Showing posts with label Meet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meet. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Meet Earth"s Martians! | YouTube Nation | Tuesday

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Meet Earth"s Martians! | YouTube Nation | Tuesday

Friday, April 4, 2014

Conservatives and Libertarians Meet for Florida Liberty Summit as Establishment GOP Plans Retreat

At The Daily News Source, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by The Daily News Source and how it is used.


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Conservatives and Libertarians Meet for Florida Liberty Summit as Establishment GOP Plans Retreat

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Meet GloZell. Here She Demonstrates Hot Pepper Consumption

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


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Meet GloZell. Here She Demonstrates Hot Pepper Consumption

Monday, March 31, 2014

Meet Joni Ernst, She"s Got Balls, LOTS Of Them


“There is so little left in national politics to delight us. The candidates, for the most part, are scripted, strident and narrow people who betray their act…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Meet Joni Ernst, She"s Got Balls, LOTS Of Them

Friday, March 21, 2014

Facebook and Google execs to meet with Obama following Zuckerberg’s fiery phone call

At Alternate Viewpoint, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Alternate Viewpoint and how it is used.


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Facebook and Google execs to meet with Obama following Zuckerberg’s fiery phone call

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Meet the Florida State Attorney Who Vindictively Wants to Send Marissa Alexander to Jail for 60 Years

At Alternate Viewpoint, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Alternate Viewpoint and how it is used.


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Like many other Web sites, Alternate Viewpoint makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


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Alternate Viewpoint does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


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You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Alternate Viewpoint"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


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Meet the Florida State Attorney Who Vindictively Wants to Send Marissa Alexander to Jail for 60 Years

Sunday, March 9, 2014

ABC News: Meet Our Team

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


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ABC News: Meet Our Team

Friday, February 28, 2014

Grassroots Organizations Mobilize to Meet Community Water Needs Following WV Chemical Spill


Last month, an estimated 10,000 gallons of the coal-processing chemical MCHM, along with an unknown amount of a second substance called PPH, spilled into West Virginia’s Elk River—just upstream from a municipal water intake that serves nine counties. Freedom Industries, the company responsible for the spill, neglected to report it, despite some residents claiming to have smelled the chemicals as far back as December. After repeated complaints of a strong licorice-like smell, state inspectors literally followed their noses to the source. It wasn’t until many hours later that the water company and government agencies finally warned residents to avoid any contact with water—aside from flushing toilets and putting out fires.


A van filled with relief water for people affected by the chemical spill in West Virginia. Photo credit: Aurora Lights Facebook page

A van filled with relief water for people affected by the chemical spill in West Virginia. Photo credit: Aurora Lights Facebook page



In the seven weeks since the disaster that has left 300,000 people unsure about the safety of their water, confusion and anger have mounted, and an estimated 400 people have been sent to the hospital. While government and industry have been slow to respond to the needs of the people, some remarkable community organizing has taken place, drawing on West Virginia’s long, proud history of grassroots work for environmental and economic justice—including powerful work against the abuses of the chemical and coal industries responsible for the spill.


Only a few hours after news of the spill began trickling out, a grassroots group called WV Clean Water Hub had already begun organizing water deliveries through its Facebook page. That quickly turned into a massive community-organized effort supported by new volunteers, as well as long-established grassroots groups in West Virginia—including Aurora Lights, Coal River Mountain Watch, Keeper of the Mountains Foundation, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and RAMPS. By working to identify communities in need of clean water and supplies, as well as connecting affected communities with volunteers and donors, this wiki-style relief effort has filled the gap left by larger relief organizations.

“There is so much bureaucracy [at the larger relief organizations] that communities fall through the cracks,” said Nate May, a volunteer organizer with WV Clean Water Hub. “We’re hearing directly from the people who need the water. Someone will post on the Facebook page that they need water and we’ll make a meme out of it. Then someone else will post when they can deliver some.”


In many communities, the water was officially declared safe for all but pregnant women within a week of the spill, but residents are still experiencing adverse reactions to touching or smelling the water coming from their taps. Some government officials recommend against exposure, while others just say to be cautious.


“The stories that get me the most are the stories of mothers with children who are sick and asking why the state is not considering it an emergency,” said Jen Osha-Buysse, a volunteer organizer with Aurora Lights. “I have spoken with many families who haven’t been able to work in the weeks since the chemical spill. They can’t just not buy water, but they also can’t afford to buy food or pay heating bills in the freezing weather.”


Amy Adkins, First Grade Teacher at Fayetteville elementary school, whose students organized a water drive for impacted families. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub

Amy Adkins, First Grade Teacher at Fayetteville elementary school, whose students organized a water drive for impacted families. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub



The WV Clean Water Hub has been led largely by environmental groups, which can be a source of tension in communities that have been split by the “jobs vs. environment” myth perpetuated by thecoal industry. However, the crisis has inspired many to ignore politics. For instance, landscaping companies have donated the use of their trucks, while schools, Girls Scouts, local unions, doctors’ offices and others have collected donations of water and baby supplies.


“We don’t want to polarize or politicize it,” May explained. “The concern is if we make it about our issue, then it feels like missionary work or like we’re trying to buy people, but clean water is an unconditional right.”


While some volunteers have encountered a few sharp questions from self-identified “coal-huggers,” the reception has largely been warm.

“Giving out water has been a way to connect on a personal level and share that we both are fed up by the government and no longer trust the people in charge,” May said.


Beyond the massive effort to deliver clean water, there has been an unprecedented surge of interest in organizing for long-term solutions.


“Shortly after the spill, we started a weekly roundtable of progressive groups in Charleston,” said Cathy Kunkel, an independent policy consultant on West Virginia energy issues and the founder/co-editor of OurWaterWV.org. “At first our focus was just on sharing information because there was so much misinformation. Now we are looking at what a longer-standing coalition with long-term political goals might look like.”


One outcome of these new partnerships was a protest hosted by the NAACP and Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, where hundreds of consumers reverse-billed the water company that serves the nine counties affected by the spill. While the West Virginia American Water Companymight be seen as an unwitting victim of the spill, the international for-profit company’s blundering response has included sending tankers full of the polluted water into communities instead of usable relief water and providing only a $ 10 credit to customers and businesses. The action to recoup the costs of having to drive miles to collect drinking water, do laundry and take showers is just one of many examples of groups from different, often isolated areas of work coming together on this issue.


Citizens have brought water donations from surrounding counties. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub

Citizens have brought water donations from surrounding counties. Photo credit: WV Clean Water Hub



In addition to the coordination of long-standing groups, there has also been an overwhelming amount of spontaneous community organizing, including the formation of a rainwater catchment organization, a moms for clean water group, various organizations of concerned small businesses, and even a fashion show to raise money for water deliveries. These diverse responses reflect the diversity of the communities that have been impacted. While the coal and chemical industry have caused toxic water in isolated rural areas for decades, this time, reporters covering the story, public health experts, and even Public Service Commission employees in charge of water regulation are all personally dealing with blue-tinted water that smells distinctly like licorice.


“Unless you work for a coal industry attorney, this spill has hurt your business and your lifestyle,” Kunkel said. “We’re trying to maintain a calendar at OurWaterWV.org, and it’s been a challenge. The day of the water company protest, there was another protest at the school board because several schools were opened just to be closed again after students and employees got sick from the water. It’s powerful to see so much organizing.”



According to Kunkel and others organizing in the area, the work has begun to focus on long-term goals over the last seven weeks, even as many organizers are exhausted with the toll of working at an emergency pace for weeks on end. Groups have outlined clear steps for politicians to take towards enforcement of the chemical and coal industry as well as beginning a campaign to engage the Public Service Commission, which regulates West Virginia American Water, to ensure that residents’ health is put before water company profits.


“The relationships we developed through distributing water are an entry into working for longer term organizing in the communities,” May said.“We’re not saying, ‘I told you so.’ We’re asking, ‘What are the problems you’re facing besides the water? What happens when we draw lines between these problems?’”


Both experienced and new activists realize this is an important moment for West Virginia, and they are working to create long lasting momentum for change at the structural level.


“I’ve been thinking about pronoia—the opposite of paranoia—the belief that the world is in a conspiracy for your well being,” May explained. “We assume that when we turn on the tap, someone is making sure the water is clean. Maybe this magical naive thinking is kind of necessary for a civil society, but we can’t assume that the world is out to help us when that is not in the self interest of the people in charge.”


Source: EcoWatch






David Howard


A father and husband dedicated to his family and to developing a stronger relationship with God.
1 Timothy 5:8







WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Grassroots Organizations Mobilize to Meet Community Water Needs Following WV Chemical Spill

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Meet Oren Zeev, Silicon Valley’s Builder-Investor

You probably have not heard of Oren Zeev, and he would prefer it that way.


There’s a small breed of early investors in Silicon Valley who primarily invest their own money, but who want to have an active role in building a company. This model isn’t for everyone. It’s a hybrid of a traditional VC with a dash of the early-stage angel investor, and it requires getting your hands dirty. They aren’t writing checks in the six figures. They’re putting in seven figures, and, in turn, own more of a startup than the average angel investor. This isn’t about scaling. It’s about building. And this is what Oren Zeev excels at.


The results speak for themselves. Zeev, the early investor behind Chegg, Houzz, Audible, Tipalti and others, has quietly seen a 100 percent IRR each year on his collective investments.


Institutional To Angel


Zeev’s career in investing began at Apax Partners in Israel. As he recalls, he was fresh out of business school and he saw the industry as nascent. There were only a handful of funds, each of which only had around $ 20 million in capital. While at Apax, Zeev focused on creating a private-equity business for the firm in Israel. In 2002, Zeev had an opportunity to move to the U.S. to work on Apax’s VC business in Silicon Valley. While moving away from his family across the world with his wife and two young kids was a risk, Zeev had always dreamed of “coming to the mecca of technology and venture.”


But Silicon Valley was still reeling from the bubble bursting. Zeev was focused on Internet investing, and people thought he was crazy for even making the move. Most VCs weren’t in the mood to do new deals because they had portfolios full of problems. But Zeev took a wait and see approach, and stumbled upon Audible, an online audio technology company that had gone public in 1999 but hadn’t seen any traction on the public markets.


“It was a total penny stock and the entire company was worth $ 30 million. People did not think it would make it but I thought the company may have gone public too early and I saw value,” he says. Apax’s $ 11 million investment bought 40 percent of the company. And a month after investment, Audible signed an exclusive deal with Apple to provide books on iTunes. In 2008, Amazon bought Audible for $ 300 million.


“There was an advantage of being an outsider and looking in to Silicon Valley,” he adds.


Don Katz, the CEO of Audible, explains to me that many of the VCs at that time came out of the MBA mold more so than the operator mold. “Their core competency was founder removal. Whenever things got tough that was their first instinct,” Katz says. “Oren was so different. He was a partner and was supportive of the founder as well as the company. He could have judged us through the eyes of a financial investor, a number cruncher, but that wasn’t helpful at the time. And he knew that.”


Zeev continued to work for Apax until 2006, but when the firm moved away from investing to concentrate on mega buyouts, Zeev knew he needed to move on. He was burnt out and, while his time at Apax had been lucrative, he needed a change. He started to teach middle school math at a school in Los Altos and took a few graduate courses at Stanford.


On the side, he started investing his own money. “Back then angel investing was less common. Most angel investors would write small checks but people weren’t really doing it for the money. These investors actually liked the company-building part of it,” says Zeev.


He also started to pool his money with three other investors in a consortium of sorts called Primera Capital. There were four equal partners, but Zeev was the only one sourcing deals full-time.


In 2008, Zeev was introduced to the co-founders of then textbook rentals startup Chegg. At the time, the company was looking for a Series B investment, and Zeev, along with his consortium, invested $ 3.5 million into the company (a quarter of which was Zeev’s own money), and Zeev joined the board. The entity put another $ 4.5 million in the Series C round when Kleiner Perkins came in. And Zeev helped recruit Dan Rosensweig to join the company as CEO.


Rosensweig cites Zeev’s network as being one of the defining factors that differentiates him as an investor. As Rosensweig recalls, when he joined, the company was at a turning point when it was trying to figure out its business model. “It was a tense, difficult situation and Oren was calm, and positive throughout the experience.”


While Rosensweig and the company were focused on making the transition from print to digital, Zeev was helping him source talent to help develop for mobile platforms and made the introduction to the 3D3R team in Israel, which, via an acquisition, became Chegg’s R&D and mobile team.


Along the way Zeev also invested in Cramster, a community to help students do their homework. When Chegg was looking to acquire compatible technologies and talent, Zeev made the intro to Cramster but recused himself from any discussions, and told Rosensweig that there was no pressure from his end on making the acquisition. Chegg ended up acquiring the company, which became the foundation for Chegg Study.


While there are a sea of angel investors, there aren’t many individuals who can grow with a startup that it matures into a late-stage company, and then a public company. Zeev is one of these unicorns, Rosensweig says. “It’s rare to have an investor and board member that can be useful at multiple stages of a company.”


“Oren is not the guy who will pound his fist on the table and demand answers. He’s thoughtful and asks the right questions,” Rosensweig explains. While Zeev is no longer on the board, Rosensweig still asks him to be in board meetings because his enthusiasm continues to help the company as it encounters new goals and challenges. “He’s really a jack of all trades and works tirelessly on behalf of his companies” Rosensweig says of Zeev.


Even when it came down to the money, Zeev didn’t sell much of the stock before Chegg’s IPO last fall. He sold 20 percent after the company’s Series E round and still owns 8 percent. The fact that he still holds stock (which is a rarity for early investors, and even some VCs) is a testament to his long-term vision for Chegg.


Oren 2.0


In Zeev’s subsequent deals after Chegg, he started to pull in different people in his network to participate in certain deals. As Katz tells me, he became “Oren 2.0.”


In perhaps the earliest, offline version of AngelList Syndicates, Zeev chooses these syndications very carefully, and says generally there is more demand than supply. And he never charges people to be part of the syndicate. While Zeev is responsible for the investment and the company-building aspect of things with the founder, members of the syndicate can get involved, as well.


Some are CEOs he has backed in the past like Rosensweig and Katz, and others are key individuals in his network who could be of help to startups, including Richard Sarnoff, an adviser to private-equity giant KKR and a former chairman of Bertelsmann, or former News Corp. exec Gary Ginsberg.


For the past few years, Zeev has been averaging around one to two deals per year. He’s also been investing primarily with Israeli entrepreneur Oren Dobronsky, the owner of Palo Alto restaurant Oren’s Hummus. Dobronsky and Zeev share an office in Palo Alto and Zeev has also backed Dobronsky’s current startup Mallpad. In total, Zeev has pulled in 40 to 50 different partners for his investments.


In 2009, Zeev backed social browser toolbar startup Wibiya with $ 2.5 million, which was eventually sold to Conduit for $ 45 million. In 2010, he backed DudaMobile, a mobile website maker, which has seen success after partnerships with Google and others. Other investments include Crossrider (acquired by Market.com for 19X the total money raised), Tipalti, Gogobot, Infolinks, Webflakes, Bonobos, Streamonce (acquired by Jive), and Preen.Me.


In late 2010, Zeev was introduced to Adi Tatarko and eBay engineer Alon Cohen, a married couple who had created a network around sharing photos and information around home remodeling and building. There was something about the startup, called Houzz, that struck Zeev as being a massive opportunity. As Tatarko recalls, Zeev went to her and Cohen’s home and saw what they were working on. Within days, the money was wired. Zeev invested the first million in Houzz for a sizeable portion of the company.


As Zeev promised Tatarko and Cohen, “I’m not going to make your life harder, I’m going to make it easier.” And Zeev stayed true to his word. He’s been a constant protector, she explains. “He’s never asked us to do anything, and he’s always there to help us, and we have leaned on him more than any other investor.” Zeev has been so involved with the development of Houzz that Tatarko compares him more to a co-founder than an investor. Zeev has taken on the task of recruiting many of the company’s strategic hires, as well as helping form deals and partnerships, and his track record helps him make inroads with investors.


When Tatarko and Cohen considered taking another round of funding in 2011, Zeev knew that he wanted to connect Houzz with Sequoia’s Michael Moritz. Tatarko and Cohen maintained that they didn’t want to visit VC offices and go through the traditional pitch process. Zeev didn’t know Moritz himself but his old friend Katz did (who Zeev had brought in on the seed round a year earlier), and he asked for an intro. Zeev pitched Houzz to Moritz over email at 9 p.m. on a Sunday night, and by Monday morning Moritz was visiting the Houzz office. Along with the Moritz email, Zeev also pitched four or five other Sand Hill VCs.


Moritz, fellow Sequoia partner Alfred Lin, Zeev, Tatarko and Cohen met and within two hours. Moritz told them that as long as terms could be agreed on, Sequoia would back the company. By the time other VCs had their assistants schedule meetings for Tatarko and Cohen, the ink had already dried on Sequoia’s first funding round in Houzz.


In the case of one of Zeev’s more recent investments, gifting service Loopt Commerce, he helped bring in PayPal as an investor, one of the few startup investments the payments giant has made. Zeev had seen PayPal CEO David Marcus at an event and was telling him about Loopt — the company actually wasn’t raising more money, but Marcus, and PayPal as an investor, is a key partnership and hard to turn down for a startup in the gifting space.


While Zeev’s network is vast, he’s also not afraid to put some old-fashioned hustle into his company building. “Everyone in the Valley is reachable within one degree of separation, thanks to LinkedIn. Recently, a portfolio company wanted to speak to someone at NetSuite and Zeev was able to connect with someone via LinkedIn.


Another element of Zeev’s network worth calling attention to is the Israeli connection — many of the entrepreneurs he backs are from Israel. Zeev acknowledges that a disproportionate part of his portfolio are startups from Israeli entrepreneurs, but he says part of his network involves founders and investors from his home country.


As I mentioned above, looking at the numbers, Zeev’s track record speaks for itself. He’s invested $ 20 million personally since 2008, and is responsible for around $ 60 million invested with other partners included. Zeev has seen his money return 100 percent annually since 2008. Good VC funds return around 20 to 30 percent per year, on average. The current value of Zeev’s portfolio is several hundred million (much of which is attributed to his 10 percent ownership in Houzz).


What is clear about Zeev is that he can’t scale, and he’s never going to be able to compete with some of the established seed and early-stage funds with larger funds. And it’s worth noting he doesn’t have a WhatsApp in his portfolio. Yet.


“What drives me is I really feel that my job is to work for founders and serve them. I like that I don’t have any other constituencies, like LPs or partners,” he says. That comes with some sacrifices as well, he adds. Zeev says he has no interest in building a firm, and acknowledges that what he does is not scalable.


But in a sea of early-stage capital and investors, Zeev offers a commitment and thoughtfulness that typically doesn’t come with scale.




TechCrunch



Meet Oren Zeev, Silicon Valley’s Builder-Investor

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Iran, powers hold "substantive" nuclear talks; U.S., Iranians meet

VIENNA (Reuters) – Six world powers and Iran began “substantive” talks on Tuesday in pursuit of a final settlement on Tehran’s contested nuclear program in the coming months despite caveats from both sides that a breakthrough deal may prove impossible.


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Iran, powers hold "substantive" nuclear talks; U.S., Iranians meet

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Obama to meet with Pope Francis in March







FILE – This Dec. 8, 2013 file photo shows Pope Francis as he arrives at the Spanish Steps to pray at the statue of the Virgin Mary, in central Rome on the occasion of the Immaculate Conception feast. President Barack Obama will meet with Pope Francis at the Vatican as part of a European trip scheduled for March. The White House says Obama “looks forward to discussing with Pope Francis their shared commitment to fighting poverty and growing inequality” during their March 27 meeting. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino, File)





FILE – This Dec. 8, 2013 file photo shows Pope Francis as he arrives at the Spanish Steps to pray at the statue of the Virgin Mary, in central Rome on the occasion of the Immaculate Conception feast. President Barack Obama will meet with Pope Francis at the Vatican as part of a European trip scheduled for March. The White House says Obama “looks forward to discussing with Pope Francis their shared commitment to fighting poverty and growing inequality” during their March 27 meeting. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino, File)













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(AP) — President Barack Obama will meet with Pope Francis at the Vatican as part of a European trip scheduled for March.


The White House says Obama “looks forward to discussing with Pope Francis their shared commitment to fighting poverty and growing inequality” during their March 27 meeting. Obama also plans to meet in Rome with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano and Prime Minister Enrico Letta.


Obama’s trip begins March 24-25 in The Hague, Netherlands, where he will participate in a nuclear security summit hosted by the Dutch government and meet with Dutch leaders.


On March 26, Obama will travel to Brussels for an U.S.-European Union summit with the presidents of the European Council and the European Commission, as well as meetings with Belgian leaders and NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.


Associated Press




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Obama to meet with Pope Francis in March

Monday, January 20, 2014

Kerry to meet Israeli, Palestinian negotiators


United States Secretary of State John Kerry holds a news conference with Canada’s Foreign Minister John Baird and Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Jose Antonio Meade (not pictured) at the State Department in Washington January 17, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron




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Kerry to meet Israeli, Palestinian negotiators

Thursday, January 9, 2014

US Envoy: Karzai Unlikely to Meet New Deadline on Troop Deal



US Envoy: Karzai Unlikely to Meet New Deadline on Troop Deal


US Keeps Setting Ultimatums, But Afghans Stand Firm


by Jason Ditz, January 09, 2014




After missing the Obama Administration’s “ultimatum” to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) by the end of December, officials told the Karzai government they wanted it done within “weeks, not months.”


Now, US Ambassador James Cunningham is admitting that the Karzai government is “unlikely” to meet that deadline either, saying he thinks Karzai will stick to his initial pledge not to sign until after the April vote.


The BSA would govern the US occupation of Afghanistan “through 2024 and beyond,” and Karzai has repeatedly said he won’t sign the deal before the election, which ends his term in office.


Karzai had been pushing for the US to make pledges to end night raids and drone strikes, citing the growing civilian casualties, while the US demands the deal be signed exactly as written.


Though the Obama Administration has made it clear they want the BSA signed as soon as possible, it is unclear why they keep going public with ultimatums that they don’t believe Karzai will accept, and coupling them with threats to withdraw that they have no intention of following through on.


Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz






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US Envoy: Karzai Unlikely to Meet New Deadline on Troop Deal

Monday, December 30, 2013

The chickens very first conspiracy. How it went down: Meet Fred THe Chicken!


posted on Dec, 30 2013 @ 08:04 PM


There once was a chicken, we will call him Fred the chicken.

Meet Fred: “The Chicken”


He was in the chicken house eating and humping away with the other chickens, and occasionally, noticed a human that came in a took some of the chickens away but never paid much attention to that, he had all the food and chicken tush he needed at this house.Then an idea went off in his head, hey you know what, I think we be being raised for food! Now all up in arms over this wild a crazy idea he had, he told some of his chicken friends in the house about this idea of being raised for food.Of course the all mock and laughed at Fred for coming up with some wild crazy idea like that. Telling Fred he should just enjoy the chicken heaven that they are in, and keep on eating and humping all day long. So Fred tried to go back to sleep to the normal routine of his day. But keep noticing some of the chickens keep disappearing by these humans and trucks that came to take them away. So Fred tried a little harder this time to get the other chickens to listen.But of course they wouldn’t. Now Fred is is starting to seem like the crazy chicken of the chicken house and the chickens are starting to talk about “crazy Fred” the chicken. So after a while, Fred finally gets some other chickens too listen. They made a plan of escape from the chicken house in hopes to save them form become a Chick fa la sandwich in their near future. Fred and his friends take notice where the humans leave and enter the house and decide that is where they are going to make a surprise “run for it” out of the house, in hopes to find their new found freedom.


The Escape
So the next morning, Fred and his new found friends decided to hang around the entrance where the humans came and went each morning, to take the chickens away, and make a break for it. At the crack of dawn the light started to pierce through the door and then Fred and his friends got ready to run,the door opens wider and they take off! A few a his friends made it past the humans and keep on running as fast as their little chicken legs can take them. Fred cries run! Run for your freedom of becoming food!. All of a sudden Fred trips over a humans foot, then Fred is grab by the neck and hears a big snap has he sucks his last breath of fresh air, and then realized that his crazy idea was maybe true after all.


Chick Fa la Bound.


Some of Fred friends noticed what happened to Fred and started to cry as they continued to run for their freedom.
They see Fred’s body being place on a truck and on the side it says Chick fl la sandwiches made here in Atlanta! A few a his friends can’t believe they made it out alive and is free from the house of food. They owe it all the one crazy Fred the chicken. They say our freedom is now enjoyed with Fred in our hearts.


Moral of story:
Your idea maybe not be that crazy after all, if it saves some of new found friends alive that were willing to listen.


edit on 30-12-2013 by Helpus2014 because: Spelling oops!





AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In General Conspiracies



The chickens very first conspiracy. How it went down: Meet Fred THe Chicken!

Friday, December 13, 2013

Meet the 11 black female comics who just auditioned for “SNL”


Lorne Michaels has revealed that “Saturday Night Live” will add at least one — and perhaps two — black female comedians to its cast in January, following months of criticism that the show hasn’t had a single black female performer since 2007. “SNL” held a secret audition last week, and Michaels told the Times that he’s narrowed the pool down to seven or eight women, who will audition on Monday.


In photographs that circulated across the Internet on Thursday, 11 comics — some of whom Salon had suggested “SNL” consider — made the casting call. Though Deadline speculates that these are the women who have made the cut for Monday’s audition, here’s a brief introduction to those 11 women who made “SNL” history last week:


Azie Dungey


Azie Dungey, high on Salon’s shortlist for “SNL” considerations, already boasts a strong YouTube following with her “Ask a Slave” series.


Nicole Byer


It’s likely that you’ve seen the hilarious Upright Citizens Brigade performer Nicole Byer on MTV’s “Girl Code.” We hope to see her on “SNL” soon, too.


Darmirra Brunson


Jay Pharoah specifically named YouTube star Darmirra Brunson as someone that “SNL” “needs to pay attention” to. “She’s amazing,” he told theGrio in September. “She needs to be on ‘SNL.’” Brunson’s videos, which include sketch comedy, parody and celebrity impersonations, have racked up millions of views on YouTube.


Bresha Webb





Bresha Webb, trained in acting, dance and voice, is a relative newcomer to the world of stand-up comedy. Best known for her role as Imunique on TV One’s comedy “Love That Girl!,” she is also a top-notch impersonator of Tiny, wife to rapper T.I.


Gabrielle Dennis


Actress and comedian Gabrielle Dennis is perhaps best known as Janay Brice from the CW’s dramedy “The Game,” but she’s been on television since she was a kid — her first appearance was in a television movie, “A Mom for Christmas,” starring Olivia Newton-John. You can see her on the big screen in “Black Coffee,” to be released at a limited number of theaters in January.


In the clip below, Dennis is an officer for a black sorority in “Campus Ladies,” a short-lived comedy on Oxygen from 2007 that featured cameos by major comedians like Will Forte, Maya Rudolph and Jason Alexander.


Amber Ruffin


Amber Ruffin, a Second City performer and Boom Chicago member, is one-third of YouTube comedy sketch group RobotDown. The writer, producer and actress has also appeared on “Key & Peele.”


Misty Monroe


Misty Monroe is an elementary school drama teacher and improv performer at the Groundlings Theater in Los Angeles. She’s had cameos on “How I Met Your Mother,” “2 Broke Girls” and Zach Galifianakis’ “Between Two Ferns” Web series.


LaKendra Tookes


LaKendra Tookes is an iOWest performer who does impersonations of Oprah, an English infomercial host and a black girl with a YouTube series.


Beth Payne


Actress and comedian Beth Payne has appeared in BET reality series “Sunday Best,” and has voiced six different characters on the animated PBS series “Maya and Miguel.” The Midwest native has toured with Charlie Murphy, opened for Michael Bolton and had cameos on “The Jamie Foxx Show.”


Simone Shepherd


You might recognize Simone Shepherd from the first season of BET’s dating show “Hell Date” in 2007, but the actress has a background in improv and sketch comedy. She’s garnered some attention from her Vine videos, creating racially charged satire in six-second clips:


Tiffany Haddish


According to her bio on Laugh Factory’s website, Tiffany Haddish was attracted to comedy as a child in foster care, and “it was her excessive talking and imaginary friends that prompted her increasingly flustered social worker to steer her into stand-up comedy.” Now, the Haddish is a successful actress and stand-up comedian, having appeared on the Laugh Factory, HBO’s “Def Comedy Jam” and Bill Bellamy’s “Who’s Got Jokes?”





Salon.com



Meet the 11 black female comics who just auditioned for “SNL”

Friday, November 29, 2013

all! lets watch the realtime Ison journey meet the sun..provide by NASA! (432 replies)

all! lets watch the realtime Ison journey meet the sun..provide by NASA! (432 replies)
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


posted on Nov, 28 2013 @ 07:29 AM


Oooh, thanks Cheesy!

All things considered so far, I’m going to go with my gut on ISON and think it’s going to survive perihelion. It’s the brightness I’m not sure about, and it doesn’t help that there’s so many varying predictions out there based on this, that & the other. It would be great if everyone could just say “Dunno, but we’ll find out!” instead of tossing out guess after guess.


And forget the popcorn, Nyiah’s cooking up some BBQ chicken for Thanksgiving perihelion watch. The only thing I’m missing out of game day foods is the freakin’ nachos (i forgot)




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Read more about all! lets watch the realtime Ison journey meet the sun..provide by NASA! (432 replies) and other interesting subjects concerning Hot Topics at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Meet the tweeting, blogging undertaker


John Brecher / NBC News



Funeral director Caleb Wilde in the Upper Octorara Cemetery, a site often visited by his family business.




By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News


He tweets. He blogs. He embalms.


Caleb Wilde is a sixth-generation mortician, working for the family business in small-town Pennsylvania — a Victorian-style funeral home where the only visible concessions to modernity are two big-screen televisions used by overflow crowds to watch a service.


But when he’s not making 2 a.m. house calls and loading “customers” (the deceased)  into “the pickup” (the hearse), Wilde is engaged in the most modern of pursuits: spreading his very intimate view of death on the web.


The 32-year-old from Parkesburg, Pa. (pop. 3,628)  may just be the undertaker for the overshare generation.


He has more than 8,000 Twitter followers. He says his blog, Confessions of a Funeral Director, gets 80,000 visits a month and his Facebook page has drawn up to 500,000 hits in a week.


His goal: to demystify death and shine some light on the funeral industry with a mix of humor and helpful hints (don’t smoke cigarettes soaked in embalming fluid and don’t sext at a wake).


John Brecher / NBC News



Caleb Wilde poses with his father and grandfather, who came before him as funeral directors in Parkesburg, Penn.




“Death gives you an important perspective on life,” the former theology student says. “It’s a tragedy not to think about death.”


The Wilde family has been in the death business since 1888, but Caleb didn’t have any plans to join them until he realized he couldn’t make ends meet as a humanitarian worker in Madagascar and came aboard 12 years ago.


He started the blog about a year and a half ago and made enough of a splash that a cable TV channel asked him to submit an audition tape for a possible reality show about death rituals around the world that never got off the ground.


Some entries read like Emily Post channeling the Grim Reaper: “If you’re attending a funeral, the best piece of advice I can give you is this: Turn your phone off,” “A family funeral is not a great second date” or “Don’t expect the funeral home staff to let you in on the family dirt. We will not be the source for #NOTTHEBABYDADDY on your Twitter feed.”


Wilde says he began his own Twitter feed so he could reach a younger, hipper audience and “push the envelope” with breezy 140-character commentaries on amusing obituaries, tricked-out hearses, and headstones with unusual names.


He invented the hashtag #hearsebombing for snaps of the funeral home’s modified Chrysler Town and Country in incongruous locations, like the parking lot of Chili’s.


There have been missteps. A post-mortem photo he grabbed off the Internet and put on his Facebook page offended some followers, and when he griped about evening viewings, the daughter of a man who was about to have one sent a sheepish apology.


He gets hate mail from people who think he’s too irreverent — well, he did take a selfie in a casket, practicing his “death look” — or too open about industry secrets.


To wit, a recent post about embalming contained this nugget: “In most states, what is pushed out of the body goes down the drain and out into public sewage. Now you know.”


Wilde’s father, Bill, says he think the blog is “cool” and jokes that his son is “our movie star.” His grandfather, Bud, who boasts that he still dresses most of the bodies for funerals, is less enthralled.


“I don’t read it. I don’t think I’d like it,” he says.


Robby Bates, president of the National Funeral Directors Association, said he had not heard of Wilde but after reading his blog declared him “the future.”


“The more information our families have, the better they’re going to be served,” Bates said.


John Brecher / NBC News



Funeral director Caleb Wilde picks up a deceased person from Brandywine Hospital in Coatesville, Penn.




Wilde thinks pulling back the curtain is healthy for a business that got a bad rep with the 1963 publication of Jessica Mitford’s scathing expose “The American Way of Death.”


“Funeral directors can take advantage of people, and a lot of them do,” he says, citing gougers here and there who encourage the bereaved to buy a casket before a cremation, push the most expensive merchandise, or convince the grieving their loved one must be embalmed at extra cost.


Educating the public also dispels misconceptions, like the idea that funeral directors are rolling in it, he says. Wilde drives a BMW M3, but it’s a 2001, and “the bank owns most of it.”


“We don’t make a lot of money. It’s a living but it’s not an upper-class living.”,” he says, pegging the average salary of an independent mortician at about $ 50,000. Plus, as he noted in a blog post, the hours are brutal, and so are the smells.


“The other ‘misconception’ is that we’re weird,” he adds. “But that one’s true. Being around death all the time makes you different.”


For Wilde, a decade of ushering folks into the hereafter has shaken his religious beliefs and made him turn to anti-depressants. But it’s also encouraged the married dad — he and his wife adopted a boy more than a year ago — focus on the here and now, something he wants his readers to do.


“We kind of live as though we’re immortal,” he says. “I don’t want to have any regrets because life is fleeting.”


Wilde has, of course, thought about his own death.


“I want a natural burial” — no embalming, the body displayed in his home instead of a mortuary. As for the casket, his pick might be considered heresy by a different breed of funeral director.


“Something small,” he says. “And inexpensive.”






Meet the tweeting, blogging undertaker

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

White House Fails to Meet Climate Change Pledge

The Obama administration has failed to abide by its promise to join developed nations in giving poor countries $ 100 billion by 2020 to fight climate change.

A new Oxfam report, which coincides with the a United Nations meeting in Poland this week aimed at assessing international efforts on the issue, says there has been a lot of confusion about what exactly was pledged, reports the Washington Times.


“What is needed is certainty in uncertain times,” Kelly Dent, a spokeswoman for the British-based relief charity told the newspaper. “The U.S. needs to provide certainty to developing countries that it is actually serious about the 2020 commitment and it needs to increase its commitments to reach the 2020 goal.”


Industrialized countries including the U.S., the United Kingdom, France, and Germany agreed to donate the money during a 2009 UN meeting in Copenhagen, but four years later they are said to be far from meeting that target.


“They’re not doing anywhere near enough,” Dent told the Times, adding, “The only ones that are close to doing what is needed are the U.K. and Germany.”


The $ 100 billion fund is at the center of the talks in Warsaw, where representatives of more than 190 countries have gathered to lay the groundwork for a global agreement on climate change, reports The Washington Post.


“Warsaw, even more than usual, is a stop along the way toward accomplishments in the longer term,” said Nathaniel Keohane, vice president of the Environmental Defense Fund’s international climate program, adding, “I don’t think anyone is expecting a major landmark in Warsaw.”


Meanwhile, Oxfam estimates that the U.S. donated $ 7.5 billion dollars to the global fund from 2010 through 2012, but in 2013 Washington gave just $ 1.6 billion.


“I hope President Obama is able to follow through on what he has promised,” Dent said, adding, “It remains to be seen whether he can follow through on his promises to reduce emissions.”


The State Department’s special envoy for climate change, Todd Stern, said in a speech in London last month that an increase in funding from developed countries is not likely.


“Now, the hard reality: no step change in overall levels of public funding from developed countries is likely to come anytime soon,” he said at Chatham House.


“The fiscal reality of the United States and other developed countries is not going to allow it.”

Related stories:


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




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White House Fails to Meet Climate Change Pledge

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Meet Betty Who, the 22-Year-Old Poised to Be Pop"s Next Big Star


Betty Who has only released four songs, but she’s about to be famous. The Berklee-educated, Australian-born singer-songwriter released a short EP called The Movement last April. It’s a glistening pop record that recalls the sounds of 80s pop stars like Whitney Houston, and the themes of unrequited love from every decade and songwriter of all time. The album was met with decent press and some interest within the industry, and the then 21-year-old Australian was justifiably content with its positive reception. On the strength of the album and her shows, she was in talks with RCA Records about a full-fledged record contract.


Then, a man proposed to his husband through a flashmob dance routine in Home Depot set to her lead single,  — an irrepressibly optimistic pop number — and posted a video of the event to Youtube. The video went viral, Betty Who got unprecedented press, and, days later, she signed with RCA. With her first full-length album only months away from a major label release, Betty Who is on the brink of stardom.


PolicyMic caught up with the singer shortly after her 22nd birthday to figure out how she writes, where she’s going, and what kind of celebrity meltdown we can expect from her once she becomes a full-fledged star.


Ben Naddaff-Hafrey (BNH): What’re you up to in LA?


Betty Who (BW): Making new music, actually. I’m working on a full-length right now with my producer so he and I have been getting up early, stopping by the café to pick up breakfast, and then heading back to his house and locking ourselves in and working. It’s actually kind of perfect for today because it’s the first time I have ever seen it rain in California.


BNH: This is your first LP then?


BW: It’s my first. It will have the songs from The Movement on it and then I had worked on a second EP before signing with RCA, so the four songs from that EP will also be on the full-length, and then a couple extra that I’m working on currently with [my producer] Peter [Thomas].


BNH: You just turned 22 (happy birthday). For how many of those years have you wanted to be a pop star?


BW: Definitely about 16 of them. I remember being about five or six and wanting to do this. There were a lot of moments in my life when I thought I would do something else because, you know — that’s kind of how it happens — but everything was just kind of a means to an end to get where I am right now.


BNH: What was the moment when you realized that this was definitely what you wanted to do?


BW: I think when I went to a summer program for singing and songwriting when I was 17. That was the first time I’d ever been anywhere where I was a vocalist. I’d been a cello principle on everything else — all of the youth programs and schools I’d been at — so it was nice to be somewhere and not have to worry about people wondering if I played cello. All of that stuff fell away from it, and that was it for me.


BNH: How do you write your songs? They’ve got pretty massive hooks in the choruses; do you write the choruses first and then build out from there or vice versa [no pun intended]?


BW: Usually the choruses actually come last for me. I’m actually obsessed with writing verses and I could write verses for days and then the chorus happens and I’m like, ”Ok, it’s time to get down to it.” The choruses usually take the longest, that’s what I spend the most time nit-picking over. But other than that it’s different with every song. It depends if I start with a guitar or piano or I start with a track or I’m in a room with my producer, everything is different. But usually I start with the verse first.


BNH: Which songwriters do you look up to?


BW: I definitely look up to Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Carole King, Michael Jackson — kind of the singer-songwriters of two generations before me who I’ve been obsessed with recently. My producer is getting me really into Prince. Phoenix is a band that I’m going through my phase of right now. I’m late to the game. 


BNH: Where does the name “Betty Who” come from?


BW: I had written this song when I was 17 and named it “Betty Who,” and then I took the name from it and put it as my name a couple years later when the project started. It was about this boy who wouldn’t love me because he was too conservative and I had too many gay friends.


BNH: After having wanted to be a pop star for this long, it must feel pretty incredible to sign with RCA. What’s that been like?


BW: It’s been so busy that I haven’t really even had that many moments where I’ve gotten to sit back and be like “how awesome does this feel?” Which I guess I kind of prefer — I’d prefer not to be like, ”Yeah! This is awesome.” And then not have anything happen. So it’s a great problem to have at this point. It’s surreal, and exciting, and totally nerve-wracking all at the same time. You know, I walk down the hall to my A&R at RCA and she has the Usher Confessions album art directly across her office in the hallway. And then I walk past the Kings of Leon album art and I’m like “oh my God.” That’s the crazy part. 


BNH: Is there anyone of your favorite songwriters that you’d want to have writing you a song to sing?


BW: I think I would literally kill to have Miguel write a song for me. He’s on RCA, so maybe I won’t have to! I’m obsessed with everything he’s doing. His music is so new and different and individual and exciting, and is one of the best songs of the last 10 years, I think. So that’s definitely on my list.


BNH: What else have you been listening to besides Phoenix and Miguel?


BW: I have been listening to the new Drake album basically on repeat. I’m kind of obsessed with it at this point, I would say.


BNH: Most underrated song from any artist you love?


BW:  by Beyonce. “Kitty Cat” is done by Pharrell, and has the coolest chords and, is just my favorite Beyonce song of all time. And it’s never talked about as being a good Beyonce song.


BNH: Most overrated song?


BW:  Because I think that Taylor Swift has so many other songs that are better than that. And I think the lyrics in that song leave so much to be desired comparatively to some of the lyrics she’s written for other songs. I’m a big Taylor fan, so I think that “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” blew up so much more — not than it should have, just than I was expecting it to — and then some of her other music didn’t get as much attention.


BNH: Any unknown singer-songwriters that you’re especially into right now?


BW: Everytime someone asks me this question I have the same answer. Have you heard of King? King is this band — one of the girls went to Berklee but they’re all living in LA now — they’re so cool and great at what they do, and the two girls who sing in it have the most beautiful voices. It’s three girls, I think two of them are sisters maybe. And they have an EP out with three songs on it, and then a new single out and I think they’re coming out with an album in January. I saw them a couple of weeks ago and I was so blown away by them that it’s all I’ve been listening to. 


BNH: Last question, now that you’re clearly en route to being a big pop star, you should probably start thinking about your celebrity meltdown. What would be the best angle?


BW: I would like to think that I’d be kind of like Britney circa 2007. That was my first really big celebrity meltdown that I remember having — you know like watching as a kid and really feeling connected to because the first tape I bought was Britney. So I think that I love the idea of — if I was going to do anything — I would shave my head and have a Vegas wedding. That feels right to me, you know? I think that’s probably where I would take it.


BNH: Good to know, I’ll keep an eye out.


BW: For sure, please do. Alert my parents.




PolicyMic



Meet Betty Who, the 22-Year-Old Poised to Be Pop"s Next Big Star