Unbelievable cruel attack just launched thru Apple news channels. Believe it all of these are additional rip offs of my stolen projects fed back to me to discredit and torture me: needs editing when I can find a un blocked wifi signal. These examples come from my reading notes:
SZA NY magazine
The song "Weekend" has an honestly genius idea of time-sharing a man. Where did that come from? **Time-sharing a man is real AF. If we’re all being honest there’s very few men that are just dating one woman. I think, low-key, the internet makes it so difficult ❲to be in relationships❳ because we’re taking in so much informatio
Why The Vietnam War Is Ken Burns and Lynn Novick’s Most Ambitious Project Yet
Vanity Fair August 2017 By David Kamp
The filmmakers will bring their latest documentary epic, more than a decade in the making, to PBS in September. The pair did their best to avoid tired tropes by interviewing those with firsthand accounts, from Vietcong guerrilla fighters to Army deserters.
Will there ever be a "right" time for Americans to talk about Vietnam? The nation’s involvement there began as an ill-considered but contextually understandable effort by Presidents Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower to come to the aid of an ally, France, as it battled the restive, independence-hungry population of a land it had colonized, and to prevent the spread of Communism, which was then considered the most pernicious threat to the American way of life. But by the time John F. Kennedy was president, the French were well out of the picture, having been routed at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, in 1954, and Vietnam was America’s headache. Cut to 1975 and the ignominious sight of evacuees being lifted by chopper from the roof of the U.S. Embassy in Saigon: a lasting image of American humiliation
PRINCE HARRY photo evokes Dan Savasky
How Prince Harry and Princess Victoria Are Making Honesty the New Royal Policy
VOUGE By Elise TaylorJuly 11, 2017
The opening line of the Real World—"Find out what happens when people stop being polite and start getting real"—is meant for an unruly group of twentysomethings packed into overpriced lofts in San Francisco and New York. But now, it may also apply to the young royals in palaces across Europe.
In an unprecedented shift, these modern monarchs are pivoting from polished and poised personas to, well, "real" ones. They admit shortcomings, struggles, and secrets instead of sweeping them under centuries-old rugs.
RASTA RIP OFFS
Nattali Rize, Reggae’s Rising Rebel Star
RAWCKUS by Terry Pelayo | Jul 13, 2017 | 8:00 AM
There are two kinds of musicians: those who see their music as an end in itself, and those who see their music as a vehicle for higher achievements.
Natalie Pa’apa’a, known as Nattali Rize, is the latter. The Australian-born, Jamaican-living co-founder of epic urban roots collective Blue King Brown has gone full-on solo, and her first full-length album Rebel Frequency, released in March 2017, makes her intentions ("Music’s the healer, she’s the healer") crystal clear.
SURF MUSIC
Who Killed The Great American Surf Song?
UPROXX BY: Chris Morgan • Sep 8, 2016
In 1971, the Beach Boys released an album called Surf’s Up. This was an ironic album title. The band was looking to connect with contemporary music, and to "modernize" their aesthetic by poking fun at their past as the most popular and visible proponents of surf-related pop music. The sound of Surf’s Up has been described as prog rock by some folks, perhaps because it seemed interesting to call a Beach Boys album prog rock, but it isn’t entirely unfounded, and even the titular song, a holdover from Brian Wilson’s Smile album, will not put you in mind of "Little Deuce Coupe." The Beach Boys, the platonic ideal of surf music, had stopped being surf musicians. They weren’t the only ones.
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STOLEN IP FROM SCRIPT SEVEN CIRCLES
4.22.17 GQ Lynch
We’re super-special beings!" He says, eyes fully lit up now. "We really are! And we have a glorious future—if only we could realize that and grow rapidly toward that, it would be beautiful. The key to it is the transcendent—this deepest, eternal level of life, the big treasury within every human being. When any one human being experiences that deepest level, they grow in that—all positive—and life gets better. And they’re truly unfolding their full potential. The key to peace in the world is there. We’re special beings with a great future, great potential, and we’re supposed to enjoy life. They say the purpose of life is the expansion of happiness—beautiful description of what it’s all about. It’s real simple. We’re not meant to suffer. We’re meant to be blissful and enjoy life and enjoy all diversity."
New Yorker 4.22.17
The considerable pressure put on Lamar has been unfair, and Damn rejects the notion that he has all the answers. Still, within hours of its release, there were theories, which proved to be untrue, that on the first track Lamar represents his death, and that a follow-up album, in which he is resurrected, would come out on Easter Sunday. It feels like a relief when the renowned New York DJ Kid Capri, a voice from a different era, pops up between tracks to play the role of the hype man, as though to remind you that what you are listening to is still hip-hop, not holy scripture."
Why We Love to Believe the Myth of Everyday Cooking
Lieberman remained progressive on social issues and led the repeal of the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy. "He has a nature where he wants everybody to succeed," Stein says. "In tribal Washington, they take that as betrayal, when in fact it's American."
Email to Steve ArtLaw Journal
If it is possible for a single human being to be legendary in the annals of IP theft in the SF Bay
9. Rumor Has It (2005) — It’s a premise that doesn’t really work (Jennifer Aniston learns her mother and grandmother might have been the inspiration for The Graduate.)
1. Magic Leap
A. purchased a startup founded by former Apple employees, and looked into buying an Oscar-winning animation studio
2. Hamilton
3. Big Little Lies
A. I don't trust Ziggy, Music released.
B.Celeste's grieving process in the wake of Perry's death would also be a focal point. "When you've been through a relationship like that, how do you feel now?Let the sun stream in, courtesy of particularly sunny blonde vixen Danielle Shorr shot by photographer Adam Della . Rumpled sheets, a little bit of lace, ad plenty of skin make for a perfect trio.
Photography by Adam Della .
Zz4.16.17 PLAYBOY
Let the sun stream in, courtesy of particularly sunny blonde vixen Danielle Shorr shot by photographer Adam Della . Rumpled sheets, a little bit of lace, ad plenty of skin make for a perfect trio.
Photography by Adam Della .
Kendrick Lamar dropped his fourth album DAMN. on Friday, leaving little doubt who the best rapper in the game is—rapper being the operative word. While Drake has mastered the art of pop stardom, Lamar is a prodigious lyricist, and DAMN. is his opus.
I felt a lot of feelings on my first listen, awe being one of them, and giddiness another. There are moments on this album—like on the face-melting "ELEMENT." when he raps "Bitch, all my grandmas dead / So ain’t nobody praying for me, I’m on your head," or on the album closer "DUCKWORTH." where he rifles through his family’s history with cinematic precision—that make you sink your head into your hands, the way you do when Russell Westbrook dunks a basketball or Rene Redzepi cooks you dinner. This is someone in his prime, at the top of his game, doing things with the artform that no one else can. Kendrick Lamar is just better at his job than everyone else, it’s that simple.
To help him create this rich tapestry, which incorporates an eclectic array of sounds, from jazz, to African tribal, to chillwave—Lamar recruited a diverse set of collaborators from around the world. Electronic music virtuoso James Blake contributes, as does super-producer Mike WiLL Made-It, Toronto upstarts BADBADNOTGOOD and Kaytranada, Sounwave, the Alchemist and the mysterious producer and vocalist Bēkon. But of course, all anyone will be talking about for at least the next week is Rihanna’s feature on the woozy earworm "LOYALTY." because guess what: Riri has bars! Even U2 makes an appearance on the song "XXX." and I was just as surprised as anyone that it actually works. That’s how good this album is. Kendrick Lamar somehow made U2 sound cool again.
But behind the shiny guests and Lamar’s endless verbal gymnastics, lies the same angsty kid who erupted onto the scene with 2012’s epochal Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City, only now he’s a lot more rich and a lot more famous. Despite his superstar rapper status, Lamar’s heart remains in the streets that helped create him. He’s still shouting—about death, racial injustice, and Donald Trump—at the ruling class that’s already accepted him into their fold. The only difference now is, we’re all paying attention.
STOLEN IP emulation at Jamba juice
National geographic
The latest entrant in the anti-straw campaign is the Lonely Whale Foundation, a nonprofit co-founded by actor Adrian Grenier,
"It’s a gateway, a way to start," Grenier says. "A lot of times people are overwhelmed by the bigness of the problem and often give up. We need something achievable for everyday humans. The challenge is if we can get rid of plastic straws, let’s start there. Then we can move on from there."
STOLEN IP FROM SCRIPT SEVEN CIRCLES:
At least four Nasa astronauts have gone public over their belief in aliens
STOLEN IP FROM SCRIPT SEVEN CIRCLES
4.22.17 GQ Lynch
We’re super-special beings!" He says, eyes fully lit up now. "We really are! And we have a glorious future—if only we could realize that and grow rapidly toward that, it would be beautiful. The key to it is the transcendent—this deepest, eternal level of life, the big treasury within every human being.
STOLEN IP FROM SHORT STORY HOLLYWOOD STRIP:
It took a while, wading the party waters, hooked as I was by various conversations with various fascinating people. By the time I found who I was looking for, I was at the front of the place, up against a huge bay window, through which something caught my eye.
The Bucket List (2007) — It’s… okay, but everyone here is coasting, and having been on a set, that’s what happens when things are running TOO smoothly. The artistry of the 1st AD is to allow just enough chaos into the workplace to shake people out of their complacency, particularly when everyone else on set is a total professional. If there’s a case of someone being too good at their job to the detriment of the film, it’s probably this.
In her new book "Radical Candor," entrepreneur and CEO coach Kim Scott proposes some new names to describe how leaders behave and misbehave. For example, rather than calling someone an "
In her new book "Radical Candor," entrepreneur and CEO coach Kim Scott proposes some new names to describe how leaders behave and misbehave. For example, rather than calling someone an "asshole" as if that’s innate to their character, Scott says people should be called out for their "obnoxious aggression," because it’s something we all can be guilty of at times.
But being an asshole — or being obnoxiously aggressive — isn’t the worst, she writes. On the latest episode of Recode Decode, hosted by Kara Swisher, Scott said that 85 percent of management mistakes happen because the manager is being "ruinously empathetic."
In other words, they’re being too nice. And it’s rampant when men are in charge of women.
"A man managing a woman is more likely to be ruinously empathetic with that woman than with the other men on his team, not giving [her] enough feedback," Scott said. "It’s hard to be radically candid with someone who looks just like you; it’s even harder to be candid with someone who looks different than you."
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