims that autism spectrum disorders are linked to vaccines has made him a target of anti-vaccine groups.

These groups have re-energized in recent years as a political movement, linked in particular to the conservative Tea Party, he says. With the help of political action committees, conservative podcasters and talking heads, and major think tanks, anti-vaccine thinking has become politicized under the banner of medical freedom. With the COVID-19 pandemic, anti-vaccine groups have also protested masks and physical distancing.

Hotez said the increase in COVID-19 cases last summer in southern states and in the northern Midwest can partly be blamed on the anti-science movement. He offered several examples of how this ideology spreads, particularly through the targeting of specific ethnic groups like the Somali immigrant community in Minneapolis and the Orthodox Jewish community. What was once a fringe element in the Republican Party is becoming more and more mainstream, Hotez said.

He cited a recent move by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who took aim at government-required vaccine passports in an executive order.

Really, nobodys talking about this. Its just kind of a straw man thats been created to galvanize, I think, the political right, but its happening at the expense of vaccines, and Im quite concerned about this, Hotez said.

Hotez, a senior fellow at the Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs at the Bush School of Government and Public Service, also has affiliations with the School of Public Health and the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences. He took time during his virtual discussion to debunk some common vaccine myths.

No one COVID-19 vaccine is better than another, he said, and its not worth waiting for the development and rollout of a new vaccine.

They all work by introducing virus-neutralizing antibodies to the spike protein, Hotez said. I always say its not worth the wait. Get what you can.

Young people are still becoming infected, he said, and need to be vaccinated. And despite claims that the COVID-19 vaccines were rushed and could be unsafe, Hotez said they were built off of more than 10 years of previous research and development efforts.

The epidemic is changing, and the UK variant is becoming fairly dominant, he said. The good news is that all available COVID-19 vaccines are working just as well against the UK variant, which Hotez said gives him cause for optimism. Later in the year and in 2022, though, a variant coming out of South Africa and Brazil could be a concern.

Looking back on the COVID-19 pandemic, Hotez said hes interested in trying to understand how science can be better communicated to a lay audience.

If theres any silver lining on this pandemic, he said, its that now people are hearing from scientists and public health experts directly in a way they never have before. Two major errors health experts made in the last year, particularly coming from the White House, were the tendency to lapse into jargon and talk down to the American people, Hotez said.

People dont mind listening to complex topics, and often want to hear directly from scientists rather than journalists and pundits. Hotez said when he is able to return to the Texas A&M campus hed like to work with students on lessons learned regarding public health and science communications during the pandemic.

One thing Hotez has learned from COVID-19 is that its sometimes necessary for public health experts to get [their] hands dirty now and then, venture into political discussions and call out disinformation.

Its a minefield, and you have to be careful, but in some cases its necessary, he said.

Read this article:

Reflecting On COVID-19 And A Growing Public Health Threat - Texas A&M Today - Texas A&M University Today

How Hollywood is reopening amid the COVID-19 pandemic – Los Angeles Times

April 14, 2021

In Los Angeles, Hollywoods awakening from the COVID-19 pandemic has been visible to anyone walking city streets in the last several months.

The usual signs of activity for the film and TV industry production crews taking over parking lots, yellow signs telling workers where to go are back. Movie theaters are open and actually starting to show big films. Prop houses and other local businesses dependent on the film and television industry are returning to life. Major studios have been issuing guidelines for eventually returning to offices.

With vaccinations rolling out across the country and California Gov. Gavin Newsom setting a target to fully open the states economy by June 15, theres a growing sense that things are finally on the mend. That should come as a big relief for the states economy, of which entertainment jobs are a key driver.

Production stoppages and other COVID-19 impacts walloped employment in the sector. In the motion picture and sound recording industry, the number of people employed in L.A. County fell from 152,500 to 92,000 from Feb. 1, 2020, to Jan. 1, 2021, according to the state (the figures do not include those indirectly employed by the industry).

Socially distant rehearsal: On location at the Santa Monica Pier, from left, Eric Christian Olsen, Chris ODonnell, LL Cool J and Nicki Micheaux work out a scene for CBS NCIS: Los Angeles while the director and fellow cast member Daniela Ruah at right looks on from a distance.

(Ron Jaffe/CBS)

Armando Santana, 56, a Teamsters Local 399 driver shuttling film trailers and actors, spent several months out of work last year after COVID-19 restrictions shut down production. The 20-year veteran Teamster has had to navigate the industrys various starts and stops since getting back to work in July. Recently, however, jobs have been steady.

It seems like the business has been very, very busy, Santana said. Im grateful for that. I probably would find it hard to go through a couple more shutdowns.

In a business that spent the bulk of 2020 either in partial closure or inching toward recovery, theres a palpable, if cautious, sense of optimism, although some of that was dampened on Monday when the owner of the popular ArcLight Cinemas and Pacific Theatres announced its locations would not reopen.

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Certain film and TV business dealings can be done remotely, including scriptwriting, dealmaking, pitching, animation, visual effects and casting, and some of the shifts in how people work together using technology may never go completely back to the way it was.

But this is still a business that depends on spontaneous, in-person interaction, said multiple filmmakers, executives and other insiders who spoke with The Times.

Thats definitely the case for Mike Larocca, cofounder and vice chairman of AGBO, the production company of Avengers: Endgame directors Joe and Anthony Russo.

The company last month started shooting The Gray Man, a big budget action film starring Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans, for Netflix onstage in Long Beach after being delayed from its previous January start date amid a COVID-19 surge. In another only-in-pandemic hurdle during pre-production, Anthony Russo had to quarantine for a week in Prague, Czech Republic, after his driver tested positive for COVID-19 while location scouting.

PPE time: On the set of The Neighborhood, Tichina Arnold, left, consults with fellow actor Gemma Johnson and director Mark Cendrowski, both masked, before filming their scene.

(Monty Brinton/CBS)

Despite being able to ramp up a massive project during the pandemic, Larocca is itching to get back to working more in person at the office.

I think people like the sort of social aspects of the business, he said. Its not the same as being in the editing room and ordering pizza and being there until midnight. Thats the kind of stuff where your project really gets done. You cant replicate that over Zoom.

For director Jon M. Chu, the promise of a return to normalcy being somewhere on the horizon could hardly have come at a better time. The Crazy Rich Asians filmmakers latest movie, In the Heights, based on the Tony-winning musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Quiara Alegra Hudes, is set for release in June.

Like many filmmakers and crew, Chu saw the disruption of the pandemic first-hand. In March 2020, Chu who lives in West Hollywood was in New York just days into the sound mix for In the Heights, when the fast-spreading virus sent Americans fleeing from offices. The team didnt start back up on the film until August, after the studio relocated post-production to Los Angeles.

Just in the past few weeks, things are definitely starting to shift, Chu said. Im able to have a meeting with my creative executive in my backyard, and were socially distanced and masked, but I dont feel as self-conscious or unsafe doing that. That edge is off a bit.

Production in greater Los Angeles has rebounded to reach about 60% of the normal activity levels the industry could expect at this point of the year, according to movie-permitting group FilmLA. Thats way up from January, when the number of permits issued collapsed to about 20% of normal levels after health officials and unions pressured productions to hold back filming.

Theres still a long way to go. Pent-up demand and the the arrival of spring a peak season for TV show filming have driven the boost, said FilmLA President Paul Audley. However, he cautioned that he doesnt expect further increases in on-location shooting until L.A. County lifts the health order under which the film industry operates. L.A. and Orange counties have been steadily advancing through the tiers of reopening, but that doesnt affect film protocols established to protect crews from the coronavirus.

The reality is thats probably where were going to be for a while until the vaccines in California get widespread, Audley said. I dont think they can move much past this point probably until the end of summer.

(Patrick Wymore / CBS)

A key hindrance to any increase in production is that, under the current protocols, crews need more space to allow for social distancing, requiring more equipment, more locations and larger soundstages, which means a longer time to do shoots. That maxing out of capacity has contributed to a race for space.

And as the pandemic continues to hinder international travel and onetime safe havens in Europe suffer from surges in infections, there is increased demand for already busy production locations like California.

Production is booming everywhere, and we are now already starting to find availability issues with crew, stages, not just in the U.K., but other places, said Jeff LaPlante, Universal Pictures president of physical production. Its already busy out there, and I think its only going to increase. So thatll be a challenge for all of us.

Producers are having to factor in the strain of working with the constant reminders of safety protocols and reducing hours, said Val Cheung, senior director of production at Shonda Rhimes production company Shondaland. The L.A.-based shows for ABC that Cheung oversees were among the first to start back in production last year, she said. They had to come up with new ways to accommodate the new strains of working slower and with fewer hours available.

This has been one of the most challenging seasons, if not the most challenging: Val Cheung, senior director of production at Shonda Rhimes production company Shondaland.

(Shondaland)

Now, Cheung finds herself on calls about Shondaland shows, incredulous that they have been able to get this far. Both Greys Anatomy and Station 19 are close to wrapping the number of episodes they had planned to make despite the pandemic-related restrictions of working during a pandemic, she said. One way the producers adapted to restrictions was by writing shows to minimize the amount of filming on location or the number of locations.

I just cant emphasize enough how hard everybody is working, Cheung said. This has been one of the most challenging seasons, if not the most challenging, for everyone. Every week we get on the phone on the different shows and were like, Can you believe it? Were almost there.

In the fall, unions and an alliance of Hollywood studios agreed to terms for cast and crew to return to work, allowing for compensation should productions be shut down or members need to quarantine or take time off for testing. That deal expires April 30, and the unions are preparing to enter talks with the studios over a renegotiation and extension of that agreement, several people close to the discussions said.

Pam Eylea, who operates the North Hollywood-based prop house History for Hire with her husband, Jim, has already noticed the increase in activity. Sales were down just 5% in the first quarter of 2021 versus the same period last year, a dramatic recovery from full-year 2020, when revenue plummeted 40%.Still, shes anticipating that the increased cost of production under COVID-19 protocols will limit what studios are willing to spend on props. Depending on the size of the production, health and safety measures can increase movie budgets by 5% to 20%.

HEPA break: On the set of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel in New York City, star Rachel Brosnahan uses an umbrella fitted with a HEPA filter for protection between takes instead of a face mask that could mess up her hair and makeup.

(Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)

I do feel like the business is building back up, Eylea said. I dont think were going to hit the same figures that we had pre-pandemic.

A welcome change for producers is that insurance companies are willing to offer more affordable policies, said Mark Gill, chief executive of Hollywood-based Solstice Studios.

For indie filmmakers, who are creating movies on a limited budget, insurance companies reluctance to provide coverage for shutdowns as a result of COVID-19 was a major blow. Bankers financing indie movies require insurance.

During the pandemic, the cost to insure a $70-million movie like the upcoming Ben Affleck thriller Hypnotic jumped more than tenfold to $7 million. Thats, of course, crazy, Gill said. We certainly werent going to do it. What were now hearing is with the prospect of the wide availability of vaccines, that number will go very far down, to maybe something more like a million.

Once production is back to full speed, companies are expected to ramp up to satisfy the need for content in theaters and on new streaming services. Agencies have continued to sell intellectual property to studios through the pandemic in anticipation of a comeback.

People want to refill the well, so there is an opportunity to put a movie together and tell it in an exciting way, said Ida Ziniti, cohead of CAAs motion picture literary department. I think buyers are more open to original ideas and concepts, because theyre seeing things perform well that may not have been obvious.

As production recovers, big media companies are making plans to bring people back to physical offices.

ViacomCBS Chief Executive Bob Bakish, in a memo to staff last month, said U.S. employees will have the option of returning to our offices starting after the July 4th weekend, at the earliest, with the initial phase lasting at least a few months.

Masked production: Jessica Par directs an episode of CBS SEAL Team.

(Monty Brinton/CBS)

Once they return, the vast majority of staff will operate under a hybrid schedule of in-office and remote work. Burbank-based Walt Disney Co. is also reportedly beginning its return after July Fourth. Disneyland, another locus of Southern California employment, with a pre-pandemic staff of 32,000, is set to reopen April 30 with limited attendance.

WarnerMedia, owner of Warner Bros. and HBO, is planning a soft reopening starting in the summer, with Sept. 1 as the target for more normal operations (August for CNN), while trying to accommodate the desire for a flexible work schedule, according to emails from executives. NBCUniversal is also aiming to broadly reopen in September.

Sony Pictures Entertainment recently told employees that it plans to bring more employees back to the Culver City lot starting June 1, with a tentative eye towards being fully up to speed on the lot by Labor Day.

Brett Gray, who plays Jamal on Netflix series On My Block, on the shows Glendale set. Season 4 began production in late March and has been shooting continuously since then.

(Ser Baffo/Netflix)

Tom Bernard, copresident of Sony Pictures Classics, which recently released The Father, nominated for six Oscars including best picture, said studios benefit from the spontaneity of an office environment. Problem-solving tends to take longer over Zoom. If the studio gets a call from a big, late-night show trying to book talent to promote a movie, for example, its no longer so easy to coordinate with publicists and executives.

Youve got to call about six people, Bernard said. And in the time of making all those phone calls, you probably lose at least a day before you can get an answer, whereas in the office, you can probably get it in two hours.

But some firms, such as visual effects and production company Luma, have yet to determine when theyre going back. Based in Los Angeles and Australia with 285 employees, Luma which recently did effects work on Disney+'s WandaVision is taking a gradual approach.

Were trying to take a step back and not rush into anything, said Chief Operating Officer Grady Gamble. Its one of the most important things were thinking about right now.

To be sure, some long-term changes may yet result from a year of people working from home. Some trade conferences and investor days will probably continue to take place online. People will be far less likely to take a crosstown meeting on a Friday afternoon than before. Video conferencing also sometimes makes it easier for different departments to share ideas.

COVID-era scene partner: Actress Katherine Kelly Lang shoots a scene with a mannequin stand-in on the set of The Bold and the Beautiful in August 2020.

(Sonja Flemming / CBS)

For efficiencies, post-production work including visual effects, editing and digital touch-ups will probably continue to be done remotely in some cases, said Eric Korsh, president of Queer Eye producer Scout Productions. Burbank-based Scout managed to film several series during the pandemic, including The Quest, a Disney+ revival of the ABC unscripted fantasy show, in Calistoga, Calif.

Its always nice when youre able to walk down the hall to talk to the editor, but the truth is that post is efficiently able to continue without gathering people in one building, Korsh said. I think thats probably going to stay with us.

Many people hope companies will be more receptive to flexible schedules that allow workers to split time between the office and working from home, especially for employees dealing with childcare, medical and other issues. A less stringent office culture could benefit companies that want to attract talent.

We can allow people to work elsewhere, said Sharon Bordas, president of the 20-person animation company Mindshow, based in downtown L.A. I think that will help around our talent pool.

Director Allison Liddi-Brown gives guidance as Neil Brown Jr., right, and others rehearse on the set of CBS SEAL Team.

(Sonja Flemming/CBS)

Like many filmmakers, Chu, the In the Heights director, is eagerly anticipating the day when people can safely gather again. Promoting a movie like In the Heights (which will be in theaters and on HBO Max on the same day) by having the cast and filmmakers do junket interviews over Zoom pales in comparison to having a big Hollywood premiere.

Plus, working from home is not ideal for the creative process, he said. Key breakthroughs often happen on a leisurely trip to the local Starbucks.

Its those in-between moments that creativity finds you, Chu said. When youre on Zoom, you have to be on and you have two hours to be on or you have six hours to be on. Creativity is not finding you. Youre seeking it out. You lose something when youre bound to a chair and bound to a screen.

Link:

How Hollywood is reopening amid the COVID-19 pandemic - Los Angeles Times

PGA Tour will no longer require COVID-19 testing for vaccinated golfers at tournaments, per reports – CBS Sports

April 14, 2021

A year after the PGA Tour shut down for three months because of the COVID-19 pandemic, protocol seems to be easing a bit internally. According to a memo obtained by bothGolf Digest and ESPN, the PGA Tour will no longer test golfers who have received the COVID-19 vaccine. Currently, golfers are tested (and cleared) before they are allowed on property for an event.

According to the report, golfers will not be required to test after 14 days have passed from their final vaccination shot. There have been several golfers since the sport returned last June who have tested positive and been forced to skip events. The biggest of those was probably Sergio Garcia, who did not get to play in the 2020 Masters, where he was a former champion. Scottie Scheffler, Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele all also missed time because of the virus.

"As the COVID-19 vaccine is becoming more readily available, more individuals are being vaccinated," the memo reads. "PGA Tour Health and Safety protocol requires individuals to continue testing onsite until 14 full days have passed since their second dose (Moderna & Pfizer) or 14 full days since their single dose (Johnson & Johnson). Once 14 days have passed, individuals are no longer required to take a COVID-19 test when considered 'inside the bubble' at PGA Tour, PGA Tour Champions or Korn Ferry Tour events."

The PGA Tour is not requiring golfers to vaccinate, but as commissioner Jay Monahan noted at The Players Championship last month, if they could choose that route, they would.

"I think as players become vaccinated, as our constituents become vaccinated, we're hopeful that everybody will," said Monahan. "But we will continue to provide testing for the foreseeable future, and hopefully, as we get to a high percentage of our players that have been vaccinated, we can start to pull back from the program that we know it as of today. It's hard to determine when that will be, but clearly we see light at the end of the tunnel, and ... the conversations we're having with players and with everybody in our ecosystem have been very positive. I think players are eager to get vaccinated and are certainly studying this."

To the Tour's credit, as well as other organizing bodies like the PGA of America, USGA and Augusta National, there has not been a widespread outbreak among players, caddies and essential personnel at any of the dozens of events that have taken place.

This extends beyond just players, too. The PGA Tour has teamed with the NBA, NFL, MLB and several other sports leagues in the "It's Up To You" PSA to encourage the general public to gather information about the COVID-19 vaccines as leagues begin to allow more and more fans back into their arenas, stadiums and courses.

"It is critical that all groups are educated about the COVID-19 vaccine in order to make smart and informed decisions," said Monahan. "As one of the first sports to return to the field of play last year, the PGA Tour is proud to collaborate with the Ad Council and other major professional sports to continue to unify and inspire through this important next step for our communities."

There has not been a full-capacity golf event since the sport returned to play at the beginning of June 2020, although most events have been held at some percentage of their former capacity.

Read the rest here:

PGA Tour will no longer require COVID-19 testing for vaccinated golfers at tournaments, per reports - CBS Sports

Twins SS Andrelton Simmons, who declined vaccine, out after positive COVID-19 test – ESPN

April 14, 2021

MINNEAPOLIS -- Minnesota Twins shortstop Andrelton Simmons has tested positive for the coronavirus and was placed on the COVID-19 injured list Wednesday before the team's doubleheader against the Boston Red Sox.

Simmons has said he doesn't plan to get the COVID-19 vaccine, which was made available in a single-shot dosage to the team at Target Field last Thursday.

Twins president of baseball operations Derek Falvey said Simmons was experiencing "very mild" symptoms and resting at home. The positive test result was received late Tuesday, after the Twins lost 4-2 to the Red Sox.

After the initial phase of contact tracing, the Twins determined no additional players needed to be quarantined.

Simmons was replaced on the roster by infielder JT Riddle, who was summoned from the alternate training site. Third baseman Josh Donaldson, out since the season opener with a strained hamstring, was expected back for the second game of the doubleheader.

The Twins held a meeting to remind players and staff to heed virus protocols, even though a majority of them have been vaccinated. The full immunization period isn't in effect yet.

"We're not out of the woods by any means on that front," Falvey said, adding, "Now is the time to be as vigilant as possible."

Simmons tweeted last month that he would not be getting the vaccine or advocating for it for "personal reasons and past experience," on which he declined to elaborate. He confirmed Sunday that he did not participate in the teamwide vaccination. Asked if he planned to get the shot in the future, Simmons said he didn't know.

"We want to continue to educate people in the environment. This is real. This is something that can enter. We know that," Falvey said. "Sometimes no one really knows exactly how it can come at different times. We know that from looking not just across our sport, but across all sports and across the country and the world. Our view of that is constantly reminding people of why we think it's a good idea to get vaccinated. Our docs have recommended that, and so we continue to provide them as resources to players, to learn as much as they can about this."

Original post:

Twins SS Andrelton Simmons, who declined vaccine, out after positive COVID-19 test - ESPN

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