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Friday, July 29, 2022

Weekend Hot Topic: Best video game remasters and remakes - Metro.co.uk

Resident Evil screenshot
Resident Evil – twice a classic (pic: Capcom)

Readers name their favourite remakes and remasters from across the generations, including Mafia Definitive Edition and Spyro Reignited Trilogy.

The subject for this week’s Hot Topic was suggested by reader Ishi, who was inspired by the recent rash of new retro releases. Which has been your favourite and why? Had you played the original when you first played the remake and how do you think the new version compares?

Some were predictable answers, with a lot of Resident Evil games mentioned, but also more obscure choices that many will have forgotten even exist.


Resident remake
I think Resident Evil (2002) is the best game remake. Coming out a mere six years after the original, it vastly improved everything. The graphics still wow today, and the dialogue and voice acting are much more competent than the 1996 version. It also added things like remixed item placements and puzzles, new areas like the graveyard, and the terrifying crimson heads: superfast, aggressive zombies that can only be put down for good with decapitation or burning.

It really took the bones of the classic game and built on them in every way and is by far the best way to enjoy the game in 2022. You can even turn off tank controls in the modernised HD rerelease.

Resident Evil 2’s remake was no slouch either, so I’m cautiously optimistic about an updated Resident Evil 4 next year.
ANON


Welcome replay
I’m not particularly in favour of remakes or remasters, especially if the originals are still relatively recent and are still completely playable. I’d rather see resources from companies and money from gamers spent on creating new experiences. (I rarely replay games.) That said, while we are still getting enough decent new games, I’m not going to complain too much!

My favourite remake or remaster is probably Grim Fandango. It was about 20 years old, and increasingly hard to even play it, since it had never been released on consoles. The original had some awkward tank controls, fixed by the remaster, and, most importantly, it was an absolute classic of a point ‘n’ click adventure, which would not have been played by many.
Matt (he_who_runs_away – PSN ID)


Most screenshotted
My favourite remaster is Mafia Definitive Edition. I can’t claim to have played the original, but I had seen enough videos to see that this truly was a game remade from the ground up. Despite being a last generation game, playing it now I think it looks fantastic; I would assume it’s a current generation game. The character models are superb and the graphics on display were spectacular, particularly when it was a rainy night. It nailed the atmosphere and it is probably my most screenshotted game.

They updated some of the gameplay from what I understand but otherwise stuck true to the original, while providing players the option to play in an ultra-realistic mode with how strict the police would be and players having to obey traffic laws. There wasn’t a great deal to do in the open world but that didn’t bother me at all, it was just great to play through the story in this stunning recreation of Empire City.
Angry_Kurt (Twitter)
Now playing: Metroid Dread (Switch) and F1 22 (Xbox Series X)


E-mail your comments to: gamecentral@metro.co.uk


Early example
I would go with Prince Of Persia on the SNES as my favourite. Compared to the Apple II version almost three years previously, Arsys substantially changed the game. They most obviously implemented heavily improved graphics befitting the stronger hardware of the SNES, but at the same time changed the visual design for the better. But they also made it a much meatier game by almost doubling the number of levels, with new enemies, new bosses, and new traps/puzzles.

They leaned even further into the sort of Sinbad-esque Middle Eastern adventure theme, with Jafar now having an extra spellcasting phase in the final boss encounter, which itself is now a more spectacular fight than the original. It also has an excellent soundtrack, where the original and most ports only had the title theme and a tiny number of jingles for end of level and set pieces, with no music for 95% of the game length.

The Japanese version also boasted sublime boxart by Katsuya Terada, which I think I mentioned on a previous Hot Topic. All in all, it improves on pretty much every aspect of the original and is much loved by Prince Of Persia fans, as well as the original Prince Of Persia creator himself Jordan Mechner, who has praised it.

I hadn’t played the original Apple II version before the SNES one, but I had played the extremely faithful IBM/DOS port first, which is a fantastic game. I think the SNES version is far and away superior, as it gets the all-important controls correct (which many ports failed at), while expanding the game with superb new content.

However, I do go back to the DOS version from time to time, since the SNES changes are so large it’s almost like playing a sequel, and the DOS version is still a very enjoyable experience with its own charm.

If this Hot Topic came up a week ago I could have said I was most looking forward to Live A Live (which more than met up to my expectations and to my fond memories of the original), but now I guess it would be Dragon Quest 3. I’m very excited for that, as the teaser trailer the other year looked excellent. Though I do hope the localisation team stops adding their silly ‘Allo ‘Allo accents (they won’t).

My dream remake is Xenogears by Monolith Soft. The game was famously rushed due to tight deadlines, so I’d love for Takahashi to go back to it and do it justice. But I kind of doubt it will happen since there’s no reason for Nintendo to pay Square for the rights when they can just go on making Xenoblade games instead.
Lord Darkstorm


Rejuvenating trilogy
Long time reader, first time submitter here. My favourite remake has to be the Spyro Reignited Trilogy. I loved the games when I was a kid, even though I wasn’t very good and usually just messed around with the flying mechanic than properly play the game, and finally beat them when I was in my teens and looking to recapture some child-like wonder.

That was an interesting experience, as being 16 instead of seven-years-old, and having two console generations pass in-between, I was not impressed by the graphics. The games were still a blast, of course, but some of those models and textures looked really bad, and I don’t know how I didn’t get nightmares back in the day from the metal back spiders.

Then the Reignited trilogy came along and it did something magical. It took the image I had in my head as a seven-year-old of what Spyro looked like and projected that on the screen. I have no idea if I were to return to the PS1 games after playing Reignited if I’d be unimpressed with the controls. In my mind Reignited controlled just the same as the originals, but the mind’s a funny thing and in this case is probably wrong.

But yeah, Reignited is my favourite remake for the simple reason it made me feel like a kid again. I know you didn’t ask for this, but my least favourite remake/remaster has to be the Dead Rising 2 remaster. Great game, but the remaster has a lot of lighting and sound issues that weren’t present in the original, and while it does run at 60fps on console it often stutters or freezes for a second and can be prone to crashing unexpectedly. The PC version is the best way to experience this game smoothly.
Anon


Exception to the rule
I’ve played some remakes and remasters, but only where I never played the original in the first place. I’ve never paid money for a remake of a game I’ve already owned I don’t think, with one exception, which is Resident Evil 2.

Remakes and remasters should be about fixing a problem with the original game, whether that is some gameplay element that doesn’t stand up anymore or couldn’t be successfully executed at the time, or just the fact that it isn’t widely available for people to play anymore. Resident Evil 2 ticks all those boxes so there are valid reasons for it to exist. It does what it sets out to do pretty successfully and retains plenty of the charm of the original as well.

Away from that, I don’t think I’m coming out with anything original when I say I pretty much hate the prevalence of remakes in the current gaming landscape.

A remaster is one thing, there’s nothing too offensive to me about giving a game a quick polish and sticking it out on a different platform, but full remakes annoy me more.

Hopefully, we’ve reached a bit of a nadir with The Last Of Us. There is just no good reason for that game to exist. Remastering it for the PlayStation 4 was fair enough, there were probably a good deal of PlayStation 4 owners out there who’d never played the original seeing as Sony had increased their market share from the previous generation, but I can’t believe there are many PlayStation 5 owners who didn’t have the chance to play the original if they wanted to.

I don’t think it’s been long enough for nostalgia to kick in that much and they’re not making gameplay changes if we believe what we hear – so what compelling reason is there for a consumer to purchase this title? Other than that Sony would quite like you to pay for it again, please. So for those reasons I don’t think it’s completely wishful thinking to hope it might underperform somewhat and scare publishers off of remakes for a bit.
Charlie


Personal
My favourite remake is Demon’s Souls on PlayStation 5 because I’d become such a big Souls fan during the Xbox 360 era but never owned a PlayStation 3.

Once I got a PlayStation 4 in 2015, I regularly checked PS Now to see if Demon’s Souls was available for streaming and I even looked to borrow someone else’s PlayStation 3 and then buy a copy of the game. Those options never worked out but since almost everything else I felt I’d missed on PlayStation 3 had been made available next gen, I could never bring myself to buy an old console just for one game.

When the remake was announced as a launch title for the PlayStation 5, it felt like it was aimed specifically at me and while I knew I’d get a next gen console eventually, it was a big incentive to jump over sooner rather than later.

The remake itself is technically excellent as well, and my choice would have to factor in whether the new version would be worthwhile for those already familiar with the original. I’d imagine this would be the case with Demon’s Souls because of the fantastic graphics, dramatically improved loading times, and quality of life improvements.

There aren’t many old games that I really regret missing out on, so when the opportunity comes up and there’s that level of dedication from a skilled developer it definitely stands out.

I do suspect Sony has something brewing with Bloodborne and that’s why it feels oddly singled out in how ignored it has been. Although I know the game inside out and I never personally had much of a problem with the frame rate, I wouldn’t say no to a full BluePoint style makeover for PlayStation 5 but it’s hard to say whether it would be more sensible for Sony just to do a basic remaster and release it on PC as well.
Panda


Resonating remaster
For this week’s Hot Topic I first thought Resident Evil 2 or Final Fantasy 7, which I assume will be popular choices for obvious reasons, but I decided to choose a favourite of mine and what I believe is an overlooked gem: Resonance Of Fate.

This got the remaster treatment for the PlayStation 4 a few years back, supporting HD/4K. The improvements may have been minor but I loved the setting of the giant tiered, clockwork/steampunk city. Seeing it with sharper/shinier graphics was a small but welcome improvement.

I think it was also a bit smoother in running compared to the PlayStation 3 version. Either way it’s a game I love with its unusual story and setting and a nice change to the usual Japanese role-playing formula.
Liam


Classic remake
Best remake for me was the original Resident Evil on the GameCube, a new masterpiece inspired by the original version but with extended features of the mansion to explore and with a variety of creatures, plus more lore within the diaries you find on your investigation.

Resi 1 is a classic remake which made me fall in love with the Resident Evil games even more. The graphics of the mansion’s interiors were so lifelike and much more foreboding to look at, with the incredibly creepy soundtrack score and the atmospheric sounds putting a right shiver down you.

The cut scenes were awesome, with the best being the decomposed state of the zombie in the bath! I loved the wardrobe zombie scene but it was the unexpected walking down a dark corridor and a zombie opening a door really unnervingly quickly, when all was previously quiet, which did it for me. I reactively pressed the pause button as I literally jumped out of my skin! Never mind the dog and its smashing of the window jumping – I knew that was coming!

The crimson zombies and crimson head, along with the giant sharks, snakes, and spiders are all very well realised and done well, but it was Lisa Trevor which was the key to the game’s extended backstory.

As you find out more about Lisa and the horrific experiments she had to go through I felt really sorry for her, as she was trying to find her mother. Very scary moments with Lisa, but I just felt compassion mostly as I found out more about her.

It was definitely a winning version for me and although we’ve had remakes of Resi 2, Final Fantasy 7 and Demon’s Souls since, my first favourite would always be Resident Evil. This due to it being so gorgeous and satisfying to look at and experience.
Alucard


E-mail your comments to: gamecentral@metro.co.uk


The small print
New Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers’ letters are used on merit and may be edited for length and content.

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Weekend Hot Topic: Best video game remasters and remakes - Metro.co.uk
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Diabetes, Osteoporosis Research Is a "Hot Topic," Says Dr Viral Shah - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network

Viral Shah, MD, an endocrinologist and scientist, discusses ongoing research on preventing bone fractures in people with type 1 diabetes (T1D).

After discussing his own research on type 1 diabetes (T1D) and bone fracture risk, Viral Shah, MD, an endocrinologist and scientist, talks about the "resurgence in this interest" in T1D and osteoporosis research.

Transcript

What are some other exciting areas of research being pursued in the area of T1D and osteoporosis?

The diabetes and osteoporosis field is now becoming a hot topic. The reason is that we have a lot of tools to manage type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes. There are so many newer medications [and] diabetes technologies to deliver the insulin automatically. With all these advances, now people are living longer, and when people are living longer, particularly with type 1 or type 2 diabetes, they are also suffering from other comorbid conditions like cardiovascular disease, cognitive issues, and osteoporosis. I think it's a resurgence in this interest in this field to understand how diabetes is affecting the osteoporosis.

There are many people working in this area. Particularly what I'm doing in this area is that I'm focusing only on type 1 diabetes, not on type 2, because it's a totally different ballgame. But in type 1 diabetes, one of my studies funded by the NIH [National Institutes of Health] is trying to look at the bone tissue compositions and the material properties and how it is different in people with type 1 diabetes compared to people without diabetes. So [we're] trying to understand how diabetes would have influenced the tissue material properties of the bone.

And then another study that I have, again funded by the NIH, we are prospectively following patients with type 1 diabetes and without diabetes and looking at the change in the bone structural properties by doing a hip CT scan. And trying to look at what kind of factors would predict that kind of a change in the bone structure property. If we know what is changing that, then probably we can make some kind of therapeutic decisions or studies in the future to prevent that. So I'm hoping that some of these studies will provide really interesting findings and a next roadmap on preventing osteoporotic fractures in people with type 1 diabetes.

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Diabetes, Osteoporosis Research Is a "Hot Topic," Says Dr Viral Shah - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network
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TOPIC PAGE: Coronavirus, oil price direction – impact on chemicals - ICIS

Will Beacham

29-Jul-2022

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on 27 July lowered its global growth forecast for this year to 2022, partly owing to the COVID-19 lockdowns in China.

The war between Russia and Ukraine has also resulted in a substantial deterioration of the global economic environment, according to the IMF, with headwinds from the conflict resulting in weaker GDP growth expectations for 2022 and into next year.

World real GDP has seen its first contraction since 2020 in the second quarter of this year, the IMF said in its latest world economic outlook report.

“World real GDP is estimated to have shrunk in the second quarter—the first contraction since 2020—owing to economic downturns in China and Russia,” the IMF said in the report.

The fund slashed its global GDP growth expectations for 2022-23 compared to forecasts last quarter, by 0.4 and 0.7 percentage points respectively.

Global GDP growth is now projected at 3.2% this year and 2.9% in 2023, according to IMF estimates.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB)  earlier this month cut its GDP growth forecast for developing Asian countries to 4.6% from its previous projection of 5.2%, with China’s growth lowered by a full percentage point to 4.0%.

Updated on 29 July 2022

On this topic page we analyse the impact of coronavirus and oil price dynamics on chemical markets and bring together the latest news reported by ICIS. 

Scroll down to see the latest interactive graphics, podcasts and videos. 

Click here to register for regular updates to help you navigate these challenging times.

LATEST HEADLINES (Last updated at 09:00 GMT on 29 July 2022)

OUTLOOK: China’s oxo-alcohols weighed by slow demand recovery, increasing supply
By Claire Gao 29-Jul-22 16:07 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s oxo-alcohols markets will face downward pressure from slow recovery of demand and increasing supply, although the outlook of export is promising.

OUTLOOK: US EDC likely to re-enter global markets in 2H as macroeconomic headwinds change flows
By Bill Bowen 29-Jul-22 05:56 HOUSTON (ICIS)–US ethylene dichloride (EDC) is likely to see weakened demand and greater availability in the second half of 2022 as demand for its downstream derivative polymer weakens on less construction activity amid macroeconomic headwinds.

INSIGHT: Europe industry facing difficult August as gas supply concerns mount
By Nigel Davis 29-Jul-22 00:14 LONDON (ICIS)–It is almost like stepping back in time, with industrial sectors in Europe vying for the attention of governments and lawmakers to try to secure operations should the region’s gas crisis escalate.

S Korea’s S-Oil Q2 net income more than doubles; Q3 PX spread to weaken
By Nurluqman Suratman 28-Jul-22 13:38 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–S-Oil’s second-quarter net income more than doubled year on year on strong refining margins and robust aromatics demand, but the South Korean producer’s paraxylene (PX) spread is expected to weaken in July-September 2022.

SE Asia August PE offers stable to soft but Vietnam market under intense pressure
By Izham Ahmad 28-Jul-22 11:22 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Initial spot import offers for August shipments of polyethylene (PE) in southeast Asia were announced either stable or softer this week as buying sentiment continued to be depressed by the slump in demand from China.

VIDEO: China’s new EVA capacities to weigh on Q3 sentiment
By Joanne Wang 22-Jul-22 12:29 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Watch ICIS senior industry analyst Joanne Wang discuss the ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) capacity increases in China and the recently launched EVA China RMB index.

Chinese ethanolamines slump weighs on sentiment in Asia and India
By Clive Ong 22-Jul-22 10:45 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The ongoing slump in the ethanolamines market in domestic China continues to weigh on sentiment of players in Asia and India.

OUTLOOK: European MMA demand uncertain amid wider economic challenges
By Mathew Jolin-Beech 21-Jul-22 23:24 LONDON (ICIS)–The European methyl methacrylate (MMA) market is facing uncertain H2 demand amid wider geopolitical and economic challenges.

Asia BDO remains weighed down by ongoing Chinese market slump
By Clive Ong 21-Jul-22 16:53 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian butanediol (BDO) market continues to be impacted by the ongoing slump in the Chinese domestic sector. Sentiment has turned increasingly bearish with participants anticipating further weakness in the near term.

OUTLOOK: US MEG market expected to get longer through Q3
By Melissa Wheeler 21-Jul-22 05:10 HOUSTON (ICIS)–The monoethylene glycol (MEG) market is expected to remain long through Q3 as suppliers continue to offer more product.

PODCAST: China’s base oils demand to be better in autumn, imports to decline YOY in H2
By Whitney Shi 20-Jul-22 15:11 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–ICIS analyst Jady Ma and Whitney Shi discuss the outlook of China’s base oil market in this episode.

Prolonged heatwave could hinder operations at Europe petrochemicals plants
By Jonathan Lopez 19-Jul-22 18:09 MADRID (ICIS)–High temperatures across Europe could reduce operating rates at some petrochemicals plants, as cooling operations become more difficult, trade groups have warned.

OUTLOOK: Middle East base oils market to face stable-to-soft demand in H2
By Izham Ahmad 19-Jul-22 10:46 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The Middle East base oils spot market is expected to still face uncertainties in the final half of 2022 as supply of most grades is expected to be mixed, with demand expected to remain stable to soft due to sluggish economic growth and global automotive sales.

World petrochemical sentiment weak as demand falters
By Felicia Loo 15-Jul-22 14:12 SINGAPORE (ICIS)-Global petrochemical markets are mired in a challenging situation writ large, with demand dull as recession risks gather pace.

VIDEO: Asia adipic acid demand struggles to reach pre-lockdown levels
By Josh Quah 15-Jul-22 14:01 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Watch ICIS editor Josh Quah discuss developments in Asia’s adipic acid market.

PODCAST: Chems sector resilient in Q2 but conditions forecast bleak for H2
By Tom Brown 14-Jul-22 18:44 LONDON (ICIS)–Projected second-quarter financial data for BASF hints that conditions for chemicals players may have been stronger than expected in the second quarter of 2022, but rising COVID-19 infection numbers in China only add to the slew of bearish news for the second half of the year.

PODCAST: China’s LDPE facing continued supply pressure
By Joanne Wang 14-Jul-22 10:28 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–In this episode, ICIS analyst Jady Ma and Joanne Wang discuss the recent developments and outlook of China’s low density polyethylene (LDPE) market.

Europe PET high prices detrimental to sales in bearish climate
By Caroline Murray 13-Jul-22 23:15 LONDON (ICIS)–The peak season for polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottlers in Europe is the summer but the combination of extraordinarily high prices and the unstable economy is affecting sales.

China PP hits lowest levels this year on slumping crude, weak demand
By Lucy Shuai 13-Jul-22 16:43 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s polypropylene (PP) prices fell to their lowest levels this year from slumping crude oil and weak downstream demand, on concerns of a global economic recession.

Crude falls nearly $2/bbl on fresh China COVID-19 curbs
By Nurluqman Suratman 12-Jul-22 11:08 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Oil prices fell by nearly $2/bbl on Tuesday morning on worries over fresh COVID-19 restrictions in China, the world’s biggest crude importer.

INSIGHT: Demand uncertainty pressuring prices as downturn gathers momentum
By Nigel Davis 11-Jul-22 23:43 LONDON (ICIS)–Movement in the ICIS weekly and monthly petrochemical indexes illustrate the strain being put on producers to hold prices in the face of increasing demand uncertainty and the volatile feedstock and energy cost environment.

European melamine spot prices stable-to-soft; Q3 contract talks ongoing as supplier and consumer pricing ideas clash
By Melissa Hurley 08-Jul-22 00:44 LONDON (ICIS)–European melamine third quarter contract discussions continued this week. More progress is expected towards the end of the week, heading in to next week. Talks between suppliers and consumers are divisive as pricing expectations remain unmatched.

PODCAST: Europe’s oxo-alcohols chain faces demand erosion amid economic uncertainty
By Mathew Jolin-Beech 07-Jul-22 22:03 LONDON (ICIS)–The European oxo-alcohols chain faces a slowdown in demand from end use sectors as the wider geopolitical and economic uncertainties begin to bite. This ICIS podcast explores the latest developments for oxo-alcohols and its derivative markets.

PODCAST: Global shortage of MEK eases, though US prices remain high
By Nick Cleeve 07-Jul-22 17:58 LONDON (ICIS)–Methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) prices are softening globally as supply constraints ease, although prices in the US, a net importer, remain at extremely high levels, drawing exports from Asia and Europe.

Asia petchems mired in bearishness on elevated recession fears
By Felicia Loo 07-Jul-22 11:21 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian petrochemical markets are in a jam, with price bearishness across the board as recession risks continue to mount.

OUTLOOK: Tight supply concerns flip to reduced oil demand by Q4
By Barney Gray 07-Jul-22 00:49LONDON (ICIS)–Oil prices were in a post-Covid recovery phase prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February. Since then, H1 crude prices have been driven by the fallout from the war, reaching record highs. But the oil market will be characterised by major volatility and rising uncertainty as we head into H2.

PODCAST: UK chemicals fighting Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse – CIA CEO
By Will Beacham 05-Jul-22 22:48 LONDON (ICIS)–The UK chemicals industry is battling the quadruple challenges of Brexit, COVID-19, the cost of living crisis and the war in Ukraine, according to Stephen Elliott, CEO of UK trade group the Chemical Industries Association.

OUTLOOK: Demand for low-end R-PET to continue to shrink
By Arianne Perez 04-Jul-22 15:03 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Low-end applications of recycled polyethylene terephthalate (R-PET) will become less popular as the more competitive virgin PET continues to eat into its market share.

China’s propylene faces headwinds from ample supply, weak demand in June
By Yi Liang 04-Jul-22 10:21 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s domestic propylene market continues to face headwinds from ample supply and sluggish end-user demand in June, with market sentiment turning bearish.

Mideast petchem market sentiment bearish on weak demand
By Felicia Loo 01-Jul-22 11:30 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Sentiment in the Middle East petrochemical markets is bearish, as demand is tepid against a backdrop of ample supply. The soaring inflation rates have led to a reduced purchasing power, weakening buyers’ appetites.

Asia AA and acrylates largely lower; sentiment softer on China downtrend
By Li Li Chng 29-Jun-22 21:20 SINGAPORE (ICIS)— Asia’s acrylic acid (AA) and acrylate esters spot discussions were under pressure, with market sentiment bearish amid a downtrend in China.

PODCAST: China PP to face uncertainties in H2 ’22 amid high costs
By Lucy Shuai 29-Jun-22 17:47 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–ICIS analysts Jady Ma and Lucy Shuai discuss the recent developments and outlook of China’s polypropylene (PP) market.

PODCAST: Europe and Middle East isocyanates demand slows
By ICIS Editorial 29-Jun-22 17:09 LONDON (ICIS)–Isocyanates Europe editor Zubair Adam discusses current demand and supply market trends for Europe with isocyanates Middle East editor Damini Dabholkar.

US ethylene begins Q3 with ample supply, eroding margins
By John Donnelly 29-Jun-22 05:45 HOUSTON (ICIS)–The US ethylene market is seeing ample supply, lower margins but decent derivative demand heading into Q3.

INSIGHT: Energy demand rebound at a time of crisis, bp stats show
By Nigel Davis 28-Jun-22 23:39 LONDON (ICIS)–Here is the energy crisis writ large. The chart, from bp as it released its latest Statistical Review of World Energy on Tuesday, shows the sharp rebound in energy consumption as COVID-19 restrictions eased and global economic activity recovered.

PODCAST: Isocyanates face high costs, squeezed margins in H2 – ICIS analysts
By Morgan Condon 28-Jun-22 21:02 LONDON (ICIS)–The isocyanates market is faced with steep production costs and weakening demand across downstream sectors, presenting the industry with a darkening outlook.

European PVC shows signs of lengthening on demand, global trends
By Chris Barker 28-Jun-22 17:29 LONDON (ICIS)–European polyvinyl chloride (PVC) contract prices for June have settled with rollovers to decreases compared to May, with indications that the outlook for availability has lengthened compared to earlier in the year.

Asia ADA trade flows punch above weight in May
By Josh Quah 24-Jun-22 13:57 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Northeast Asia adipic acid (ADA) markets logged a large trade surplus in May, according to import-export data captured by ICIS Supply and Demand Database.

Europe capro, nylon 6 markets face slow summer demand
By Marta Fern 24-Jun-22 00:35 LONDON (ICIS)–European caprolactam (capro) and nylon 6 markets are facing persistent soft demand, which could weaken further in the coming months while the costs of production are on the rise.

VIDEO: Asia MEG may face more challenges in H2 2022
By Judith Wang 23-Jun-22 17:16 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Watch ICIS Senior Editor Judith Wang discuss current developments in Asia’s monoethylene glycol (MEG) market and its outlook.

China’s NBR import offers plummet with domestic losses, soft demand
By Ai Teng Lim 23-Jun-22 15:56 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s import offers for acrylonitrile butadiene rubber (NBR) are at year-low levels, as sellers tried to chase deals with wider discounts.

Tight tonnage and robust demand push Asian chemical tanker market, sentiment bullish
By Luffy Wu 23-Jun-22 14:37 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The Asian chemical tanker shipping market saw overall upward pressure amid high global bunker levels and regional tonnage tightness, drained by robust long-haul activities and clean petroleum product (CPP) markets.

PODCAST: How may China respond to looming global energy crisis?
By Bee Lin Chow 23-Jun-22 13:32 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–ICIS analysts discuss how China may respond to what seems like a looming global energy crisis.

US SBR demand healthy from tyre sector, but tyre imports growing
By Amanda Hay 23-Jun-22 05:34 HOUSTON (ICIS)–US styrene butadiene rubber (SBR) demand healthy for tyres, but North American tyre manufacturers face growing tyre imports.

INSIGHT: Don’t stifle chemicals now in the face of energy uncertainty and climate reform – UK industry
By Nigel Davis 22-Jun-22 22:20 LONDON (ICIS)-The UK chemical industry is now 6% larger than at the onset of the pandemic, chief executive of the country’s sector trade group, the Chemical Industries Association (CIA), said last week.

PODCAST: China benzene prices hit 8-year high; cost and supply support to persist
By Yoyo Liu 17-Jun-22 10:37 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–ICIS analyst Jady Ma and Yoyo Liu discuss the recent developments and outlook of China’s benzene market.

Asian BD buying slows as domestic China tumbles
By Ai Teng Lim 17-Jun-22 09:48 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Sentiment was duller in this week’s spot talks for Asian butadiene (BD) imports, as buyers retreated after the domestic China market suffered heavy losses early-week.

PODCAST: Europe PET speculation rife in face of diverging upstream dynamics
By Caroline Murray 17-Jun-22 00:07 LONDON (ICIS)–Mixed xylene prices are skyrocketing higher than PX prices and concerns over negative margins mount. PX June contract talks are ongoing. By contrast, MEG supply remains lengthy and demand has been low, pressuring down spot prices. The June MEG contract price also remains unconfirmed.

INSIGHT: PET, politicians and TikTok – the industry’s battle for our attention
By Matt Tudball 16-Jun-22 22:17 BRUSSELS (ICIS)–The battle for our attention is a fierce one. In the post-COVID-19 world, as employees we feel a sense of email overload and Zoom fatigue while as a consumer we face a constant bombardment of media telling us what we should be doing, thinking, eating, drinking and watching.

Asian petrochemicals to rebound in June amid bumpy recovery – ICIS analysts
By Ann Sun 16-Jun-22 12:12 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian petrochemical market is expected to be generally firmer in June given higher crude prices and easing lockdowns in China, according to a latest Price Forecast by ICIS analysts.

PODCAST: Global base oils supply and refinery margins to stay under pressure in H2
By Eashani Chavda 15-Jun-22 22:35 LONDON (ICIS)–ICIS editors Eashani Chavda, Samantha Wright and Amanda Hay are joined by ICIS analyst Mike Connolly to discuss the latest developments in Europe and US base oils markets. Key topics include: supply shortages, shifting trade flows, refinery margins and additive shortages.

PODCAST: Chemical distributors see inflation hurting demand, downturn in prospect
By Will Beacham 14-Jun-22 22:03 BARCELONA (ICIS)–Rising inflation is now hurting demand for chemicals, raising the prospect of a broad economic downturn later this year or in 2023, according to chemical distributors.

China PE finds support from stimulus policies; eyes on demand performance
By Sijia Li 14-Jun-22 14:57 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s domestic polyethylene (PE) market entering June has found support from stimulus policies and costs. Looking ahead, players are focusing on demand recovery, with the easing of lockdowns in multiple regions amid decreasing COVID-19 infections.

India domestic LAB prices rise; China demand improves as lockdowns ease
By Clive Ong 10-Jun-22 11:53 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–India’s domestic prices for linear alkylbenzene (LAB) have spiked on the back of rising costs, but some players expect some headwinds with the monsoon season kicking off.

  • Monsoon season to hamper India demand
  • China demand sees uptick as COVID-19 restrictions ease
  • China’s competitively priced cargoes still available in Asia (including India), Mideast

Oil prices drop more than $1/bbl on partial lockdowns in China
By Nurluqman Suratman 10-Jun-22 11:34 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Oil prices fell more than $1/bbl on Friday on renewed demand fears after fresh COVID-19 lockdown measures were announced in China, but tight supply concerns capped losses.

INSIGHT: Sustainability to remain the key driver for Asia recycled polymers
By Arianne Perez 10-Jun-22 11:00 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Capacity expansions of recycled polyethylene terephthalate (R-PET) and recycled polyethylene (R-PE) faced delays amid the onslaught of COVID-19, particularly last year, but overall growth of Asia polymers recycling is set to continue with sustainability as the main driver.

PODCAST: European ACN market keeps a close eye on ammonia and propylene
By ICIS Editorial 09-Jun-22 18:35 LONDON (ICIS)–The European acrylonitrile (ACN) market has good supply and some softening demand, but costs remain high. In this latest podcast, ICIS deputy managing editor Jane Massingham (Europe) talks to managing editor fertilizers, Julia Meehan and senior editor on olefins, Nel Weddle about the ammonia and propylene markets and what to expect in the months ahead.

PODCAST: Asia benzene, styrene short-term outlook to hinge on demand-supply balance
By Jasmine Khoo 09-Jun-22 11:35 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asia’s benzene prices have hit an all-time high on strong performance from the US amid the turnaround season, while styrene price gains have been lagging behind due to weak performance in the styrenics sector. In this podcast, Jasmine Khoo speaks with editors Angeline Soh and Trixie Yap on benzene and its key downstream styrene monomer (SM) and styrenics sectors.

China PP exports may fall on narrow price gap with SE Asia
By Lucy Shuai 08-Jun-22 17:09 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–With the lifting of COVID-19 lockdowns in China, as well as stimulus policies to boost the economy, China’s polypropylene (PP) prices have rebounded since late May. However, as PP prices have fallen in the southeast Asian market, China’s PP exports may fall in June due to a narrow price gap.

VIDEO: China PP demand set to improve in June as restrictions ease
By Lucy Shuai 08-Jun-22 16:21 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Watch industry analyst Lucy Shuai share her insights on the rebound seen in China’s polypropylene (PP) market following the easing of strict COVID-19 curbs in the country.

Asia Q3 biodiesel market sentiment to stay weak on poor European demand
By Felicia Loo 07-Jun-22 12:13 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The third-quarter market sentiment for southeast Asian palm methyl ester (PME) biodiesel is expected to remain weak amid poor buying requirements from Europe, a key importing region for southeast Asian material.

Germany’s chemicals hit hard by China lockdowns, automotive sentiment improves – Ifo By Jonathan Lopez 03-Jun-22 16:49 MADRID (ICIS)–Lockdowns in China to contain the coronavirus pandemic have had a major impact on export-intensive industrial sectors in Germany such as chemicals, research institute Ifo said on Thursday.

Asia MEG rebounds on higher crude, demand recovery expectations
By Judith Wang 03-Jun-22 10:50 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asia’s monoethylene glycol (MEG) weekly prices rebounded during the week amid stronger crude values and expectations of demand improvement due to easing lockdowns in Shanghai.

Global chem production fell 2.9% year on year in April
By Stefan Baumgarten 03-Jun-22 01:57 HOUSTON (ICIS)–Global chemical production volumes in April fell 4.1% month on month and 2.9% year on year, and they were off 0.4% year on year for the first four months of 2022, ICIS senior economist Kevin Swift said in a report on Thursday.

China methanol to face ample supply, mixed demand performance
By Doris He 01-Jun-22 21:05 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s methanol market is expected to face overall ample supply from domestic and overseas producers in the near term, while demand may be mixed from different downstream sectors.

INSIGHT: China, India to be main drivers of PVC supply, demand in Asia
By Jonathan Chou 01-Jun-22 11:00 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The coronavirus pandemic has changed how we live our lives, upending also supply and demand dynamics for polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and its related markets.

Over two years on since the pandemic hit, much of Asia has attempted “living with COVID-19” in 2022, with some starting to treat it as an endemic disease.

China SM margins likely to be squeezed by higher costs, weak demand
By Tina Zhang 31-May-22 11:55 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Margins in China’s styrene monomer (SM) market are expected to continue to be squeezed in the near term, in view of rising feedstock benzene values and weak demand.

China petrochemical market sentiment upbeat on Shanghai recovery plan
By Fanny Zhang 30-May-22 13:27 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s domestic petrochemical market sentiment is upbeat at the start of the week, with demand expected to recover when the two-month lockdown in Shanghai is lifted in June.

Asian epoxy market stable, Chinese domestic market outlook ambiguous
By Luffy Wu 27-May-22 11:54 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The Asia epoxy resins market saw overall stable market sentiment while buyers exhibited improved price acceptability compared with in April.

Asia nylon market cautious as Shanghai inches towards June reopening
By Josh Quah 26-May-22 16:16 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The lockdowns have been damaging for Asia’s nylon market, with prolonged demand loss particularly felt in the CFR (cost & freight) China market. There have been recent signs, however, that the worst may have passed in the lead up to the reopening of key cities in China.

PODCAST: Weak demand from lubricants, China’s Group II base oil import margins to be negative
By Whitney Shi 25-May-22 14:09 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–ICIS analyst Jady Ma and Whitney Shi discuss the recent developments and outlook of China’s base oil market.

INSIGHT: China crude consumption softens amid COVID-19 lockdowns
By Pearl Bantillo 25-May-22 12:00 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s consumption of crude has softened as industrial production is hit by pandemic-related restrictions in place since February, with no sign of the government giving up on its zero-COVID policy.

INTERVIEW: China emergence from lockdowns, stimulus to recharge auto and construction – Covestro CFO
By Joseph Chang 25-May-22 05:17 NEW YORK (ICIS)–China’s easing of and potential emergence from COVID-19 lockdowns along with government stimulus should spark a major recovery in its automotive and construction markets, the chief financial officer (CFO) of Germany-based Covestro said on Tuesday.

Asian MMA peaks in May; outlook pending clarity amid easing restrictions in China
By Li Li Chng 24-May-22 13:47 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Asian methyl methacrylate (MMA) peaked in May, after increasing around 17% since H2 February. Market players are awaiting clearer picture on China’s lifting of COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions.

PODCAST: Europe PE and PP update and outlook
By Ben Lake 23-May-22 23:42 LONDON (ICIS)–Senior editor, Vicky Ellis, and market editor, Ben Lake, join forces to discuss a distinct change in the polymers market. The frenzied activity in March and April has given way to a far more relaxed sentiment in May – on the buy-side, at least. Vicky and Ben give their outlook for June and take a look at events that could shake up the markets again.

INSIGHT: China PE demand to rebound from June, but slow road ahead
By Amy Yu 23-May-22 18:27 SINGAPORE (ICIS)—China polyethylene (PE) demand is expected to firm as COVID-19 containment measures ease, but the pace of recovery remains hindered by remaining lockdown measures.

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TOPIC PAGE: Coronavirus, oil price direction – impact on chemicals - ICIS
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Thursday, July 28, 2022

Opinion: On the Delicate Topic of Youth Suicide, Journalists Are Faltering - Undark Magazine

In April, The New Yorker published a searching feature story about child suicide. It told the story of a 12-year-old boy, describing how he evaded adult supervision and other safeguards to take his own life, and conveying in graphic detail the condition of the boy’s body after his death. The piece was lauded by Nieman Storyboard as “powerful” and “riveting.”

The article is part of a string of recent coverage that has grappled with the worrisome rise in youth suicides in the U.S., seeking to answer the heartbreaking question: What convinces a child or teenager that the future holds no promise? Stories in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and other outlets have painted portraits of children in dire emotional and psychological pain who died by suicide, survived their attempts, or contemplated death.

On one hand, the publications are to be applauded for taking an unflinching look at a crisis that isn’t abating, and that appears to be worsening for non-White, non-Hispanic groups. Reporting that looks at the many risk factors for suicidal feelings and behavior, and the difficulty of accessing effective treatment, can point to system failures and potential solutions. It can help those who’ve struggled with suicidal thoughts — and their loved ones — feel less alone.

But reporting on suicide is an ethically complicated, high-stakes endeavor that, if done irresponsibly, can contribute to the spread of suicidal behavior. So it’s worth asking: Are these stories getting it right?

Leaders in the suicide prevention field have long discussed how to best report on these deaths. Many of the best practices that emerged from those discussions appear in “Recommendations for Media Reporting on Suicide,” a set of guidelines informed by researchers and journalists, which was released in 2011. The American Association of Suicidology released similar guidelines in 2019, developed with Nationwide Children’s Hospital, the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, and the E. W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University. Other guides have focused on the U.K., such as the Suicide Reporting Toolkit and the Samaritans’ Media Guidelines for Reporting Suicide.

Although the details of these reporting guides vary, they echo a shared set of general principles: Journalists should omit information about the method and location, guard against sensationalistic language and framing, refrain from glorifying or romanticizing the death, and avoid suggesting that the death served a purpose or function. The idea is that if readers who are already at high risk identify closely with the subject of a suicide story or the method of death, they may be more prone to act on suicidal thoughts themselves.

Yet many recent stories on youth suicide have flouted the recommendations of suicide reporting guides. The New Yorker piece committed a litany of mistakes: It included sensationalist details about the child’s behavior and mental health, information about how he carried out the act, and a macabre description of his death. The New York Times story included information about the materials teens used to harm themselves and excerpted a suicide note. The Wall Street Journal opened its piece by describing a 10-year-old girl’s suicide as inexplicable — which experts believe may inadvertently suggest that suicide is random and impossible to prevent — and later describes the method of the child’s death. While the piece also offers a compassionate depiction of suicidal thinking amongst youth, its missteps may have unintended consequences.

The suicide reporting guidelines warn against exactly the thing that we journalists are traditionally trained to do, which is to dramatize the human experience in unforgettable ways, particularly by relying on evocative details.

I can sympathize with the journalists who wrote these stories, because in the past I’ve committed some of the same sins myself. In 2013, before I first encountered the suicide reporting guidelines, I wrote a feature about a young Marine who had killed himself. I described in detail the firearm he’d used, because it had special significance to his father. I also described the moment of his death. At the time, I believed those narrative tactics were in service of what I’d learned about using reporting and craft to draw attention to an important problem. And that speaks to a fundamental tension faced by journalists who report on suicide: The suicide reporting guidelines warn against exactly the thing that we journalists are traditionally trained to do, which is to dramatize the human experience in unforgettable ways, particularly by relying on evocative details. This kind of storytelling wins journalists acclaim and awards.

But decades of research suggest that, on matters of suicide, visceral, evocative storytelling can do more harm than good. Many of the early studies on this topic suggested graphic reporting could lead to increased suicide deaths, and while causation remains difficult to prove, the science has matured substantially in recent years and demonstrated a clear link. A preponderance of studies now supports the existence of a phenomenon known as the Werther effect, in which a highly publicized suicide, when covered irresponsibly, correlates with a spike in imitative suicides.

Reporting on suicide is an ethically complicated, high-stakes endeavor that, if done irresponsibly, can contribute to the spread of suicidal behavior.

This connection is abundantly clear in recent studies that have used time-series analyses, search engine data, and other techniques to examine contagion following celebrity suicide deaths. A systemic review and meta-analysis of such research, published in The BMJ in 2020, found that the risk of suicide increased by 13 percent in the weeks after a celebrity suicide. When news outlets reported on the method of the suicide, there was a 30 percent increase in deaths by the same technique. The researchers found that general coverage of suicide unrelated to celebrity deaths did not seem to affect suicide rates, but they noted that this result was based on a small number of studies. None of the research took into account whether the reporting followed guidelines to reduce contagion. If high- and low-quality coverage were lumped together, it could have distorted the negative effects of certain types of reporting.

A 2021 literature review of more than 100 research papers suggests the Werther effect is “causal and real,” and that younger people in particular may be most vulnerable to suicidal contagion. Research indicates that between 1 and 5 percent of teen and young adult suicide deaths happen in clusters, likely as a result of contagion. (Some studies suggests that certain types of storytelling can have a protective effect against suicide, known as the Papageno effect, but that research area is still new.)

As a journalist who’s reported on suicide for more than a decade, I believe sensitive, responsible coverage of the topic is a public service. And while stories that center graphic or surprising narratives may pull at the heartstrings, there are other, perhaps more constructive ways to tell these stories. For instance, John Ackerman, a clinical psychologist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and a lead author of the American Association of Suicidology’s reporting guidelines, suggests that media could highlight effective evidence-based programs, and focus more on prevention and intervention strategies, on issues of accessing expert care prior to a crisis, and on efforts to identify at-risk populations, as this recent piece from The St. Louis Post-Dispatch did.

Journalists also can and must spotlight young people who have survived suicidal thoughts or attempts, like this Toronto Star article did beautifully in 2011. These efforts needn’t only focus on individual resilience; they can explore holistically what it means to master crisis. Such coverage might explore ways individuals can draw on internal and external resources, while noting the complex role played by structural factors like systemic racism and healthcare access.

Dan Reidenberg, lead author of the Recommendations for Media Reporting on Suicide guidelines and executive director of the suicide prevention nonprofit Suicide Awareness Voices of Education, said that when he trains journalists, he asks them: “If you knew your story was going to impact and result in one other death — one other death — would that change your behavior?” Young people who are so distressed as to contemplate suicide think there’s no hope, he said. “We have to help people understand that you can actually get through that crisis.”


If you’re feeling suicidal, please talk to somebody. You can reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988; the Trans Lifeline at 877-565-8860; or the Trevor Project at 866-488-7386. Text “START” to Crisis Text Line at 741-741. If you don’t like the phone, consider using the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline Chat at www.crisischat.org.

Rebecca Ruiz covers mental health as a senior reporter for Mashable. She is a former Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Journalism Fellow.

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Opinion: On the Delicate Topic of Youth Suicide, Journalists Are Faltering - Undark Magazine
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Tuesday, July 26, 2022

'Elitist 2006 Hot Topic Employee' Reacts to 2022 Version of Store - Loudwire

Hot There's no denying that the Hot Topic you can visit in your local mall today is dramatically different from the Hot Topic in your memories from the early aughts. One creator on TikTok revealed just how much the store has changed over the years in a hilarious and viral upload on the app.

TikTok user @littalpunk imagined how an "elitist Hot Topic employee" from the year 2006 would respond if they were to time travel into the 2022 version of the store. And it's safe to say that the time traveler would not be thrilled with what the future holds.

"What have they done to you," the creator panics as Olivia Rodrigo's "Good 4 U" blasts in the background.

The first thing that she takes issue with is the array of Funko Pop! figurines on display. Only, she pronounces the brand name as "F--ko Pop."

"Back in my day the only dolls that were sold here were Chucky and Tiffany," she adds. Hopefully someone made the distressed time traveler aware that Funko has made both Chucky and Tiffany dolls!

She was also shocked by the presence of Harry Potter and My Little Pony merchandise and the overwhelming amount of anime on display. Unfortunately, the final straw was realizing that the song pounding from the speakers was not a Paramore cover.

"She remembers bullying the harry potter kids in ‘06," @littalpunk joked in the caption. Check out the hilarious TikTok below:

The video went absolutely viral on TikTok. At the time of publishing, it's amassed more than 1.5 million views and nearly 300,000 likes. Thousands of users also rushed to the comments section to have a good laugh.

"Now it's just mild topic," one user wrote. "Hot topic died."

"I'm surprised she didn't mention all the Disney stuff," another pointed out.

Others made it clear that they agreed with the elitist employee's perception of the changing store.

"Honestly ngl kinda agree with her," one user wrote. "I miss old hot topic."

Although plenty of people agreed, others pointed out that the store's name was literally about highlighting what is trendy or hot in the moment.

If you are a fan of the viral video, you'll be happy to know that @littalpunk already promised to make a version that shows a "98 goth elitist going to HT in 2022." She's already uploaded a video set in the year 2009.

"This place has gone to the dogs," the 2009 elitist cashier complained. "Do you remember when we had real musicians playing here and like real band merch? Now we're selling f--king Twilight tees? Abercrombie is right next door."

The character proceeds to rip into a customer who is looking for an Avril Lavigne shirt and questions their knowledge of the band Rancid.

"Way back when hot topic used to gaslight AND gatekeep," @littalpunk joked. Watch the equally hysterical video below:

16 Things Metalheads Really Need to Get Over

Get over it! Here are 16 things that metalheads really should get over.

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'Elitist 2006 Hot Topic Employee' Reacts to 2022 Version of Store - Loudwire
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Off Topic: the wide open space of Better Call Saul - Eurogamer.net

Heads up there are vague spoilers for Better Call Saul season 6 episode 9 in here.

In a way, this episode could've been the last. I'm talking about 'Fun and Games', episode 9 of Better Call Saul's final season, which is technically not the latest by the time this piece is live. I think it could've been the last because of the sheer amount of things it ties up, but Better Call Saul, the sleepy, scummy, obsessively detailed prequel to Breaking Bad, is summed up best by the space it likes to give. To end it here, despite the at times interminable wait to see Saul as Saul, would've been too quick.

Over its seven years of runtime, the Breaking Bad prequel has sprawled. Showrunners Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould had apparently expected Jimmy McGill, a peevish, bitter, and just infuriatingly lovable young lawyer, to have fully evolved into Saul Goodman, a kind of late-Elvis final, tacky form, by the end of the first season - but they were also known to have not really had a plan for how that might happen, either.

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Off Topic: the wide open space of Better Call Saul - Eurogamer.net
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Farm Bill Hot Topic at Annual Peanut Meeting - Southeast AgNet

By Clint Thompson

A collection of Southeast peanut farmers and industry leaders at the Southern Peanut Growers Conference last weekend allowed for in-depth talks and discussion centered around topics pertinent to the industry’s future. The Farm Bill was especially emphasized.

peanut farmer

Ken Barton, executive director of the Florida Peanut Producers Association, discussed the importance of growers attending these events and providing input to industry leaders.

“One topic of discussion that’s pretty important to farmers right now is the upcoming Farm Bill. We’re looking at programs, what may be coming down the pike that will assist us with the safety net or might adversely affect us. That’s something that farmers are paying close attention to and we’re having a lot of discussion about it,” said Barton.

“You don’t want just the leadership making these decisions. We want input from every farmer out there. ‘How is this program going to affect me and my farm?’ The only way we know is events like this where we can get those farmers together and get some input and see what fits and what’s the best safety net method for me on my particular farm. Then you compile all of that data and produce the best thing that fits with the majority of the farmers.”

Other Opinions

Don Koehler, executive director of the Georgia Peanut Commission, echoed Barton’s sentiments.

“We actually have a survey we’re doing for Dr. Stanley Fletcher that we gave to all of the producers. We’re trying to look at the costs. I’ve had farmers tell me that their fuel prices are up 100% from last year. Their fertilizer prices more than doubled. Equipment is up 25%. Repairs are up 25%. Their costs have gone up all over the place,” Koehler said. “The numbers we get from them and assembled by Dr. Fletcher are the same numbers that we’ll use as we go into the farm bill to defend continuing a program and maybe even making improvements to the program in Washington.”

Having growers supply input is an important step in formation of legislation that will last five years.

“It is extremely important for us to be observant and be proactive on the Farm Bill because we have to offer our input well in advance of them writing a farm bill. That’s what we’re trying to do now; find out what the growers want and try to include that. We have been reasonably successful in the past and we’re trying to build on that,” said Carl Sanders, president of the Alabama Peanut Producers Association.

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Farm Bill Hot Topic at Annual Peanut Meeting - Southeast AgNet
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Event: Lecture topic "Safe monitoring" - PembinaValleyOnline.com

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Monday, July 25, 2022

How to Never Again Run Out of Content Topic Ideas - Programming Insider

In the journey of digital marketing, the content of your website reigns supreme. If efforts are in your hands, and if you want to do everything in your power regarding your website, develop a robust and smooth flow of content updated regularly and posted at regular intervals. Although, it has been observed that it is quite difficult to achieve this feat. Analysis results point to the fact that:

  1. Every marketer needs at least one content topic idea each working day, amounting to approximately 250 new and fresh ideas in a year.
  2. About 50% of the marketers run dry with the flow of ideas to fuel their content publishing efforts.

At such times when ideas are not readily available, it is no less than a paralyzing situation for a content marketer. They know that it is important to produce content and to maintain a flow of content at a steady rate, but they somehow are unable to generate enough ideas.

Nevertheless, the Dallas digital marketing agency suggests that there are ways to tackle this situation.

One can generate many ideas for their blog, website, social media platforms, podcasts, etc., by following a few straightforward and systematic steps and procedures.

Below we will discuss a few steps to ensure you never again run out of content topic ideas. These steps are result driven and tested by the top marketers.

Quora

If numbers speak for themselves, then look at the following statistics regarding Quora.

  1. Quora has a whopping 300 million unique visitors every month.
  2. Almost 400 thousand topics are discussed in various fields each month.
  3. Around 3000 to 5000 questions are being asked daily, with an average of 6 to 7 responses to each question.

Digital marketing agencies in Dallas vouch for a platform like Quora to find great and unique ideas for content creation.

Just search for your topic or keyword on Quora, and you will find various questions asked by different visitors worldwide.

It will give you a perspective of what people are asking and what could be the answers they are looking for. This perspective alone can help you to read the customer’s mindset and generate new ideas to solve their problems.

Reddit and Subreddits

With 50-million-plus daily active unique visitors and more than 100 thousand active communities, Reddit is a gold mine for someone searching for ideas.

It is a forum-based site with myriad QNA (Questions and Answers) posts. The topic-based unique forum consists of communities known as Subreddits. Subreddits are smaller forums that narrow down their focus on a particular topic.

Search through Reddit regarding your specific topic or keyword, and you will find an enormous list of Reddit subreddits. Each Reddit is a broad category, and the subreddits are more topic-specific categories of your search query.

The Dallas digital marketing company and other top digital marketers from around the world have found that if a post from a Reddit user has got several upvotes and comments, then those posts can be a topic idea for your content.

A thorough analysis of the Reddit search and posts can give you a steady supply of topic ideas and also allow you to delve deeper into the mindset of the specific community. You will know beforehand what people want and why. This insight will help you to customize your content to target a specific audience in your digital marketing campaign.

Keywords Search Tools

You have a niche and some keyword ideas related to your products and services.

A keyword research tool will help you to generate ample keywords around your niche and help you understand what people use to search for their queries around the niche.

This insight helps you to build your content tightly focused on the keywords of your target audience.

There are plenty of keyword search tools, both free and paid. Some of them are good and some might not give you the desired results. Some of these are for beginner-level users, while others are for intermediate and advanced users.

Amongst the free tools available currently, Moz Keyword Explorer, Google Keyword Planner, Semrush, etc., are used by most digital marketers.

The finest digital marketing companies in Dallas use the best keyword search applications and tools to generate a long list of ideas to keep the content calendar engaged for a long time.

Using Google Autocomplete

Have you ever started typing your query on the Google search bar, and a list of suggestions pops beneath? This feature is known as Google Autocomplete.

You need to note all the suggestions that Google offers in the list around your primary keyword search initiative. All of those suggestions could be your topic ideas.

Another helpful method is to pay attention to a section known as the “People also ask” and the “Related search” shown on the Google search results pages. One can notice that autocomplete and the related searches of Google are demographic and region centered. This readily gives you an insight into the popular and relevant keywords and ideas trending in a particular region, city, or country, or the keywords that a specific group of population or age is using most frequently.

The Dallas digital marketing company and other similar top digital marketers believe that since Google is a prominent player in the search engine arena, one will get a lot of ready-to-use keywords, phrases, and topic ideas by using these sections wisely.

Competitor Analysis

Most businesses operate in a competitive environment. It is thus vital to know your competitors well to position yourself in the market.

Since a particular website or business is your competitor, you will likely find topics of similar interest and the same niche in their content. Identify and analyze the competitor’s website, blogs, social media handles, etc., and identify the commonly used and unique keywords.

While doing a competitor analysis, check the medium of content delivery, the frequencies and types of content and campaigns run, the most popular content published by your competitors, etc. Locate the keywords used by them and analyze their SEO metrics.

This insight will provide you with numerous ideas for your topic.

Using Google Trends

As the name suggests, Google Trends tells you the trending topics in a particular niche and region. One can even get the keywords or phrases that are related to a specific trending topic in Google by narrowing down the search to a specific region, city, or country.

The best Dallas digital marketing agencies point out that a wisely conducted search in Google Trends combined with Google Autocomplete and other such tools will give you a list of keywords and topic ideas that are current, fresh, and relevant to your niche. A periodic search using these tools will ensure your content calendar is filled with ideas to work on.

Ask Your Customers 

It is for the customers that you are building your content. What better way to know what to work on than by asking your customers what they want? However, bluntly asking a customer does not provide you with results.

The Dallas digital marketing agency agrees that a genuinely customer-driven brand that seeks the valuable opinions of its customers will never run out of content ideas.

One needs to be tactful and polite and make sure it is convenient and secure for the customer to share their opinions. There are a lot of platforms and ways to get to know what the customers are looking for.

Installing a chatbot on your website, asking for the customers’ opinions through a poll, or seeking feedback from their experiences about your brand and products will provide insight into how your customers perceive your brand. It will also give you enough new ideas to produce your next content.

Having your content calendar beaming with topic ideas to create meaningful content requires following some systematic approach and methodical steps.

Trusted digital marketing companies in Dallas practice some of these proven techniques to generate topic ideas.

So if you ever come across a dry patch with no new ideas, go through the steps enumerated above, and you will generate many ideas that will make the content portfolio blossom.

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How to Never Again Run Out of Content Topic Ideas - Programming Insider
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Pele's goal count a topic of debate - CTV News

Nobody disputes Pele's greatness and his penchant for scoring. The exact number of goals in his career will forever be a topic for deba...