, according to estimates by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The first season, Rave in the Wasteland, plays out across the 14 tracks of “Based on True Story” and represents his willingness to learn from life’s lessons.“I’ve come to some really beautiful answers for myself,” Smith said. “My perception of God and reality.”
Though Smith, 56, is still a bankable global star, rebuilding trust and momentum has been an uphill battle. He’s grappled with harsh realities while trying to move past the backlash fromat the Oscars in 2022 and hisWill Smith is focusing on self-improvement while his 10-year ban from the Oscars, for slapping Chris Rock, is in force. (March 24)
Several entertainers — including Zoë Kravitz, Wanda Sykes and Rob Reiner — criticized Smith’s actions. Jim Carrey was particularly vocal, stating that Smith had been “” and cracked under the pressure.
When asked about Carrey’s “bandwidth” remark, Smith agreed but reiterated that he needed to step back to gain a deeper understanding of himself and move beyond his own limitations.
“There’s a small self that — the small concept of myself - can get to the end of his bandwidth,” he said. “And then, if I back up, there’s like an infinite space, where my bandwidth is the bandwidth of life itself. It’s like trying to not get stuck in having to be only a narrow band of things, to give myself permission to be wider in the truth of who and what I actually am.”“We’re really writing the history of these peoples that lived prior to 1492, all the way back 10,000-plus years,” said Helmer.
It’s a welcome opportunity for Mark Rees, a professor of archaeology at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and director of the Louisiana Public Archaeology Lab.Still, Rees laments that the work is hampered by people who have made unauthorized digs and made off with material from the site.
Gray Tarry, bottom left, an archeological field technician for the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, digs, while Josiah Hamilton, left, and Jamie Butts, right, high school students from Youth Conservation Corps, watch at an archeological site in Kisatchie National Forest, La. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)Gray Tarry, bottom left, an archeological field technician for the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, digs, while Josiah Hamilton, left, and Jamie Butts, right, high school students from Youth Conservation Corps, watch at an archeological site in Kisatchie National Forest, La. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)