Tuesday, March 31, 2015

How to delete all your embarrassing tweets before you become famous

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Oh, Internet. As newly-minted The Daily Show host Trevor Noah is learning, hell hath no furry like old tweets discovered to embarrass those new to the public spotlight.

Within hours of the announcement that Noah would replace Jon Stewart as host of Comedy Central's The Daily Show, old tweets by Noah surfaced

Whether the tweets are offensive or merely poor attempts at humor (a different kind of offense altogether), the Internet shame machine is out in full force.

Noah, like so many other individuals thrust from obscurity and into the limelight, forgot the first rule of social media: Delete that embarrassing social media paper trail! Read more...

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Morgan Spurlock, 'One Direction: This Is Us' Director: Zayn Malik 'Struggled The Most' With Touring Demands

Morgan Spurlock got to know the men of One Direction pretty well while he was directing their documentary "This Is Us," and he told HuffPost Live on Tuesday that he always knew ex-member Zayn Malik struggled with fame.

Malik, who Spurlock called "probably my favorite guy in the band" and "probably the best singer in the group," announced last week that he was leaving One Direction to return to being "a normal 22-year-old who is able to relax and have some private time out of the spotlight."

Spurlock told HuffPost Live's Ricky Camilleri that he saw that sentiment in Malik from the time they met:

He always struggled with being on the road. He's a homebody. He wanted nothing more than to sit in his house and spray paint and draw and do art, and I think this explosion that happened to him -- which was something none of them ever predicted -- but I think he was the one who struggled with it the most. And being away, being on the road, being away from his girlfriend I think finally just got to him, and I think he said, "I'm done."


Unbeknownst to Spurlock, a Malik solo track called "I Won't Mind" was uploaded online less than a week after his departure was announced, leading to speculation that Malik actually left the band to pursue his own career.

Click here to watch the full HuffPost Live interview with Morgan Spurlock and the team behind AOL's new douseries "Connected."

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before.

Internet Sensation Freddie Wong Talks Shop Via Banff World Media's CONNECT L.A. Conference

So I'm chatting with Freddie Wong, producer of the wildly popular online series Video Game High School, whose company Rocket Jump is launching a new series this year with Hulu and Lionsgate. I'm an Atari 2600 guy who learned to edit with VHS, and teeny-tiny bits of film plus Scotch tape, so I dive headlong for our common ground: USC's School of Cinematic Arts. It turns out that Mr. Wong also cut actual film there -- in 2008, their penultimate class to do so -- but he offers further practical insight:

"When you break it down," says Freddie, "I think the fundamentals of filmmaking, of storytelling, haven't changed -- since, arguably, 1905. But in terms of the side of it that I think film schools are a little bit lagging behind is the idea of audience engagement; it's the idea of film as a populist medium. But the idea of film online, and video, is more populist than I think anybody could have ever conceived of. And this sort of world where building an audience is a very important thing, and it enables you to do a lot of stuff creatively, and enables you to get viewership for your projects. That's something that we've found, having left school, that we sort of figured out on our own."

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Freddie Wong and Amber J. Lawson
photo by Oscar Torres



The context is CONNECT L.A., last week's storytellers market that connected content producers, broadcasters, distributors and executives. The event featured face-to-face meetings for attendees with development executives from ABC, Disney, BET, CBS, CW, Sony, TNT, and others. Forgathering within West Hollywood's London Hotel were writers and business folk aplenty, including Community creator Dan Harmon, speaking with Yahoo's head of programming Ian Moffitt, and Sony's VP of Development Max Aronson, about moving his show (formerly at NBC) to a new audience at Yahoo. Similarly, Mr. Wong spoke with Beatrice Springborn of Hulu, and Jordan Gilbert of Lionsgate. CONNECT L.A.. serves as a SoCal lead-in to the huge annual Banff World Media Festival, way up in the Canadian Rockies, spearheaded by Robert Montgomery and Amber J. Lawson, CEO and Executive Producer with Achilles Media, respectively.

"It's really about deals," says Toronto-based entrepreneur Mr. Montgomery. "And one of the key focuses of Connect L.A. is in the meeting rooms, where we facilitate tons of relationships. One of the key deliverables that we see -- which emanated from the Banff World Media Festival, which is the biggest dedicated production and development market in the world -- the whole purpose and function of that is to profile key people who are making a difference in the industry, and connect them." Robert adds that, while they have developed a software platform, it's the face-to-face meetings (especially in the mountains, 90 minutes from an airport) that make their market work. "It's incredibly successful, and it's perfect for the future of entertainment."

Ms. Lawson, a mega-multihyphenate who is comedy-based and serious about it (she's CEO of charitable organization Comedy Gives Back) further opines about how new media and old studios are mixing it up:

"It's interesting," Amber J. states. "One of my friends is running the digital division at Warner Bros., and their whole goal is to create short-form content, leveraging the Warner Bros. library -- so their partnerships they're creating are with Google, and with the various platforms that are out there. It's something that I don't think they took very seriously, until now. It's happening. And they're aware of it. Because they can't be left out. They have to evolve, just like everybody else.

"I would say that this year we've seen a major uptick in that: in studios, this is a huge acquisition year! I know that Freddie Wong wasn't 'acquired' by Lionsgate, but huge pacts are forming, with production companies, with studios, with influencers: that's a big trend happening." Amber J. further suggests a win-win approach: "These are major media companies that are coming together, and they're not -- we don't live in a time where they're necessarily competitors, although there is competition, of course, there always will be. But it is more about collaboration, and that is more the ideal attitude of the business today."

The point, of course, is that these days, non-traditional distribution methods are taking off big time. Using two words rarely employed in polite parlance, I ask Freddie if he can cite a Gestalt behind his Internet success, or if he and his crew simply planned from the beginning to "pwn" it (pronounced "pone," he assures fledgling-hipster me).

"It was in 2010 that we started with YouTube," Freddie notes. "I was working on direct-to-TV, direct-to-DVD feature films [including Bear: which he kindly informs me features not insane CGI but a real grizzly bear], and at that time it was very clear: YouTube is a place where people are watching stuff; and YouTube is a place where you can build and grow an audience. And we had looked at guys like Kevin Smith, and these directors who -- hey, they can do whatever they want! They have an audience, and the audience will go and see their stuff! And so, for us, the goal was: Let's build an audience. Let's create cool content. Let's get people behind us as creators -- and behind the content itself. And then continue to serve the audience and grow the audience from there."

It was this "if a tree falls in the forest" perception of media (as he puts it: "If a show launches without an audience, will anybody stick around to watch it?") which turned Freddie's company Rocket Jump's germ of an idea with Video Game High School into a hit, and he's comfortable with the basic formula:

"The fundamental time-length formats -- and what I mean by that is a television show being 22 minutes long, or in that range; or a movie being in that 80-90-minute range -- we've experimented with that, in Video Game High School season one -- and what we eventually arrived at, with seasons two and three, is doing things television-length. There's a lot of reasons for it. It's about the right amount of time to be able to tell a longer-form story. I think 11 minutes, and 22 and 44, and 90-minute features are a thing, and they're a thing that works: they work on a script level; they work on a story level. It gives you time to engage with characters -- and that doesn't change." Internet sensation Freddie adds knowingly: "What does change is where you see things."

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Robert Montgomery, Randy Sklar, Freddie Wong, and Jason Sklar
photo by Oscar Torres



Mr. Montgomery elaborates, with a note on "monetization": "To the extent that digital storytellers are telling stories on video, there is no difference. All television is video, but not all video is television. I think a key take-away is that there's an honesty around that, that consumers are accepting of: no longer are people going, 'Oh, that's sponsored content.' If it has legitimacy, if it adds value to the experience of the consumer, they're good."

Adds Amber J.: "Being a digital native myself, I've seen the evolution of content: from short-form content, to broadcast-quality content, just starting on a different platform. Really it's just a matter of where the content is premiering. And as you can tell, by the numbers, it can cost little amounts of money, and that could be a licensed show around the globe. Or it could be a hundred million dollars, with House of Cards, on Netflix. It's been a democratization of content, in my opinion."

In closing, I poignantly reference the South Park episode, "Guitar Queer-O," wherein Stan's dad vainly (in both senses of the word) attempts to distract his son and friends from playing Guitar Hero with a real guitar, capably delivering "Carry On Wayward Son" (sans comma, alas; musicians) to the gaggle of stone-faced, apathetic gamers. Even some top musicians, accustomed to the old ways, are getting pissed off at digital royalties (or lack thereof). I ask Freddie how he thinks artists can better meet the new frontiers.

"I think if you were to track one trend that kind of comes throughout the history of art itself -- in terms of music, of film, especially music," replies Freddie, "it's the idea of authenticity. You see that come and go in waves throughout the entire history of music, be it jazz, be it pop music, or what-have-you. And I think we're due for another go-round, certainly on the music side -- of the idea of authenticity, and true musicianship, and instrumentation. But I think that's where everyone is! I think that art is a search for the representation of truth in this world. And that approach I don't think changes.

"I think that the way that you engage with the audience member, and the way that it comes into your eyeballs, and your brain, may be different, and it may change. But from an artistic perspective, I think that that pursuit has been the same since the beginning. And that never changes. What does change is the methodology, and the means -- and the craft itself maybe has the addition of technology to it; but technology has always aided an ease or clarity towards that search for truth -- and I think that if it doesn't, then it's very quickly discarded."

Official Site: Content Industry CONNECT L.A.

Official Site: Banff World Media Festival

Anonymous messaging app Yik Yak is testing a photo feature

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Yik Yak, the anonymous messaging app, is testing a new feature that would let users share photos, Mashable has learned.

Yik Yak is in the early stages of testing the feature on some college campuses for limited periods of time, sometimes as brief as several hours, in order to get feedback from users, according to sources familiar with the matter. Yik Yak confirmed the development to Mashable.

"Yakkers have told us that they’d love the option of adding a picture to their yak, so this is something we’re currently testing out on a handful of campuses," Yik Yak CEO Tyler Droll told Mashable in a statement. "There have been some great photo yaks so far, depicting everything from questions to sports victories to random funny moments. We’re excited to see what these communities share." Read more...

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Obama commutes sentences of 22 drug offenders

President Obama, who has stepped up his campaign this year to overhaul the nation's criminal justice system, commuted the sentences of 22 drug offenders Tuesday.More than a year ago the Justice Department launched an initiative aimed at granting clemency to nonviolent offenders, Obama had pardoned just eight people as part of the effort. All of those felons were serving lengthy prison sentences for crack cocaine offenses.Read full article >>






Tile Launches Sharing, Allowing Others To Help You Find Your Lost Items

tile1 Tile, the lost item tracker that you can attach to purses, keys, luggage, bikes or anything else that tends to go missing at times, is today rolling out a new feature designed to make it easier for people to get help finding their items. In an update to the company’s iOS and Android applications, users will now be able to share their Tiles with others, including friends, family,… Read More

Pence defends Indiana law, says state will ‘fix’ religious bill to say it will not allow discrimination

Indiana Gov. Mike Pence (R) vowed Tuesday morning that the state would alter its religious liberties bill in the wake of a controversy that has drawn widespread criticism to the state, even as he defended the law and insisted it was being unfairly portrayed in the media.Read full article >>






Social Media Management Company Sprinklr Raises $46M, Now Valued At More Than $1B

sprinklr experience cloud Sprinklr just announced that it has raised $46 million in new funding, at what it says is a valuation of more than $1 billion. The round was led by existing investors Battery Ventures, Intel Capital, and Iconiq Capital and brings the company’s total funding to $123.5 million. (Sprinklr’s last funding of $40 million was announced just under a year ago.) Read More

The last 50 years of Lego in true Lego form

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Though the classic brick has not changed since it was patented in 1958, the Lego brand has evolved greatly in the past half-century

The simple building toy has grown into an empire boasting enormous playsets, board games, video games and even an awesome movie (with a sequel on the way)

With sets related to Star Wars, Harry Potter, Batman, The Avengers and more, Lego has basically had your childhood locked down for decades

So what are the most popular playsets from the past 50 years? What gargantuan sets have the most pieces? We could have just given you the answers to these questions in a simple list, but where's the fun in that? Instead, we built an explanation, IRL, using Lego bricks. Read more...

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Poetry Coast to Coast: American Poets Paul Fericano and George Wallace

Paul Fericano and George Wallace


...the only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars.

-- Jack Kerouac, On The Road


In his newest collection, Hollywood Catechism, San-Francisco-born poet Paul Fericano sweeps up humor, irony and deep feeling in a winning trifecta. He takes the materials of popular culture -- from Elizabeth Taylor to The Three Stooges -- and makes of them something transcendent. Fericano rewrites Catholic liturgy, as in "The Director's Prayer", which begins, "Our Fellini / who Art in Carney, / Clooney be thy name," and ends not with "Amen" but, "Cut."

Yet, it is not all fun and games. For Fericano, founder of a support group for survivors of clergy abuse, male sexuality is inherently tied up with violence. A form of re-empowerment comes through satire. Master of the one-liner, Fericano sometimes delivers punch lines as titles, such as, "A Direct Correlation Between the War On Terror and the Proliferation Of Penis Enlargement Spam," and the chillingly prescient (a la Ferguson), "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man."

The poet also simultaneously admires and appropriates both Hollywood stars and famous poets, cutting everyone -- affectionately -- down to size. Obsessed since boyhood with the Three Stooges, poetic slapstick inhabits these poems in line after line that both hurts and makes us laugh. Indeed, Fericano may be said to be pulling off his own aesthetic -- "stoogery" -- delivered with same affection and dismay as the fool in King Lear's court.

These are poems that read like the messages in a bottle that might be written by the last sane man on Earth, when everyone else has gone mad.

In Poppin' Johnny, Long Islander George Wallace's poems explode on the page. Like the cartoon call-outs when Batman hits a bad guy in a punch-up scene, these poems are loaded with "pow," "bam," "biff." But, for all their muscular gestures, these poems also convey sensitivity and irony -- sometimes at once.

As much as Wallace has been called an inheritor of Kerouac, his heady and ecstatic proclamations can also be traced back to Whitman. Consider these lines from "Starlight! So Much Starlight":

[...] i saw starlight in

the coffins of the mad. i saw

starlight in the eyes of a dog.

i saw a man with a tin badge

he wore starlight on his chest.

handcuffs have it electric lights

have it window shades drawn

at night. [...]



These are poems obsessed with cars and dames, liquor and baseball. But beneath the brass-band bravado lie the horrors of "My First Dance" -- shaking a grown man's enormous sweaty hand, being pinned and kissed by a fat girl, drinking punch from a paper cup and sympathizing with the "four-legged madness of a dog / who was trying to do nothing more / complicated than just get away."

Yet even the most intimate moments are told in a vernacular slant, like when the speaker realizes in "How it Worked" that his lover is kissing him goodbye for the last time, and says:

i laid there like a pizza delivery guy with too / many pizzas to deliver who has fallen off his bicycle and / onto some wet pavement. i laid there like bambi on ice, / like flipper on a plate, and i looked back at her like roy / rogers trying to figure out what is wrong with his faithful / horse trigger.


These are poems as rough and vulnerable as manhood, as full of hope and heartbreak as the New World.

You could drive Route 66 from coast to coast to get a feel for the poetry of America. Or you could pick up copies of Fericano and Wallace, and read these poems out loud.

Portions of this article first appeared on robertpeake.com

Monday, March 30, 2015

IKEA's Better Shelter gives refugee camps a much-needed redesign

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The Swedish masters behind those DIY bed frames and bar stools have a new addition to their collection, but not one you'll find in IKEA catalogs

The "Better Shelter" is a weatherproof and sustainable refugee home developed in partnership between the IKEA Foundation and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). It looks nothing like its shoddy tarp-covered counterparts that have become the norm in refugee camps

Each 188-square-foot shelter can accommodate five people and comes equipped with a solar panel that powers an internal lamp and cellphone charger. Instead of canvas lining, Better Shelter's panels are made of a custom-designed plastic foam that provides thermal insulation Read more...

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Schrödinger’s Meerkat

schrodingers-meerkat We humans are mostly boring. Our daily activity, unless carefully curated by the entertainment complex, is mundane and few people outside of our immediate family and circle of friends care about us. It is into this cold, dark world that Meerkat was born. A “massive” hit at SXSW, the app allows us to stream live video to folks who follow us on Twitter. When you initiate a stream… Read More

Schrödinger’s Meerkat

schrodingers-meerkat We humans are mostly boring. Our daily activity, unless carefully curated by the entertainment complex, is mundane and few people outside of our immediate family and circle of friends care about us. It is into this cold, dark world that Meerkat was born. A “massive” hit at SXSW, the app allows us to stream live video to folks who follow us on Twitter. When you initiate a stream… Read More

How to Choose the Perfect Cookware

By Architectural Digest.

Being a good cook is about more than the recipes--you need the right equipment, too. Use our cookware guide to decide which pots and pans will work best for you.

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(photo: courtesy of Williams Sonoma)


COPPER
Copper is handsome and heats quickly and evenly. But it's like a top-of-the-line sports car: luxurious, costly, sometimes hard to handle, and high maintenance. Frequent polishing is required to keep it looking good, and regular use will eventually cause the tin lining (which protects against acidic foods) to wear through, leaving you susceptible to copper poisoning. To avoid that, the worn pan will have to be re-tinned by a craftsman.

Ruffoni Artichoke-Handled stockpots, hand-hammered copper lined in durable and nonreactive tin, with riveted brass handles. Available exclusively through Williams-Sonoma in sizes of 4.75 qt., 7.5 qt., and 12.75 qt., $325-$425. williams-sonoma.com, 877-812-6235.

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(photo: courtesy of All-Clad)


CLAD STAINLESS STEEL
Clad stainless steel is a metal sandwich of sorts: a layer of heat-conducting copper or aluminum coated with stainless steel. It's one of the easiest kinds of cookware to care for--many manufacturers now make dishwasher-safe pieces.

All-Clad stainless-steel ten-piece cookware set, $700. all-clad.com, 800-255-2523.

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(photo: courtesy of Williams Sonoma)


CAST IRON
Cast iron warms slowly but distributes heat evenly, whether the cookware is enameled or not. Plus, cast iron lasts forever. But keep in mind that it's quite heavy and that nonenamaled pieces need to be regularly "seasoned" with cooking oil to keep rust at bay and provide a nonstick cooking surface.

Lodge Cast Iron 12"-dia. preseasoned skillet, available through Williams-Sonoma, $36. williams-sonoma.com, 877-812-6235.

See more: 12 Unbelievably Gorgeous Rustic Kitchens

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(photo: courtesy of Calphalon)


ALUMINUM
Aluminum heats well and resists corrosion; it's also lightweight. But make sure you buy pots and pans with a protective anodized coating. Uncoated aluminum reacts with acidic ingredients, such as tomatoes and peppers, which can pit the metal and leach aluminum into your food.

Calphalon Contemporary hard-anodized nonstick-aluminum 11-piece cookware set, dishwasher safe and comes with a lifetime warranty, $400. calphalon.com, 888-626-9112.

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(photo: courtesy of Kitchenaid)


NONSTICK
Nonstick pans are easy to clean (that's why they were invented) but can be damaged when used over too-high heat or when cleaned with abrasives. Overheating also releases toxins. And avoid cooking with metal utensils, which can scratch.

Kitchenaid nonstick-aluminum ten-piece set, offered in red (shown) and black, $230. kitchenaid.com, 800-541-6390.

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(photo: Imusa)


CARBON STEEL
Carbon steel--often used for woks--heats very quickly, but, like cast iron, it needs to be seasoned to reduce sticking.

Imusa 14" nonstick-carbon-steel wok, available through Macy's, $40. macys.com, 800-289-6229.

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(photo: Le Creuset)


ENAMELED STEEL
Though not ovenproof, enameled steel is lighter than enameled cast iron, easy to clean, resistant to sticking, and it heats quickly and evenly.

Le Creuset 20-qt. enameled-steel stockpot, available in flame (shown), cherry, Marseille, and soleil, $160. lecreuset.com, 877-418-5547

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  • Gisele Bündchen and Tom Brady's Gorgeous L.A. Home