Jordan Peele donates $1 million to Black Lives Matter and four other organizations : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

Actor and filmmaker Jordan Peele is standing in solidarity with the community amid the Black Lives Matter movement. The actor has donated $1 million to five organizations Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective, Black Lives Matter, Equal Justice Initiative, Fair Fight, and Transgender Gender-Variant & Intersex Justice Project.

On Wednesday, his company Monkeypaw released a statement that read, “We are committed to continued action against a system rooted in the violence against and oppression of the Black community.”

Jordan Peele founded Monkeypaw in 2012. His announcement and donation news comes in two weeks after the global protests against police brutality and racial injustice. This was sparked after a video had surfaced of a policeman killing George Floyd in Minneapolis. The cop has been arrested and charged with second-degree murder.

ALSO READ: Trailer of Jordan Peele’s Hunters starring Al Pacino and Logan Lerman is DEADLY

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Censorship and surveillance could be the biggest rights challenges post Covid-19 – The Mail & Guardian

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Significant public attention in relation to Covid-19 has focused on the economic dimensions of the virus resulting in joblessness and deprivation on a monumental scale. But something else is severely under threat — civic space — basically the right to freely organise, participate and communicate in public life.

Over the past few months, while health and economic concerns have taken public stage, insidious power grabs have been taking place, prompting the United Nation’s special expert on the right to privacy to warn that “dictatorships and authoritarian societies often start in the face of a threat”. 

Civic space was already under pressure before the pandemic. As Covid-19 concerns were first surfacing, the CIVICUS Monitor — our participatory research platform that assesses global civic space conditions — reported that only 3% of the world’s population were living in countries where the core civic freedoms of association, peaceful assembly and expression were adequately protected. Since then, Monitor research shows that several alarming trends have further accelerated the erosion of civic space.

China’s government has aggressively scrubbed information from the internet about its response to Covid-19 and the extent of its spread. At the same time, it has pushed through carefully crafted propaganda to promote the idea that its response to the pandemic was effective while doubling down on measures to monitor and restrict people’s activities. Such practices are being copied by other repressive governments. 

In Vietnam, scores of people have been summoned to police stations and fined for posting information about the pandemic on social media. In Pakistan, protesting medical workers seeking to raise awareness about the lack of personal protective equipment for frontline staff were beaten and arrested.

Overarching surveillance in the name of “contact tracing” to control the spread of the pandemic has been ramped up from Israel to Singapore, creating hurdles for civic space and activism.

But the challenge is not only restricted to governments with poor records on civic freedoms. South Africa has enacted regulations under its disaster management law, criminalising any statement intended to deceive people about Covid-19 or the government response to the pandemic. Although this has been couched in benign language around the need to protect the public from disinformation, the dangers are evident.

In Brazil, one of the worst-hit countries, the government has used the Covid-19 crisis to restrict access to information — it abruptly stopped releasing the official number of cases and even wiped data from an official site prompting the Supreme Court to step in to reinstate the information.

In the United States, the White House has sought to prevent the country’s top infectious diseases expert from testifying before a congressional committee looking into the administration’s response to the pandemic.

Bizarrely, the latest update of the Edelman Trust Barometer points to higher levels of trust in government responses to the pandemic. Some of the countries reporting increased trust in government include China, India and Saudi Arabia.

They fare abysmally in the Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index  and their current governments have been known to hound whistleblowers, investigative journalists and rights defenders. Without adequate civic space, which is the bedrock of an open and democratic society, studies of public perceptions can be arguably influenced by extraneous factors. 

International law and constitutional principles mandate that restrictions on civic space must stand the test of proportionality and necessity in a democratic society. Yet the pendulum seems to have swung away from the core civic freedoms of expression, peaceful assembly and association.

Rampant censorship and runaway surveillance could create a post 9/11-like situation where torture and enforced disappearances were justified in the name of keeping people safe.

So grave is the challenge that the UN secretary general António Guterres

 has cautioned “against the background of rising ethno-nationalism, populism, authoritarianism and a push back against human rights in some countries, the crisis can provide a pretext to adopt repressive measures unrelated to the pandemic”. 

Our political leaders are making life-or-death decisions. The need to access credible information, shape decisions and hold decision makers to account has never been more acute.

Concerned citizens, the media and civil society organisations need civic space not only to ensure better decisions now but also to protect the interests of future generations. The post 9/11 experience has taught us that the price of hard-won rights is eternal vigilance.

Mandeep Tiwana is the CIVICUS Chief Programmes Officer and Marianna Belalba Barreto is the civic space research lead at the CIVICUS Monitor, an online participatory platform that tracks threats to civil society in every country



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Ask These 4 Questions Before Joining A Social Media Campaign

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Perhaps the best recent example of a well-meaning social media campaign gone south is Blackout Tuesday.

On June 2, social media users posted black squares on their accounts en masse, often adding hashtags such as #theshowmustbepaused, #blackouttuesday, #blacklivesmatter and #blm, to show outrage over the killing of George Floyd and solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. There was quite a bit of pressure from participants for businesses, musicians, actors and friends to post a square ― to not do so was to cement complicity with racism.



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‘Revenge spending’ in China is giving luxury brands some hope

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Several luxury goods companies reported an uptick in China this spring as people emerged from weeks of lockdowns, spurring what some analysts have called a trend of “revenge spending” — the release of pent-up demand once people aren’t forced to stay home.

This was despite a drop of about 40% in Tiffany’s global net sales in May. “Our business performance in mainland China, which was the first market impacted by the virus, is indicative that a robust recovery is underway,” CEO Alessandro Bogliolo said during the company’s earnings presentation on Tuesday.

Others have echoed similar thoughts. Burberry (BURBY) said last month that sales of its clothing, bags and accessories in China were “already ahead of the prior year, and continuing to show an improving trend.”
And Swiss jewelry and watchmaker Richemont has pointed to China as a bright spot in recent weeks, reporting “strong demand” in a results announcement last month since its 462 boutiques in the country opened back up.

“The data indicates that China is in recovery mode,” Luca Solca, an analyst at Bernstein, wrote in a note published late last month. Researchers at his firm have created a “rebound index” to track consumer confidence, which indicates that sentiment among Chinese shoppers improved significantly through May.

‘Revenge spending’

Because of the recent lift, China could be the one market where luxury retailers see a turnaround this year, according to Claudia D’Arpizio, a partner at consulting firm Bain.

“It’s actually been very, very positive,” Edgardo Osorio, founder of Italian shoe brand Aquazzura, told CNN Business. “China has always been, but is especially now more than ever, one of the most fast, [responsive] customers.”

Chinese customers may be spending more money on goods at home because they aren’t able to travel as easily. Two-thirds of sales from Chinese shoppers typically happen outside China, according to analysts.

But much of the world is still dealing with the pandemic, limiting foreign trips and the opportunities people have to spend any excess cash.

“Instead of going on holiday, they might buy a Chanel bag,” said Fflur Roberts, head of luxury goods research at Euromonitor, who added that an uptick in spending is also happening in other countries, including South Korea. “We are seeing signs of the market returning to a certain extent.”

Shoppers lining up to enter a Louis Vuitton boutique in Seoul in May. "South Korea is almost mirroring what's happening in China," said Fflur Roberts, an analyst at Euromonitor.

Some shoppers may also be after “a psychological effect — of coming back to normal life,” noted D’Arpizio.

The rebound in China is important because shoppers there are vital to the global luxury market. They account for 35% of all sales worldwide, according to Bain. Five years from now, the consultancy’s estimates suggest that could shoot up to nearly 50%.

But the industry’s still hurting

But success in China is only part of the story. As customers elsewhere stay home and hold back on luxury shopping in favor of essential purchases or cheaper, unbranded goods, sales of personal luxury items — including handbags, shoes and clothing — are still expected to take a huge hit.

Bain projects that global sales of those items could decline by as much as 35% this year, with expected revenue of 180 billion to 220 billion euros (around $204 billion to $250 billion). That’s compared to the estimated 281 billion euros ($319 billion) taken in last year.

Global brands have acknowledged the pressure. Last week, for example, LVMH (LVMHF) disclosed to investors that its board had met to reexamine its pending $16.2 billion acquisition of Tiffany in the light of the pandemic.

“Coronavirus is forcing companies to rethink almost every business model,” Roberts said.

A closed Louis Vuitton store in Wuhan in March. Its parent company, LVMH, told investors in April that sales had surged for most of its brands in China as the market there reopened.

The recent jump in sales inside China “is not counterbalancing the loss of sales for luxury brands from Chinese consumers globally,” said D’Arpizio. “Overall spending from Chinese is much below last year.”

The boost of “revenge spending” isn’t expected to last very long, either. “We see this as a sort of temporary effect,” added D’Arpizio.

What the industry really needs are tourists, from China or elsewhere, she noted. “We expect traveling to be the last driver to really come back to normality. It will need many months, probably more than one year.”

How we shop has changed

To cope with the new reality of catering more heavily to the domestic market, companies will have to adjust their strategy and figure out how to reach more local customers.

China is already giving brands a blueprint. Even before the outbreak, shoppers were spending money closer to home as they avoided hubs such as Hong Kong due to mass protests, and as brands reduced the price gap that had typically made their products cheaper elsewhere.
Chinese shoppers are spending more at home. Tiffany has big plans to cash in

That pushed companies to open more stores in mainland China, collaborate with local artists and form partnerships with Chinese players. That trend appears to be accelerating.

Burberry, for example, is working with Tencent (TCEHY) on a new online store in China set to launch later this year.
The approach could be applied elsewhere. Burberry CEO Marco Gobbetti last month called the plan a “fundamental testing ground” that could help its teams figure out how to serve customers better in the future.

And as long as travel is restricted, brands may have to tailor offerings in each market, according to analysts.

That’s a pivot for businesses, which typically rely on the crisscross of travelers and don’t always spend significant time carving out strategies for individual countries.

“This is also a big change for the stores in Europe that were really meant more for tourists — a shop in Paris, or a shop in Milan,” said D’Arpizio. Now, “growth will come from the local customers.”

Shop assistants welcoming customers to Chanel at Galeries Lafayette, on the first day of the department store's reopening in Paris in May.

Boutiques are here to stay

Some storied luxury brands that have typically held out on e-commerce are rethinking their strategies, too.

Swiss watchmaker Patek Philippe, for example, recently started selling timepieces online for the first time because of the crisis, according to Roberts, the Euromonitor researcher. The company did not respond to a request for comment.

That suggests a subtle shift, although some brands say the allure of going to a store in person won’t go away anytime soon.

“For me, my boutiques, I decorate them like my home,” said Osorio, the Aquazzura boss. “You do need a physical presence because you want the final client to show up and understand [the brand].”

Brands also view stores as an opportunity to “gain visibility,” according to D’Arpizio. That’s why companies will still continue to invest in shops at airports, even if no one can visit them right now, she said.

An Aquazzura store in Sao Paulo, Brazil. "I've always believed in brick-and-mortar retail," said Edgardo Osorio, founder of the Italian shoe brand. "You need these boutiques, these flagships or these physical showrooms in the major locations around the world."

Even as challenges mount, conventional retail “is ingrained in the whole luxury world,” Roberts noted.

She predicted that companies could eventually reduce the number of stores they operate, or the size of each shop — but they probably won’t pull away altogether.

And while Osorio defended the importance of a brick-and-mortar store, he admitted that the coronavirus has pushed him to think about his strategy in new ways.

The executive recently set out to simplify his business, deciding that instead of putting out four collections a year, he will do just two. He’s also directed his team to relaunch its website to become more mobile-friendly.

“After an incredible two months where I was literally just thinking, ‘How do I survive this?’ Now it’s about: ‘How do I take my brand to the future?'” said Osorio. “It has actually been probably the most creative four weeks of my life.”

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Six EU leaders urge greater collaboration to tackle future #Pandemics

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The leaders of six European Union nations have called for building up EU stocks of critical medicines and equipment and other measures to boost the bloc’s long-term resilience to public health crises, writes Victoria Waldersee.

The 27-nation EU and Britain have reported some 1.4 million cases of the new coronavirus, or about a fifth of the global total. At the height of the crisis, many EU states resorted to protectionist measures, raising trade barriers to hinder the export of medical equipment to their neighbours.

In a joint paper sent to European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on Tuesday, the leaders of Denmark, Spain, Germany, France, Belgium and Poland backed proposals for shared research and development of vaccines and treatment.

“A broader, holistic EU strategy could be more efficient than each member state attempting to enhance preparedness on their own,” they said in the paper.

The proposals included maintaining a three-month stock of critical medicines, supplies and equipment across the EU as well as collaboration between states and companies to produce key products in times of crisis.

Reuters earlier reported that EU member states drastically underestimated their capacity to respond to the coronavirus and had told Brussels in February there was no need to order more medical supplies.

The paper emphasized the need for greater European research and development capacity for vaccines, through funding large-scale clinical trials and a “preparedness platform” that would reduce the risk for companies to develop vaccines by guaranteeing public purchases.

Research results could be shared on a European COVID-19 data platform, said the paper, which also called for joint monitoring and analysis of different testing strategies.

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‘This was an ambush’: California authorities search for suspect after deputy is shot in the head in Paso Robles

A California deputy was shot in what police are calling an ‘ambush’ attack on Wednesday morning. A manhunt is ongoing to find the suspected shooter.

       

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How Akshay Kumar, Raveena Tandon’s love saga ended after actor’s cheating scandal

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How Akshay Kumar, Raveena Tandon’s love saga ended after actor’s cheating scandal 

Akshay Kumar has had his fair share of controversies during his career in Bollywood, one of which also involves a cheating scandal with ex fiancee Raveena Tandon.

There was a time when Akshay was dating popular actress Raveena and was even engaged to her before tying the knot to Twinkle Khanna.

However, the former flames’ love saga reached its tragic end when Akshay was caught red handed with two actresses by Raveena.

It so happened when the two broke up die to a fallout that occurred during the shoot of Khiladiyon Ka Khiladi. 

Raveena had a problem with Akshay’s intimate scenes with Rekha in the movie and the problem was further fuelled by Shilpa Shetty’s entry.

Post their split, Raveena blasted Akshay and during an interview revealed she had caught him red handed with Rekha and Sushmita Sen.

Moreover, she went as far as to reveal that her friends had already warned her about Akshay but she did not pay heed to them back then. 

Raveena also claimed that Akshay got engaged to two more girls even after being engaged to her.

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Ex-Lesotho PM Thabane paid killers $24 000 to murder estranged wife

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Lesotho’s former prime minister Thomas Thabane and his wife paid assassins a down payment of $24 000 to kill his estranged wife Lipolelo three years ago, according to a police affidavit seen on Wednesday.

The details were the latest twist in a scandal that has rocked the southern African state and prompted Thabane to resign last month under pressure over accusations he hampered the investigation.

Thabane and his then wife Lipolelo Thabane, 58, were in the middle of a bitter divorce when she was shot and killed outside her home two days before her husband’s 2017 inauguration.

Thabane denies any involvement in wife’s murder

Thabane has not yet been charged, but the police said he was involved in the plot to kill Lipolelo using hired killers and his wife Maesaiah is in custody accused of murder.

In an affidavit filed on Tuesday but seen by AFP on Wednesday, Deputy Commissioner of Police Paseka Mokete said Thabane and Maesaiah “wanted the deceased dead so that (Maesaiah) …could assume the position of First Lady”.

Ex-premier “Thabane physically pointed out the residence of the deceased to his co-accused,” Mokete said.

Police have said they found Thabane’s mobile number in communications records from the crime scene.

Thabane has denied involvement in the murder. He married Maesaiah two months after the death of Lipolelo.

The police commissioner said the couple had promised to pay the killers the equivalent of $179 485, which was to be paid in instalments.

“They would be remunerated in cash… and through employment opportunities, should they carry out the murder of the deceased prior to (Thabane’s) inauguration as prime minister,” Mokete said.

Initial payments totalling 400,000 maloti ($23,931) were made after Lipolelo’s assassination on 14 June 2017, police said. 

First assassination attempt failed

A first attempt to kill Lipolelo failed on 12 June 2017, police said.

One of the accused killers has since turned state witness.

Maesaiah, 43, was charged with murder in February and spent half a night in jail before a High Court freed her on a 1,000 maloti ($57) bail.

She returned to custody last week after a court revoked bail. She applied for fresh bail on Thursday and a hearing is scheduled for 16 June.

In the application, she sought release to allow her to take care of her “critically ill” husband who has “been diagnosed with an advanced prostate cancer” for which he underwent an operation in South Africa on 29 May 2020.

Police oppose the bail application.

by Pascalinah Kabi for Agence France-Presse (AFP)



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Shriram Transport Finance gains over 6% post March quarter results

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Shares of Finance rose 6.34 per cent to Rs 675.75 on the BSE on Thursday after the company reported a 7.5 per cent growth year-on-year (YoY) growth in March quarter (Q4FY20) revenue to Rs 4,173.04 crore.


The non-banking financial company’s consolidated net profit, though, declined 70 per cent YoY to Rs 223.38 crore for the quarter, largely because of the credit loss provision of Rs 909.64 crore the company made on account of the Covid-19 impact.



“The company has used relevant indicators of moratorium, considering various measures taken by government and other authorities along with an estimation of potential stress on probability of defaults and loss given defaults due to COVID-19 situation,” Finance said in a regulatory filing.


For the full fiscal year, net profit was nearly flat at Rs 2,501.84 crore as against Rs 2,563.99 crore in the preceding fiscal. Income in FY20 rose to Rs 16,582.63 crore from Rs 15,556.66 crore.


Further, the company also declared that the interim dividend of Rs 5 per equity share paid in November 2019 shall be the final dividend for 2019-20 in order to conserve cash resources to face the challenges and the contingencies created by COVID-19.


At 10:17 AM, the stock was up 5.52 per cent at Rs 670.55. The stock had plunged 3.2 per cent to Rs 605 in opening deals before staging a smart recovery. Around 55.17 lakh shares have changed hands on the BSE and NSE, combined, so far.


Analysts at UBS maintained ‘BUY” on the stock with the price target of Rs 1,000, saying the risk-reward was “very favourable” at current levels.


“Due to lockdown, SHTF was able to collect from only 23 per cent of borrowers in April’20; however, the company collected from 52 per cent of borrowers in May’20 with total collection efficiency closer to 40 per cent. With lockdown restrictions getting relaxed, SHTF expects collections to improve further in June/July’20,” UBS said in a note.


“We believe SHTF is likely to be relatively less impacted than other financiers given that about 62-63 per cent of asset under management (AUM) is towards used trucks and LCVs which run on shorter routes; these trucks also transport essential commodities and the cash flow impact is likely to be lower in an economic slowdown. Secondly, loan-to-value (LTV) ratios are lower at 65-70 per cent for SHTF customers; and driver shortage will likely hit large fleet operators and will ensure better freight availability for owner-drivers (which constitute 75 per cent of SHTF’s AUM),” it said.



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Martin Truex Jr. ends 2020 winless skid with victory at Martinsville – Sportsnet.ca

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MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Martin Truex Jr. used a trip to NASCAR’s shortest track to end a lengthy losing streak on the day the stock car series at long last banned the Confederate flag.

Truex cruised down the stretch and won his first NASCAR Cup race of the season on Wednesday night in the first race under the lights at Martinsville Speedway.

Truex, the 2017 Cup champion, has been one of NASCAR’s biggest winners over the last three years, but failed to find victory lane for Joe Gibbs Racing over the first 10 races of this season. He won 19 times from 2017-2019.

“I knew we were going to get one soon,” Truex said. “Hopefully we can get on a roll.”

Tick tock. The time ran out on the losing streak.

Truex won the Martinsville grandfather clock on the paperclip-shaped track at just 0.526 miles. He won for the first time with new crew chief James Small.

“It’s huge for him and his confidence and for the way people look at him,” Truex said. “I think it’s huge. I knew all along that he was capable, I know he’s going to be an amazing crew chief for a long time to come.”

Ryan Blaney, Brad Keselowski, who has two wins this season, and Joey Logano made it a 2-3-4 finish for Team Penske.

The race started shortly after NASCAR said the Confederate flag would be be prohibited from all NASCAR events and properties.

The issue was pushed to the fore this week by Bubba Wallace, NASCAR’s lone black driver and an Alabama native who called for the banishment of the Confederate flag and said there was “no place” for it in the sport. Wallace drove the Richard Petty Motorsports’ No. 43 Chevrolet with a #BlackLivesMatter paint scheme. Wallace, wearing an American flag mask, clapped his hands when asked about the decision before the start of the race.

“It’s been a stressful couple of weeks,” Wallace said on FS1. “This is no doubt the biggest race of my career tonight. I’m excited about tonight. There’s a lot of emotions on the race track.”

Wallace wore a black “I Can’t Breathe” T-shirt but did not kneel during the national anthem. His Chevy had “Compassion, Love, Understanding” emblazoned on the hood. He finished 11th at Martinsville.

’Our Black Lives Matter Chevrolet — that’s so good to say, right — was so good on the long runs,” Wallace said.

The 26-year-old Wallace, who finished second in the 2018 Daytona 500, also had a dose of newfound fame. Already outspoken on social causes in NASCAR, Wallace denounced the flag and his message spread throughout sports. Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James tweeted a “BIG S/O” to Wallace and retired NFL star Deion Sanders tweeted he was proud NASCAR “recognized the sensitivity of our country while confronting the racial injustices.”

Wallace even made some new NASCAR fans — for a night, at least — out of other athletes. New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara replied to NASCAR’s statement with a tweet asking “when the next race??” with a popcorn emoji. He followed along on social media, as did Carolina Panthers safety Tre Boston. Boston tweeted questions about the race and seemed to enjoy the action at Martinsville: “Do y’all be pinned to the TV. I’m watching the standing more than the drivers I feel. Is this ok? Am I doing this right? Do y’all flip channels?”

Former NFL safety Bernard Pollard Jr. joined in on the social media action and had a question on cautions answered on the FS1 broadcast.

But NASCAR’s decision angered a contingent of flag loyalists, who stewed on social media. NASCAR helmet artist Jason Beam, who paints designs for some of the sports biggest stars, was among the loudest critics. He unleashed a string of tweets blasting the move, writing “You can’t erase history by picking and choosing what parts you want to keep and don’t won’t to keep.”

Oh well, Reese Witherspoon gave the ruling a high-five emoji on Twitter, and that alone might be enough to outweigh the haters.

Martinsville capped a stretch of seven straight Cup races since it resumed without fans at the track. That streak ends Sunday when 1,000 Florida service members, representing the Homestead Air Reserve Base and U.S. Southern Command in Doral, are allowed to attend the Cup race at Homestead-Miami Speedway as honorary guests and view the race from the grandstands. The following week at Talladega Superspeedway, up to 5,000 fans will be allowed to attend the race. NASCAR says all fans will be screened before entering, required to wear face coverings, mandated to social distance at six feet, and will not have access to the infield.

“I want to say hi to all the fans at home, we definitely miss you,” Truex said. “This just doesn’t feel right, but exciting to win for sure.”

Austin Dillon, the 2018 Daytona 500 champion, was helped from the car because of overheating after the crush panels in his No. 3 Chevrolet were damaged earlier in the race. Dillon’s wife is expecting their first child any day now.

“I don’t know if I got dizzy or what,” Dillon said. “I just pulled in, had to stop, and thank all the medical staff that got me back.”



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