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June 2024
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What’s New on Disney+ in July 2024
Disney+ is relatively light on new content in July compared to recent months, though new episodes of Lucasfilm’s The Acolyte will continue weekly on Tuesdays (episodes drop at 6 p.m. PT) through July 16.
Also a highlight is Descendants: The Rise of Red (July 12), a fantasy musical and fourth film in The Descendants franchise (the other three of which are arriving on the platform on the same day). Descendants: The Rise of Red features Kylie Cantrall as the daughter of Alice in Wonderland‘s Queen of Hearts and Malia Baker as the daughter of Cinderella and Prince Charming.
Finally, Disney+ will be live streaming the NFL Flag Football Championship (featuring 15U boys and 18U girls) from 3-5 p.m. PT on July 21.
Here’s everything coming to Disney+ in July 2024, including Bluey Minisodes (July 3), a collection of seven one-to-three minute shorts featuring Bluey and Bingo.
Disney Plus series with new episodes weekly in July 2024
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The Acolyte—Tuesdays
Movies and complete series/seasons coming to Disney Plus in July 2024
Arriving July 1
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SHARKFEST
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Attack of the Red Sea Sharks
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Baby Sharks in the City
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Shark Attack 360 (S1, 8 episodes)
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Shark Beach with Anthony Mackie: Gulf Coast
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Shark vs. Ross Edgley
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Sharks Gone Viral
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Supersized Sharks
Arriving July 3
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Bluey Minisodes
Arriving July 12
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Disney Descendants (Sing-Along Version)
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Disney Descendants 2 (Sing-Along Version)
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Descendants 3 (Sing-Along Version)
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Descendants: The Rise of Red
Arriving July 15
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Angels in the Outfield
Arriving July 17
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America’s Funniest Home Videos (S27-29, 66 episodes)
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Pupstruction (S1, 4 episodes)
Arriving July 19
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EPCOT Becoming: Inside the Transformation
Arriving July 21
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NFL Flag Football Championship (Live)
Arriving July 24
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Firebuds (S2, 13 episodes)
Arriving July 31
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Mickey Mouse Funhouse (S3, 5 episodes)
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Minnie’s Bow-Toons: Camp Minnie (S1, 6 episodes)
NBA Draft History: First overall picks, most MVPs, best classes
Look back through NBA Draft history before the league officially sets its sights on the 2024-25 season.
In new opportunity with Commanders and Jayden Daniels, Dan Quinn is checking his blind spots
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MLB Power Rankings: Which player should each team be sending to the All-Star Game in Texas?
Bryce Harper, Steven Kwan and Gunnar Henderson lead the top three teams in our latest power rankings.
MLB Power Rankings: Which player should each team be sending to the All-Star Game in Texas?
Bryce Harper, Steven Kwan and Gunnar Henderson lead the top three teams in our latest power rankings.
How to Use the ‘80/20’ Rule for Running
Runners often swear by the 80/20 rule for organizing their training—but this is no relation to the Pareto principle of the same name. Let’s talk about where the 80/20 idea comes from, how to implement it, and when it is and isn’t a good idea to train this way.
What is the 80/20 rule for running?
Briefly, it’s the idea that 80% of your running should be low intensity, and only 20% at medium or high intensity. Recreational runners (like you and me) often run closer to a 50/50 split. The 80/20 rule suggests that we should take some of those faster runs and slow them the heck down to reach a better training balance.
The 80/20 rule was popularized in a 2014 book, 80/20 Running, by Matt Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald, in turn, based his recommendations off research by Stephen Seiler, who found that elite athletes in a variety of endurance sports, including running, cycling, and cross-country skiing, did about 80% of their training sessions at intensities much lower than they would ever use in racing. In other words: To train your body to go fast, you have to log a lot of miles going slow. This is similar to the idea of “polarized training,” which means that you stick to the extremes—either working very easy, or very hard, rather than spending much time in the in-between.
Note that 80/20 here only refers to how you split up your training: 80% easy versus 20% hard. This is not the Pareto principle, which states that 80% of your results come from 20% of your…whatever. (80% of sales coming from 20% of customers, 80% of your needs met by 20% of the stuff you own, etc.) In running, there is only really one result—your race time—so the question is just how to split up your training time. 80% easy and 20% hard is the balance that, Fitzgerald and Seidler would argue, will get you the best race times.
What counts as low intensity for the 80%?
If you’ve been paying attention to the “zone 2” trend, you’re probably thinking you should be in zone 2 (arguably 60-70% of your max heart rate) for 80% of your training. And you know what? That will get you close enough. Go with it.
But the definitions more often used in the scientific research aren’t based on heart rate alone. Some of them use metrics we can’t easily measure on our own—go ahead, try to keep your blood lactate below 2 millimoles per liter.
What’s more useful—and still borne out by research—is to use VT1, the “first ventilatory threshold.” That’s a fancy word for what old heads will know as the “talk test.” If you can carry on a conversation without taking extra breaths mid-sentence, you’re below VT1. That’s what 80% of your training should feel like.
I know that’s not enough information for the more data-minded among you, so I’ll note that Fitzgerald reported in his book that this level is often found around 77% to 79% of elites’ max heart rate. The exact number might vary from person to person, and heart rate numbers are never totally objective, since they can be affected by heat and stress among other things. But as a gut check, 77% of my own known, tested max puts me around 153, which matches shockingly well to what I consider my easy pace—I try to stay in the low 150’s for my easy runs.
Taking this information together, it turns out we can go a bit higher than “zone 2” and still be at the right intensity for the 80% part of our 80/20 running—as long as it truly feels easy. If you’d like, you could customize your zones on your running watch so that you have a zone that tops out at 77% or so. (It might even make more sense for that to be zone 3 rather than zone 2.)
How to train with the 80/20 rule
Before we can divvy up our training, we need to decide how we’re measuring our training. Are we aiming for easy runs to be 80% of our training sessions? 80% of our miles? 80% of our total training time?
Fitzgerald, in his book, counted up minutes in easy, moderate, and hard intensity levels. But if you’re doing an interval run, he counted the intervals and the recovery between them as part of your harder intensity work. (A cooldown after those intervals would count as low intensity, though.)
So you can do the same. It would also get you in the right ballpark to think in terms of miles or sessions. If you do one hard run for every four easy runs, you’re still doing 80/20 (as long as those runs are roughly similar in mileage).
How important is it to stick to the 80/20 rule?
Even though it’s called a “rule,” this isn’t a thing you have to follow. It’s just one way of training that matches what a lot of elite athletes do. There has also been research showing that recreational runners can benefit—but that doesn’t mean it’s the only way to train.
Seidler, the researcher, even told Fitzgerald, the author, that if he could only train twice a week, he’d do a mix of harder and easier work in both sessions. Research on competitive recreational runners found that a 77/23 split and a 46/54 split both resulted in small improvements to 10K time, and the difference between groups was not statistically significant. That said, these folks had 10K times (that’s a 6.2-mile race) under 40 minutes to start, so they were pretty fast to start with, compared to a lot of beginner runners.
Meanwhile, there’s plenty of other research showing that casual runners can improve with almost any type of training, and that increasing your total mileage (measured in miles per week) is helpful for improving your fitness and your race times.
The bottom line
If you’re a runner with lots of room for improvement—which covers many of us beginner, intermediate, and casual runners—you don’t necessarily have to slow down 80% of your runs to a crawl. You can use any conversational pace that works for you, even if your watch says that’s zone 3. And since increasing mileage is usually part of improving as a runner, it may make more sense to think about adding easy miles, rather than turning your hard miles into easy ones.
2024 Predictions: Who is this year’s Jordan Love? (Dark horse top 5 QB) | Yahoo Fantasy Football Show
We continue our summer ‘Flip the Script’ series by trying to identify who this year’s Jordan Love will be: A dark horse QB that comes out of nowhere to finish as a top 5 fantasy QB in 2024. Andy Behrens joins Matt Harmon for the pod as they look back at what made Love’s year special in 2023 and who could potentially replicate that in the upcoming season.
These five Red Sox players deserve to be All-Stars
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