Missing Black and Indigenous people don’t get the same attention as missing white women

The disappearance of Gabby Petito has captivated the country for weeks, but the widespread concern and fascination with her case outshines that of countless Black and Indigenous women who are missing today.

Petito, a 22-year-old white woman, went missing during a cross-country road trip with her fiancé, Brian Laundrie. The online frenzy to discuss her disappearance may have contributed to the FBI investigation that eventually led to her remains, which were found near Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming on Sunday, and confirmed on Tuesday to be those of Petito. Her death was ruled a homicide.

SEE ALSO:

Gabby Petito’s disappearance shouldn’t be an internet true crime thriller

Updates on Petito’s case have been widely covered by news outlets, as well as thoroughly discussed online by true crime enthusiasts. The couple had been traveling in a white camper van, which belonged to Petito, and documenting their trip on social media. Laundrie returned to his home in Florida earlier this month without Petito, and refused to speak to both investigators and his fiancée’s family. Amateur sleuths tried to piece together a timeline of her disappearance. Petito’s name was trending on Twitter for days, and TikTok tags related to her racked up millions of views.

Unfortunately, the public is far less likely to apply that same energy and outpouring of support when Black and Indigenous people go missing.

Jolie Varela, a Nüümü land protector who runs the Instagram account Indigenous Women Hike, expressed her condolences for the Petito family on Monday, and asked followers to share the same care for missing people who aren’t white.

“It wasn’t the outcome that anyone had hoped for, and I hope that her family receives justice,” Valera wrote in the post. “For everyone that followed and became invested in this devastating story, I ask that you put that same energy into caring and amplifying the story of the many…who do not receive national attention and resources to aid in their recovery.”

Though numerous followers shared her sentiment, Valera still received messages from “angry white people” who were offended by her request.

“It’s pretty telling that when we ask for the same energy and care for our missing and murdered sisters and relatives that we’re met with such fragility,” Valera responded in an Instagram story. “This country does not value or care for Black and/or Indigenous, Trans, or WoC bodies the same way that it does a thin/pretty/white woman’s.”

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Others shared the same opinion.

During ReidOut on Monday, host Joy Reid questioned whether people would be as interested in Petito’s case if she was a woman of color.


The way this story has captivated the nation has many wondering: Why not the same media attention when people of color go missing?

“The way this story has captivated the nation has many wondering: Why not the same media attention when people of color go missing?” Reid mused on-air. “Well, the answer actually has a name: Missing White Woman Syndrome, the term coined by the late and great Gwen Ifill to describe the media and public fascination with missing white women…while ignoring cases involving people of color.”

Ifill, the late PBS anchor, coined the term during a 2004 conference for journalists of color. As interest grew in true crime since then — especially in the past five years— so has criticism of the unwavering whiteness of the genre. Both fictional and nonfictional true crime media disproportionately centers around cases in which white women are the victims.

Missing white women statistically receive more media coverage than any other racial and gender group. Northwestern University sociologist Zach Sommers published a 2013 study in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology analyzing coverage of FBI missing person cases in four online media outlets. Cross-referencing the FBI’s database of missing persons with coverage from the Star-Tribune, the Chicago Tribune, CNN.com, and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Sommers concluded that white women make up roughly a third of the national population, but account for half of the news articles in his data set.

News outlets were likely to report on the same missing white women multiple times, which added up. Sommers wrote in the study that by disproportionately writing about white victims, the four news outlets “are implicitly — or perhaps explicitly — intimating that the cases of those individuals matter more.”


Conversely, the lack of media attention trained on victims of color denotes that their lives are less valuable and less of a priority for rescue.

“White women and girls in particular are more easily seen as ‘universal’ victims with whom all viewers and readers can identify,” Sommers continued. “Their outsized presence in the news as crime victims implies that they are inherently good and innocent. Conversely, the lack of media attention trained on victims of color denotes that their lives are less valuable and less of a priority for rescue.”

People of color, particularly Black and Indigenous women, get disproportionately less media coverage than white people who are reported missing. The FBI’s National Crime Information Center reported that in 2020, of all missing persons in the U.S., 33.6 percent were Black. Only 13.4 percent of the U.S. population is Black, per U.S. Census Bureau records. Cases involving Black victims receive significantly less coverage by news outlets, let alone the attention of true crime enthusiasts like the ones dedicated to Petito’s case.

Statistics regarding missing Native American women are largely underreported, as law enforcement agencies and tribal governments are often at odds. A 2016 study by the National Institute of Justice found that more than four in five Native American men and women have experienced violence in their lifetime. The Department of Justice reports that on some reservations, the murder rate of Native American women is more than 10 times the national average. In Wyoming alone, where Petito’s body was found, 21 percent of the state’s homicide victims were Native American, despite Native American people only making up 3 percent of the population. A horrifying 710 Indigenous people — most of whom were young women and girls — have gone missing in Wyoming between 2011 and 2020. In Canada, a national inquiry concluded that while Indigenous women and girls only made up 4 percent of the country’s population, they represented 16 percent of female homicides between 1980 and 2012. Despite the staggering rates, news outlets neglect to cover their disappearances.

In an effort to raise awareness for violence within Indigenous communities activists began using the hashtags #MMIW and #MMIWG2S, which stand for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two Spirit individuals. The tags have circulated online since 2016, when Canada opened a national public inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

On Instagram, the tag #mmiw has more than 144,000 posts. On TikTok, the tag #mmiw has 248.6 million views, and the tag #mmiwawareness has 65 million.

But in the days since Petito was reported missing, TikTok tags related to her case have skyrocketed. Her name #gabbypetito has roughly 812 million views, the tag #findgabbypetito has 69.3 million, #gabbypetitoupdate has 133 million, and #whereisgabbypetito has 48.4 million.

The fact that Petito and her fiancé was so active on social media may have contributed to the widespread attention on her case. In addition to her online presence, which portrayed her nomadic life with Laundrie as an idyllic one, outsider recordings and clues in posts from other YouTubers in the area made Petito’s case even more compelling. A 911 caller reported Laundrie for slapping Petito weeks before she went missing, and bodycam footage from a police stop in Utah shows a clearly distressed Petito describing Laundrie locking her out of the van. Law enforcement undoubtedly failed to protect Petito, who admitted to hitting Laundrie in an effort to take back her phone and keys; the police wrote off the encounter as a mental health crisis rather than a domestic incident.

Petito’s death is a tragedy, and the events leading up to it make it even more devastating. The national concern for her wellbeing, and widespread grief after her body was found, is completely understandable. It’s just as tragic that the coverage revolving around her far overshadows that of Black and Indigenous people who also went missing in that area around the same time she did — if they received any coverage at all.

When cases involving victims of color do receive attention, the victims typically aren’t described as righteously as their white counterparts are. Cara Chambers, the chair of the task force that released the report on Wyoming’s missing and murdered Indigenous people, told NPR that media coverage of Indigenous homicide victims is often more centered on the grisly act than on the victim’s personhood.

“When you had an Indigenous victim, the articles were more likely to have negative character framing,” Chambers said. “More violent and graphic language, really focusing more on sort of where the homicide occurred versus anything about the victim.”

Amid mourning for Petito, others on social media are trying to bring the same awareness for missing people of color. As Twitter users expressed condolences for the Petito family, they also asked that the true crime community and others following Petito’s case bring attention to victims who aren’t white women.

Few, if any, have expressed resentment toward Petito. The widespread attention on her case is not her fault; she is as much of a victim of violence as any missing or murdered person. If anything, her case should alert the country to how many women experience violence in their lifetimes. But the lack of awareness and care for Black, Indigenous, and non-white victims is even more apparent when compared to the attention that Petito’s case received.

The fact that so many people are offended at the suggestion that Petito’s whiteness influenced media coverage of her case is telling. Pointing out the disparity between empathy for her and the lack of it for Black and Indigenous people doesn’t diminish the tragedy of Petito’s death. Instead, it amplifies the fact that many people don’t seem to care for Black and Indigenous victims the way they do for white ones. We can start by raising awareness for their cases the way true crime enthusiasts did for Petito’s.

“Bring them home,” Valera wrote in her Instagram post about the countless missing Indigenous women and Two Spirit, Black women, and women of color. “Bring them justice.”

Netflix drops hair-raising ‘Britney vs. Spears’ trailer

It’s high time we free Britney.

With Britney Spears’ conservatorship once again making headlines, Netflix dropped the trailer for Britney vs. Spears, a documentary from Emmy-nominated filmmaker Erin Lee Carr about the pop star’s quest for freedom. Through interviews and new information from within the conservatorship itself, Carr and journalist Jenny Eliscu elaborate on the Spears conservatorship and what it means for Britney’s past, present, and future.

Britney vs. Spears hits Netflix Sept. 28.

SpaceX’s Starlink to exit beta next month

Changes may be in store for SpaceX’s Starlink network. The satellite internet system will exit beta next month, according to CEO Elon Musk. 

Musk made the statement in a tweet on Friday. But for now, he hasn’t said what the ending of the beta phase may mean for Starlink. 

Still, exiting beta usually signals that a service is stable and ready for a wider rollout. Starlink is currently serving 100,000 users across a dozen countries, including the U.S. However, the system has a backlog of over 500,000 users still waiting to try out the satellite broadband service. 

One problem facing the service is that the ground-based satellite dishes necessary to connect to the Starlink network have been expensive to manufacture. The company currently produces about 5,000 Starlink dishes each week, meaning it would take two years to fulfill the current backlog of users.  

Fortunately, SpaceX is preparing to boost production. The company developed a next-generation Starlink dish, which it can churn out in “multiples” of 5,000 each week.

The ending of the beta may also signal speed increases for the service. The official Starlink website currently says beta users can expect data speeds “from 50Mb/s to 150Mb/s and latency from 20ms to 40ms in most locations.” However, Musk himself has been promising Starlink’s speeds will get even faster and reach 300 Mb/s later this year. 

In addition, the latency for Starlink is going to drop under 20 milliseconds, making it capable of competitive gaming, Musk has previously said.

A Harry Potter super fan’s VR Quidditch game is a magical gift for fellow fans

The Quaffle has fallen. I’m racing toward the grass from 50 feet in the air to retrieve it, but I’ll have to recover from my nose dive — fast — if I want to grab the Quidditch ball without slamming into the ground. Can I pull it off? Closer, closer, I reach out my arm, and at the same time as I’m grabbing the ball with my left hand, I’m pulling up on the broomstick with my right and YES! The Quaffle is mine!

Multitasking in mid-air is a necessary skill to hone in a new VR game for Oculus Quest called Seeker VR. It’s the creation of a Harry Potter super fan so dedicated that he spent the better part of the pandemic year teaching himself how to code in VR, all to bring to life the Hogwarts castle and grounds, as well as the flying mechanics of the broomstick and autonomous balls, for fans like him.

“No one had made a Quidditch game for the headset yet,” the developer, who goes by Team Eldritch, said via email. “And it felt like somebody should.”

It debuted in August, and as of late September, had over 10,000 downloads on itch.io.

Seeker VR is an unofficial Quidditch game, but what really makes it stand out is the virtual, multi-sensory, three-dimensional and tantalizingly explorable Hogwarts world Team Eldritch has constructed with high fidelity to the films. In order to create the VR Hogwarts, he adapted the highly detailed spatial images from a previous Harry Potter game that’s currently out of print and no longer playable on most devices.

Potter fans, there are some things to know before you go running to your Quest (or start planning to buy one). Seeker VR is an “unofficial” game in two ways, which means playing it requires jumping through some hoops.

First, it is not affiliated with Warner Brothers, the studio that owns the rights to Harry Potter. The webpage for the game includes an all-caps disclaimer noting that it is a fan creation, available for free, and is for non-commercial use only. Team Eldritch is hoping that “the nice people at Warner Brothers,” as he calls them in the game site’s disclaimer/plea to c’mon lawyers just let him do this, will stay true to their previous stance with fan creations and let him carry on as long as he doesn’t claim affiliation or try to make money. He would also be open to working with the official Portkey Games if they wanted to.

However, Team Eldritch prefers to stay anonymous and go by his developer name, in hopes of avoiding any cease-and-desist letters should the “nice” lawyers change their tune.

Unofficial on multiple levels.

Unofficial on multiple levels.
Credit: team eldritch

Seeker VR is also an “unofficial” game in the Oculus universe. That means you won’t find it in the Oculus Store, where you can download Facebook-approved games like Beat Saber and The Climb (Facebook owns Oculus, in case you forgot).

Instead, anyone with enough technical know-how can find games that are experimental or still in development by using alternate content libraries and installation mechanisms. This is a practice called “sideloading.” Some tech platforms — notably Apple — take a hard stance against sideloading. But it’s ok on Facebook’s Oculus for now, as long as you enable “Developer Mode,” which requires confirming your identity with a credit code or phone number.

One popular way to sideload on the Oculus Quest is with a free service called SideQuest, a platform that also serves as a content discovery library. Essentially, you download the game on itch.io, and then SideQuest is the platform that lets you install it on your Oculus. Seeker VR‘s SideQuest page is here, but there are other methods for sideloading, too.

But jumping — and hopefully throwing the Quaffle — through those hoops just might be worth it, because the best way to describe the experience of Seeker VR is that it’s magical. While there have been other Harry Potter games, a VR version feels special because of its ability to transport you inside the world, where you become an active participant. AKA a wizard.

“Playing a Quidditch game in VR isn’t like playing one on a flat screen,” Team Eldritch said. “You put the headset on and you’re standing there on the pitch… no cables, no headphones, just the towers stretching up and the sound of the wind at your back. And then you take off, and the ground’s 50 feet below, and you can look down and actually feel it. What it’d be like to fly up there. It’s the closest I’ve ever felt to real magic.”

The pitch is yours.

The pitch is yours.
Credit: team eldritch

Quidditch, and then some.

In terms of actual gameplay, Seeker VR is mostly a demo right now. When you fire it up, you’ll go through a 10-minute tutorial that mimics Harry’s first Quidditch lesson, when then-Gryffindor Quidditch team captain Oliver Wood explains the rules: Team Eldritch even hired an actor to voice the demo, and he uses a very Oliver Wood-esque accent.

In the demo, you learn how to fly your broomstick; throw, catch, and score with the Quaffle; beat away the Bludgers; and, if you’re fast, catch the Golden Snitch. I wasn’t able to achieve that last feat, but my husband did, and he said he felt “really cool.”

I had some trouble just getting the flying down, and I kept getting stuck under the grass somehow. But eventually I got the hang of it, and taking off, accelerating, and doing loop-de-loops is a rush.

“I spent a long time just figuring out the flight mechanics and making sure they felt fun,” Team Eldritch said. “Cornering, braking, accelerating – everything had to be dialed in exactly to strike that balance between speed and control. The first time I felt like I’d nailed it was when I finally managed to do a figure-eight around the three goal hoops without smacking into any of them.”

While accelerating on my broomstick towards the hoops, I find that my left arm holding the Quaffle is accessing some long-forgotten muscle memory from (mandatory) eighth grade Water Polo class. So I wind up and bring my elbow in line with my engaged shoulder, and then use my back muscles to launch the Quaffle, one-handed, through the hoops. I definitely have better aim and force in (virtual) mid-air than I ever did in the pool, and scoring is all the sweeter since throwing the ball through those hoops prompts the same “score” noise as in the films.


“You can look down and actually feel it. What it’d be like to fly up there. It’s the closest I’ve ever felt to real magic.”

In separate parts of the demo, interacting with the Bludgers and Snitch that move of their own volition is a different kind of challenge. The Snitch buzzes around like a mischievous golden fly, and whacking the menacing Bludgers with the small bat is as satisfying as it looks in the films. Team Eldritch said that those balls actually represented some of the most challenging parts of the game to create.

“They’re essentially mini-AIs,” Team Eldritch said of the Quidditch balls. “Finally managing to code a Bludger that was capable of homing in on you, firing itself at your head and whizzing off again was a very proud moment.”

Multiplayer gameplay probably isn’t in the cards for Seeker VR — it would require overhauling the game with even more advanced coding, and server hosting costs would be prohibitively expensive. But Team Eldritch is still working, and he said that playing with a virtual team against some AI opponents is more likely.

You can also fly out of the Quidditch arena to explore Hogwarts castle and the surrounding grounds. This isn’t exactly a game, but as a straight up Harry Potter dork more motivated by fandom than by gameplay, it’s my favorite part. Taking in the turrets from 360 degrees, zooming through the bridge Neville Longbottom eventually blows up, discovering the owlery and the boathouse and courtyards in VR — all on a broomstick! — feels like a privilege. Like I got to explore the Harry Potter world in a way even the actors never could.

“The castle was never originally supposed to be part of the game, but I kept adding to it,” Team Eldritch said. “It’s kind of the fulfilment of a lifelong dream – ever since I saw that beautiful movie miniature, I’ve wanted to shrink [it] down and walk around it for real. It’d be awesome to think I made that dream come true for a few other people as well.”

A Harry Potter super fan's VR Quidditch game is a magical gift for fellow fans

During the game, the music from the scene where Harry rides Buckbeak the Hippogriff swells as you ride over Hogwarts Lake. In the moment, I feel the tingles of watching that scene, and the wonder I felt laying on my elementary school library’s floor reading about the Hogwarts letters filling up 4 Privet Drive, with a potency I haven’t channeled in years.

So how did this developer do it?

Working from blueprints.

Team Eldritch describes himself as a “jack of all trades” who took advantage of Epic Games’ 3D development tool, Unreal Engine, to teach himself VR game creation. He familiarized himself with the standards of this sort of game development — like pressing the trigger on a Quest handset to grab something — which makes it easier for frequent VR users to catch on.

To build the world, Team Eldritch looked to the official Harry Potter games from the mid-aughts. The developer Bright Light Studios went to great lengths to create a realistic model of Hogwarts based on the films where players could run around. The team even worked from the same blueprints as the movies.

Unfortunately, Team Eldritch says that “due to various licensing entanglements, it’s not actually possible to buy or play those games on PC anymore. (You can get the DVD-ROMs on eBay, but the DRM they use isn’t compatible with modern Windows unless you run a virtual machine, which is way too much hassle for most people.) Effectively, those games are now abandonware, which is a bit of a sad legacy for a series that had so much love and artistry poured into it.”

He gives copious credit to the original developer, and hopes that the Bright Light team from back then would appreciate their creations getting new life.

“Extracting 3D assets from a 15-year-old game built on a closed-source engine isn’t easy,” Team Eldritch said. “It took me a month and a half just to finish putting together the exterior of the castle. But it was absolutely worth it, because the detail the artists at Bright Light achieved was phenomenal.”

He’s also hoping that the fact that the original game is no longer really playable will give him some legal leeway. Team Eldritch extended that philosophy to other media assets, too.

“I’ve tried to only use 3D assets in this game that are already available for free or that nobody seems interested in making money from anymore, like the Bright Light games,” Team Eldritch said. “This has genuinely been a labor of love for a series I adore and respect.”

The lakeside view.

The lakeside view.
Credit: Team eldritch

Another element that makes the game feel real is sound. Team Eldritch himself “voiced” the spitting and hissing Bludgers, but the tech that powers Quest experiences allowed him to go much further. Oculus supports an “open source spatial audio plugin” that lets developers play to the way our brains process sound in three dimensions.

“That means you can have a Golden Snitch flying around your head and know immediately which direction the sound is coming from – which completes the illusion as far as 360° audio is concerned,” Team Eldritch said. “It’s the difference between hearing a stereo recording of a city sidewalk and actually going and standing outside.”

Paying attention to that sound is, in fact, part of the key to catching the Golden Snitch. My most burning question for the developer was how in the heck do I get my (virtual) hands on the elusive flier?

“Most of the time, you’ll be able to hear the Snitch before you see it,” Team Eldritch said.

Just like magic.

The best Apple deals as of Sept. 21: iPad, MacBook, Apple Watch, and more

UPDATE: Sept. 21, 2021, 4:54 p.m. EDT This story has been updated to include the latest deals.

Check out our favorite bargains from across the Apple universe as of Sept. 21:

  • BEST MAC DEAL: 2020 Mac Mini (M1, 256GB) — Save $99.01

  • BEST IPAD DEAL: 2021 iPad Mini (WiFI, 64GB) — Save $39.01

  • BEST IPHONE DEAL: iPhone 12 Mini (64GB) at AT&T — Save $349.99

  • BEST APPLE WATCH DEAL: Apple Watch Series 6 (40mm, GPS) — Save $70


You could really kill some time trying to dissect the iron grasp Apple has on the general population, but when it comes down to it, their products look good, work well, and stay cutting edge — of course people like them. Whether your favorite day of the year is their annual September reveal event or you just want a solid computer no matter the brand, Apple’s got you covered. Sure, they are a little notorious for their higher price points, but we’ve rounded up the best weekly deals on iPads, AirPods, and every Apple product in between. Check them out below.

Mac

OUR TOP PICK: 2020 Mac Mini (M1, 256GB) – $599.99 (save $99.01)

One of the most affordable Macs is even more affordable this week. Don’t let its size deceive you — this mini computer is powerful. As a nice bonus, it’s also quiet, despite working at a speed that runs apps nice and smoothly. If you’re in the market for a new desktop, you’ll want to jump on this deal while it lasts.

Save $99.01 at Amazon

Credit: Apple

Save $99.01 at Amazon

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  • MacBook Pro (Intel Processor, 1TB) — $1,599.99 (save $399.01)

  • MacBook Pro (Intel Processor, 512GB) — $1,499.99 (save $299.01)

  • MacBook Air (M1, 512GB) – $1,099.99 (save $150)

  • MacBrook Pro (M1, 512GB) — $1,399.99 (save $99.01)

  • 2021 iMac (8-core CPU,8-core GPU, 256GB) — $1,449.99 (save $50)

iPad

OUR TOP PICK: 2021 iPad Mini (WiFi, 64GB) — preorder for $459.99 (save $39.01)

The new iPad Mini is finally here and its already on sale (bless). The Mini has officially undergone first redesign since 2012 and now comes equipped an A15 processor. If you’re looking to tote around what essentially looks like an iPad Pro but cuter, you’ll want to jump on this preorder deal and get ready for the Mini’s official release on Sept. 24.

Save $39.01 at Amazon

Save $39.01 at Amazon

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  • 2021 10.2-in iPad (WiFi, 64GB) — preorder for $299.00 (save $30.99)

  • 10.9-in iPad Air (WiFi, 256GB) — $649.99 (save $99.01)

  • 10.9-in iPad Air (WiFi, 64GB) – $539.99 (save $60)

  • 2021 11-in iPad Pro (WiFi, 128 GB) – $749.00 (save $50)

  • 2021 12.9-in iPad Pro (WiFi, 128GB) – $999.00 (save $100)

iPhone

OUR TOP PICK: iPhone 12 Mini (64GB) at AT&T — $349.99 (save $349.99)

We know the new iPhones are here (and that some are even on sale, cough, see below, cough) but don’t be so quick to hit pre-order on the newer model. This remains the only deal that requires no trade-in for 50% off a phone that still has 5G, and a ton of comparable features to its newer counterpart. iPhone 12 Mini, you remain on top another week.

Save $349 at AT&T

Credit: Apple

Save $349 at AT&T

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  • 128GB iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 Pro at AT&T — free with an eligible trade-in on an unlimited plan

  • iPhone 12 Mini (64GB) at AT&T — $349.99 (save $349.99)

  • iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Pro, and iPhone 12 Pro Max at AT&T – save up to $700 with a trade-in

  • 128GB iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 Pro at Verizon — free with select trade-in and unlimited plan

  • 64GB iPhone 11, XR, and SE at Verizon — free with an unlimited plan and new line

  • iPhone 12 at Verizon — save up to $700 with a trade-in (new line required)

Accessories

OUR TOP PICK: Apple Watch Series 6 (40mm, GPS) — $329 (save $70)

Though it’s no longer the newest model on the market, the Series 6 still has an SPO2 censor and a decent processor; plus, it’s great for tracking fitness goals. It’s possible we’ll see even better deals once the Series 7’s release draws nearer, but in the meantime this one is pretty damn good.

Save $70 at Walmart

Credit: Apple

Save $70 at Walmart

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  • AirPods (second generation) — $119.00 (save $40.00)

  • AirPods Pro — $197.99 (save $52)

  • AirPods Max — $489.98 (save $59.02)

  • Renewed AirPods Max — $427.41 (save $62.57)

  • OttorBox Slim Case with MagSafe for iPhone 12/12 Pro — $39.95 (save $10)

More related content:

  • 8 monitors to take your MacBook Pro to the next level

  • MacBooks aren’t the only great laptops — and this list proves it

  • Best headphones for iPhone owners: Think outside the (AirPods) box

Peacock greenlights Adam Devine ‘Pitch Perfect’ spinoff. Sure.

Adam Devine's Bumper Allen will return.

Peacock just announced a Pitch Perfect spinoff with Adam Devine, because there are approximately a million streaming services, and they all need stories..

Devine starred in Pitch Perfect and its 2015 sequel (but not the 2017 threequel), in which he played antagonist Bumper. Devine, 37, will not be playing a college student, but a future version of Bumper now cultivating a music career in Germany. We can only hope Amy (Rebel Wilson) features in his adventures and brings along more of the Pitch Perfect cast. Elizabeth Banks returns as producer.

“We’re so happy to have the opportunity to bring the beloved Universal Pictures franchise Pitch Perfect to the small screen and to explore the hilarious and distinct characters in this musical-filled world,” Erin Underhill, President, Universal Television said in a statement. “We’re lucky to partner with the talented Elizabeth Banks, Max Handelman and Paul Brooks, who produced the iconic films; the exceptionally funny and memorable Adam Devine; and Megan Amram, whose clever adaptation of Pitch Perfect is sure to have audiences laughing out loud and tapping their feet.”

Bumper Allen will return, only on Peacock.

Save $100 on a 55-inch QLED TV that’s great for gaming

Save $100: The Hisense 55-inch ULED U7G Android 4K TV is on sale for $749.99 at Amazon as of Sept. 21. That’s a savings of 12%.


You finally have a good shot at grabbing a new gaming console these days. But if you want the total experience when you pick up Far Cry 6 in a couple of weeks, you also need a TV that draws out the full potential of a PS5 or Xbox Series X. Luckily, you have more options these days that won’t strain your gaming budget.

Gamers can get the Hisense 55-inch ULED U7G Quantum Dot Android 4K TV for only $749.99 from Amazon: a match of its lowest price ever.

The Hisense U7G is so much more than a great gaming TV.

The Hisense U7G is so much more than a great gaming TV.
Credit: hisense

Wondering why you need a new TV for your console? The answer is HDMI 2.1. This updated output allows for increased bandwidth, which translates to faster refresh rates and higher resolutions. And the Hisense U7G offers two HDMI 2.1 ports along with two standard HDMI 2.0 connections. This ensures that you enjoy that coveted 120Hz refresh rate for super smooth gameplay.

SEE ALSO:

The best TVs for gaming to get you to next-level play

This TV is good beyond gaming, too. With its Hisense ULED technology, it’s able to provide a wider color gamut in over one billion shades. The Dolby Vision HDR provides ultra-realistic pictures; plus, it includes a voice remote and you can customize your home screen on the Android TV to better organize your favorite streaming apps.

The Hisense U7G covers plenty of bases when it comes to entertainment, so at $749.99 it’s a pretty sweet option — even if you aren’t much of a gamer.

Save $100 at Amazon

Credit: Hisense

Save $100 at Amazon

Buying Options

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Explore related content:

  • 7 of the best gaming chairs to maximize your gaming experience

  • 7 of the best gaming headsets that will change the way you play PlayStation for the better

  • 9 of the best gaming routers to supercharge your game

AirPods used to feel like the future, but now they’re a relic of the past

Remember when these were cool and futuristic?

As recently as 2019, AirPods were unquestionably the best wireless earbuds in the game. Those telltale white stems were visible everywhere you looked — the streets, the office, the subway, and schools. It’s that runaway success which may have led Apple to get, not lazy but complacent in the past couple of years. By not releasing any meaningful hardware updates to its entry-level AirPods, Apple has effectively ceded ground to a tidal wave of great low-cost earbuds from rivals. And now it seems as if the former market leader is stuck playing catch-up.

Although most of the tech world expected to see the heavily rumored third-generation AirPods release at Apple’s iPhone 13 launch event, that didn’t happen. We saw four new iPhones, a new Apple Watch, and even some new iPads, but Apple left us hanging with the one product that arguably needs a refresh more urgently than any of the others.

After setting the standard for wireless earbuds back in 2016 and dominating the marketplace in the years since, Apple’s mysterious, present-day silence about a follow-up is puzzling, to say the least. So as we wait indefinitely for the next pair of Apple’s earbuds to drop, let’s review how we even got to this point and where Apple could go from here.

From goofy to commonplace

They weren't always fashionable.

They weren’t always fashionable.
Credit: Edward Berthelot / Getty Images

When Apple first unveiled the original AirPods five years ago, even those of us who like Apple products tended to agree that they seemed a little silly. Many of us wondered: Who would want to walk around with these long, white stems protruding out from their ears? Wouldn’t it be far too easy to lose these earbuds since they aren’t tethered by any wires? But even as early coverage from sites like ours praised the earbuds (despite their humorous appearance), what came next was fairly shocking.

AirPods became a huge hit. One market study from Slice Intelligence found that Apple had jumped from zero percent of wireless headphones market share to more than 25 percent of it in 2017, almost overnight. In what felt like just a few months, those garish white stems went from something you saw in social media memes to something you saw actual people wearing on the street. In fact, in the last few months of 2020, AirPods (along with Apple’s other wearable devices) brought in almost $13 billion in revenue, per Nikkei.

To be clear, Apple didn’t invent wireless earbuds (Onkyo beat it to the punch by a year), but there’s a real argument to be made that Apple did make wireless earbuds trendy and, thus, desirable for other tech companies to imitate. And imitate, they did. By 2020, most of Apple’s contemporaries like Microsoft, Samsung, and Google had released their own proprietary wireless earbuds to compete with AirPods.


It’s just unusual to see Apple get lapped like this in the earbuds race.

Apple didn’t always rest on its laurels when it came to AirPods. In 2019, more than two years after its first earbuds dropped, Apple provided two big updates: The AirPods 2 and AirPods Pro. The former kept roughly the same design, sound quality, and feature set of the original AirPods but slightly improved the battery and added hands-free Siri voice commands. The latter was a bigger departure, which saw the AirPods redesigned with smaller stems, silicone ear tips, and active noise cancellation. The Pro’s $250 price tag was (and still is) a high barrier to entry, but it’s tough to deny their excellence.

Unfortunately, we haven’t seen any new real AirPods since. The $550 AirPods Max over-ear headphones don’t count, sorry. (They’re not earbuds and they’re way too expensive.) As a result, Apple’s complacency has put AirPods in a somewhat awkward spot. AirPods market share dropped from 41 percent at the end of 2019 to 29 percent at the end of 2020, according to research firm Counterpoint. That’s still a substantial lead over everyone else, but it does point to what happened in the more than two years since the last AirPods update: Other companies made cheaper and better entry-level wireless earbuds, and consumers took notice.

In 2021 alone, we’ve seen a plethora of wireless earbuds that make it hard to recommend Apple’s $160 AirPods to anyone, especially since they lack active noise cancellation (ANC). For Android users, the $150 Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 are a no-brainer thanks to their stylish looks and quality ANC. As for device-agnostic earbuds, the OnePlus Buds Pro, Amazon Echo Buds, and Nothing Ear (1) all include things like ear tips and ANC for less than Apple charges for its most basic AirPods, and at least $100 less than AirPods Pro.

It’s just unusual to see Apple get lapped like this in the earbuds race. The company will often go a year or two without big updates to certain iPads, MacBooks, and iMacs, but those products typically stay good and relevant during those dormant periods. One model of iPad doesn’t usually look completely obsolete next to the competition by the time its successor comes out. But by maintaining its status quo, Apple’s let everyone else figure out how to make better wireless earbuds and sell them for less.

A long wait is seemingly almost over

Nothing Ear (1) is one of several pairs of quality wireless earbuds I'd recommend over entry-level AirPods at this point.

Nothing Ear (1) is one of several pairs of quality wireless earbuds I’d recommend over entry-level AirPods at this point.
Credit: molly flores / mashable

Obviously, this isn’t an obituary for AirPods. They’re still exceedingly popular and eminently recognizable. Apple’s molasses-like pace of iterating on AirPods has made them a harder sell than some of the competition in recent years, but we know an upgrade is coming, and likely very soon.

Reports indicate the new AirPods are already in production, which is roughly in line with what Apple analysts like Ming-Chi Kuo have been saying for months now. Gene Munster of Loup Funds said he expected Apple to announce the new AirPods in October right after the iPhone launch event finished. In an email to Mashable, he gave one possible explanation for Apple’s delayed announcement.

“The AirPod update is likely ready to be announced, but Apple is holding back to give the iPhone 13 launch time to marinate with potential buyers,” Munster said. “I expect the update to come in October, and could just be a press release (not at an event).”


What was once the standard-bearer for wireless earbuds now looks overpriced and obsolete next to its peers.

We also know roughly what to expect from the new AirPods, as rumors have been flying around for more than a year. Apple is supposedly redesigning them to look more like AirPods Pro, with a smaller stem and possibly silicone ear tips. Aside from that, Apple could make the new AirPods natively support the spatial audio feature that was recently added to Apple Music. One thing reports have suggested not to expect is active noise cancellation, which may very well stay exclusive to the more expensive AirPods Pro.

Apple launching new AirPods without ANC would be disappointing, and doubly so if the price stays in that $160 to $200 range the entry-level AirPods have always lived in. They may very well be excellent earbuds, but that price point made more sense in a world where you couldn’t find effective noise-cancelling earbuds for $100. Now that you can, I’m afraid Apple is going to run head-first into a situation where what was once the standard-bearer for wireless earbuds now looks overpriced and somewhat obsolete next to its peers.

Maybe a slight price drop for either of the two existing AirPods models would help alleviate that. It’s reasonable to assume the AirPods 2 will depreciate in value once a new model is out there, but Apple finding a way to make AirPods Pro more affordable would do wonders, especially if the company doesn’t plan on updating those in the near future. It’s just a lot to ask for $250 for a pair of wireless earbuds that aren’t functionally that much better than some that you can buy for $100 less. But Apple also loves charging slightly too much for everything, so don’t count on that happening anytime soon.

AirPods felt futuristic to me the first time I tried them out, but their slow evolution has given the competition too much time to catch up. We’ll likely see the new AirPods 3 before the end of this year. But until then, it’s tough not to wonder if Apple’s fumbled strategy has disqualified AirPods from running in the race it originally kicked off.

How to use Twitter

Your guide to the bird app.

Ready to start getting tweets right from the source, but not sure where to start? We’ve got you covered.

We’ve created a guide to answer all your burning questions about how to use Twitter from how to send a DM to how to schedule a tweet. By the time you finish this article you’ll be a Twitter expert.

Follow the steps below to learn how to use Twitter.

How to create a Twitter account

1. Go to Twitter’s website

2. Select how you want to sign up. Your options are via Google, Apple, phone number, or email and follow the steps. We will walk you through how to sign up with phone number or email.

Choose how you want to set up your Twitter account.

Choose how you want to set up your Twitter account.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Enter your information. Then select “Next.”

Once you enter your information, select "Next."

Once you enter your information, select “Next.”
Credit:

4. Twitter will send you a text or email to verify your account

5. Verify your account by clicking the link Twitter texted or emailed you

6. Customize your Twitter! You’ll be prompted to fill in fields about your interests, who you’d like to follow, and what you’d like your @name to be.

How to make your Twitter account private on desktop

Choosing to “Protect your Tweets,” also known as “going private,” might be for you. It means your posts and info will be visible only to followers, and that prospective new followers have to get your permission first.

1. Go to the Twitter website

2. Select “More” on the right hand side of the screen

Select "More."

Select “More.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Select “Settings and privacy”

Select "Settings and privacy."

Select “Settings and privacy.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

4. Select “Audience and tagging”

Select "Audience and tagging."

Select “Audience and tagging.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

5. Select “Protect your Tweets”

Select the box next to "Protect your Tweets."

Select the box next to “Protect your Tweets.”
Credit: screenshot: Twitter

How to make your Twitter account private on the app

1. Open the Twitter app

2. Swipe right anywhere and a menu will come from the left side of the screen

3. Tap “Settings and privacy” at the bottom of the screen

Select "Settings and privacy."

Select “Settings and privacy.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

4. Tap “Privacy and safety”

Select "Privacy and safety."

Select “Privacy and safety.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

5. Tap the white circle next to “Protect your Tweets”

The oval turning green indicates that your Twitter account is private.

The oval turning green indicates that your Twitter account is private.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

How to send a DM on Twitter on desktop

1. Go to the Twitter website

2. Select “Messages” on the right hand side of the screen or in the lower right hand corner of the screen

Select "Messages."

Select “Messages.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Select the envelope icon to create a new message

Select the envelope icon.

Select the envelope icon.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

4. Search for the Twitter user you want to dm and select that user

5. Select “Next”

Select "Next."

Select “Next.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

6. Compose your message and select the arrow in the bottom left hand corner to send it

Select the arrow to send your dm.

Select the arrow to send your dm.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

If you want to DM someone a tweet, select the arrow below the tweet in the right hand corner. Then select “Send via Direct Message.” Search the user you want to dm and select the arrow in the bottom right hand corner to send the tweet via dm.

How to send a DM on the Twitter app

1. Open the Twitter app

2. Select the envelope in the bottom right hand corner

Select the envelope.

Select the envelope.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Select the blue envelope in the lower right hand corner.

Select the blue envelope.

Select the blue envelope.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

4. Search for the user you want to dm, and select their name.

5. Compose your message and select the arrow in the bottom left hand corner to send it

Select the arrow.

Select the arrow.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

How to search for tweets on desktop

1. Go to the Twitter website

2. Click the search bar in the upper right hand corner

Use the search bar to search for tweets.

Use the search bar to search for tweets.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Type out the tweet you’re searching for and hit the enter button

Mashable found that the search function isn’t super helpful, so we recommend using Twitter’s advanced search option to find a specific tweet. To perform an advanced search, after you search for something select the three dots next to the search bar on the results page. From there you can narrow your search to only, for instance, a certain user, or a certain range of dates, which will yield better results.

How to search for tweets on app

1. Open Twitter app

2. Tap the magnifying glass on the bottom of the screen

Tap the magnifying glass.

Tap the magnifying glass.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Type out the tweet you’re searching for and select search

Select "search."

Select “search.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

You can’t perform an advanced search on the app, but you can add search filters after searching something by selecting the lines with circles to the right of the search bar.

How to schedule tweets

To schedule tweets, use TweetDeck. It is currently available as a website, and as a desktop app for Mac.

1. Go to the TweetDeck website or open the TweetDeck desktop app for Mac

2. Select the feather in the upper right hand corner

Select the blue feather icon.

Select the blue feather icon.
Credit: Screenshot: twitter

3. Type out your tweet in the text box

4. Select “Schedule Tweet”

Select "Schedule Tweet."

Select “Schedule Tweet.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

5. Select date and time you want the tweet to be sent out

6. Select “Tweet at [time you want the tweet to be sent out]”

Use the calendar to schedule your tweet.

Use the calendar to schedule your tweet.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

How to reply to a tweet

1. Go to the Twitter website or open the Twitter app

2. Select the speech bubble below the tweet you want to reply to

Select the speech bubble to reply to a Tweet.

Select the speech bubble to reply to a Tweet.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Type out your reply and select “Reply”

Select "Reply" to send out your reply.

Select “Reply” to send out your reply.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

How to retweet on Twitter

1. Go to the Twitter website or open the Twitter app

2. Select the two arrows beneath the tweet you want to retweet

Select the two arrows.

Select the two arrows.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Select “Retweet”

Select "Retweet."

Select “Retweet.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

If the tweet was tweeted by a private account you won’t be able to retweet it.

What is a quote tweet

A quote tweet allows you to retweet a tweet with your own choice of text above it, so you are quoting the original tweet and adding context or commentary.

How to quote tweet

1. Go to the Twitter website or open the Twitter app

2. Select the two arrows beneath the tweet you want to quote tweet.

Tap the two arrows.

Tap the two arrows.
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Select “Quote Tweet”

Select "Quote Tweet."

Select “Quote Tweet.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

4. Type out your response to the tweet and select “Tweet.”

Type out your comment and tap "Tweet."

Type out your comment and tap “Tweet.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

If the tweet was tweeted by a private account you won’t be able to quote tweet it.

How to delete your Twitter account

To delete your Twitter account you have to first deactivate it. When you deactivate your account your username and profile won’t be visible on Twitter. Twitter gives you a 30-day period of deactivation during which you can revive your account before Twitter permanently deletes it. If you login to your account before the 30-day period of deactivation is up, you can revive it.

How to delete your Twitter account on desktop

1. Go to the Twitter website

2. Select “More” on the right hand side of your screen

Select "More."

Select “More.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

3. Select “Settings and Privacy”

Select "Settings and Privacy,"

Select “Settings and Privacy,”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

4. Select “Deactivate Account”

Click "Deactivate Account."

Click “Deactivate Account.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

5. Confirm you want to deactivate your account by selecting “Deactivate”

Click "Deactivate."

Click “Deactivate.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

How to delete your Twitter account on the Twitter app

1. Open the Twitter app

2. Swipe right anywhere and a menu will come from the left side of the screen

3. Scroll down and select “Settings and privacy”

Select "Settings and privacy."

Select “Settings and privacy.”
Credit: screenshot: Twitter

4. Tap “Account”

Select "Account."

Select “Account.”
Credit:

5. Tap “Deactivate your account”

Tap "Deactivate your account."

Tap “Deactivate your account.”
Credit: screenshot: twitter

6. Confirm you want to deactivate your account by selecting “Deactivate”

Tap "Deactivate."

Tap “Deactivate.”
Credit: Screenshot: twitter

Did you remember? The 21st night of September? This comedian sure did.

It’s OK if you forgot. What with the pandemic, and the hurricanes, and fires, and the general mess everything’s in.

But Demi Adejuyigbe remembers. Every year since 2016, in fact, the artist and comedian honors the Earth, Wind & Fire song “September” with a video dance tribute that drops on Sept. 21 — the date mentioned, repeatedly, in the song.

And every year, without fail, his videos are a burst of pure joy in an otherwise joyless time.

In keeping with the good vibes, Adejuyigbe is (once again) asking those who enjoyed this year’s artistic tour de force to make a donation to one of three charities.

As of the time of this writing, almost $150,000 had been raised — making Sept. 21 a true day to remember.