Twin sisters swinging for success on Olympic badminton court: Racing Toward Paris
This is the first in our weeklong series “Racing Toward Paris,” where we take a closer look at Team USA athletes and their sports ahead of the Paris Olympics.
When twins Annie and Kerry Xu were around 8 years old their parents gave them a choice: continue practicing ice skating, which they were excelling at, or select another sport that they’d like even more.
Their pick? Badminton.
“I can’t remember where exactly it was because we were eight, but I just remember the ambiance was pretty nice and as an 8 year old, I was like ‘this place was so cool. I feel I would like this sport just because of the place we were in,’” Kerry Xu told Straight Arrow News.
And once they picked up that badminton racquet, Kerry said, “We really liked it, so there was no looking back.”
Now, it’s time to look ahead as the 24-year-old twin sisters from San Jose, California embark on their first Olympic Games.
As teens, they competed in junior and national tournaments where they would hear from their coaches they had what it took to one day make the Olympics. But the sisters took their time, making sure they were fully prepared for the journey ahead.
They got jobs to fund their goal and earned an education, graduating from UC Berkeley while putting athletics somewhat on hold until it was time to focus on their Olympic dreams.
“In 2022, after we had worked for a year and saved up a little bit of money and with our parents’ support, we decided to take that leap of faith and just go for it because we didn’t want to have any regrets later in the life,” Annie Xu said.
After qualifying for their first Olympic Games, the twins felt a mix of immense joy and relief.
They are going into the Olympics with an underdog mentality, leaving unnecessary pressure at the door while being ready to expect the unexpected. They said their top priority is to have fun.
The sisters will have their family cheering them on in the stands.
“That will inspire us to be fearless on the court and really go for it,” Annie said.
Annie and Kerry said they used to watch badminton players on their TV growing up, idols who inspired them, but now they are the ones who will be inspiring the next generation.
“I think it would mean a lot to us, just because when we were growing up, yes, we had idols but most of them were from a different country where badminton was more supported,” Annie said. “So for young girls in the states and other countries to look at two badminton players from the United States who really made it and inspire them to take a journey similar to ours would mean the world to us.”
“It would be really cool if there were young girls who look at us and then make that Olympic dream theirs and have that to strive for growing up,” Kerry said. “It would be heartwarming for us.”
Presidential race shaken up as Biden ends 2024 campaign, endorses Harris
President Joe Biden exited the 2024 presidential race, endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris and shaking up the Democratic Party only weeks before the convention. And we begin our closer look at Team USA as the Paris Olympic games are just days away. These stories and more highlight The Morning Rundown for Monday, July 22, 2024.
President Biden ends 2024 campaign, endorses Vice President Harris
He also immediately endorsed his vice president, Kamala Harris, to take his place on the ballot.
No major presidential candidate has ever dropped out of the race this close to election day, or after all the primaries had already ended. President Biden posted on X, saying “it is in the best interest of the party and the country” for him to stand down and focus solely on finishing the remainder of his first and only term.
There’d been intense pressure leading up to Sunday’s decision, with dozens of democratic lawmakers and donors asking the president to step aside over concerns he would lose the election.
Right now, President Biden is recovering from COVID-19, but he’s expected to address the nation publicly over his decision to drop out of the race.
Prominent names from both sides of aisle react to Biden’s announcement
There was immediate reaction to President Biden dropping out of the 2024 race from prominent people in the Democratic Party, including former President Barack Obama, the Clintons and major labor organizations. There was also reaction from the Republican side of the aisle — House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is calling for President Biden to resign now.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi both supported Biden’s decision, calling it a difficult one to make, but the right one.
In a joint statement former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton both supported Biden’s decision to drop out and endorsed Vice President Harris.
Former President Obama published a statement to social media following Biden’s announcement, touting Biden’s successes in his long political career, including his time as Obama’s VP. Obama also said the Democratic Party is now entering “uncharted waters.”
On the Republican side, House Speaker Johnson said, “If Biden isn’t fit to run for president, he’s not fit to serve as one.” The Republican nominee, former President Donald Trump, also canceled a presidential debate that was scheduled for October amid uncertainty on who will be the Democratic nominee.
So, what is next for the Democratic Party? It’ll probably be a busy week of further endorsements as questions swirl around who the vice president on the Democratic ticket would be if Harris is the presidential candidate.
After a tumultuous few weeks since debate night, the party as a whole seems reenergized. Reports show Democrats have raised nearly $50 million since Biden’s announcement.
While a lot of attention turns to Kamala Harris in the coming days, it won’t be until the Democratic National Convention in August that the party secures its nominee to take on former President Trump in November.
Secret Service director to testify on Trump assassination attempt
Lawmakers are expected to press the head of the Secret Service at a congressional hearing Monday, July 22, after the assassination attempt of former President Trump on July 13. Director Kimberly Cheatle will be asked how the Secret Service’s biggest failure in four decades happened under her watch.
Cheatle released a statement on Sunday, July 21, in support of independent reviews of the agency’s steps taken that day.
The Secret Service has acknowledged there have been times it did not provide full federal resources to Trump’s campaign, though it did not deny any requests at the Pennsylvania rally where the shooting occurred.
This comes as critics are questioning the agency’s preparations and actions, and calls for the director to step down are growing ahead of her testimony.
Israel strikes Yemen following deadly Houthi attack in Tel Aviv
Since the Israel-Hamas War began in October, the Iran-backed group has been launching strikes on Israel from Yemen. The strike on Saturday, July 20, is the first time Israel is known to have responded to a Houthi attack — hitting a critical port that Israel says is where the Houthis receive their weapons from Iran.
More flights canceled as Delta struggles after tech outage
Delta Air Lines is struggling to get back to normal after last week’s global cyber software outage. The company canceled more than a thousand flights Sunday, July 21, alone. The airline already had to cancel 3,500 since the Friday, July 19, CrowdStrike outage.
Twins Annie & Kerry Xu swinging for success on badminton court in Paris
The summer Olympics will begin on July 26, hosted in Paris, France. But with nearly 600 athletes from the U.S. competing, it’s a tall order to know every single one. So, this week, SAN will highlight a few of them and get to know them and their sport a little better.
Monday, July 22, we have the story of twin sisters who are looking to make a “racket” on the badminton court.
When twins Annie and Kerry Xu were around eight years old, their parents gave them a choice: continue practicing ice skating — which they were excelling at — or select another sport, one they think they would like even more.
Their pick? Badminton.
“I can’t remember where exactly it was because we were eight, but I just remember the ambiance was pretty nice and as I, an 8 year old, I was like this place was so cool I feel I would like this sport just because of the place we were in,” Kerry Xu said.
Now it’s time to look ahead, as the twin sisters from San Jose, California embark on their first Olympic games.
As teens, they competed in junior and national tournaments, where they would hear from their coaches they had what it took to one day make the Olympics.
But the sisters took their time, making sure they were fully prepared for the journey ahead, getting jobs to fund their goal and getting an education — graduating from UC Berkeley while putting athletics somewhat on hold until it was time to focus on their Olympic dreams.
“In 2022, after we had worked for a year and saved up a little bit of money and with our parents’ support, we decided to take that leap of faith and just go for it because we didn’t want to have any regrets later in life,” Annie Xu said.
The 24-year-old twins qualifying for their first Olympic games — feeling a mix of immense joy and relief. They’re going in with an underdog mentality, leaving unnecessary pressure at the door, ready to expect the unexpected.
Their top priority going into the games? To have fun. And they will do so with the support of their family.
“The people standing behind us our parents are our number one supporter … all going to Paris will be watching in the stands … people watching in your journey — that will inspire to be fearless on court and really go for it,” Kerry Xu said.
Annie and Kerry say they used to watch badminton players on their TV growing up; idols that inspired them to go for their dreams.
Now, these talented sisters will be the ones who’ll be inspiring the next generation of badminton players.
“I think it would mean a lot to us, just because when we were growing up, yes we had idols but most of them were from a different country where badminton was more supported so for young girls in the states and other countries to look at two badminton players form the states who really made it and inspire them to take a journey would mean the world to us,” Annie Xu said.
“It would be real cool if there were young girls who look at us and then make that Olympic dream theirs and have that to strive for growing it,” Kerry Xu said. “It would be heartwarming for us.”
Mayor of Paris takes dip in Seine River to show it’s safe for Olympians
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo delivered on a long-awaited promise on Wednesday, July 17, nine days before the Olympic Games kick off. Hidalgo took a much-anticipated swim in the long-polluted Seine River in an effort to prove that the water is clean enough for the upcoming Olympic swimming competitions that will take place in the waterway.
“It’s amazing, you know, it was a dream for us,” Hidalgo said. “We worked a lot and very hard for that. It is, not just be here today and swim together, it’s a very lucky and happy day. It’s also for the planet, you know, and for the river and the ocean.”
Swimming in the Seine River had been banned since 1923 due to health concerns related to pollution in the river. However, since 2015, $1.5 billion has been spent by organizers in an effort to prepare the river for the Olympic Games. The plan involved constructing a gigantic underground water storage basin, sewer renovations and upgrades to water treatment plants.
Despite the efforts, daily water tests in early June revealed that unsafe of E. coli existed within the river. However, more recent findings have shown improvement to the water quality.
Hidalgo’s swim was previously planned for June, but snap elections in France postponed her dive into the Seine River. On the initial date of her expected swim, some social media users reportedly threatened to defecate upstream into the river in protest of the Olympic Games.
More serious threats have been leveled as well. French authorities said that they arrested an 18-year-old suspected Neo-Nazi for allegedly plotting an attack at the Olympic Games. The man reportedly had followers on Telegram prepared for violence after he threatened a Paris-based drag queen who participated in the Olympic torch rally.
Amid the heightened security concerns, French soldiers have arrived in Paris to provide extra security. A newly built military camp is located for operations across the city and can hold up to 4,500 soldiers.
The Olympic Games are set to begin Friday, July 26.
Paris busing out thousands of homeless people ahead of Olympic Games
French President Emmanuel Macron has promised the 2024 Olympic Games will showcase the splendor of Paris. However, to fulfill that promise, the French government reportedly wants to keep Paris’ homeless problem out of view. The government is allegedly considering bussing thousands of homeless migrants out of the city and into other towns ahead of the Olympic Games on July 26.
The New York Times reported that around 5,000 people have been evicted under the program over the past year.
Macron’s administration said that the program is voluntary and has denied that the effort is connected to the Olympics. Paris is currently dealing with an emergency housing shortage and the city’s homeless population sits at 100,000 people, which is around half of the homeless population in France.
However, a Paris government official seemed to contradict Macron’s assertion that the evictions are not related to the upcoming 2024 Games. In an email to a French newspaper, the official said the goal is to “identify people on the street in sites near Olympic venues and remove them before the Games.”
Beginning last year, police raids on homeless encampments and abandoned building increased.
The city maintains that it relocates the homeless and provides them with housing in other cities. However, many migrants told The New York Times that they were lured into the program with the promise of housing and social services only to discover that the process could lead to deportation.
Others interviewed by the Times said that they never knew the program was voluntary given that they were surrounded by police with the offer to relocate.
After arriving in their new cities, relocated individuals live in shelters temporarily and are screened for asylum. Several, however, have instead received deportation orders. Those eligible can receive long-term housing but around 60% of people are denied.
The chance of deportation has lawyers advising people not to get on the buses and instead to take their chances on the streets.
Biden issues warning after immunity ruling as Trump looks to overturn conviction
Reaction from President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump after the Supreme Court’s historic ruling on presidential immunity. And Hurricane Beryl strengthens to a Category 5 as it approaches Jamaica. These stories and more highlight The Morning Rundown for Tuesday, July 2, 2024
Biden issues warning after SCOTUS ruling as Trump looks to overturn conviction
In a landmark 6-3 vote along ideological lines the Supreme Court justices ruled Monday, July 1, that former President Donald Trump is entitled to immunity for official acts he took while in office. The effects of the court’s decision will be seen in the coming days.
The high court’s ruling gave Trump some immunity from being criminally prosecuted on charges of attempting to overturn the 2020 election, however, it did not totally dismiss Special Counsel Jack Smith’s case. The former president is reportedly looking to have his New York trial conviction overturned based on the Supreme Court’s decision.
According to Trump’s legal team, the Manhattan jury’s verdict that found him guilty of falsifying business records should be overturned because the jurors saw evidence during trial that they now consider to be protected. Trump’s lawyers are seeking a delay in Trump’s sentencing so they can have more time to make their case. Trump’s sentencing is currently scheduled for July 11.
In the Supreme Court’s opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote, “The president is not above the law. But … the president may not be prosecuted for exercising his core constitutional powers.”
After that decision came down, Trump posted on his social media platform Truth Social saying, “Big win for our Constitution and democracy. Proud to be an American.”
BIG WIN FOR OUR CONSTITUTION AND DEMOCRACY. PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN!
— Donald J. Trump Posts From His Truth Social (@TrumpDailyPosts) July 1, 2024
Meanwhile, President Joe Biden decided the historic ruling warranted a primetime address. In it, he warned of what he called a “dangerous precedent.”
Biden calling the ruling a, “disservice to the people of this nation,” saying the decision means there are “virtually no limits on what a president can do.”
“This nation was founded on the principle that there are no kings in America,” the president said. “Each of us is equal before the law. No one, no one is above the law, not even the President of the United States. [With] today’s Supreme Court decision on presidential immunity, that fundamentally changed for all practical purposes.”
Biden repeated Justice Sonia Sotomayer’s dissent, saying the ruling makes the president “now a king above the law.”
In response, Trump posted that the primetime address was just meant to deflect from Biden’s “horrible campaign performance.”
Steve Bannon begins 4-month prison sentence for contempt of Congress
“I’m proud to go to prison,” he said in a press conference before turning himself over to authorities. “I am proud of going to prison today.”
The longtime Trump ally was convicted of contempt for defying a congressional subpoena from the committee that probed the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol attack.
“If this is what it takes to stand up to tyranny, if that’s what it takes to stand up to the [Attorney General Merrick] Garland corrupt criminal DOJ, if this is what it takes to stand up to Nancy Pelosi, if this is what it takes to stand up to Joe Biden, I’m proud to do it,” Bannon said. “I was on a destroyer for four years in the Navy. I am prepared for whatever prison has, right? Our prisons are run very well. The Bureau of Prisons does a great job. I’m prepared to do this, whatever task I do, I’m totally prepared mentally, physically, everything, for prison.”
In an interview Monday, former President Trump blamed President Biden for what he claims is a “weaponization” of the justice system, saying Biden is “going to pay a big price” for it. Trump’s campaign told ABC News Trump’s statement meant Biden will lose the election come November.
Iran, Syria, North Korea sued in connection with Oct. 7 Israel attack
More than 100 victims and families of victims of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel are suing Iran, Syria and North Korea. They said the countries provided the terrorist organization the money, weapons and instruction to carry out the deadly attack.
📢 BREAKING: ADL filed a federal lawsuit today against Iran, Syria and North Korea for providing material support to Hamas to commit atrocities in Israel on Oct 7, 2023. These state sponsors of terror must be held accountable. 🧵https://t.co/hfIcxLKyz5pic.twitter.com/CUdQWDhQJ5
The lawsuit, which was filed in a New York court, seeks at least $4 billion in damages for the attack. The suit was filed by the Anti-Defamation League — a Jewish advocacy organization — and is the largest case against foreign countries in connection with the attack.
This comes as the Israeli army ordered a mass evacuation of Palestinians from much of the southern Gaza city Khan Younis on Monday, July 1, signaling troops are likely to launch a new ground assault into the strip’s second-largest city.
The call to move toward the Al Mawasi Humanitarian Zone does not apply to the patients in the European Hospital or the medical staff working there.
There is no intention to evacuate the European Hospital in the Khan Yunis area. https://t.co/MditW1DJ9g
Hurricane Beryl now a Category 5 storm, heads for Jamaica
Hurricane Beryl is now a Category 5 storm. This is the earliest on record that a hurricane in the Atlantic has reached the highest category there is, with wind speeds above 160 miles per hour.
— NOAA Aircraft Operations Center (@NOAA_HurrHunter) July 1, 2024
It made landfall on the Caribbean’s Windward Islands on Monday as a Category 4 storm. Many are still without power or water and at least one death has been reported.
Beryl is only the second Category 5 Atlantic storm to be recorded in July.
Biden student loan repayment plan allowed to proceed
In a small victory for the Biden administration, a federal appeals court will allow the Department of Education to move forward with lowering millions of student loan borrowers’ monthly payments in July. The move comes as the administration faces two legal battles over the repayment plan known as SAVE, which launched in 2023.
A federal judge in Kansas issued an injunction blocking the plan from taking effect on July 1. The Department of Justice quickly appealed.
New: The 10th Circuit has GRANTED @usedgov's request to stay the Kansas court's decision to block parts of the SAVE plan. Unclear yet what this will look like for borrowers (ED placed 3M of them on forbearance last week in light of the rulings). pic.twitter.com/XO9EsoQgls
Under SAVE, many borrowers will pay only 5% of their discretionary income toward their debt every month, and anyone making $32,800 dollars or less will have no monthly payment.
On the other income-driven repayment plans, borrowers pay at least 10% of their discretionary income.
After twice breaking the U.S. record for under-18 runners at the Olympic trials, it was confirmed Monday, July 1, Wilson will be joining Team USA at the Paris summer games later this month.
Teenaged phenom Quincy Wilson, 16, is headed to Paris as part of the U.S. men's 4×400 Olympic relay squad, his coach confirmed on Monday.
He's the youngest American male track athlete to appear at an Olympics 👏
Wilson will be part of the team that runs the 4x400m relay, making him the youngest American male track athlete to appear at an Olympics. Wilson’s team will formally be announced next week.
Supreme Court to issue ruling on Trump’s immunity claim
The Supreme Court will deliver its long-awaited ruling on whether former President Donald Trump is immune from being prosecuted. And after his debate performance last week, President Joe Biden’s future as the Democratic nominee remains a topic of discussion within his party. These stories and more highlight The Morning Rundown for Monday, July 1, 2024.
Supreme Court to issue ruling on Trump’s immunity claim
There will be a ruling on whether former President Donald Trump has immunity from criminal prosecution today, Monday, July 1. That is one of the opinions left as the Supreme Court wraps up its current term, extending its rulings into July.
Chief Justice John Roberts announced on Friday, June 28, the highly anticipated decision concerning the former president and all remaining opinions will come down starting at 10 a.m. EST Monday.
The court will decide if the former president is immune from being prosecuted in the federal election interference case where he’s accused of conspiring to obstruct the 2020 presidential election. Trump has argued he should be immune from any official acts taken while in office, saying future presidents would not be able to function without immunity.
Without Presidential Immunity, a President of the United States literally could not function! It should be a STRONG IMMUNITY, where proper decisions can be made, where our Country can be POWERFUL and THRIVE, and where Opponents cannot hold up and extort a Future President for… pic.twitter.com/QurlpNbBoK
— Donald J. Trump Posts From His Truth Social (@TrumpDailyPosts) June 30, 2024
A federal appeals court rejected Trump’s claim in February. The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case a few weeks later. During arguments in April, the court focused in on deciding which acts are private and which are considered part of the role of president.
In a decision on Friday, the Supreme Court limited obstruction charges that have been brought against Jan. 6 rioters. Former President Trump is also charged with obstruction in this federal case.
The justices will also issue a ruling on when it comes to states passing laws to regulate how social media companies moderate content on their platforms.
Biden’s future as candidate being discussed after debate performance
The fallout from last week’s presidential debate continued to make headlines over the weekend, with President Joe Biden’s future as a candidate being questioned following his debate performance. NBC News released a report on Saturday, June 29, that said the Biden family would discuss the future of the president’s reelection campaign during a previously planned weekend family gathering at Camp David.
Biden’s campaign said the report was false, calling it “100% media-fabricated” and said Biden will be the Democratic nominee.
Biden advisers told CNN the president’s family at Camp David, including the first lady and son Hunter, encouraged him to stay in the race.
Those advisers said there were talks about whether the aides who helped prepare the president should be fired, after some Democrats blamed Biden’s performance on his prep for the event.
Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., said it was a case of “preparation overload” and the president should continue to run on his record.
Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., meanwhile, has admitted there are ongoing serious conversations in the party following the debate.
“I mean, this is what a real political party looks like, and this is what a real political party does,” Raskin told ABC News. “Obviously, there was a big problem with Joe Biden’s debate performance, and there is also just a tremendous reservoir of love for Joe Biden in our party. So, this makes it a difficult situation for everybody, but there are very honest and serious and rigorous conversations happening at every level of our party, because it is a political party, and we have differences in point of view.”
Raskin said whatever Biden decides, the Democratic party will be unified.
Biden himself has spoken out about his debate performance. At a rally in North Carolina on Friday, June 28, he said he doesn’t debate as well as he used to but knows how to get the job done. And then he told supporters during a campaign fundraiser in New Jersey over the weekend, “I understand the concern after the debate. I get it. I didn’t have a great night, but I’m going to be fighting harder.”
DOJ offers Boeing plea deal in connection with 2 deadly plane crashes
The Justice Department is giving Boeing the chance to avoid trial in connection with two 737 Max crashes that left a total of nearly 350 people dead. The DOJ has offered Boeing a deal that would include three years’ probation, a fine and a corporate monitor to ensure safety compliance in exchange for a guilty plea to criminal charges.
Families of the victims of two fatal Boeing crashes are tonight furious at the prospect of a "plea deal", between the U-S Justice Department and the aviation giant. #9Newspic.twitter.com/yYG6cPTdcM
The potential plea deal comes after repeated safety failures at Boeing that have resulted in multiple federal investigations. The DOJ said in June the safety failures were a breach of the terms of a 2021 agreement in which the company avoided criminal charges for two fatal crashes.
If Boeing agrees to plead guilty, a judge will have to sign off on the deal.
The lawyer who represents 15 families of those killed in the plane crashes called this a “sweetheart deal” and said they will object to it.
U.S. military bases in Europe on alert amid possible terror threat
— Stars and Stripes (@starsandstripes) July 1, 2024
According to the Army, Charlie “applies when an incident occurs or intelligence is received indicating some form of terrorist action or targeting against personnel or facilities is likely.”
One U.S. Official told Fox News that intelligence points to an attack on U.S. bases over the next week or so.
Hurricane Beryl barrels through Caribbean
Hurricane Beryl is now a major Category 3 storm after it picked up power and speed on Sunday, June 30, over the Caribbean. It was previously a Category 4 hurricane, becoming the earlier Cat 4 in the Atlantic on record.
The storm is expected to make landfall in the Windward Islands Monday, July 1, morning. The hurricane’s eye is forecast to track just south of Barbados with 130 mph winds, bringing up to six inches of rain.
And while it’s too soon to know for sure — Beryl, or remnants of the storm, could reach southern Texas by the weekend, bringing heavy rain to the area.
Biles returned to competitive gymnastics last year after withdrawing from the team final and individual all-around at the 2020 Olympics. Biles said she was suffering from the “twisties” — a mental block that causes gymnasts to lose their body position — and taking an extended break to prioritize her mental health.
At 27 years old, the four-time Olympic gold medalist who’s also the most decorated gymnast ever, will be the oldest female American gymnast to compete at the Olympics in 72 years.
The good and bad of AI voice generation in sports, entertainment, elections
People can expect legendary performances at the 2024 Olympics — and not just from the athletes. Play-by-play announcer Al Michaels, who has helped voice nearly a dozen Super Bowls, is contributing a clone of his voice to assist with NBC’s coverage.
NBC is the latest entity to introduce audience to AI voice technology, and many are skeptical about it. Michaels himself said the proposal was “a little bit frightening,” but changed his tune when he heard his copy “speak.”
The network said there will be a team of human editors who will review any AI content before it is released.
But what happens when it’s a musician getting copied without their permission? Artificial intelligence has been used to bring back the vocals of dead artists.
Singer Sheryl Crow recently spoke out about this practice, criticizing Drake for using AI to recreate the voices of Kendrick Lamar and late rapper Tupac in his song “Taylor Made” released in April. The diss track was ultimately pulled after Tupac’s estate threatened to sue.
The debate continues elsewhere in the entertainment industry. Major record companies are now suing music generation companies, accusing them of using copyrighted sounds and songs to train their AI services.
The controversy over AI has also spread into politics, where experts warn that voice generation could have a major impact on the 2024 presidential election. In January, many voters in New Hampshire received a robocall featuring the fake voice of Joe Biden telling them not to vote in the state’s primary.
There are tools people can use to help make sense of the different voices, however, much like the technology, they are still evolving.
The best bet may be to just listen closely. Audio recordings created by a live person tend to sound more natural and varied, compared to AI-generated voices that are more likely to be very clear.
Michael Phelps wants dopers banned ahead of Paris Olympics
The Paris Olympics are a month away and while much of the focus is on sewage in the River Seine, Congress is talking about doping. The House Energy and Commerce Committee held a hearing on what members contend are failures of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
To shine a light on the conversation, lawmakers brought Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps.
“I witnessed firsthand the pervasive uncertainty and the suspicions surrounding doping,” the 23-time gold medalist said. “The hardest part was seeing athletes achieve seemingly impossible feats, knowing the immense effort and sacrifices required to reach these heights cleanly.”
Members on both sides of the aisle accused WADA of unevenly applying its rules to athletes from different countries.
Lawmakers pointed to an incident involving swimmers from China at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.
Before the Games, 23 Chinese swimmers tested positive for a banned substance but 13 of them ultimately competed in the Olympics.
According to Chinese officials, the athletes tested positive “after inadvertently being exposed to the substance through food/environment contamination as a result of TMZ detected in the kitchen” of their hotel.
WADA accepted the explanation from officials, and 11 of those athletes are scheduled to compete again in Paris.
“How many more Olympic athletes have to lose out on winning medals and proudly singing their country’s national anthem before the World Anti-Doping Agency decides to enforce these rules uniformly,” Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., said.
WADA was invited to testify but did not show.
“It’s really outrageous that WADA does not have the courage or integrity to show up and defend itself here tonight. WADA should be protecting clean sport and not hiding from accountability,” Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., said.
“Some of [the swimmers] were tested on two or even three occasions on consecutive days,” WADA stated in a six-page document. “For several swimmers, the results varied from negative to positive within a few hours, which is not compatible with a doping scenario of deliberate ingestion nor with micro-dosing.”
The CEO of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency cast doubt on that explanation.
“TMZ is a controlled prescription medication, it’s prohibited all the time,” U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart said. “The default sanction is four years. It doesn’t magically appear, fairy dust in a kitchen.”
Tygart suggested assigning an independent prosecutor who can look at the evidence and athlete’s individual files.
As for Phelps, the athlete who dedicated his life to reaching greatness, he wants rule breakers banned.
“If somebody does test positive, I would like to see a lifetime ban,” Phelps said. “If somebody is going out of their way to single handedly cheat, go, lifetime ban.”
Paris 2024: Behind the Olympic spectacle lies a history of corruption
Every four years, billions of people across the globe tune into the Summer Olympics. The 2024 Games are set to be a spectacle, descending on Paris for the first time in 100 years.
But sometimes, scoring the biggest sporting event on the planet is rife with corruption. And the scandals don’t stop after the winning bid is announced.
Olympic pride and bragging rights
In the United States, polls show the number of people who are extremely proud to be an American is at record lows. But through the Olympics, that sentiment changes. During the Tokyo Games in 2021, 63% of Americans said they had a “very positive” reaction to seeing the American flag.
The reach goes beyond the traditional sports fan. Yes, the Olympics features the world championships in 300 different events, but moments are what make the games memorable.
The legends of athletes like Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps and Simone Biles are born during those two weeks and those legends will live on.
The Olympics also puts the spotlight on the host city and country. The world’s media focuses its cameras on the culture and history of nations that viewers may never have the opportunity to visit.
It’s the host city’s time to shine on a global stage. Paris is seizing that chance with a tradition-breaking opening ceremony. Instead of the pomp and circumstance in a world-class arena, Paris is opting for a parade of nations along the city’s famed Seine River.
The Olympics is a biennial wonder that attracts millions of in-person spectators and many more through broadcast. But behind the scenes, this event can be rife with bribes and other shady deals.
To understand Olympic corruption, you have to go back to its inception. Despite the tradition of swearing an oath to Zeus to play fair, the competition was founded on cheating.
As Greek mythology goes, Pelops won his bride’s hand by sabotaging the chariot of her father King Oenomaus before a race. The king died in the race and Pelops founded the Games to commemorate his victory.
The remnants of the ancient Games’ history with cheating are still visible today in Olympia, Greece. Pedestals that once supported bronze statues of Zeus can be found on the pathway to the entrance of the ancient stadium.
The Zanes, as they were called, were paid for by fines imposed on cheating Olympic athletes. The pedestals had the names of the cheaters inscribed, shaming them and warning other athletes to play fair. But though centuries have passed, some still need to be warned.
Athletes cheating with performance-enhancing drugs, also known as doping, is a very real issue in the Olympics. But that specific type of controversy deserves its own deep dive.
Bid rigging
Olympic corruption can start decades before the cauldron is lit at the opening ceremony. It’s called bid rigging and the Olympic version was a poorly kept secret before Salt Lake City’s scandal busted it wide open.
Salt Lake City tried and failed to secure the Olympics four times before winning the 2002 Winter Games. After the city’s fourth loss, to Nagano, Japan, for the 1998 Winter Games, the Salt Lake organizing committee changed its strategy. Tired of losing, officials took a page from Nagano’s book after learning Japanese officials spent as much as $14 million, or $32 million in today’s dollars, to land the Games.
Nagano, at the time a little-known Japanese city, reportedly gave International Olympic Committee (IOC) officials the five-star treatment during the bidding process. Nagano’s bid committee hosted members in fancy hotels in Tokyo, Nagano and Kyoto. They also entertained them with geishas and helicopter rides. To cover up any corruption, they burned 10 large boxes of documents to incinerate the paper trail.
When there’s money, there’s corruption.
Charlie Battle, Olympic bid consultant
“The Salt Lake City people realize that you had to keep a file on each IOC voting member,” Olympic historian David Wallechinsky told Straight Arrow News. “And then, you do whatever you could to get their vote.”
Wallechinsky fell in love with the Olympics as a kid when his father took him to the 1960 Rome Games. He became so intrigued with the event that he wrote “The Complete Book of the Olympics” and is one of the founding members of the International Society of Olympic Historians.
Wallechinsky said the way Salt Lake City secured the Games was some of the most overt bid rigging in history.
“There was an IOC member from Togo,” he said. “Togo doesn’t compete in the Winter Olympics. That didn’t matter, because the guy still voted. So they kept flying him out to Salt Lake City. Well, that wasn’t good enough, so they had to include a stopover in Paris so his wife could go shopping on the bid committee’s pocketbook. The whole thing was so ridiculous. But they got the Games and that was all they cared about.”
After investigators found out about the Salt Lake City scheme, the IOC expelled 10 members. The U.S. Department of Justice also brought bribery and fraud charges against the president and vice president of the Salt Lake City bid committee. Both officials resigned years before the games came to town. Those charges were dropped after the successful 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.
The crackdown didn’t end allegations of bid rigging. In 2021, years after the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games, Brazilian Olympic Committee President Carlos Arthur Nuzman was sentenced to 30 years in jail for crimes connected to buying votes to secure the Olympics. However, Nuzman is still free after a Brazilian federal court ruled the original judge didn’t have the legal competence to rule in the case.
How to get the Olympics
While the honor of hosting an Olympics has driven some to risk jail time, scoring the global event isn’t always a corrupt process.
“Growing up as a child, I loved to watch the Olympics,” said Charlie Battle, an instrumental member of the team that brought the Olympics to Atlanta in 1996. “I believed in it. I bought into the whole [idea of] bringing the world together through sport.”
Before Battle got involved with Atlanta’s Olympic bid, he was a municipal finance attorney in the city. He said when they started the bidding process, Atlanta was a very different city than it is today.
“We were just in the ’80s, beginning to get international plane service,” he recalled. “But we call ourselves the world’s next great city.”
“Truth be known, when we started this, people wondered if we were going to have blackjack because they got us confused with Atlantic City, New Jersey,” he added.
Before U.S. city organizers can pitch to the IOC, they need to win over the national committee. After Atlanta beat out San Francisco, Nashville and Minneapolis for the U.S. bid, the committee needed to raise money to challenge other nations for the right to host.
“The government doesn’t support the Olympics in this country,” Battle said. “There are a lot of constitutional provisions that prevent cities and counties from pledging money.”
“We couldn’t start building our stadium until we had a TV contract in hand,” Battle continued. “That was a bankable contract. And then when we won the U.S. designation, we were able to get some corporate support.”
Atlanta-based beverage behemoth Coca-Cola put up, at least, tens of millions of dollars to bring the games to their home turf, though they’d been a major Olympic sponsor for years. For the most part, the Atlanta Games was a privately-funded affair.
But selling sponsorships was just a part of the process. Battle said they also had to sell the IOC on Atlanta’s event-hosting prowess.
“There were 88 international members,” he explained. “We had to meet them, try to get them to come to Atlanta, go to see them. And basically, I ended up just on the road for the next couple of years.”
There wasn’t any bribery involved in bringing the Olympics to Atlanta. As far as Battle was concerned, all they needed was southern charm.
“That’s why I went on the road so much to go visit people, visit them in their homes, get to know their families, try to get them to come to Atlanta, show them that we’ve got the people they can trust,” he said. “It’s a marketing deal in the end, but from our perspective, making friends was the key.”
In 1990, the IOC officially awarded the games to Atlanta. At the time, the Atlantic Journal wrote, “Battle’s personal skills at lobbying IOC members were a key to Atlanta’s win.”
Six years later, Atlanta was celebrating a successful start of the games when a bomb detonated at Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park, killing one woman and injuring more than 100 others.
Security guard Richard Jewell was initially hailed as a hero for discovering the suspicious backpack and moving Olympic fans out of harm’s way, limiting the bomb’s destruction.
Within days, Jewell was wrongfully targeted as the prime suspect. It took years to catch the real bomber, Eric Rudolph, whom police arrested in 2003. Clint Eastwood directed a film focused on Jewell’s part of the story in the 2019 film, “Richard Jewell.”
Outside the tragedy and some problems with heat and traffic, the ’96 Olympics were mostly seen as a success. Despite that success, in 2013, when the U.S. Olympic Committee asked cities to put names in the ring for the 2024 Games, former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, who co-led the ’96 bid, said they shouldn’t make another push.
“I don’t feel like going through it again, and I don’t imagine anyone from 1996 will,” Young told Atlanta Magazine at the time. “It’s a 10-year commitment.”
Still, Young said hosting the Olympics is good for any city, and Battle agreed that Atlanta benefited greatly from the Games.
“There are always people who say, ‘Well, we shouldn’t spend this money, we ought to spend it on something else,’ and there’s no doubt about that,” Young said. “We should, but that isn’t the way the world works. We wouldn’t have had this money. They weren’t going to raise to revitalize [the city or] something else or help build housing, or this, that and the other.”
The winning bid had a lasting effect on the city, specifically on Atlanta’s downtown.
“We built a downtown park in Atlanta called Centennial Olympic Park, which was on nobody’s radar at the time we started, but ended up being, really, the best legacy of our games,” Battle said.
In the three decades that followed the Atlanta Games, the city’s population doubled. Hosting the Olympics helped solidify Atlanta as a premier sporting event destination. Since 1996, it has hosted two Super Bowls, multiple NCAA Final Fours and the College Football National Championship.
The pitfalls of hosting
Not every Olympic host city secures a symbolic gold medal. One of the biggest pitfalls is the budget, which tends to be more aspirational than pegged in reality.
From 1960 to 2016, the Summer Games went over budget by an average of 213%, according to an analysis from the University of Oxford. The 2008 Beijing Olympics only went over budget by 2%, but the city had a significantly higher budget than the average host city. Meanwhile, the 1976 Montreal Games exceeded its budget by 720%.
For the Winter Olympics, the average cost overrun is 142%. The 1980 Lake Placid games went 324% over budget.
Overages can wreck a hosting legacy. There’s no place more “Olympic” than Greece, but the country was in poor shape to handle its most recent hosting duties.
“The only reason Greece was able to put on the Games was the EU, but they borrowed too much money and went into financial [trouble] because they built all kinds of monuments that they didn’t need,” said Battle, who continued consulting on bids following the success of the Atlanta Games.
While some cities like Atlanta reap the benefits of hosting the Olympics, abandoned state-of-the-art venues often become an eyesore in others.
“They build way too much stuff and they build stuff they don’t need and they waste a lot of money,” Battle said.
Atlanta transformed its Olympic track-and-field stadium into Turner Field shortly after the Olympics. The facility became the home of the MLB’s Atlanta Braves for two decades.
Because issues like budget and abandoned facilities continue to come up with each event, the IOC is taking steps to stop it from being a regular part of future Olympic stories.
“What the IOC has done is they’ve introduced a system where you have to — in advance, before you’re even allowed to bid — meet a certain criteria of where you’re going to get the money; what are the venues that are going to be built; the environmental aspects; sustainability,” Wallechinsky told SAN.
Post-bid corruption
For controversy-laden Olympics, the opportunity for bribery doesn’t stop after a city has been named as the host.
The 2014 Games in Sochi, Russia, cost an estimated $55 billion. With all of that money to spend, contracts to support hosting the Games were highly coveted.
A major Sochi beneficiary was Arkady Rotenberg, who Bloomberg described as “the boyhood friend and former judo partner of black-belt President Vladimir Putin.” The publication counted at least 21 contracts awarded to Rotenberg worth more than $7 billion, which totals more than some entire Olympic budgets.
The contracts ranged from a share of the transportation system linking Sochi to ski resorts to a highway along the Black Sea and a $387 million media center.
After the Sochi Games, Putin also quietly handed out medals to his billionaire friends who invested in the Games.
“There were bribes: TV rights bribes, all sorts of bribes, which sponsor would get the rights to this or that,” Wallechinsky said of the Tokyo bribery scandal.
Advertising giant Dentsu, five other companies and seven individuals are charged with colluding in assigning contracts for the Tokyo Games. Organizers also faced allegations that they may have secured the Games in a less-than-honest fashion. But as the world prepares for the next summer spectacle, the most recent is still playing out in Japanese courts.
Paris is in the thick of preparing to host the games.But in October of last year, officials raided the office of the Paris Olympic Committee. A source told Reuters at the time that the raid was part of an investigation into alleged favoritism for some awarded contracts.
IOC’s rule change
While the IOC cleaned house over bid rigging corruption, it has less control over what happens after awarding the games. Paris will be the first Olympics under the IOC’s new anti-corruption clause.
“What we’ve seen now is a real change,” Wallechinsky said. “The IOC under Thomas Bach, who’s the president of the IOC, realized this is not good. We can’t have another Sochi situation, we can’t have another Rio situation.
“So when they got really good bids for the 2024 Summer Olympics from both Paris and Los Angeles, they went, ‘Wait a minute, let’s not pit these people against each other. Let’s give them each an Olympics.’”
Instead of a long, drawn-out bidding process for the Summer and Winter Olympics, which has historically produced corruption, two IOC panels are permanently open to talks with any city that could host the games. These panels can also approach prospective cities they think might be the right fit to host the Olympics.
The idea of eliminating the bidding process altogether and using a handful of rotating sites has come up, but it didn’t gain much traction. Still, cities that have hosted successful games could get multiple chances.
“Salt Lake City is going to get the Winter Olympics again,” Wallechinsky said. “But in a more honest way.”
Salt Lake’s path to 2002 might have been burned by bribery and budget overages, but the city turned it around when Mitt Romney took the reins. The 2002 Winter Games turned a profit when all was said and done and turned Romney into a household name. After snubbing him in 1994, Massachusetts voters elected him to be their governor in 2002 and the rest is history.
Though the Salt Lake City scandal forever tarnished IOC’s history, it’s now the front-runner for the 2034 Winter Games.
Paris scrutiny
Aside from the ongoing investigation into the Paris Organizing Committee, Wallechinsky — who splits his time between the south of France and the U.S. — said there are other hosting concerns.
“There have been some terrible terrorist attacks in France,” he said. “They’ve come up with this opening ceremony, which is going to be in public with hundreds of thousands of people.”
It’s an Olympic first: An opening ceremony outside of a stadium. The Paris pomp and circumstance will take place along the Seine. While it will make for an amazing spectacle, security is top of mind.
“The challenge that the French are facing is not just protecting the Olympic venues, but the entire city and to a certain extent the rest of the country as well, all at the same time,” Wallechinsky said.
But still, he said there isn’t a lot a city can do to avoid scrutiny.
“I always told people from host cities, ‘Everybody’s going to criticize you before the Games,’” Wallechinsky said. “Because as members of the media, if we say, ‘Oh, this is going really well,’ nobody’s going to follow that. They don’t want to read that. It’s not click-friendly.
“And so we’re always looking for something that’s wrong. That’s going to be the story. And then when the competition starts, everybody forgets about that unless it’s really serious.”
While the bombing at Atlanta’s Centennial Park shook the city, Americans still remember the Magnificent Seven taking home gold, or Michael Johnson breaking the 200-meter world record that stood until Usain Bolt burst onto the scene. And that’s why people like Charlie Battle still believe in the Games, despite its flaws.
“I still believe that good athletic competition and good athletic stories can be inspirational to young people,” Battle shared.
The 2024 Paris Summer Olympic Games kicks off with the opening ceremony on July 26 and runs through Aug. 11.
Caitlin Clark’s Olympic ‘snub’ reminds us the best athletes used to be banned
One of the most covered stories about the upcoming Olympics is who’s not competing in Paris. WNBA rookie Caitlin Clark has been left off the Team USA roster in favor of more veteran talent, like A’ja Wilson, Breanna Stewart and Diana Taurasi.
But a generation ago, none of these women would have been allowed to compete at the Olympics. Neither would Stephen Curry, LeBron James, Jayson Tatum and the rest of the men’s team. Nor would golfers Scottie Scheffler or Rory McIlroy.
These athletes are paid professionals and it wasn’t long ago the Olympics barred pro athletes from participating.
The age of amateurism
When the International Olympic Committee (IOC) formed in 1894 to bring back the Olympic Games, it built the modern foundation on amateurism, a word derived from the Latin word for “lover.” The argument was that amateur athletes competed for the love of the sport, not money.
Former IOC President Avery Brundage claimed the “amateur code” prevented the Olympics from being “used by individuals, organizations or nations for ulterior motives.” Leaders of the Olympic movement would point back to the tradition of the ancient Games but the concept of amateurism was somewhat of a misnomer.
“They weren’t amateurs, they were supported in their training,” Olympic historian David Wallechinsky said. “If they won, even in the ancient Games, they’d never have to pay for a drink again for the rest of their lives.”
For Wallechinsky, Olympic fandom was in his blood. His father, author Irving Wallace, brought him to the 1960 Rome Olympics when Wallechinsky was 12 years old.
“I got to see the opening ceremony, a couple of events, and so I became hooked,” Wallechinsky said. “I wanted to read a book that had all the results and all the best stories and it didn’t exist. So I spent 2.5 years creating it.”
In 1984, Wallechinsky published the first edition of “The Complete Book of the Olympics,” which has served as a favorite reference book on the subject ever since.
Jim Thorpe’s amateurism controversy
Jim Thorpe, considered one of the greatest athletes of the 20th century, is a prime example of the problem with amateurism. Thorpe swept gold in the 1912 Stockholm Olympics in the decathlon and pentathlon, becoming the first Native American to win an Olympic gold medal.
Then in 1913, the IOC took away his medals for having previously played two summers of semi-pro baseball. Many other Olympic athletes had also played semi-pro baseball but weren’t penalized because they played under fake names. Thorpe’s crime was using his real name.
The athletes and host countries awarded gold in Thorpe’s place never accepted the results, insisting that Thorpe was the sole winner of these events.
The IOC eventually righted this wrong, reinstating Thorpe’s gold medals 70 years later and listing him as a co-winner. But he never lived to see that day as it happened decades after his death. It wasn’t until 110 years after the Olympics in question that he was reinstated as the sole winner of the decathlon and pentathlon.
Cheating the amateur code
Thorpe’s situation did not compel the IOC to ditch amateurism. The case to eventually allow professional athletes into the Olympics stretched for decades and involved nations continuing to skirt the rules.
The Soviet Union was one of the main offenders. Its athletes were state-sponsored and trained full time, despite claiming to be amateurs. Meanwhile, countries that followed the rules could only present students or true amateur athletes to compete against de facto professional athletes. The Soviet screen came to a head in the hockey rink, where they dominated against Canada and everyone else.
“Canada got really angry,” Wallechinsky said. “‘We’re the best country in the world at ice hockey, we’re sending amateurs and the Soviet Union is sending professionals.’”
The Canadian hockey team even boycotted the ’72 and ’76 Olympics over it. Then in 1980, the U.S. had its miracle on ice, beating those Soviet professionals with an amateur team.
“Finally, the IOC, sport by sport, went, ‘Okay, you can make money at the Olympics and still be in the Olympics,’” Wallechinsky said.
The Dream Team
The Dream Team marked the true death of amateurism in the Olympics. The 1992 Barcelona Games marked the first time NBA players could play in the Olympics and they did it with arguably the greatest sports team — of any sport — ever assembled.
The team included basketball greats Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird and Charles Barkley. They won all eight games by an average of 44 points and coach Chuck Daly never called a single timeout.
The Dream Team helped grow the NBA’s popularity on a global stage. Three decades later, the WNBA is getting its moment.
With or without Caitlin Clark, in Paris, Team USA will strive for its eighth straight win, which would break the record for the most consecutive Olympic team victories in all Olympic sports. The women haven’t lost an Olympic game since 1992.