Netflix s Eden Reveals Trailer and English Dub Cast
Netflix has revealed a new trailer and the English dub voice cast for its new original anime series,
EDEN! First announced to be in the works back in 2019, this series will finally be making its debut with Netflix later this month. While there has admittedly been very little seen for the series since it first was announced a couple of years, now fans have gotten their best look yet with Eden s official worldwide debut on Netflix not being long away from now. This newest trailer for
EDEN also comes with the confirmed English dub cast for the series.
Memphis Commercial Appeal
Catherine Bacon starts her shift at 5 a.m. on the assembly line for a catfish processor in rural Mississippi, a line of work that hasn’t paused during the COVID-19 pandemic.
It’s a job Bacon, 53, and her coworkers at Consolidated Catfish Producers in Isola have fulfilled despite COVID-19 upending day-to-day life, ensuring grocers and restaurants continue to get their supply of catfish products.
“When everything shut down, we still had to come to work every day,” she said. “We came to work like six days a week. We didn’t let up any.”
Bacon received her first Moderna vaccine shot in late March. She said “it felt good that it’s almost over” the worry of catching COVID-19 and not being able to spend time with her three grandchildren have made the past year a trying one.
GARRETT NEESE
Volunteers from Michigan Technological University men’s club volleyball alumnus Matthew Radloff of Appleton, Wisconsin; Alex Roelant, a fourth-year mechanical engineering student; and Ian Blair, a master’s of business administration student sort plastic bags during the second annual Waste Reduction Drive Saturday. (Photo by Garrett Neese, Houghton Daily Mining Gazette)
HOUGHTON At least 31,000 items otherwise bound for a landfill were collected for reuse Saturday as part of the second annual waste reduction drive.
Members of Michigan Technological University’s Sustainability Demonstration House and other volunteers collected items at Tech’s Student Development Complex.
Event organizer Rose Turner, a graduate student and SDH resident, was glad to see residents put in so much effort to divert their waste. The event is also intended to show people how many opportunities there are to reuse those products. A station outside the SDC had pamphlets on how to r
gneese@mininggazette.com
Garrett Neese/Daily Mining Gazette
Volunteers from Michigan Technological University menâs club volleyball â alumnus Matthew Radloff of Appleton, Wisconsin; Alex Roelant, a fourth-year mechanical engineering student; and Ian Blair, a masterâs of business administration student â sort plastic bags during the second annual Waste Reduction Drive Saturday.
HOUGHTON At least 31,000 items otherwise bound for a landfill were collected for reuse Saturday as part of the second annual Waste Reduction Drive.
Members of Michigan Technological University’s Sustainability Demonstration House and other volunteers collected items at Tech’s Student Development Complex.
Event organizer Rose Turner, a graduate student and SDH resident, was glad to see residents put in so much effort to divert their waste. The event is also intended to show people how many opportunities there are to reuse those products. A station outside the SDC had pamphlets on