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03 Jun 17:52

May 29, 2015

03 Jun 17:51

June 03, 2015

03 Jun 17:51

Ceo Tosses Catbert - Dilbert by Scott Adams

03 Jun 17:50

- Dilbert by Scott Adams

03 Jun 17:46

May 30, 2015

03 Jun 17:46

May 29, 2015

01 Jun 11:49

The Sartorialist X Tod’s

by The Sartorialist
None!

third pic .. what is wrong with her knee?

TodsScott_0376I find the best collaborations are always with the companies I know best, and that I personally wear myself. Tod’s is a perfect example of this.

 

I’ve worn Tod’s boots across the streets and sidewalks of the world, and with the introduction of the Marlin, I hope to add a few boardwalks and boats with a few villas scattered in-between.TodsGiovanni8B1133

As you’ll see in the following set of images, I’m not alone. Tod’s gave me a chance to capture some of my friends and acquaintances across a two month period to try and understand how they personally epitomize the expanding concept of international Italian style.

tods-marlin-scott-schuman-the-sartorialist-8

TodsDevon6B7978

TodsDavid6B7631

 Click here to see more shots on the Tod’s Website

29 May 11:32

Drunken email wins over Anthony Bourdain

by Janet Nguyen
None!

Here's a lesson in how not to pitch your business to investors.

Or, maybe, exactly how to pitch your business to investors.

Anthony Bourdain — of all those travel and eating shows that aren't really about eating at all — has invested in food and travel website Roads & Kingdoms.

How, you might fairly ask, did someone as busy as Bourdain come to be an investor? Because one of the founders emailed him after drinking many glasses of sake.

Kids, don't try this at home

How to win over a potential investor? One man got drunk.
29 May 00:42

Heat wave death toll passes 1,000 in India

by Robert Garrova
None!

thats hot.

Streets are melting under intense 120 degree temperatures.
28 May 13:32

May 28, 2015

None!

haha. and also Macy's still has wooden escalators.

28 May 13:12

Alice Can Be Disrespectful - Dilbert by Scott Adams

27 May 17:36

May 22, 2015

Picture of girl standing near Baobab trees, Madagascar

Mother of the Forest

Photograph by Marsel van Oosten, National Geographic Your Shot

These baobab trees on Madagascar are up to 800 years old, writes Your Shot member Marsel van Oosten. Locally known as mother of the forest, the baobab forms a micro-ecosystem of its own, supporting life for both animals and humans, van Oosten says. Old hollow baobabs are a home to snakes, bats, bush babies, bees, and sometimes even humans. More importantly, the tree is an important source of waterit can store up to 4,000 liters of water in its trunk. For Africa, it is literally the tree of life.

This photo was submitted to Your Shot, our storytelling community. Check out the new book Getting Your Shot for more photos, plus tips and creative insights from Nat Geo experts.

27 May 17:35

REI Debuts the Youth-Dedicated “evrgrn” Line

by Stephanie Smith-Strickland
None!

i think that is like a blanket sleeping bag? im confused.

If you’re not an outdoor enthusiast, there are probably reasons. Perhaps the hot sun beating on your brow is something you’d rather avoid, or maybe the idea of a gnat finding its way into your beverage (and subsequently down your throat) makes your stomach turn; whatever it is, you say “I’ll pass” when you hear the words “great” and “outdoors.” We’re not judging, however we do have a solution, courtesy of REI.

The outdoor equipment maker has just unveiled the “evrgrn” collection, an 11-product sub-line specifically designed for young people who want to socialize outside in comfort and style. REI says it recognized that “the current generation, like generations before, is redefining itself in the outdoors.” In response, they wanted to create a line of products that catered to the shifting view of what an outdoor experience entails. With this goal in mind, REI’s designers developed “evrgrn” to emphasize style, function and spontaneity. I personally have an eye on the “Campfire Rocker,” “Downtime Hammock” and the bamboo-top picnic table. I also wouldn’t mind the “Starry Night” tent for my next camping trip. I suspect an uninhibited view of the stars would make up for the whole sleeping outside situation.

The collection runs between $25 and $250 and can be purchased through REI.

The post REI Debuts the Youth-Dedicated “evrgrn” Line appeared first on Selectism.

27 May 15:29

Charter moves to acquire Time Warner Cable

by tfitzsimons
None!

they spelled millions with a b

And why it may go more smoothly than the failed Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger.
27 May 15:15

FIFA officials charged with corruption

by Tobin Low
None!

the stack of money i got was about this big

Here's what we know:

-Seven FIFA soccer officials were arrested early Wednesday morning in Zurich as they prepared for their annual meeting.

-Nine FIFA officials and five corporate executives have been charged by the U.S. with a scheme that has allegedly been going on for 24 years, involving more than $150 million in bribes and kickbacks.

-A separate investigation by the Swiss Government was also launched to look into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup.

-The seven officials who await extradition to the U.S. for trial are FIFA Vice President Jeffrey Webb, FIFA Vice President Eugenio Figueredo, Eduardo Li, Julio Rocha, Costas Takkas, Rafael Esquivel and José Maria Marin.

-The arrests and charges come ahead of Sepp Blatter's expected re-election as president of FIFA—it would be his fifth term. So far, Blater is not among those who have been charged with corruption.

Several officials were arrested early Wednesday morning in Switzerland.
27 May 14:41

Hermanos

by Pablo Sandoval

Day One is a new Players’ Tribune series where athletes sit down with the people who’ve been in their life since the beginning, and discuss their journey to the pros. This installment features Pablo Sandoval of the Boston Red Sox in conversation with his brother, Michael.

Michael:
When we were little kids growing up in Venezuela, nobody had any real equipment. We didn’t have the means to buy it. But Pablo and I loved baseball, so we would improvise. We got really good at finding anything we could get our hands on in the neighborhood.

Pablo:
We used to make a ball by taking some duct tape and rolling, rolling, rolling it until it was almost round like a baseball. It would never be totally round — that made the ball a little harder to hit.

Venezuela Cabrera

Michael:
For the bat, we would take a big broom handle and cut it in half so that we would have two bats, in case we lost one. Sometimes we would play at the park when our friends were around but Pablo and I wanted to play all the time, so we used to play one-on-one in a garage behind our house.

Pablo:
You used to cheat so bad, man.

Michael:
I did. I was the older brother! It was my job to cheat to make you tough.

Pablo:
We didn’t have a catcher so we would mark a little square on the wall of the garage for the strike zone. This guy would be calling everything a strike, man.

baby_pabloMichael:
One day when I was about 13, and Pablo was 8, he got so mad. He was getting so good at hitting by then that I kept having to cheat more and more when I was the pitcher. I was throwing pitches way outside and calling them strikes, and I was talking shit, like, “Oh no, you’re losing little bro! Haha!”

Pablo:
I warned you. I knew what you were doing.

Michael:
He caught on and I kept shouting, “Steeee-trike! Steeeek-rike!”

Pablo:
I charged the mound.

Michael:
He came at me! He swung the bat at my leg.

Pablo:
It was a broom, man.

Michael:
Still, it hurt! I had an important Little League game the next day, and I couldn’t play because my leg was messed up.

Pablo:
What did you say to the coaches? “My 8-year-old brother beat me up.”

Michael:
I had no words, man.

Pablo Sandoval

Pablo:
We used to play every single day after school. People don’t understand how big baseball is in Venezuela. We didn’t get many MLB games on TV. We grew up watching the Venezuelan professional league. We wanted to be like those guys, you know?

Michael:
Pablo was born left-handed. But he wanted to be just like his hero Omar Vizquel, so he taught himself how to throw right-handed. He learned really fast. It took him about a month and he could throw both ways.

Pablo:
My dream growing up wasn’t to win the World Series — it was to win a championship with Navegantes del Magallanes in the Venezuelan league. We had a family friend who was a batboy for the team, so we would go and hang around the clubhouse with him. When the big league players came down to play winter ball, we would watch their every move. Vizquel, Andres Galarraga — those were our heroes. When I made it to the Giants and I was playing third base next to Vizquel … wow. I couldn’t believe it. It was a dream come true for me.

Michael:
Baseball in Venezuela is different than MLB. There’s only 60 regular season games, so every game is much more intense. The crowd is really wild in Venezuela. They get to the field at 4 p.m. for a 7 p.m. game. They put a lot of pressure on you to perform, especially if you have the reputation of being a big leaguer. You better do a good job.

SANDOVAL

Pablo:
Yeah, the crowd is so much crazier than the MLB crowd. This is a true story: We played on the road for the 2012 Venezuelan League championship. The stadium was normally 45 minutes away. It took our bus five hours to get through the city because of how crazy it was.

Michael:
Also, there’s cheerleaders, which is pretty cool.

Pablo:
When winter ball is going on, that’s all the entire country cares about. It’s a way for people to forget about what’s going on in the country for a little while and to have fun.

Michael:
I think once you have played in the Venezuelan league, there’s a little less pressure coming to MLB.  When you play there, you can’t be nervous anymore. The whole media — the whole country — has their eyes on you. That’s why so many players from Latin America have performed really well during the World Series.

World Series Tigers Giants Baseball

Pablo:
Game 1 of the 2012 World Series, I hit three home runs. I remember thinking, Man, I’ve already done this a thousand times before. But it was with a tape ball in the garage. The rule was whenever you hit it out of the garage, it was a home run.

Michael:
Nobody knows Pablo’s swing better than I do. Early on last season, he was struggling a little bit. I noticed a little thing in his mechanic that causing him to chase pitches and not recognize the breaking ball. So I called one of my friends in San Francisco, and I asked him to let me use his batting cage.

Pablo:
He called me up and said, “Hey, we’re going to the cages.” We had a long talk about what my mentality was when I was taking BP and when I stepped to the plate. I was trying to do too much. After that, I started hitting the ball a lot better.

Michael:
The perfect Pablo swing is when his hands stay behind. When he’s hitting left-handed and a right-handed pitcher throws him a slider to his back foot — wow. He’s going to hit that ball out of the park.

Pablo Sandoval

Pablo:
Hitting is all about your mentality. That’s one thing I learned from Galaraga. When things aren’t going well, you have to remember that you’re playing a game. Frustration is what can kill you. I play best when I’m having fun.

Michael:
I used to play winter ball with Marco Scutaro and Henry Blanco. I had a pretty good rookie season and they were saying, “Wow, you can really hit.” I remember telling them, “You think I’m good? Wait until you see my little brother, man.” They were laughing like, Yeah, sure.

Pablo:
When we won the Series, we were all taking a photo together, and Scutaro turned to Michael and said, “Hey, I guess your little brother is pretty good!”

Michael:

You know what though, bro? I tell you all the time — you have a World Series and a Venezuelan Championship, but I have the Caribbean Series title!

Pablo:
We’re going to have to play some one-on-one to settle this. I’m getting an umpire this time so you can’t cheat me.

Photographs By AP Photos

27 May 13:47

Where everybody knows your game

by Janet Nguyen
Gamers will now be getting their very own bars.
27 May 13:39

Shhh ... we're talking about Fight Club

by Mukta Mohan
None!

there are haikus ...?

The first rule of Fight Club is … do not talk about Fight Club. We’re going to break that rule, because there is now a sequel and it’s written in a completely different style than the original. Author Chuck Palahniuk teamed up with artists David Mack and Cameron Stewart to release a 10-part comic book that brings back Tyler Durden.

The first issue of Fight Club 2 hits shelves on Wednesday. Earlier this month, Palahniuk released a collection of short stories called Make Something Up: Stories You Can’t Unread.

On why he chose to bring back Fight Club:

I finally had the time to learn a new storytelling skill. I had about a year off, because my story collection was done. I was invited, kind of ambushed, at a dinner party by a bunch of comic people, including Brian Bendis and Matt Fraction. They really hammered on me about creating Fight Club 2 as a graphic novel, so I had the time and I had the peer pressure so, what the hell?

On how to write a comic book:

There’s so many different parts of that skill. As you see the two pages, the reader scans them all (to get) a general idea of what’s going to happen. The only moment you can surprise or shock the reader is when they turn the page. It’s called the page-turn reveal. So you’ve got to have a set up at the bottom of the right hand page, and you have to have a payoff at the top of the left hand page as they turn that page every time. It drives you crazy to pace a story so artificially!

On what his life has been like the past 19 years since Fight Club came out:

You know the biggest change, if I can be honest, is that both of my parents died. My father was killed in ‘99 and my mother died in 2009. I had to come to terms with how much of my performance was based on pleasing them and getting their approval and I had to find a way to motivate myself now that they were both gone.

On the sense of loneliness that his characters have:

So many of us think that if we can get money enough, we can kind of isolate ourselves in the country or in the penthouse, then we will be happy because we won’t be dealing with Sartre’s “other people,” and then when we do achieve that isolation, we realize we’ve never been more unhappy.

On the marketing of Fight Club 2:

I’ve been really pulled into the whole creative, the whole enterprise. I had to answer the letter columns. I had to write 200 haikus as Tyler Durden so those could be tweeted out gradually. I had to come up with all these little extras whenever there was a blank page, and I had to design a lot of the marketing things because this is supposed to be my baby…and that’s exciting.

Will there be a new movie?

There’s been interest, there’s also been some television interest — so people are just kind of holding their breath right now.

We're breaking the rules to talk about the sequel to Fight Club.
27 May 13:22

May 27, 2015

None!

this will be my wifey mid day today

27 May 13:13

Home prices and sales are up, but who's buying?

by Janet Nguyen
None!

a statistic i am

Young buyers boost the market and economy, but not to pre-recession levels.
27 May 13:11

May 27, 2015

Picture of a boy carrying a calf in Purulia, West Bengal, India

Cow-Eyed

Photograph by Jawed Alam, National Geographic Your Shot

Your Shot member Jawed Alam was passing through a village near the Purulia district of West Bengal, India, when he saw a boy and his calf standing in a field of wildflowers. Alam saw the perfect frame in the background of colorful flowers, the boys yellow T-shirt, and the black calf. I quickly adjusted my camera setting and started clicking pictures, he writes.

Alams image was recently featured in Your Shots Daily Dozen.

This photo was submitted to Your Shot, our storytelling community. Check out the new book Getting Your Shot for more photos, plus tips and creative insights from Nat Geo experts.

27 May 10:52

What Qatar doesn't want you to know about the 2022 World Cup

by Robert Garrova
None!

F these people.

BBC journalist Mark Lobel and his team recently traveled to Qatar at the invitation of the country’s prime minister.

Lobel was invited to go on a tour of new and improved migrant worker facilities that would address Qatar’s reputation of laborer mistreatment. With Qatar getting ready to host the 2022 World Cup, there’s been an influx of migrant workers to house.

But Lobel quickly found that he would not be allowed to complete a balanced report of Qatari labor camps.

“Eight cars drove us off the street, and we were taken in by intelligence officers, treated like spies if you like,” Lobel says.

After two nights in jail, Lobel was released. But he says he worries about what this will mean for future World Cup coverage.

“The fact that we were dealt with by security officers is the beginning of what I think could be a very worrying trend,” says Lobel.

BBC journalist Mark Lobel was detained for investigating Qatari labor camps.
27 May 00:49

There are 14,000 lobbying groups in Washington

by nmarshall-genzer
Thirty-five of them focus on dairy. Why? “We have to tell our story."
27 May 00:48

PODCAST: Beers and board games

by Tobin Low
An Apple promotion, a "Democratic Socialist" campaign, and a pub for gamers.
26 May 13:40

- Dilbert by Scott Adams

26 May 13:38

May 25, 2015

25 May 07:09

On the Street…Broadway, New York

by The Sartorialist
None!

teva's are now high fashion. only natural.

51915Megan6B8542Web

25 May 07:08

An egg-cellent shortage of eggs

by Tobin Low
None!

$12.7 billion
That's how much CVS Health Corp will reportedly pay to acquire Omnicare Inc, a pharmaceuticals provider. As Bloomberg reports, pharmaceutical companies are looking for ways to consolidate to take full advantage of the rising demand for pharmacy services.

87 percent
That’s the percentage of afflicted chickens in the recent avian flu outbreak that are egg-laying hens, according to the New York Times. And that potentially means big business for a company like Hampton Creek, which sells an egg substitute product. The chief executive of Hampton Creek says eight companies, including General Mills, have been in contact about purchasing supplies. It seems that without planning for the inevitable shortage of the real stuff, these companies might really lay an egg.

5 percent
That's how much sales for Old Navy increased last fiscal year. In an effort to shed its reputation as a store for cheap basics, Old Navy hired Stefan Larsson, who helped oversee H&M's expansion stateside. And the numbers show the style makeover has worked. That's good news for parent company Gap Inc., but leaves its sister franchise, The Gap, with an identity crisis—The Gap saw sales fall 5 percent in the same amount of time.

60
That's how old Disney will turn this summer. We take a look at how the economic ecosystem of the company works—from parlaying the success of films into merchandising, as well as attractions in one of many theme parks. Frozen, for example, was released two years ago, and the company is still reaping the benefits—its recent second quarter earnings report showed stronger-than-expected numbers.

$100 million
That's how much the city of Baltimore was given 20 years ago as part of a program called The Empowerment Zone. Delivered in the form of a block grant and a package of tax credits for businesses and employers, the award went to six cities, with some wiggle room for each to choose how the money could be used. Baltimore chose to focus on job creation in its poorest neighborhoods. Marketplace's Noel King recently took a trip to Baltimore to answer the question: How many jobs does $100 million get you?

Here are the numbers we're reading and watching for Thursday.
21 May 14:32

Brain Scan And 3 D Scanner - Dilbert by Scott Adams

21 May 13:26

The job application for Al-Qaeda

by Janet Nguyen
None!

On Wednesday, the U.S. government declassified a whole bunch of documents it found in Osama bin Laden's compound in Pakistan.

Lots of fascinating stuff — among them a job application to join Al-Qaeda, which will sound familiar to anyone who's ever filled out any job application.

These are all quotes:

"Please write clearly and legibly."
"Have you ever been in jail or prison?"
"List your previous occupations."
"Do you wish to execute a suicide operation?"
"Who should we contact in case you became a martyr?"

The U.S. Government declassified documents found in Osama Bin Laden's compound in Pakistan.