Volume 70 Issue 09

Page 1

The Highlander

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE

For the week of Tuesday, November 30, 2021

VOL. 70, ISSUE 09

est. 1954

RADAR

How ‘Eternals’ could be the glory or downfall of the Marvel Cinematic Universe

MARVEL’S MOST DIVERSE MOVIE HAS CAUSED MIXED REVIEWS AND RIFTS BETWEEN FANS AND CRITICS.

BRENDA JOVEL Assistant Radar Editor

Tyree Henry), Kingo (Kumail Nanjiani) and Sprite (Lia McHugh). Each possesses unique abilities and personalities that were created by Arishem, their leader and a celestial. They were originally placed on Earth thousands of years ago to protect the world from maneating creatures called deviants. Once every deviant was destroyed, each member went their own way and were soon caught up living new lives in the modern era. Their new lives are thrown into a whirlpool of chaos when a deviant suddenly re-emerges, causing the Eternals to join forces once again to restore peace and safety for humanity. This is only the sub-plot of the film as the biggest and most important plot reveals itself to be the task to prevent the emergence of a celestial whose birth would result in the H demise of planet Earth. ■

When audience members were introduced to the highly-anticipated cast for “Eternals,” the world went haywire. As Marvel’s most diverse cast, they made sure to showcase each character as much as they could to hype fans up. New teasers went up on Marvel Studios’ official Instagram page for weeks before the newest posters for each character were shown. Seeing familiar A-list faces like Salma Hayek, Richard Madden, Gemma Chan and more in their characters’ costumes created a train of thrills and anticipation for the film’s release. “Eternals” takes place five years after the events from “Avengers: Endgame.” The group is comprised of 10 members: Ajak (Salma Hayek), Ikaris (Richard Madden), Sersi (Gemma Chan), Druig (Barry Keoghan), Makari (Lauren Ridloff), Gilgamesh (Don Lee), Thena (Angelina Jolie), Phastos (Brian

OPINIONS

TWO YEARS INTO THE PANDEMIC, AAPI HATE INCIDENTS HAVE INCREASED, BUT IT’S IMPOSSIBLE TO FORGET THE EVENTS THAT LED TO THIS POINT.

Hatred against Asian Americans surged during the pandemic, but history shows this has been a long time coming

COURTESY OF ELVERT BARNES VIA FLICKR UNDER CC BY-SA 2.0 YSABEL NAKASONE and 320,000 Pacific Islanders have Contributing Writer

A new national report done by the group Stop AAPI Hate shows that about 20% Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have experienced a hate-motivated incident in the last year. Based on the report, 20% means roughly 4.8 million Asian Americans

► SEE ETERNALS PAGE 8

COURTESY OF WALT DISNEY STUDIOS MOTION PICTURES

been the subject of a hate incident. Despite public attention shifting away from this issue, AAPI hate has continued to surge. This is not only due to the association made between the pandemic and Asia, but also due to inflammatory rhetoric on the part of public officials and the country’s history of AAPI discrimination and

oppression that encourages people to act on long-standing racist attitudes. For this recent pandemic surge, the blame can at least in part be assigned to former President Donald Trump after his liberal use of racist terms like “Chinese virus” and “Kung Flu,” which he synonymously used for coronavirus. This choice to refer to the virus as Chinese was a conscious and deliberate one that was discovered after a photo was taken of Trump’s script where the word “corona” was crossed out and written in was the word “Chinese.” Experts were openly critical of these terms, claiming that they could increase occurrences of AAPI hate. A study done by UC San Francisco found a connection between Trump’s use of the term “Chinese virus” and the rise of anti-Asian hashtags on Twitter. The use of these blatantly racist terms for the coronavirus encourages people to see the virus as attached to an Asian person and gives people an excuse for H their own racist opinions or actions.■ ► SEE ASIAN AMERICAN HATE PAGE 5

SPORTS

UC Riverside’s men’s basketball team on a three-game win streak with a win over Florida A&M HANSEL CHU Assitant Sports Editor

The UC Riverside basketball team won 6049 against Florida A&M University at the SRC Arena on Black Friday. Going into this game, the Highlanders had a dominating win against Bethesda and squeaked past the University of Texas at El Paso on Monday night. Strong performances from junior guard Zyon Pullin and junior center Callum McRae led UCR to a victory Friday afternoon. Junior guard Flynn Cameron got things started for the Highlanders with a triple to open up the game. However, both teams struggled to put points up on the scoreboard as

THE HIGHLANDERS MANAGE TO BE VICTORIOUS IN A TOUGH DEFENSIVE BATTLE AGAINST THE RATTLERS the defensive intensity was high. A layup from graduate student guard Dominick Pickett gave UCR a 10-6 lead with 12:06 left in the first half. A couple of minutes later, a 3-pointer from freshman guard Wil Tattersal gave Riverside a 5-point lead around the halfway point of the half. This would ignite a 15-4 run from the Highlanders to grab control of the game. A pair of 3-pointers from senior forward J.P. Moorman II and a couple of buckets from Pullin H contributed to the run. ■ ► SEE MEN’S BASKETBALL PAGE 9

@thehighlanderucr @HighlanderUCR UCRHighlander NEWS 3

OPINIONS 4

FEATURES 6

RADAR 8

SPORTS 9

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Volume 70 Issue 09 by The Highlander- UCR - Issuu