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Tag: voice

  • Keith Urban’s surprising response when asked to reprise his mentor role on The Voice Australia following Guy Sebastian’s shock exit

    Keith Urban’s surprising response when asked to reprise his mentor role on The Voice Australia following Guy Sebastian’s shock exit

    Keith Urban could be heading back to the The Voice in 2025 after Guy Sebastian quit the show last week.

    The 57-year-old country superstar last took his place in the big red chair as coach two years ago.

    And reports have now surfaced that Urban is open to return to the singing competition.

    ‘When asked about returning Keith didn’t say no,’ an insider told Yahoo Lifestyle last month.

    The source added that Urban said he missed being in Australia and coaching on the show.

    He also said that the star and his wife, Nicole Kidman, wanted to spend more time Down Under.

    They continued: ‘There is also a big tour for Keith in Australia next year and if they can all be back here in the country when filming gets underway Keith might make his 4th return to the singing competition.’

    The fan favourite is scheduled to bring his High and Alive Tour Down Under in August.

    Keith Urban could be heading back to the The Voice in 2025 after Guy Sebastian quit the show last week. Pictured: Urban performing in the US last month

    Keith Urban could be heading back to the The Voice in 2025 after Guy Sebastian quit the show last week. Pictured: Urban performing in the US last month

    He first appeared coach on The Voice in 2012 and returned in 2021, before leaving the show in 2022. 

    It comes after The Voice Australia appears set to have a major cast shake up after Guy Sebastian’s shock exit from the singing competition last week.

    Reports have surfaced that current coaches Kate Miller-Heidke and Adam Lambert are ready to follow the 43-year-old hitmaker out the door.

    The 57-year-old country superstar last took his place in the big red chair as coach two years ago. And now an insider has revealed to Yahoo Lifestyle last month that the star is open to return to the singing competition. (Pictured on The Voice)

    The 57-year-old country superstar last took his place in the big red chair as coach two years ago. And now an insider has revealed to Yahoo Lifestyle last month that the star is open to return to the singing competition. (Pictured on The Voice)

    And an insider has claimed the network is attempting to lure former fan favourites besides Urban back as coaches.

    ‘The line-up that Channel Seven wants is Keith Urban, Jessica Mauboy, Ronan Keating and LeAnn Rimes,’ a source told Yahoo Lifestyle on Saturday.

    ‘Keith was asked about returning when he recorded a performance for the grand finale and he sounded open to the idea,’ the insider said.

    The source also confirmed that US singer Rimes, 42, is likely to return in 2025.

    ‘In the lead-up to this year’s finale, LeAnn’s management kept talking about the next series and what she plans to do differently,’ the insider added.

    ‘LeAnn was clear about her ambition to return next year and Channel Seven are keen to have her back after her artist won.’

    They also said that fans shouldn’t expect to see Kate back since she appeared ‘a little out of place’ on the show.

    Meanwhile, Ronan Keating, 47, was last seen on for The Voice Australia back in 2016, and has appeared as a judge for the series in the UK and Germany.

    It comes after The Voice Australia appears set to have a major cast shake up after Guy Sebastian's shock exit from the singing competition last week

    It comes after The Voice Australia appears set to have a major cast shake up after Guy Sebastian’s shock exit from the singing competition last week

    The source said the former Boyzone singer was very keen to appear on the Australian version of the show again.

    Sebastian, meanwhile, sensationally quit The Voice Australia on Wednesday after six seasons.

    The Australian Idol winner shared the announcement to Instagram.

    ‘I am busy planning shows in Australia and worldwide and I am really looking forward to getting out and connecting with you all there,’ he said in the lengthy statement.

    He began by congratulating the show’s current winner Reuben De Melo, before detailing how he came to his dramatic decision.

    And an insider has claimed the network is attempting to lure former fan favourites besides Urban back as coaches. Pictured: The Voice judges in 2022 (left-to-right) Rita Ora, Urban, Guy Sebastian and Jessica Mauboy

    And an insider has claimed the network is attempting to lure former fan favourites besides Urban back as coaches. Pictured: The Voice judges in 2022 (left-to-right) Rita Ora, Urban, Guy Sebastian and Jessica Mauboy

    ‘I have some news to share with you all regarding my role as a Voice coach,’ he began.

    ‘I have made the decision to take a break from the best red chair on the planet.

    ‘It’s been six amazing years as a coach and it’s honestly been the best gig ever! I have nothing but good things to say about the show itself, & sharing the panel with such amazing coaches has been a pleasure.’

    The Angels Brought Me Here singer concluded with chatter about his upcoming album, which he’s poured his heart and soul into over the last four years, before ending with a warning.

    ‘Whoever has the audacity to take my chair, don’t get too comfortable… I will wrestle for it back with zero dignity when I’m ready to return,’ he wrote.

    Channel Seven was quick to offer their well wishes.

    ‘Guy has been a powerhouse coach for The Voice on Seven. His mentorship and command of artistry has been inspirational to our Voice artists and viewers alike, as well as the production team and all at Seven,’ commented Seven Network Chief Content Officer, Brook Hall.

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  • The Voice Australia fans call out ‘underwhelming’ finale: ‘What on earth has happened to Australian TV?!’

    The Voice Australia fans call out ‘underwhelming’ finale: ‘What on earth has happened to Australian TV?!’

    The Voice Australia viewers have called out the show’s grand finale over one very ‘underwhelming’ detail.

    The 2024 final aired on Sunday night, with LeAnn Rimes’ act Reuben De Melo being crowned the winner of the singing competition.

    The father-of-three appeared shocked when host Sonia Kruger told him he had won $100,000 in prize money and an artist development package with Studios 301.

    However, disgruntled fans complained about the finale being pre-recorded as they pointed out that Reuben’s reaction appeared somewhat underwhelming.

    While earlier series of The Voice have featured live finals, the singing contest has been pre-recorded in more recent years, with four alternate endings being taped.

    The final contestants only find out the result when the show airs on Channel Seven after the public vote, with many viewers complaining Reuben’s reaction looked ‘fake’.

    Taking to social media, one fan fumed: ‘Wish it was actually live so we didn’t have pre-recorded fake reactions.’

    Another questioned: ‘Can they bring back live results reactions?! His reaction seemed so underwhelming.’

    The Voice Australia viewers have called out the show's grand finale over one very 'underwhelming' detail after Reuben De Melo (pictured) was crowned the 2024 winner

    The Voice Australia viewers have called out the show’s grand finale over one very ‘underwhelming’ detail after Reuben De Melo (pictured) was crowned the 2024 winner 

    A third commented: ‘I can’t get my head around pre-recording the result. It takes the emotion out of the result. Reuben seemed totally underwhelmed. 

    ‘His family seemed so happy and tearful but we know that it was acting so it takes the joy out of watching it.’

    While another raged: ‘Why was the Finale prerecorded? Either have a live finale or don’t bother, ridiculous to end it like that, did you record every artist winning? What on earth has happened to Australian TV? On a happier note, congrats Reuben!’

    Another added: ‘He seems like the nicest person. This wasn’t a criticism of him but the process of pre-recording. No-one had won at that point so the reactions were all pretend. Congratulations to him- he is incredible.’

    A friend of Reuben’s also commented on The Voice’s Instagram winner reveal post to insist that the singer’s reaction was much more genuine when the show aired on TV. 

    ‘Reuben is one of my great friends. We had a watch party and trust me, he was not underwhelmed when we all heard the news!’ they wrote. 

    ‘I’m sure he’ll share on his socials. It was a great moment and couldn’t have been won by someone more deserving!’

    The winner of the 2021 show Bella Taylor Smith previously complained that it was a ‘weird’ experience having to record four separate final results in one day. 

    Upon his victory, disgruntled fans complained about the finale being pre-recorded as they pointed out that Reuben's reaction appeared 'fake' (he is pictured with coach LeAnn Rimes)

    Upon his victory, disgruntled fans complained about the finale being pre-recorded as they pointed out that Reuben’s reaction appeared ‘fake’ (he is pictured with coach LeAnn Rimes)

    ‘The night of the grand final was full-on busy because not only did we have to film the four alternate endings, but also the four singles performed at the end,’ she told Yahoo Lifestyle. 

    ‘And then that night we also did our duets with the coaches and our solo performances as well, and then you had to clean up the confetti at the end and do all of that stuff.’

    In Sunday night’s finale, Reuben admitted he never thought he would make it to the end of the competition as he was crowned the 2024 winner. 

    ‘I never thought I’d get this far, this is crazy,’ he said in the pre-recorded segment upon his victory. 

    Elsewhere, celebrity coach LeAnn was quick to share kind words for her mentee following his triumphant win. 

    ‘I’m so proud,’ the Can’t Fight The Moonlight singer gushed.

    ‘You deserve every bit of this moment and I’m so honoured that I could be on this journey with you. You are incredible.’

    Reuben competed in the grand finale alongside Annie Jones from Team Adam, Jaedyn Randell from Team Kate and SKŸE from Team Guy. 

    Reuben won $100,000 in prize money plus a music masterclass and industry recording development package with Alexandria-based Studios 301.

    It was the first year the winner was not offered an automatic record deal with Universal Music Australia or EMI Music Australia.

    It was claimed the controversial move could actually be a good thing for the 2024 winner and break the ‘terrible cycle’ of talents failing to profit of their wins.

    Judge Kate defended the change as she claimed being ‘shackled’ to a major label early on in your career can be a curse rather than a blessing.

    ‘In the past, some of these artists have ended up locked into contracts with major labels before they’ve even really figured out who they are as artists,’ she told TV Tonight.

    Reuben competed in the grand finale alongside Annie Jones (centre) from Team Adam, Jaedyn Randell (left) from Team Kate and SKŸE (right) from Team Guy

    Reuben competed in the grand finale alongside Annie Jones (centre) from Team Adam, Jaedyn Randell (left) from Team Kate and SKŸE (right) from Team Guy

    ‘You do need time as an artist to be able to hone your craft. I think the risk, when you’re so young or inexperienced, to go out there and be shackled to a major label right off the bat is too early.’ 

    In a breathtaking final solo performance of House Of The Rising Sun by The Animals, Rueben left all four coaches in awe, with Kate-Miller Heidke praising it as ‘exceptional’. 

    ‘I can’t stop smiling. You just gave it your all. That was just insane,’ added LeAnn, who also joined Reuben onstage for a heartfelt duet of Fix You by Coldplay. 

    Reuben captivated Australian audiences – and the show’s judges Adam Lambert, Guy Sebastian, Kate and LeAnn – with his very first Blind Audition.

    Eager to snap him up, LeAnn used her Ultimate Block to guarantee he would be on her team.

    ‘I knew as soon as he opened his mouth, and I heard him sing. There was just so much feeling there,’ she said at the time. 

    ‘There was no way I was letting any of the other coaches get to him before I did.’

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  • Disgruntled The Voice Australia contestant reveals what the coaches are really like behind the scenes: ‘They barely have any time for you’

    Disgruntled The Voice Australia contestant reveals what the coaches are really like behind the scenes: ‘They barely have any time for you’

    A contestant from the The Voice Australia has shockingly claimed that working with the A-list coaches is far from the glitz and glamour that fans expect.

    An aspiring singer from the 2024 series shared their disillusionment with the behind-the-scenes experience ahead of the talent competition’s semi-final

    They claimed the coaching from the celebrity judges – LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller Heidke, Adam Lambert and Guy Sebastian – is more of a façade than genuine mentorship.

    ‘They sell you this dream of being mentored by these huge names, but honestly, it felt so shallow,’ they confessed to Yahoo Lifestyle on Monday.

    ‘The coaches barely have time for you. It’s like they’re playing a role on TV and don’t really connect with you.’

    The anonymous contestant went on to allege that their experience wasn’t unique but something that all the singers had to deal with.

    ‘I thought it was just because my coach was an international artist, but everyone I spoke to had the same experience. It was all quite contrived,’ they added.

    It adds fuel to the ongoing speculation about how much real interaction the contestants actually get with their celebrity coaches.

    A contestant from the The Voice Australia has shockingly claimed that working with the A-list coaches is far from the glitz and glamour that fans expect (pictured: LeAnn Rimes)

    A contestant from the The Voice Australia has shockingly claimed that working with the A-list coaches is far from the glitz and glamour that fans expect (pictured: LeAnn Rimes) 

    They claimed the coaching from the celebrity judges - LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller Heidke (pictured), Adam Lambert and Guy Sebastian - is more of a façade than genuine mentorship

    They claimed the coaching from the celebrity judges – LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller Heidke (pictured), Adam Lambert and Guy Sebastian – is more of a façade than genuine mentorship 

    While viewers at home see heartwarming moments of connection between contestants and their mentors, there have been claims the reality is less personal.

    The Voice 2023 winner Tarryn Stokes told Daily Mail Australia that she hadn’t heard anything from her on-screen mentor Rita Ora for months.

    Stokes, who was crowned winner of the reality show last October, said the pair exchanged several emails in June, but alleged they have not been in contact since.

    ‘Not a lot [of contact with Rita], but she gave me her e-mail, so we were emailing back and forth,’ the mother-of-two, 41, said. 

    However, it appears this digital correspondence was short-lived as Tarryn claims she hasn’t heard from her since.

    The allegations came as a blow to the show’s reputation, which prides itself on fostering a sense of personal growth and development for its contestants.

    The Voice coaches are yet to respond to the claims.

    Daily Mail Australia has reached out to Channel Seven for comment.

    It comes after The Voice completely overhauled its judges this year, with Guy being the only one to return alongside three newcomers.

    The Voice 2023 winner Tarryn Stokes told Daily Mail Australia that she hasn't heard anything from her on-screen mentor Rita Ora for months

    The Voice 2023 winner Tarryn Stokes told Daily Mail Australia that she hasn’t heard anything from her on-screen mentor Rita Ora for months  

    Outgoing coaches Rita Ora, Jessica Mauboy and Jason Derulo did not reprise their roles on the popular show. 

    According to a production insider, the reason for the switch-up was the star’s pay cheques, and a desire from producers to keep costs down.

    The insider added that salary increases are necessary to keep returning stars on the show and the price tag for the former crop was ‘too expensive’.

    ‘The company line was that Jessica, Rita and Jason were all too busy, but I don’t think anyone is too busy to pick up these sorts of pay cheques.

    ‘It certainly did have a lot to do with keeping the costs down.’



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  • Disgruntled The Voice Australia contestant reveals what the coaches are really like behind the scenes: ‘They barely have any time for you’

    Disgruntled The Voice Australia contestant reveals what the coaches are really like behind the scenes: ‘They barely have any time for you’

    A contestant from the The Voice Australia has shockingly claimed that working with the A-list coaches is far from the glitz and glamour that fans expect.

    An aspiring singer from the 2024 series shared their disillusionment with the behind-the-scenes experience ahead of the talent competition’s semi-final

    They claimed the coaching from the celebrity judges – LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller Heidke, Adam Lambert and Guy Sebastian – is more of a façade than genuine mentorship.

    ‘They sell you this dream of being mentored by these huge names, but honestly, it felt so shallow,’ they confessed to Yahoo Lifestyle on Monday.

    ‘The coaches barely have time for you. It’s like they’re playing a role on TV and don’t really connect with you.’

    The anonymous contestant went on to allege that their experience wasn’t unique but something that all the singers had to deal with.

    ‘I thought it was just because my coach was an international artist, but everyone I spoke to had the same experience. It was all quite contrived,’ they added.

    It adds fuel to the ongoing speculation about how much real interaction the contestants actually get with their celebrity coaches.

    A contestant from the The Voice Australia has shockingly claimed that working with the A-list coaches is far from the glitz and glamour that fans expect (pictured: LeAnn Rimes)

    A contestant from the The Voice Australia has shockingly claimed that working with the A-list coaches is far from the glitz and glamour that fans expect (pictured: LeAnn Rimes) 

    They claimed the coaching from the celebrity judges - LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller Heidke (pictured), Adam Lambert and Guy Sebastian - is more of a façade than genuine mentorship

    They claimed the coaching from the celebrity judges – LeAnn Rimes, Kate Miller Heidke (pictured), Adam Lambert and Guy Sebastian – is more of a façade than genuine mentorship 

    While viewers at home see heartwarming moments of connection between contestants and their mentors, there have been claims the reality is less personal.

    The Voice 2023 winner Tarryn Stokes told Daily Mail Australia that she hadn’t heard anything from her on-screen mentor Rita Ora for months.

    Stokes, who was crowned winner of the reality show last October, said the pair exchanged several emails in June, but alleged they have not been in contact since.

    ‘Not a lot [of contact with Rita], but she gave me her e-mail, so we were emailing back and forth,’ the mother-of-two, 41, said. 

    However, it appears this digital correspondence was short-lived as Tarryn claims she hasn’t heard from her since.

    The allegations came as a blow to the show’s reputation, which prides itself on fostering a sense of personal growth and development for its contestants.

    The Voice coaches are yet to respond to the claims.

    Daily Mail Australia has reached out to Channel Seven for comment.

    It comes after The Voice completely overhauled its judges this year, with Guy being the only one to return alongside three newcomers.

    The Voice 2023 winner Tarryn Stokes told Daily Mail Australia that she hasn't heard anything from her on-screen mentor Rita Ora for months

    The Voice 2023 winner Tarryn Stokes told Daily Mail Australia that she hasn’t heard anything from her on-screen mentor Rita Ora for months  

    Outgoing coaches Rita Ora, Jessica Mauboy and Jason Derulo did not reprise their roles on the popular show. 

    According to a production insider, the reason for the switch-up was the star’s pay cheques, and a desire from producers to keep costs down.

    The insider added that salary increases are necessary to keep returning stars on the show and the price tag for the former crop was ‘too expensive’.

    ‘The company line was that Jessica, Rita and Jason were all too busy, but I don’t think anyone is too busy to pick up these sorts of pay cheques.

    ‘It certainly did have a lot to do with keeping the costs down.’



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  • James Earl Jones’ Darth Vader voice lives on through AI. Voice actors see promise and peril in that

    James Earl Jones’ Darth Vader voice lives on through AI. Voice actors see promise and peril in that

    LOS ANGELES — Over the course of an acting career that spanned more than six decades, James Earl Jones’ voice became an indelible piece of his work as a performer.

    On screen, Jones, who died Monday at 93, brought to life a reclusive writer coaxed back into the spotlight in “Field of Dreams” and a haughty king of a fictional land in “Coming To America.” On stage, he won two Tony Awards for “The Great White Hope” and “Fences.” His work as a voice actor — the regal dignity of his portrayal of Mufasa in “The Lion King” and the menacing and deep timbre he lent to Darth Vader in “Star Wars” — helped cement his place as a legendary actor among generations of fans.

    But in the wake of his death, an aspect of Jones’ career has come to the fore: consenting to the use of artificial intelligence to replicate his performance as Darth Vader after he stepped away from the role. Skywalker Sound and the Ukrainian company Respeecher used AI to recreate Jones’ villain for the 2022 show “Obi-Wan Kenobi” on Disney+. Mark Hamill’s voice was also “de-aged” using Respeecher for his appearance as Luke Skywalker in “The Mandalorian.”

    Voice actors say they fear AI could reduce or eliminate job opportunities because the technology could be used to replicate one performance into a number of other movements without their consent — a concern that led video game performers with the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists to go on strike in late July.

    To some, Jones’ decision to allow AI to replicate his voice raises questions about voice acting as an art, but also potentially helps lay the ground work for transparent AI agreements that fairly compensate an actor for their performance with consent. Zeke Alton, a voice actor and member of SAG-AFTRA’s interactive media agreement negotiating committee, said it’s “amazing” that Jones was involved in the process of replicating his voice.

    “If the game companies, the movie companies, gave the consent, compensation transparency to every actor that they gave James Earl Jones, we wouldn’t be on strike,” Alton said. “It proves that they can do it. They just don’t want to for people that they feel don’t have the leverage to bargain for themselves.”

    Hollywood’s video game performers announced a work stoppage — their second in a decade — after more than 18 months of negotiations over a new interactive media agreement with game industry giants broke down over artificial intelligence protections. Members of the union have said they are not anti-AI. The performers are worried, however, the technology could provide studios with a means to displace them.

    Concerns about how movie studios will use AI helped fuel last year’s film and television strikes by the union, which lasted four months.

    Jones, who overcame a childhood stutter, said in previous interviews that he was “happy to be able to talk at all, because there was time when I couldn’t.” His goal, he said, was for his voice to be clear. Speaking with The Associated Press in 1994, he said that he tried to make Darth Vader “more human and more interesting.” But George Lucas, the filmmaker who created ”Star Wars,” advised him to “go back to a very narrow band of expression” because the mechanical parts of the villain’s body would make it difficult for him to sound more human.

    Neither Skywalker Sound nor Respeecher responded to a request for comment. But a sound editor with Skywalker Sound told Vanity Fair that Jones signed off on the use of archival recordings to keep Darth Vader alive and that he guided Darth Vader’s performance for the Disney+ show as “a benevolent godfather.”

    Voice actor Brock Powell said that the ability to use an actor like Jones’ voice in perpetuity could eliminate the need for actors who specialize in matching voices. That type of work provides steady jobs for many performers, they said, who can recreate a famous voice for video games, animated series and other types of media.

    “To quote ‘Jurassic Park,’ the scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to ask if we should,” Powell said.

    That type of AI use could also reduce “ingenuity” in acting, they said, because new actors might not have the chance to come in and reinvigorate a role.

    Crispin Freeman, an actor who has done voice matching work replicating Orlando Bloom’s voice in “Pirates of the Caribbean,” said that the technology may take away voice matching roles, but doesn’t harm “the ability of future artists to blaze their own trails” in new roles.

    “We always need to keep reinventing new stories as we’re going forward, and not simply relying on the old stuff,” he said. “Rather than worrying, ‘Oh, will someone else be able to be Darth Vader,’ why don’t we make a new ‘Star Wars’ character that’s as compelling as Darth Vader?”

    Jones’ contract could set an example of properly bargaining with an actor over their likeness, said Sarah Elmaleh, chair of SAG-AFTRA’s interactive negotiating committee. Elmaleh, a voice actor, said there is a chance for these tools to be used in “meaningful, smart artistic decisions.”

    “I worry about a world where we conflate the superficial qualities of a person’s voice with their performance,” she said. “I can’t help getting away from the metaphor that’s baked into this character itself, which is, when you conflate the man with the machine, you become a tool for other forces, other powers that be.”

    Alton, the voice actor, said he wonders about what the use of Jones’ voice as Darth Vader would mean if it were used for another 100 years and people didn’t remember “all of the different things that built him into the iconic character that he was.”

    “It’s just a disembodied voice at that point. It’s part of the neutering of art that generative AI has the potential to do, and it’s sort of a heady subject, but it’s very important for us as a world to consider what we want our entertainment and our art to be in the future,” he said. “Do we want it to be human, or do we want it to be bland?”

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  • Only Palestinian Athlete At Paralympics Vows To Be A ‘Voice’ Amid War In Gaza

    Only Palestinian Athlete At Paralympics Vows To Be A ‘Voice’ Amid War In Gaza

    PARIS (AP) — Fadi Aldeeb got the competing out of the way early at the Paralympic Games. He’s been using the rest of the time to talk.

    The only Paralympian in the Palestinian delegation in Paris, Aldeeb feels he bears special responsibility to represent all Palestinians living in Gaza, the West Bank and elsewhere. He tries not to think about his own situation.

    “I’m their voice. And I want to talk and talk and talk,” the Gaza native told The Associated Press in an interview this week.

    The 40-year-old Aldeeb, who uses a wheelchair, was the Palestinian flag bearer during the Games’ opening ceremony, two days before he placed last in the men’s shot put for seated athletes with a season best throw of 8.81 meters.

    The winner, world record holder Ruzhdi Ruzhdi, returned to Bulgaria with his gold medal, but Aldeeb has stayed around the Paralympic Village, speaking to media about the desperate situation in his homeland following Israel’s retaliatory offensive in Gaza after Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking about 250 hostages.

    After nearly 11 months of fighting, the war has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians, according to local health officials, who say about half of the dead are women and children. It has displaced the vast majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million people, often multiple times. It has plunged the besieged territory into a humanitarian catastrophe, including new fears of a polio outbreak.

    Aldeeb said he lost his younger brother on Dec. 6 when the building containing the family home in the Gaza City neighborhood of Shijaiyah was bombed and destroyed.

    Fadi Aldeeb throws during the shot put finals at the Paralympic Games in Paris on Friday, Aug. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Nathalee Simoneau)
    Fadi Aldeeb throws during the shot put finals at the Paralympic Games in Paris on Friday, Aug. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Nathalee Simoneau)

    Aldeeb, who besides competing in shot put is a professional wheelchair basketball player, was playing a French league match and only saw afterward he’d received many missed calls from the brother. There was no connection when he tried calling back. Another brother told him the next day he had been killed.

    Aldeeb said it made him question why he plays sport. He said the image of his brother comes to him at night and he often wonders what he was trying to say when he called during the league match.

    “I received a call from his daughter, she’s like, 7 years old. I never ever can forget this,” Aldeeb said, fighting tears. “She asked me, ‘My uncle, I know he’s died and he goes – Inshallah – to Jannah, but I want his body. I don’t need his body to stay under the building, and the dogs start eating his body.’ Imagine, a child 7 years old, speaking like this.”

    Aldeeb said other family members decided to scatter around the Gaza Strip to maximize their chances of survival.

    “If they stay together, it’s all too easy that all of this family disappears and is killed,” he said.

    Aldeeb said he hasn’t seen his own wife and children for two years because they’re still in Turkey, where he moved from Gaza in 2016 to play basketball. They can’t get a visa to join him in France, and he says he can’t get a visa to join them in Turkey without going to Gaza.

    “Sometimes, you keep your feelings inside of yourself because you don’t want to show yourself, like, weak or something like that. You want to keep going because you have a big goal. You want to have it, but at the same time when you’re alone, yeah, you’re crying, you’re human,” he said.

    Fadi Aldeeb, the only Palestinian athlete at the Paralympic Games, signs an autograph for a young fan during an interview with The Associated Press in Paris, Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Ciaran Fahey)
    Fadi Aldeeb, the only Palestinian athlete at the Paralympic Games, signs an autograph for a young fan during an interview with The Associated Press in Paris, Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Ciaran Fahey)

    Aldeeb said he received his life-changing injury on Oct. 4, 2001. He said he was shot in the back by an Israeli sniper when soldiers responded with bullets after some kids threw stones at an Israeli tank.

    The current war is creating many more potential Paralympians, but Aldeeb said all Palestinian athletes face a lack of facilities and equipment – and difficulties leaving.

    The 3 million Palestinians in the West Bank live under seemingly open-ended military rule, and Gaza’s borders have been sealed for months. Even before the war, athletes struggled to leave the territory for international competitions because of an Israeli-Egyptian blockade imposed after the Hamas militant group seized power in 2007.

    Aldeeb wants to see future Palestinian delegations at Paralympic and Olympic competitions grow.

    “We have in Gaza something the world doesn’t have – the type of players, the type of athletes. What they need are just little programs. You cannot imagine what they can do,” Aldeeb said. “I hope they can get this opportunity before they are killed, I hope.”

    Jack Leo, a student in the undergraduate certificate program at the Carmical Sports Media Institute at the University of Georgia, contributed to this report.

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  • Palestinian athlete sees himself as a voice for his people

    Palestinian athlete sees himself as a voice for his people

    PARIS : Nine months ago, Fadi Aldeeb missed several calls from his brother. The next day, he found out that he had been killed in an Israeli attack on his home.

    Aldeeb, the only Palestinian athlete at the Paris Paralympics, left the Gaza Strip a decade ago for a wheelchair basketball career that took him to Turkey and Greece before France.

    “On December 6, I had a French league game and when I was finished I found my brother had called me many times… I tried to call back but there was no connection,” Aldeeb, who took part in the Paralympics shot put, told Reuters.

    “The 7th of December at night I received (the news) that ‘Okay, your brother was killed in an attack on our building’,” said Aldeeb, adding that he often wonders what his brother’s last message was.

    In Paris, Aldeeb is feeling the pressure of being what he says is the voice of his people at the Paralympics.

    “It’s too many feelings, too much responsibility, because I’m not speaking about myself, I’m not playing for myself. I’m here for 11 million, for all who say I’m a Palestinian, for all who talk about humanity, and to talk about the freedom of Palestine,” he said.

    “When we are raising the flag here in Paris, we are (showing we are) still alive, we still we need our human rights, we still need our freedom,” he said.

    The Palestine Olympic Committee was recognised three decades ago by the International Olympic Committee. Gaza has a population of about 2.3 million people, and millions more Palestinians live elsewhere.

    OTHER ATHLETES’ SUPPORT

    Aldeeb, 40, said he became paraplegic after being shot in the back by an Israeli soldier in 2001 during the second Intifada, or uprising, against Israeli occupation.

    He raises his voice when talking about life in Gaza, where the Health Ministry says over 40,000 people have been killed since Israel began an offensive against the militant group Hamas that led an attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7 last year.

    About 1,200 people were killed and around 250 were taken hostage in the attack, according to Israeli tallies.

    Aldeeb, who will resume playing wheelchair basketball in the Paris suburb of Genevilliers after the Paralympics, sees Israel’s military as a “killing machine”.

    “There is no difference (for Israel’s military) between athletes, disabled or non-disabled, children or women, big or small homes, hospitals, hotels, universities or school,” he said.

    Israel says its offensive is aimed against Hamas, not civilians. It accuses Hamas fighters of using public buildings such as hospitals to hide in, putting civilians at risk, and says it takes great precautions to limit harm to civilians.

    Aldeeb made clear he felt uncomfortable with the presence of Israeli athletes in Paris, which held a ceremony before the Games to pay tribute to Israeli Olympic team members killed by Palestinian gunmen at the 1972 Munich Olympics.

    But welcoming support he had received from other competitors, he said: “I’m not feeling that I’m alone or feeling like I’m alone, these people really, it’s amazing and incredible, they give me a feeling of humanity.”

    A far-left lawmaker said before the Olympics, also held in Paris this summer, that Israel’s delegation was not welcome and called for protests against its participation. France said after his remark that Israeli athletes would have 24-hour protection.

    The Olympic charter states that competitors at the Olympic Games should enjoy freedom of expression but that no “political propaganda” is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas. Aldeeb was speaking outside the Olympic village.

    (Writing by Julien Pretot, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

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