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Jason Momoa will play the villain in final Fast & Furious movie

Jason Momoa will play the villain in final Fast & Furious movie
Mar 4 2022 Share

Jason Momoa, known for his roles in Game of Thrones and Aquaman, will be playing the villain in the next Fast and the Furious movie. This means Khal Drogo himself will be taking on Vin Diesel and throwing some punches.

He revealed this to Entertainment Weekly, saying that he cannot wait to play the bad guy once again. ‘I’m gonna go do Fast 10, that’s gonna be fun… it’s fun, I get to play the bad guy, which I haven’t gotten to do for a while.’ 

Momoa was silent about his upcoming role but revealed that his flamboyant character would clash with Dominic Toretto’s crew in Fast 10. And although the new addition is very exciting, the rest of the cast has been kept very quiet as very little is known about who’s joining the line-up. 

However, Justin Lin, who previously directed F9, will be returning to direct the tenth film in the franchise. Many of the previous Fast family are set to reprise their roles as filming kicks off in London, but the Rock will not be making a comeback. 

The tenth film was set to be released in early April last year. However, the COVID-19 pandemic halted the release and had it pushed back to February 2023 and then delayed to April 7th. More delays means it will hit theatres in May. 

Even if this is somewhat too far in the future for Fast fans, they can use this time to binge watch the entirety of the series and get caught up on what will be going on to end the series with a blast. 

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Bernard Grech signs joystick and plays football at Junior College

Bernard Grech signs joystick and plays football at Junior College
Mar 4 2022 Share

Nationalist Party leader Bernard Grech continued to be a sport (literally) today as he visited Junior College and spent some time with the students. 

Video content uploaded to Grech and the Nationalist Party’s social media platform show him signing a literal joystick and playing football. 

 

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Before he signed the joystick, he alluded to a previous social media interaction wherein a poster asked him if he was a gamer, to which he responded ‘ija bro.’ He yelled out the catchphrase, which circulated as a local meme, before signing the back of the student’s joystick. 

Another video shows him kicking penalties and scoring twice, and you could just see that he was having an absolute blast. Students gave Bernard a warm welcome as he went on to sign a table as well to the cheering of pupils. 

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PN leader admits to electoral manifesto mistake on housing rent subsidies

PN leader admits to electoral manifesto mistake on housing rent subsidies
Mar 4 2022 Share

Opposition leader Bernard Grech has admitted to a typo mistake in the party’s proposal in regards to rent subsidies found in the Nationalist manifesto.

This follows Peter Agius and Ivan Bartolo insisting on Thursday that tenants with pre-1995 rental contracts will continue benefitting from existing subsides. This is despite the party manifesto saying otherwise. 

However, the candidates refused to admit the proposal in the manifesto had an error which changed what the party intended. Grech went on to speak to media following a Junior College visit Friday.

‘We never had a problem in admitting our mistakes. The PN is made up of people who are not perfect. We humbly accept that we can make mistakes, but let’s see how our proposals will change people’s lives to the better’ said the Opposition leader. 

Grech went on to say that it was a priority to address the issue, saying that Prime Minister Robert Abela tried to address it but only applied a rent law which was already established. This is in reference to the fact that rental contracts before 1995 were liberalised last year. 

The law introduced safeguard mechanisms to cap rental payments and ensure government will subsidise the increases for as long as tenants live there. Grech said that for them and unlike Robert Abela, a situation wherein an 80-year-old is spending the last years of her life going to court to solve the situation is unacceptable. 

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NATO not sending troops to Ukraine to avoid all out war in Europe

NATO not sending troops to Ukraine to avoid all out war in Europe
Mar 4 2022 Share

NATO has revealed that it will not be sending troops onto the ground in Ukraine or imposing a no-fly zone above the country either. The alliance’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg ruled out putting NATO airplanes into the airspace above Ukraine or sending out troops because of how the move could end up in all-out war in Europe. 

NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) previously announced the strengthening of its land, sea and air forces across Eastern Europe. However, Secretary General Stoltenberg clarified that NATO is ‘not part of this conflict.’ 

The foreign ministers met today in Brussels, deciding that while NATO is not part of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, the alliance does have a responsibility to ensure it does not escalate and spread beyond Ukraine. He warned that if NATO were to deploy troops on the ground in support of Ukraine or fly planes in the country’s airspace, it could lead to a fully-fledged war in Europe. Despite this, Putin was called upon to stop and withdraw his forces from Ukraine and engage in genuine diplomacy. 

This decision follows the seizure of Europe’s biggest power plant in Ukraine, Zaporizhzhia, by Russian forces earlier this morning. This was deemed as nuclear terrorism by Ukrainian president Zelenskyy. NATO will also be strengthening its forces in other areas of Eastern Europe, with Bosnia, Herzegovina and Georgia receiving such support. Around 130 jets and 200 ships will be on high alert after NATO’s response force were deployed for the first time.  

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