Tag: leaving
Piers Morgan leaving TalkTV to focus on YouTube channel
Transfer news LIVE: FOUR players leaving Liverpool, Osimhen ‘perfect’ for Chelsea, Real ‘eye’ Bellingham and Mbappe
LIVERPOOL have announced that Roberto Firmino, James Milner, Naby Keita and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain will all leave the club this summer.
The Reds quartet have played nearly 1,000 times combined during their respective Anfield careers.
Elsewhere, Real Madrid are reportedly eyeing up sensational moves for Jude Bellingham, Kylian Mbappe and Alphonso Davies.
Meanwhile, Wilfried Zaha is reportedly considering extending his stay at Crystal Palace.
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Stay up to date with ALL of this summer’s transfer news…
Meet the Fallout 4 wanderer leaving bobbleheads around Boston
A real-world Fallout 4 bobblehead hunt is underway for the post-apocalyptic RPG game‘s Vault Boy collectibles, as we at PCGamesN interview the fan responsible for jetting across the states to make it happen. Fallout 4‘s Boston setting has thus been brought to life, while we learn exactly why this has happened in the first place. If you’re excited about the Fallout 5 release date, this will definitely keep you entertained.
MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Fallout 4 console commands, Fallout 4 mods, Fallout 4 System Requirements
Coastal Cities Priced Out Low-Wage Workers. Now College Graduates Are Leaving, Too.
This pattern, visible in an Upshot analysis of census microdata, is startling in retrospect. Major coastal metros have been hubs of the kind of educated workers coveted most by high-powered employers and economic development officials. Economists have lamented the growing coastal concentration of their wealth. A politics of resentment in America has fed on it, too. These urban centers have become a class of their own — “superstar cities” — with outsize impact on the American economy fueled by the clustering of workers with degrees. But it appears in domestic migration data that, years after lower-wage residents have been priced out of expensive coastal metros, higher-paid workers are now turning away from them, too.
Working-age Americans with a degree are still flowing into these regions from other parts of the country, often in large numbers. But as the pool leaving grows faster, that educational advantage is eroding. Boston’s pull with college graduates has weakened. Seattle’s edge vanished during the pandemic. And the analysis shows San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles and Washington all crossing a significant threshold: More college-educated workers left than moved in. For most of this century, large metros with a million residents or more have received all of the net gains from college-educated workers migrating around the country, at the expense of smaller places. But among those large urban areas, the dozen metros with the highest living costs — nearly all of them coastal — have had a uniquely bifurcated migration pattern: As they saw net gains from college graduates, they lost large numbers of workers without degrees.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Our favorite gruesome Sovietcore boomer shooter is leaving early access next week
All signs hint toward OPPO and OnePlus leaving France. Rest of Europe next?
Chris Brown & Crew Allegedly JUMP Usher, Reportedly Leaving Icon with “Bloodied Nose”
In a developing story, it’s being reported that Chris Brown and his crew allegedly jumped R&B superstar Usher in Las Vegas following a dispute.
Details on the alleged encounter below…
Per HU, the drama went down in Las Vegas during the early hours of this morning.
Usher has ironically thrown C. Breezy an early birthday party at Skate Rock City.
The post Chris Brown & Crew Allegedly JUMP Usher, Reportedly Leaving Icon with “Bloodied Nose” appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. – Thirsty?.
Driver warning – how going green and buying an electric car could end up leaving you THOUSANDS out of pocket
THE value of some of the most in-demand electric cars is falling at two times the rate of petrol cars, new research has discovered.
Most mainstream motors will experience a steady decline in value over time, due to factors such as increasing age, mileage covered and general wear and tear.
Buying an electric car could end up leaving you out of pocket[/caption]
However, a new study has found that, on average, battery powered cars will lose 51 percent of their original value (based on data from 2020 to 2023), compared to just 37 percent for petrol models.
This means a huge £15,220 drop for owners of EVs, compared to £9,901 for drivers of petrol cars, reports The Express.
The worrying information comes from ChooseMyCar.com – using a comparison of new model prices from three years ago compared to their current value.
Put simply, the higher the original purchase price of the car, the bigger the loss – with the Tesla Model S losing £25,000 in value over 36 months of ownership, equating to a fall of 46%.
Shockingly, even popular entry-level EVs like the Nissan Leaf were affected by big levels of depreciation, recording a fall of £13,000 (58%).
Nick Zapolski, of ChooseMyCar.com, said: “Our research shows yet another blow for EV owners, on top of many other issues that have come to light recently.
“Not only are the EVs themselves not holding value, the price of electricity itself has zoomed up, meaning running the cars is not as economical as it once was.”
One thing that hasn’t helped matters is the Government doing away with its Electric Vehicle Homecharge Scheme (around a year ago), which previously helped drivers to save money on installing an EV charger at home.
Many are now calling on the Government to bring the scheme back to support motorists making the switch to an electric car.
Mr Zapolski continued: “Home charge points are expensive to install (if you even had the necessary driveway to allow that) and there has been uproar about the availability and reliability of public charge points.
“On top of that, recent decisions made by the Government mean that some of the initial incentives to encourage EV ownership are being discontinued, such as lower tax and free entry into ULEZ zones.
“The Government really needs to take action if it wants to continue to push the idea of EVs onto the consumer, as currently the cons of EV ownership threaten to outweigh the pros.”
TikTok’s head of US trust and safety is leaving
TikTok’s head of trust and safety for the US, Eric Han, is leaving the company on May 12th, according to two people familiar with the matter and an internal memo to employees I’ve seen.
His departure comes as TikTok is still trying to clench a deal to avoid a ban by the US government. Han has been leading TikTok’s safety teams in the US for several years, and in December, he was named the head of trust and safety for TikTok US Data Security (USDS), a separate entity created to convince the government that the app shouldn’t be banned.
In the memo to employees announcing his departure, Andy Bonillo, interim USDS general manager, said he will be “stepping in to lead USDS T&S on an interim basis” until “we identify Eric’s replacement for the…