Warning to Olympic athletes: Follow the rules at the Tokyo Games, or else Share Updated: 4:25 PM PDT Jun 15, 2021 By STEPHEN WADE, AP Sports Writer
Warning to Olympic athletes: Follow the rules at the Tokyo Games, or else Share Updated: 4:25 PM PDT Jun 15, 2021
Hide Transcript
Show Transcript athletes who break Covid 19 rules at the summer olympics could be kicked out of the Games organizers announced in the third and final olympic playbook. That punishment ranges from warnings to disqualification, to financial sanctions. What s clear here is that participants will have to go through major logistical hurdles and bureaucracy to pull these games off, Athletes will be tested twice within 96 hours of leaving for Japan, they ll be tested upon arrival and tested daily after that. They re asked to wear masks as much as possible to avoid public transportation and to only go to designated places. There will be social distancing instead of the usual
Avengers Land To VelociCoaster – Disney, NBCU CEOs Say Post-Covid Theme Park Renaissance Underway
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Universal plans to open Epic Universe in a couple of years — but no mention of Harry Potter
orlandosentinel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from orlandosentinel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In AT&T’s WarnerMedia spinoff, a Hollywood outsider again learns a tough lesson Steven Zeitchik © Ronald Martinez/Getty Images A man walks with an umbrella outside of AT&T corporate headquarters in Dallas. The executive from outside Hollywood had a strong reason his company should pay billions to acquire an entertainment giant.
Popular Searches Distribution and content, he said, “have been developing simultaneously they are like wheels of the same car.” The executive added that, after the sale was complete, the studio’s content could then be “distributed all over the world through a variety of media.” The statement encapsulates the logic AT&T offered three years ago when it bought WarnerMedia. But it didn’t come from the Texas phone juggernaut. It originated much farther away and longer ago with Akio Tanii, the former president of the Japanese electronics giant Matsushita, who uttered it back in 1990 to justify his firm’s purch