The album was well received by music critics. John Quaintance of Yahoo! Music called it "a remarkable album" and a "return to form" for Muddy Waters, commenting that "Johnny Winter, ... James Cotton, Pinetop Perkins, Bob Margolin, Charles Calmese and Willie "Big Eyes" Smith are all thrilled to be in the same room with Muddy, and it shows, as they lay down a serious foundation for the old master who struts and brags like it's 1950 again."[10] Q called it "a guaranteed delight" for "students of the post-war blues", while Down Beat stated, "Singing, [Muddy is] playful and proud, brawny and insistent, his free-flow of inspiration spreading to his superlative road band".[6] Dan Oppenheimer of Rolling Stone magazine said that "Mannish Boy" sounded like it was recorded live,[11] while both Oppenheimer and Daniel Gioffre of Allmusic state how powerful Willie "Big Eyes" Smith's drumming is.[3][11] Oppenheimer and Gioffre both share the opinion that Hard Again is Muddy Waters comeback album.[3][11] In The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), Rolling Stone journalist Dave Marsh said "Johnny Winter provided the sensitive production touch otherwise lacking on some of [Muddy's] early '70s recordings."[7]

The production of the song features piano keys and trap drums, over which Lil Baby raps melodically,[4] about topics such as his aspirations, trust issues,[3] and blessings.[5] In the chorus, he raps: "I'm back goin' hard again, I'm shuttin' down my heart again / No one can get next to me, so they gotta put orders in / Try my best to act like I didn't care, but I can't hold it in and / I'm not into losin', I go hard as I can go to win".[5][6]


Download Hard Again By Lil Baby


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Alexander Cole of HotNewHipHop wrote, "Overall, Lil Baby has an immaculate flow here as the melodic rapping sounds fantastic. This is the sound that fans expect from Baby, and it definitely goes hard here."[4]

An official music video was released alongside the single. Directed by Never Panic Films, it sees Lil Baby throwing a massive party with his crew on multiple yachts,[3][5][6][7] cruising through Miami[1] and surrounded by bikini-clad and twerking women,[1][5][7] before going to the restaurant Kiki on the River.[1] The party also includes jet skis and fireworks.[3] Baby is wearing jewelry and at one point is seen getting a massage. His baby mama Jayda Cheaves makes an appearance in the video.[6]

Remember those? Like when your baby stopped just going to sleep after feedings and woke up only to fuss much of the time he was awake UNTIL the next feed? And all the while you were trying to figure out how to eat more than a Cliff bar and grab a shower after 3 feeds seemingly back to back? Because your partner went back to work and you were left alone with a baby who seemed way easier when Daddy (or grandma, auntie, etc) was home?

Lil Baby is one of the biggest artists in the world right now. Overall, this designation is very well deserved. He has been working extremely hard at his craft, and fans love him. Moreover, he is going to be heading out on tour soon, which means his fanfare will be at an all-time high. Albums like My Turn and It's Only Me were huge in the streaming game. They produced some amazing tracks, and Lil Baby is a huge star because of them. However, fans are still clamoring for new music.

The track begins with some nice piano keys that stay with you as the trap drums kick in. Overall, Lil Baby has an immaculate flow here as the melodic rapping sounds fantastic. This is the sound that fans expect from Baby, and it definitely goes hard here. At the end of the day, this is a song that many have already heard. Although, it is very nice to see this kind of mastered version that is readily available on YouTube.

I'm back goin' hard again, I'm shutting down my heart again

No one can't get next to me, so they gotta put orders in

Try my best to act like I didn't care, but I can't hold it in

And I'm not into losin', I go hard as I can go to win

You should change the force of the back blows depending on the size of the child. Be much gentler with a smaller child than with a larger child. The force you use to deliver the back blows should also be relative to your own strength. The back blows need to be hard enough to dislodge the blockage.

On most occasions, you will see it coming out of their mouth and the child will start to breathe again. You can also ask them if they are feeling better and they will let you know whether the blockage has cleared or not.

Jamila Taylor, an advocacy leader for the federal Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), said that she is hearing from parents across the country that certain specialty formulas are still hard to find. Those are often formulated for people with allergies, sensitive digestion or specific nutritional needs.

It\u2019s been nearly 10 months since the largest infant formula manufacturer in the country, Abbott Nutrition, recalled its popular Similac powder and two lines of specialized formula, shutting down one of its plants due to bacterial contamination. The shutdown, which came during a pandemic that exacerbated U.S. supply chain issues, quickly escalated into a national formula supply crisis. \n\n\n\nGrocery store shelves across the country were empty, and parents, particularly those in rural and low-income parts of the country, scrambled to find ways to feed their babies \u2014 some turning to strangers on social media. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued new guidance that would make it easier to import formula from other countries and help domestic manufacturers enter the market. Congress passed an emergency spending bill to provide the FDA with more resources. And President Joe Biden invoked the Defense Production Act, a 1950 law first enacted in response to the start of the Korean War, to expedite supplies needed \u201cto promote national defense.\u201d \n\n\n\nStill, months after the worst point in the crisis, many families are reporting having trouble finding formula. The 19th spoke with government officials, domestic formula manufacturers and supply chain experts to better understand why. \n\n\n\n\n\nIs there still technically a shortage? \n\n\n\nYes, though supply has improved overall. Industry insiders said they are seeing a more \u201cspotty\u201d shortage based on location and product type. \n\n\n\nAccording to the FDA, things are nowhere near as dire as they were at the height of the infant formula shortage when more than 40 percent of all formulas were out of stock across the country. As of November 20, about 12.5 percent of formula baby powder was out of stock across the country \u2014 which is very close to pre-shortage levels, according to data from IRI, a Chicago-based market research firm. \n\n\n\n\u201cWe aren\u2019t in a place to declare mission accomplished, but we\u2019ve made tremendous progress,\u201d an FDA spokesperson told The 19th. \u201cThe supply chain has gotten stronger with more products available to parents and caregivers. We recognize that while supplies are improving, there are still parents struggling to find formula or find their specific type of formula on store shelves. We understand their frustration and continue to do everything we can to make sure parents can get safe and nutritious infant formula whenever and wherever they need it.\u201d \n\n\n\nJimmy Chen, an associate professor of analytics and operations management at Bucknell University, said the lingering formula shortage is still a major concern for many parents, which has an impact on demand and the tendency to induce panic-buying behavior. \n\n\n\n\u201cWhile supply has increased, so has demand,\u201d Chen said. \u201cSimilar to toilet paper, infant formula has no substitute. So the baby formula is yet another perfect product to trigger panic buying amid shortages. Unsure of a sustainable future formula supply, parents who emphatically fear the worst will overfill their cupboards with the products for fear of running out.\u201d \n\n\n\nThis panic buying, he said, could quickly deplete retailers\u2019 shelves. \n\n\n\nAt the height of the shortage, many of the big box stores limited the amount of formula product each customer could purchase at one time in an effort to keep their shelves stocked. As of November, several still had quota policies in place, forcing some customers to drive to several stores to get what they need for their children. CVS Health and Walgreens, for example, maintain a three-product limit per customer. Walgreens has also expanded its supply to now include popular European brands in its inventory, according to a company spokesperson. \n\n\n\nJamila Taylor, an advocacy leader for the federal Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), said that she is hearing from parents across the country that certain specialty formulas are still hard to find. Those are often formulated for people with allergies, sensitive digestion or specific nutritional needs.\n\n\n\n\u201cAt this point, the formula crisis has become hyper-localized: One county might be fully stocked while the county next door only has 20 percent of their shelves filled,\u201d said Taylor, who is president and chief executive of The National WIC Association (NWA), the nonprofit advocacy group for WIC. \u201cNew manufacturers have entered the market and other competitors have stepped up their production capacity, but ongoing distribution challenges continue to impact regions differently.\u201d \n\n\n\n\n\nWhat measures have been taken to increase the supply?\n\n\n\nThe U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) issued waivers in February to provide low-income families with additional formula options, including alternate sizes and brands. \n\n\n\nThe Biden administration invoked the Defense Production Act in May, which required suppliers to prioritize formula manufacturers over manufacturers of other goods and launched a directive to use military aircraft to get formula from overseas. The House passed a $28 million emergency spending bill to help the FDA increase supply, while leaders from the country\u2019s top formula manufacturers testified before the Committee on Energy and Commerce. \n\n\n\nThat same month, the FDA eased federal import regulations, allowing millions of pounds of powdered formula to be shipped in from other countries. The policy was initially set to expire in November, but was later extended to January 2023. In September, the FDA announced that the recent entrants to the U.S. market under the FDA\u2019s relaxed guidance will have until October 2025 to fully comply with all of the agency\u2019s requirements \u2014 including those related to safety, nutrient adequacy, labeling and packaging \u2014 which apply to every product sold in the United States. \n\n\n\n\u201cWe understand that the continued availability of infant formulas brought in through enforcement discretion is important for infants who started on a specific formula during the shortage and now are accustomed to that formula as an essential source of nutrition,\u201d Susan Mayne, the director of the FDA\u2019s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, said in a statement in September. \n\n\n\nIn addition, the USDA partnered with the Department of Health and Human Services and the General Services Administration to launch Operation Fly Formula, a federal effort to import infant formula not typically offered on U.S. shelves. As of the end of September, at least 74 flights had imported the equivalent of nearly 98 million 8-ounce bottles of formula \u2014 an amount that comes to about three months of sales. Pallets of product came from New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Australia, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, Mexico and Singapore. \n\n\n\n\n\nHow have the pandemic and inflation exacerbated the problem? \n\n\n\nThe pandemic tanked the economy, disrupted the global supply chain and contributed to rising inflation. Women, especially, bear the brunt of rising costs at the grocery store. According to a 19th analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data, single women spend as much as 30 percent more than single men on most grocery items \u2014 items that are most impacted by inflation increases. \n\n\n\nThe average cost of baby formula products increased by 18 percent in the past year alone, according to the Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank. \n\n\n\nWho is having the hardest time finding infant formula?\n\n\n\nMore than 80 percent of infants consume formula at some point in the first year of their lives. Low-income parents, particularly women of color, rely on formula to feed their babies at higher rates and continue to be most impacted by the shortage, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As much as 65 percent of all formula in the United States is purchased by families through WIC, the assistance program for low-income women and children. \n\n\n\nThe NWA has been encouraging all WIC families seeking formula to reach out to their local WIC clinics for support, resources and educational materials on what practices to avoid to keep infants safe. \n\n\n\n\u201cThe burdens of the continued formula shortages are not borne equally,\u201d Taylor said. \u201cA single mom with two jobs will have a harder time checking the shelves at four different stores to find the specific formula that her baby needs. A family that doesn\u2019t have reliable access to transportation can\u2019t necessarily go to the store in the next town over if the shelves at their regular grocery store aren\u2019t stocked.\u201d \n\n\n\nCarla Cevasco, an assistant professor of American studies at Rutgers University, told The 19th at the height of the crisis that \u201crace and class inequities play a huge role\u201d in who suffers. Women of color, for instance, are much less likely to have access to paid family leave. Parents who work lower-income jobs often need to rely on formula because they cannot afford to establish regular breastfeeding habits \u2014 assuming a parent can otherwise produce enough milk. \n\n\n\nCevasco said a cycle of work not conducive to raising families and formula dependence has deep roots in American history. And the problem is felt most acutely in rural areas, where there are fewer stores, fewer options and parents are at the mercy of only one or two grocery stores. To make things more difficult for these families, WIC recipients historically could only use their benefits in stores, not online or through delivery. \n\n\n\nHistorically, why has it been difficult for companies to manufacture baby formula?\n\n\n\nThe formula industry has long been dominated by three U.S. companies \u2014 Abbott, Reckitt and Gerber Products Company \u2014 that contribute to the vast majority of production in the country. Collectively, these companies operate nine domestic facilities and produce about 95 percent of all infant formula sold in the United States. \n\n\n\nIt\u2019s been difficult for other companies to break through, given the extensive and expensive barriers to entry. Infant formula is one of the most regulated food products on the market, and it\u2019s the only food product in the United States that requires a clinical study to be able to go to market. \n\n\n\nLaura Katz in 2019 founded Helaina, an infant formula company, with the goal of adding proteins that so far are only available in breast milk. The company\u2019s product is not on store shelves yet, Katz said, as it works its way through the lengthy research process, safety studies and clinical tests required by federal regulations. Katz said she faced several barriers while trying to get her company off the ground, from obtaining venture capital dollars as a woman founder to finding and building a relationship with a manufacturer that is accredited to make formula. \n\n\n\n\u201cBeing able to follow all of the regulatory guidelines requires a lot of work, capital, infrastructure and time,\u201d Katz said. \u201cSo it\u2019s not a category for the faint of heart. You have to have a lot of conviction. Seeing two or three players taking up most of the market, it\u2019s very easy to let them dominate. To innovate requires a team, a whole village of people who are looking to overcome these barriers \u2014 which is possible but takes time.\u201d\n\n\n\nAccording to current FDA regulations, domestic and international manufacturers must include in their formulas 30 nutrients, in specified amounts; ensure every ingredient is \u201csafe and suitable\u201d; provide directions for preparation and use, including a pictogram showing how to prepare the formula at each step; and an expiration date. Every facility is also subject to inspection, according to the agency. \n\n\n\n\u201cWe\u2019ve made important progress toward improving the infant formula supply in the U.S. and paving the way for a more robust and diverse marketplace for the future,\u201d FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf said in a statement in September. \u201cHowever, the FDA can\u2019t do it alone. We\u2019ll need to work with all stakeholders to evaluate what other steps could be taken to encourage a more diverse and resilient infant formula marketplace.\u201d \n\n\n\nWhat\u2019s being done to fix the pipeline issue in the short- and long-term future? \n\n\n\nWhen Laura Modi, a mother of three, started her own infant formula company in 2018, she warned investors and stakeholders that a supply crisis was a serious possibility if the industry didn\u2019t change. She saw too few players dominating the market, a product that parents were disappointed with and a system rife with inequities and stigmatizations. She hoped her new company, Bobbie, could help change all of that. \n\n\n\n\u201cThe entire industry needed to be reformed, and we really are at that moment,\u201d said Modi, one of the only women executives in the infant formula industry. \u201cWe have to stop thinking about what we are doing to get out of the shortage and instead what we are doing to fix this industry. And fixing this industry isn\u2019t going to happen in the next year \u2014 it could take five to seven years.\u201d \n\n\n\nChen said the Biden administration\u2019s immediate responses to the crisis were effective short-term solutions, but broader changes need to happen for a more sustainable future. The government needs to improve its resources and conduct more frequent inspections of existing formula manufacturers to detect potential problems earlier. In addition, there should be a continued effort to create flexible regulations that encourage more players in the industry, he added. \n\n\n\n\u201cCritical products such as infant formula need to build resilience into their supply chains, which may come from manufacturing capacity buffers or a diverse, highly-competitive formula marketplace,\u201d Chen said. \u201cPutting all our eggs in a few baskets can be risky.\u201d \n\n\n\nSmaller formula manufacturers like Bobbie and Helaina had already started making inroads before the formula shortage. As products by the big three companies grew scarce, customers were more willing to turn to these smaller companies. Bobbie is now the fifth-largest formula company in the country, serving nearly 5 percent of the market, and is working with WIC to get its product into the hands of those who need it most. \n\n\n\nModi said there is a noticeable shift happening in the industry and increased interest from lawmakers to make changes. She recently spent a few days on Capitol Hill talking to members of Congress about how to increase the number of domestic manufacturing centers, improve FDA nutritional standards that haven\u2019t been meaningfully updated in four decades and review the WIC contractual bidding process. \n\n\n\n\u201cThe formula industry is not set up to equally serve every baby out there,\u201d Modi said. \u201cI believe if we build resiliency in this industry that parents are going to be better off. It takes a lot more than one company to speak out on this. It\u2019s going to take all of us to come forward to actually change it. We need more competition.\u201d\n","post_title":"The 19th Explains: Why baby formula is still hard to find months after the shortage","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"19th-explains-infant-formula-shortage","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-01-04 09:12:40","post_modified_gmt":"2023-01-04 15:12:40","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/19thnews.org\/?p=47941","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},"authors":[{"name":"Mariel Padilla","slug":"mariel-padilla","taxonomy":"author","description":"Mariel Padilla is a general assignment reporter. Previously she covered breaking news at The New York Times where she contributed to COVID-19 coverage that won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize, compiled data at the Toni Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism and contributed to a 2018 Pulitzer Prize-winning project at The Cincinnati Enquirer.","parent":0,"count":198,"filter":"raw","link":"https:\/\/19thnews.org\/author\/mariel-padilla"}]} The 19th

The 19th is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. Our stories are free to republish in accordance with these guidelines. e24fc04721

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