How Olympics opening ceremony artistic director is capturing the essence of France

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By Tom Nouvian, Associated Press

PARIS (AP) — In a luxurious hotel room on the 16th floor, overlooking the heart of Paris and the iconic Seine River, Thomas Jolly prepares for the grand spectacle that will inaugurate the Paris 2024 Olympics.

“I was overwhelmed at first. I wondered how I could create a show where everyone can feel represented as part of this great union,” admits Jolly, the actor and stage director who was tapped two years ago to helm the artistic direction of the opening and closing ceremonies. “This responsibility was ambitious, complex, but magnificent for an artist.”

More than a billion people are expected to watch the July 26 opening ceremony. But Jolly, 42, is no stranger to outsized projects in France, producing a 24-hour-long Shakespearean tetralogy in 2022 and reviving the favorite musical “Starmania.” He has earned three Molière prizes, France’s highest theater award.

Now, he is tasked with sharing France with the rest of the world in a parade that’s expected to last nearly four hours.

“France is a story that never stops being constructed, deconstructed, and reconstructed. It’s alive, it remains alive,” Jolly passionately explained in an interview on Friday. This dynamism, he believes, fuels the country’s reputation for protests and strikes — manifestations of France’s constant reexamination of its identity and values.

Behind Jolly, the scene is a hive of activity, with construction workers toiling on the settings for the upcoming ceremony on the riverbanks of the Seine, sealed to the public. At one point, Tony Estanguet, the head of the Paris 2024 organizing committee who is also giving interviews in the hotel, joins Jolly on the balcony, away from the media frenzy. Cigarette in hand, Jolly gestures animatedly towards the Seine as they discuss final details, Estanguet nodding in agreement.

Last year, France hosted the Rugby World Cup. The opening ceremony imagined by Oscar-winning actor Jean Dujardin, who portrayed a beret-wearing baker in a 1950s rendition of France, received criticism for being too stereotypical and outdated. While acknowledging the cliches, Jolly is determined to both play with and subvert these stereotypes, believing that opening ceremonies often tell the story of a country.

“When we watch ‘Emily in Paris’ or ‘Amélie Poulain,’ we know it’s not quite the real Paris. We’re going to play with all those cliches, but we’re also going to challenge them,” said Jolly, who is also directing the Paralympics ceremonies. “Paris is also a vibrant youth. Different cultures rubbing shoulders in the streets.”

Tony Estanguet, President of the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games Organizing Committee, left, poses with Thomas Jolly Friday, July 19, 2024 in Paris. Thomas Jolly, a 40-year-old actor and stage director, was chosen by the Paris 2024 Organizing Committee to helm the artistic direction of the four grand ceremonies. He will be tasked with bringing to life Paris’ ambitious plan to hold the July 26, 2024, opening ceremony in the French capital’s city center, along the Seine River. (AP Photo/Tom Nouvian)

The opening ceremony will be attended by approximately 300,000 people, most of whom have been invited, with the organizers intent on celebrating inclusion and diversity. The original plan was to have a 100% free ceremony, with millions watching the parade from the riverbanks. Those ambitions were dialed down by the French government, who feared security threats in a city that has had major extremist attacks as recently as 2015.

“An opening ceremony has never been held outside of a stadium. There is no model; it’s absolute creation,” Jolly said, acknowledging the challenges of such a feat. He envisioned a giant ballet in 12 acts with hundreds of dancers stationed on the many bridges that span the Seine, as boats floats down the river carrying the Olympic athletes to the Eiffel Tower.

Jolly is extremely tight-lipped about what will eventually transpire at the ceremony. Rehearsals are being held in secret locations scattered throughout France, but there will be no full rehearsal before the actual date. The mystery has prompted much speculation, with some of the most audacious theories positing the use of submarines in the Seine and performances by pop stars such as Celine Dion, Lady Gaga and French-Malian singer Aya Nakamura.

“I’ll be fired if I tell you anything,” Jolly says with a cheeky laugh. “All I can tell you is that it will be very meaningful for the artists that will perform.”

Kamala Harris is preparing to lead Democrats in 2024. There are lessons from her 2020 bid

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By BILL BARROW Associated Press

ATLANTA (AP) — Kamala Harris was greeted by a massive, cheering crowd during the first rally of her newly announced presidential campaign in 2019. Speaking on a late January day outside city hall in her hometown of Oakland, California, she framed her bid as part of something bigger than simply winning an election.

“We are here at this moment in time because we must answer a fundamental question,” Harris said, invoking Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 call for “moral leadership.” “Who are we as Americans?”

The early days of Harris’ campaign were wrapped in historical significance. She formally launched her bid on Martin Luther King Jr. Day with references to Shirley Chisholm, the first Black person and woman to seek a major party’s presidential nod.

At the time, with Democrats in despair over Donald Trump’s presidency, the first-term California senator appeared to be an ideal cure. The daughter of an Indian mother and a Black Jamaican father, Harris evoked comparisons to Barack Obama, whose powerful biography and soaring rhetoric galvanized Democrats more than a decade earlier.

But the early promise of Harris’ campaign met a more complicated reality as she spent the next 10 months struggling to break through a crowded field of candidates and churning through staff and cash. She ultimately withdrew from the race weeks before the Iowa caucuses, a disappointment mitigated only when nominee Joe Biden selected her as his running mate.

Now, after Biden ended his reelection bid, Democrats say Harris has grown into a more savvy candidate who will avoid repeating mistakes from her first campaign.

“Look, there’s been no roadmap for Kamala Harris,” said Donna Brazile, a former Democratic National Committee chair and one of the prominent Black Democrats who urged Biden to pick Harris in 2020. “But she’s really found her voice and has been going non-stop since the 2022 midterm campaign, especially. I think she’s become a generational figure and proven she can bring … leadership to the party and the country.”

Harris began her campaign as a favorite

A former prosecutor and state attorney general, Harris launched her 2020 campaign with the slogan: “Kamala Harris: For the People.” She spoke in sweeping terms about an “inflection point” for a country riven with social fissures, economic disparities and political strife. She emphasized her biography and her “stroller’s-eye view” of her parents’ activism in the Civil Rights Movement.

An early entrant to the race, Harris’ initial media blitz and massive opening rally solidified her status as a presumed favorite.

Her aides outlined a wide path to the nomination.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders led Democrats’ progressive wing, with Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren offering his biggest challenge. Biden, then the 76-year-old former vice president, had yet to announce but was expected to anchor the more centrist wing, and he stood strong among Black voters who figured so prominently in the first-in-the-South primary in South Carolina and many Super Tuesday states that followed.

Harris came to the campaign having hit her stride during Senate Judiciary Committee sessions, especially when questioning Trump’s judicial nominees. She’d also signed on as a co-sponsor to Sanders’ push for a “Medicare for All” national health insurance system. She was a regular on cable news and social media.

Some younger progressives distrusted her record as a prosecutor. “Kamala is a cop” became a tag line on social media. That contingent, however vocal, was not viewed as large enough to sway a national primary contest — and its opposition actually affirmed one of Harris’ arguments: “My entire career has been focused on keeping people safe,” she told ABC News. “It is probably one of the things that motivates me more than anything else.”

At her full potential, Harris’ aides reasoned, she could appeal to nearly all branches of the party. It was, more or less, a campaign intended to chip away and eventually overtake Biden’s coalition, presuming he joined the race, bolstered with a leftward reach that Biden, the white, male veteran of the Washington establishment, could never manage.

‘That Little Girl Was Me’

There’s an art in presidential politics to enticing voters in ways that allow them to see what they want to see: “Hope and Change” from Obama, “Make America Great Again” from Trump. The risk in aiming everywhere, though, is that a candidate may not stick anywhere.

Harris’ early appearances in Iowa, first up in the nominating calendar, and South Carolina were dominated by working-age women, a key Democratic demographic. In South Carolina, far more diverse than overwhelmingly white Iowa, her audiences were racially diverse.

But as the overall field widened, Harris faded from de facto front-runner status. She became one of many candidates vying for money, media attention and votes — especially once Biden announced in the spring. She raised $12 million in the first quarter of 2019, a solid sum but not one that reflected the electricity of her opening salvo in Oakland.

“That thing was a free-for-all,” said Boyd Brown, a former Democratic National Committee member who backed former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke for the nomination. “Everybody was trying to catch Biden.”

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The argument for a Harris presidency never crystallized. Her “For the People” motto notwithstanding, she did not project Sanders’ or Warren’s economic populism. Entreaties about democracy were not central to her brand compared with Biden, whose “Soul of the Nation” pitch framed 2020 as a singular mission: sparing the country another Trump term.

And there was another contender Harris did not account for: Pete Buttigieg, the 37-year-old former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, built a grassroots network in Iowa, enjoyed glowing national media attention and became a generational counter to Biden in the primary’s moderate lane.

Harris managed a hit moment in the primary’s first debate in June, criticizing Biden for having opposed court-ordered busing in the 1970s as an answer to continued public school segregation. She personalized her broadside, telling of a young minority student who attended an integrated school only because of federal action.

“That little girl was me,” she told Biden.

Harris’ campaign immediately marketed campaign merchandise with the quote, drawing some criticism that the line was canned.

A sputtering finish

The debate gave Harris her best fundraising surge since her launch. But the good news was short-lived. She clarified in succeeding days that she did not necessarily support federally mandated busing — the position Biden held as a young U.S. senator. And even with the boost, her second-quarter fundraising haul was only $12 million, well behind Biden, Sanders and Buttigieg, who doubled her mark.

In the summer, Harris unveiled her health care plan, proposing to add a Medicare-like public option to existing private health insurance exchanges. It was a shift that abandoned her single-payer position in the Senate and highlighted her difficulty finding a core message. In debates, rivals attacked her record as a prosecutor, especially her aggressiveness against drug offenders. By the fall, her speaking time on stage was middle of the pack, making it difficult to change the dynamics.

Biden was faltering in Iowa and New Hampshire. But Biden’s support among Black voters remained steady, and Harris could not afford television ads. Harris’ ideal scenario — an impressive start in Iowa, then moving ahead of Biden in South Carolina and on Super Tuesday — was closed.

“Joe Biden has always been our guy,” said Antjuan Seawright, a prominent Black Democratic consultant in South Carolina, explaining that it was never a rejection of Harris.

She ended her campaign on Dec. 3, 2019, saying, “In good faith, I can’t tell you … that I have a path forward if I don’t believe I do.”

Still enough for the No. 2 spot — and now No. 1

The harshest assessment is that Harris ran a bad campaign that reflected the principal — a warning about her 2024 prospects.

“She’s just a horrible candidate who could not communicate a rationale for her candidacy,” said Republican pollster Whit Ayres, who mused that Biden, at 81 years old, may have been quicker to set aside his own reelection ambitions if he had more confidence in his vice president.

Most Democrats are more charitable with their hindsight. Certainly, Biden was as he considered his options for second in command.

“We made the case that she could bring the right energy and help make the case. … Clearly, he saw something there, too,” Brazile said.

Biden himself ran “a lousy presidential campaign” in 2007-08, Brown noted, only to become Obama’s vice president and eventually take down Trump. Now, Harris has that chance.

“Politics,” Brown said, “is all about timing.”

Afton father charged after 10-year-old daughter took friend on ATV ride that killed them

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An Afton man has been charged after his 10-year-old daughter gave her best friend a ride on an ATV that led to a crash that killed both girls last year.

The Washington County Attorney’s Office charged Lance Alan Koeckeritz, 54, with two counts each of second-degree manslaughter and child endangerment in connection with the deaths of his daughter, Savanna Koeckeritz, and Alexis “Lexi” Gibson, also 10, of Mahtomedi, at his Afton property April 22, 2023.

Left: Alexis “Lexi” Gibson, 10, of Mahtomedi. Right: Savanna Koeckeritz, 10, of Afton. The girls died on Saturday, April 22, 2023, in an ATV accident in Afton. (Courtesy of the New Heights School)

When the girls didn’t return in time to leave for a movie, a relative went out looking for them, Friday’s criminal complaint says. They were found trapped under the ATV unconscious and not breathing, and later pronounced dead at the scene.

Koeckeritz told deputies who were called to the scene that the children were allowed to operate the ATV whenever they wanted, and it is not necessary for them to check in with him or ask permission, the complaint says.

He added, “the girls would take the ATV for brief periods at a time” and that they would return to a camper located on the property or the residence.

The ATV is a 2013 CFMoto, with an 800cc engine and saddle-style seat. According to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, the recommended engine size for children ages 10 and up is up to 110cc.

In Minnesota, anyone can drive an ATV on private property with permission from the owner. But to legally drive one on public property, young people ages 12 to 15 must be supervised by an adult and have a valid ATV safety certificate.

Koeckeritz was charged by summons and has a first appearance on the charges scheduled for Aug. 19. An attorney is not listed in his court case file.

County Attorney Kevin Magnuson declined to comment Tuesday on the charging decision.

According to the complaint and the Washington County Sheriff’s Office:

Deputies and first-responders arrived at the Koeckeritz property in the 1000 block of Neal Avenue around 5 p.m. and found the girls lying on their backs with CPR being performed on them.

Detectives saw that neither girl was wearing helmets or other protective gear, the complaint says.

Detectives were told that Alexis and Savanna went to the home after school the day before for a sleepover. The property is just under 8½ acres with hilly terrain and worn dirt paths throughout, the complaint notes.

Savanna’s mother was at work at the time of the crash, while her father was at home.

Koeckeritz told detectives that he never left the home, that he was in his office trailer from approximately 1 to 5 p.m. He showed detectives the trailer office he was working in and said he did not hear any disturbances while he worked.

“Detectives observed the work trailer to be nearly soundproof where they could barely hear yelling directly outside the trailer door,” the complaint says.

Savanna’s mother planned to bring the girls to a movie at 5:15 p.m. She had communicated her plans to Koeckeritz earlier in the day, and around 4 p.m. asked another child at the home to get the girls ready for the movie.

The mother arrived at the home around 4:15 p.m. and was unable to locate the girls despite searching for them for over 15 minutes. At approximately 5 p.m. a second child at the home found the girls pinned under the ATV and unconscious.

Koeckeritz remained in the work trailer until he was told of the emergency after the girls were found, the complaint says.

Autopsies showed the girls died of asphyxia.

According to the manufacturer’s specs, the ATV weighs about 1,000 pounds with a full tank of gas.

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Hamline University settles lawsuit over showing of Prophet Muhammad in art history class

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Hamline University has agreed to settle the religious discrimination lawsuit brought by an art history instructor who lost her job after showing paintings of the Prophet Muhammad during an October 2022 class.

The tentative deal was reached Monday night after a 12-hour settlement conference, according to U.S. District Court records. The terms are not public.

Attorneys for Erika López Prater and the private St. Paul university were instructed to finalize the settlement in the next 60 days or ask the court for more time.

López Prater’s showing of two ancient works of art over videoconference offended a Muslim student, who believes the Prophet should not be visually depicted.

University leaders largely took the student’s side, with one calling the decision “disrespectful and Islamophobic,” and López Prater was not allowed to teach the following semester.

Those moves sparked an outcry from academics across the country and led to Hamline hosting a fall 2023 symposium on free speech, diversity and academic freedom. Then-President Fayneese Miller, who has since retired, said Hamline made a “misstep” when it called the instructor’s actions Islamophobic.

López Prater sued Hamline in January 2023.

In September, U.S. District Judge Katherine Menendez dismissed some of the claims but allowed the case to proceed on religious discrimination. The judge found that López Prater plausibly alleged that Hamline took action against her “because she was not Muslim or did not conform to the religious beliefs held by some that viewing images of the Prophet Muhammad is forbidden.”

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