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Actress Ashley Judd became the breakout star of the Women's March on Washington

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ashley judd

Actress and political activist Ashley Judd brought the house down at the Women's March on Washington, a rally that drew over 200,000 demonstrators in protest of President Donald Trump.

Crowds went berserk for the big-screen actress as she waxed poetic in R-rated language on women's rights and the perceived threat the new administration poses to those liberties.

Judd read a poem from 19-year-old spoken word poet, Nina Donovan, from her home state of Tennessee. The actress shared a video of Donovan to her Facebook page late last year.

"I am a nasty woman. Not as nasty as a man who looks like he bathes in Cheetoh dust," she began, eliciting cheers from the main stage area on Independence Avenue.

You can watch the speech below.

Judd took the main stage while filmmaker Michael Moore still stood at the podium.

"My name is Ashley Judd, and I am a feminist," she said, as Moore watched on smiling.

Women's March on Washington organizers insisted leading up to event — which is expected to draw nearly a quarter of a million people — that the demonstration was more pro-women than anti-Trump. But as Judd recited Donovan's words, it became clear she would not pass on the opportunity to take angled digs at the new administration.

Much of the poem played on the theme of what it means to be a nasty woman, in reference to a remark Trump made against Hillary Clinton during the last presidential debate.

"I'm not nasty, like the combo of Trump and Pence being served up to me in my voting booth. I'm nasty like the battles my grandmothers fought to get me into that voting booth," she said.

Another line called out Trump's unsettling record of comments about the attractiveness of his daughter Ivanka: "I'm not as nasty as your daughter being your favorite sex symbol."

The poem hit on why tampons are taxed but Rogaine and Viagra aren't, the pay gap in Hollywood, and sexual harassment.

"We are not here to be debunked, we are here to be respected," she said. "We are here to be nasty. I'm nasty, like the blood stains on my bed sheets."

People took to social media to express their admiration for Judd.

"I am nasty like Susan, Elizabeth, Eleanore, Amelia, Rose, Gloria, Condoleezza, Sonya, Malala, Michelle, Hillary," Judd said as her speech came to an end. "And our p-----s ain't for grabbing."

SEE ALSO: Women band together for what could be the largest political demonstration the US capital has ever seen

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Aerial photos show the contrast between crowds at Trump’s inauguration and the Women's March

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A sea of pink poured through the nation's capital on Saturday as an expected 200,000 men and women gathered for the Women's March on Washington in protest of Donald Trump.

In a tweet by BuzzFeed's David Mack, aerial images of the National Mall showed that crowds at the Women's March may have outnumbered attendance at Trump's inaugural address.

Here's a screenshot from a EarthCam livestream on Inauguration Day.

women's march on washington trump inauguration attendance

The crowd was visibly smaller than that which packed the National Mall during Barack Obama's inaugural address in 2008, when an estimated 1.8 million turned out. It's unclear when this screenshot was taken, as the mall could have filled more as the events got underway.

Here's a screenshot from EarthCam a day later, when roughly a quarter of a million people flowed through the US capital in order to raise awareness of women's rights.

women's march on washington trump inauguration attendance

It's difficult to take accurate headcounts at events like these, where attendees often overflow into side streets. But the aerial photos give a more clear-cut look at how crowds compared.

The Washington Metro subway system reported that riders took fewer trips on Friday morning during Trump's inauguration than did during the Women's March a day later. Metro counted 193,000 rides as of 11 a.m. on Friday, as compared to 275,000 rides before the same time on Saturday when demonstrators gathered on the National Mall, according to Newsweek.

For more of Business Insider's coverage on the Women's March on Washington, click here.

SEE ALSO: Women band together for what could be the largest political demonstration the US capital has ever seen

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Madonna: 'Yes, I have thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House'

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madonna women's march on washington

Madonna gave an explosive address at the Women's March on Washington on Saturday that likely has many news networks wishing they had played her remarks on delay.

"Yes, I am outraged. Yes, I have thought an awful lot about blowing up the White House ... but I choose love," Madonna said from the main stage area near the National Mall.

Her remarks are now going viral.

An estimated 500,000 people poured into DC over the weekend for what could be the largest political demonstration the US capital has ever seen. The march aims to bring together women across diverse backgrounds to send a bold message to the new administration that they will not be ignored or have their rights stomped on. It comes just one day after Trump's inaguration.

Madonna, an icon of both pop music and feminism, took the stage later in the event. While the march's organizers have insisted the event is pro-women more than anti-Trump, the singer did not pass on an opportunity to take public digs at the new president.

"It took this horrific moment of darkness to wake us the f--k up," Madonna said.

She repeated expletives multiple times on stage.

Madonna cheered on those who turned out for the march and delivered choice words to others.

"And to our detractors who insist this march will never add up to anything, f--k you. F--k you."

Madonna ended her address with a rendition of her song, "Express Yourself," in which she sang, "Donald Trump, suck a d--k, I'm not your b---h."

You can watch more of Madonna's remarks below.

To follow along with our coverage on the Women's March on Washington, click here.

SEE ALSO: Actress Ashley Judd became the breakout star of the Women's March on Washington

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch protesters and Trump supporters get into a fiery argument on the National Mall right after the new president was sworn in

Stunning photos from inside the Women's March, which saw half a million protesters descend on DC

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gloria steinem women's march on washington

An estimated half a million people joined the Women's March on Washington on a crisp Saturday the day after Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th President of the US.

The march aims to bring together women across diverse backgrounds and send a bold message to the new administration that they will not be ignored or have their rights stomped on.

People carried signs with calls for gender equality and anti-Trump statements, though the rally's organizers have insisted the demonstration is more pro-women than anti-Trump. Many sported pink knitted beanies called "pussy hats," a symbol of solidarity among the protestors.

These stunning and soon to be iconic photos show what it was like to be there.

We'll be updating this post as more photos come in.

SEE ALSO: Women band together for what could be the largest political demonstration the US capital has ever seen

DON'T MISS: Aerial photos show the contrast between crowds at Trump’s inauguration and the Women's March

An estimated 500,000 men and women poured into the US capital on January 21.

One city official told the Associated Press that turnout estimates are at 500,000, up from the 200,000 who were originally expected to come.



They gathered to raise awareness of women's rights ...



... and the perceived threat Donald Trump's administration poses to those liberties.



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There are over 300 staffers Trump doesn't choose when he enters the White House — and they're the ones he'll see every day

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U.S. President Barack Obama wipes his face with a cloth handed to him by White House Butler Von Everett (R) in the Blue Room following an event with business leaders in the East Room on the state floor of the White House on January 28, 2009 in Washington, DC. Obama is serving as the 44th President of the U.S. and the first African-American to be elected to the office of President in the history of the United States.

On Friday, Donald Trump will be inaugurated as the 45th president of the US.

In preparation, Trump and his transition team have been working expeditiously to fill the roughly 4,000 positions that will be vacant when the Obama administration leaves.

But there are a few lesser-known staff positions that Trump will not choose: White House permanent residence staffers.

These are the butlers, chefs, valets, groundskeepers, and others who keep the White House running smoothly from day to day. They prepare state dinner banquet rooms, feed the first family, and are available for any request, small or large, that may arise.

And unlike policy staff members, they aren't replaced when a new first family enters the White House. In fact, some stay for decades, assisting one president to the next. Eugene Allen, for example, was a butler from 1952 to 1986 and was the inspiration for the 2013 film "The Butler."

The group is characteristically tight-lipped about what it's like to work for the president and their family. The clearest glimpse into the life of a residence staffer comes from the 2015 book "The Residence: Inside the Private World of the White House," by Kate Brower.

First Lady Laura Bush (R) speaks as chefs Cristeta Comerford (3rd L), Bill Yosses (2nd L) and Roland Mesnier (L) listen during a media preview of the White House holiday decorations November 30, 2006 in Washington, DC. The theme of the White House holiday decorations this year is 'Deck the Halls and Welcome All.'

Brower interviewed more than 100 former staff members for her book, noting how rare it was to get such intimate details about the jobs.

"There's an unwritten rule that they stay in the background," Brower told The Washington Post in 2015. "Unlike a lot of people in Washington, they don't talk about their jobs."

There are 96 full-time and 250 part-time residence staffers, according to Bower. They work throughout the 132-room White House, which contains 28 fireplaces, eight staircases, six floors, and two below-ground levels.

A White House kitchen staff member prepares the State Dinning Room at the White House July 17, 2002 in Washington, DC. U.S President George W. Bush will be hosting a State Dinner tonight for President Aleksander Kwasniewski of Poland, who is on a three-day trip to the U.S.And their jobs are incredibly demanding, a former White House executive chef explained in the book.

"You work for the same people every day. You don't have any personal life, family, social life," he said. "You work what we used to call 'White House flex time' — that is, you choose any 85 hours you want to work each week."

Still, they are devoted to the families in the White House, regardless of which candidate they voted for.

"I was an independent Republicrat," Worthington White, a White House usher from 1980 to 2012, told Brower in a Vanity Fair article published last April. "I would say I voted for the president, no matter who it was."

And some of their toughest work comes on Friday, when they will have about five or six hours to turn over the White House for the incoming president. Michelle and Barack Obama will head to the inauguration, and at noon, the White House is no longer their home.

First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton stands next to a 70-pound gingerbread house replica of President Clinton's Hope, Ark. boyhood home with master pastry chefs Franett McCulloch, center, and Roland Mesnier. Mrs. Clinton was giving a tour of the White House Christmas decorations Dec. 5, 1994Still, being a permanent staffer at the White House doesn't mean there is no risk of being replaced. Their employment is still at the discretion of the president.

Trump's team may be willing to shake up the staff. For example, the team dismissed longtime inauguration announcer Charles Brotman earlier in January via email.

"I looked at at my email, then I got the shock of my life," Brotman told CNN. "I felt like Muhammad Ali had hit me in the stomach."

Brotman was the announcer for the past 11 presidents and has been at every inauguration parade since 1957.

Some staffers apparently worried in April about the fate of their jobs if Trump won the election, according to Brower's Vanity Fair article. Former top pastry chef Roland Mesnier told Brower that he would be nervous if he were still working there.

"If the Donald makes it to the White House, I think there's going to be a lot of changes," said Mesnier, who served five presidents from Jimmy Carter to George W. Bush. "I think the White House as we know it and the kitchen will be totally different."

SEE ALSO: Trump's pick for education secretary avoided answering a number of questions in a contentious confirmation hearing

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Thousands of women wore pink 'pussy hats' the day after Trump's inauguration

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women's march on washington

The US may as well be renamed the land of the red, white, and pink on Saturday, January 21.

An estimated 500,000 people gathered for the Women's March on Washington to advocate for gender equality on President Donald Trump's first full day in office. Many sported pink knitted beanies with cat ears, called "pussy hats," as a symbol of solidarity among protestors.

A group called the Pussyhat Project helped make the hat part of marchers' uniform. Project co-organizer Jayna Zweiman told Business Insider that anyone who planned to march could download a crochet, knit, or sew pattern for the hat on the project's site. Alternatively, people could make and send them to the organizers to give away at DC's march.

women's march on washington

Since it launched in late November, the project has garnered thousands of social media followers, and Zweiman estimates nearly 100,000 people have downloaded the hat's pattern. Amy Schumer, Patti Smith, Rosanne Cash, and Krysten Ritter have posted photos of themselves wearing the hats, too.

Actress Jessica Chastain ("The Martian," "Zero Dark Thirty") handed out buttons at the Women's March on Washington while wearing a pussy hat.

actress Jessica Chastain women's march on washington

Following the election, Zweiman and co-organizer Krista Suh designed the hat's pattern with the owner of The Little Knittery, a Los Angeles-based knitting shop. Besides the cat-ear shape, the hat's name was inspired by Trump's 2005 comments in the Access Hollywood audio leaked in October 2016, in which he bragged about grabbing women by their genitals.

The Pussyhat project is "about women refusing to be erased from political discussion," Suh said.

The team has also organized knit-alongs — where people can learn how to make the hats together — in 100 knitting shops across the country. Suh and Zweiman said they have received hats from people outside the US, including those in Scandinavia, New Zealand, and Canada, who could not make the march but wanted to show support.

pussy hats women's march on washington pussyhat project

Suh said she received an email from a daughter whose mother participated in the 1963 March on Washington with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. For this march, however, the daughter needed to take care of her mother, but they knitted and sent their hats to the project's organizers "to represent their family at the march."

Two days after the project's launch, Zweiman also received a note from a woman whose daughter used to be an avid knitter. But she quit after she suffered a brain injury and had trouble maneuvering one of her hands. The pussy hat, which is a simple pattern, inspired her to start looming again.

"No matter who you are, no matter what your skill-set is, people can help you make it. Everyone can participate," Zweiman said.

SEE ALSO: Stunning photos from inside the Women's March, which saw hundreds of thousands protesters descend on DC

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Here's how much it would cost to buy the White House

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White House

The White House is worth $397.9 million, according to the real-estate listings firm Zillow.

The home of every US president except George Washington gained 15% in value during President Barack Obama's eight years in office, according to a release published Tuesday. Zillow said it first calculated the White House's worth in 2009 using a proprietary algorithm.

"President Obama's term coincided with a massive recovery of the US housing market, and that's reflected in the updated value of the White House," the release said. "Home values across the country are growing at their fastest pace since 2006, with many markets setting new records — one of the reasons why the White House is worth more now than it has ever been."

In October, US home prices extended to their best levels since the financial crisis, according to the latest data from S&P/Case-Shiller.

Renting the 132-room building at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. would set you back $2.1 million every month, according to Zillow. In fact, Zillow has a listing page for the White House that shows off features including a fitness center, basketball court, and controlled access.

It's obviously off the market since President-elect Donald Trump effectively signed the lease in November. Trump will move from his equally luxurious digs in Trump Tower in New York.

Unlike many former presidents, the Obamas will live in Washington, DC, after they leave the White House later this week. Their new home, a nine-bedroom house in the nearby neighborhood of Kalorama, was sold for more than $5 million in 2014, according to CNN.

Zillow estimated that the Obamas' monthly rent there would be $22,000. Ivanka Trump and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos will be close neighbors.

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Homeschooling is more popular than ever but still widely ignored

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epting family

During Betsy DeVos' recent three-hour confirmation hearing to become President Donald Trump's education secretary, charter schools came up no fewer than 60 times. Homeschooling was mentioned once.

Charter schools have become a significant part of the US public-education system and now educate 2.5 million kids. But homeschooling has quietly experienced a surge in recent years too. Brian Ray, a homeschooling researcher at the National Home Education Research Institute, estimates the number of kids taught at home is growing by as much as 8% a year since the total hovered around 2 million in 2010, according to US Census figures.

That puts the upper estimate at approximately 3.5 million children, far surpassing charter schools.

Betsy DeVos

The homeschool myth

Teaching kids at home has long been controversial, with critics saying the instruction is uneven in subject and quality and makes kids asocial.

But in recent years, technology and changing attitudes have made homeschooling easier and more effective, helping boost its popularity. And research suggests homeschooled kids do better on tests and in college than their peers in public schools.

"Homeschooling really cultivates a trait of open-mindedness and [being] open to new experiences," says Claire Dickson, a Harvard sophomore who was homeschooled from kindergarten through her senior year of high school. Her mother, Milva McDonald, pulled her out of her Boston-area public school when she realized, for example, that 5-year-olds were being told to sit still. McDonald felt structure was the enemy of education, and she vowed never to subject her kids to that kind of environment.

Dickson is quick to dispel homeschooling stereotypes. For example, religion wasn't a factor, and she wasn't holed up at home all day.

"I have to explain to people that we didn't have a blackboard in our kitchen with equations written on it. I was out in the world," she says. "Homeschooling more refers to the lack of going to one institution."

After seven years of the standard menu of subjects — math, science, history, English — Dickson's mom let her study whatever she chose. She says she drifted toward psychology, which she ended up taking additional classes for at local community colleges and at Harvard Extension.

"Because there was no structure, I was forced to look at my options and say, 'This is what I like,'" she says. Now, she's studying psychology to earn her degree.

Taking a personalized approach

Research suggests homeschooled children tend to do better on standardized tests, stick around longer in college, and do better once they're enrolled. A 2009 study showed that the proportion of homeschoolers who graduated from college was about 67%, while among public school students it was 59%. Catholic and private schools fell even lower, with 54% and 51% of kids completing all four years.

Maybe it's the way today's homeschoolers learn.

Research on effective instruction suggests it's all about personalization, in both content and style, which homeschooling offers from the start. And thanks in large part to the internet, contemporary homeschoolers have far more options at their disposal.

kelley family

In Mount Kisco, New York, members of the Kelley family spend five-hour schooldays absorbed in their inner worlds. As classical music plays in the background, John, 17, sits in the front room studying for an AP test on his iPad, and 15-year-old Regina sits on the couch with art-history flashcards. The three youngest kids gobble up workbooks at the dining-room table.

Their mother, Amy Kelley, says she began homeschooling for a number of reasons. In the beginning, it was to help her oldest son, Nat, who has a genetic disorder that makes traditional learning difficult. During that time, she grew increasingly frustrated with the public-school system.

workbooks

Like Dickson's mom, Kelley thought traditional schools were too strict and formulaic. She wanted her kids to have a more freewheeling education but still with a Catholic bent. About 64% of today's homeschool parents cite religion as a reason they chose their particular route. Kelley says that if her approach lives up to any stereotype, it's that one. On the dining-room table are stacks of workbooks with such titles as "Vocabulary 6 for Young Catholics" or "Better Handwriting for Young Catholics," and religious art adorns the rooms of the house. But many homeschooling families don't emphasize religion.

In the Bronx, New York, Jessica Epting says that while she does try to instill Christian values in her kids, there are no workbooks rooted in religion. The only visible sign is a handwritten copy of 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 tacked on the door above the kids' work plan. The passage, which begins "Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast" is hardly the Bible's most devout verse.

'He doesn't get this all day ... so here's his chance'

Just by virtue of the kids' interests, Epting says she needs to make sure her four kids are exposed to a wider world of knowledge. Recently, her 5-year-old son Creighton asked about the big bang theory. He couldn't quite grasp the idea that the universe started from a giant explosion, but Epting says she told him the idea would come in time. "I said, 'You'll probably keep coming back to that a million times in your life. You'll keep reassessing if that could happen, if it couldn't happen.'"

epting family

Both the Kelleys' and the Eptings' efforts to open their kids' minds have defied the stereotype that homeschoolers are asocial. Regina and John Kelley have met up with local kids and others across the country on social media. Epting regularly takes her children to gymnastics, ballet, and piano lessons. Both families attend homeschool meet-up groups.

But there's a lot of growing up that happens in a schoolhouse that, for better or for worse, is hard to recreate outside its doors. The cliques and bullying, for all the misery it brings, can teach kids coping skills and confidence. Epting has forced herself to let Creighton suffer teasing on the playground so that he may develop those defenses.

"He doesn't get this all day, every day, like every other kid out there," she says. "So here's his chance. I'm going to sit there and distract myself."

epting family

A legal back-and-forth for 40 years

Homeschooling's roots go back hundreds of years. Before school was institutionalized as teachers standing in front students, kids mostly learned through apprenticeship or private tutors. But in the past 40 years or so, families began to push for alternative methods — the kind of free choice that DeVos and others have advocated. Jim Mason, director of litigation for the Homeschool Legal Defense Association, a nonprofit advocacy group that fights for homeschool parents' rights, says the greatest changes involved the loosening of laws that required parents to be certified as teachers and, of course, the internet. Together, swaths of nonteacher parents who were interested in homeschooling could choose to do so even if they had minimal training.

But some say that's not a good thing. Rachel Coleman, executive director at the Coalition for Responsible Home Education, says the research is still too thin to definitively say homeschooling works well consistently. People still need to ask tough questions to know which approaches aren't successful, for the sake of homeschool students.

Homeschool parents seem to acknowledge the method has flaws, adding that they're just not as dire as the ones found in public, private, and Catholic schools. In the age of the internet, they say, when university lectures and guided lessons are getting nearly as good as in-person instruction — and are free from distractions — almost anything can be taught.

kelley family

A slow march toward the mainstream

Every Friday after school, the Kelley kids pile into their 12-person van bound for tennis practice. It's one of the few ways the family spends time with other homeschoolers in the area. 

On the way home, Kelley reflects on the lingering insecurities homeschoolers face, even after her 15 years of involvement.

But she adds that the stigma has faded as parents realize the true size of the community they're entering and how many options sit before them.

"When you have a bunch of young kids, you love the schools," Kelley says. If you're a new parent, you can drop your kids off at preschool or kindergarten and spend the workday knowing they're learning and having fun.

But that doesn't last forever, she says. Kids start resenting certain teachers. They complain about their lunches. They fear their bullies. Bright spots do come along, but often at a steep price — like the love of learning or the desire to pursue interests other kids deride as "weird."

"It's only as life goes on that the imperfections become more visible," Kelley says. "And then people start to view homeschooling more positively."

SEE ALSO: Schools aren't teaching the most important subject for kids

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Science says parents of unsuccessful kids could have these 6 things in common

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Watch this time-lapse of two people eating IHOP’s 'All You Can Eat Pancakes' for 5 hours


This New York apartment was transformed into a modern bachelor pad for a financier

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Esparros 4

When Homepolish designer Jesse Turek was asked to redesign a one-bedroom New York City apartment into the ultimate modern-day bachelor pad, he was up for the challenge.

Homepolish is a startup that designs spaces for homeowners as well as other startups. The client, who works in finance and has requested to stay anonymous, called on the company to take his living space up a notch. 

We chatted with Turek to hear more about how he approached designing the perfect space for a modern-day gentleman.

SEE ALSO: Inside the 'paparazzi-proof' building where penthouses are selling for $54 million

This apartment, located on Manhattan's Lower East Side, is located inside what was previously a printing press for the newspaper Forward. Completed in 1912, the building was turned into condominiums in the 1990s.



Turek noted that the client requested a "spa-like atmosphere" in the apartment.



"He requested that the space be relaxing, uncluttered, and organized," Turek said.



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The secret to an amazing sex life: Get old

This fried chicken restaurant has just 3 menu items — and San Franciscans are going nuts for it

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A fried chicken restaurant has captured the hearts of San Franciscans. The Bird landed in the city's SoMa neighborhood in October, and has been drawing lines out the door since.

The counter-service restaurant is part of restauranteur Adriano Paganini's growing empire, which includes Super Duper Burger, Unos Dos Tacos, and about 20 other Bay Area restaurants. Like the popular burger chain, The Bird features a limited menu of just two entrées and fries.

We stopped by The Bird on a recent afternoon to see if it's worth the wait.

SEE ALSO: This fast-food chain you've probably never heard of is making a killing selling $8 burgers

San Franciscans are lining up to try the city's hottest new fast-casual venture, The Bird.



Somehow I drummed up the willpower to hold off on lunch till about 1:30. When I arrived at The Bird, there was no line. My colleagues tell me they usually wait about 20 minutes.



Check out that line!

 



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Celine Dion's enormous $38.5 million Florida mansion has been on the market for 4 years without a buyer

There's a $10 million precious stone hidden in plain sight at Grand Central

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Grand Central Terminal is one of the busiest train terminals on earth, with more than 700,000 people coming through the doors every day. Whether they're traveling or simply visiting the beautiful New York City landmark, most passersby won't even notice the historical clues or many secrets on display right before their eyes – or hidden beneath their feet

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