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Filipinas on course to peak against Switzerland on July 21

PHILIPPINE coach Alen Stajcic said the hard-working Filipinas are on course to hit top form for their historic FIFA Women’s World Cup debut on July 21 against Switzerland in New Zealand.

From their four-week camp in Sydney, the Filipinas moved to Auckland for the final stretch of their intensive buildup for the Group A duels with the Swiss, host New Zealand and Norway.

Mr. Stajcic said the next 10 days would be crucial in getting everything in order before the opening assignment in Dunedin.

“At the moment, were focusing on how we are as a group, focusing on day-to-day training, traveling, arriving fit and healthy and ensuring that everyone is healthy for our training session and making sure that the time we have are used to fine tune the aspects of our games so by the time we play our first game, we’ll be in our best form,” he said.

“The whole point of the cycle of a World Cup is to be at your peak at the World Cup and I would say that we are at that point now where we are close to that peak and we have 10 more days to try and reach that peak for July 21,” he added.

Over the last two years, the Filipinas have been to a series of high-level training camps and friendlies in as far as Europe and South America to get equipped for battle.

“I’m really proud of everyone for their collective effort and now it’s time to go to the biggest women’s sporting event in the world and try to do the best that we can,” said Mr. Stajcic.

“It really is a magical moment for the country and we hope that everyone is proud of the fight that we’re going to show in those games.”

Before taking the WC plunge, the Filipinas will test their readiness in a closed-door, unofficial friendly against World No. 3 Sweden on July 17 in Wellington. — Olmin Leyba

‘To win a World Cup, play a perfect game,’ says Altamonte

NATIONAL team catcher Chezka Altamonte knew there is only way to win in the Women’s Softball World Cup — play a perfect game.

“It’s tough to win in the World Cup,” said Ms. Altamonte, who is also the concurrent Amateur Softball Association of the Philippines secretary-general in yesterday’s (July 11) Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum at the Philippine Sports Commission building in Malate, Manila.

“But if we want to win, it has to be a perfect game, meaning no mistakes, perfect pitching. We can really be competitive if we can all do that,” she added.

Ms. Altamonte and the rest of the Cebuana Lhuillier-backed Blu Girls will try to shock the world as they clash against the best the planet can offer in Pool C of the group stages set July 22 to 26 in Castions di Strada, Italy. The Filipinas, who will be mentored by Ana Santiago, finished fourth in the Asia Cup in Incheon, South Korea last April that earned them a spot to the World Cup where they are bracketed with powerhouse Japan, Canada, Venezuela, Italy and New Zealand.

To make it to the Grand Finals, the country would need to finish in the top two of their group.

Also in the team are pitchers Glory Alonzo, Mary Ann Antolihao, Ma. Celyn Ojare, Royevel Palma and Reyae Mae Lubuguin, outfielders Cristy Joy Roa, Alaiza Talisik, Danica Aquino and Krishna Genuary Cantor, and infielders Sky Ellazar, Ma. Angelu Gabriel, Nicole Hammoude and Mary Joy Echalar.

Ms. Altamonte is also optimistic they can snare a medal in the Hangzhou Asian Games scheduled Sept. 23 to Oct. 8.

“We’re eyeing a podium finish and I think we can,” said Ms. Altamonte. — Joey Villar

Wimbledon: Alcaraz and Djokovic still on collision course

LONDON — Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz remained on collision course at Wimbledon with fourth-round victories on Monday while Elena Rybakina and Ons Jabeur set up a repeat of last year’s final.

Defending champion Mr. Djokovic conceded his first set of the tournament as he was briefly thrown off balance by Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz on the resumption of their contest.

The 36-year-old, who led by two sets when Wimbledon’s curfew halted his progress on Sunday, quickly recovered to claim a 7-6(6) 7-6(6) 5-7 6-4 victory in his 100th match at the tournament.

World number one and top seed Mr. Alcaraz also dropped a set but hit back in sensational fashion to beat Italian former runner-up Matteo Berrettini 3-6 6-3 6-3 6-3.

Mr. Alcaraz will face fellow 20-year-old Holger Rune on Wednesday in what will be the youngest Wimbledon men’s quarterfinal in the professional era while seven-time champion Mr. Djokovic is back in action on Tuesday in his 56th Grand Slam quarterfinal, against Russian seventh seed Andrey Rublev.

Mr. Djokovic, bidding for a fifth successive title, took his winning streak at Wimbledon to 32 matches and is now unbeaten on Centre Court for a decade.

But the Serb said he had not enjoyed facing Mr. Hurkacz whose thunderous serves left the world’s best returner powerless at times, at one point even knocking him to the floor.

Mr. Alcaraz came through a significant test against 2021 runner-up Mr. Berrettini with flying colours. Italian Mr. Berrettini’s serve and sledgehammer forehand briefly stopped the Spaniard in his tracks but Mr. Alcaraz took charge.

Sixth seed Mr. Rune is rivalling Alcaraz in the popularity stakes and he gained more fans as he battled back to eclipse 21st seed Grigor Dimitrov, the Bulgarian who was once regarded as a future Grand Slam champion.

Flair player Mr. Rune won 3-6 7-6(6) 7-6(4) 6-3 to become the first Dane in 65 years to reach the Wimbledon quarterfinals.

Third seed Daniil Medvedev maintained his steady progress, reaching the Wimbledon quarter-finals for the first time after ailing Czech Jiri Lehecka pulled up with a right foot injury while trailing 6-4 6-2.

Fifth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas’s hopes of becoming the first Greek man to reach the quarterfinals were wrecked by American outsider Christopher Eubanks who continued his fairytale debut at the grasscourt slam with a 3-6 7-6(4) 3-6 6-4 6-4 win.

Tunisian sixth seed Jabeur crushed out-of-sorts former champion Petra Kvitova 6-0 6-3 in a Centre Court demolition job.

Second seed Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus continued her march towards a second Grand Slam title of 2023, as the Australian Open champion beat Russian Ekaterina Alexandrova 6-4 6-0. — Reuters

Ginebra tops PBA 3×3 Season 3 Leg 2 in 19-17 overtime thriller

SAME nerve-wracking situation in the finale, same result for Barangay Ginebra.

Duplicating their gutsy performance in winning last week’s Leg 1, the Gin Kings eked out a 19-17 overtime thriller over Meralco to annex the PBA 3×3 Season 3 Leg 2 honors yesterday at the Ayala Malls Circuit.

Donald Gumaru first forced a 17-17 stalemate after 10 minutes with a last-gasp reverse layup then Ralph Cu sealed the deal in extra time with a booming two-pointer.

Mr. Cu (six points, five rebounds and four assists), Mr. Gumaru (two points), Ralph Salcedo (three points) and Kim Aurin (eight points) delivered Ginebra’s first back-to-back leg wins and third overall counting their Season 2 Third Conference Leg 3 triumph.

It was a display of the famous Ginebra never-say-die mantra as Mr. Cu and Company worked their way out of a 6-10 deficit early and a 16-17 disadvantage in the last three seconds of regulation.

Not wasting time after Alfred Batino’s go-ahead for Meralco, Mr. Gumaru quickly drove to the basket and drilled in the equalizer. After firing the clinching deuce a week ago, Mr. Gumaru played facilitator this time to Mr. Cu, who dutifully took care of business.

Ginebra, which booked a second straight championship stint with a 22-17 victory over semifinal foe Blackwater, banked P100,000.

Mr. Batino and Bolts teammates Joseph Sedurifa, Jeff Manday and Bryan Santos, who nosed out Cavitex in the semis, 21-18, settled for the P50,000 runners-up prize.

Cavitex’ Tonino Gonzaga, Ken Ighalo, Jorey Napoles and Dominick Fajardo, meanwhile, got another podium finish worth P30,000 after beating Blackwater’s Rey Publico, Nico Salva, Dariel Bayla and Patrick Jamison for third, 19-15. — Olmin Leyba

Molina, Cignal wallop Foton in straight sets

Games On Thursday
(PhilSports Arena)
9:30 a.m. — Gerflor vs Chery Tiggo
12 p.m. — F2 vs Petro Gazz
4 p.m. — Creamline vs PLDT
6:30 p.m. — Farm Fresh vs Cignal

CIGNAL spiker Ces Molina came into their duel with Foton with a killer instinct of a predator and a mindset of winning all their remaining group stage games in the Premier Volleyball League (PVL) Invitational Conference.

It resulted to one of her best games of the conference.

Powered by Ms. Molina’s ferocious performance, the HD Spikers dissipated the Foton Tornadoes, 25-10, 25-16, 25-22, at the PhilSports Arena yesterday to breathe life to their semifinal hopes.

The 28-year-old Southeast Asian Games veteran wound up leading all hitters with 16 points in a quick straight-set triumph including 15 off attacks that gave Cignal its second win in three starts.

They would need to hurdle Farm Fresh tomorrow and Choco Mucho next week in their last two Pool B assignments for a chance to claim one of the two spots next round in their bracket.

“We really needed this win, actually we should win all our games,” said Ms. Molina, who got help from Jovelyn Gonzaga’s 14 hits and Roselyn Doria’s 10 points.

In the other morning Pool B game earlier, Petro Gazz likewise stayed in the hunt after repulsing a pesky Farm Fresh, 25-21, 31-29, 25-17, for the former’s second win against a loss.

Grethcel Soltones continued to show MVP form and drilled in 16 points while Aiza Pontillas scattered 15 hits as the Angels’ overcame an error-prone performance that saw them committing a near-catastrophic 21 errors.

“We were too eager and wanted to win right away that we lost our timing,” said Petro Gazz coach Oliver Almadro. “But I’m happy with our overall performance and this victory.”

Foton and Farm Fresh both fell to their third straight defeat and out of semis contention in the league organized by Sports Vision and backed by BingoPlus, ArenaPlus, Mikasa, SMART, Rebisco, Kumu, Asics and SportRadar.

The Foxies, whose roster is composed mainly of the same St. Benilde team that swept its way to the NCAA crown its last two seasons, almost snatched their first set victory after roaring to a 19-15 lead in the second set and three set points, the last at 29-28.

It wasn’t meant to be though as the Angels threw the defensive gauntlet at the Foxies to reclaim the second set and eventually the match. — Joey Villar

Trading Lillard

Heading into the National Basketball Association draft on June 30, seven-time All-Star Damian Lillard made no secret of his desire for the Blazers to leverage their position in pursuit of a more competitive roster. As far as he was concerned, the front office needed to go on win-now mode; he had given 11 years’ worth of loyal service to the black and red, and he felt he deserved to be backstopped by a cast that would allow him to get closer to winning his first title. He wasn’t getting any younger, never mind that he just came off a season in which he normed more than 30 points for the first time in his career.

As Blazers general manager Joe Cronin explained, however, there were no reasonable offers for the Number Three pick that would have supported Lillard’s aims. “Building around Dame has always been the goal all the way, even through the draft,” he noted in a news conference the other day. “The difficult things we ran into were finding the right deals.” And so he went about using the pick on Scoot Henderson, the best talent still available on the board. While it wasn’t a bad move in and of itself, it did signal to the 32-year-old franchise cornerstone that yet another difficult path to the hardware lay ahead.

Needless to say, Lillard wasn’t pleased, and subsequent events showed just how much. It wasn’t simply that he had to finally speak up and demand for a trade, in stark contrast to his assertions in previous seasons about him wanting to win, but with the Blazers. It was that he wanted to be traded only to the Heat. He still does, and is bent on seeing his plan through; he has even had agent Aaron Goodwin communicate to potential suitors that he would not be a happy camper should he be compelled to Don another jersey.

Why Lillard has done a 180-degree turn understandably gives franchise owners pause. He’s a marquee name who, in the immediate past, seemed content to stay with the Blazers until the end of his playing days, and who even signed a contract extension last year. Now, he’s going back on all his previous statements and attempting to railroad a path to the Heat despite the absence of any leverage, at least on paper. It’s the ugly side of empowerment no one thought him capable of displaying. In all likelihood, he came to the conclusion after Henderson’s arrival that his fidelity was not being reciprocated, and that it was time for him to leave.

At this point, where Lillard will begin his 2023-24 campaign is anybody’s guess. Cronin asserts that the Blazers will not pull the trigger on any swap unless they get equal value in return, which would theoretically disqualify the Heat. That said, they also need to comprehend the worth of addition by subtraction. Moreover, the 2018 All-NBA First Team selection’s determination to take his talents to South Beach figures to keep swaying decisions around the league. Make no mistake: The standoff will end. Who will be all smiles by then is another matter altogether.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Hong Kong plans to ban sea products from Japan

MAN CHUNG-UNSPLASH

HONG KONG — Hong Kong leader John Lee on Tuesday said the city will ban seafood products from a large number of Japanese prefectures if Tokyo goes ahead with a plan to discharge treated radioactive water from the crippled Fukushima plant into the ocean.

Hong Kong is Japan’s second-largest market for agricultural and fisheries exports. Mainland China is its biggest.

Japan’s plan, approved by U.N. nuclear watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has faced opposition at home and abroad over concerns for food safety. Tokyo says the releases will be safe and meet global standards.

Hong Kong’s current ban on shipments from one prefecture would “definitely” be expanded, said Mr. Lee, chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, at a media briefing.

“If the exercise really starts, we’ll be banning a large number of prefectures’ sea products.”

China said last week it would tighten its scrutiny on food from Japan and maintain curbs on some Japanese imports. South Korea said a ban on food and seafood imports from the Fukushima region would remain in place.

Mr. Lee said he had asked Hong Kong’s secretary for the environment and ecology to form a multi-department team to design the city’s action plan. The government would take “decisive action” and announce details of the plan to the public as soon as possible, Mr. Lee said.

“The catering industry will be affected, but I am sure that they will understand that we’re forced to make a decision because of this unprecedented exercise.”

In 2022, Japan exported 75.5 billion yen ($536 million) in fishery products to Hong Kong, according to Japanese government statistics. — Reuters

Taiwan drills to involve defending main airport for first time

REUTERS

TAIPEI — Taiwan’s annual military drills will for the first time involve defending the island’s main international airport and also practice how to keep the sea lanes open in the event of a Chinese blockade, officials said on Tuesday.

China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has ramped up military pressure in the past three years to try to assert its sovereignty claim.

China practiced precision strikes and blockades in drills around the island in April after Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen met US House of Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy in Los Angeles.

Taiwan’s defense ministry said the Han Kuang exercises in late July would see the military defending Taoyuan international airport, the island’s most important air link with the rest of the world, from an airborne assault of paratroopers and helicopters.

Meanwhile, fighter jets would land and take off at Taitung’s civilian Fengnin airport on the east coast, to simulate it acting as a backup if runways are destroyed at air bases during a war.

“The Taoyuan airport (part) is aimed at the enemy threat and designed with its main focus as anti-airborne exercises,” Lin Wen-huang, who heads Taiwan’s defense ministry’s combat and planning department, told a news conference.

“Fengnin is a backup airport and will be engaged in related take-offs, landings and replenishment to maintain air combat power.”

Meanwhile at sea, the armed forces will practice “saturation attacks” on enemy ships including amphibious assault ships, and “anti-blockade escorts”, Lin added.

Taiwan’s traditional military thinking during a conflict has been to use its mountainous east coast, especially the two major air bases there, as a place to regroup and preserve its forces given it does not directly face China unlike Taiwan’s west coast.

But China has increasingly been flexing its muscles off Taiwan’s east coast, sailing warships and flying warplanes there and showing its ability to operate much further away from China’s own coastline. — Reuters

Researchers spot alien planet with metallic clouds resembling ‘a giant mirror’ in space

An artist impression of exoplanet LTT9779b orbiting its host star. — RICARDO RAMÍREZ REYES/UNIVERSIDAD DE CHILE/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

WASHINGTON — It is a planet astronomers say probably should not even exist.

Researchers said on Monday they have spotted a truly extreme planet beyond our solar system, a blazingly hot world a bit bigger than Neptune that orbits a sun-like star every 19 hours and appears to be wrapped in metallic clouds made of titanium and silicates that reflect most incoming light back into space.

“It’s a giant mirror in space,” said astronomer James Jenkins of Diego Portales University and the Center for Excellence in Astrophysics and Associated Technologies (CATA) in Chile, a co-author of the research published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

It reflects about 80% of incoming light, making it the universe’s most reflective object known. Venus, the brightest object in Earth’s night sky besides the moon, is our solar system’s most reflective object, enrobed in toxic sulfuric acid clouds. Venus reflects about 75% of incoming light. Earth reflects about 30%.

The planet, named LTT9779b, and its star are located in our Milky Way galaxy about 264 light years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Sculptor. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).

The planet’s diameter is about 4.7 times greater than Earth, and it orbits very close to its star — closer than our solar system’s innermost planet Mercury’s distance to the sun and 60 times closer than Earth’s orbit. With blistering solar radiation from its star, its surface temperature is about 3,270 degrees Fahrenheit (1,800 degrees Celsius), hotter than molten lava.

With its star so close, it is a wonder it has any atmosphere, according to the researchers. An atmosphere with water-based clouds, as on Earth, would have been blown away by solar radiation long ago. But they believe its clouds are metallic, a combination of titanium and silicate — the stuff that makes up most of the rocks in Earth’s crust.

“We even think that the clouds could condense into droplets, and have titanium rain falling in parts of the atmosphere,” Mr. Jenkins said.

The researchers studied the planet using the European Space Agency’s CHEOPS orbiting telescope.

“No other planet like this has been discovered to date,” said astronomer and study lead author Sergio Hoyer of the Marseille Astrophysics Laboratory in France.

Possessing an atmosphere while orbiting so close to its star makes it “a planet that shouldn’t exist,” according to astronomer and study co-author Vivien Parmentier of the Côte d’Azur Observatory in France.

“The super-reflective cloud cover likely helped stop the planet from warming up too much and being stripped of its atmosphere,” Ms. Parmentier said. “This is quite unique as all other planets at this temperature that are big enough to keep their atmosphere are too hot to form clouds and are thus as dark as charcoal.”

It also appears to be tidally locked to its star like the moon is to Earth, with a permanent day side facing the star and a permanent night side facing away.

All previously known planets that orbit their stars in less than one Earth day were either “hot Jupiters,” gas giants similar in composition to our solar system’s largest planet but much hotter due to solar radiation — or rocky planets smaller than Earth and lacking an atmosphere.

The researchers are pondering whether LTT9779b, classified as an “ultra-hot Neptune,” perhaps began as a gas giant only to lose most of its atmosphere, or whether it started out at its current size.

More than 5,000 planets beyond our solar system — called exoplanets — have been discovered, many with traits vastly different than our solar system’s eight planets. With increasingly capable instruments coming online — the James Webb Space Telescope became operational last year and the Extremely Large Telescope is under construction in Chile — more discoveries await.

“The diversity of exoplanets is stunning,” Ms. Parmentier said, “and we have just scratched the surface.” — Reuters

EU investigates Ozempic, weight-loss drug Saxenda after suicidal thoughts reported

REUTERS

THE EUROPEAN Medicines Agency (EMA) is investigating Novo Nordisk’s diabetes drug Ozempic and weight-loss treatment Saxenda after Iceland’s health regulator flagged three cases of patients thinking about suicide or self-harm.

Shares of the Danish drugmaker fell 1% on Monday following the news.

An EMA safety committee is looking into adverse events raised by the Icelandic Medicines Agency, including two cases of suicidal thoughts in those who used Ozempic, which contains the active ingredient semaglutide, and Saxenda, the regulator said.

Another patient on Saxenda, Novo’s earlier and less effective weight-loss drug that contains the active ingredient liraglutide, reported thoughts of self-injury, the agency said.

Iceland’s drugs regulator did not immediately respond to requests for details.

Novo Nordisk said patient safety was top priority and it treated all reports about adverse events very seriously. Its own safety monitoring so far found no “causal association” between the self-harming thoughts and the drugs, it said in a statement.

The EMA’s investigation centers on medicines that contain either semaglutide or liraglutide. Novo’s obesity treatment Wegovy, for which demand has surged in the United States, contains semaglutide.

The review was announced weeks after the regulator raised a thyroid cancer safety signal, a means to monitor potentially adverse effects, on several of Novo’s products containing semaglutide.

Suicidal thoughts are not listed as a side effect in the Europeam Union (EU) product information for either drug.

In the United States, however, prescribing instructions for Wegovy recommend that patients are monitored for suicidal thoughts or behavior.

According to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) Public Dashboard, there have been at least 60 reports of suicidal ideation since 2018 from patients on semaglutide or their health care providers.

FAERS has received at least 70 such reports since 2010 from users of liraglutide or their health care providers.

Information in these reports has not been verified and the existence of a report is not proof of causation, the FDA says.

The FDA said it monitors safety of drugs throughout their life cycle. Wegovy’s trials did not suggest increased risk of suicidal behavior, but the drug’s label contains a warning for suicidal behavior and ideation because of risks associated with other weight management drugs, the regulator said.

SENSITIVE
Although Iceland’s regulator has flagged only three cases, the issue of suicidal thoughts linked to weight-loss drugs is sensitive and has hobbled previous attempts by the drug industry to develop lucrative weight-loss drugs.

In clinical trials for Ozempic and Saxenda, Novo excluded people with a history of psychiatric disorders or recent suicidal behavior.

Sanofi’s Acomplia, which never won US approval, was withdrawn in Europe in 2008 after being linked to suicidal thoughts.

Acomplia was designed to modify parts of the nervous system that regulate appetite. New weight-loss drugs such as Wegovy regulate appetite by mimicking a gut hormone, and not directly interfering with brain chemistry. 

Diet pills Contrave by Orexigen Therapeutics and Qsymia by Vivus, Inc., approved in the US in 2014 and 2012, respectively, carry warnings on their labels about increased risk of suicidal thoughts.

Markus Manns, senior portfolio manager at Union Investment and a Novo shareholder, said that a low incidence of suicidal thoughts might be acceptable for a drug against Type 2 diabetes but not for a weight-loss drug.

The EMA said on Monday it would consider whether the review should be extended to other medicines of the same class, known as GLP-1 receptor agonists.

The EMA’s ongoing thyroid cancer investigation includes all GLP-1s.

Other drugs in the class include Eli Lilly and Co’s Mounjaro. Lilly did not respond to a question from Reuters on whether the EMA had contacted them to provide data for the new investigation.

Penny Ward, a visiting professor in pharmaceutical medicine at Kings College in London and an expert on EU drug safety monitoring, said the most likely outcome of the investigation would be a change in the drug’s label in the EU to carry a warning of the possible side effect of suicidal thoughts.

Another drug safety expert, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the small size of Iceland’s population might have led regulators to consider only a few adverse event cases were a significant proportion and worth investigating. — Reuters

Meta’s Threads surges to 100M signups faster than ChatGPT

META Platforms’ Twitter rival Threads crossed 100 million sign-ups within five days of launch, chief executive officer (CEO) Mark Zuckerberg said on Monday, dethroning ChatGPT as the fastest-growing online platform to hit the milestone.

Threads has been setting records for user growth since its launch on Wednesday, with celebrities, politicians and other newsmakers joining the platform that is seen by analysts as the first serious threat to the Elon Musk-owned microblogging app.

“That’s mostly organic demand, and we haven’t even turned on many promotions yet,” Mr. Zuckerberg said in a Threads post announcing the milestone.

The app’s sprint to 100 million users was much speedier than that of OpenAI-owned ChatGPT, which became the fastest-growing consumer application in history in January about two months after its launch, according to a UBS study.

Twitter had nearly 240 million monetizable daily active users as of July last year, according to the company’s last public disclosure before Mr. Musk’s takeover, although data from web analytics companies indicates usage has dropped since then.

Twitter’s web traffic was down 11% from the year prior in the days after the Threads launch, compared to the 4% it was down year-over-year as of June, according to Similarweb.

Matthew Prince, CEO of internet infrastructure firm Cloudflare, shared a graph showing a similar trajectory in a tweet on Sunday and said Twitter’s traffic was “tanking.”

Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino tweeted on Monday that the platform last week had its “largest usage day” since February, without providing details. “There’s only ONE Twitter,” she tweeted.

Mr. Musk tweeted “I think we may hit an all-time record this week.”

While Threads is not the first attempt to challenge Twitter, other burgeoning competitors such as Mastodon, Bluesky, Truth Social and T2 all remain relatively small at this point.

Mastodon has about 7.7 million total users, although fewer than 2 million of them actively use the service, according to daily user counts it provides.

Bluesky, a new service backed by Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey, has signed up 265,000 users since launching an invite-only beta in February, and maintains a waitlist of around 2 million more, according to a spokesperson.

Two social media platforms geared toward political conservatives — GETTR and Truth Social, which was founded by former US President Donald Trump — have an estimated 144,000 and 607,000 monthly users respectively, according to data from Similarweb.

GETTR and Truth Social did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Musk has responded to Threads’ arrival by mocking it and threatening to sue Meta, alleging that the social media behemoth used its trade secrets and other confidential information to build the app.

That claim, legal experts say, could be hard to prove.

Threads, like other would-be rivals, bears a strong resemblance to Twitter. It allows posts that are up to 500 characters long and supports links, photos and videos of up to five minutes.

The app also does not yet have a direct messaging function and lacks a desktop version that certain users, such as business organizations, rely on.

It also currently lacks hashtags and keyword search functions, which limits its appeal to advertisers and its utility as a place for following real-time events like users frequently do on Twitter.

Still, analysts said the turmoil at Twitter, including an uproar over recently imposed limits on the number on tweets users can see, could help Threads to attract those groups.

Currently, there are no ads on the Threads app and Mr. Zuckerberg said the company would only think about monetization once there was a clear path to obe billion users.

Instagram head Adam Mosseri said last week Meta was not trying to replace Twitter and that Threads aimed to focus on light subjects like sports, music, fashion and design.

He acknowledged that politics and hard news are inevitably going to show up on Threads, in what would be a challenge for the app pitching itself as the “friendly” option for public discourse online.

Meta shares closed up 1.2% on Monday and have gained more than 140% so far this year. — Reuters

Open Doors: The first anniversary show of the Samsung Performing Arts Theater at Circuit Makati

A celebration of Filipino artistry, featuring Ms. Regine Velasquez

This year, the Samsung Performing Arts Theater in Circuit Makati celebrates its first anniversary with a grand showcase of Filipino talent. The show is a purposeful celebration, aptly titled “Open Doors”. The event happening on July 14 promises to be an evening filled with world-class performances while also serving as an initiative to raise funds to benefit deserving artists and community groups.

The evening will be headlined by Ms. Regine Velasquez and will feature performances from the Manila Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philippine Madrigal Singers, Alice Reyes Dance Philippines, Steps Dance Studio, Menchu Lauchengco-Yulo, Markki Stroem, Soprano Lara Maigue and Poppert Bernardas. The evening will also feature special appearances from National Artists Alice Reyes and Ryan Cayabyab. This event is part of the year-long celebration of Circuit Makati’s 10th anniversary.

“Open Doors” is not just an event to experience great art, but also an opportunity to contribute to its development. Proceeds from ticket sales will go towards venue grants. These grants will reduce the rental costs for community-based groups, which is currently a barrier to accessing a world-class space like the Samsung Performing Arts Theater. “We believe that the opportunity to perform on a stage such as ours will not only boost creativity but also broaden artistic dreams and ambitions. It all begins when someone opens the door,” says Christopher Mohnani, Director of the Samsung Performing Arts Theater.

Inaugurated just a year ago, the Samsung Performing Arts Theater in Circuit Makati has now become an accessible venue for Filipino artists who no longer need to leave the country to perform on world-class stages. Over the past year, the theater has nurtured a broad spectrum of productions – from homegrown Filipino musicals and touring productions to box-office concerts. In a year, the Samsung Performing Arts Theater has transformed the landscape of the performing arts in the Philippines, creating an enduring platform for artists to showcase their talents.

Join us in celebrating the power and potential of Filipino artistry. An event you won’t want to miss, tickets are now available for sale at TicketWorld. For further information, please send an email to inquire.cpat@ayalaland.com.ph.

 


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