Nancy Upton took some pictures and made a Tumblr. Three weeks later, she’s on the “Today” Show. The plus-sized Texas woman, if you recall, entered American Apparel’s controversial “The Next Big Thing” plus-size modeling contest, where “booty-ful” girls were encouraged to post pictures of themselves on the retailer’s website in a chance to become the new face of American Apparel’s plus-size line. Upton found the entire project, which mocked the plus-size girls with sarcastic, punny language as it recruited them, to be insulting… so she submitted to the contest with some sarcastic (NSFW) pictures of her own. To her surprise, she won the contest. And American Apparel was none too happy, sending her a scathing letter saying, “We have decided to award the prizes to other contestants that we feel truly exemplify the idea of beauty inside and out, and whom we will be proud to have representing our company.” Big mistake. Since then American Apparel has backtracked, complimenting Upton and inviting her out to its factory in Los Angeles to meet with the company’s creative directors (who masterminded the plus-size contest). Upton spoke to the “Today” Show about American Apparel’s “condescending” and “insulting” contest, why she made her racy, food-covered photos and what she hopes she can teach American Apparel about marketing to plus-size customers. WATCH: if(typeof AOLVP_cfg===’undefined’)AOLVP_cfg=[];AOLVP_cfg.push({id:’AOLVP_1178351055001′,’codever’:0.1, ‘autoload’:true, ‘autoplay’:false, ‘playerid’:’61371448001′, ‘videoid’:’1178351055001′, ‘width’:480, ‘height’:270, ‘stillurl’:’http://pdl.stream.aol.com/aol/brightcove/us/living/thatsfit/2010/yogaworks/yoga_singlepigeon_video_still_480.jpg’, ‘playertype’:’inline’,’videotitle’:’Title’,’videodesc’:’Description’});
Continue reading …(YouTube link) Muppet creator (and the most renowned puppeteer ever) Jim Henson was born on September 24, 1936, which would make him 75 years old if he were with us today. In honor of the occasion, the Google Doodle features a group of Henson’s monsters -and you can act as the Muppeteer! Link to Google. Link to a Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Neatorama Discovery Date : 24/09/2011 04:18 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …In the weekly Republican message, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine is calling for a “timeout” on federal regulations that many in her party say are hurting the economy. Collins promoted ideas for taming what she called a “regulatory behemoth.” (Sept. 24)
Continue reading …A 5-year-old British girl born long after Jurassic Park made its theater debut uncovered a 160-million-year old fossil dating back to that very period. Emily Baldry, now 6, dug up the fossil while on a dig with her father in Gloucestershire last year. Baldry’s discovery is thought to be the first whole Rieneckia odysseus fossil found in Britain, according to geologist Neville Hollingworth, the Escapist magazine reports. The sea creature, with its sharp-pricked shell, roamed the ocean when dinosaurs roamed the earth. After the dig, Baldry and her father turned their discovery, which Baldry has affectionately nicknamed “Spike”, over to Hollingworth for restoration, and now the Jurassic-era sea creature will go on display at the Gateway Information Centre, according to the Sun. Baldry is excited to go on future digs, her mother told the Gazette and Herald after the find. “This was the first dig she has been on and she has done another one since she found the big fossil and she now has a collection of small ammonites,” she told the Gazette and Herald. “Even on the beach on holiday she is always looking out for them.” For more on Baldry’s historic find, watch the video above. Clarification: An earlier version of this story referred to the dig in the Cotswolds as an “archaeological” dig, following our sources. We have clarified the language to reflect the fact that Baldry’s discovery was not itself “archaeological.”
Continue reading …Type: TV Series Episode Video on Demand Title: Project Mercury: Ordinary Supermen See all customer reviews See the details
Continue reading …In his weekly radio and Internet address, President Barack Obama said the package of tax cuts and direct spending in his $447 billion jobs bill would put tens of thousands of teachers back to work and modernize at least 35000 schools. (Sept. 24)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As House Republicans threaten another government shutdown if they don’t get some steep cuts in return for disaster relief and as Democrats look like they’re finally standing up to the hostage taking, what do we get from David Gergen, Gloria Borger and host Anderson Cooper on CNN? More false equivalencies and the “both sides” are playing politics game. For a more honest assessment of what’s going on, here’s more from TPM — CRUNCH TIME: House GOP Jams Senate With Government Funding Bill, Partisan Budget Cuts For Disaster Aid : House Republicans closed ranks just after midnight on Friday morning, and passed legislation to avert a government shutdown at the end of the month. The vote tally was 219-203. But the bill received almost no Democratic support and faces an uncertain future in the U.S. Senate because Republicans have used the funding bill as a vehicle for disaster relief money, and insisted it be paid for by slashing funds for jobs programs Democrats support. Dems say the GOP legislation provides insufficient aid, and sets a dangerous precedent by requiring those funds to be offset with partisan budget cuts. “The bill the House will vote on tonight is not an honest effort at compromise,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) in a statement anticipating its passage. “It fails to provide the relief that our fellow Americans need as they struggle to rebuild their lives in the wake of floods, wildfires and hurricanes, and it will be rejected by the Senate.” A livid Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) told reporters Thursday night “We’re fed up with this…we’re sick of it, we’re tired of it.” Democrats are pushing Republicans to strip the disaster aid provisions from the bill entirely and pass a clean funding bill, and separate, emergency, Senate-passed legislation to provide relief to disaster-stricken regions across the country. At her weekly press conference Thursday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) pointed to a potential compromise. Read on… UPDATE: It appears that we had some bipartisan objection to the House’s hostage taking in the Senate — Cram It! Senate Dems And Republicans Reject Holding Disaster Aid Hostage . Gergen and Borger’s hackery from CNN last night below the fold. COOPER: More breaking news tonight, and “Keeping Them Honest.” Here we go again on the brink of a possible government shutdown. All that talk of compromise. Well, maybe just that. Talk. The do- nothing Congress could be living up to the nickname tonight once again. We’re waiting for a crucial vote in the House on a bill to fund the government beyond September 30, and even if it passes, it would only fund the government for seven more weeks. And that’s a big if. The vote on the GOP measure failed in the House last night, 230 to 195, 48 Republicans defected, voted against their party’s own measure, and only six Democrats sided with Republicans. Now the failed vote, some say, has proved to why Congress has just 12 percent approval rating in the latest poll conducted by CBS and the “New York Times.” Conservative Republicans voted against the C.R., Continuing Resolution, because they said there weren’t enough spending cuts to offset the $3. 6 billion in disaster relief money. Now you can decide for yourself if you think funds for disaster relief for agencies like FEMA should only be available if they’re offset by spending cuts elsewhere. This country is in some pretty tough strait for sure, but this is the first time ever, ever, that funding for people affected by things like tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, fires, you name it, have been used as a political edge. And right now, that aid is in limbo until this bill gets passed. “Keeping Them Honest,” just last week, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said he wouldn’t hold up disaster relief. We found this on ThinkProgress.org. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) (CROSSTALK) REP. ERIC CANTOR (R-VA), HOUSE MAJORITY LEADER: No one is holding any money hostage. I also think we can do so responsibly. (END OF VIDEO CLIP) COOPER: He says no one is holding any money hostage. But they are tonight, even though Cantor pointed out his district needs the aid. His district in Virginia was hit by Hurricane Irene and an earthquake last month. House Speaker Boehner seemed caught off guard by last night’s vote. He desperately tried to get his party on board and failed but today at a news conference he dismissed there was any chaos in the ranks and insisted they’re going to reach a deal. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) REP. JOHN BOEHNER (R-OH), SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE: The founders gave us a committee which is now 535 individuals. And trying to get 535 people to come to agreement on anything around here is difficult. But that’s — we’ve known that going in. We’ll work our way through this. I have always been confident that we’ll be able to come to an agreement and we will. (END OF VIDEO CLIP) COOPER: That’s Speaker Boehner earlier today. At this hour, again, we’re waiting for a new vote on the measure. It’s expected any moment. We’ll see if Republicans did in fact reach an agreement as Mr. Boehner said they would. Republican sources tell us that House GOP leaders have in fact unveiled a new proposal to offset the cash wanted for disaster relief by cutting roughly $100 million from a government loan program that granted a $535 million loan guarantee to the now bankrupt and highly controversial Solyndra solar company. The question tonight, will this get the bill pass and avoid a government shutdown. Let’s talk about it with CNN political analysts David Gergen and Gloria Borger. David, what do you make of this? When you hear Congressman Cantor and other Republicans say that they’re not playing politics with disaster relief funding, especially as the possibility of a government shutdown looms, do you buy that? GERGEN: Anderson, I think both sides are going to try to make points. Democrats are going to try to do that over in the Senate, Gloria has been reporting on some of that, to the make points off the FEMA thing. But I have to tell you. I do think they’re going to get something passed. I don’t think there’s going to be a government shutdown. The amount of money at issue here is actually modest. But what this has done, it was one of the things, it was a backdrop to the markets going down so much today. The investors looking, and saying, my god, those people in Washington, they haven’t made peace, they can’t even agree on this little tiny — little bit of business. And it is — it is fueling the sense that they’re not going to be able to get a real bargain on — big bargain on the deficits. GLORIA BORGER, CNN CHIEF POLITICAL ANALYST: Right. GERGEN: They may not be able to live up to the agreement they cut on the debt ceiling back in August. BORGER: Well, you know, Anderson, that’s the whole problem. When they cut this deal on the debt ceiling, they said, when we pass a bill to keep the government running, known as a Continuing Resolution, it’s going to be clean. Then you had these disasters, as you pointed out, and the Republicans in the House say we need to pay for those disasters. And I just got off the phone with the Senate Democratic leadership aide who said to me that if the House bill passes tonight, with more offsets, spending cuts for disaster relief, the Senate will reject it. That Senate Democrats will reject it. And what they eventually will do is pass a clean Continuing Resolution to fund the government with FEMA funding separately and deal with that — don’t forget the FEMA money for these — for disaster relief expires early next week. So we will move from one crisis to another crisis. COOPER: Is this the way business is just going to be done now, David? I mean especially between now and the election? Can anything major get done between now and this presidential election? GERGEN: Anderson, one held out hope for that, I think, a few months ago, that they could actually make some real progress, get some more breakthroughs before the election. I think that hope has diminished sharply in the last few weeks. Everybody here has now gotten into campaign mode. And by the way, this is something President Obama foresaw some months ago. He — this is the very reason he wanted to get a bigger deal in August because he thought, as we got closer in, it was going to be hard. But now the White House has gotten into politics, too. I mean everybody is playing the game. And I think that there’s a growing feeling that big breakthroughs are going to have to wait the next administration, the next president, this president, whoever it is. BORGER: And here’s — GERGEN: And the next Congress. BORGER: And here’s what complicates all of this. What really complicates it, you have a Republican primary going on. Don’t forget, those Republican presidential candidates were all out there, most of them, saying, you cannot even pass an extension of the debt ceiling. You have congressional leaders who may — Republicans — who may feel they want to get something done as I think John Boehner felt early on in this process. But they have to try and be on the same page with their presidential candidates. The presidential candidates are appealing to a Republican primary electorate, which is very, very conservative. And so I think gridlock is in the offing because Republicans’ hands are tied by this primary. COOPER: But even — I mean what’s so frustrating about that is that — I mean we’re seeing today the markets reacting in part to this gridlock. BORGER: Of course. COOPER: I mean this is costing people — this is costing people their 401(k)s, this is costing people money. GERGEN: Exactly. BORGER: And it could cost people their disaster relief, by the way, Anderson. COOPER: Right. BORGER: If that doesn’t go through. GERGEN: That’s exactly right, Anderson. A lot of people’s 401(k)s are — you can measure that through the S&P 500. That’s where a lot of the mutual funds are, for example. S&P 500 is down 7 percent over the last two days. And you know so people are losing, not only their housing value but their — now their 401(k) again taking hits. And that’s what’s so frustrating about this. But I have to say, it’s not just that the Republican candidates are tying their people up and asking for loyalty. Look at Norm Dicks, a Democrat, who was going to vote for this Continuing Resolution. He said he publicly was going to vote for it. Very independent, fine congressman, he came under pressure from his caucus on the Democratic side to vote against this Continuing Resolution, to stop things, because, you know, they’re playing their political game, too. BORGER: Absolutely. I mean they’re playing it on both sides. GERGEN: Right. BORGER: Why do you think the Democrats want to separate out the money for FEMA? GERGEN: Right. BORGER: Because then they can say that the Republicans don’t want to fund disaster relief. COOPER: Right. It’s just games, I mean, back and forth. BORGER: Terrible. GERGEN: Just games. BORGER: Yes. COOPER: Yes. David Gergen and Gloria Borger, appreciate it. Thank you.
Continue reading …It’s easy to get nostalgic for those classic Dean Martin TV celebrity roasts. Just watch a Comedy Central Friars Club roast. This is not comedy; they are unremittingly vicious. When they announced they were going to roast Charlie Sheen, a disgraceful human being if ever there was one, there was a sense of karmic comeuppance. Then the show aired. Only someone as deranged as Sheen would find it funny. Sheen is deserving of plenty of verbal head-slaps for his aerobically amoral life with prostitutes, his wife-beating/strangling, and his bizarre behavior after being fired by the gutter-level CBS comedy “Two and a Half Men.” But this was supposed to be comedic. Instead, it was a merciless bonfire of ferocity. No humanity remained. The host of this hatefest was appropriate: Seth MacFarlane, who’s done so much to pollute the airwaves on Sunday night with his tasteless, puerile cartoons on Fox. He noted “Two and a Half Men” would air a mock funeral for Sheen’s character on the season debut of the sitcom – and Comedy Central timed its roast to compete with that show. McFarlane said “No need to switch over. You can just wait a couple months and see the real thing.” He then started to read the personal obituary he’d written for Sheen, saying the actor was found dead in his apartment, then stopped: “I just kinda just copied Amy Winehouse's obituary,” adding “I only had to change three things: the sex of the deceased, the location of the body, and the part that says ‘a talent that will be missed.'” In case the early death of drug-addled Winehouse in late July wasn’t enough grist for giggles, the fameless “comedienne” known as Amy Schumer made fun of the June drunk-driving car-crash death of MTV reality star Ryan Dunn. Turning to Dunn’s friend and fellow MTV star “Steve-O,” Schumer cracked, “When Ryan Dunn died, Steve-O probably was thinking it could’ve been him — with the rest of the world wondering why it wasn’t.” This wasn’t Don Rickles “we kid because we love” stuff. This was acidulous “wish you were dead, not really kidding” material. But don’t feel bad for Steve-O. When it was his turn, he mocked the low-voltage star power of his fellow roasters by joking, “The last time this many nobodies got roasted, at least the band Great White was playing.” That refers to the 2003 nightmare at a Rhode Island nightclub when a a spray of sparks from the band’s pyrotechnics crew ignited foam soundproofing material in the ceiling. Killing 100 people. While we’re speaking of obscure jokers who will say anything to get noticed, there’s Anthony Jeselnik, who used to write jokes for Jimmy Fallon’s NBC late-night show. “The only reason you got on TV in the first place is because God hates Michael J. Fox,” Jeselnik sneered, since Sheen replaced Fox on ABC’s “Spin City” after Fox’s symptoms from Parkinson’s disease grew too severe. Jeselnik also joked “You’ve convinced more women to get abortions than the prenatal test for Down syndrome.” There’s a knee-slapper. He was on a roll with dead-kid jokes. “You dropped out of school faster than Casey Anthony's kid.” (For anyone who doesn’t get that, Caylee Anthony was murdered at age two.) Jeselnik isn’t tasteless just on TV. Check out what he put on his Twitter page on the tenth anniversary of 9/11: “Today is the 10th anniversary of my first 9/11 joke.” Comedy Central spared no one’s taste to produce this shindig, adding to the panel of roasters former heavyweight champ Mike Tyson. So when actress Kate Walsh joked that Sheen was the only one who pulls a knife on a woman already willing to have sex, Tyson, also a convicted rapist, yelled “I’ll drink to that!” For his part, Tyson tried poetry: “This wife-beating cokehead who claims he’s a rock star from Mars / If he were black, he’d be behind bars.” William Shatner was also on hand, fresh from the failure of the CBS sitcom “[Feces] My Dad Said.” Since the taboo of religion needed to be shredded, Shatner joked about Jesus:
Continue reading …Driving cars on the floor is so passe, which is exactly why you need iHelicoter’s wall-scaling iW500. We’ve seen similar gravity-defying propositions in the past, but this is the first to be controlled by your iOS device. Belying its 90s toy looks, the car attaches itself to vertical surfaces with a sealed vacuum that even has enough suck to drive upside-down across your ceiling. As you’ll see in the video after the break, controls are handled using the built-in accelerometer on your phone or tablet as well as the touchscreen interface on the dedicated app. It’ll join a crowded starting grid of iPhone-friendly RC cars, helicopters and monster trucks , priced at $59.99. Continue reading iOS-controlled iW500 RC car defies gravity, paint job may drive you up the wall (video) iOS-controlled iW500 RC car defies gravity, paint job may drive you up the wall (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 10:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Kim Delaney Stumbles Through Speech – 9/22/11 Kim Delaney Speech Kim Delaney Speech Honouring Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates geekeyewear says: Kim Delaney delivers incoherent speech ; booted from Philly stage http://t.co/nCEFKdcm
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