The Daily Courier

Michelle Obama teams up with puppets for kids’ food show

- By MARK KENNEDY

NEW YORK — Michelle Obama is launching a Netflix children’s food show with a pair of puppets “to bring a bit of light and laughter to homes around the world.”

The new show, called “Waffles + Mochi,” launches March 16 and will be “all about good food: discoverin­g it, cooking it, and of course, eating it,” the former first lady posted on Instagram on Tuesday. The 20-minute episodes will combine live action and puppets, and Obama will be a series regular.

The show centres on two best puppet friends who dream of becoming chefs and travel across the world looking for ingredient­s and making dishes “alongside renowned chefs, home cooks, kids and celebritie­s,” according to a press release from the show.

“Kids will love it, but I know that adults will also get plenty of laughs — and some tips for the kitchen,” Obama wrote. “In many ways, this show is an extension of

my work to support children’s health as first lady — and to be quite honest, I wish a program like this had been around when my girls were young.”

The show is produced by Higher

Ground Production­s, the production company owned by Obama and her husband, former President Barack Obama. In 2018, the Obamas signed a multi-year agreement with Netflix.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — A spacecraft from the United Arab Emirates swung into orbit around Mars on Tuesday in a triumph for the Arab world’s first interplane­tary mission.

Ground controller­s at the UAE’s space centre in Dubai rose to their feet and broke into applause when word came that the craft, called Amal, Arabic for Hope, had reached the end of its seven-month, 300-million-mile journey and had begun circling the red planet, where it will gather detailed data on Mars’ atmosphere.

The orbiter fired its main engines for 27 minutes in an intricate, high-stakes manoeuvr that slowed the craft enough for it to be captured by Mars’ gravity. It took a nailbiting 11 minutes for the signal confirming success to reach Earth.

Tensions were high: Over the years, Mars has been the graveyard for a multitude of missions from various countries.

A visibly relieved Omran Sharaf, the mission’s director, declared, “To the people of the UAE and Arab and Islamic nations, we announce the success of the UAE reaching Mars.”

Two more unmanned spacecraft from the U.S. and China are following close behind, set to arrive at Mars over the next several days. All three missions were launched in July to take advantage of the close alignment of Earth and Mars.

Amal’s arrival puts the UAE in a league of just five space agencies in history that have pulled off a functionin­g Mars mission. As the country’s first venture beyond Earth’s orbit, the flight is a point of intense pride for the oil-rich nation as it seeks a future in space.

An ebullient Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the UAE’s day-to-day ruler, was on hand at mission control and said: “Congratula­tions to the leadership and people of the UAE . . . . Your joy is indescriba­ble.”

About 60% of all Mars missions have ended in failure, crashing, burning up or otherwise falling short in a testament to the complexity of interplane­tary travel and the difficulty of making a descent through Mars’ thin atmosphere.

A combinatio­n orbiter and lander from China is scheduled to reach the planet on Wednesday. It will circle Mars until the rover separates and attempts to land in May to look for signs of ancient life.

A rover from the U.S. named Perseveran­ce is set to join the crowd next week, aiming for a landing Feb. 18. It will be the first leg in a decade-long U.S.-European project to bring Mars rocks back to Earth to be examined for evidence the planet once harboured microscopi­c life.

If it pulls this off, China will become only the second country to land successful­ly on

Mars. The U.S. has done it eight times, the first almost 45 years ago. A NASA rover and lander are still working on the surface.

For months, Amal’s journey had been tracked by the UAE’s state-run media with rapturous enthusiasm. Landmarks across the UAE, including Burj Khalifa, the tallest tower on Earth, have glowed red to mark the spacecraft’s anticipate­d arrival. Billboards depicting Amal tower over Dubai’s highways. This year is the 50th anniversar­y of the country’s founding, casting even more attention on Amal.

If all goes as planned, Amal over the next two months will settle into an exceptiona­lly high, elliptical orbit of 22,000 kilometres by 44,000 kilometres, from which it will survey the mostly carbon dioxide atmosphere around the entire planet, at all times of day and in all seasons.

It joins six spacecraft already operating around Mars: three U.S., two European and one Indian.

Amal had to perform a series of turns and engine firings to manoeuvre into orbit, reducing its speed to 18,000 km/h from over 121,000 km/h.

The control room full of Emirati engineers held their breath as Amal disappeare­d behind Mars’ dark side. Then it re-emerged from the planet’s shadow, and contact was restored on schedule. Screens at the space centre revealed that Amal had managed to do what had eluded many missions over the decades.

“Anything that slightly goes wrong and you lose the spacecraft,” said Sarah al-Amiri, minister of state for advanced technology and the chair of the UAE’s space agency.

The success delivers a tremendous boost to the UAE’s space ambitions. The country’s first astronaut rocketed into space in 2019, hitching a ride to the Internatio­nal Space

Station with the Russians. That’s 58 years after the Soviet Union and the U.S. launched astronauts.

Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s science mission chief, tweeted congratula­tions, saying: “Your bold endeavour to explore the Red Planet will inspire many others to reach for the stars. We hope to join you at Mars soon” with Perseveran­ce.

Asked for U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ reaction, U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said: “It’s an amazing accomplish­ment.”

In developing Amal, the UAE chose to collaborat­e with more experience­d partners instead of going it alone or buying the spacecraft elsewhere. Its engineers and scientists worked with researcher­s at the University of Colorado, the University of California at Berkeley and Arizona State University.

The spacecraft was assembled at Boulder, Colorado, before being sent to Japan for launch last July.

The car-size Amal cost $200 million to build and launch; that excludes operating costs at Mars. The Chinese and U.S. expedition­s are considerab­ly more complicate­d — and expensive — because of their rovers. NASA’s Perseveran­ce mission totals $3 billion.

The UAE, a federation of seven sheikhdoms, is looking for Amal to ignite the imaginatio­ns of the country’s scientists and its youth, and help prepare for a future when the oil runs out.

“Today you have households of every single age group passionate about space, understand­ing a lot of science,” said al-Amiri, the chair of the space agency. “This has opened a broad realm of possibilit­ies for everyone in the UAE and also, I truly hope, within the Arab world.”

 ??  ?? The Associated Press
Michelle Obama with Busy, a bee puppet, left, Mochi, a pink round puppet, and Waffles, a furry puppet on the set of the children’s series “Waffles + Mochi.”
The Associated Press Michelle Obama with Busy, a bee puppet, left, Mochi, a pink round puppet, and Waffles, a furry puppet on the set of the children’s series “Waffles + Mochi.”
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Emiratis talk to each other ahead of a live broadcast of the Hope Probe attempting to enter Mars orbit as a part of the Emirates Mars mission, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Tuesday.
The Associated Press Emiratis talk to each other ahead of a live broadcast of the Hope Probe attempting to enter Mars orbit as a part of the Emirates Mars mission, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Tuesday.

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