Bill O’Reilly Has Been Brian Williams-ing For Decades

MotherJones has done a great job, worth reading and then forwarding to faux news lovers.

After NBC News suspended anchor Brian Williams for erroneously claiming that he was nearly shot down in a helicopter while covering the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, Fox News host Bill O'Reilly went on a tear. On his television show, the top-rated cable news anchor declared that the American press isn't "half as responsible as the men who forged the nation." He bemoaned the supposed culture of deception within the liberal media, and he proclaimed that the Williams controversy should prompt questioning of other "distortions" by left-leaning outlets. Yet for years, O'Reilly has recounted dramatic stories about his own war reporting that don't withstand scrutiny—even claiming he acted heroically in a war zone that he apparently never set foot in.

O'Reilly has repeatedly told his audience that he was a war correspondent during the Falklands war and that he experienced combat during that 1982 conflict between the United Kingdom* and Argentina. He has often invoked this experience to emphasize that he understands war as only someone who has witnessed it could. As he once put it, "I've been there. That's really what separates me from most of these other bloviators. I bloviate, but I bloviate about stuff I've seen. They bloviate about stuff that they haven't."

Fox News and O'Reilly did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Here are instances when O'Reilly touted his time as a war correspondent during the Falklands conflict:

  • In his 2001 book, The No Spin Zone: Confrontations With the Powerful and Famous in America, O'Reilly stated, "You know that I am not easily shocked. I've reported on the ground in active war zones from El Salvador to the Falklands."
  • Conservative journalist Tucker Carlson, in a 2003 book, described how O'Reilly answered a question during a Washington panel discussion about media coverage of the Afghanistan war: "Rather than simply answer the question, O'Reilly began by trying to establish his own bona fides as a war correspondent. 'I've covered wars, okay? I've been there. The Falklands, Northern Ireland, the Middle East. I've almost been killed three times, okay.'"
  • In a 2004 column about US soldiers fighting in Iraq, O'Reilly noted, "Having survived a combat situation in Argentina during the Falklands war, I know that life-and-death decisions are made in a flash."
  • In 2008, he took a shot at journalist Bill Moyers, saying, "I missed Moyers in the war zones of [the] Falkland conflict in Argentina, the Middle East, and Northern Ireland. I looked for Bill, but I didn't see him."

In April 2013, while discussing the Boston Marathon bombing, O'Reilly shared a heroic tale of his exploits in the Falklands war:

I was in a situation one time, in a war zone in Argentina, in the Falklands, where my photographer got run down and then hit his head and was bleeding from the ear on the concrete. And the army was chasing us. I had to make a decision. And I dragged him off, you know, but at the same time, I'm looking around and trying to do my job, but I figure I had to get this guy out of there because that was more important.

Yet his own account of his time in Argentina in his 2001 book, The No Spin Zone, contains no references to O'Reilly experiencing or covering any combat during the Falklands war. In the book, which in part chronicles his troubled stint as a CBS News reporter, O'Reilly reports that he arrived in Buenos Aires soon before the Argentine junta surrendered to the British, ending the 10-week war over control of two territories far off the coast of Argentina. There is nothing in this memoir indicating that O'Reilly witnessed the fighting between British and Argentine military forces—or that he got anywhere close to the Falkland Islands, which are 300 miles off Argentina's shore and about 1,200 miles south of Buenos Aires.

Given the remote location of the war zone—which included the British territory of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, more than 1,400 miles offshore—few reporters were able to witness and report on the combat that claimed the lives of about 900 Argentine and British troops. The government in London only allowed about 30 British journalists to accompany its military forces. As Caroline Wyatt, the BBC's defense correspondent, recently noted, "It was a war in which a small group of correspondents and crews sailing with the Royal Navy were almost entirely dependent upon the military—not only for access to the conflict, but also for the means of reporting it back to the UK." And Robert Fox, one of the embedded British reporters, recalled, "We were, in all, a party of about 32-34 accredited journalists, photographers, television crew members. We were all white, male, and British. There was no embedded reporter from Europe, the Commonwealth or the US (though they tried hard enough), let alone from Latin America."

American reporters were not on the ground in this distant war zone. "Nobody got to the war zone during the Falklands war," Susan Zirinsky, a longtime CBS News producer who helped manage the network's coverage of the war from Buenos Aires, tells Mother Jones. She does not remember what O'Reilly did during his time in Argentina. But she notes that the military junta kept US reporters from reaching the islands: "You weren't allowed on by the Argentinians. No CBS person got there."

That's how Bob Schieffer, who was CBS News' lead correspondent covering the Falklands war, recalls it: "Nobody from CBS got to the Falklands. I came close. We'd been trying to get somebody down there. It was impossible." He notes that NBC News reporter Robin Lloyd was the only American network correspondent to reach the islands. "I remember because I got my butt scooped on that," Schieffer says. "He got out there and we were all trying to get there." (Lloyd tells Mother Jones that he managed to convince the Argentine military to let him visit Port Stanley, the capital of the Falkland Islands, but he spent only a day there—and this was weeks before the British forces arrived and the fighting began.)

Schieffer adds, "For us, you were a thousand miles from where the fighting was. So we had some great meals."

O'Reilly did see some action in Argentina—just not war action. He writes in The No Spin Zone that shortly after he hit Buenos Aires—where CBS News had set up a large bureau in the Sheraton hotel—thousands of Argentines took to the streets, angry at the military junta for having yielded to the Brits.  

As he tells it in his book, O'Reilly, then 32 years old, raced to cover the event: "A major riot ensued and many were killed. I was right in the middle of it and nearly died of a heart attack when a soldier, standing about ten feet away, pointed his automatic weapon directly at my head." A television cameraman was trampled, journalists were banged up, and O'Reilly and others were teargassed. "After a couple of hours of this pandemonium," he recalls, "I managed to make it back to the Sheraton with the best news footage I have ever seen. This was major violence up close and personal, and it was an important international story."

The rest of the book's section on this episode is a resentful recounting of how O'Reilly was "big-footed" when CBS used his best-ever footage in a news report that featured Schieffer, not him. "I got the hell out of Argentina fast, landed in Miami, and raised a major ruckus at the CBS offices there," O'Reilly writes. Soon he "parted company" with CBS and took an anchor/reporter job in Boston. Schieffer notes that he and other CBS reporters also covered the protest, and that per common practice, all the footage gathered that day was pooled together for the report filed by the Buenos Aires bureau.

O'Reilly's account of the protest in Buenos Aires is at odds with news reports from the time—including the report from his own bureau. The CBS Evening News that night aired about a minute of video of the protest, apparently including some of the footage that O'Reilly and his camera team had obtained. It showed angry Argentines yelling and denouncing the junta that had lost the war. The only act of violence in the spot was a man throwing a punch against the car of a Canadian news crew. On the segment, Schieffer reported, "There were arrests throughout the day. The police threatened to use tear gas at one point. Several North American television crews were jostled…An ABC camera team's car was stoned before the crew escaped." The CBS report said nothing about people being killed. It does not match O'Reilly's dramatic characterization of the event in his book; the video on the broadcast did not depict "major violence up close and personal."

Dispatches on the protest filed by reporters from the New York Times, the Miami Herald, and UPI note that thousands did take to the street, setting fires, breaking store windows, and that riot police did battle with protesters who threw rocks and sticks. They say tear gas was deployed; police clubbed people with nightsticks and fired rubber bullets; reporters were assaulted by demonstrators and by police; and a photojournalist was wounded in the legs by gunfire. But these media accounts did not report, as O'Reilly claims, that there were fatalities. The New York Times noted, "Several demonstrators were reported to have been injured, along with at least two reporters."

During a 2009 interview with a television station in the Hamptons, O'Reilly talked about reporting on the Buenos Aires protest, which he claimed other CBS journalists were too fearful to cover: "I was out there pretty much by myself because the other CBS news correspondents were hiding in the hotel." ("We were all out with our camera crews that day to cover the protest," Schieffer says. "I'd been out there with a crew too.")

O'Reilly noted that soldiers "were just gunning these people down, shooting them down in the streets" with "real bullets." And he told of rescuing his South American cameraman, who had been trampled by the crowd: "The camera went flying. I saved the tape because it was unbelievable tape. But I dragged him off the street because he was bleeding from the ear and had hit his head on the concrete…The sound man is trying to save the camera…And then the army comes running down and the guy points the M-16. And I'm going, 'Periodista, no dispare,' which means, 'Journalist, don't shoot.' And I said, 'Por favor.' Please don't shoot…Then the guy lowered his gun and went away."

The protest in Buenos Aires was not combat. Nor was it part of the Falklands war. It happened more than a thousand miles from the war—after the fighting was over. Yet O'Reilly has referred to his work in Argentina—and his rescue of his cameraman—as occurring in a "war zone." And he once told a viewer who caught his show in Argentina, "Tell everybody down there I covered the Falklands war. They'll remember."

O'Reilly has frequently represented himself as a combat-hardened journalist—he has visited US troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan and reported from those countries—and he has referred to his assignment in Argentina to bolster this impression. On his television show in 1999, O'Reilly responded to a letter from a retired Air Force colonel, who said he had flown 123 missions over Vietnam and who criticized O'Reilly for supporting military action in Kosovo, by citing his Falklands war days: "Hey, Colonel, did you ever have a hostile point an M-16 at your head from 10 yards away? That happened to me while I was covering the Falklands war." In his 2013 book Keep It Pithy, he writes, "I've seen soldiers gun down unarmed civilians in Latin America." During his radio show on January 13, 2005, he declared, "I've been in combat. I've seen it. I've been close to it." When a caller questioned him about this, O’Reilly shot back: "I was in the middle of a couple of firefights in South and Central America." O'Reilly did not specify where these firefights occurred—in The No Spin Zone, the only South America assignment he writes about is his trip to Argentina—and then he hung up on the caller.

In The No Spin Zone, O'Reilly does write vividly about an assignment that took him to El Salvador during the country's civil war shortly after CBS News hired him as a correspondent in 1981. As O'Reilly recalls in the book, he and his crew drove for a full day to reach Morazán province, "a dangerous place," and headed to a small village called Meanguera, where, a Salvadoran captain claimed, guerrillas had wiped out the town. "Nobody in his right mind would go into the guerilla-controlled area," O'Reilly writes. But he did, and he notes he found a horrific scene: "The place was leveled to the ground and fires were still smoldering. But even though the carnage was obviously recent, we saw no one live or dead. There was absolutely nobody around who could tell us what happened. I quickly did a stand-up amid the rubble and we got the hell out of there." He does not mention being in any firefight.

O'Reilly's account of his El Salvador mission is inconsistent with the report he filed for CBS News, which aired on May 20, 1982—shortly before he was dispatched to Buenos Aires. "These days Salvadoran soldiers appear to be doing more singing than fighting," O'Reilly said in the opening narration, pointing out that not much combat was under way in the country at that time. O'Reilly noted that the defense ministry claimed it had succeeded in "scattering the rebel forces, leaving government troops in control of most of the country." He reported that a military helicopter had taken him and his crew on a tour of areas formerly held by the rebels. (This fact was not included in the account in The No Spin Zone.) From the air, O'Reilly and his team saw houses destroyed and dead animals "but no signs of insurgent forces."

As part of the same 90-second story, O'Reilly reported from Meanguera, saying rebels had been driven out of the hamlet by the Salvadoran military after intense fighting. But this was not a wiped-out village of the dead. His own footage, which was recently posted by The Nation, showed residents walking about and only one or two burned-down structures. O'Reilly's CBS report gave no indication that he had experienced any combat on this assignment in El Salvador.

When O'Reilly was excoriating Brian Williams last week for telling a war-related whopper, he said of his Fox television show, "We've made some mistakes in the past but very few…We take great pains to present you with information that can be verified." And he asserted, "Reporting comes with a big responsibility, the Founding Fathers made that point very clearly. They said to us, 'We'll give you freedom. We'll protect you from government intrusion. But, in return, you, the press, must be honest.'"

 

 

 

 

Bill O'Reilly Responds. (MotherJones) Annotate.

On Thursday, Mother Jones published an article by Daniel Schulman and me documenting how Fox News host Bill O'Reilly has mischaracterized his wartime reporting experience. It noted that he has repeatedly stated that during his short stint as a CBS correspondent in the 1980s, he was in the "war zone" during the Falklands war between the United Kingdom and Argentina in 1982. He once claimed he had heroically rescued his cameraman in  "a war zone in Argentina, in the Falklands," while being chased by army soldiers. Yet no American journalist reached the war zone in the Falkland Islands during this conflict. O'Reilly and his colleagues covered the war from Buenos Aires, which was 1,200 miles from the fighting.

O'Reilly responded to the story by launching a slew of personal invective. He did not respond to the details of the story. Instead, he called me a "liar," a "left-wing assassin," and a "despicable guttersnipe." He said that I deserve "to be in the kill zone." (You can read one of my responses here.) And in his show-opening "Talking Points memo" monologue on Friday evening, he continued the name-calling.

In a way, it's impossible to win a debate with O'Reilly because he is not bound by reality. In response to the article, he told Fox News' media reporter, Howard Kurtz, "Nobody was on the Falklands and I never said I was on the island, ever." Yet our article included video of O'Reilly saying in 2013, "I was in a situation one time, in a war zone in Argentina, in the Falklands, where my photographer got run down and then hit his head and was bleeding from the ear on the concrete. And the army was chasing us." Note the words "war zone" and "in the Falklands."

Part of our article examined his depiction of a protest in Buenos Aires after the Argentine junta surrendered to the British. O'Reilly covered that event, and in a 2001 book, he wrote, "A major riot ensued and many were killed." He has called it a "combat situation." In a 2009 interview, he recalled how soldiers "were just gunning these people down, shooting them down in the streets" with "real bullets." Yet no media reports of the event that we found referred to such dramatic violence or any fatalities. Not even the CBS News report on the protest that O'Reilly contributed to mentioned soldiers shooting and killing civilians. Erik Wemple, a media critic at the Washington Post, has examined this part of our article in detail. He, too, found that there were no news reports matching O'Reilly's description—and that this was not "combat." He concluded that this "appears to be a  a Brian Williams-level embellishment." (Wemple is married to a Mother Jones reporter. You can watch this Washington Post video and decide if his assessment is fair.)

Another part of the story concerned O'Reilly's portrayal of a reporting assignment he had in El Salvador in 1982. In a book, he described a harrowing trip to a village that "was leveled to the ground and fires were still smoldering. But even though the carnage was obviously recent, we saw no one live or dead. There was absolutely nobody around who could tell us what happened. I quickly did a stand-up amid the rubble and we got the hell out of there." Yet the 1982 news broadcast he filed and that aired on the CBS Evening News showed residents walking about this hamlet and only one or two burned-down structures.

But now O'Reilly continues to insist that he has not embellished or mischaracterized anything—and that he is the victim of a smear campaign. So let's turn to his "Talking Points memo" monologue, as published on the Fox News site, with my responses in italics.

TALKING POINTS MEMO
2-20-15

Hi, I'm Bill O'Reilly ... thanks for watching us tonight ... more proof the American media is corrupt. That is the subject of this evening's Talking Points memo. This man ... 56-year-old David Corn ... who works for the far left magazine ... Mother Jones ... smeared me, your humble correspondent, yesterday ... saying I had fabricated some war reporting. Mother Jones ... which has low circulation ... considered by many the bottom rung of journalism in America. however ... in this Internet age ... the defamation they put forth ... gets exposure. and so I have to deal with this garbage tonight. I’m sorry.

Mother Jones did give O'Reilly a chance to "deal with this" earlier. Before posting the article, we sent him and Fox News a detailed list of questions and asked for comments and clarifications. They chose not to respond at all.

basically David Corn ... a liar ... says that I exaggerated situations in the Falklands War ... and Salvadoran War.

The article did not use the word "exaggerate." It noted that there were contradictions between his accounts and the factual record.

Here's the truth ... everything I’ve said about my reportorial career ... everything ... is true.

See above.

33-years ago in June ... Argentina surrendered to Great Britain ... ending the Falklands War. I was covering the conflict from Argentina and Uruguay for CBS News.

In his own 2001 book, The No Spin Zone, O'Reilly says he arrived in Buenos Aires just before the war ended.

After learning of the surrender ... angry mobs in Buenos Aires ... stormed the presidential palace ... the Casa Rosada ... trying to overthrow the government of General Leopoldo Galtieri.

News accounts, including the CBS News report, noted that a crowd numbering in the thousands had gathered to hear the president, but people grew angry after learning Galtieri would not speak, with many denouncing him and his junta as traitors for surrendering to the Brits. Media accounts do not describe the scene as a mob storming the palace, but angry protesters who set fires, broke store windows, and jostled reporters.

I was there on the street ... with my camera crews.

In a 2009 interview, O'Reilly claimed other CBS journalists were too fearful to cover this event: "I was out there pretty much by myself because the other CBS news correspondents were hiding in the hotel." Yet veteran CBS News reporter Bob Schieffer, who was then the lead correspondent in Buenos Aires says, "We were all out with our camera crews that day to cover the protest. I'd been out there with a crew too."

The violence was horrific. ... as Argentine soldiers ... fired into the crowd ... who were responding with violent acts of their own. My video of the combat ... led the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather that evening. and later on ... I filed a report ... that ran nationwide. That's what happened.

In tonight's account, O'Reilly doesn't say—as he has previously said—that Argentine troops gunned down civilians and many were killed. So is he standing by those prior assertions? He does still refer to the protest as "combat."

I never said I was on the Falkland Islands... as Corn purports ... I said I covered the Falklands War ... which I did.

See above. O'Reilly said on his own show in 2013, "I was in a situation one time, in a war zone in Argentina, in the Falklands." In his 2001 book, he wrote, "I've reported on the ground in active war zones from El Salvador to the Falklands." The "active war zone" in the Falklands war was 1,200 miles from Buenos Aires, far out in the Atlantic ocean.

Now ... in what I consider to be a miracle ... I found this CBS internal memo from 33 years ago ... praising my coverage that day. The cable was sent to the CBS bureau chief in Buenos Aires ... by the news desk here in New York City: "Doyle, O'Reilly didn't have the time last night but would like to say many thanks for the riot piece last night. WCBS-TV and WCAU-TV both took the entire piece, instead of stripping it for pix. They called to say thanks for a fine piece.” "Thanks again. Your piece made the late feed, a winner last night."

No one has suggested O'Reilly did not cover the protest or that the footage he obtained was not valuable for CBS News.

Want more? ... here it is: Shortly after my crew and I ... escaped grave danger on the streets of Buenos Aires ... I wrote to CBS News boss Ed Joyce ... praising the crew’s bravery. I have the letter: "The crews were great … the riot had been very bad, we were gassed, shot at, and I had the best vantage point in which to report the story."

No one has suggested that O'Reilly and his crew did not perform well while covering a protest that turned ugly.

So we have rock solid proof ... that David Corn ... smeared me ... and some websites that picked up his defamation ... did as well.

Actually, no.

Now ... I had to spend hours last night ... on the phone with various reporters ... and crawling around my basement covered with dust to find documents from 33 years ago. Again, it was a miracle I found them. all because an irresponsible ... guttersnipe ... a far left zealot ... who has attacked Fox News many times before ... spit this stuff out on the net. and you know what? ... nothing is going to happen to David Corn.

O'Reilly neglected to mention that during one of those interviews he said, "I expect David Corn to be in the kill zone. Where he deserves to be." In an email to Fox News executives, Mother Jones' editors in chief asked O'Reilly to renounce this remark and apologize for responding in a violent tone. So far he has not done so.

Mother Jones and the far left websites ...couldn't care less about the truth. They are in business to injure. This is a political hit job. At this point ... TV coverage has been scant, but CNN tried to exploit the situation because a guy over there named Brian Stelter ... is another far left zealot ... masquerading as a journalist.  CNN can do a lot better than this guy.

You can watch that CNN spot here and decide for yourself.

Real journalists ... knew this story was B-S from the jump. They knew Corn was trying to take the Brian Williams situation ... and wrap it around my neck ... for ideological reasons ... because he has a history of attacking Fox News. In addition ... Corn actually wrote that I hammered Brian Williams ... when everyone knows ... I went out of my way on Kimmel and the Factor ... to be compassionate to the man.

The first paragraph of our story noted that after Williams was suspended, O'Reilly declared that the American press isn't "half as responsible as the men who forged the nation." He decried the supposed culture of deception within the liberal media, and he proclaimed that the Williams controversy should prompt questioning of other "distortions" by left-leaning outlets.

Corn must think the folks ... are as dumb ... as he is.

In one interview yesterday, O'Reilly declared, "Everything I said about my reportorial career—EVERYTHING—is accurate." Which would be more problematic: If he really believes that, or if he doesn't?

Source: http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/0...

Hst Street Car Catches Fire

A little after midnight Hst Street Car caught fire, fire appears to be on roof. At posting time the street car is on fire in front of the Auto Zone on Hst NE

 

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*Update* electrical fire, around midnight.  

The Apple Watch Is Scaling Back Its Health Features

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 Apple is just months away from jumping into the smartwatch game with the release of the first Apple Watch. The company hopes its first new device of the post-Jobs era will be another game changer, but the initial model will be less ambitious than previously planned. The smartwatch's advanced biosensing features have reportedly been scrubbed

The Apple Watch won't measure blood pressure, heart activity, stress levels, and blood oxygen levels, according to the Wall Street Journal. "Health will be a component, but it’s not going to be everything," Malay Gandhi, managing director of Rock Health, which funds early-stage digital health companies, told BuzzFeed News.

The decision may have been made to avoid regulation by the FDA, according to BuzzFeed

"Advanced biotracking sensors would have made the Apple Watch less of a multipurpose consumer device and more of a medical device used to diagnose diseases or track chronic conditions — which could have opened the watch up to regulation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

'I don’t think Apple wants to be a health-monitoring device maker,' said Harry Wang, director of health and mobile product research at Parks Associates. 'They do want to leverage their popularity on the iPhone as a device platform, integrating all health data that can be collected for different devices.'"

Still, the Apple Watch will measure body movement, steps, burned calories, and heart rates. That information could be used to suggest when users need to breathe, stretch, or take more steps.

And we can obviously expect more features in later generations. 

Source: http://www.complex.com/pop-culture/2015/02...

Obama picks Clancy as Secret Service director

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Wednesday chose the former Secret Service special agent he installed temporarily in the wake of security breaches to become the agency's next director, brushing aside an independent panel's conclusion that the job should go to an outsider.

Joseph Clancy will fill the position after four months as acting director. Clancy is a 27-year veteran of the agency and was previously the head of the service's presidential protective division. He was hurriedly appointed on an interim basis last year after then-Director Julia Pierson was forced out.

A panel responsible for reviewing the Secret Service and making recommendations for improvements had concluded earlier this year that the agency was too "insular" and "starving for leadership," recommending the hiring of an outsider as the next director.

"The next director will have to make difficult choices, identifying clear priorities for the organization and holding management accountable for any failure to achieve those priorities," the group wrote after interviewing 50 Secret Service employees. "Only a director from outside the (Secret) Service, removed from organizational traditions and personal relationships, will be able to do the honest top-to-bottom reassessment this will require."

On Sept. 19, a fence-jumper carrying a knife was able to run deep into the executive mansion, prompting the agency to put a second layer of fencing around the presidential complex. Obama initially told aides he was satisfied with the changes, but then wanted new leadership after he learned that he rode an elevator with a security contractor that the Secret Service didn't know was armed.

Four of the agency's highest-ranking officials were reassigned recently in response to a series of embarrassing problems inside the Secret Service.

Earlier this month, the agency's No. 2, Alvin "A.T." Smith was also ousted and was transferred to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. Both agencies are part of the Homeland Security Department. ICE Director Sarah Saldana told her staff that Smith would be a "senior adviser" for cybercrime.

The panel that recommended an outside hire included former Obama administration Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli; former Deputy Attorney General Mark Filip, who served during Bush's term; Danielle Gray, a former assistant to Obama; and Joe Hagin, deputy chief of staff for operations during the Bush administration.

In a statement released by the White House, Perrelli called Clancy "a dedicated public servant who has made important changes since he began the job and has started the process of reforming the (Secret) Service."

The chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, said he was disappointed that Obama decided not to follow the panel's recommendations.

"The panel made it crystal clear that only a director from outside the agency would meet the needs of the agency today - someone with a fresh perspective, free from allegiances and without ties to what has consistently been described as a 'good old boys network,'" Chaffetz said in a statement.

Chaffetz spoke briefly to Clancy after his appointment and congratulated him.

Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the committee, welcomed Clancy's appointment.

"Joe Clancy has taken strong action over the past several months to begin righting the ship at the Secret Service, he has been extremely responsive to Congress, and his decisive leadership has already resulted in major changes," Cummings said in a statement.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Clancy was chosen in part because Clancy, as acting chief in the last few month, "has demonstrated that he was willing to conduct a candid, clear-eyed assessment of the shortcomings of that agency."

"His willingness to use his credibility within the agency to implement these reforms in some ways is the best of both worlds," Earnest said.

Source: http://bit.ly/1AMagB3

New Wooden Sculptures Made From Recycled Skateboards by Haroshi

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 Tokyo-based artist Haroshi began skateboarding at the age of 15. But as he amassed interest in the sport, so too did his pile of skateboard decks and broken parts. Skaters will tell you that they go through new decks in 1 – 3 months. Some will even replace their decks every week so you can imagine how quickly these pile up. But instead of throwing them away, Haroshi decided to keep them.

One day, when he decided to cut into one of the decks, Haroshi discovered a fascinating wooden mosaic pattern that was a result of the laminated layers of wood. The self-taught artist, now 37, has created dozens of sculptures over the last decade and his latest creations are  part of an upcoming solo exhibition in New York at Jonathan Levine Gallery.

Still Pushing Despite the Odds” opens this week on February 19 and incorporates “articles of low-technology from the early to mid-1900s. Vintage items such as neon signs, dental tools and roller skates create a striking textural contrast when paired with the smooth silhouette of the skate decks,” says the gallery. “Throughout their lifespan together the skater and his board get battered, but even so they get up again to face the obstacles in their path,” says Haroshi, explaining the meaning behind the title of his show.

Although not always visible, Haroshi incorporates every part of the old skateboard into his sculptures. The metallic, non-malleable parts are often placed in the center as a “soul” of the sculpture. The process mimics a certain Japanese tradition: the sculpting of Great Buddhas. “90% of Buddha statues in Japan are carved from wood, and built using [the same method]” expalined Haroshi. Unkei, a 12-th century Japanese sculptor of Buddhas would set a crystal ball called Shin-Gachi-Rin (Heart Moon Circle) in the position of the Buddha’s heart.

Still Pushing Despite the Odds” runs through March 21, 2015.

 

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Source: http://www.spoon-tamago.com/2015/02/16/new...

A 21-year old aspiring rapper is suing Jay Z for allegedly blocking his paternity claim attempts

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 Jay Z tends to avoid drama, whether it be baby mama drama or legal drama. Today though his name is in the news for both, at least, allegedly.

In a new lawsuit targeting Jay Z, an alleged love child born 21 years ago is claiming that Hov has blocked his attempts to get a paternity test, in order to prove that the music mogul is his father. The alleged son, Rymir Satterthwaite, claims that his mom hooked up with Jay two decades ago, before the fame (and Beyonce).

The civil suit is handwritten by a woman named Lillie Coley, who claims she's Rymir's (it's unclear what happened to Rymir's mother). Coley claims that Jay submitted "fraudulent info" to the court in order to negate Rymir's paternity claim. We do not know what this fraudulent info consists of. 

Coley claims that because of this, Rymir has suffered financial and emotional damage. Jay Z's lawyers have yet to respond.

It should be noted Rymir is an aspiring rapper. We'll keep you updated if more details arrive.

 
Source: http://www.hotnewhiphop.com/jay-z-sued-by-...

BRAVO: MARK ZUCKERBERG’S BOOK CLUB GOES TO BAT FOR VACCINATION

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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has come out swinging in support of vaccination--and he wants his book club members to read all about it. Undaunted by lukewarm reception to his first few picks, Zuckerberg is continuing with his public new year's resolution to read a new book every two weeks with a fourth choice, On Immunity: An Inoculation, by essayist Eula Biss.

The book club, called "A Year of Books," has had growing pains, including a dismally-attended Facebook Q&A with the first book’s author who was asked many questions from folks who hadn’t read the book, the Washington Post reported. It seems Zuckerberg has learned a few things about picking a book that will engage, but not overwhelm, readers: On Immunity is short, sweet, is recommended by plenty of health professionals, and fits within Zuckerberg’s stated goal to educate his book club followers in economics, psychology, and sociology.

Source: http://m.fastcompany.com/3042627/fast-feed...

Airbnb pays millions in back taxes to San Francisco

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The short-term housing rental service Airbnb has paid back taxes that ran into the millions of dollars to the city of San Francisco, the company said Wednesday.

The popular San Francisco-based company said in a statement that it has paid in full a back-tax bill. A spokesman wouldn’t say how much the company paid.

City Treasurer Jose Cisneros ruled in 2012 that Airbnb owed back taxes. He has declined to reveal how much money he collected so far from Airbnb, saying local law mandates confidentiality on all tax matters.

Officials had estimated that Airbnb owed the city as much as $25 million, the San Francisco Chronicle reported (http://bit.ly/1CKFyWB ).

The back-tax issue had threatened to unravel legislation that the supervisors passed last year legalizing short-term home rentals in the city. The law mandated that Airbnb pay the city’s hotel tax going forward, but it didn’t address issue of back taxes.

The law, which took effect Feb. 1, allows only permanent residents to offer short-term rentals; it requires hosts register with the city and get a business license and permit; and it mandates the collection of hotel tax. It also limits entire-home rentals to 90 days per year, requires each listing to carry $500,000 in liability insurance, and establishes guidelines for enforcement by the Planning Department.

Source: http://wtop.com/business/2015/02/airbnb-pa...

Get To Know: YOUNG GURU - Coming to The Lodge This Saturday

Jay-Z & Young Guru

By Marcus K. Dowling

Young Guru is Jay-Z's engineer and was nominated for a Record of the Year Grammy for his role behind the boards in the production of the Roc Nation chief's 2009 hit (with Alicia Keys) "Empire State of Mind." However, it's as a DJ where Guru started in the music industry some 20-plus years ago, and a DJ he still remains today, headlining at H Street's Lodge at Red Rocks on February 21st. Blessed with an encyclopedic knowledge of music acquired over a career that has seen the DJ literally travel the globe in search of the perfect beat, his sets are rooted in hip-hop, but make pleasant deviations through all other genres and cultures great and small.

He's joined on the 21st by DC's own Steven Faith, who could actually be described as somewhat of a local legend for open-format DJs. His standard of excellence has actually provided the blueprint for success followed by many rising and globally-renowned DC-born and bred DJs and producers. Cosigned by the likes of Mad Decent Records, Steven also lists touring DJ credits with emcee Tabi Bonney among his considerable accomplishments. Growing up comfortable in DC's punk and go-go scenes, a soulful style that blends seamlessly with his wild edges defines the typical expectation of his mixes.

Here's three amazing reasons to check out Young Guru at the Lodge at Red Rocks:

a) Young Guru's a 90s era Howard University alumnus who never shies from his DC connections. This means that he remembers what Georgia Avenue and H Street looked, sounded and felt like 20 years ago, and his sets will absolutely reflect that. In fact, nine times out of 10, he personally knows the artist that recorded a certain hit record of that era, or remembers the first time he heard it played in a club in the Nation's Capital, too. That type of knowledge of time, space and place makes Young Guru - and especially his sets in DC - special.

b) Here's a fun DC/Young Guru factoid: Young Guru's first "big-time" music industry position was being the tour DJ for Nonchalant. Yes, that's the same DC_born Nonchalant whose single "Five O'Clock" was a Billboard top-40 charting and gold-certified single in 1996.

c) In layman's terms, the engineer is the person ultimately responsible for mixing all of the pieces of a track together to ensure that the song sounds its absolute best (insofar as sound quality) when completed. Need ten more great sounding hit songs (not by Jay-Z) that Young Guru could play on the 21st to convince you of Young Guru's engineering excellence? Here's a list:

Cam'ron - Oh Boy
Lil Kim - Magic Stick
Nelly - Hot in Herre
Pharrell Williams - Frontin'
Freeway - What We Do
Ghostface Killah - The Champ
Eve - Tambourine
Rick Ross - Hustlin'
Rick Ross - B.M.F.
Drake - Fancy

If looking for a night where what are truly some of the ultimate (both underground and mainstream) pop-friendly party records literally of all time will be played all night long (by someone with an intimate knowledge of many of them), then The Lodge at Red Rocks on February 21st is absolutely the place to be. Young Guru will be playing alongside Steven Faith & Lodge resident, Sharkey. Doors open at 9pm. No Cover. More event details HERE.

Steven Faith

Jack White doesn’t think this whole guacamole thing is funny

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In response to media reports implying he was angry that a college newspaper leaked his top secret guacamole recipe, Jack White has released a statement clarifying that he wasn‘t angry about the guacamole per se, but about the student newspaper’s—and the profession in general’s—lack of ethics in guacamole journalism. In his 20 years of playing music, he says, he’s never had his tour rider or contract revealed publicly, and that’s what really makes him mad. Besides, that’s not even his recipe. He can’t cook for shit.

In an apparently hastily composed email released through his publicist’s office (subject line: “FOR GOD SAKES!”), White says that the whole guacamole thing was “my hilarious tour managers inside joke with the local promoters, it’s his recipe, not mine...though i wouldn’t know because i’ve never had it.” Besides, he says, “i can’t even make kool aid [,] let alone cook any real food enough to have a ‘recipe’. sorry, i dont have that talent.”

The majority of White’s wrath, however, is directed towards the implication that he was somehow being “difficult” by asking for the items on his rider, pointing out that the majority of the food and drinks aren’t for him at all: “people WANT a rider to be a list of demands that a diva insists occur lest he or she refuse to play a note of music,” he says. “but in reality, it’s just some food and drinks backstage for the hundred workers and guests who have to live in a concrete bunker for 15 hours...what you’r looking for is someone throwing a tantrum because they didn’t get their brown m and m’s, sorry to dissappoint.” (What White doesn’t address here is that the clichéd “no brown M&Ms” demand, according to rock lore, is a test of local crews’ attention to detail, lest they be as sloppy with heavy, expensive, and dangerous lights and equipment as they are with the food.) Also, apparently someone on his crew is allergic to bananas.

Anyway, White says that he has nothing against the students at the University of Oklahoma, and he fully intends to play there again. And if his management or university employees were rude to members of The Oklahoma Daily’s staff, threatening to stop booking shows at the university or asking them to delete pictures taken at the event, well, hopefully that’ll teach them a lesson. “am i dissappointed in young journalists at their school paper? absolutely,” he says. “but i forgive them, they’re young and have learned thier lesson about truth and ethics hopefully...look for real problems instead next time. look for the truth, not fake drama.”

 

Source: http://www.avclub.com/article/jack-white-d...

[VIDEO] The Friday Night Jump Off w/DJ Impulse & DeeJay Life TONIGHT!

Event link: https://www.facebook.com/events/435281803290375/

The Joodlum Group Presents: 
⋆THE FRIDAY NIGHT JUMP OFF w/DJ IMPULSE & DeeJay Life⋆

- Friday Nights at The Lodge are a weekly jam packed party with a mix of the best DJ's in the city playing everything from old school hip-hop, funk, & soul to rock, moombahton, house & top 40. 
- Weekly specials at the bar, No cover charge at the door and rooftop views of the Capitol Building & Washington Monument officially make Friday Nights The Jump Off. 

(((THIS WEEKS SPECIAL - Buy One Beer Get A FREE Shot)))

AT: THE LODGE at REDROCKS H STREET⋆
DC's Coolest Room with Balcony and Balcony Bar to Rooftop View of the Capitol. BOOM!
1348 H St, NE WDC 

with DJ's:
⋆DJ IMPULSE⋆
djimpulseonline.com/
facebook.com/pages/Dj-Impulse/7802924621
twitter.com/djimpulse
With over ten years DJ’ing, DJ Impulse has achieved more than most in his field. From the age of 5, music, and specifically the rhythm of music took a hold of Impulse and he started playing the drums. His love for the beat drew him to Hip Hop early on and it didn’t take long before he began to take notice of the man behind the beat, the DJ. Watching Yo! MTV RAPS, Impulse saw Jam Master Jay, Kid Capri and Jazzy Jeff and knew that he wanted to be a part of what they were doing. At age 14 he asked for turntables and he began his journey as a DJ himself. He started DJ’ing house parties and did his first club gig before he was old enough to legally get in the door. After that it was a steady journey as he did parties and concerts at an alarming rate. He’s opened for and DJ’d with numerous artists including Mos Def, Talib Kweli, Wu Tang Clan, Common, Lupe Fiasco, 50 Cent, Juvenile, DJ Qbert, DJ Craze, Funkmaster Flex, Rakim, Nappy Roots, De La Soul, Q Tip, T Pain, Mims, Rev Run(Run DMC), Pete Rock, Ludacris, Flava Flav, Cam’ron, and Kia Shine, to name a few. His proficiency for rocking parties speaks for itself and many times his reputation for doing so has been the fuel for his fire, securing him gig after gig. Currently working with Scratch Academy out of New York City, Impulse has been at the helm, commanding parties for corporate sponsors from Red Bull and Scion to Bloomingdale’s and Saks Fifth Avenue. Never one to be pigeon holed, he has a chameleon like quality with his sets and a knowledge of many forms of music allowing him to know what record to drop when. He has done sets ranging from 70′s and 80′s classics to mash up parties with rock and rap, to funk and R&B, to rock and alternative, to his home town’s native music, Baltimore Club, and of course Hip Hop. You name it, he can play it, and he can make it blend perfectly. As he looks to the future Impulse isn’t content. He wants to do bigger parties, play at even more over the top events and continue to network with the worlds top artists as he makes his mark on the DJ culture.

⋆DEEJAY LIFE⋆
facebook.com/iamdeejaylife 

21 & Over
NO COVER!
9pm-3am

THE LODGE at REDROCKS H STREET
1348 H Street, NE
facebook.com/thelodgeatredrocks ⋆Like us⋆

THE JOODLUM GROUP
facebook.com/thejoodlumgroup ⋆Like us⋆

Dog walks 20 blocks to be with owner in hospital.

 

You might not believe this one if you didn’t have the surveillance video to prove it!

Last week, Sissy the dog’s owner was admitted to Mercy Hospital in Cedar Rapids, Iowa for complications following an earlier surgery.

Well, apparently the little dog was missing her mom! Sissy walked, alone, for 20 blocks from her home to the hospital in search of her family. As you can see, she found the hospital, walked right through the front door and right into her mom’s loving arms.


Source: http://www.dogingtonpost.com/dog-walks-20-...

Barracks Row Shop Homebody to Be Replaced by Rose’s Luxury Spinoff AROUND TOWN

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The high-end home goods shop Homebody may be saying farewell to Barracks Row.

After 10 years at 715 8th St. SE, Homebody will close this summer to make way for a second restaurant from the owners of top-rated Rose’s Luxury, located next door.

Homebody will seek a new storefront, owner Henriette Fourcade said Tuesday, after news broke that Rose’s Luxury would open a fine-dining restaurant in the store’s current location.

“I don’t know if [the new store] will be on the Hill,” Fourcade said. “We’re looking for space now.”

Homebody reached the end of its 10-year lease, after opening in Aug. 2005.

“It seems like the way of the city,” Fourcade said. “All the landlords see what’s happening and they’re capitalizing on that.”

Homebody, which sells furniture and household items, will likely move out in June or July.

The second Rose’s Luxury location will operate as a “fancy” but not “formal” restaurant by night, and a coffee shop by day, The Washington Postreported. Unlike Rose’s Luxury, the still-unnamed restaurant will take reservations.

 

UPDATE

 

 

How do you follow a restaurant that was declared the best new eatery in America by Bon Appetit and, less than a year into its existence, slipped into the third slot in critic Tom Sietsema's favorite places to eat in Washington?

If you're Aaron Silverman, the chef and owner behind Rose's Luxury on Capitol  Hill, you just up the ante.

Silverman has signed a lease for the ground-floor space of the Homebody store, located next to his debut restaurant on Eighth Street SE, where he will open an evening-only fine-dining establishment that will take the Rose's Luxury experience to the next level. During daylight hours, the space will double as a coffee shop and cafe.

"People love, myself included, things that are really fancy. Fancy is fantastic. Formal not so much," says Silverman while sitting at a rustic wooden table at Rose's. "I think you can do super fancy without being formal. I think formal for me, and for a lot of people, detracts from pleasure because it can make you uncomfortable."

[Rose's Luxury: No. 3 in Tom Sietsema's 2014 Fall Dining Guide]

"It's not that we're doing this whole new genre," he adds. "It's just Rose's super fine-tuned or super dialed-in."

One other difference for Silverman's next project: The fine dining restaurant will take reservations.

"That was, like, the best part," the owner says. "As soon as we decided [on fine dining], we were like, 'This is going to be great. Everyone's going to love it. No line.'"

When it opens in a year, the still-unnamed restaurant will instantly become one of the most unconventional fine-dining establishments in the country. It will not feature white tablecloths. It will give servers "some freedom in their uniforms," Silverman says. "We're thinking, maybe, I don't know, everyone wears bow-ties, but they can wear whatever bow-tie they want." The restaurant will also not — and I repeat, not — be open on Saturdays or Sundays.

"I was like, 'You know what? Let's do a five-day-a-week restaurant,'" Silverman says. "Then I started thinking about it, and I was like, 'Well, I might as well run the numbers and see if I can make it work with four.' And I was like, 'All right, well, it works with four.' I mean, we're not going to make as much money as we could, but that's not the point of it. We'll make enough to pay investors back and make them happy."

So what is the point of a four-day-a-week restaurant? For starters, the owner says, it gives his employees the weekend off, like many Americans have. And second, it gives the restaurant down time to experiment on dishes, develop more efficient operational systems and perhaps even organize the walk-in cooler. This was one of the many lessons Silverman learned at Rose's: The place became so busy, so fast, that it left little time to do the things that could help the restaurant perform better.

"We can always add a fifth day if we have to," Silverman adds.

Silverman and team had considered a number of ideas for their next project: a sandwich shop, a coffee shop, a bar, an ice cream shop or a fine dining restaurant. In the end, the 2,000-square-foot Homebody space dictated what they selected, Silverman says, since  at least half the area would be dedicated to the kind of tricked-out kitchen the chef wanted.

The size of Silverman's current kitchen, considerably smaller than the one that James Beard Award winner Jimi Yui will design for the new space, has been one reason why the luxury has been limited at Rose's. Silverman mentions a tempura-fried spot prawn dish to illustrate his point: If he added such a delicacy to Rose's, the dish would immediately consume an entire station in a kitchen that is already maxed out.

"We can't do it here because it takes so much time," Silverman says. "If we sell it by the piece, we'll sell 500 pieces a night. We'll never be able to keep up. It will be the guy's entire station."

But those tempura prawns could make the cut at the new restaurant, which will feature a prix-fixe menu running at least $100 per person. Other dishes that Silverman and team have been considering and/or developing with an eye toward the new place: a Sungold sorbet as palate cleanser; scrambled uni served in an eggshell with live uni on top; whole racks of lamb; and even a whole pig on the grill.

"We're very happy with what we do here, but we are totally limited. We do 240 to 300 covers a night," Silverman says about Rose's. "The level of [sophistication] is limited because of that."

"What we'd like to do is create a little more curated experience, that is a little bit quieter, a little bit slower paced. A little bit, not a lot!" Silverman adds, punctuating the thought with a small, muffled laugh.

The coffee and cafe concept, dedicated to a tight space in front of the restaurant, is not fully sketched out yet. Silverman and his managers plan to offer coffee, espresso and cappuccino, but after that, they are still batting around ideas. They may offer sandwiches, breads, pastries or even to-go foods.

"I don't think we're, like, super-huge coffee nerds, but we're a little bit into a lot of things, so we'll definitely do a good job with it," Silverman says of the cafe, which will likely be open Tuesdays through Saturdays.

One benefit of Silverman's new restaurant will be personal for the chef: It will put him back in the kitchen more often. He doesn't expect, at present, to hire a chef de cuisine to run the place.

"My goal is to spend four days a week here, working on probably three services a week out of four and spend my fourth day doing experimentation, cooking, organization," Silverman says. He also plans to still spend two days a week at Rose's.

 

 

 

 

Source: http://www.hillnow.com/2015/02/10/barracks...

Brooklyn is officially the most unaffordable housing market in America

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When you hear the word "Brooklyn," you probably think "hipster."

But you should really think "staggeringly unaffordable housing."

As New York Magazine and Bloomberg report, the borough has become the least-affordable housing market, relative to income, in the US.

In Brooklyn "a resident would need to devote 98 percent of the median income to afford the payment on a median-priced home of $615,000," Bloomberg reports.

That's higher than between 2005 and 2008, at the height of the housing bubble.

The data comes from RealtyTrac, the real-estate-information company. San Francisco and Manhattan are the second- and third-least affordable, according to that data.

Brooklyn's wallet-destroying real-estate surge comes thanks to a few factors, but the biggest one is the saturation of Manhattan.

The world's super rich have started to use Manhattan as the new Swiss Bank Account — since 2008, a reported 30% of condo sales in large Manhattan developments have come from overseas. This is pushing the slightly-less-super-rich to Brooklyn.

And they are ready to buy. 

Ninety-eight townhouses in Brooklyn sold for over $3 million in 2014, most of which were in the swanky neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights, Cobble Hill, and Park Slope, where a historic brownstone went for a record-breaking $10.78 million.

Other trickle-down effects are more socially devastating.

"What's a frustration for ­middle-class buyers amounts to a desperate crisis for poor renters," reports Andrew Rice in a New York Magazine feature on gentrification in East New York.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/brooklyn-is...

London Approves Europe’s First City-Spanning Bike Superhighway

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Catering to some of the 170,000 cyclists that ride across London every day, this segregated bicycle lane will stretch from west to east, pass through the heart of the city and span 18 miles when completed, the longest of its kind on the continent. Backed by mayor Boris Johnson, a second route will also eventually span perpendicular to this first one, reaching south to north and crossing the first path in the middle of the city.

Allocating bikers lane space on par with that given to vehicles and separated by safety curbs, this plan represents a huge shift in how London treats cyclists and the largest such endeavor of its kind to date. Few long bike paths on the planet can boast such separation for bikers from city traffic, a move that makes bike lanes much more accessible to bikers of all ages and abilities and portends a far different future for cities currently congested with cars.

As The Guardian‘s Peter Walker describes, “The effect is humanizing, civilizing, relaxing, enchanting. It makes the city immediately more appealing. Beyond all that it also rebuts the perennial complaint that the push for London bike routes is the niche hobby horse of a small coterie of middle-class, male cyclists. The whole point is that if you create safer cycling you necessarily create more inclusive cycling.”

Building on a series original-but-modified proposals shown directly above and below, the new path with pass along the Victoria Embankment to connect Tower Hill and Paddington, re-purposing existing lanes used by motorists and linking up with a north-south route that would connect King’s Cross with Elephant and Castle.

While the removal of motorized vehicular space has drawn complaints from some, it fits London’s larger vision of reducing car traffic in and through the city (dovetailing with existing strategies including a hefty congestion tax).

Other cities will be looking to the results of this radical change, which could have significant global influence on urban design strategies around city cycling for years and decades to come. Perhaps it is too much to hope for as a realized project (due to potentially prohibitive construction costs), but lofty visions like the London SkyCycle also remain ideas worth striving toward with regards to the future of bike transit, both within and beyond England’s capital.

 
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Source: http://weburbanist.com/2015/02/03/london-a...

Future sneaker

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Maison Margiela, having dropped the “Martin” from their name since the installation of John Galliano’s as the house’s creative director, unveils a new take on its signature Future sneaker. The aptly-named futuristic sneaker sports a cracked leather upper, executed in white and a Yeezy-esque crimson colorway that, if we’re being honest, is starting to grow a little tired.

The sneakers are available for preorder now from Barneys, while the high fashion house’s Fall/Winter 2015 menswear presentation can be found here.

Source: http://www.highsnobiety.com/2015/02/04/mai...

Fool's Gold Co-Founder Joshua Prince Dead at 38

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Joshua Prince, the co-founder of influential hip-hop/electronic label Fool's Gold along with A-Trak and New York DJ Nick Catchdubs, died on Monday at the age of 38. The cause of death is currently unknown.

"It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of original Fool's Gold co-founder and art director Joshua Prince, a.k.a. Dust La Rock," the label wrote on Instagram. "His singular talent and uncompromising vision set a foundation for our label as a beacon for artists. He will be missed dearly by the Fool's Gold family and the creative community at large. #RIPDustLaRock"

As Fact noted, Prince was the art director and chief designer for the label from 2007 to 2012,  creating artwork for A-Trak, Action Bronson, Danny Brown and Duck Sauce — A-Trak's collaboration with Armand Van Helden — among many others.

"Lost one of my dearest friends today," A-Trak wrote on Instagram. "RIP Joshua Prince aka Dust La Rock, original Fool's Gold co-founder... Art director for myself, Fool's Gold and Duck Sauce. You helped define so much of what I stand for. Love you man. Still can't believe this."

"RIP Dust La Rock," wrote Just Blaze on Twitter. "Awesome artist, visionary, and all-around great human being."

In a 2008 Dazed and Confused profile of the then-fledgling label, Prince cited his inspirations as "Peter Blake, Pop Will Eat Itself, Zulu Nation, Peter Saville's Factory, guns, drugs, fucking, ride or die..." Prince's work had been featured in numerous music and art magazines, including BillboardPlayboyXLR8R and Mass Appeal alongside packaging and design for acclaimed toy designer Kid Robot.


 
Source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/foo...