Tourists share concern as ‘chaotic’ queues erupt at Canary Islands Airport

There’s nothing quite like the thought of a well-deserved holiday, but it’s no secret that the journey to your dream destination can be anything but relaxing.This week, social media has been full of videos capturing hordes of tourists trapped in seemingly endless queues at Tenerife South Airport. The passport control chaos has emphatically been branded an “awful” experience.Security screening is mandatory for all outbound travellers from Tenerife Sur, involving an airport metal detector and possibly an additional check with a handheld device. Passport control, however, has recently become notorious for its incredibly long queues.Footage circulating online shows countless passengers lined up, awaiting their turn, as the queue crawls at a snail’s pace.For TikTok influencer Claire Walters, known by her handle @walters101515, the situation represents a shocking failure in efficiency. Another TikTok user, Scott Story, shared similar frustrations in his footage from the destination.One dismayed traveller commented: “Just came back today and half the plane was empty due to people being stuck in the queue. Absolute joke.”Someone else said: “We were fortunate enough last Friday to get through just before our plane left. What happens if you don’t get through on time? How do you arrange another flight and do you have to pay?”A third replied: “We had this a few weeks ago. Stood in that queue for an hour-and-a-half.”Not everyone shared the same views though, with one person noting: “This must depend on the time of your flight. I flew home yesterday and we were the only people there. Maybe 40 minutes or so before our flight boarded.”In a similar vein, another traveller observed: “I fly to the UK and back once a month. This is not the norm – far from it.”Back last year there were reports of “chaos” at the south airport, a situation that has been partially attributed to Brexit ramifications. During the fracas, exasperated tourism chiefs on the island denounced passport control at the bustling Tenerife Sur as “nonsense”, and called for immediate measures to curtail the one-hour queues through passport checks.Tourism authorities conceded that this conundrum had persisted for several months, significantly affecting droves of British holidaymakers. Current talk indicates that this may seem to be a problem that hasn’t gone away.The team at Tenerife Sur have been asked to comment about queuing issues.

Halloween and other Holiday Movie Recommendations

It’s that time of the year when several major holidays are celebrated within a two month span of time. This gives time for some American workers to take time off from their jobs so they can spend their hard earned dollars on commercial products for the occasion. It’s also a chance to watch some specially themed movies or holidays specials. So here are some recommendations.

(Some Descriptions Taken from Wikipedia)

October 31, 2024
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) This isn’t so much of a Halloween film as it is a film that has an incident that takes place at Halloween. It also has a scene that takes place at Christmas. That’s because the story is divided into a series of seasonal vignettes, starting with Summer 1903, that relates the story of a year in the life of the Smith family in St. Louis leading up to the opening of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition (most commonly referred to as the World’s Fair) in the spring of 1904. The film stars Judy Garland and Margaret O’Brien. It is one of the films that my wife Kristin watched over and over with our daughter Princess. It’s a classic with many take away lines and scenes.

Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948): The original cinematic universe blending comedy and horror. Besides their famous ‘Who’s on First’ routine Abbott and Costello appeared in several crossover movies with Universal Monsters. This would include besides the above mentioned film

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In the 1948 film Abbott and Costello go up against  Universal’s greatest horror creations, Count Dracula (Bela Lugosi), Frankenstein’s monster (Glenn Strange) and The Wolf Man (Lon Chaney Jr.). Interestingly Bela once played Jesus in a stage play.

It also has a cameo by the classic horror actor Vincent Price as the The Invisible Man. If your kids haven’t seen it, it’s a good way to introduce them to good clean classic horror and classic comedy at the same time.

Monster Mash  (1963) Not a film but a song appropriate to the season. Monster Mash” is a 1962 novelty song by Bobby “Boris” Pickett (February 11, 1938 – April 25, 2007).
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It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966) Christmas has Santa and Easter has the bunny and the beagle. Halloween has the Great Pumpkin. This is the classic Peanuts special where Charlie Brown and the gang go trick or treating and have Halloween fun, although Charlie Brown gets rocks in his bag instead of candy. While the kids are at a halloween party Linus and Sally go off to the Pumpkin Patch to await the arrival of the Great Pumpkin. Snoopy meanwhile climbs aboard his doghouse to fight the Red Baron. This animated classic kicks off the Peanuts holiday season.

Michael Jackson’s Thriller (music video)  (1983) Not an actual movie but a song with a cool video and a narration from Vincent Price. It’s great to dance to at Halloween.
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Little Shop of Horrors (1986): I was in this musical in a small role back in my first year of college. The story centers on a floral shop worker who discovers a sentient carnivorous plant that feeds on human blood.  It is filled with catchy songs and comedy. It was directed by muppeter Frank Oz and starred a multitude of comedic actors that included  Rick Moranis,   Steve Martin, Jim Belushi, Bill Murray and John Candy. It is an adaptation of the 1982 off-Broadway musical of the same name by composer Alan Menken and writer Howard Ashman, which is itself an adaptation of the 1960 film The Little Shop of Horrors by director Roger Corman that had a bit part played a young Jack Nicholson. Roger made  House of Usher (1960) which became the first of eight films directed by Corman that were adapted from the tales of Edgar Allan Poe, and which collectively came to be known as the “Poe Cycle“.

The other horror comedy musical that John was in was…
Nothing but Trouble (1991) I’ve never seen this horror comedy film that received the Worst Supporting Actor Razzie at the 12th Golden Raspberry Awards. But I include this and Little Shop here because they are horror based film starring John Candy who was born on October 31, 1950. Trouble was a film written and directed by Dan Aykroyd in his directorial debut, based on a story by his brother Peter, and starring Chevy Chase, Dan Aykroyd (in a dual role), John Candy (in a dual role), and Demi Moore. It tells the story of two yuppies and the clients of one of them who are taken to court for running a stop sign in the bizarre, financially bankrupt small town of Valkenvania, which is dominated by a 106-year-old judge. Tupac Shakur made his acting debut as a member of the rap group Digital Underground.

The Nightmare Before Christmas  (1993): This beautifully stop-motion animated film by master director Tim Burton tells the story of  Jack Skellington, the King of “Halloween Town”, who stumbles upon “Christmas Town” and schemes to take over the holiday. Filled with memorable songs  such as ‘What’s This’.
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The great thing about this film as that it can also function as a Christmas movie as well as a Halloween one.

The Sixth Sense (1999): If you haven’t seen this classic ghost story directed by M. Night Shyamalan be warned; it has a great twist ending that most people who watched it say they didn’t see coming. As you watch it pay attention and watch the clues. It is a master class in filmmaking. A child psychologist played by Bruce Willis starts  treating a young boy played by Haley Joel Osment who has  a disturbing secret. He sees dead people. It is a great eerie film that will give you chills with some Christian imagery. It also illustrates beautifully for all souls day the reality of purgatory. The catechetical application is that we can help those souls by our prayers.

Bless the Child  (2000) This movie has little but some gore. It stars Kim Basinger as  a woman who discovers that her niece, whom she has adopted, is being sought by a Satanic cult seeking to use her supernatural abilities. What makes this film stand out for me is the display of intercessory prayer portrayed in the film especially by a group of nuns pleading to Jesus during a critical moment in the film. It also shows stepping in leading the characters in a path to safety
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The Exorcism  of Emily Rose (2005) ‘Emily Rose’ however is not a straight out horror film. It is more like a courtroom drama with horror elements. The film however seems to go beyond the description of any one genre. Those of you, who might like to see it but are expecting ‘The Exorcist’, can rest assured. The movie is actually based upon the true story of a young German woman named Anneliese Michel who died in 1976 after a year of exorcism sessions given to her by her local priest. In the film version she is an American young woman named Emily Rose. Click on the link to read my whole review.

Constantine (2005) The plot is as good as a very low b horror flick , but tailored to fit an A class action movie. All the sound doctrinal theology is centered around Constantine and his mission to kick half-demon’s butts. Yes Half-demon, like the demigods in Percy Jackson. Just one of the many incorrect theological aspects of the film. Any theology that is off the beaten track of truth is made once again to serve the overall action of the film and not as a missionary effort to convince someone that this is actually true and you should believe it.  That is not necessarily bad in a picture, provided it serve the bigger purpose of portraying an overall truth that is beneficial to all who watch it. There are some bothersome theological errors and there are some “for the sake of the Plot” theological errors. Click on the link to read my full review.

I Am Legend (2007): The last place you would expect to find God is in a world overrun by vampires. The year is 2012 and 90% of the world has been wiped out by a lethal virus. 1% survived with immunity to the virus but were hunted down by the 9% that had turned into vampires. The last remaining normal human being is U.S. Army virologist Lieutenant colonel Robert Neville who is accompanied by his faithful dog Sam. He spends his days hunting, exercising, playing, searching for other possible survivors via a radio broadcast, and trying to find a cure for those turned into vampires, he has dubbed Dark Seekers.

“Where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there.” Psalm 139: 7-8

He thinks he is the last man on earth. Click on to read the full review.

Happy Death Day (2017): Groundhog Day meets a Slasher Horror Film. Happy Death Day and its sequel Happy Death Day 2U (2019) bring a time loop sci-fi theme to the horror genre.  It follows college student Tree Gelbman, who is murdered on the night of her birthday but begins reliving the day repeatedly, at which point she sets out to find the killer and stop her death. Time Loops are a subgenre of Time Travel movies, one of my favorite genres. I’m glad they made one you can watch at Halloween.

Time Cut (2024)
Just in time for Halloween another new Time Travel horror movie premiering on Netflix. It’s about a high school senior student and amateur inventor accidentally finds a time machine and travels back to 2003, the year her sister was murdered by an unknown killer. Looks good.
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Heretic  (2024): Nov 8, 2024
A little late past Halloween but this latest entry to the horror genre showcases the dangers of being a Mormon missionary when two missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints attempt to convert a Scottish man, it turns out to be far more dangerous than they could have anticipated. Hugh Grant looks really creepy in this. It might be worth a watch.
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All Saints Day/All Souls Day
November 1/2, 2024
The Song of Bernadette (1943): This is about Saint Bernadette Soubirous who was the visionary of the apparitions of Our Lady of Lourdes. It starred  Jennifer Jones in the title role and horror icon Vincent Price as Vital Dutour, Imperial Prosecutor. You get a horror actor in a Catholic saint movie. A two for one special.

The Reluctant Saint (1962)  St. Joseph of Cupertino (June 17,1603 – September 18, 1663) could easily be the patron saint of slapstick comedians.   This young man resembles the kind of character you might find in a Jerry Lewis, Laurel &  Hardy or Mr. Bean picture.  He’s not that bright,  is scorned at by the well to do, and seems to destroy expensive and valuable items in his vicinity.  But in the end he comes out on top as an inspiring figure who has beat the odds and has achieved remarkable success in some way or other.  It is a compelling religious drama with lots of humorous touches, but could easily have been a great slapstick comedy (or even a musical) having great sight gags and physical comedy (and great musical numbers) and still retain its  Christian themes and tone. The great thing about this particular film however is that it is based on a real person and real events and not a character created by a talented comedian.

Cabrini  (2024): This is the latest movie to join the ranks of great films about great saints. So it is a great film for All Saints Day. Here is my take on the film.Cabrini Was Awesome. I haven’t enjoyed a cinematic experience this much in quite a long time. It was a great faith based film in the traditional hollywood style of films such as The Song of Bernadette (1943) Going My Way (1944) or Francis of Assisi (1961). Everything from the cinematography to the musical score, from the storytelling to the acting was nothing short of amazingly fascinating.
Also Check Out Cabrini Reactions.

The Carpenter (November 1, 2023)
Not a Saint movie, but a new Christian movie.
An adopted viking orphan becomes a carpenter’s apprentice to Jesus. The orphan, Oren, fights as a side hustle. His experience training as a carpenter with Jesus as his mentor changes his lifestyle.- IMDB
I told a coworker who is into wrestling about this and he said he would check it out.
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November 5, 2024
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) The president is not the only office up for election. This classic lighthearted political satire film is directed by Frank Capra (It’s a Wonderful Life) and stars Jean Arthur and James Stewart (It’s a Wonderful Life). The story is about a naive, newly appointed United States senator who fights against government corruption, and was written by Sidney Buchman, based on Lewis R. Foster‘s unpublished story “The Gentleman from Montana”. It was loosely based on the life of Montana US Senator Burton Wheeler, who underwent a similar experience when he was investigating the Warren Harding administration. 
The film believe it or not was controversial in the US when it was first released, with attacks from many politicians claiming that it brought Washington into disrepute, but it was very successful at both the domestic and international box offices, and it made Stewart a major star.

Abbott and Costello Service Comedies

Japan used this Buck Privates as propaganda to demonstrate to its own troops the “incompetence” of the United States Army. The film was shown to U.S. troops in every theater of war.

Dave  (1993) This is a American political comedy film directed by Ivan Reitman (Ghostbusters (1984)) and starring Kevin Kline and Sigourney Weaver. Kline plays the president of the U.S.A. and also plays a man named Dave  who looks like the president. He is recruited by the Secret Service to become a momentary stand-in for the President of the United States after he has a heart attack while having a stroke with his chief of staff. This is a very charming funny film with a lot of heart. The type of president we are not going to elect.
I forgot that I was hired to do a job for you and that it was just a temp job at that. I forgot that I had two hundred and fifty million people who were paying me to make their lives a little better and I didn’t live up to my part of the bargain. See, there are certain things you should expect from a President. I ought to care more about you than I do about me… I ought to care more about what’s right than I do about what’s popular. I ought to be willing to give this whole thing up for something I believe in.

Air Force One (1997): The movie is another Die Hard on a plane type film where a group of terrorists who hijack Air Force One and the President‘s (Harrison Ford aka:Han Solo, Indiana Jones) attempt to rescue everyone on board by retaking his plane.

I would like a remake where Donald Trump uses some of his wrestling movies on some terrorists.
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Swing Vote (2008) A unique parablish type of film. In a unbelievable remarkable turn-of-events, the result of the presidential election comes down to the vote of just one man played by Kevin Costner. Kelsey Grammer as President Andrew Boone and Dennis Hopper as Senator Donald Greenleaf vow to win his vote.

Lincoln  (2012): This film is directed and produced by Steven Spielberg, and stars Daniel Day-Lewis as United States President Abraham Lincoln. The screenplay by Tony Kushner was loosely based on Doris Kearns Goodwin‘s 2005 biography Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln and covers the final four months of Lincoln’s life.
The film focuses on Lincoln’s efforts in January 1865 to abolish slavery and involuntary servitude by having the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution passed by the United States House of Representatives.

New Christmas Before Thanksgiving 2024
Does releasing Christmas movies before Advent bring in any box office revenue? I would add these to my Christmas movie list but they might be out of theaters way before Christmas and I think they are at least worth mentioning.

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever: Nov 8, 2024
I hope his new movie does well. This early Christmas movie is opening against a late Halloween movie. Both with religious themes. From the man who brought us The Chosen Dallas Jenkins, now gives us the movie based on the 1972 novel of the same name by Barbara Robinson. It centers around the Herdmans, a group of juvenile delinquent siblings who have inadvertently found themselves starring in the town’s Christmas pageant, and stars Judy Greer, Pete Holmes, Molly Belle Wright, and Lauren Graham. It will be interesting to see what he does with something outside  what he is best known for. Kristin and I have been going to Immaculate Conception Church in Cranston, R.I. to hear Fr. Wilson give a biblical and catechetical lesson on each episode. It’s quite inspiring and informational. Very faith filled experience each time we go.
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Red One (November 15, 2024)
After Santa Claus (code name: Red One) is kidnapped, the North Pole’s Head of Security (Dwayne Johnson) must team up with the world’s most infamous bounty hunter (Chris Evans) in a globe-trotting, action-packed mission to save Christmas. (IMDB) This is the Christmas film that you didn’t know existed but can only imagine wanting it to.
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Veterans Day 

Monday, November 11,2024

Saving Private Ryan  is a 1998 American epic war film directed by Steven Spielberg and written by Robert Rodat. Set in 1944 in Normandy, France, during World War II, it follows a group of soldiers, led by Captain John Miller (Tom Hanks), on a mission to locate Private James Francis Ryan (Matt Damon) and bring him home safely after his three brothers have been killed in action. The cast also includes Edward Burns, Tom Sizemore, Barry Pepper, Giovanni Ribisi, Vin Diesel, Adam Goldberg and Jeremy Davies. It lost best picture to ‘Shakespeare in Love’, which always puzzled and bugged me.

Hacksaw Ridge(2016) The film focuses on the World War II experiences of Desmond Doss, an American pacifist combat medic who, as a Seventh-day Adventist Christian, refused to carry or use a weapon or firearm of any kind. Doss became the first conscientious objector to be awarded the Medal of Honor, for service above and beyond the call of duty during the Battle of Okinawa. Andrew Garfield stars as Doss, with Sam Worthington, Luke Bracey, Teresa Palmer, Hugo Weaving, Rachel Griffiths, Vince Vaughn and Richard Pyros in supporting roles.

Remains of POW chaplain Emil Kapaun identified after 70 years. Another chaplain embarks on journey to greet them, inspired by 419 chaplains’ sacrifices. The convergence of their paths from different eras leads to a healing moment.-IMDB
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(November 28, 2024)
And looking ahead to a few other movies at the end of November and December.
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (1973): Another classic Charlie Brown holiday special where the Thanksgiving dinner consists of a feast of toast, pan-fried popcorn, pretzel sticks, jelly beans and ice cream sundaes.

Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987) with John Candy and Steve Martin. It is one of the few Thanksgiving themed movies out there. It stars Martin as a Chicago advertising man who struggles to travel home from New York for Thanksgiving  who ends up traveling with John Candy’s lovable oaf of a shower-curtain-ring salesman as his only companion.

They get into all types of scrapes involving Trains, Planes, Buses, and Automobiles. It has one of the funniest scenes I’ve ever seen in a movie.
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Free Birds (2013) A thanksgiving animated sci-fi movie where two turkeys named Reggie and Jake travel back to the first Thanksgiving to prevent turkeys from being domesticated and eaten by humans. The film stars the voices of Owen Wilson (Loki) Woody Harrelson (Hunger Games, Cheers) and Amy Poehler (Inside Out, Parks and Recreation) with a great supporting role by Star Trek’s George Takei.
Some Other New November Movies That Look Good

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Just in Time For Thanksgiving

Entertainment News | ‘Santosh’ a Deeply Political but Accessible Film, Says Director Sandhya Suri

New Delhi, Oct 31 (PTI) British-Indian filmmaker Sandhya Suri says her debut feature “Santosh”, which is the UK’s official entry to the Oscars, is a deeply political film but she was careful that the story, woven around two female cops, doesn’t become “didactic”. Set in the interiors of north India, the movie revolves around a widow, played by Shahana Goswami, who gets her late husband’s job of a police constable. She and her senior inspector (Sunita Rajwar) are soon sucked into a high profile investigation into the rape and murder of a Dalit teenager. Also Read | ‘Bhool Bhulaiyaa 3’ Song ‘Hukkush Phukkush’: Kartik Aaryan Brings Desi Halloween Vibes to Diwali With This Fun Track (Watch Video). “My film is deeply political about the role of women and where we are,” Suri told PTI in an interview, admitting that she often gets lost for words to talk about the movie in a “bigger way” because she funnelled everything she felt about the subject into her movie. Suri said she knew from the beginning that her script was strong and hoped that as a director she makes the film “as good as the script”. Also Read | ‘Amaran’ Full Movie Leaked on Tamilrockers, Movierulz & Telegram Channels for Free Download & Watch Online; Sivakarthikeyan’s Film Is the Latest Victim of Piracy?. “I’m happy that I did manage to do that… The key to the story is that it doesn’t become didactic or it doesn’t become a campaigning film or a militant film,” she said. “Santosh” premiered in the Un Certain Regard category at the Cannes Film Festival in May and recently screened at the Mumbai MAMI film festival. It will travel to the Dharamshala International Film Festival in November. Suri, who has made critically acclaimed documentaries such as “I For India” and “Around India with a Movie Camera”, said the violence perpetuated against women is not a new topic, but it always disturbed her. It was also the starting seed for her movie. “There’s been more media and outrage about some of these incidents in the last 10 years. But I remember reading daily reports about the casual daily violence and how almost depressingly normal it was for these things to happen even before 2012 (the Delhi gangrape and murder case). I was more outraged by the regularity of such incidents. So it was more like a cumulative effect about the violence as opposed to one particular event.” Asked whether not being based in India gave her the necessary distance to explore the caste, gender and political faultlines in her movie, Suri credited her training in documentary filmmaking for helping her approach the topic a certain way. “For me, it is not about distance. It is about being a documentary maker and having a certain rigor about the level of observation and research, having a lot of respect for detail and putting them in the film… This film, in script and in shooting, elevated in its craft,” she said. While she didn’t set out to make a commercial or genre film, Suri is hopeful that when the film releases in India, “people would want to go and see it”. “It just ended up that I made a film on the Indian police. Actually, it is a very accessible film and the actors are so great. I had an amazing run in the cinemas in France.” Suri said the film’s release in India is of “supreme importance” to her. “I did not make this film for viewers only outside of India… There are things which an Indian audience will definitely pick up that others might not.” It was by design that her central protagonist is a housewife-turned-cop because the filmmaker wanted a lower middle class constable, who “does not move in higher circles”. “I just wanted that really normal average woman who goes on this crazy journey. I wanted that type of woman to be seen all over the world.” Suri does not want to make much of the fact that her film is the first Hindi film to represent the UK in the best international film category at the Oscars. “Given that it is a largely British-funded film with support from France and Germany and that I’m a British filmmaker of Indian origin, it sort of makes sense. In the beginning of this journey, financing myself out of the United Kingdom was difficult but with time, people have become a bit more used to that and I had great support here,” she said. Both “Santosh” and Payal Kapadia’s “All We Imagine As Light” screened at Cannes at different times. The director said while she missed meeting Kapadia at the French movie gala where “All We Imagine As Light” won the Grand Prix award, they crossed paths at the Telluride Film Festival later. On the inevitable question of female filmmakers triumphing at Cannes this year, she said, “I met Payal in Telluride for the first time, and I think for a joke that was the first question I asked her, ‘Like, what do you feel about another female filmmaker?’ “And she asked me the same thing and we had a little laugh because I think it’s just a hard question to answer because we are filmmakers and we should be there. I think we’re just happy in our own right to be there and in our own journeys because good films are good films.”(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

Book Review: Heavy Weight of Darkness

Heavy Weight of Darkness

by J.M. Erickson

Genre: Science Fiction / Dystopia

ISBN: 9781942708551

Print Length: 210 pages

Reviewed by Elizabeth ReiserA cinematic sci-fi dystopia following one man’s search for redemptionIn J.M. Erickson’s Heavy Weight of Darkness, readers follow former military officer Willard Bennett as he confronts the consequences of his past actions.Bennett, once a first-class patrician, has been stripped of everything that allowed him privileges in society. Instead of being revered, he is now just like the people he once found deplorable. To regain his freedom and the life he misses, Bennett must find the person who helped put him in this state. Once he captures the rebellious Cassandra Kurtz, he then must kill her. However, as Bennett begins his journey and starts looking into more about the elusive Cassandra, he learns the world he has always fought to protect is far more corrupt than he was willing to acknowledge. He now finds himself at an impasse regarding what to do. Bennett is one intriguing protagonist. He begins the story angry at being in a low place, searching for redemption for his prior perceived failures. His anger is palpable, and that underlying rage adds to the tension that drives the first third of the story. It is a slow-burn start to the book, but the reader stays interested up and through the embarking of his adventure.Bennett does not work alone on his task, and his cohorts are the ones who help open his eyes to the truth. Working with the mysterious Betsy Ann Hall on his mission to capture Cassandra, they engage in conversations where he is forced to confront and question what he has always believed. Betsy and their other sidekick Virgil balance one another nicely, with Betsy being frank and Virgil more malleable until he finds his way. Their conversations range from serious topics like racism to humorous ones where they tease one another in a genuine, likable way. Combined, they make a great trio. Cassandra is not seen much in this story. As a sequel to Erickson’s Endless Fall of Night, which follows Cassandra closely, this book focuses primarily on Bennett. While this can be read as a standalone, reading the first installment would provide more context to understand the nuances of Bennett’s tumultuous relationship with Cassandra.  It should also be noted that this series uses Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness as inspiration. Like Conrad, Erickson focuses on how different power dynamics work within classes, race, and morality. The topic is heavy, but it makes for an entertaining read nonetheless. Fans of the science fiction genre and classic books like Conrad’s will enjoy this one. Heavy Weight of Darkness reads like watching a movie—and an exciting one at that. What a terrific job Erickson has done in creating this world.Thank you for reading Elizabeth Reiser’s book review of Heavy Weight of Darkness by J.M. Erickson! If you liked what you read, please spend some more time with us at the links below.

These surprising horror films are the scariest ever according to science

These are the scariest horror films of all time – but which one came out on top? (Picture: SHUDDER/Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock)Research has revealed the scariest horror films ever made – and the results might surprise you.
From buckets of gore to jump scares and tension so high you could cut the atmosphere with a knife, every horror fan has an opinion on the right recipe to scare.
Whether the classic monster movies gave you nightmares or the modern rise in psychological horror makes you glance out of the corner of your eye, a new study has determined the title that comes out on top just in time for Halloween.
Money Super Market has conducted the Science of Scare study since 2020, tracking the heart rates of volunteers subjected to hundreds of hours of horror films.
According to the study, Scott Derrickson’s 2012 supernatural horror, Sinister, is the scariest movie ever made.
And not for the first time, as the chilling tale of Bughuul has topped numerous studies and lists crowning it the most terrifying movie of the year.

Sinister has been dubbed the scariest horror film of all time (Picture: Everett/REX/Shutterstock)

Lockdown horror Host came in at number two (Picture: SHUDDER/Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock)The film follows true crime writer Ellison Oswald (Ethan Hawke) who discovers the existence of a snuff film showing the death of an entire family and moves into their home to solve the mystery.
In this new research, the audience experienced a 34% uplift in heart rate when watching the movie, from a resting rate of 64 BPM up to 86 BPM (beats per minute) on average during the movie.
Sinister’s most scary moments sent hearts racing to a whopping 131 BPM, with the film scoring an overall ‘Science of Scare score’ of 62, measured by combining the average BPM increase with HRV (heart rate variance) decrease.
Second place was Zoom-based horror Host at 95, and divisive ‘lo-fi horror’ Skinamarink in third place.
Directed by Kyle Edward Ball in their feature debut,  Skinamarink impacted audiences’ HRV more than any other movie on the list at 22%, causing the most stress and dread among viewers.

Divisive horror film Skinamarink took third place (Picture: IFC Films/Everett/REX/Shutterstock)

But it wasn’t the only divisive title on the list (Picture: ScreenGem/Everett/REX/Shutterstock)However, a common criticism among those who disliked the film was that they did not find it scary at all – a stark contrast to those who dubbed it the most terrifying film of 2022.
It has 73% from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, but only 40% from audiences with more than 100 verified ratings.
The audience consensus reads: ‘For some, it might be scary, but for a lot of viewers, Skinamarink is just frighteningly dull.’
The top 10 boasts a lot more modern titles than many may expect, with classic films such as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and The Exorcist just breaking the top 50.
Host was released in 2020, terrifying audiences with director Rob Savage’s unique utilisation of Zoom to tell the terrifying haunted house story.
Completing the top 10 were Insidious, The Conjuring, Hereditary, Smile, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, Hell House LLC, and Talk to Me. 

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Similarly to Skinamarink, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, released in 2005, drove a wedge between audiences and critics who had wildly different opinions of the film.
On Rotten Tomatoes, critics panned the movie giving it a score of just 45%, while audiences favoured it slightly more with the 2005 film sitting at 60%.
More Trending

Read More StoriesCritics thought: ‘Loosely based on a true story, The Exorcism of Emily Rose mixes compelling courtroom drama with generally gore-free scares in a ho-hum take on demonic cinema.’
According to the study, the scariest film of 2024 was  Oddity, Damian McCarthy’s latest offering which debuted at an impressive 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Stopmotion, the feature-length debut from British director Robert Morgan and record-breaking splatter film Terrifier 3 also cracked the list – but didn’t make the top 20.
Other new films making it into the top 50 included Sydney Sweeney’s nun-horror Immaculate, Nicholas Cage’s smash hit demonic thriller Longlegs, The Omen prequel The First Omen, and found footage flick Late Night with the Devil.

The scariest horror films ever made, according to the Science of Scare Project

Sinister
Host
Skinamarink
Insidious
The Conjuring
Hereditary
Smile
The Exorcism of Emily Rose
Talk To Me
Hell House LLC
The Conjuring 2
It Follows
The Dark and The Wicked
The Descent
Paranormal Activity
The Babadook
A Quiet Place Part 2
The Autopsy of Jane Doe
Insidious 2
Oddity
The Ring
Terrifier 2
Terrifier 3
Stopmotion
A Quiet Place
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
Barbarian
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Halloween (1978)
Insidious: The Red Door
Hush
The Nun 2
The Exorcist
The Visit
IT (2017)
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It
The Blair Witch Project
Paranormal Activity 2
Evil Dead Rise
Immaculate
Light’s Out
Longlegs
Saw X
28 Days Later
The Grudge
Oculus
The First Omen
Ouija: Origin Of Evil
Late Night With The Devil
Scream

Got a story?
If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us [email protected], calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.

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MORE : London’s most haunted café is so terrifying staff refuse to work alone

These surprising horror films are the scariest ever according to science

These are the scariest horror films of all time – but which one came out on top? (Picture: SHUDDER/Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock)Research has revealed the scariest horror films ever made – and the results might surprise you.
From buckets of gore to jump scares and tension so high you could cut the atmosphere with a knife, every horror fan has an opinion on the right recipe to scare.
Whether the classic monster movies gave you nightmares or the modern rise in psychological horror makes you glance out of the corner of your eye, a new study has determined the title that comes out on top just in time for Halloween.
Money Super Market has conducted the Science of Scare study since 2020, tracking the heart rates of volunteers subjected to hundreds of hours of horror films.
According to the study, Scott Derrickson’s 2012 supernatural horror, Sinister, is the scariest movie ever made.
And not for the first time, as the chilling tale of Bughuul has topped numerous studies and lists crowning it the most terrifying movie of the year.

Sinister has been dubbed the scariest horror film of all time (Picture: Everett/REX/Shutterstock)

Lockdown horror Host came in at number two (Picture: SHUDDER/Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock)The film follows true crime writer Ellison Oswald (Ethan Hawke) who discovers the existence of a snuff film showing the death of an entire family and moves into their home to solve the mystery.
In this new research, the audience experienced a 34% uplift in heart rate when watching the movie, from a resting rate of 64 BPM up to 86 BPM (beats per minute) on average during the movie.
Sinister’s most scary moments sent hearts racing to a whopping 131 BPM, with the film scoring an overall ‘Science of Scare score’ of 62, measured by combining the average BPM increase with HRV (heart rate variance) decrease.
Second place was Zoom-based horror Host at 95, and divisive ‘lo-fi horror’ Skinamarink in third place.
Directed by Kyle Edward Ball in their feature debut,  Skinamarink impacted audiences’ HRV more than any other movie on the list at 22%, causing the most stress and dread among viewers.

Divisive horror film Skinamarink took third place (Picture: IFC Films/Everett/REX/Shutterstock)

But it wasn’t the only divisive title on the list (Picture: ScreenGem/Everett/REX/Shutterstock)However, a common criticism among those who disliked the film was that they did not find it scary at all – a stark contrast to those who dubbed it the most terrifying film of 2022.
It has 73% from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, but only 40% from audiences with more than 100 verified ratings.
The audience consensus reads: ‘For some, it might be scary, but for a lot of viewers, Skinamarink is just frighteningly dull.’
The top 10 boasts a lot more modern titles than many may expect, with classic films such as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and The Exorcist just breaking the top 50.
Host was released in 2020, terrifying audiences with director Rob Savage’s unique utilisation of Zoom to tell the terrifying haunted house story.
Completing the top 10 were Insidious, The Conjuring, Hereditary, Smile, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, Hell House LLC, and Talk to Me. 

[embedded content]
Similarly to Skinamarink, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, released in 2005, drove a wedge between audiences and critics who had wildly different opinions of the film.
On Rotten Tomatoes, critics panned the movie giving it a score of just 45%, while audiences favoured it slightly more with the 2005 film sitting at 60%.
More Trending

Read More StoriesCritics thought: ‘Loosely based on a true story, The Exorcism of Emily Rose mixes compelling courtroom drama with generally gore-free scares in a ho-hum take on demonic cinema.’
According to the study, the scariest film of 2024 was  Oddity, Damian McCarthy’s latest offering which debuted at an impressive 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Stopmotion, the feature-length debut from British director Robert Morgan and record-breaking splatter film Terrifier 3 also cracked the list – but didn’t make the top 20.
Other new films making it into the top 50 included Sydney Sweeney’s nun-horror Immaculate, Nicholas Cage’s smash hit demonic thriller Longlegs, The Omen prequel The First Omen, and found footage flick Late Night with the Devil.

The scariest horror films ever made, according to the Science of Scare Project

Sinister
Host
Skinamarink
Insidious
The Conjuring
Hereditary
Smile
The Exorcism of Emily Rose
Talk To Me
Hell House LLC
The Conjuring 2
It Follows
The Dark and The Wicked
The Descent
Paranormal Activity
The Babadook
A Quiet Place Part 2
The Autopsy of Jane Doe
Insidious 2
Oddity
The Ring
Terrifier 2
Terrifier 3
Stopmotion
A Quiet Place
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
Barbarian
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Halloween (1978)
Insidious: The Red Door
Hush
The Nun 2
The Exorcist
The Visit
IT (2017)
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It
The Blair Witch Project
Paranormal Activity 2
Evil Dead Rise
Immaculate
Light’s Out
Longlegs
Saw X
28 Days Later
The Grudge
Oculus
The First Omen
Ouija: Origin Of Evil
Late Night With The Devil
Scream

Got a story?
If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us [email protected], calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.

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‘We filmed one of the most iconic 90s horror movies for $35,000 – but this would have ruined it’

The Blair Witch Project is one of the most important horror films ever made – and one key scene was almost entirely different (Pictures: Shutterstock)The Blair Witch Project traumatised audiences upon its release in 1999 and it has continued to haunt horror fans for 25 years.
The supernatural mockumentary followed student filmmakers – Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams, and Joshua Leonard – who played fictional versions of themselves, as they embarked on a camping trip into the Maryland woods to investigate the local legend of the Blair Witch.
The students disappear, and their story is told via tapes ‘discovered’ with their equipment a year later.
The found footage style of the film coupled with a ground-breaking marketing campaign helped cement the realism of Blair Witch and terrify audiences in the process.
The film culminates in an abrupt yet haunting final scene in which Heather and Mike find an abandoned house, believing Joshua, who had been missing, is calling to them.
After becoming separated, Heather finds Mike in the basement of the house staring into the corner before she is attacked by an unseen force, dropping her camera to the floor which lingers on Mike before cutting to black.

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The found footage horror film was released in 1999 starring Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard, and Michael C Williams (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock)

The trio played fictional versions of themselves with the same names as they created a mockumentary about the fabled Blair Witch (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock)It is one of the most sinister images in horror cinema despite the film reportedly being created on a budget of just $35,000 (£27,000) – but directors Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez believe if they had had more money, they would have ‘ruined’ their own film.
‘The whole movie was based on making something for cheap,’ Eduardo told Metro.
‘We were film students and we knew how expensive movies were, So we were like, “How do you make a horror movie – or any movie – for cheap?” and we came up with the idea we could do cheap because it didn’t have to be crazy lighting, sound, or anything like that.’
He reflected: ‘I think the limits of the budget were actually the strength of the movie. Dan and I have both said a million times if we had more money, we would have probably had some kind of crazy creature at the end of the movie attacking them and in the cellar, or something in that basement, and we would have ruined our own movie.
‘We struggled with that ending and we asked ourselves at the time “How are we going to end this movie?” And I always tell people, man, if we had an extra 20 or 30,000 bucks, we would have hired somebody to make some stupid suit.’
Daniel joked that had they had more money, there ‘definitely would have been an alien in there somewhere.’

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Directors Eduardo Sanchez (left) and Daniel Myrick (second right) struggled to end the film (Picture: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)‘The budget was just perfect looking back on it. It was a struggle because we were dirt poor, but it was very fortunate that we didn’t have more money because we would have probably ruined the movie,’ Eduardo continued.
While studying at the University of Central Florida, Daniel and Eduardo were inspired to create the film after they realised their fear of paranormal documentaries outweighed that of traditional horror films.
After putting together a 35-page screenplay with the idea much of the dialogue would be improvised, they found their cast following open auditions and began shooting The Blair Witch Project in Maryland over eight days.
‘There were moments in the production when things got really difficult,’ Daniel shared.
‘We got rained out one night and the actors kind of needed to be rescued because it became too much.
‘The whole shoot was like a 24/7 ongoing role-play game through the woods, so it was hard to keep track of where all the pieces (of the film) were.

The disturbing and unconventional ending of the horror film became iconic (Picture: Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect)

The actors in The Blair Witch Project filmed much of the footage themselves (Picture: Getty Images)

The found footage style is what the directors credit as part of the film’s success (Picture: Getty Images)‘We were reviewing footage from the actors a day or two after they shot it. We were doing everything we could just to keep up because it was moving so fast.’
He said that two days before they were scheduled to begin filming, they still didn’t know how they were going to end the movie.
‘We did all this build-up and had great scary moments. The film had to look and feel real, so we asked ourselves “How do you create that payoff at the end of the movie?” So it was a real dilemma for us,’ Daniel continued.
While it ‘threatened to derail’ the entire production, Eduardo and Daniel came up with the iconic final scenes right at the last moment.
Daniel said: ‘We had no real idea if any of what we were attempting was going to work. We knew that we were getting some good moments and stuff like that, but how that was all going to plug in, we just didn’t know.
‘Part of the beauty of it is that the low budget forced us to do creative things like Ben Rock (production designer) came up with the iconic stickman form. We had a version of the stick man who was more like a thatched-like big scarecrow, but we had to simplify that idea because of the budget.

The signature stickman in the film was created to cut down costs (Picture: William Thomas Cain)

The directors came up with the film’s ending at the last minute – much to the relief of the cast and crew (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock)‘Ben came up with this great little hanging rune that ended up being one of the most iconic things in the movie. Somehow it all just worked out.’
After horrifying audiences at its Sundance Film Festival premiere and causing people to vomit during cinema screenings, The Blair Witch Project was released on home video.
But the version we have watched from the comfort of our sofas ever since was not how the directors intended the film to be seen thanks to a transfer blunder.
‘We shot the movie on video and 16-millimetre film, and we had that film transferred to video so we could edit. So then when we went to Sundance [Film Festival] and when we released the movie, they took our video master,’ Eduardo said.
‘They transferred it to film because there was no digital distribution back then, so that was the version you saw in theatres. It’s a video transfer.
‘But then when they released the film on video, instead of going back to our master film, they just released the negative that they had used for theatres. So that original transfer and edit that we had has never seen the light of day.’

A new remaster of The Blair Witch Project from Second Sight Films is the first of its kind (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock)

Eduardo said the original transfer and edit they created ‘ has never seen the light of day’ (Picture: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)

Daniel believes the film’s low budget is part of ‘its beauty’ (Picture: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)Second Sight Films acquired the original sources to release The Blair Witch Project how Eduardo and Daniel had always wanted, alongside a limited edition box set including bonus content such as a documentary directed by Jed Shepherd.
‘We’ve been trying to do this for a long time. Every special anniversary we’d contact Alliance a year and a half before, but they weren’t listening to us, unfortunately,’ Eduardo told us.
‘Then Second Sight reached out to us earlier last year. We were big fans of their earlier releases – they’re serious film enthusiasts and historians – so we knew that it was going to be done right.
‘We helped as much as we could and guided them to all this making of footage that had never been really shown.
‘The movie had never really been released in the original format that we shot it in, and they geeked out with us and created the definitive release of the movie we always wanted.’

Following its release, The Blair Witch Project became one of the most profitable indie horror films of all time (Picture: Artisan Pics/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock)

Fans still flock to Black Hills Forest in Burkittsville, MD, where The Blair Witch Project was filmed (Picture: GEORGE BRIDGES/AFP via Getty Images)The Blair Witch Project grossed nearly $250m (£191.5m) worldwide, becoming one of the most successful independent films of all time.
Two sequels followed as well as novels, comic books, and video games while the film inspired several found footage horror films released in the decades that followed including the Paranormal Activity franchise.
And Eduardo and Daniel believe the simple style of the film and its relatability even 25 years later have contributed to its continuing success.
‘I still think the film works on a primal level,’ Daniel explained. ‘I remember my son seeing it for the first time when he was about 15, and he really liked it. He wasn’t just saying it – he and his friends responded to the film. And that tells you that it’s still working on some fundamental level.
‘Not all films stand the test of time, even some of the classics show their age over time, but because Blair Witch and found footage films are so simple, in a lot of ways, it’s a modern movie because it is that first-person perspective that so many young people today are used to and are used to seeing on YouTube.

The viral marketing campaign – the first of its kind – helped the film’s buzz (Picture: William Thomas Cain (Credits: Getty Images)

A number of sequels, video games, and other adaptations followed the 1999 movie (Picture: Artisan Pics/Kobal/Shutterstock)‘It’s a small independent movie that speaks to a modern aesthetic. If you’ve got a good idea, you can go out with an iPhone and get a million followers, and that’s something the kids today respond to.’
Earlier this year, horror institution Blumhouse announced they would be rebooting The Blair Witch Project with Saw director James Wan attached.
The news prompted a mixed reaction among fans while original cast member Leonard blasted the franchise and demanded ‘retroactive and future residual payments’ for their involvement as well as ‘meaningful consultation’ on any reboots and sequels.
Eduardo said it ‘would have been cool to have been part’ of the reboot and shared the full Blair Witch universe plans he and Daniel have.
‘It’s cool that this movie is still being thought of for a sequel or a reboot or whatever,’ he said.

A reboot is in the world which Eduardo and Daniel said they would love to be a part of(Picture: The Legacy Collection/THA/Shutterstock)

Acclaimed horror director James Wan is said to be attached to the Blumhouse reboot (Picture: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)‘It would have been cool to have been part of it. Not that we expect to write or direct it or anything like that, but we are the guys that came up with it and we’ve been living in the Blair world for 25 years now.
More Trending

Read More Stories‘It sucks, but it’s normal. With any reboot movies, they rarely go back to the original filmmakers. I understand that, but it would have been cool because we do have a lot of ideas that I think we could add.
‘I’m not sure if they’re going to reach out to us and include us in this version, but we would love to be a part of it. We’d love to revisit that world. We had a plan for a whole series of Blair Witch movies and TV shows, but unfortunately, they haven’t come to us for guidance.
‘But it’s Blumhouse and they’ve got James Wan so I think they’re gonna do something cool. So, you know, we’ll see what happens.’
The Blair Witch Project UK Limited Edition and Standard Blu-ray is available to pre-order now from Second Sight Films. It is released on Monday, November 11.
Got a story?
If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us [email protected], calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.

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GALLERY | Monsters and Mad Scientists at the Georgia Southern Museum

The Georgia Southern Museum is hosting a spook-tacular series of kid-friendly events this week as part of their Monsters and Mad Scientists Halloween theme. 

On Tuesday, kids of all ages enjoyed making slime and exploring spooky science supplies as part of the Mad Scientist Demonstration and Spooky Slime Lab! 

Museum staff were decked out in zombie and mad scientist gear, and they supplied each participant with a kid-sized lab coat to wear while they were in the slime lab. Everyone got to pick their slime color, then mix the sticky goo by hand until satisfied. There were also Halloween themed slime mix-ins! 

Griffin enjoyed making his slime at the Monsters and Mad Scientists event at the Georgia Southern Museum. Photo by Jordan Wilburn

Kids also got the chance to play with spooky science equipment including a glass apparatus that boils water using the warmth of your hand, a plasma ball, a speaker that made spooky sounds as you got closer to it, and even jars filled with liquid and various “organs!” 

Monsters and Mad Scientists week at the Georgia Southern Museum October 2024. Photo by Jordan Wilburn

The museum’s best-loved exhibits were part of the festivities as well – spiderwebs, spooky signage related to the exhibits (even a terrifying true story about a horse and veterinarian!), and the megalodon jaws were all fit for a haunted house experience! 

What came first – The Cyclops or the Skull? Photo by Jordan Wilburn

Make time to bring your little ghouls this week…if you dare! For full event details, click here. 

The business of hate

Dr. Stephen Soloway sits in a book-lined office in front of a screen, taping yet another interview with grassroots right-wing media.This time, the host is a Rumble producer from Hackensack. Soloway, as he does in so many of his appearances, mixes self-promotion with red meat conservative politics.The Vineland rheumatologist hawks the two books he has authored. And the self-described “Miracle MD” insists Donald Trump won the 2020 presidential election. The Memorial Day weekend show plays video clips that straddle those two worlds.In one, Trump gives Soloway a public shoutout, describing him as “a tremendous doctor” and “my friend for years” during a 2023 event at Trump National Golf Course in Bedminster.“No one loves you more than I do,” Soloway calls out off-camera in response.In the other clip, Soloway keynotes an America First Republicans of New Jersey gathering in Bergen County, where he stands before a large American flag and rails against immigrants he claims are bringing violence and disease over the border.“Everyone coming from the south is coming here to become a terror cell, to become a burden on society, to become a criminal,” Soloway tells his audience. “Like Trump says, ‘What are they doing?’ They’re letting out the insane asylum. They’re dumping them here. And now, we have to walk around carrying a gun or something, just to feel safe.”Among New Jersey political insiders, Soloway is hardly a household name. His inflammatory rhetoric falls well outside the moderate GOP messaging that has long dominated the party in New Jersey.But he is among a professional class of influential right-wing activists who have emerged here, remaking themselves as fearmongers to raise money, galvanize a grassroots base and promote themselves — all while promising to transform a deep blue state in their crimson red image.They are selling outrage and scapegoating, targeting immigrants, the LBGTQ+ community and other vulnerable groups at a time when anger and conspiracy always have an audience. And they are trading on Trump’s name — and sometimes, his direct endorsement — to show bona fides.Their efforts have seen mixed success: Some have raised just enough to pay the rent, while others have taken in hundreds of thousands of dollars and elevated their own status by trumpeting far-right grievances.Soloway’s deep pockets have earned him a platform as “Trump’s doctor” after he donated more than $1 million over the years to the former president’s campaign and Republican causes, according to federal and state campaign finance disclosures. He now uses his pulpit to verbally attack migrants and the transgender community in his books and speeches for ultraconservatives groups such as the America First Republicans.Cynthia Hughes has remade herself into a symbol of far-right patriotism — and a Trump cause célèbre — by raising millions for her nonprofit, Patriot Freedom Project, to aid defendants charged in the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. The Brick woman has worked to recast the alleged Jan. 6 rioters as political prisoners and likened their prosecution to institutional persecution.On the other end of the spectrum, Gregory Quinlan is a vocal presence in the conservative parents rights movement, one of many amplifying claims that schools have become dark and dangerous places. The pastor, founder of the nonprofit Center for Garden State Families, has done it despite operating on a shoestring budget.All told, millions of dollars are flowing into New Jersey to support right-wing extremist causes, suspects Michael Gottesman, the founder of the New Jersey Public Education Coalition, a group that seeks to counter extremism in schools. But a patchwork of federal and state political committees and nonprofit advocacy groups complicates watchdog efforts, he says.“Everyone wants to follow the money, and it’s just very, very difficult to do,” Gottesman said.Nonprofits do not have to disclose their contributors and offer few details about their financial picture beyond yearly tax filings. Many other organizations got their start as Facebook groups, overseen by volunteers raising funds through donations or T-shirt purchases.But that small scale could have its benefits as they set out to create a movement, according to Micah Rasmussen, the director of the Rebovich Institute for New Jersey Politics at Rider University.“If it’s not a super-organized effort, if it’s not a super-methodical effort, if it’s still a collection of individuals who are toiling away and doing their thing, then it’s probably not a really expensive thing either,” said Rasmussen, who hesitates to call the far right well-financed in New Jersey, despite pockets of money that some have tapped into.But these activists are operating with a mixture of grandiosity, self-dealing and real-world success, a reflection of Trump’s own norm-breaking political career. They have risen in the far-right realm despite their own personal problems, ranging from bounced checks and bankruptcies to a sexual harassment lawsuit, casting themselves as God-and-country folk who have found a calling. And they insist they will prove the doubters wrong once again in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans by more than 900,000 registered voters.“Everyone wants to follow the money, and it’s just very, very difficult to do.”Michael Gottesman, New Jersey Public Education CoalitionTake Hughes, who was so pressed for money in 2018 that she and her husband sued their credit agencies, claiming financial hardship, according to court records. Or Soloway, who was sued last year by a former nurse in his practice, alleging he sexually harassed her, crudely bragged about sleeping with other employees and routinely referred to women who worked for him as “bitches.”Their voices are being heard not only online but at sometimes packed and sometimes sparsely attended political rallies from Paramus to Keyport to Shamong. They’re also amplifying their messaging through crowdsourcing fundraisers and merchandise sales — including Trump memorabilia tables and Trump painting auctions at events.The far right is making progress at the grassroots level, experts say, especially on school boards across the state, where clashes over sex education and LGBTQ+-themed library books are now common.Gottesman fears the rhetoric will only get worse amid a superheated presidential election. Its vitriol is echoing at the local level, where he has heard right-wing advocates denounce transgender people as “sick,” “mentally unstable” and “sinners against God.”“And it’s like they say it with impunity, because, unfortunately, we’re in a society now where we’re modeling politicians who have no problem saying that,” Gottesman said. “There’s no such thing as political incorrectness anymore.”In some cases, political incorrectness is paying off handsomely.Keynote speaker Dr. Stephen Soloway addressing the audience at an America First Republicans of New Jersey event in Shamong in March 2024. 

How to choose the perfect printer for your SMB” target=”_self” data-before-rewrite-localise=”/news/computing-components/printers-and-scanners/business-multifunction-printers-what-you-need-to-know-1113069

In spite of the push to go paperless, SMBs still rely heavily on printers for their day-to-day operations. Choosing the right printer can significantly impact your productivity, budget, and even your environmental footprint.But with so many options available, how do you know which is the best small business printer for you? Do you need a laser printer for high-volume text documents, or would an inkjet be better for your colorful presentations? Should you invest in a multifunction all-in-one printer, or stick with a single-function printer? And what about those new bulk-ink models – are they worth considering?These are just a few of the questions you might be grappling with as you search for the perfect printer. The choice can seem overwhelming, especially when you’re trying to balance performance, cost, and long-term value.We’ll talk about the various types of printers suitable for SMBs, discuss key features to look for, and provide you with essential questions to ask before making your purchase. By the end of this article, you’ll be equipped with all the knowledge you need to choose a printer that will serve your business efficiently and economically for years to come.We’ve also covered the best small business printers.Types of SMB printers When it comes to choosing a printer for your SMB, the underlying technology plays a crucial role in determining its suitability for your specific needs. Let’s take a closer look at the main types of printers available:Inkjet Printers: These versatile printers are a popular choice for many SMBs. They work by spraying tiny droplets of ink onto paper, making them excellent for producing high-quality color documents and photos. In my experience, inkjet printers are particularly well-suited for businesses that need to print a mix of text and graphics, such as marketing agencies or real estate offices. Modern inkjet printers have come a long way in terms of speed and efficiency, with some models rivaling laser printers in these aspects.Laser Printers: If your SMB primarily prints text documents in high volumes, a laser printer might be your best bet. These printers use a laser beam and toner to create sharp, crisp text at high speeds. They’re typically more expensive upfront but can be more cost-effective in the long run for businesses with high print volumes. I’ve found laser printers to be particularly useful in legal offices, accounting firms, and other businesses that produce a lot of text-heavy documents.LED Printers: Similar to laser printers, LED printers use light to create an image on a drum, which then transfers toner to paper. They’re often more compact and energy-efficient than traditional laser printers, making them a good choice for SMBs with limited space or those looking to reduce their energy consumption.Solid Ink Printers: Although less common, solid ink printers are worth considering for SMBs that need high-quality color printing. These printers melt solid ink sticks and apply the liquefied ink to paper. They produce vibrant colors and are generally more eco-friendly than other printer types, as they generate less waste.Multifunction Printers (MFPs): Also known as all-in-one printers, these devices combine printing, scanning, copying, and sometimes faxing capabilities in a single unit. For many SMBs, an MFP can be a space-saving and cost-effective solution. In my own small business, our MFP has been invaluable for its versatility, allowing us to handle a variety of document management tasks with just one machine.Features to look for in an SMB printer When shopping for a printer for your SMB, there are several key features you should consider to ensure you’re getting a device that meets your needs and provides good value for money.Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!Print Speed: For busy offices, print speed can be crucial. Look for a printer with a pages per minute (ppm) rate that matches your output needs. Remember, color printing is typically slower than black and white.Print Quality: Consider the resolution (measured in dots per inch or dpi) that you need. Higher resolution means sharper text and more detailed images, but it also usually means slower printing and higher ink or toner consumption.Connectivity: In today’s connected world, you’ll want a printer that offers multiple connectivity options. Look for printers with Ethernet ports for network printing, Wi-Fi for wireless printing, and perhaps even NFC or Bluetooth for easy mobile printing.Paper Handling: Consider the paper capacity, the ability to handle different paper sizes and types, and whether you need features like automatic duplexing (double-sided printing).Running Costs: Don’t just look at the upfront cost of the printer. Consider the cost per page, which includes ink or toner and other consumables. Some printers might be cheaper to buy but more expensive to run.Duty Cycle: This refers to the maximum number of pages a printer can produce per month without breaking down. Make sure the printer’s duty cycle exceeds your expected monthly print volume.Energy Efficiency: Look for printers with energy-saving features like automatic sleep mode or ENERGY STAR certification. These can help reduce your electricity bills and your business’s environmental impact.Security Features: If you’ll be printing sensitive documents, look for printers with security features like secure print release or the ability to encrypt data sent to the printer.Questions to ask when choosing an SMB printer Before making your final decision, it’s important to ask yourself (and potentially the printer vendor) some key questions:What is our average monthly print volume? This will help determine the type and capacity of printer you need.What types of documents do we primarily print? Text-heavy documents, graphics, photos, or a mix?Do we need color printing, or is black and white sufficient?How important is print speed to our operations?Do we need additional functions like scanning, copying, or faxing?What’s our budget, both for the initial purchase and for ongoing costs?How much physical space do we have for a printer?What level of print quality do we require?Do we need any special features, like wide-format printing or the ability to print on specialized media?How important are environmental considerations in our printer choice?Creating an ideal printer setup for SMBs Choosing the perfect printer for your SMB isn’t just about picking a single device – it’s about creating a printing ecosystem that meets all your business needs efficiently and cost-effectively.Start by assessing your printing needs thoroughly. Consider not just your current requirements, but also how they might evolve in the near future. If you’re a growing business, it might be worth investing in a printer that can handle higher volumes than you currently need.Don’t be afraid to mix and match different types of printers if that’s what works best for your business. For example, you might have a high-speed laser printer for bulk text documents, an inkjet for occasional color printing, and a multifunction device for general office use.Remember, the cheapest printer isn’t always the most cost-effective in the long run. Consider the total cost of ownership, including supplies and maintenance, over the expected life of the printer. In my experience, investing in a higher-quality printer often pays off in terms of reliability and lower per-page costs.Lastly, don’t forget about software and support. Look for printers that are compatible with your existing systems and come with good customer support. A printer is only as good as its ability to integrate seamlessly into your workflow and keep running smoothly day after day.We’ve featured the best workgroup printers.