Quantcast
Channel: Business Insider
Viewing all 116484 articles
Browse latest View live

Actor Jim Carrey says he's deleting his Facebook page and dumping stock over Russian election meddling, and he wants you to do the same (FB)

$
0
0

Jim carrey

  • Actor Jim Carrey tweeted that he plans to dump his Facebook stock and delete his Facebook page because, he said, the social network "profited" from Russian interference in US elections. 
  • Facebook testified to Congress in October that Russian-backed content reached as many as 126 million Americans through its network during and after the 2016 presidential election. 

 

Actor Jim Carrey tweeted Tuesday that he plans to dump his Facebook stock and delete his Facebook page because, he said, the social network "profited" from Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election. 

Carrey tweeted the following message with what appears to be his own hand-drawn portrait of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg beside a dislike button emoji:

"I’m dumping my @facebook stock and deleting my page because @facebook profited from Russian interference in our elections and they’re still not doing enough to stop it. I encourage all other investors who care about our future to do the same. #unfriendfacebook"

The same text also appeared in a post on Carrey's Facebook page, which is still up and features the portrait of Zuckerberg as its header photo: 

Screen Shot 2018 02 06 at 3.25.23 PM

Facebook did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter.

The company testified to Congress in October that Russian-backed content reached as many as 126 million Americans during and after the 2016 presidential election.

Carrey's latest film appearance came in the 2017 Netflix documentary "Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond," which featured on-set footage of his performance as comedian Andy Kaufman in the 1999 biopic "Man on the Moon."

SEE ALSO: Jim Carrey tries to explain the very, very strange interview he gave at New York Fashion Week: 'Who's Jim Carrey?'

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: JIM ROSS: Here's who will take over WWE after Vince McMahon


The creators of 'Game of Thrones' are going to make a new 'Star Wars' movie series

$
0
0

Game of Thrones

The guys who brought "Game of Thrones" to the small screen are now heading to the big screen with "Star Wars."

That's right.

Lucasfilm announced on Tuesday that David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, the creators behind the TV series adaptation of "Game of Thrones" for HBO, will write and produce a new series of "Star Wars" movies.

It's unknown how many titles they will do, or when filming will begin, but Lucasfilm made a point to include in its release that what Benioff and Weiss will create will be separate from the current Skywalker saga, and the trilogy of movies "The Last Jedi" director Rian Johnson is developing.

“In the summer of 1977 we traveled to a galaxy far, far away, and we’ve been dreaming of it ever since,” Benioff and Weiss said in a joint statement. “We are honored by the opportunity, a little terrified by the responsibility, and so excited to get started as soon as the final season of Game of Thrones is complete.”

"Game of Thrones" is currently filming its final season, it will air in 2019. The show has won 38 Primetime Emmys to date.

And don't worry about the "GOT" faucet being closed after season 8. HBO has plans for 5(!) prequel spin-off series which will kick off in 2020.

SEE ALSO: "Black Panther" is the rare Marvel movie that makes you care about the villain — and Michael B. Jordan delivers an incredible performance

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why most scientists don't care about these incredible UFO videos

Google and Facebook have similar rules on asking out coworkers: You only get one chance

$
0
0

facebook

  • The Wall Street Journal reports that Facebook and Alphabet's Google have a policy stating employees can ask out a coworker just once.
  • An ambiguous response counts as a "no."
  • No matter where you work, it's important to know your company's policy on intra-office dating, and to proceed carefully.


The office has always been a reliable place to meet a partner.

A 2017 Career Builder survey found that as many as 41% of workers have dated a colleague — and that nearly one-third of those relationships ended in marriage.

Yet as sexual-harassment scandals continue to unfold in a range of industries, men and women alike may be justifiably concerned about blurring the lines between their personal and professional lives.

Yoree Koh and Rachel Feintzeig at The Wall Street Journal report that Facebook and Alphabet's Google have landed on a seemingly sensible approach to modern-day office romance. Employees at the two tech giants are allowed to ask out a coworker just once. If the person turns them down, they do not get to ask again.

"Ambiguous" responses — like "I'm busy," or "I can't that night" — count as a "no," Heidi Swartz, Facebook's global head of employment law, told The Journal.

Facebook employees don't have to report the date to human resources, even if one person is more senior than another, The Journal reports. But if there's a clear conflict of interest and the employees don't disclose the relationship to human resources, "disciplinary action" will follow.

It's important to know your company's policy on intra-office dating before you start a relationship with a coworker

For those of us who don't work at Facebook or Google, it's still important to think carefully about making romantic overtures at work. Brittany Wong at HuffPost recommends checking what HR policies your company does have — and following them.

Wong also spoke to experts who advise against asking someone out at work or in a communal area. "Be ready to give the person an easy out if they're not interested," one expert told HuffPost.

To be sure, even the clearest HR guidelines can still be interpreted in different ways.

The Journal spoke to Anna Wood, the founder and CEO of Brains Over Blonde who worked at Google for four years. Wood said she'd found herself on "accidental dates," meaning she thought it was an after-work drink with a co-worker and the co-worker had something more romantic in mind.

Even after a relationship starts at work, certain rules still apply. As Business Insider previously reported, you and your partner should get on the same page about what you'll do if rumors start to spread — or if you break up.

Consider, too, what you'll do if things work out: Will one of you leave the company to avoid the relationship interfering with work? As Lynn Taylor previously told Business Insider, if "love happens to strike at work, don't make a concerted effort to fight it at any cost. Just know the risks."

Read the full article at The Wall Street Journal »

SEE ALSO: My office romance turned into a marriage — here are 13 rules for dating a coworker

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Science-backed reasons for why dating your best friend is a good idea

A look at the intense rivalry between figure skaters Evgenia Medvedeva and Alina Zagitova, training partners who will battle it out for gold at the Olympics

$
0
0

Russian Figure Skaters Alina Zagitova Evgenia Medvedeva

• Accomplished Russian figure skaters Evgenia Medvedeva and Alina Zagitova both train together under the same coach.

• They're also set to face off at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympic Games.

• Medvedeva has long been a dominant presence in figure skating. However, she was recently hobbled by a broken foot.

• Zagitova is fresh off a victory over Medvedeva at the 2018 European Figure Skating Championships.


An intense showdown is about heat up the world of ice skating at the upcoming Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.

This year, the battle for gold may come down to Russian figure skaters and training partners Evgenia Medvedeva and Alina Zagitova.

Medvedeva, 18, has long been regarded as the favorite. She's twice swept the world, European, and Russian championships. The Muscovite was also named one of Business Insider's 50 most dominant athletes.

On the other hand, Zagitova recently spoiled Medvedeva's winning streak at the 2018 European Figure Skating Championships, the Japan Times reported. The 15-year-old also scooped up gold at the last Russian Championships, which Medvedeva missed due to a broken foot.

The two Russians train with the same coach and will compete at this year's Winter Games as neutral athletes. They're two of the 169 Russian athletes who have been cleared to compete in Pyeongchang in the wake of their home country's massive, government-sponsored doping scandal.

Here's a look at what's shaping up to be one of the most talked-about rivalries of the 2018 Winter Olympics:

SEE ALSO: A look at the career of Olympic gold medalist Lindsey Vonn, who competed just hours after an 'excruciating' crash in 2006 and recently said she doesn't represent Trump

Medvedeva first took to the ice at the age of three. She said her parents encouraged her to continue to pursue the sport in order to improve her figure and posture. The 18-year-old loves K-Pop, "Sailor Moon," and actors Grant Gustin, David Tennant, and Benedict Cumberbatch.

Source: FS Gossip, FS GossipISU Results, FS Russia



The daughter of an ice hockey coach, Zagitova hails from Izhevsk, but lives with her grandmother in Moscow in order to train. She has a pet cat and two chinchillas, enjoys drawing and rhine-stoning, and has expressed interest in one day opening a Japanese restaurant.

Source: Russia BeyondNBC, R-Sport



Both skaters have a good chance of medaling. Sports Illustrated predicted Zagitova would take home gold, while Medvedeva would snag silver. International Figure Skating Magazine predicted the opposite.

Source: Sports Illustrated, International Figure Skating Magazine



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A house narrower than a Tube passenger car is for sale in London for $1.4 million

$
0
0

tiny house side by side

  • The tiny house trend has become a global phenomenon.
  • But just because a home is small doesn't mean it comes cheap.
  • 7.5-foot-wide home in London is on the market for about $1.4 million.

 

Tiny houses have become a global trend. But just because they're small doesn't mean they come cheap.

In the inner London borough of Wandsworth, a home measuring just 91 inches across is on the market for about $1.4 million (£1 million).

Measuring 7.5 feet wide, the property is nearly two feet narrower than a London Tube passenger car.

The so-called "Slim House" spreads 1,058 square-feet across three floors and fits four bedrooms, one "family bathroom," a reception room, dining area, and open floor-plan kitchen. There's also a landscaped garden out back that's 48 feet long.

According to Bloomberg, the median home price in Wandsworth is about $887,815 (£635,969) — more than $500,000 below the "Slim House" asking price.

The home's owner reportedly paid $1.16 million (£837,500) for it in 2014, after a local architecture firm called Alma-Nac renovated the home to optimize space and added a sloped roof with skylights.

The home is already quite famous, having been featured on British home improvement shows including Grand Designs and George Clark's Amazing Spaces.

Tiny homes are often in high demand. Last year, one of London's smallest houses— a 290 square-foot one bedroom, one bathroom — sold for about $139,476 (£100,000) over its asking price.  

Here a few photos of the "Slim House":

A reception room is pictured here, with plenty of storage space.

slim house london

Here is the open floor plan kitchen. It may actually be bigger than the kitchen in a typical New York apartment.

slim house london

One of the bedrooms looks like a tight squeeze, but has plenty of natural light.

slim house london

The long and narrow outdoor garden has a small seating area on the other end.

slim house london

Savills has the listing.

SEE ALSO: This couple couldn't afford to live in San Francisco, so they're building tiny homes made from shipping containers

DON'T MISS: A pair of Harvard students have designed tiny houses that could be the future of weekend getaways

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Microsoft built tree houses in the woods for its employees — here's a look inside

The relationship history of Elon Musk, who says he must be in love to be happy

$
0
0

Elon Musk Talulah Riley

• Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk was interviewed for an intensely candid Rolling Stone profile.

• He discussed his views on relationships and loneliness.

• Musk has been married twice, and recently split from his girlfriend actress Amber Heard.



Elon Musk got candid about his personal life in an in-depth Rolling Stone interview.

He spoke of his breakup with ex-girlfriend Amber Heard, expressing his heartbreak over their parting.

It's an unusual move for Musk, who said in 2010 that he would "rather stick a fork in my hand than write about my personal life."

The CEO of Tesla and SpaceX went on to discuss how difficult it is for him to meet people, saying he is looking for a long-term relationship — and a soul mate. Musk even asked interviewer Neil Strauss if there was anyone Strauss thought he should date.

"If I'm not in love, if I'm not with a long-term companion, I cannot be happy," he told Rolling Stone. "I will never be happy without having someone. Going to sleep alone kills me. It's not like I don't know what that feels like: Being in a big empty house, and the footsteps echoing through the hallway, no one there – and no one on the pillow next to you. F--. How do you make yourself happy in a situation like that?"

Here's a look at some of the tech titan's past relationships:

SEE ALSO: A look inside the marriage of world's richest couple, Jeff and MacKenzie Bezos — who met at work, were engaged in 3 months, and own more land than almost anyone else in America

DON'T MISS: A look at the demanding schedule of Elon Musk, who works in 5-minute slots, skips breakfast, and largely avoids emails

Musk told Rolling Stone he's struggled with loneliness since childhood. "When I was a child, there's one thing I said," Musk said. "'I never want to be alone.'"

Source: Rolling Stone, Business Insider



Musk met his first wife, Justine Wilson, at Queen's University in Ontario. Writing in Marie Claire, Justine — who uses Musk's last name — recalled Musk invited her out for ice cream.

Source: Marie Claire



She decided to stay in to study, but he showed up with "two chocolate-chip ice cream cones dripping down his hands." Musk transferred to Wharton, but kept sending Justine roses. They went their separate ways, but reconnected as Musk started working on his first startup and Justine started working on her first novel after graduation.

Source: Marie Claire



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The NYPD spent decades spying on New Yorkers — now you can see what they collected

$
0
0

NYPD surveillance

  • The New York Police Department spent decades infiltrating political organizations and spying on politically active New Yorkers.
  • While surveillance continues in some form today, a public exhibit at the New York City Municipal Archives showcases what police spying looked like in the 1960s and '70s during one of the most turbulent political periods in modern US history.
  • But few New Yorkers know about this vast collection of surveillance materials.
  • Business Insider dug through the archives to discover the scope of NYPD spying — and to see what they found.

In the dank quarters of a courthouse just a block away from City Hall in lower Manhattan, dozens of brown boxes of declassified surveillance records — compiled over the course of decades by undercover police detectives — remain largely un-examined, never before seen by the public.

The records include a mix of internal police reports and memos, photos, newspaper clippings, event fliers, political campaign buttons, and posters.

They are available for anyone to view. You just have to ask.

In September, the New York City Municipal Archives launched an unprecedented exhibit showcasing NYPD surveillance materials from 1960 to 1975, one of the most turbulent political periods in modern American history.

The exhibit, "Unlikely Historians: Materials Collected by NYPD Surveillance Teams", gives visitors a small taste of just how far NYPD detectives went to infiltrate political organizations and investigate people they considered a threat.

But it ultimately represents just a fraction of the overall collection. Of the 520 boxes of NYPD surveillance materials in their possession, archivists at the Department of Records have only reviewed and catalogued about a quarter of them. The un-reviewed materials are temporarily stored at their office in Brooklyn.

"We're just starting to get the word out," Rossy Mendez, the collection's lead archivist, told Business Insider. "So people don't really know it exists."

We visited the archives to see for ourselves:

SEE ALSO: Civil Rights Lawyers Say The NYPD Is Watching Everything Muslims Do

DON'T MISS: The Berlin Wall has officially been gone for as long as it stood — here's how the 27-mile blockade looks today compared to 1989

The New York City Municipal Archives, which maintains the city's historical records, is located at Surrogate's Court in lower Manhattan.



In a storage room in the building's basement, records and old video reels are meticulously organized.



The NYC Municipal Archives has a vast collection of materials, including records dating back to the colonial era. But in 2015, the department received one of its most politically divisive collections yet.

Source: New York City Department of Records & Information Services



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A look at the demanding schedule of Elon Musk, who works in 5-minute slots, skips breakfast, and largely avoids emails

$
0
0

Elon Musk Nasdaq Tesla

• Elon Musk splits much of his time between SpaceX and Tesla.

• He is the CEO of both companies.

• He plans every minute of his day, and often works through meals.



Elon Musk is one busy guy.

The Tesla and SpaceX founder generally spends a full workweek at each of his two companies, wolfing down lunch in five minutes and skipping phone calls for productivity's sake.

So it's not surprising that his daily life is pretty jam-packed.

Based on previous interviews, Business Insider pieced together an estimation of what an average day looks like for this real-life Tony Stark.

Take a look at a day in the life of Elon Musk:

SEE ALSO: Vladimir Putin's hard-core daily routine includes hours of swimming, late nights, and no alcohol

Musk kicks off his day bright and early, rising at about 7 a.m. In a Reddit AMA, he said he usually got six hours of shut-eye.

Source: EntrepreneurBusiness Insider



Musk usually skips breakfast. Occasionally, he will slow down long enough to grab a quick coffee and an omelette.

Source: Auto Bild



One thing he always makes time for, no matter what? Showering. He once told Reddit it was his most important daily habit.

Source: Business Insider



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The 30 best-selling cocktails in the world in 2018

$
0
0

sidecar cocktail

From floral touches to smoke and fog, there seems to always be a new trend in the world of booze — but some cocktails simply stand the test of time.

Drinks International has released its list of the best-selling cocktails around the world in 2018, and it proves that most of today's popular drinks are new takes on the classics.

The website compiled the list by asking 106 of the best bars in the world — using the results of the World's 50 Best Bars list — to rank their 10 best-selling cocktails.

From Sidecars to Sazeracs, scroll down to see the 30 best-selling cocktails in the world, ranked in ascending order.

SEE ALSO: The 25 best-selling cocktails in the world in 2017

SEE ALSO: The biggest mistake people make when drinking wine is choosing the wrong glass — here's exactly how to drink Bordeaux, sauvignon blanc, chardonnay, and pinot noir

30. Gimlet. Down 14 places since last year, this drink is essentially gin and juice — a 75/25 gin-to-lime-cordial ratio is what's most common.



29. Champagne Cocktail. There are variations of this drink, but they all aim to make fizz even more fancy. To make it, cover a sugar cube with bitters then pour Champagne over that.



28. French 75. Up two places since last year, this cocktail — made popular in Paris in the 20s — is made with London dry gin, lemon juice, sugar, and Champagne.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Relationship experts say these are the 9 signs the person you're dating is right for you — and some are surprisingly simple

$
0
0

couple hugging in field

If you already have a partner this Valentine's Day, congratulations, you've beaten the system.

For the rest of us, modern dating is a minefield. There are so many rules and games to play it's easy to lose track. You might be "left on read" by someone you really liked, and your mind may spin out of control when you're over-analysing what their last few messages really meant.

The woes don't necessarily stop when you find someone. With Tinder right at your fingertips, it's tempting to go back and see if there is someone out there who is just a bit more perfect. With so much available choice, how are you supposed to know if someone is right for you? When should you stop over-thinking and finally commit?

Business Insider asked nine relationship experts for the signs to look out for when you're trying to figure out if someone is right for you.

Here's what they said:

SEE ALSO: Relationship experts say these are the 8 red flags to look out for when you start dating someone — and some are surprisingly common

1. They pass the 'bar test'

"As simple as this may seem, I call it the 'bar test' to know if you're with the right person. When you're at a bar (or restaurant, wherever) with your new partner, are you looking around to see who else is out there or who might see you two together? Or, are you perfectly content with your partner, and you want everyone there to notice you with him/her? If the latter is true, then he/she passes the test. But if it's the former, it might be time to decide whether being in a relationship with this person is your best option."

— Erika Ettin, dating coach and founder of dating site A Little Nudge



2. They don't hold you back

"A person who can authentically be excited about your success and goals in life is someone who won't feel the need to hold you back. Most unhealthy relationships include some form of sabotaging of one partner. Dating someone who is happy with their life means they can be happy for you and alongside of you."

— Shannon Thomas, therapist and author of "Healing from Hidden Abuse: A Journey Through the Stages of Recovery from Psychological Abuse"



3. They don't want to change you

"When you listen to your heart, you'll feel whether or not the person you're dating is right for you. This is known as 'intuition' — your heart's message to you. Almost everyone can think back and recall a time when they didn't listen to it. When you feel good, feel that your partner is patient and true, treats you the same in public as he/she does at home, then you're on the right path. Keep in mind that your intuition may send out warnings as well. It may come as a gut reaction. For example, if your partner wants to change you in any way. He/she is not accepting you for who you are. If that happens, run. That is a sign of a controlling person and he/she will never treat you properly."

— Tracy Malone, a relationship expert on YouTube



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Here's what you should do if you want to celebrate Valentine's Day but your partner loathes it — or vice versa

$
0
0

giving flowers

  • Some people truly hate Valentine's Day.
  • Unfortunately, some of them may end up in relationships with people who expect them to celebrate it.
  • Both partners can be happy if they are both willing to compromise.
  • The important thing to remember is it isn't about winning, and instead about seeing the situation from your partner's perspective.


Couples argue about loads of different things. Maybe they didn't come to an event you thought was important, or perhaps you're in trouble because you didn't do the dishes when you promised you would.

Sometimes, a couple may even fall out over what to do on Valentine's Day.

While one of the pair might see Valentine's as nothing but a commercial nightmare, the other may well be expecting a romantic day filled with affectionate gifts and gestures.

This expectation can cause problems, says psychologist Lisa Aronson Fontes, especially when people think the day has to be perfect.

"People, especially women, often have an idealised image from the movies of what Valentine's Day should be," she told Business Insider. "Only good feelings, no conflict, perfect roses etc. So when we have high expectations, and the same thing can occur around other holidays, they're often going to be dashed because it's difficult for real life to meet those idealised images."

It's not about getting your own way

Another problem is when those expectations aren't balanced between the two people. Couples can get around this by approaching the day with the attitude of "how can I please my partner?" Fontes said, because because the goal is to generate feelings of love, not to get your own way.

"The goal is not to win an argument about Valentine's Day, or to show who's boss, but to communicate love," she said. "And so if the stereotypical act that people expect for Valentine's Day — a dozen red roses and a box of chocolates — doesn't feel right to one of the partners, they can come up with a list of things that feel right to them, that would also communicate love."

You could be with a partner who completely refuses to take part in Valentine's Day at all. "It isn't who I am," they might say. If they aren't even willing to think of the alternative (free) ways they can make the day special, then you may want to consider whether they are someone you really want in your life.

"So what if it's a stretch? We stretch ourselves for the people we love," Fontes said. "Your partner wants to be honoured on that day, so you honour them. People don't stop being their authentic selves because they give their partner something their partner wants."

Figure out what it is that makes you uncomfortable

According to Laura VanderDrift, associate professor of psychology at Syracuse University's College of Arts and Sciences and director of the Close Relationships Lab at Syracuse University, it essentially comes down to why you want to celebrate Valentine's Day in the first place. Once you work that out, it eases the pressure somewhat.

You might like public displays of affection or going out for romantic dinners, or you may simply like spending time with your partner one-on-one.

"I think it's important to consider whether it's the activities that constitute a Valentine's Day celebration themselves that are off-putting, or if it's the cultural significance of Valentine's Day that adds too much pressure to be enjoyable for you both," she told Business Insider.

"If it's the latter, then reframe the day so you can both be happy: you can celebrate your relationship however you feel fit, and it doesn't have to be labeled as Valentine's Day with all of its cultural significance or baggage. If it's the former, and your partner just simply doesn't want to do what you want to do, then try to take his or her perspective."

Relationships require a balance of opinions, choices, and beliefs. This includes whatever you decide to do on Valentine's Day. Ultimately, showing you're willing to sacrifice your own preferences for the sake of your relationship is good sign, and making allowances for one day won't hurt. In fact, it might make all the difference in the long run.

SEE ALSO: Relationship experts say these are the 9 signs the person you're dating is right for you — and some are surprisingly simple

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: I quit social media for a month — and it was the best choice I've ever made

The latest 'Deadpool 2' trailer introduces Cable while taking jabs at 'Justice League' and 'Toy Story'

$
0
0

Deadpool_Cable_Fox

  • Here's our first look at Josh Brolin in action as Cable in "Deadpool 2."
  • But, of course, there is also some NSFW hilarity from Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) throughout.


The latest trailer for "Deadpool 2" is out, and it introduces us to the Merc with a Mouth's pal, Cable — in a NSFW way that only the Deadpool franchise can.

This is the first footage we've seen of Josh Brolin playing the beloved character, who is trying to better the world from a future he knows is full of pain. He certainly has the look down, but as the trailer goes on you may notice that not all of Cable's CGI is screen-ready yet.

Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) realizes Cable's metal arm is only a green sleeve and literally pauses the trailer. "It's a metal arm, it's not like we're trying to remove a mustache," Deadpool screams, referring to Henry Cavill's mustache for his role in the upcoming "Mission: Impossible" movie having to be digitally removed when he did reshoots as Superman for "Justice League."

Saying he will handle it himself, the trailer then cuts to Deadpool playing with a Cable toy and a Deadpool toy (dressed as Woody from "Toy Story" as he yells "Reach for the sky!"). Following some, yes, NSFW banter, the trailer returns — now with Cable sporting a metal arm — blowing things up and fighting along with Deadpool, Domino (Zazie Beetz), and recognizable faces from the first movie.

Watch the trailer below. "Deadpool 2" opens in theaters May 18.

SEE ALSO: The 20 best romantic movies on Netflix you'll actually want to watch

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: What happens to your body when you start exercising regularly

How 22-year-old American Olympian Mikaela Shiffrin, called 'the next Lindsey Vonn,' became the world's best slalom skier

$
0
0

Mikaela Shiffrin

• Olympic gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin is a favorite to earn more glory at this year's Pyeongchang Games.

• Shiffrin won gold in Sochi in 2014, at the age of 18.

• The competitor was the youngest person to win an Olympic gold medal in the slalom.

• She could become the first American woman to win three skiing medals at one Olympics, The Denver Post reported.



Mikaela Shiffrin wants you to know that she's not a superhero.

The 22-year-old alpine skier became the youngest person to win an Olympic gold medal in the slalom at the Sochi Games. She's long been labeled as the next Lindsey Vonn, as The New York Times reported back in 2014. She routinely puts herself through grueling workouts that leave her feeling like she might pass out, according to The New Yorker. She's currently the reigning overall World Cup Champion, which she snagged at St. Moritz in 2017.

And now, she's on the verge of potentially making history at the Pyeongchang Games. She could become the first American woman to win three skiing medals at one Olympics, The Denver Post reported.

"How I got here is a crazy path that probably could not be replicated," she told The New York Times. "But it doesn't have to be replicated. I may have become a world champion quicker than most, but people should look at me and realize there are all kinds of ways to get where you want to go."

Shiffrin may not be a superhero, but she's already accomplished some out-of-this-world athletic feats over the course of her life.

Here's a look back at her career:

SEE ALSO: A look at the career of Olympic gold medalist Lindsey Vonn, who competed just hours after an 'excruciating' crash in 2006 and recently said she doesn't represent Trump

Shiffrin's parents — anesthesiologist Jeff and former nurse Eileen — are both avid skiers, too. They introduced Shiffrin and her brother Taylor to the sport at the early age. "They had us walking around the living room in these tiny, little, plastic Mickey Mouse skis that you just latched onto snow boots," Taylor told the New York Post.

Source: The New York PostThe New Yorker



All that early exposure paid off. When the Vail, Colorado native was five, she wowed skiing instructors with her technique. They ended up declaring they didn't know which training group to put her in, Sports Illustrated reported. So Shiffrin continued to train with her parents.

Source: Sports Illustrated, The New Yorker



She ultimately attended Burke Mountain Academy, a Vermont prep school for young ski racers. By 2012, she had made the US ski team.

Source: Sports IllustratedThe New Yorker



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

We went to Manhattan's most luxurious department store to see how the 1% shops — and it revealed no one's immune to the retail apocalypse

$
0
0

Barneys Sale Rack.JPG

Department stores across the country are doubling down on discount options to offset slowing sales, but not Barneys New York.

Established in 1923, Barneys is an exclusive department store known for having some of the sharpest and most expensive clothing items from the world's top luxury brands. 

The retailer rarely releases earnings reports, so it's hard to tell how the company is doing. 

We visited the Barneys Madison Avenue location in New York City to see how the luxury brand is doing.

 

We visited Barneys NY's flagship store on a Sunday morning and found all 8 floors strangely quiet.



The women's section was particularly empty, but offered a very cathartic shopping experience.



Despite the serene atmosphere, a quick look at the registers proved that a lack of customers didn't necessarily mean poor sales for the luxury retailer.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The reviews of 'Fifty Shades Freed' are in, and even kinky ice cream can't save this dud

$
0
0

fifty shades freed

  • Critics are pummeling "Fifty Shades Freed," the latest installment in the "Fifty Shades" series, ahead of its release on Friday.
  • The third (and last?) movie in the franchise finds the newlyweds Christian and Anastasia's marriage uprooted by outside forces.
  • It has a 17% on Rotten Tomatoes, with more reviews sure to come.


We've reached the third entry in the "Fifty Shades" phenomenon, the supposed finale of a trilogy. As expected, critics are tearing apart the movie in brutal and hilarious fashion, pointing out its desperate attempts to remind us what made the series popular in the first place.

For "Freed," that seems to include a kinky ice-cream scene that critics can't get enough of.

The movie follows the newly married Christian (Jamie Dornan) and Anastasia (Dakota Johnson) as their marriage is threatened by the past.

It now sits at a dismal 17% on Rotten Tomatoes, with more terrible reviews are sure to come. The previous two movies — 2015's "Fifty Shades of Grey" and last year's "Fifty Shades Darker" — ended up with 25% and 10% Rotten Tomatoes scores.

It would appear that this series just can't free itself of negative opinions. Check out some of the first reviews below:

"While the first film in the series did most of the legwork in wrestling the source material into something that would sit right with a wider, more woke, audience, the last in the series seems to focus entirely on keeping the fans satisfied. And at this point, they're basically the only ones likely to still be around."

Anna Hartley, The Wrap



"But where the first film's sex scenes, however tame in the grand scheme of things, were integral to setting the terms and tone of the relationship under scrutiny, by this point they're mostly just (very) attractive digressions."

Guy Lodge, Variety



"This lighter approach to sexual intercourse seems to lift the spirits of the characters along with the tone."

Manuela Lazic, Indiewire



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The couple that paid $90,000 for a private street in San Francisco reveal how they bought it, and how the rich and powerful neighbors made them give it back

$
0
0

presidio terrace private street 1

  • A couple bought one of the most exclusive streets in San Francisco for $90,000 in 2015.
  • Outraged residents sued the city and the couple. City leaders voted in November to reverse the sale.
  • Now the couple are fighting to win their street back.
  • Michael Cheng, the buyer, tells Business Insider that he and his wife lost Presidio Terrace because the wealthy get their way in San Francisco.


Michael Cheng and Tina Lam couldn't afford to live on Presidio Terrace, one of the most exclusive private streets in San Francisco. But they could buy the sidewalks for $90,000.

In an online auction in 2015, the couple from San Jose, California, quietly bought the street, its common area, and the shrubbery that lines the cul-de-sac, without the knowledge of the wealthy homeowners who live there. The city had put Presidio Terrace up for sale after the homeowners' association failed to pay property taxes on the street for more than a decade.

But the homeowners railed against the city for allowing Cheng and Lam to scoop the street up from underneath them without notice. Their district supervisor, Mark Farrell, who was sworn in as interim mayor last month, called the couple "bottom-feeding pirates" in a public hearing.

san francisco couple buys presidio terrace

Last November, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted 7-4 to overturn the sale.

Cheng, a real-estate investor, told Business Insider the decision was unsurprising.

"The most obvious interpretation I have is these are probably the richest residents of SF, with supervisors who like to have wealthy donors," Cheng said in a recent interview.

He and his wife believe they lost ownership of the street, which they bought legally, because its residents are wealthy and politically connected. The law doesn't apply to them, he said.

The couple didn't know what Presidio Terrace was when they bought it

For at least 17 years, the city's treasurer and tax-collection office mailed tax forms to the address of a now deceased bookkeeper who worked for the homeowners' association before retiring in the 1980s.

Over the years, the $14 annual property tax went unpaid by the people who live on Presidio Terrace. (San Francisco taxes the private street as a separate parcel from the homes on it.) The bill racked up hundreds of dollars in penalties and interest.

In 2015, the city listed Presidio Terrace, along with 389 parcels, on the auction block.

When Cheng bid on the parcel now associated with Presidio Terrace, he had no idea what he'd gotten himself into.

The self-employed real-estate investor is in the habit of betting tens of thousands of dollars on land for sale online in the Bay Area — parcels that are represented in the online auction system as a series of letters and numbers. Some are zoned for building residential housing, which Cheng could turn around and sell at a profit, while others are underwater.

Cheng knew by looking at the parcel associated with Presidio Terrace only that it was in a nice part of town. Over three days, other investors placed higher and higher bids.

"I figured they knew something I didn't," Cheng said.

His final offer: $90,100.

presidio terrace private street 4

About six months went by before Cheng learned he was the new owner of a gated-community street. In the city's assessor-recorder's office, he dug up a document that laid out the rules of the neighborhood. It described a parcel that contained the sidewalk, "decorative islands," and the street itself, which Cheng confirmed was his.

Cheng said he and his wife did not attempt to enter the street, because they didn't want to push their luck.

"Once we found out what it was — the historical significance of it — we felt like this is really worth keeping," Cheng said. "In life, you can have money. But having something of significance is meaningful. This kind of property doesn't come along very often in a lifetime."

Presidio Terrace isn't open to the public. A stone wall surrounds most of the development, and a private security guard stands watch at the entrance.

The street's enhanced security and isolated location at the top of the peninsula have attracted some of the wealthiest and most powerful politicians in California over the years, including Sen. Dianne Feinstein and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. The homeowners' association has reigned over the street since 1905.

According to the real-estate site Zillow, the estimated median home value in the Presidio Heights neighborhood tops $4.8 million, more than four times that for all of San Francisco.

Residents were furious about the sale

Though they may be well-connected, the residents of Presidio Terrace were not made aware of their street's sale until May 2017, when a title-search company working on behalf of Cheng and Lam contacted the homeowners' association to see whether it was interested in buying back the land. Cheng has since said that was done in error.

presidio terrace street san francisco 6925

Residents began a full-blown effort to reclaim the street. They hired attorneys, sued the city and the couple, and requested a hearing before the Board of Supervisors to overturn the sale.

Cheng and Lam met with supervisors from nearly every district before the hearing last November.

Cheng, who came to the US from Taiwan when he was 8 and has lived in California most of his life, said that in conversations with some supervisors, including Farrell, they were told they would probably lose because they are outsiders from Silicon Valley.

Cheng says he also remembers being told the city should have made more of an effort to notify residents of the unpaid taxes before it listed Presidio Terrace for sale.

"It's like, OK, sounds good, except that I've never heard of that for anyone else who wasn't super rich," Cheng said.

Farrell did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Presidio Terrace was one of several hundred parcels (mostly vacant lots) that hit the auction block in 2015, according to the San Francisco Office of the Treasurer and Tax Collector. Cheng said that during his research, he discovered that two of those parcels were private streets like Presidio Terrace: one in the Balboa Park neighborhood, and the other in Outer Richmond.

Both parcels sold in less affluent neighborhoods.

"Nobody cared," Cheng said.

Documents from the treasurer's office that Cheng provided to Business Insider showed these two parcels exist and sold through public auction in 2015.

The treasurer's office denied his claim in a statement: "To our knowledge, there were no other private streets sold in 2015."

Cheng says the outcome of the hearing shows that a different standard of government applies to the rich and politically connected in San Francisco.

"The wealthy is demonstrating ... they do control the laws," Cheng said. "They have politicians in their back pockets. They can do whatever they want."

Now the couple is suing to win their street back. Attorneys for the couple filed a lawsuit against the city in January with the San Francisco Superior Court.

The couple also launched a GoFundMe page, seeking to raise $50,000 for their legal defense. They've raised $3,300 in one month.

A letter sat atop a pile of papers Cheng brought to our interview. It was fan mail from a resident of the San Francisco Bay Area urging Cheng and Lam not to give up the fight.

"We feel like it's about more than just the street," Cheng said. "We're standing up for the law."

SEE ALSO: Inside one of the most exclusive streets in San Francisco that a couple bought for $90,000 and was forced to return to the city

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Spending habits of self-made millionaires from a guy who studied rich people for 5 years

84-year-old music legend Quincy Jones says he used to date Ivanka Trump — and that Tommy Hilfiger set them up

$
0
0

quincy jones ivanka trump

  • In a new interview with Vulture, the legendary producer Quincy Jones said he "used to date" Ivanka Trump.
  • Jones said he met her through the designer Tommy Hilfiger 12 years ago.


The legendary producer Quincy Jones has been making an art form of the Q&A in recent weeks.

After giving an extensive and captivating interview to GQ late last month, Jones brought the same charisma to a wild interview with Vulture published Wednesday in which, among many other quotable responses, he said he dated Ivanka Trump.

After Jones discussed the pervasiveness of racism in the US, Vulture's David Marchese asked, "What's stirred everything up? Is it all about Trumpism?"

"It's Trump and uneducated rednecks," Jones replied. "Trump is just telling them what they want to hear. I used to hang out with him. He's a crazy motherf-----. Limited mentally — a megalomaniac, narcissistic. I can't stand him. I used to date Ivanka, you know."

Jones, 84, said he met the president's daughter 12 years ago through the designer Tommy Hilfiger.

"Tommy Hilfiger, who was working with my daughter Kidada, said, 'Ivanka wants to have dinner with you,'" Jones said. "I said, 'No problem. She's a fine motherf-----.' She had the most beautiful legs I ever saw in my life. Wrong father, though."

Jones, best known for his work with Michael Jackson in the 1980s, has won 27 Grammy Awards in his career, tied for the second most of any musician.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

SEE ALSO: The 50 best-selling albums of all time

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: An exercise scientist explains why you shouldn't do sit-ups or crunches

There's an absurd amount of sugar hiding in most of the food you eat — and Silicon Valley has a new way to reveal it

$
0
0

Bagels

  • Any diet that's too high in one ingredient is unhealthy, but recent research has focused on sugar because it's become so ubiquitous in our food.
  • When you eat a high-carb or high-sugar meal that isn't rounded off with protein or fiber, it can cause blood sugar levels to spike, leading to energy crashes and cravings later.
  • Edward Damiano, a diabetes researcher and engineer, called foods like bagels "the enemy in the room here." They are "lovely to look at, but don't ever eat [them]," he said.
  • Devices called continuous glucose monitors can help someone visualize their sugar intake — and a startup with $6 million from Fitbit may soon simplify it with a new tool.


Sugar lurks in countless unsuspecting foods, including ketchup, granola bars, salad dressings, and yogurt. A glass of orange juice has roughly the same amount of sugar as a can of Sprite. Foods like white rice, white bread, and bagels may as well be sugar given the effect they have on your body.

"If you go out to fast-food places and you watch them prepare these meals, they'll put on the order of three cups of rice on the plate — so somewhere around 120 grams of carbs — before any real food has hit the plate," Edward Damiano, a diabetes researcher and professor of biomedical engineering at Boston University, told Business Insider. "That's massive: That's twice the carb load recommended for one person in a single meal."

It means that even when most of us think we're eating healthy, we may be consuming lots of carbohydrates that could send our blood-sugar levels through the roof.

This can lead to energy crashes, mood swings and, ironically, sugar cravings. Somestudies also suggest that high-carb, high-sugar diets are strongly tied to weight gain.

These negative outcomes have led a handful of tech companies and self-proclaimed "biohackers" in Silicon Valley to work on a tool that could reveal the problems with our diets by showing us where the sugar is hiding. The devices would also show us how to balance out a high-carb portion of a meal, such as a serving of rice, with ingredients that help round out blood sugar levels, such as proteins and fats like those from fish, meat, eggs, or nuts.

"Of course we know that eating less sugar is good, but how do you know you're actually doing that?" Ashwin Pushpala, the founder of San Francisco-based health and tech startup Sano, told Business Insider.

Pushpala's company is aiming to make a device called a continuous glucose monitor, or CGM, that could be used by the general population to get a sense of the direct impact of a meal or a diet on their body.

Sugar lurks in some surprising places

Fast Food Sugar 11The foods that send blood sugar levels spiking may surprise some people.

The obvious offenders are foods like bagels and white rice, which can contain on the order of 40 to 60 grams of refined carbohydrates per serving. Those carbs get processed much like sugar in the body.

"A bagel, which so many people love, that’s the enemy in the room here," Damiano said. "I tell people just stay away from that — it’s bad for you. It’s lovely to look at, but don’t ever eat it."

But other foods, like smoothies and even seemingly healthy items from fast-food chains, can also be loaded with sweets.

A 16-ounce "Orange Dream Machine" smoothie from Jamba Juice contains 71 grams of sugar— 21 grams more than the daily limit of 50 grams recommended by the World Health Organization. A large side of baked beans from Kentucky Fried Chicken has nearly the same amount, at 61 grams, and a Wendy's apple pecan chicken salad contains 40 grams of sugar, or 80% of the recommended daily limit.

Even foods portrayed as healthy can contain surprising amounts of sugar. A single serving of several popular brands of low-fat yogurt contain anywhere from 24-28 grams of sugar — roughly half the recommended daily limit, while a Honey Nut Cheerio's Milk and Cereal granola bar contains 16 grams.

Alcohol is another often overlooked source of sugar and carbs. A 10-ounce margarita packs roughly 42 grams of sugar, while a piña colada contains about 21 grams.

Pushpala and Damiano envision healthy people using CGMs to see how these carb-heavy foods affect their glucose readings and compare that information against what their readings look like after they eat a healthier, more balanced meal.

"They'll start looking at foods differently," Damiano said.

A device that shows you wear the sugar is hiding

sano deviceToday, millions of people with diabetes use CGMs to keep their blood sugar levels from falling dangerously high or low — but the devices are generally too expensive and painful for healthy people to adopt. All current CGMs involve wedging a quarter-inch-long needle underneath the skin and wearing the device all day. To set most of them up, users also have to prick their finger so the device can be calibrated with glucose readings. Diabetics who don't use CGMs can track their glucose the old-fashioned way — with regular finger pricks and a glucose meter. Those who use this approach draw blood from their fingers between 40,000 and 100,000 times throughout a lifetime.

While he was developing prototypes of his device for Sano, Pushpala pricked his own fingers roughly 3,000 times.

"You'd think you'd get used to it and eventually it would be OK," Pushpala said. "It is never OK."

Pushpala's device gets rid of the needle by replacing it with 400 tiny, painless ones arranged in a small square. Wearing the device, he said, feels like a stiff band-aid with sandpaper on one side.

Ideally, the information from the device would be fed to a smartwatch or smartphone so that users could get a visual read-out of how a meal or a diet is impacting them. Over a few weeks or months of wearing the device, Pushpala envisions people using its data like a set of what he called "guardrails." When something sends blood sugar levels skyrocketing, that's a sign to cut back on that food. On the other hand, when a food keeps glucose levels steady, that's a sign that the food was a good, nutritious bet.

"So one day you have a slice of cake that you assume is really unhealthy. Perhaps you look at your readings and find out actually it wasn't that bad. Great, you can eat that again," Pushpala said. On the other hand, maybe you eat your favorite lunch — a big salad that you thought was really good for you — and your glucose readings tell you it was actually full of sugar. "OK, now I know that meal isn't as healthy as I thought it was."

Damiano sees a device like this having a huge amount of potential for people who want to eat healthier, as well as for professional athletes who spend hours trying to ensure they're getting the right nutrients to fuel them for an event.

"People without diabetes who wear a CGM will learn several things. First, they'll learn what macronutrients [things like protein, fat, and carbohydrates] do to their blood sugar," Damiano said. "They'll also learn that blood sugar should be stable. Your body wants things to be flat — so you should keep them flat."

SEE ALSO: A little-known technology that Fitbit and Apple are exploring could be the answer to healthy eating and peak performance

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: What happens to your body when you stop exercising

What 9 Olympic athletes vying for gold in Pyeongchang eat for breakfast

$
0
0

Olympic figure skater Adam Rippon

For those of us with office jobs, breakfast may not be such a big deal. Maybe you grab a granola bar and a piece of fruit, or maybe you stick with black coffee.

But for athletes competing in this year's Winter Olympics, breakfast is a chance to prepare their bodies to perform incredible feats.

We scoured the web to see what some of the biggest stars of the upcoming games have shared about their breakfast routines. One has a personal chef who prepares a veggie omelet for her; another feasts on chocolate pancakes. Read to on to find out how athletes will be fueling up when the Winter Olympics start Friday.

SEE ALSO: How 22-year-old American Olympian Mikaela Shiffrin, called 'the next Lindsey Vonn,' became the world's best slalom skier

Alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin eats two eggs, two pieces of whole-wheat toast, and sometimes cereal or oatmeal and fruit. It's part of her 3,000-calorie daily meal plan.

Source: Good Housekeeping



Snowboarder Chloe Kim downs chocolate pancakes, biscuits and gravy, toast, and cottage cheese. "I don't have a crazy diet," she told PopSugar.

Source: PopSugar



Alpine skier Marcel Hirscher eats "lots of banana, mango, ham, and spelt bread" — and drinks coffee. He said he tries to avoid cow's milk, eggs, and wheat.

Source: Outside



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Hope Hicks reportedly volunteers to tell Trump bad news because he takes it better from her

$
0
0

hope hicks donald trump

  • The White House communications director, Hope Hicks, volunteered to tell President Donald Trump about negative stories, a former campaign official told Town & Country magazine.
  • Hicks' relationship with Trump has been under scrutiny since the revelation that the special counsel Robert Mueller is focusing on her as part of his Russia investigation.
  • Hicks' supporters say she's effective in reading Trump's moods and approaching him with tact, while her critics say she enables Trump's worst tendencies.


Hope Hicks, the White House communications director and right-hand woman to President Donald Trump, reportedly volunteered to do one of the least coveted tasks incumbent upon Trump's aides: informing him about negative stories.

"She always has impeccable timing," Jason Miller, the Trump campaign's former senior communications adviser, told Town & Country magazine. "When a bad story would come up, she would volunteer, saying, 'I'll just go and tell him; I got it.' We all had to do it. She was just better at it."

The magazine described a "close family friend" as saying Hicks is good at giving her elders advice because she's "smooth and direct, you know where she stands, and she's never confrontational."

Trump has previously acknowledged that Hicks has a way with words and a knack for approaching him tactfully, telling The New York Times in 2016 that he was "lucky to have her."

"She will often give advice, and she'll do it in a very low-key manner, so it doesn't necessarily come in the form of advice," Trump said. "But it's delivered very nicely."

Hicks' relationship with Trump has been closely scrutinized in recent weeks after news surfaced that the special counsel Robert Mueller has begun focusing on her in his investigation into Russia's meddling in the 2016 US election.

Her critics have accused her of enabling Trump's worst instincts, while her supporters argue that she can very effectively read the president's moods.

One former Trump campaign official likened Hicks to Huma Abedin, Hillary Clinton's most trusted aide.

Hicks "does everything from big important conversations to getting a cup of coffee ... or whatever it takes to make [Trump] succeed in the moment," the official told Town & Country. "She puts his success above her own."

Though Hicks, 29, is frequently underestimated, partly because of her age and lack of prior political experience, observers say she's highly competent and has worked her way into a position of immense power.

"A lot of people who may have underestimated her are now working with her and through her to get what they need from this administration," Michael Feldman, who was an official in the Clinton White House, told the magazine.

SEE ALSO: Inside the strange relationship between Trump and Hope Hicks, his right-hand woman and the youngest White House communications director in history

DON'T MISS: How 29-year-old Hope Hicks became the youngest White House communications director in history — and Trump's 'real daughter'

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: How to make America great — according to one of the three cofounders of Black Lives Matter

Viewing all 116484 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images