These kids are probably somewhat privileged to begin with, but I’m happy to see them take on the industry. From the New York Times: Two men who worked on the hit movie “Black Swan” have mounted an unusual challenge to the film industry’s widely accepted practice of unpaid internships by filing a lawsuit on Wednesday asserting that the production company had violated minimum wage and overtime laws by hiring dozens of such interns. The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Manhattan, claims that Fox Searchlight Pictures, the producer of “Black Swan,” had the interns do menial work that should have been done by paid employees and did not provide them with the type of educational experience that labor rules require in order to exempt employers from paying interns. “Fox Searchlight’s unpaid interns are a crucial labor force on its productions, functioning as production assistants and bookkeepers and performing secretarial and janitorial work,” the lawsuit says. “In misclassifying many of its workers as unpaid interns, Fox Searchlight has denied them the benefits that the law affords to employees.” Workplace experts say the number of unpaid internships has grown in recent years, in the movie business and many other industries. Some young people complain that these internships give an unfair edge to the affluent and well connected . For whatever their motives may be, this is a good thing. When these entry-level, career-path creative jobs pay a decent wage, they will be an option for applicants of all backgrounds, not just the children of the rich and well-connected.
Continue reading …In Mexico City, “‘Til death do us part” may turn into “‘Til I’m sick of you.” Leftist lawmakers in the city’s assembly are proposing a new amendment that eliminates the eternal bliss component from a marriage contract, providing couples with an easier exit strategy than divorce. The new legislation, designed to avoid the hassle of
Continue reading …Are you a Starbucks Rewards Member? If you are, you probably got this awesome warm-and-fuzzy feeling email today about how you could help Starbucks help needy schools by funding Bill Gates’ DonorsChoose.org initiative. It all sounds great, doesn’t it? msnbc’s Morning Joe and Starbucks encourage you to support public schools through DonorsChoose.org. Starting October 4th, Starbucks retail stores and participating grocery stores will feature a select number of marked bags of Gold Coast Blend®- Morning Joe Edition coffee with $5 DonorsChoose.org donation stickers*. To direct funding to the public school classroom project of your choice visit DonorsChoose.org/starbucks**. [...and the fine print...] **Offer only available through codes found on specially-marked packages of Starbucks® Gold Coast Blend® – Morning Joe Edition coffee. We will donate $5 for every code entered through 12/31/2011, until $600,000 has been given. Enter your code at www.donorschoose.org/starbucks then choose a classroom project to receive the $5 donation. Codes expire on 12/31/2011 at 11:59 pm EST. Donations can only be directed to existing projects on DonorsChoose.org. Coffee purchases and this $5 donation are not tax-deductible. For promotional details and restrictions, visit www.donorschoose.org/starbucks. Awww, isn’t that nice? A special blend for the conservative dude on the so-called “liberal” channel, and all you have to do is buy it to send five bucks off to DonorsChoose.org, which until recently I supported for the most part. The idea behind DonorsChoose is for teachers to put up a wish list for their classrooms, and small donors to fulfill it with…small donations. This is all great except that it now includes charter schools, which already receive plenty of money from big donors, including a lot of very, very far right wing donors. It’s also symptomatic of a larger issue, which is the abject underfunding of our schools. What’s next? A $5 donation for every bag of Bill O’Reilly Decaf Blend? Or maybe the Erick Erickson Afternoon Teabag? Howard Schultz, as you may recall, is the kahuna behind the effort to de-fund certain candidates running for office by withholding contributions until they step up to his tune.. This would be just awesome for those of us who think corporate money has too much influence over politics, except that Schultz’ effort, if successful, would punish Democratic candidates at the local, state and federal levels while leaving conservative candidates to happily continue collecting their big donations at the door, given that Schultz and his friends are the sort of Third Way types who put a lot of money toward Democrats, but expect those Democrats to deliver corporate help. So maybe Schultz isn’t a conservative in liberals’ clothing. But the net effect of what might otherwise be a noble effort is to raise visibility to the one professed conservative on the MSNBC network with one effort, while starving Democratic candidates of donations on the other. We can argue all day long about whether or not it’s a good thing for Democrats to be starved of corporate donations. It may well be. But it certainly doesn’t bode well for competing in states where lots of conservative corporate money is landing. In honor of Schultz’ deeply charitable effort to pimp Joe Scarborough’s show, I’m going to make a donation to the Blue America candidates . Give up that Morning Joe blend and join me?
Continue reading …Click here to view this media One of the foremost business investors on the planet doesn’t know much about capitalism, according to Governor Goodhair of Texas. ANDREW SORKIN, CNBC: Governor Perry, real quick. Warren Buffett is going to be in new york tomorrow for an obama fund-raiser. Curious about your thoughts on the Buffet Rule. Gov, RICK PERRY: I think it’s right down to the real problem that we’ve got in Washington, D.C. an administration that is listening to people who really don’t have an understanding about what’s going on out there in the real world. you think — I respect — I think Mr. Buffet is a really intelligent individual. I can promise you he doesn’t know what’s going on in places that where the job creation is at a zero because of overtaxation and overregulation. Dodd-Frank is strangling the small community banks across america. It needs to be repealed. We need to get Washington out of the business of overregulation. It’s killing our country. ANDREW SORKIN: Taxing millionaires? Do you believe ultimately is going to kill jobs? GOV. RICK PERRY: I think taxing millionaires is such a fake way to talk about what’s going on in this country.
Continue reading …MIA on a trapeze high above New York, Diane Keaton flat on the floor, a windswept Marion Cotillard… great photographers on how they found new ways to shoot some of the world’s most photographed stars
Continue reading …MIA on a trapeze high above New York, Diane Keaton flat on the floor, a windswept Marion Cotillard… great photographers on how they found new ways to shoot some of the world’s most photographed stars
Continue reading …Obama welcomes news of Awlaki’s death in US air strike, and says dual US-Yemeni citizen advanced ‘murderous agenda’ A missile fired from an American drone has struck and killed a radical US-born Islamic cleric in Yemen , bringing an end to a controversial, two-year manhunt but reigniting questions over the targeting of a US citizen on foreign soil. Anwar al-Awlaki, a dual US-Yemeni citizen, has been one of America’s top targets in its fight against al-Qaida. His firebrand rhetoric had become renowned on jihadi websites and is thought to have inspired many more followers. With a blog, a Facebook page and numerous YouTube videos of his sermons, he had increasingly been regarded by the US as one of the most dangerous al-Qaida leaders. President Barack Obama authorised a request to target Awlaki in April last year, making him the first US citizen to be a legal target for assassination in the post-9/11 years. He was one of two US citizens killed in the strike. Samir Khan, US-born editor of Al Qaeda’s online jihadist magazine, was also killed in the attack, according to Yemeni officials. Faced with accusations from critics on Friday afternoon that the administration had authorised an “extra-judicial murder”, White House officials sought to justify the strike on Awlaki officials as “self defence.” Obama welcomed the news of Awlaki’s death. At a ceremony at the White House to welcome the appointment of a new joint chief of staff for the US military, Obama broke from his prepared schedule to say Awlaki’s death was a major blow to America’s enemies and condemned him as a dangerous terrorist. “He repeatedly called on individuals in the United States and around the globe to kill innocent men, women and children to advance a murderous agenda,” Obama said. Awlaki is credited with inspiring or directing at least four plots against the US in recent years, three of which were unsuccessful – a shooting inside the Fort Hood military base, the failed Times Square bombing, the failed underwear bomber, and a parcel bomb hidden inside a printer that also failed to explode inside a passenger jet. The administration avoided giving details of the strike with experts saying they clearly feared further complicating their complex relations with Yemen. At a White House briefing spokesman Jay Carney dodged questions about the legality of the assassination and details of the US’s involvement. Nor would he confirm Khan’s death or how the bodies were identified. Asked if the White House would publish evidence that Awlaki was “operationally involved” in terrorism, Charney said: “Again, this is — the question is — makes us – you know, has embedded within it assumptions about the circumstances of his death that I’m just not going to address.” Awlaki’s exact role in al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula is much debated by security analysts: some claim he had a senior operational role, others say he had a more informal relationship, and some reports said he was at odds with the established leaders of the group. His key role, both locally and internationally, was as a propagandist and inspiration to potential terrorist operators. The bespectacled and bushy-bearded cleric usually appeared in videos dressed in traditional Yemeni long robe, headscarf and tribal dagger, but he spoke in conversational American English. With his native English and grasp of Western culture, Awlaki was able to make the often esoteric worlds of radical Islamist theology and Middle Eastern politics accessible and understable to a new audience in Europe and American, introducing political arguments more familiar to listeners who may have had limited understanding of their professed faith. Awlaki was also linked to failed plots to target British and European interests, according to security officials. The attempted murder of the MP Stephen Timms was inspired by Awlaki’s sermons, and a British Airways employee, Rajib Karim, was convicted in February of plotting attacks against the airline. Awlaki was born in New Mexico in 1971 to Yemeni parents who took him back to Yemen after early childhood. He returned to the US in 1991 to attend college. US authorities believe he came into contact with at least two of the 9/11 hijackers while giving sermons at a San Diego mosque. He is believed to have been killed at 9.55am on Friday morning at a site 90 miles (140km) east of Sana’a between the provinces of Marib and al-Jawf in what is believed to have been an air strike. Few details have been released about the strike – not least because the Obama administration is wary of further destabilising the embattled regime of Yemeni president Ali Abdulla Saleh. But witnesses say that Awlaki was boarding a 2005 Toyota Hilux along with five other supporters when the US drone attack hit the vehicle. Initial reports suggest that it was the drone was operated by the CIA, working alongside the US joint special operations command team that directed the Osama bin Laden assassination. The death of Awlaki is the most significant blow to the al-Qaida organisation since Bin Laden was assassinated in May. He was one of the few senior operatives orientated to western ways, and in recent years had become increasingly strident in his calls for Muslims to wage jihad against the US. The CIA and the US military have used drones to target al-Qaida officials in Yemen and had placed Awlaki near the top of a hit list. Yemeni officials initially said they were not yet sure who had killed him. However, they released details of the killing within several hours of it happening, suggesting that Sana’a was either directly involved or well-briefed by the US. Perhaps mindful of the difficult circumstances in Yemen, Obama was careful to praise the country’s involvement in the strike and stress that Islamic militants have carried out many attacks in Yemen. “Awlaki and his organization have been directly responsible for the deaths of many Yemeni citizens,” he said. “His hateful ideology and targeting of innocent civilians has been rejected by the vast majority of Muslims and people of all faiths, and he has met his demise because the government and the people of Yemen have joined the international community in a common effort against al-Qaida.” In a comment piece for the Guardian , former general Wesley Clark said Alwaki’s “death makes his final legacy a proof of the effectiveness of America’s active defense against terrorists.” Would-be Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry praised Obama and the US military for the death of “American-raised al Qaida leader.” But not all reaction was positive. The campaign to take out Alwaki has been criticised by some as a worrying development where the US government can undertake to kill a US citizen without any form of trial. Republican presidential candidate, libertarian-leaning congressman Ron Paul, spoke out against the attack. “Nobody knows if he [Awlaki] ever killed anybody,” Paul said after a political event in New Hampshire where he is currently campaigning. “If the American people accept this blindly and casually … I think that’s sad,” he added. Paul is a long-standing critic of American foreign policy and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The American Civil Liberties Union also condemned the attack. The organisation, which campaigns on legal and human rights issues, put out a strongly-worded statement saying the strike was a clear violation of both US and international law. “This is a programme under which American citizens far from any battlefield can be executed by their own government without judicial process, and on the basis of standards and evidence that are kept secret not just from the public, but from the courts,” said ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer. He added: “It is a mistake to invest the president – any president – with the unreviewable power to kill any American whom he deems to present a threat to the country.” Anwar al-Awlaki al-Qaida Yemen United States Global terrorism Middle East Martin Chulov Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Obama welcomes news of Awlaki’s death in US air strike, and says dual US-Yemeni citizen advanced ‘murderous agenda’ A missile fired from an American drone has struck and killed a radical US-born Islamic cleric in Yemen , bringing an end to a controversial, two-year manhunt but reigniting questions over the targeting of a US citizen on foreign soil. Anwar al-Awlaki, a dual US-Yemeni citizen, has been one of America’s top targets in its fight against al-Qaida. His firebrand rhetoric had become renowned on jihadi websites and is thought to have inspired many more followers. With a blog, a Facebook page and numerous YouTube videos of his sermons, he had increasingly been regarded by the US as one of the most dangerous al-Qaida leaders. President Barack Obama authorised a request to target Awlaki in April last year, making him the first US citizen to be a legal target for assassination in the post-9/11 years. He was one of two US citizens killed in the strike. Samir Khan, US-born editor of Al Qaeda’s online jihadist magazine, was also killed in the attack, according to Yemeni officials. Faced with accusations from critics on Friday afternoon that the administration had authorised an “extra-judicial murder”, White House officials sought to justify the strike on Awlaki officials as “self defence.” Obama welcomed the news of Awlaki’s death. At a ceremony at the White House to welcome the appointment of a new joint chief of staff for the US military, Obama broke from his prepared schedule to say Awlaki’s death was a major blow to America’s enemies and condemned him as a dangerous terrorist. “He repeatedly called on individuals in the United States and around the globe to kill innocent men, women and children to advance a murderous agenda,” Obama said. Awlaki is credited with inspiring or directing at least four plots against the US in recent years, three of which were unsuccessful – a shooting inside the Fort Hood military base, the failed Times Square bombing, the failed underwear bomber, and a parcel bomb hidden inside a printer that also failed to explode inside a passenger jet. The administration avoided giving details of the strike with experts saying they clearly feared further complicating their complex relations with Yemen. At a White House briefing spokesman Jay Carney dodged questions about the legality of the assassination and details of the US’s involvement. Nor would he confirm Khan’s death or how the bodies were identified. Asked if the White House would publish evidence that Awlaki was “operationally involved” in terrorism, Charney said: “Again, this is — the question is — makes us – you know, has embedded within it assumptions about the circumstances of his death that I’m just not going to address.” Awlaki’s exact role in al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula is much debated by security analysts: some claim he had a senior operational role, others say he had a more informal relationship, and some reports said he was at odds with the established leaders of the group. His key role, both locally and internationally, was as a propagandist and inspiration to potential terrorist operators. The bespectacled and bushy-bearded cleric usually appeared in videos dressed in traditional Yemeni long robe, headscarf and tribal dagger, but he spoke in conversational American English. With his native English and grasp of Western culture, Awlaki was able to make the often esoteric worlds of radical Islamist theology and Middle Eastern politics accessible and understable to a new audience in Europe and American, introducing political arguments more familiar to listeners who may have had limited understanding of their professed faith. Awlaki was also linked to failed plots to target British and European interests, according to security officials. The attempted murder of the MP Stephen Timms was inspired by Awlaki’s sermons, and a British Airways employee, Rajib Karim, was convicted in February of plotting attacks against the airline. Awlaki was born in New Mexico in 1971 to Yemeni parents who took him back to Yemen after early childhood. He returned to the US in 1991 to attend college. US authorities believe he came into contact with at least two of the 9/11 hijackers while giving sermons at a San Diego mosque. He is believed to have been killed at 9.55am on Friday morning at a site 90 miles (140km) east of Sana’a between the provinces of Marib and al-Jawf in what is believed to have been an air strike. Few details have been released about the strike – not least because the Obama administration is wary of further destabilising the embattled regime of Yemeni president Ali Abdulla Saleh. But witnesses say that Awlaki was boarding a 2005 Toyota Hilux along with five other supporters when the US drone attack hit the vehicle. Initial reports suggest that it was the drone was operated by the CIA, working alongside the US joint special operations command team that directed the Osama bin Laden assassination. The death of Awlaki is the most significant blow to the al-Qaida organisation since Bin Laden was assassinated in May. He was one of the few senior operatives orientated to western ways, and in recent years had become increasingly strident in his calls for Muslims to wage jihad against the US. The CIA and the US military have used drones to target al-Qaida officials in Yemen and had placed Awlaki near the top of a hit list. Yemeni officials initially said they were not yet sure who had killed him. However, they released details of the killing within several hours of it happening, suggesting that Sana’a was either directly involved or well-briefed by the US. Perhaps mindful of the difficult circumstances in Yemen, Obama was careful to praise the country’s involvement in the strike and stress that Islamic militants have carried out many attacks in Yemen. “Awlaki and his organization have been directly responsible for the deaths of many Yemeni citizens,” he said. “His hateful ideology and targeting of innocent civilians has been rejected by the vast majority of Muslims and people of all faiths, and he has met his demise because the government and the people of Yemen have joined the international community in a common effort against al-Qaida.” In a comment piece for the Guardian , former general Wesley Clark said Alwaki’s “death makes his final legacy a proof of the effectiveness of America’s active defense against terrorists.” Would-be Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry praised Obama and the US military for the death of “American-raised al Qaida leader.” But not all reaction was positive. The campaign to take out Alwaki has been criticised by some as a worrying development where the US government can undertake to kill a US citizen without any form of trial. Republican presidential candidate, libertarian-leaning congressman Ron Paul, spoke out against the attack. “Nobody knows if he [Awlaki] ever killed anybody,” Paul said after a political event in New Hampshire where he is currently campaigning. “If the American people accept this blindly and casually … I think that’s sad,” he added. Paul is a long-standing critic of American foreign policy and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The American Civil Liberties Union also condemned the attack. The organisation, which campaigns on legal and human rights issues, put out a strongly-worded statement saying the strike was a clear violation of both US and international law. “This is a programme under which American citizens far from any battlefield can be executed by their own government without judicial process, and on the basis of standards and evidence that are kept secret not just from the public, but from the courts,” said ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer. He added: “It is a mistake to invest the president – any president – with the unreviewable power to kill any American whom he deems to present a threat to the country.” Anwar al-Awlaki al-Qaida Yemen United States Global terrorism Middle East Martin Chulov Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Most people are aware that The Onion is a satirical site and should not be taken seriously. But apparently their recent post mocking the economic hostage-taking we’ve seen from members of Congress — and taking that to its most absurd end — with them literally taking schoolchildren hostage, didn’t sit so well with the Capitol Police this Thursday. While I can understand their agitation, since I’m sure they had to deal with many people that did not understand this was satire. But I have absolutely no sympathy for our current members of Congress, who deserve to be raked over the coals as they were by The Onion . Here’s the story from The Onion that had them terribly upset — Congress Takes Group Of Schoolchildren Hostage : ‘We Need $12 Trillion Or All These Kids Die’ WASHINGTON—Brandishing shotguns and semiautomatic pistols, members of the 112th U.S. Congress took a class of visiting schoolchildren hostage today, barricading themselves inside the Capitol rotunda and demanding $12 trillion dollars in cash. House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), who has emerged as spokesman for the bipartisan group, informed FBI negotiators this morning that the ransom was to be placed in stainless-steel suitcases and left on the Capitol steps by 4 p.m. sharp. If their demands are not met in full, the 11-term representative announced, “all the kids will die.” “Bring us the money and we let the children go, simple as that,” said Boehner, appearing in the East Portico with a serrated switchblade held to one of the fourth-grader’s throats. “If you want to play games and stall for extra time, we’re going to shoot one kid an hour, starting with little Dillon here.” “Tick tock,” he added, vanishing back into the building with the terrified child in tow. I won’t share any more here because the next line is not safe for work, so just go read the rest. As humorous as their post was, reading their Twitter feed today was laugh out loud funny and possibly more humorous if you got the joke as well and I’ll share some of that below the fold. Here are a few of their Tweets on this article that came in throughout the day and you can follow their entire timeline here . enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Most people are aware that The Onion is a satirical site and should not be taken seriously. But apparently their recent post mocking the economic hostage-taking we’ve seen from members of Congress — and taking that to its most absurd end — with them literally taking schoolchildren hostage, didn’t sit so well with the Capitol Police this Thursday. While I can understand their agitation, since I’m sure they had to deal with many people that did not understand this was satire. But I have absolutely no sympathy for our current members of Congress, who deserve to be raked over the coals as they were by The Onion . Here’s the story from The Onion that had them terribly upset — Congress Takes Group Of Schoolchildren Hostage : ‘We Need $12 Trillion Or All These Kids Die’ WASHINGTON—Brandishing shotguns and semiautomatic pistols, members of the 112th U.S. Congress took a class of visiting schoolchildren hostage today, barricading themselves inside the Capitol rotunda and demanding $12 trillion dollars in cash. House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), who has emerged as spokesman for the bipartisan group, informed FBI negotiators this morning that the ransom was to be placed in stainless-steel suitcases and left on the Capitol steps by 4 p.m. sharp. If their demands are not met in full, the 11-term representative announced, “all the kids will die.” “Bring us the money and we let the children go, simple as that,” said Boehner, appearing in the East Portico with a serrated switchblade held to one of the fourth-grader’s throats. “If you want to play games and stall for extra time, we’re going to shoot one kid an hour, starting with little Dillon here.” “Tick tock,” he added, vanishing back into the building with the terrified child in tow. I won’t share any more here because the next line is not safe for work, so just go read the rest. As humorous as their post was, reading their Twitter feed today was laugh out loud funny and possibly more humorous if you got the joke as well and I’ll share some of that below the fold. Here are a few of their Tweets on this article that came in throughout the day and you can follow their entire timeline here . enlarge enlarge enlarge enlarge
Continue reading …