Pippa Middleton takes a front row seat for the Spring-Summer 2012 catwalk show from Temperley London, and designer Alice Temperley talks backstage about the inspiration for her collection and her hopes for the future of London Fashion Week. (Sept. 20)
Continue reading …Early Bird Special: As Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is finally, officially repealed , one US soldier decides the time is right to finally, officially come out to his dad. (Starts around 2:15.) [ areyousurprised .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 20/09/2011 06:09 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …Members of two Pennsylvania high school football teams have been suspended after a brawl prompted officials to end the game early.(Sept. 20)
Continue reading …When the Westboro Baptist Church decided to protest the Foo Fighters concert in Kansas City on the grounds that their music promoted fornication and homosexuality, the band came up with a counter-protest of their own. The musicians—dressed in hillbilly costumes from a recent promo video—performed their song “Keep…
Continue reading …Don’t Ask Don’t Tell Policy ends – 5:30 am EXCLUSIVE Preview : ‘The Strange History of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ (VIDEO) Webcast: Chaz Bono on Dancing with the Stars; DADT Repealed Panicnfreakout says: RT @ whitehouse As of 12:01 am, the repeal of the discriminatory law known as ‘ Don ’ t Ask , Don ’ t Tell ’ finally & formally takes effect. #DADT
Continue reading …The Playboy Club Season 1 Episode 1 Pïlot The Playboy Club – Episode 1 – Season 1 Full {NEW!} The Playboy Club Season 1 – Episode 1 pikelet says: Halfway through episode one of The Playboy Club . Enjoying this immensely.
Continue reading …Trends are strictly for the high street. The designers at London fashion week had their own stories to tell on the catwalk The script of this London fashion week was written in advance. London in 2012 is all about the Olympics, after all, and these are the clothes London’s designers will be selling next summer. Ergo … well, it’s obvious, isn’t it? Cashmere will be out, and Lycra in; the go-faster stripe becomes the new Breton top. Or so we thought. London’s designers may not be the one-legged-trousered provocateurs they once were, but they still have a little of the awkward squad about them. So they refused to play ball with the neat concept of Olympic-themed summer collections. Where sportswear figured as an influence, it was in a highly stylised guise: racer-back dresses at Marios Schwab and Peter Pilotto ; a satin tennis skirt at Christopher Kane; Aertex-effect shirts at JW Anderson . London designers will not be dictated to. For all the ongoing tussles with New York and Milan over schedules, there is a real sense of confidence about London fashion week these days. For these few days, designers take ownership of the capital with an assurance that was not there a decade ago. All those fashion shows in disused car parks – in retrospect, they seem like reflection of fashion’s self-image in those years as something self-consciously alternative, disenfranchised from the “real world”. How times have changed. One of the joys of this week was touring the landmark buildings that designers had taken over for their shows. The commandeering of the gorgeous Somerset House as London fashion week HQ and the now-regular Downing Street receptions have had a knock-on effect of inspiring designers to hold their events in the city’s other famous addresses. So we went to the Tate Modern for Matthew Williamson , the Royal Courts of Justice for Giles Deacon, Queen Elizabeth Hall for Antonio Berardi, the Savoy for Maria Grachvogel and Erdem, Claridges for Mulberry, the Royal Opera House for Sass & Bide and the British Museum for Temperley. (OK, Beyoncé showed in a car park. But everyone knows the rules are different for megastars.) But if the Olympians are not to be next season’s muses, who is? Perhaps the Duchess of Cambridge – so feted by the fashion world on her wedding day only five months ago? There was an oblique reference, perhaps, at Temperley , where Pippa Middleton – who wore a green Temperley dress to her sister’s evening reception in April – sat in the front row. One of the references cited for the collection was Tracy Lord in High Society, a character played by Grace Kelly – whose lace-sleeved wedding dress was similar in style to the Duchess’s. No, you’re right – that’s tenuous, even for fashion. The princess bride is, frankly, over. A mischievous mind could, however, see a connection between the Cambridges’ married life in Anglesey and the fact that a new character – the Valiumed-out Stepford housewife – turned up on the catwalk this season. Jonathan
Continue reading …Well, it looks like the “field trial” is officially over. Google today announced that its Google+ social network has moved up to beta status and, as a result, it’s now open to everyone (no invitation required). It’s also rolled out a slew of new features for the occasion, including a number of improvements to the Hangouts video chat service. That includes Hangouts on your phone (Android 2.3+ only, for now), a new Hangouts On Air feature for public broadcasts, and a number of “extras” including screensharing, a sketchpad and shared Google Docs (not to mention Hangouts APIs). Google’s now also finally added search functionality across the site, and it’s renamed the Huddle group chat feature to Messenger (which also includes a number of new tweaks). Hit the links below for the complete rundown on what’s new. Google+ moves from field trial to beta, adds Hangouts on phones, search and more originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Sep 2011 12:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t David ] Poor Rep. John Fleming. After he pays his 500 employees and rent for his Subway and UPS stores, he says he only has $400,000 to show for it. Only $400,000. That poor guy. It’s a wonder he can manage . Here’s a bit of his whine: “In my own case, I own LLCs,” Fleming told MSNBC’s Chris Jansing. “The income flows to my personal tax return and whatever is left over after taxes are paid, I feed my family on the one hand and on the other hand, I reinvest in my business.” “With all due respect, The Wall Street Journal estimated that your businesses, which I believe are Subway sandwich shops and UPS stores — very successful — brought you last year, over $6 million,” Jansing noted. ” Yeah, that’s before you pay 500 employees, you pay rent, you pay equipment and food,” Fleming agreed. ” Since my net income — and again, that’s the individual rate that I told you about — the amount that I have to reinvest in my business and feed my family is more like $600,000 of that $6.3 million. And so by the time I feed my family, I have maybe $400,000 left over to invest in new locations, upgrade my locations, buy more equipment.” Wow, there’s some magic in those numbers. I’m guessing his reference to “feeding his family” also relates to paying for his home, his cars, their private schools, and any other household expenses, which he estimates at $200,000, five times the earnings of an average middle class family. But that’s not even the real magic. It’s unclear where that $6.3 million figure came from. Jansing noted that it “brought him” $6.3 million, but what does that mean? If the $6.3 million is the amount that flowed through onto his personal tax return, then payroll, equipment, rent and supplies were already factored in. That is the amount left over after he expensed all of those items. If, on the other hand, $600,000 flowed through from his LLC to his personal taxes, then he had $600,000 left to “feed his family with”, since all of the expenses he enumerated as counting against it would have been accounted for already. Six-hundred thousand bucks isn’t such a bad paycheck to take home, especially when he isn’t really active in the day-to-day management of the businesses, just the higher level overview, by his own admission . Assuming his $174,000 Congressional salary isn’t included in the $600,000 figure, that’s nearly $800,000 of income. Excuse me if I don’t weep for him paying a bit more in taxes, though even with all that combined income, he hasn’t hit the million-dollar mark set by President Obama’s plan. Except….he has. By the way, the reason Rep. Fleming has structured his businesses as Limited Liability Corporations is to avoid paying any corporate income tax , similar to Koch Industries’ structure. Why? Because corporate rates are higher than personal tax rates, and losses can be passed through to offset other losses on their personal tax return. In fact, a look at Fleming’s financial disclosures reveal that he was less than forthcoming about his financial picture. If you’re going to go on TV and whine about taxes sucking the life out of job creation, Rep. Fleming, you might want to think about at least drawing the whole picture. According to his most recent financial disclosures, Rep. Fleming’s three largest sources of income are from his Subway restaurants, a medical practice and his property investment corporation. The Subways yielded *income* of over $5,000,000 in 2010. The property investment corporation yielded income of more than $100,000 and less than one million dollars in 2010. The medical practice yielded income of between 1 million and $5 million. He has other businesses, too, but their income reported is negligible in comparison. If I add up the totals of non-IRA, non-401k, non-investment income on the high and low ends, Rep. Fleming’s income is between $6,271,000 and 12,164,500 for 2010. That’s substantially more than the paltry $400,000 he claims to have for reinvestment into his businesses, and doesn’t even take into account income sources from other passive investment activities. Rep. Fleming just unwittingly made himself the poster child for tax reform. Between his creative corporate structuring — all legal, of course — to minimize his income taxes and his disingenuous claim to only have a fraction of that available for reinvestment in jobs and business while his disclosures clearly say otherwise, he’s proven just how much we need tax reform right now.
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