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News24 | Friday’s weather: Cold front to hit at least 3 provinces, but fine temperatures forecast elsewhere

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Top Stories Tamfitronics A cold front is expected to hit at least three provinces, otherwise fine temperatures for the rest of SA. (Kinga Krzeminska/Getty Images)

A cold front is expected to hit at least three provinces, otherwise fine temperatures for the rest of SA. (Kinga Krzeminska/Getty Images)

TheSouth African Weather Servicehas forecast a cold front over the weekend in at least three provinces, while the rest of the country can expect fine and cold to cool conditions.

Advisories

A significant cold front is expected to hit the Western Cape, Northern Cape and Eastern Cape from Saturday into Sunday.

The public and small stock farmers have been warned about the expected intermittent heavy downpours, snowfalls, cold conditions, strong coastal and interior winds as well as rough seas.

The weather in your region

Gautengwill have morning fog patches in the west, otherwise it will be fine and cool.

The expected UVB sunburn index is high.

Morning fog patches are expected inMpumalangaover the Highveld and escarpment.

Otherwise, fine and cool temperatures are forecast but warm conditions are expected on the Lowveld where it will be partly cloudy at first.

Limpopocan expect partly cloudy conditions with morning fog patches on the Lowveld, otherwise it will be fine and cool to warm.

Fine and cool to warm temperatures are expected in theNorth West.

TheFree Statewill be fine and cool.

Fine and cold to cool conditions are forecast in theNorthern Capebut it will be cold in the south, becoming partly cloudy in the west.

The wind along the coast will be a moderate to fresh north-westerly in the morning, otherwise a moderate to fresh south-easterly is expected.

TheWestern Capecan expect cloudy conditions and cold to cool temperatures with isolated to scattered rain and showers over the western parts from the morning into the late afternoon when it will be windy.

The wind along the coast will be a moderate to fresh westerly to north-westerly east of Cape Agulhas, otherwise a fresh to strong northerly to north-westerly is expected.

The expected UVB sunburn index is low.

Partly cloudy and cool conditions are forecast in the western half of theEastern Cape.

It will become cloudy in the south from the evening.

The wind along the coast will be a moderate to fresh south-westerly.

The eastern half of the province will be cold with morning frost in the north, otherwise fine and cool, becoming cloudy in the evening with fog in places south of the escarpment.

The wind along the coast will be a light north-westerly, becoming moderate to fresh south-westerly in the afternoon.

KwaZulu-Natalwill have morning fog patches over the interior, otherwise fine and cool temperatures are expected but it will be warm in the north-east.

The wind along the coast will be light to moderate north-westerly until late morning, otherwise it will be moderate to fresh northerly to north-easterly but light to moderate in the south, becoming moderate to fresh south-westerly in the south from late afternoon.

The expected UVB sunburn index is high.

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Fact Check: Trump Fan Sues Biden For Losing $10k on Let’s Go Brandon Merch?

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President Joe Biden‘s departure from the 2024 presidential race has left both Republicans and Democrats reassessing election strategies with new pitches and attack lines for their rivals.

On Wednesday, Biden made his first major public appearance since he confirmed he was ending his reelection campaign and endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris to replace him as the Democratic Party‘s 2024 nominee.

During his speech, he said his achievements as president “merited a second term,” but that he believed it was in the best interest of the country to “pass the torch to a new generation.”

With Biden out, claims appeared online that merchandisers with piles of excoriating merchandise were planning to sue the president for the money they had now lost.

Top Stories Tamfitronics Let's Go Brandon
Attendees wave “Let’s go Brandon” banners as they attend a “Don’t Tread on Florida” tour campaign event with Florida governor Ron DeSantis at the Alico Arena ahead of the midterm elections, November 6, 2022, in…GIORGIO VIERA/AFP via Getty Images

The Claim

A post by user @Roshan_Rinaldi on X, formerly Twitterposted on July 25, 2024, viewed 934,400 times, said “Man says he lost $10,000 in now-worthless ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ merch.

“So he wants to sue Joe Biden for dropping out.

“Ahahaha!”

The post included what appeared to be a still from a TV news broadcast that said, “BREAKING NEWS – BIDEN SUED FOR DROPPING OUT – MAN SAYS HE LOST $10,000 ON WORTHLESS LET’S GO BRANDON MERCHANDISE.”

The Facts

The “Let’s Go Brandon” slogan is an anti-Biden mantra, based on an infamous news broadcast in which a sportscaster mistook chants of “F*** Joe Biden” heard during a live show.

Presumably, much of the merchandise with this slogan will have little relevance for the rest of the presidential campaign. However, the claim of a lawsuit, let alone a “Breaking News” story about it, appears to have been made up.

The image used in the post on X was pulled from an unrelated Fox News story about a Trump merchandise seller published in 2021. Business owner Keith Lambert shared the photo from one of his “Let’s Go Brandon” stores in New England.

There have been no reports that Lambert is planning to sue the president over losing money on merchandise purchases.

Newsweek has contacted an associate of Lambert for comment.

There are no other legitimate news stories about such a lawsuit. The screenshot shows no news widget or icon to indicate which network broadcast the story, although it bears some similarity to Sky News’ formatting.

It appears the image was produced using a template that allows users to create fake headlines. It is a well-known template used in other misleading news stories. The only difference with the image shared on X is that a watermark usually generated automatically onto the template has been removed.

The image was also sent by BrooklynDad_Defiant on July 23, 2024, who may have created it in accompaniment to a post he wrote.

“Good morning and Happy Tuesday to everyone who JUST realized that MAGA has wasted a TON of time, money, and energy on all of their Let’s Go Brandon tee shirts, flags, lawn signs and other dumb anti-Biden merchandise for the 2024 election,” BrooklynDad_Defiant wrote.

“Sure it’s petty, but it’s hilarious.”

In any case, the image appears to have been created for satire. Newsweek has contacted a White House media representative for comment.

The Ruling

Top Stories Tamfitronics Satire Fact Check ruling

Satire.

There are no legitimate news reports that a business owner is suing President Biden over wasted “Let’s Go Brandon” stock. The image used to accompany the claim appears to have been created by a popular online template generator used elsewhere in an attempt to prop up other misleading and false stories.

FACT CHECK BY Newsweek’s Fact Check team

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Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

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The Mainstream Media Strikes Back

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The news about the news most days is grim. Every story about the industry seems to include the word “beleaguered,” and if a newsroom isn’t laying people off, it’s probably cutting or slashing in some other way. In March, Axios co-founders Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei dropped this quasi-obituary while exploring the shifting power dynamics of our information landscape: “Traditional media, at least as a center of dominant power, is dead.”

Allen and VandeHei wisely observed how Americans are self-sorting into a dozen different isolating media bubbles. But the thing is, bubbles can pop. Though the old mass media days may be long gone, even in this era of influencers and information silos, major networks and legacy newsrooms have the ability to break through. In the past several weeks of political upheaval, complete with an assassination attempt against Donald Trump, the national media has reasserted itself in a 2024 election story the public had been largely tuning out.

Just ask President Joe Biden. What started with a presidential debate produced by the O.G. cable news network, CNN, ended four weeks later with the president giving a televised address on his decision to pass the torch to Kamala Harris. About 29 million people tuned in across the networks. If this were a summer blockbuster, it would be titled The Mainstream Media Strikes Back.

I want to be crystal clear: The Biden backlash was not a media creation. The news coverage was not conceived by conniving editors who wanted to force Biden off the ticket. This wasn’t some muscle-flexing contest or clickbait strategy. Those conspiratorial takes (and I’ve read them all in my social media replies!) presume that some all-powerful entity controls the commentariat. If only it were that easy! When CNN’s John King, seconds after the debate, reported on air that “there is a deep, a wide, and a very aggressive panic in the Democratic Party,” he had no idea that Nicole Wallace was saying much the same thing on MSNBC.

But it’s true that the conventional wisdom about Biden’s weakness hardened very quickly. Newsroom leaders sensed that a huge story was unfolding within the Democratic Party—even though most of the Democrats in positions of power were only speaking anonymously at first. Well-sourced reporters signaled that Biden’s candidacy was on the line—not because they wanted it to be, not because they craved a juicy story, but because that was the reality inside the party.

Even before the debate, the enduring power of the “MSM” was on display. All of the major networks came together in April and flexed their collective power with a statement that publicly pressed Trump and Biden to debate. The Biden campaign, in a now-infamous miscalculation, proposed a matchup in June, far earlier than past general election debates have been held. CNN (one of my former employers) provided all the production resources—as only a handful of media entities are able to do.

Just three months before the debate, Biden delivered a commanding State of the Union address that surprised Democrats and Republicans alike. Representative Jerry Nadler was heard telling Biden afterward, “Nobody is going to talk about cognitive impairment now.”

But, of course, that talk resumed about one minute into the debate, as Biden appeared hoarse and halting. CNN anchor Anderson Cooper later said that political commentator From Jones looked, during the June 27 debate, like he’d been punched in the stomach.

Opinion writers at The New York Times drafted columns calling on Biden to step aside. Editors at The Atlantic assigned multiple articles about Biden’s inability to govern for another four years. Anchors on MSNBC wondered aloud about alternatives like Harris. These bastions of traditional media—some openly left-leaning, others fiercely independent—platformed the fears that were blowing up progressives’ group chats. “For the President to insist on remaining the Democratic candidate would be an act not only of self-delusion but of national endangerment,” the New Yorker editor David Remnick wrote two days after the debate.

These media outlets, though squeezed by eroding business models and growing competitors, still have a ton of sway—and the Biden turmoil reaffirmed it. While the bubble phenomenon is real, “and the trend is accelerating,” VandeHei said, “there’s also the enduring power of the big institutions in big moments.”

Large swaths of liberal readers, including White House aides and Biden (now Harris) campaign strategists, paid attention to every new development and data point. All of a sudden people were buzzing about newspaper editorials—not exactly an everyday occurrence. Insiders were parsing the comments on Biden’s morning show of choice, Morning Joe, for clues about what might happen next.

Political historian Brian Rosenwald, author of Talk Radio’s America, told me he thought the Biden crisis coverage was “disproportionate” but legitimate. “With each generation, media has fragmented more” away from the Big Three network model, “but this was one of those rare moments when it almost approached the old landscape,” he said. Scrutiny of Biden’s condition was relentless, he told me, and “when we get this kind of hyperfocus, it still packs a huge punch.”

Legacy outlets like The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post contributed crucial reporting about Biden’s diminished health. Some Biden diehards bemoaned the reliance on anonymous sources and tried to deny the stories. But the leaks were generally borne out. The reporting rightly pointed toward Biden’s inevitable exit.

The criticism sometimes burned. WaPo editor Matt Murray reminded his staff, about a week after the debate, that “we serve the largest aims of readers and of our democracy by shining light on our leaders even in difficult times and even on topics that may make some readers uncomfortable.”

TikTokers and YouTubers found themselves citing the work of dead-tree media as the Democratic infighting intensified. After all, someone still has to sort out the raw material that everyone else dissects. “I just did Megyn Kelly’s podcast and we spent half the time arguing about the mainstream media,” VandeHei recalled.

Biden’s inner circle acknowledged the import of old-guard media by booking interviews with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos and NBC’s Lester Holt. Instead of alleviating concerns about Biden’s competency, the interviews merely prolonged the anxiety. While the fever swamps of the right-wing echo chamber swelled with crazed conspiracy theories about Biden’s death, the reality-based media signaled that Biden was increasingly isolated and likely to step aside. As Jones said on CNN, “We got new information about our leader, and we decided that we had a responsibility to the country, and to the party, to give somebody else a shot.”

On Sunday, Biden succumbed to the pressure and said he would not run for a second term. On Monday, shares of stock in The New York Times Company closed at a 52-week high.

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Fact Check: Jennifer Aniston Falsely Claims JD Vance Wants to Ban IVF

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Friends star Jennifer Aniston has jumped in to the election fray, positioning herself as the patron saint of childless cat ladies everywhere after the mainstream news media dug up Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance’s long-ago comment about Kamala Harris.

But in so doing, the Hollywood star also ended up spreading fake news about Vance’s position on IVF.

In her defense of cat ladies, Jennifer Aniston erroneously claimed that JD Vance wanted to take away womens’ access to in vitro fertilization.

“All I can say is … Mr. Vance, I pray that your daughter is fortunate enough to bear children of her own one day,” Aniston wrote on Instagram. “I hope she will not need to turn to IVF as a second option. Because you are trying to take that away from her, too.”

However, Vance voiced his support for IVF in a February interview with local NBC affiliate WCMH-TV, during which he said he, Trump, and “pretty much every Republican that I know is pro-fertility treatments.”

“My view is babies are good, families are good,” Vance said. “And I want there to be as much access to fertility treatment as possible. And I think 99 percent of people agree with me, Democrat, Republican, or in the middle.”

The Washington Examiner was the first to correct Aniston’s false claim about Vance.

As Breitbart News reportedJennifer Aniston has publicly spoken about her difficulties conceiving a child naturally while she was married to actor Brad Pitt, adding that she wishes someone had told her to freeze her eggs when she was younger.

Follow David Ng on Twitter@HeyItsDavidNg. Have a tip? Contact me at[email protected]

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