That Time Zendaya Ruled In A Room Full Of Disney Execs And Got What She Wanted

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Zendaya — star of the upcoming film “Spider-Man: Homecoming” and current Vogue cover girl — knows what she wants and isn’t afraid to ask for it.

Case in point: The 20-year-old actress recently shared a sweet story with Vogue about walking into a room full of Disney Channel executives at 16 and pretty much owning the meeting.

At the time, Zendaya had just wrapped her first Disney show, “Shake It Up,” where she played an aspiring dancer alongside Bella Thorne. The heads of the Disney Channel now wanted her to do a show called “Super Awesome Katy.” Zendaya did not think the name of the show was so awesome.

“The title is whack,” Zendaya recalled telling the execs. “That’s gonna change.”

She also nixed the character’s name, telling them, “Do I look like a Katy to you?”

The star then made a few more requests. Zendaya wanted to be a producer and made sure that the show featured a family of color. But it didn’t end there.

“I wanted to make sure that she wasn’t good at singing or acting or dancing. That she wasn’t artistically inclined,” she told Vogue of her character. “I didn’t want them to all of a sudden be like, ‘Oh, yeah, and then she sings this episode!’ No. She can’t dance; she can’t sing. She can’t do that stuff. There are other things that a girl can be.”

The show eventually became “K.C. Undercover” — a show about a confident teenage math whiz who becomes an international spy.

Sounds like girlfriend got exactly what she wanted.

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Congress, America, Innocence, War, Peace, Your Cat At Stake In GA-6

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Senate Republicans want to hold a preemptive vote to raise the debt ceiling, though destroying the global economy sure would be a way to avoid a sophomore slump after taking everyone’s health care away. The Georgia 6th special election reminded us that unlike the dating pool and most self-respecting co-op boards, journalists should be allowed into public events. And a Republican congressman introduced legislation to allow lawmakers to carry guns wherever they go. The bill would also require lawmakers to certify that they are Good Guys. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Tuesday, June 20th, 2017:

GEORGIA-6 A SQUEAKER – It’s finally over, as are the Daily Kos articles your parents forward you with a note about how they contributed. Ariel Edwards-Levy: “Earlier surveys gave Democrat Jon Ossoff, who was backed by record levels of fundraising, a slight edge over Republican Karen Handel, whom he led by 2 to 3 points in most surveys. Ossoff led by 7 points in both a WXIA-TV poll conducted by SurveyUSA in May and an Atlanta Journal-Constitution survey from Abt SRBI in early June.  A subsequent SurveyUSA poll, however, found the race tied, as did a second poll conducted for WSB-TV. One survey, from the GOP-affiliated Trafalgar Group, gave the edge to Handel, although it remains the only recent poll to do so. Given the margin of error inherent in any survey ― not to mention the added difficulty of predicting who will turn out to vote in an off-year House runoff ― and the race looks about as close as it can get.” [HuffPost]

What tonight’s results might mean: “The special election in Georgia’s 6th Congressional District is already one of the most hotly contested and absurdly expensive contests in congressional history. Now, those hoping to put off Obamacare’s demise are gearing up to use a potential win by the Democratic nominee, Jon Ossoff, as a means of spooking recalcitrant Republicans into inaction. ‘It could at least give them pause that there will be a bigger backlash than they even thought and that they should rethink this huge bill,’ is how one top health care reform advocate put it.” [HuffPost’s Sam Stein]

Today’s unused HuffPost Hill headlines: “Sean Spicer Not Fat, Just Full Of Chewing Gum” ”‘At Least Someone Called Sean Spicer Fat’ Thought Zero Dying Uninsured Americans” “Already Beleaguered Nation Forced To Think About Sean Spicer’s Body”

SENATE GOP HOPES TO GET DEBT CEILING OUT OF THE WAY – It’s not as much fun to play chicken with the global economy when you control the government. Burgess Everett and Rachel Bade:  “Senate Republicans are planning for a July vote to raise the debt ceiling, according to senators and aides. Though the Treasury Department has said that Congress can likely wait until September to avoid default, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and his lieutenants are increasingly disposed to clearing the Senate’s plate as much as possible before heading home for August recess. That would also likely mean decoupling the debt ceiling from a potential government shutdown fight in September. It’s not clear what exactly such a bill would look like, but members of both parties are interested in a broad spending deal that would avoid the blunt budget cuts of sequestration. A clean debt ceiling increase may be a problem for a GOP majority filled with fiscal conservatives.” [Politico]

Rep. Brian Babin (R-Texas) introduced legislation that would let lawmakers carry guns everywhere.

MONEY FOR OMB, NONE FOR THEE – Matt Fuller and Arthur Delaney: “While President Donald Trump and Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney propose deep cuts to the social safety net ― as well as thousands of fewer jobs at agencies like the Department of State and the Environmental Protection Agency ― Mulvaney is asking Congress to increase one aspect the federal bureaucracy: his own office. When Mulvaney goes before a House appropriations subcommittee on Wednesday, he will be asking for modest increases to the OMB budget and the office’s full-time employees. He wants to boost the OMB budget 8.4 percent, from $95 million to $103 million, and add 30 employees to the staff of about 465. Mulvaney’s spokespeople did not respond to requests for comment. Democrats, however, were happy to point out the apparent hypocrisy. ′With 30 additional people, hopefully the OMB will have enough employees to double-check its math and realize the extreme harm the Trump Administration’s budget will inflict upon millions of Americans,′ Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), an Appropriations Committee member and Trump budget hater, told HuffPost in an emailed statement.” [HuffPost]

DELANEY DOWNER – For politicians across the spectrum, shuttered factories are a symbol of America’s diminished economic greatness. But even good manufacturing jobs come with a downside that politicians overlook in their effort to valorize them: long, terrible hours…. [T.J. Bray, a Carrier worker for the past 15 years, explained the downside of 60- and 70-hour weeks:] “You miss out on so much stuff in your life because you’re freakin’ in a factory all week, and then you get one day off and on that one day off all you want to do is sleep and rest,” he said. “I don’t want to spend my life ― six, seven days a week ― in a factory and next thing I know, my kids are going to be grown up and I missed out on everything because I was too busy making money.” [HuffPost]

DOUBLE DOWNER – Your trusty HuffPost Hill correspondent was the ONLY reporter at a presser on the plight of working people whose jobs have random crappy schedules. Rosa DeLauro and Elizabeth Warren have legislation addressing the problem of unfair scheduling.

Like HuffPost Hill? Then order Eliot’s book, The Beltway Bible: A Totally Serious A-Z Guide To Our No-Good, Corrupt, Incompetent, Terrible, Depressing, and Sometimes Hilarious Government

Does somebody keep forwarding you this newsletter? Get your own copy. It’s free! Sign up here. Send tips/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to eliot@huffpost.com. Follow us on Twitter – @HuffPostHill

WHITE HOUSE LESS TRANSPARENT, VERY HOSTILE – Rosie Gray: “Over the course of the Trump administration, the White House’s daily press briefings have been pared progressively further back; they are now shorter, less frequent, and routinely held off-camera…But instead of canceling them entirely, the White House has appeared to embrace a different strategy: simply downgrading them bit by bit, from ‘briefings’ to ‘gaggles,’ and from on-camera to off-camera. Guidance for the briefings have begun to include a note that audio from them cannot be used. Additionally, though Trump has held short press conferences when foreign leaders visit, he has not held a full press conference since February… Neither Spicer nor deputy press secretary Sarah Sanders responded to queries about the changes to the briefings. Asked why the briefings are now routinely held off-camera, White House chief strategist Steve Bannon said in a text message ‘Sean got fatter,’ and did not respond to a follow-up.” [Atlantic]

SEAN SPICER REAPPEARS! IS TOTALLY UNHELPFUL – Spicer repeatedly told reporters that he hasn’t “touched base” with the president, which is language typically used to describe texting someone to see how their tinder date went. Hayley Miller: “White House press secretary Sean Spicer’s first on-camera press briefing in over a week was full of non-answers and promises to ‘touch base’ with President Donald Trump at a later date. When asked Tuesday if Trump believed Russia interfered with the 2016 presidential election, as the U.S. intelligence community determined in January, Spicer said he wasn’t sure. ‘I have not sat down and talked to him about that specific thing,’ Spicer said. ‘Obviously, we’ve been dealing with a lot of other issues today. I’d be glad to touch base.’ It’s been six months since the FBI, CIA and National Security Agency released a joint report outlining the Kremlin’s efforts to tip the election in favor of Trump. Spicer acknowledged that he’s personally seen the reports, but he apparently hasn’t been able to gauge where Trump stands on the issue. ‘I have not sat down and asked him about a specific reaction to it,’ Spicer said. ‘So I’d be glad to touch base and get back to you.’” [HuffPost]

ERIC HOLDER FOR PRESIDENT: BECAUSE AFP NEEDS TO RAISE EVEN MORE MONEY – Hooray, four more years of talking about Fast and Furious!  Andrew Romano: “More than two years after leaving the Obama administration, former Attorney General Eric Holder is reentering the political fray. His goal: to lead the legal resistance to Donald Trump’s agenda — and perhaps even run against the president in 2020. Seized by a sense of urgency to oppose Trump and restore what he regards as America’s best self, Holder is mulling a White House bid of his own, according to three sources who have spoken to him and are familiar with his thinking. ‘Up to now, I have been more behind-the-scenes,’ Holder told Yahoo News in an exclusive interview about his plans. ’But that’s about to change. I have a certain status as the former attorney general. A certain familiarity as the first African-American attorney general. There’s a justified perception that I’m close to President Obama. So I want to use whatever skills I have, whatever notoriety I have, to be effective in opposing things that are, at the end of the day, just bad for the country.’” [Yahoo News]

BECAUSE YOU’VE READ THIS FAR – Here are dogs unloading groceries.

SO MUCH FOR THAT POST-SHOOTING SENSE OF TOGETHERNESS – Mary Papenfuss: “The hotly contested special election for a Georgia congressional seat took on the added drama of a media war Monday as both campaigns reportedly barred news operations unfriendly to their cause. The conservative Washington Free Beacon said its reporter was escorted out of a campaign event Monday night before Democrat Jon Ossoff was scheduled to speak on the eve of the election. And a reporter from liberal ThinkProgress said she was barred from events by Republican Karen Handel.” [HuffPost]

COMFORT FOOD

– What life is like in Barrow, Alaska, America’s most northern large town.

Robot sumo wrestling feels like a metaphor for Twitter arguments.

– How to deal with politics-induced stress, aside from reading HuffPost Hill, of course.

TWITTERAMA

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Unproven Treatments For 'Chronic Lyme Disease' Lead To Severe Infections

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In a small number but growing number of cases, people in the U.S. have suffered severe bacterial infections, bone damage or a life-threatening condition called septic shock — all because of treatments they received for a condition called “chronic Lyme disease.”

But there is no test for “chronic Lyme disease,” and no treatments have been proven to be effective in treating the illness, according to a new report on some of these cases. In fact, experts in treating infectious diseases don’t support using the term “chronic Lyme,” Dr. Christina Nelson, a medical epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and a co-author of that new report, wrote in an email to Live Science.

Patients may be given a diagnosis of chronic Lyme disease by health care providers at complementary and alternative medicine clinics, after seeing conventional medical doctors who have not been able to treat their symptoms, the report said. Fatigue, pain and neurological problems are all symptoms reported by people who have gotten a diagnosis of chronic Lyme. [27 Devastating Infectious Diseases]

The health care providers who diagnose these patients typically treat them with prolonged courses of antibiotics, lasting months or even years, the report said. That happens even though at least five well-done studies have shown that such courses of antibiotics do not help people who have this diagnosis, according to the report. Moreover, taking antibiotics for that long can result in serious harm, including death.

“Incorrect diagnosis of Lyme disease and treatment with long-term antibiotics can have devastating effects,” Nelson said. People who have been diagnosed with or treated for chronic Lyme disease should consider getting a second opinion to be evaluated for other conditions, she said.

Lyme disease is a bacterial infection that is spread by tick bites. About 30,000 cases in the U.S. are reported to the CDC yearly, the agency says. The test for the disease is a blood test that looks for antibodies to the Borrelia burgdorferi bacteria that cause the infection. [10 Important Ways to Avoid Summer Tick Bites]

But health care providers — some of whom label themselves as “Lyme literate,” according to the report — may diagnose people with chronic Lyme based solely on the provider’s clinical judgment. The patients may not have any positive test for B. burgdorferi infection, nor any of the typical signs of Lyme infection.

“Chronic Lyme is very controversial,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease physician and a senior associate at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore. The term “chronic” implies that the bacteria that cause Lyme disease may persist in these patients’ bodies after the individuals have been treated for the disease, “but that’s not the case,” and there’s no evidence that the bacteria remain in the body, said Adalja, who was not involved in the new report.

There are indeed people with Lyme disease who experience lingering symptoms after completing the standard course of antibiotics used to treat the condition; these patients are said to have a condition called post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome. But people often use that term interchangeably with “chronic Lyme,” and that’s not helpful, Adalja said. There is no evidence that people with post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome have bacteria lingering in their systems, and although the cause of this condition remains a mystery, some experts think the condition may be due to a reaction of the immune system.

Chronic Lyme is also often used to describe symptoms in people who have no evidence of a current or past infection with Lyme disease, Nelson said.

Taking antibiotics for a long time is dangerous, Adalja said. Such antibiotics may be given intravenously, and the catheters that are used to deliver the drugs into the bloodstream can becomes sites of bacterial infection. [6 Superbugs to Watch Out For]

In the new report, the researchers presented details from five cases that they said illustrate what can happen to patients diagnosed with chronic Lyme. The cases came from reports that the CDC receives periodically, from state health departments and doctors who have treated patients with serious bacterial infections that the individuals got from treatments for chronic Lyme, Nelson said. Most of these patients likely didn’t have Lyme disease.

“We have heard of many more cases, but limited the report to five examples,” she said. Studies have shown that this is a growing problem, she added. [10 Deadly Diseases That Hopped Across Species]

In one case, a teen girl who had muscle and joint pain, backaches, headaches, and lethargy for years was diagnosed with chronic Lyme at an alternative medicine clinic. She was given antibiotics both orally an intravenously for five months, but did not improve. The antibiotics were stopped, but the catheter that doctors used to deliver the drugs was left in. The girl developed a bacterial infection that spread in her blood and caused a life-threatening complication called septic shock. In this condition, a person’s blood pressure drops dangerously. She recovered after being hospitalized for several weeks.

In another case, a woman in her late 30s was diagnosed with chronic Lyme disease, along with other infections, after she went to a local doctor because she felt fatigue and joint pain. She was given multiple courses of oral antibiotics, but got worse. She was then given antibiotics intravenously through a catheter for three weeks, but her joint pain continued, and other problems developed. She was hospitalized in an intensive care unit and given many treatments. But the patient continued to worsen and eventually died. Her death was attributed to septic shock related to a bacterial infection from her catheter. 

No use of a catheter was warranted in the woman’s case, Nelson said.

The patients in the other three cases in the report had symptoms such as fatigue, cognitive difficulties, progressive weakness, swelling and tingling in the extremities. All were given either antibiotics or a treatment called immunoglobulin therapy, which is an infusion of fluid that contains antibodies, and all patients developed severe infections and needed to be hospitalized. Two of them eventually improved, while the third died from complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, sometimes called Lou Gehrig’s disease), which she had previously been diagnosed with.

In January 2015, researchers reported in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine the cases of three patients who had cancer but whose cancer diagnoses were delayed because the individuals had initially been diagnosed with chronic Lyme. Two of those patients showed no evidence of ever having Lyme disease, the researchers wrote in their report. And although the third patient had tested positive for Lyme disease, he had been treated appropriately with antibiotics, and his “subsequent symptoms were incorrectly attributed to persistent infection,” the researchers wrote.

“Chronic Lyme disease is a misleading term that should be avoided,” those researchers wrote in their conclusion.

So far, there have not been systematic efforts to collect data about how often people diagnosed with chronic Lyme experience severe health problems, Nelson said. The researchers said they hope that cases can be more systematically studied in the future.

Patients who have been diagnosed with chronic Lyme should know that “infectious disease physicians don’t discount their symptoms and are trying to do right by them,” Adalja said. Doctors want to use treatments that are evidence-based, he said.

Originally published on Live Science.

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