Camping Paradis : De grosses boulettes agacent les téléspectateurs…

Les scénaristes de Camping Paradis (TF1) auraient-ils cédé à la facilité ?

Lundi 3 juin 2019, les téléspectateurs de la Une avaient rendez-vous avec un épisode inédit de la série portée par Laurent Ournac. Dans celui-ci, l’intrigue se déroule en 1976, en pleine canicule, et l’on retrouve le héros en compagnie de ses parents lorsqu’ils étaient jeunes… Son but ? Comme dans le film culte Retour vers le futur, il doit faire en sorte que ses parents tombent bel et bien amoureux afin qu’il puisse exister dans le présent. C’est d’ailleurs la belle Dounia Coesens (Plus belle la vie) qui campait le rôle de la maman de Tom.

Malheureusement, si l’épisode a bien entendu enchanté les fans de Camping Paradis, de nombreux téléspectateurs ont regretté que des anachronismes – qui auraient facilement pu être évités – soient venus gâcher quelque peu la fête. En effet, lors d’une soirée au camping, la playlist proposée posait problème puisque les clients ont pu danser sur le tube disco Born to Be Alive… sorti en 1979. Quelques instants plus tard, c’est sur YMCA des Village People que les comédiens ont pu bouger alors que le titre n’était pas connu avant 1978 ! Autant d’erreurs qui ont soit amusé, soit agacé…

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Évidemment, de nombreux tweets ont pointé du doigt ces incohérences :

Jenna Dewan officialise avec son nouveau chéri comédien sur Instagram

Aucun couple hollywoodien n’est véritablement officiel s’il n’a pas fait ses débuts sur Instagram. C’est désormais chose faite pour Jenna Dewan et Steve Kazee. Ce 5 juin 2019, la danseuse et comédienne a publié une première tendre photo sur laquelle elle s’affiche lovée contre son nouveau compagnon.

En parlant de paix…“, a simplement commenté l’Américaine de 38 ans en légende de ce nouveau portrait en duo. Discrets depuis le début de leur romance, entamée à l’automne dernier, les deux comédiens s’affichent aujourd’hui tout sourire sur le réseau social. “Je ne parle pas de ma vie privée, mais merci ! Je suis très heureuse“, a affirmé la mère de la petite Everly (5 ans) à Us Weekly en novembre dernier.

Speaking of peace….

Une publication partage par Jenna Dewan (@jennadewan) le

Somehow, inexplicably, I’ve been granted the honor to have this be the person that I get to be side by side with throughout this wild journey we call life. Jenna I don’t know what I did to deserve your love but I will always be so thankful that our lives found their way to each other. Here’s looking at you, kid. Happy Valentines Day my love

Une publication partage par Steve Kazee (@stevekazee) le

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3 GOP senators come out against Biden intelligence nominee over Huawei ties

Three Republican senators say they won’t back President BidenJoe BidenPaul Ryan: Voters won’t be impressed by ‘yes-men and flatterers flocking to Mar-a-Lago’ Intelligence told White House they have unexamined evidence on coronavirus origins: report Milley says U.S. planning for potential evacuation of Afghan translators from region MORE’s nominee to serve as the top lawyer for the intelligence community because of his past experience working for a Chinese company accused of intellectual property theft.

Christopher Fonzone, Biden’s pick to serve as general counsel at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), did legal work for Chinese tech giant Huawei after leaving the Obama administration’s National Security Council.

The company came under legal scrutiny starting in 2018, when Canadian authorities detained the firm’s chief financial officer at the request of the U.S. on financial fraud charges.

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The U.S. government also has security concerns about Huawei due to potential ties to the Chinese government.

“You can’t work for Huawei and then work for the Director of National Intelligence,” Sen. Ben SasseBen Sasse3 GOP senators come out against Biden intelligence nominee over Huawei ties Biden to meet with Putin next month This week: Senate set for chaotic sprint before break MORE (Neb.) said in a statement Wednesday alongside fellow GOP Sens. Marco RubioMarco Antonio RubioExtraordinary explanations for UFOs look increasingly plausible 3 GOP senators come out against Biden intelligence nominee over Huawei ties Rubio calls on Wall Street to stop ‘enabling Communist China’ MORE (Fla.) and Tom CottonTom Bryant Cotton3 GOP senators come out against Biden intelligence nominee over Huawei ties Republicans seek vindication amid reemergence of Wuhan lab theory The Memo: Media face hard questions on Trump, Wuhan lab MORE (Ark.).

“After Mr. Fonzone left President Obama’s National Security Council, he did legal work for Huawei. He knew exactly who Huawei is, and he knew that he didn’t have to take their money,” Sasse added.

Fonzone was associated with the company through his position at the law firm Sidley Austin, doing less than 50 hours of legal work for both Huawei and China’s Ministry of Commerce, according to a questionnaire he submitted to the Senate Intelligence Committee.

“The firm asked me to look into a question of how U.S. law works. I did a de minimis amount of work, less than 10 hours, to explain how U.S. administrative law works, I provided it to my partners, and … I’ve had no follow-up since then,” Fonzone told the Senate Intelligence Committee at a May 18 hearing to review his nomination.

Fonzone was doing work for Huawei as recently as 2019, according to National Law Journal.

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Rubio on Wednesday said: “Any nominee who is up for a key national security post and comes from a law firm or other entity that performs work for the Chinese Communist Party or a Chinese state-directed entity like Huawei requires extra scrutiny.”

“Mr. Fonzone’s work on behalf of Huawei and China’s Ministry of Commerce may have been technical in nature but it raises serious questions about his judgement and decision making, especially considering his previous national security roles in government,” Rubio added.

ODNI did not respond to a request for comment.

Fonzone’s nomination was advanced Wednesday by the Senate Intelligence Committee. Four Republicans on the panel voted against him: Sasse, Rubio and Cotton and Sen. James Risch (Idaho).

A simple majority is needed to confirm a nominee on the Senate floor.

Fonzone told lawmakers earlier this month: “If I was confirmed, I would be driven by what the intelligence community’s views are on Huawei. That would underpin my analysis.”

–Updated at 11:52 a.m.

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Pelosi: GOP 'cowardice' on Jan. 6 vote makes 'our country less safe'

Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiOvernight Health Care: Public option plan left out of Biden budget proposal | House Republicans demand congressional probe into COVID-19 origin | Half the total US population have received at least one vaccine dose Public option plan left out of Biden budget proposal Pelosi: GOP ‘cowardice’ on Jan. 6 vote makes ‘our country less safe’ MORE (D-Calif.) slammed Republicans on Friday who voted against the creation of an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

Leader McConnell and Senate Republicans’ denial of the truth of the January 6th insurrection brings shame to the Senate. Republicans’ cowardice in rejecting the truth of that dark day makes our Capitol and our country less safe,” the Speaker said in a press release, referring to Minority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellSenate meltdown reveals deepening partisan divide Trump, midterms fuel GOP’s effort to quash Jan. 6 commission Senator’s on-air interview features carpooling colleague waving from back seat MORE (R-Ky.).

The bill to create the commission was struck down in a 54-35 vote on Friday with only six GOP senators voting in favor of it.

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“Mitch McConnell asked Senate Republicans to do him a ‘personal favor’ and vote against the January 6th Commission. In doing so, Mitch McConnell asked them to be complicit in his undermining of the truth of January 6th. In bowing to McConnell’s personal favor request, Republican Senators surrendered to the January 6th mob assault,” Pelosi said.

The details of the independent commission, modeled after the one created in the wake of 9/11, had been agreed to in bipartisan negotiations, but Republicans in both chambers had largely turned away from the idea.

“Democrats worked across the aisle, agreeing to everything that Republicans asked for. We did this in the interest of achieving a bipartisan Commission. In not taking yes for an answer, Republicans clearly put their election concerns above the security of the Congress and country,” Pelosi said.

The six Republicans who voted for the commission were Sens. Lisa MurkowskiLisa Ann MurkowskiTrump, midterms fuel GOP’s effort to quash Jan. 6 commission Schumer and Collins appear to have heated exchange before Jan. 6 vote White House: Biden ‘remains committed’ to Jan. 6 probe MORE (Alaska), Mitt RomneyWillard (Mitt) Mitt RomneySchumer and Collins appear to have heated exchange before Jan. 6 vote White House: Biden ‘remains committed’ to Jan. 6 probe Pelosi: GOP ‘cowardice’ on Jan. 6 vote makes ‘our country less safe’ MORE (Utah), Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsSenate meltdown reveals deepening partisan divide Schumer and Collins appear to have heated exchange before Jan. 6 vote White House: Biden ‘remains committed’ to Jan. 6 probe MORE (Maine), Bill CassidyBill CassidySchumer and Collins appear to have heated exchange before Jan. 6 vote White House: Biden ‘remains committed’ to Jan. 6 probe Pelosi: GOP ‘cowardice’ on Jan. 6 vote makes ‘our country less safe’ MORE (La.), Rob PortmanRobert (Rob) Jones PortmanTrump, midterms fuel GOP’s effort to quash Jan. 6 commission ‘SECURE 2.0’ will modernize retirement security for the post-COVID American workforce Schumer and Collins appear to have heated exchange before Jan. 6 vote MORE (Ohio) and Ben SasseBen SasseSchumer and Collins appear to have heated exchange before Jan. 6 vote White House: Biden ‘remains committed’ to Jan. 6 probe Pelosi: GOP ‘cowardice’ on Jan. 6 vote makes ‘our country less safe’ MORE (Neb.).

“I do not believe the extraneous ‘commission’ that Democratic leaders want would uncover crucial new facts or promote healing. Frankly, I do not believe it is even designed to,” McConnell (R-Ky.) said for his case against the commission.

Senate Majority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerNY, NJ rail project gets key federal approval Senate votes to advance China bill after Schumer strikes deal Pelosi: ‘Personally devastated’ by latest mass shooting in home state MORE (D-N.Y.) said he could force another vote on the commission after Friday’s failure.

Supreme Court rebuffs death row inmate's bid for execution by firing squad

The Supreme Court on Monday turned away a death row inmate’s bid to be executed by firing squad due to the risk that lethal injection might trigger an excruciating epileptic seizure.

The court’s three more liberal justices dissented from the court’s denial of Missouri death row inmate Ernest Johnson’s petition.

Johnson, who suffers from epilepsy, sought an alternative execution method in order to avoid lethal injection involving the drug pentobarbital, which is known to trigger seizures.

–Developing

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Key inflation measure comes in at 0.6%, above expectations

The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, a key measure of inflation, rose 0.6 percent in April, according to Commerce Department data released Friday, higher than the already-inflated 0.5 percent expectations among economists.

A “core” version of the measure that excludes volatile food and energy prices came in even higher, at 0.7 percent.

In year-over-year terms, the index was up 3.1 percent, more than the 2.9 percent economists had expected. That figure was the highest in 13 years but was also distorted because it was set in comparison to last year when the economy was reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The increase will add fuel to Republican arguments that President BidenJoe BidenPaul Ryan: Voters won’t be impressed by ‘yes-men and flatterers flocking to Mar-a-Lago’ Intelligence told White House they have unexamined evidence on coronavirus origins: report Milley says U.S. planning for potential evacuation of Afghan translators from region MORE‘s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill overstimulated the economy.

Both the Biden administration and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell have argued that the spike in prices is likely to be temporary, and not a sign of newly entrenched inflation.

“My judgment right now is that the recent inflation that we have seen will be temporary. It’s not something that’s endemic,” Treasury Secretary Janet YellenJanet Louise YellenOn the Money: Biden to propose trillion budget | Senate Republicans pitch 8 billion infrastructure offer | Biden faces dilemma on Trump steel tariffs Yellen expects high inflation rates to be temporary Watch live: Yellen testifies before House panel MORE, herself a former Fed Chair, said at a hearing Thursday.

“I expect it to last, however, for several more months, and to see high annual rates of inflation through the end of this year.”

Stock futures changed little following the release of the data, which also showed personal income falling 13.1 percent, as stimulus checks from the relief bill petered out. That figure was still better than the 14 percent economists expected.

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The stimulus checks helped fuel a stunning 20.9 percent increase in personal income in March.

The data showed signs of a reawakening economy. As vaccination levels increased and COVID-19 cases dropped, people flocked back to bars, restaurants and recreational activities, which represented the largest drivers of service spending.

At the same time, the biggest drop in goods consumption came from food and beverage, as people’s newfound habits of eating and drinking out led them to rely less on groceries.

Biden budget includes $750M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget

President BidenJoe BidenPutin backs up Belarus’s Lukashenko amid international pressure Biden administration to reimpose sanctions on Belarus over diverted flight Senate passes resolution urging probe into COVID-19 origins MORE’s proposed budget for the upcoming fiscal year includes $750 million to address the ongoing fallout from the SolarWinds hack, even as lawmakers continue to press the administration to include more funding for a key cyber agency. 

The proposed fiscal 2022 budget designated the funding to go towards “agencies affected by the recent, significant cyber incidents to address exigent gaps in security capability,” pointing specifically to the SolarWinds hack.

The incident, first discovered in December, involved Russian hackers exploiting a vulnerability in a software update from IT group SolarWinds to compromise at least nine federal agencies and 100 private sector groups for months for espionage purposes. 

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U.S. intelligence agencies formally attributed the hack to Russia earlier this year, with Biden announcing a sweeping set of sanctions against the country in retaliation shortly after. 

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The $750 million was included in the budget as part of a larger proposal of $9.8 billion to go toward a variety of cybersecurity efforts.

As part of this funding, $15 million was set aside for the newly established White House national cyber director’s office. Biden nominated former National Security Agency Deputy Director Chris Inglis for the role in April, and he is awaiting a Senate nomination hearing. 

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) was given a $2.1 billion proposed budget for 2022, $110 million more than the previous year, which is in addition to the $650 million given to the agency as part of the American Rescue Plan Act signed into law earlier this year. 

The proposed increase in CISA’s budget was lower than some lawmakers have argued for in recent months. 

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Reps. Jim LangevinJames (Jim) R. LangevinBiden budget includes 0M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget Colonial Pipeline CEO to testify on Capitol Hill in June following cyberattack School districts struggle to defend against rising ransomware attacks MORE (D-R.I.) and Mike GallagherMichael (Mike) John GallagherBiden budget includes 0M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget GOP lawmaker calls for Wuhan probe to ‘prevent the next pandemic’ Lawmakers introduce bill to protect critical infrastructure against cyberattacks MORE (R-Wis.) sent a letter to the leaders of the House Appropriations Committee in April asking them to carve out $400 million in additional appropriations for CISA as compared to last year’s budget.

The lawmakers pointed to CISA’s leading role in responding to both the SolarWinds and to new vulnerabilities in Microsoft’s Exchange Server that allowed Chinese hackers to potentially breach thousands of organizations.

“Despite the critical functions that CISA is currently performing, far more is required of the agency in order to build meaningful security in federal networks and national resilience to significant cyber incidents,” they wrote. 

House Homeland Security Committee ranking member John KatkoJohn Michael KatkoBiden budget includes 0M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget GOP gambles with Pelosi in opposing Jan. 6 commission Is lawmaking today a game of principals? MORE (R-N.Y.) also threw his weight behind increasing CISA’s budget by $400 million, submitting a budget proposal earlier this month to give the agency $2.5 million in the next fiscal year.

In the wake of the detailed budget being formally rolled out on Friday, Sen. Maggie HassanMargaret (Maggie) HassanBiden budget includes 0M to help agencies recover from SolarWinds hack in proposed budget The case for improving America’s research and experimentation tax credit The ‘frills’ of Biden’s infrastructure plan are real needs MORE (D-N.H.) on Friday sent a letter to Acting Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young expressing concerns that the overall proposed budget for the Department of Homeland Security, which CISA falls under, was “essentially flat.”

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“I am concerned that a flat DHS budget will not provide enough resources to address growing cybersecurity, border security and vetting, and violent extremism threats facing the United States,” Hassan wrote to Young, pointing specifically to the SolarWinds hack and other recent major cyber incidents. 

Mark Montgomery, a senior advisor to the Cyberspace Solarium Commission and a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told The Hill Friday that the “mathematics” of the budget needed to be “worked on.”

“There are some other things in there that are palliative, but at its core, CISA is the agency that is going to drive federal IT network security, and it needs to be resourced effectively,” Montgomery said.

Vietnam identifies new, highly transmissible variant of coronavirus

Vietnam has detected a new, highly transmissible variant of the coronavirus, the Vietnamese Health Ministry announced Saturday. 

The variant, which is believed to have spurred a recent wave of COVID-19 infections in the country, has a mix of characteristics from both the strains first found in the United Kingdom and India, according to VnExpress, an international newspaper. 

Specifically, Health Minister Nguyen Thanh Long said that the new variant is a version of the one first found in India with mutations like the U.K. variant, according to the news outlet. 

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The new variant is highly contagious when spread through the air, and Long said that viral cultures revealed the virus was able to replicate itself very quickly. 

“The Ministry of Health would announce the new coronavirus variant on the global genome map,” Long said, according to VnExpress. The variant has yet to be named. 

The news from Vietnam comes as India continues to struggle after the coronavirus overwhelmed hospitals, and created a dearth of medical supplies in the country. 

In a potential sign of a coming reprieve, Reuters reported Saturday that the South Asian county has seen a decrease in cases for the first time in 45 days. India reported 173,790 new coronavirus infections in the last 24 hours. However, the wire service notes, the death toll rose to 3,617.

The Indian variant, B.1.617, is thought to be the main cause of an explosion of cases in the country. 

U.S Health officials, including the nation’s top infectious disease expert, Anthony FauciAnthony FauciAnother casualty of the pandemic: Journalists’ curiosity about the Wuhan lab Two new studies indicate COVID-19 vaccine immunity lasts at least a year The Biden White House has made 4 big economic mistakes in just 4 months MORE said that coronavirus vaccines administered are effective against the Indian variant. 

It remains unclear if a vaccine will stand up to the new variant announced by health officials in Vietnam. 

 

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DOJ asks judge to dismiss cases against Trump, Barr for Lafayette Square clearing

Department of Justice lawyers asked a federal judge to dismiss lawsuits against former President TrumpDonald TrumpNY, NJ rail project gets key federal approval Senate meltdown reveals deepening partisan divide DHS formally bans family separations for illicit border crossings MORE, former attorney general William BarrBill BarrWatchdog pushes back on DOJ effort to block release of Trump obstruction memo How long will Trump remain immune? Federal appeals court tosses out challenge to bump stock ban MORE and other administration officials for the forced clearing of racial justice protesters at Lafayette Square last June. 

The Washington, D.C., chapters of the ACLU, Black Lives Matter and other civil rights organizations sued the Trump administration and law enforcement officials for the use of chemical agents, rubber bullets and other violent action to disperse protesters before Trump walked across the square to pose for photographs with a Bible outside of St. John’s Episcopal Church. 

The legal action also targeted the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department and several specific officers in the actions used against protesters, who had gathered in the days following the police killing of George Floyd in May, 2020. 

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The incident resulted in four overlapping lawsuits against the Trump administration and law enforcement agencies filed on behalf of more than 100 U.S., D.C. and Arlington County defendants. 

Lawyers for the plaintiffs and the Justice Department presented oral arguments before a federal judge on Friday, with government lawyers arguing that Trump and other U.S. officials could not be included in civil lawsuits against police over actions taken to protect a president, The Washington Post reported. 

Trump’s photo-op outside the church following the forced removal of more than 1,000 largely peaceful protesters has been viewed by critics as a political stunt. 

According to the Post, Justice Department lawyers also argued Friday that because of Trump’s 2020 election loss, future violations are unlikely, adding that President BidenJoe BidenPutin backs up Belarus’s Lukashenko amid international pressure Biden administration to reimpose sanctions on Belarus over diverted flight Senate passes resolution urging probe into COVID-19 origins MORE’s administration does not share the same hostility Trump presented toward the wave of civil unrest and demonstrations that erupted in the months following Floyd’s death. 

Meanwhile, ACLU attorneys argued that by dismissing the lawsuits, the court would “authorize brutality with impunity” near the White House. Washington’s ACLU legal director Scott Michelman said that U.S. authorities “could have used live ammunition to clear the park, and nobody would have a claim against that as an assault on their constitutional rights.” 

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The Justice Department then responded by calling presidential security a “paramount” government interest, according to the Post. 

After nearly three hours of oral arguments, U.S. District Judge Dabney L. Friedrich of Washington said that she would deliver rulings on motions to dismiss the lawsuits “in the near future.”

The Hill has reached out to the Justice Department for comment. 

Lafayette Square reopened earlier this month for the first time since it was shuttered following police’s removal of the protesters.

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New York to open vaccination pop-ups at airports for visitors, locals

New York Gov. Andrew CuomoAndrew CuomoNew York to open vaccination pop-ups at airports for visitors, locals The Hill’s 12:30 Report – Presented by Facebook – Chris Cuomo says advising brother was a ‘mistake’ University of Virginia to require student vaccinations MORE (D) this week announced the addition of seven new pop-up vaccination sites at airports across the Empire State in an effort to increase the number of individuals vaccinated against COVID-19. 

The vaccine sites, which will remain open from May 24 to May 28, will offer the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine on a first-come, first-serve basis, with no prior appointments required, according to a press release from Cuomo’s office. 

The seven airports participating in the pop-up vaccine drive include JFK, LaGuardia and Albany, and non-New York residents traveling through can also walk in to sites to get the shot. 

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The governor said the state was launching the program following the success of its pop-up sites at MTA station stops throughout the New York City, Long Island and Mid-Hudson regions. 

“Our vaccination pop-up sites have been instrumental in helping us reach more New Yorkers who need to get vaccinated, and given the success of our pilot program at subway and train stations across the MTA network, we are getting creative once more by bringing the vaccine to our airports,” Cuomo said in a statement on Thursday. 

“This vaccine is the best weapon that we have to defeat COVID, and we will go anywhere we need to get more shots into people’s arms,” he added. “If you are traveling through or working at one of these airports or just happen to be passing through and you still need to get vaccinated, I encourage you to make time to get your shot so we can finally defeat this virus.” 

New York State Sen. Tim Kennedy (D), who chairs the state senate’s transportation committee, said in a statement included in the press release that the pop-up vaccine sites “will only amplify opportunities to get vaccinated, and further educate people about why it’s so important to do so.” 

“New York continues to think outside the box in order to ensure the COVID-19 vaccine is accessible in every community,” he added. “By bringing these doses directly into transportation hubs that people use every day, we’re intentionally dedicating resources to highly trafficked facilities and connecting directly with people looking to receive the vaccine quickly and efficiently.”

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The airport vaccine drive marks Cuomo’s latest effort to encourage New Yorkers to get the jab as supply now outpaces demand for the shot across the country. 

Late last month, the governor announced that all state-run mass vaccination sites would be open to walk-in appointments for New Yorkers aged 16 and older. 

Cuomo at the time also encouraged all vaccine providers in the state, including local health departments that operate local and county sites, to allow walk-in appointments for all eligible New Yorkers. 

As of Saturday, about 52 percent of New York’s population has received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine, with roughly 44 percent fully vaccinated, according to New York Department of Health data.