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Sean Parker And Fiance Living In Plaza Hotel For 1.5 Years While Their $20 Million NYC Townhouse Gets Renovated

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alexandra lenas sean parker

Sean Parker and his fiance Alexandra Lenas have no problem burning cash.

The couple, worth an estimated $2 billion from Parker's time at Facebook, is reportedly living in New York City's Plaza Hotel while their 6-story townhouse in Greenwich Village is being renovated.

They've been living at the Plaza since December, Daily Mail reports. Parker purchased the townhouse in 2011 for $20 million.

Meanwhile, Parker and his fiance are also throwing a wedding this summer that will cost an estimated $9 million, complete with custom-made costumes for each guest and the building of Hollywood-style backdrops.  Although so much about their wedding has been leaked to the press, Daily Mail says the couple is "strongly considering" scrapping their plans and having the multi-day extravaganza in Pebble Beach instead.

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Ex-Wife Alleges Billionaire 'Godfather Of Las Vegas' Is Being Held Hostage

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Kirk Kerkorian

Legendary Las Vegas hotelier Kirk Kerkorian's ex-wife says that he's being held hostage by managers of his holding company, Tracinda Corp, TMZ reports.

In Court documents, Lisa Kerkorian says that Kirk hasn't been seen in public since June 2012 — not even to occupy his regular lunch table at the Polo Lounge at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

She fears his managers are controlling him, and separating him from their daughter, Lisa.

From TMZ:

Lisa and Kirk were possibly in the nastiest celebrity divorce in Hollywood history, yet now Lisa has gone to court on behalf of her daughter to seek the appointment of a conservator to manage Kirk's affairs and pave the way to re-establish a relationship between Kirk and Kira...

And one more twist ... Kira isn't even Kirk's biological daughter, but he raised her as his own.

A rep for Tracinda tells TMZ, "There are no facts to support Bonder’s claims and therefore no merit whatsoever to the allegations she has made."

The billionaire and former owner of MGM Studios is 95, and is the 412th richest person in the world, according to Forbes.

He started out in the world of Las Vegas casinos in 1962 after purchasing 80 acres of land on the Las Vegas Strip. He bought MGM in 1968.

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Yale Fined $165,000 For Failing To Report Sex Crimes

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yale university

The Department of Education (DOE) has finedYale University for failing to report serious sex crimes and  endangering students who thought campus was safer than it really was.

Yale didn't report four "forcible sex offenses" from 2001 and 2002, and the university failed to explain its policies for alerting students about crimes on campus. Under the Clery Act, any school whose students get federal financial aid have to report crimes on campus every year.

The DOE noted that Yale has improved how it responds to sex crimes since the agency started looking into its Clery Act violations in 2007. However, the DOE also told Yale in a letter its failures to comply with Clery were "very serious and numerous."

"These failures endangered Yale's students and employeeswho must be able to rely on the disclosures of campus crime statistics, policies, and statements, and the accurate reporting of crime statistics to take precautions for their safety," the DOE letter said.

The DOE said it began scrutinizing Yale's Clery Act reports after its alumni magazine ran a piece in 2004 called "Lux, Veritas, and Sexual Trespass: How Yale College Investigates Sexual Harassment and Assault."

The piece, written by journalist and Yale Law school graduate Emily Bazelon, suggested Yale had been seriously underreporting its sex crime statistics.

Bazelon's piece points to the story of a Yale sophomore who was pinned down by a junior boy in a dorm room in 2001. She told him "stop" and "don't do this" while he masturbated on her. The sophomore eventually reported the assault to Yale's "sexual harassment grievance board," which approached the junior. He admitted the assault but Yale never reported it in its Clery report, according to Bazelon.

This type of approach might have been why Yale had been reporting fewer sex offenses than any other Ivy League school, Bazelon noted. Yale reported five sex offenses between 2000 and 2002, while Harvard reported 80 from that same period and Princeton reported 29. Bazelon added:

To students trying to raise awareness on campus, the tiny number of assaults that Yale reports is maddening. “The dominant attitude is that rape doesn’t happen here. And Yale University reports support that feeling,” wrote Della Sentilles ’06 in the Yale Daily News last winter. “Yale statistics seem misleading and Yale students are inadequately informed.”

Yale reported 20 sex offenses in 2011 — so either the number is going up or the school is doing a better job of reporting its crime statistics. The university had this to say about the recent fine, according to the New Haven Register:

Yale fully supports the Department of Education’s mandate under the Clery Act and believes that student safety is of paramount importance. The university is fully committed to maintaining a robust program of campus security policies and campus crime statistics reporting that contains all of the elements prescribed by the Clery Act.

Yale added, though, that the "imposition of maximum fines is not warranted" for violations from so many years ago.

SEE ALSO: Columbia University Football Player Charged With Hate Crime For Allegedly Assaulting Classmate

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Mercedes-Benz Reveals Its New Top-Of-The-Line Sedan [PHOTOS]

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2014 mercedes-benz s-class sports package

Mercedes-Benz has finally revealed photos and details of the new model S-Class, the sedan that sits at the top of its luxury line.

The company notes that the average S Class owner makes $371,000 a year — enough to afford a car that will likely cost around $100,000, as well as its competitors.

Longtime rival BMW and up-and-comer Audi have threatened Mercedes's position as top luxury brand, so this S Class matters a lot to its bottom line.

For the 2014 model, Mercedes promises the "best or nothing in every respect."

From what it revealed Wednesday, it looks like it has delivered.

With a classic design, a ton of power under the hood, and a gorgeous interior (complete with an automatic perfuming function), the 2014 S-Class looks great.

In profile, the 2014 model is in keeping with the classic Mercedes-Benz look.



It will be luxurious, but powerful as well.



The S550 will have a twin-turbocharged, 4.7-liter V8 engine under the hood.



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Columbia Is Trying To Change The Terms Of Its $840,000 Scholarship For White Kids From Iowa

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columbia university libraryNYC's Columbia University seeking to change 1920 fellowship bequest for whites from Iowa

NEW YORK (AP) — Columbia University is seeking to change the terms of a 93-year-old trust earmarked for white students from Iowa.

The Lydia C. Roberts Graduate Fellowship stipulates that money be given only to "a person of the Caucasian race" from Iowa.

Roberts left Columbia most of her $509,000 estate when she died in 1920 and created the highly restrictive fellowship. It also stipulates that students must not study law, medicine, dentistry, veterinary surgery or theology. They also must move back to Iowa for a minimum of two years after graduating.

Lucy Drotning, the university's associate provost, filed an affidavit in Manhattan state Supreme Court last week in support of a legal action initiated by the fund's administrator, JPMorgan Chase Bank, seeking to change the terms of the trust. Columbia hasn't awarded the fellowship since 1997 — but the school said it's impossible to know when exactly Columbia stopped adhering to the race-related terms of the gift.

"Columbia long ago ceased awarding the fellowships in question and does not follow gift conditions that violate anti-discrimination laws," the university said in a statement Wednesday. "It should go without saying that a university rightly known for the great diversity of its student body is as offended as anyone by the requirements of these fellowships."

The court papers ask for the whites-only provision to be thrown out and suggest a modification to the Iowa-only rule.

The original trust is designated for graduate students who were born in Iowa and attended a college or university in Iowa. Columbia suggests in its affidavit that the stipulation could be modified so that fellowships could be awarded either to students who are residents of Iowa or to students who graduated from college there.

According to the affidavit, the current value of the trust is $840,000, and it earned $26,000 in income in 2011.

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A Controversial Banksy Mural Is About To Hit The Auction Block

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Slave Labour banksy

Art created by renowned British graffiti artist Banksy that was withdrawn from a controversial US auction is being put up for sale again in London, auctioneers said on Saturday.

The mural called Slave Labour mysteriously vanished from its original site on a wall in north London in February before appearing on an auction list in Miami later that month.

The work, which shows a boy making a Union Jack bunting on a sewing machine (an apparent comment on sweat-shop labour) was pulled from sale at the last minute, apparently after pressure by campaigners who wanted it returned to its original home.

The piece had been expected to fetch up to £450,000 (RM2 mil) The work had first appeared last May on the wall of an outlet of thrift store Poundland in the Wood Green district of Haringey shortly before the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee.

The piece is now set to go on sale at the London Film Museum in Covent Garden on June 2, auctioneers The Sincura Group said in a statement.

Sincura said that the mural has “been sensitively restored under a cloak of secrecy”, and will be “the centrepiece” of the group’s latest private art exhibition alongside pieces by Damien Hirst, Andy Warhol, Mario Testino and Russell Young.

But Alan Strickland, a councillor for Wood Green who has spearheaded the ‘Bring Back Banksy’ campaign since the piece was removed from its original site, said he would fight to prevent the sale going ahead.

“We feel very strongly that this piece was given freely by Banksy to our area. It belongs to the community and it should be returned to Wood Green,” Strickland said.

“The sale shows complete disregard for the strength of public feeling. “We were delighted to stop the sale in Miami and we are determined to campaign hard to stop this sale.

“News that the piece is being sold at an exclusive VIP reception is particularly galling for residents who previously enjoyed the artwork for free on a daily basis.”

Strickland said the successful sale of the work would set a dangerous precedent for other pieces of street art in public view.

“People from around the world have got in touch with us about this,” Strickland told us. “They are watching this because they know the possible consequences for street art where they live if this sale takes place. “If it goes ahead, every piece of street art will have its price.”

Keith Flett, secretary of the Haringey Trades Union Congress, said: “The Slave Labour Banksy belongs to the people of Haringey, not to a wealthy private client. “We want the sale stopped and the Banksy back where it belongs in London N22.”

Sincura director Tony Baxter said his group “does not condone any acts of wanton vandalism or other illegal activity” and said that they were “entirely satisfied that the mural was legally salvaged”.

He said the current owners of the work preferred to remain anonymous “due to unnecessary and disproportionate criticism,” adding that the piece was now being represented by a group called Bankrobber.

There was suspicion that the mural had been stolen when it first disappeared in February but London’s Metropolitan Police said there were “no reports of any theft”.

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16 Small Businesses On The Verge Of A Breakthrough

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Dun Well Doughnuts

OpenSky, a startup known as "the social network of shopping," recently put out a call for small businesses that deserve to expand. 

The Breakthrough Award will be given to the small business with the most votes. OpenSky shared the 16 small businesses that have risen to the top in voting. 

The winner of the contest will receive a plethora of web and e-commerce tools to expand and improve business. 

The finalists are diverse and offer products ranging from donuts to bow-ties.   

Impressed with one of these ideas? You can vote here. The winner will be announced June 20. 

Artisan Baking Company

Location: Fort Worth, Texas.

What they do:Artisan Baking Company is a small family business that specializes in "great-tasting, handmade bread and baked goods made from scratch with local, seasonal and organic ingredients."



Bottle & Bottega

Location: Chicago, Illinois.

What they do: Bottle & Bottega offers art classes and good wine for customers. The company is so successful it Chicago that it has begun franchising around the U.S. "Our hands-on art sessions allow anyone to uncork their inner artist and create something of their own," the company says



Campfire In A Can

Location: Henderson, Nevada. 

What they do: Campfire In A Can aims to make campfires easy. The $280 product is reusable and easy to transport. "We built a product that can easily be used from the backyard to the beach or wherever your adventures take you," the company says. 



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The Best Hotel Pools In Las Vegas

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Garden of the Gods Pool Oasis, Caesars Palace

You might thank a small Spanish island for the current daytime pool-party scene in the Nevada desert. 

Las Vegas has been called the new Ibiza, though in typical Vegas fashion, hotel casinos have taken the daytime electronic dance music scene and amplified it—with 32,000-watt subwoofers and custom lasers, international resident DJs, and cabanas with private infinity pools and beds for sleeping off the revelry.

Add in beaches, swim-up gambling, and models as waiters, and it’s safe to say that Las Vegas pools have never been cooler. 

See The Best Pools In Las Vegas >

With nearly 40 million visitors hitting the Strip in 2012, many with a seemingly insatiable appetite for daytime drinking and dancing, it’s no wonder hotels are devoting pool real estate to pay-to-play mega venues. New openings like Daylight in Mandalay Bay, Bagatelle in Tropicana, and the expanded Wet Republic at MGM Grand can host up to 5,000 partiers.

To be fair, the dayclub pool concept isn’t brand-new in Las Vegas. Rehab, the legendary Sunday bash at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, started the trend with its raucous parties back in 2003. What began as an excuse to extend the weekend became a rite of passage and the biggest meat market on or off the Strip. Meanwhile, DJs like Paul Oakenfold, who was in residence at the Palms, helped pave the way for electronic dance music fever.

 Because of the profitability of this pool party model, this also means that the Vegas pendulum has swung back to a decidedly grown-up scene, where cabana rentals often start at $300 on weekdays and rise exponentially on weekends. (Keep in mind that the prices reflect minimum food and drinks spending; do the math for your group to see if a cabana works in your favor.)

Still, we’ve identified swimming pools where kids are welcome, as well as some oases that are free or blissfully serene, such as the private Cypress Premier Lounges at the Bellagio. And here’s a little-known secret: you can gain entry to one of the Strip’s most rarefied pool areas by renting a cabana, and for a comparatively low rate.

For details, dive in to our roundup of the best Vegas pool options, from family-friendly to adults-only, with some pools that bridge the gap nicely.

See The Best Pools In Las Vegas >

More from Travel + Leisure:

Boulevard Pool, The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas

The largest of Cosmopolitan’s pool areas, the multilevel Boulevard Pool has an unobstructed view of the Strip below.

Big shareable daybeds give cover from the sun, and you can hang out in the wading pool, play ping-pong and foosball, or belly up to one of three bars. The pool springs to life at twilight, when either Dive In movies play on the 65-foot screen or the Set Your Life to Music concert series brings live performances. At Bubbles and Brunch, roving waiters serve items like blue claw crab Benedict with Creole hollandaise, and guests sip champagne while DJs spin until 6 p.m.

When to Go: Saturdays and Sundays for Bubbles and Brunch; Thursday evenings for Set Your Life to Music; Monday nights for Dive In Movies.

Admission: $20, but varies according to the event.

Open to Non-Hotel Guests? Hotel guests only during the day; open to non-guests for special events.

Family Friendly? Family friendly during the day; adults only for special events.



Liquid at Aria, Aria Resort & Casino

The modern Tahitian vibe at Liquid is less frantic than higher-volume dayclubs, and its 16,000 square feet qualifies as intimate, so you can enjoy a good mix of local DJs and the industry’s A-listers without battling a throng of crazed dancers. Eight cabanas are each outfitted with flat-screen TVs, a private pool, two daybeds, and a fridge. Handcrafted wicker daybeds and lounges surround the pool. Order from Light Group executive chef Brian Massie's menu poolside or at Liquid's own restaurant.

When to Go: Saturdays are busiest; Sundays are relaxed.

Admission: From $10 for women and $20 for men.

Open to Non-Hotel Guests? Yes.

Family Friendly? Adults 21 and over.



Rehab, Hard Rock Hotel and Casino

Break out your best swimsuit for this Sunday institution: three acres of beautiful people downing bottle service and signature cocktails around the 50 Tahitian-style cabanas and along the man-made sandy beaches and lazy river. The raucous party—which originated the dayclub concept in Vegas in 2003—shows no signs of slowing down. In 2012, Hard Rock introduced Summer Camp Fridays, another reason to start the weekend early. If Paradise Beach (which hosts Rehab) is too intense, hotel guests can migrate to Nirvana Beach. Breathe Pool is even more private—right above Nirvana with views of the Strip.

When to Go: Sundays for Rehab, Fridays for Summer Camp Fridays.

Admission: Free for hotel guests daily and the general public Monday through Friday. On Saturdays, from $20 for women and $40 for men; on Sundays, from $30 for women and $50 for men.

Open to Non-Hotel Guests? Yes

Family Friendly? Monday-Thursday. Adults 21 and over only Friday-Sunday.



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Half A Billion Dollars Worth Of Art Sold Last Night At The Biggest Auction In History

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art auction christie's

A blockbuster auction of Contemporary art in New York, including a record $58.4 million for a Jackson Pollock drip painting, fetched nearly half a billion dollars -- the biggest haul ever at an art auction.

Christie's said Wednesday's sale raised a "staggering" total of $495,021,500, with 94 percent of lots finding buyers. Nine of the works sold went for more than $10 million and 23 for more than $5 million.

It wasn't just the most successful auction of Contemporary art at Christie's, but the biggest haul from an art auction anywhere at all, the auction house said.

It was "the highest total in auction history," Brett Gorvy, head of post-war and Contemporary art, said. "The remarkable bidding and record prices set reflect a new era in the art market, wherein seasoned collectors and new bidders compete at the highest level within a global market."

Leading the frenzied charge were the Pollock and a work by one-time graffiti artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, which set another record at $48.8 million.

Pollock's "Number 19, 1948", executed in his iconic drip-paint style with a shimmering mixture of silver, black, white, red and green, had been expected to sell for between $25 million and $35 million.

But it shot up to set a new auction high for the artist. The previous top auction price for a Pollock had been $40.4 million last year, although his paintings are said to have sold for far more in unconfirmed private deals.

Christie's called the painting the fruit of "a legendary three-year burst of creativity between 1947 and 1950 that completely revolutionized American painting and reshaped the history of twentieth century art."

The exuberant sale at Christie's came a day after rival Sotheby's sold Barnett Newman's "Onement VI" for $43.84 million and a Gerhard Richter photo-style painting called "Domplatz, Mailand" for $37.1 million -- the highest auction price for any living artist.

Christie's Manhattan sale also saw Basquiat's "Dustheads" sail past its $25 million to $35 million pre-sale estimate to the highest auction price ever for the artist, who died in 1988 of a heroin overdose in New York, aged just 27.

The painting depicts two grimacing, brightly colored figures against a black background and "demonstrates Basquiat's unique ability to combine raw, unabashed expressive emotion whilst displaying a draughtmanship that was unrivalled in modern painting," Christie's said.

The previous auction high for the street artist turned superstar had been $26.4 million last year.

The other mega sale of the evening -- yet again setting an auction record for the artist -- was "Woman with flowered hat" by Pop Art master Roy Lichtenstein, going for $56.1 million.

The work is unusual for Lichtenstein, who is best known for comic-strip style scenes, but this time used his meticulous style to parody the Cubism of Picasso. The previous auction record for a Lichtenstein was $44.9 million, also last year.

Among the few losers in Wednesday's sale were Francis Bacon, whose "Study for portrait", estimated at $18 million to $25 million failed to find a buyer. Another work by Bacon, "Study for Portrait of P.L.", had been expected to sell for up to $40 million on Tuesday at Sotheby's, but also flopped.

Mark Rothko's "Unititled (black on maroon)" fetched $27 million, surpassing the pre-sale high estimate of $20 million, and Richter's "Abstraktes bild, Dunkel", estimated at $18 million, fetched just under $22 million.

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DEAR NEW YORKERS: Check Out The Amazing Cheap Rentals In The Rest Of America

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Las Vegas Nevada better than nyc

After THE WORST ROOMTumblrwent viral last week, everyone became aware of what New Yorkers have known forever — rent in NYC is absolutely insane.

New York real estate is so in demand that it isn't uncommon for people to share rooms, put up fake walls, and pay $1,000 a month for an apartment the size of a large closet.

So we asked Zillow, a U.S. home and real estate marketplace, to help us find some fantastic rentals around the rest of the country that can be had for under $1,000 a month. 

Unsurprisingly, all of the apartments are pretty huge, and most have pools and fitness centers in the buildings.

This 600-square-foot one bedroom in Albuquerque, New Mexico has a dishwasher and a pool in the back for $651/month.

Source: Zillow



This $950/month one-bedroom apartment in Atlanta is 800 square feet with a walk-in closet and gym and pool in the building.

Source: Zillow



This Austin, Texas one-bedroom costs $725/month. It comes with 660 square feet of space, plus a sauna, pool, basketball court, and fitness center in the building.

Source: Zillow



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American Apparel's 'Unisex' Ads Portray Men And Women Very Differently

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American Apparel unisexWhen perusing American Apparel's website for "unisex" wear, you might notice a strange trend.

While men in non-gender-specific shirts are shown modeling the clothing in innocuous poses — looking straight at a camera or smoking a cigarette — the female models all seem to forget their pants.

Swedish blogger Emelie Eriksson is sick of American Apparel's habit of letting male models wear shirts like normal human beings when women are posed almost naked in sexually explicit positions, for the very same clothing item.

Obviously, this is a deliberate ploy by American Apparel, which is known for shock tactics in advertising and regularly getting banned for vulgarity in the UK.

Still, the side-by-side comparison of how the retailer markets identical pieces to the different sexes is jarring. We've collected a few. (Warning: partial nudity ahead.)

Here's how American Apparel sells a unisex flannel shirt to a man.



And here's how the retailer thinks it should look on a woman.



All women wearing the innocuous garb suddenly find themselves incapable of wearing pants.



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Saving Money With Illegal Downloads Could Leave You Bankrupt

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game of thrones

The rise of file sharing sites over the last decade, including Napster, Kazaa, and more recently, torrent sites like The Pirate Bay, have pushed media-hungry Americans into the risky territory of illegal downloads.

While the instant gratification of watching the latest Game of Thrones episode for free may be appealing if you cannot afford the cost of HBO’s premium price tag, the legal and financial dangers of participating in illegal downloading or sharing can easily negate any savings.

Saving Money Through Illegal File Sharing Sites

Early renditions of illegal file sharing sites, like Napster, ran into copyright infringement issues and caused them to be shut down, but that hasn’t stopped a new generation of illegal file sharing sites to crop up. According to the U.S. Copyright Office, peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing websites are described as “applications in which users can use the Internet to exchange files with each other directly or through a mediating server.”

Depending on the item(s) being shared, a moderate-to-heavy downloader has the potential to save a few hundred dollars to a few thousand dollars a year, using torrent P2P sites like The Pirate Bay — especially when considering costs for software programs like Adobe Photoshop CS6 are at $700, an HBO subscription is up to an extra $50 per month depending on your subscriber, and a full album on iTunes costs approximately $10.

While file sharing in itself isn’t illegal, the sharing of copyrighted material — like the most downloaded TV show in 2012, Game of Thrones – is. Common copyrighted types of files spread across file-sharing platforms include music, episodes of television shows, blockbuster hits (and summer flops), in addition to video games, ebooks and computer software.

What Is Copyright?

The U.S. Copyright Office defines copyright as “a form of protection grounded in the U.S. Constitution and granted by law for original works of authorship fixed in a tangible medium of expression. Copyright covers both published and unpublished works.”

Ultimately, the “right to copy” is reserved to the creator so that the artist or entity that owns the property (i.e. song, album, show, software, etc.) can profit from it. In order to preserve this right, the U.S. government imposes heavy fines for those who are proven liable for copyright infringement, and possibly even time behind bars.

Internet Piracy Laws Hammer Down on Users

As copyright holders continue to stomp out illegal file sharing sites, more are turning to internet watchdogs to uncover file sharing users. Some employ for-hire monitoring services or ask your internet service provider (ISP) to report any unusual downloading activities under your account, based on any prolonged and excessive bandwidth use you’ve exhibited.

“More and more law firms are forcing ISP’s to turn over the internet identities of file sharers and [are] going after them individually,” notes Arif A. Mahmood, international intellectual property and social media lawyer.

Mahmood adds, “I would strongly advise those who are active file sharers that the days of complete anonymity are ending and it is possible to be identified, or have your employer identified if you are active at work, and end up in a possibly embarrassing situation.”

According to Mahmood, if you’re found liable of copyright infringement, you may have to repay damages to the copyright owner, in addition to any profits you have earned from the illegal downloads (e.g. if you downloaded the material and sold copies). Also, you may be risking your bank account to the tune of $750- $30,000 in statutory damages.

“If the infringement is ‘willful,’ the statutory fines can cost as much as $150,000,” continues Mahmood.

Illegal Downloads: Are the Extra Savings Worth It?

There are many varying points of view when it comes to the ethical standpoint of illegal downloads, but ultimately much of the conversation falls on money. When GoBankingRates surveyed the public regarding their thoughts on The Pirate Bay and other illegal file sharing sites, the responses were at extremes.

The Case Against Illegal Downloads

Juan María Solare, pianist and composer explains why he’s opposed to P2P file sharing:

“As a composer and pianist myself, peer-to-peer file sharing websites like Pirate Bay mean the difference between eating a cheap sandwich or a real meal,” says Solare. “If somebody copies my music without paying me, I will maybe not starve, but my life standard would noticeably change — for worse.”

Solare continues, ”There is a known fallacy out there that states that the real thieves are the record companies, because they pay the artists — if at all — just a fraction of what they get paid … As an independent artist, I get at least 80% of the money that people pay. And I would dare say, 90% of today’s real world artists are independent, they don’t have a major label that backs them and they ‘do it themselves,’ therefore, if somebody copies my music, they are not ‘stealing the thief,’ they are stealing my money.”

In Favor of Free Downloads

At the opposite end of the debate is Dan Nainan, an actor and comedian that claims that he “loves” illegal downloading. “I’ve been downloading illegally since way back in the beginning with Napster. I see absolutely no problem with it, because it saves me money,” claims Nainan. “I don’t pay a dime for music, software, even books … I don’t see any disadvantages whatsoever. The only thing is, I only do it from other Wi-Fi networks, not my home network, because I don’t want to get shut down or arrested.”

There is a saying amongst the technorati that ‘Information wants to be free.’ I’m a big believer in that. My YouTube video, which has been seen over 1.3 million times, allows people to watch my comedy for nothing, but I’ve gotten booked all over the U.S. and in 21 countries around the world because of that video, and I make my money from touring. It’s the Internet age — deal with it,” states the comedic entertainer.

No matter which side of the spectrum you’re more inclined to side with, keep in mind that the risks involved with illegal downloads from The Pirate Bay and other file sharing sites comes with a big price to pay if you’re targeted as an infringer.

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Prince Harry Has Crazy Swag, And Other Observations From Yesterday's Charity Polo Match In Greenwich

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Prince Harry Sentebale Polo Cup

There's something about having the British royals around that makes Americans of all ages act like it's 1964 again and the Beatles just landed.

Prince Harry's latest tour of the country was no exception. His week-long trip was marked by a seemingly endless barrage of pictures of girls crying/staring adoringly/ squealing (and so forth) from Washington D.C. to Colorado. Chris Christie looked charmed, the media went nuts, and (of course), there was an interview on Good Morning America.

The madness culminated yesterday, when Harry played in an exclusive polo match for the 3rd Annual Sentebale Royal Salute Polo Cup in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Now, as you've probably figured, Greenwich doesn't do frenzy like teen girls in New Jersey do frenzy. We're talking about the hedge fund capital of the world here. The event was held at the Greenwich Polo Club, a gorgeous, sprawling piece of countryside owned by billionaire businessman Peter Brant— Land Rover and St. Regis were two of the sponsors.

And of course, the event had a cause. The Sentebale Royal Salute Polo Cup is a fundraiser for Sentebale, a charity Prince Harry founded with Prince Seeiso of Lesotho in honor of their mothers. The organization benefits children that have been impacted by the AIDS crisis in southern Africa, and it's looking to expand its efforts throughout the region.

Put all that together and you've got a royal, a great cause, and the sport of kings. This, ladies and gentleman, is Greenwich's wheelhouse.

Prince Harrt playing poloOnly 400 tickets were available for this invite-only party, and they seem to have sold out in March.

And why wouldn't they — How often do Princes come around for the afternoon? The party started at 11:30 am, with guests trickling in slowly (some opting in to do the step and repeat — we did not) during a cocktail hour sponsored by Royal Salute Whisky.

It rained — no one cared.

Around 12:15 pm, the colorfully clad polo patrons started filing into a large white dining tent to await the Prince. Sometime before the gnocchi or filet mignon, he got on stage and made a speech about Sentabale.

And you know something? Prince Harry has a very welcoming demeanor. He smiles alot, he chuckles at people's jokes, he has a relaxed and confident stance. Since he's so at ease, it puts you at ease — and that means you listen.

Sentebale funds Mamohato Camps, places where kids with HIV can get educated about their status and receive the physical and psychological support they need. This is intended not only to help the kids as individuals, but also as a way to use education to stop the spread of the disease.

"Many of you may have heard this before and you're thinking, 'another African Charity,'" said Prince Harry. "But we believe the Mamohato Camps are a real game changer."

Harry's time at lunch was cut short because he had to prep for the polo match, and that takes some doing. Helmet and boots aside, if you want to play in a game of polo, you need four extremely smart, extremely fearless, well-trained horses — one for each 7 minute period (the periods are called chuckers).

And you need to know how good you are. Every polo player is given a "goal" handicap from -2 to 10. There are only a few ten goals in the world, and the two highest rated players on the field yesterday, polo stars Nacho Figueras and Malcolm Borwick, are both 6s.

Karolina Kurkova with Valentino GaravaniHarry is a 1 goal. But if you haven't spent your life leaning sideways on a saddle hitting a fairly small ball with a stick while a horse runs at full speed, that's pretty good.

Polo pros are tireless wanderers, constantly traveling with their families to places where polo is in season. (Figueras, for example, had his wife and kids with him). This match marked the beginning of polo in the New York area.

So a slightly tipsy, definitely well-dressed group of party-goers got to watch Harry lean, yell, and careen across the field. The rain stopped, the sun shined, and aside from a brief moment when Harry's teammate Michael Carrazza, a private equity CEO, suffered a minor injury, there were no physical hiccups.

And then the Sentebale team won.

The Cup was presented by former Victoria Secret model Karolina Kurkova, there was kissing and hand waving, and cheering — and then poof, Prince Harry was gone.

The party still went on though. It's not like you need a Prince to throw a good party in Greenwich.

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Bret Easton Ellis Explains How He Got The Inspiration For Those Super Gruesome Scenes In 'American Psycho'

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Patrick Bateman

Brett Easton Ellis, the author of "American Psycho" (the scariest book written about Wall Street) and several other must-read novels, did a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" the other day

It was a pretty good AMA and we'd recommend reading the full thing. 

Here's an excerpt.  (Note: This has been lightly edited for clarity):

Reddit User: How did you write such disgusting scenes in American Psycho. How did they even get in you? Where did you find such inspiration? Especially for the rat, that was EXTREMELY F*****D UP. Also, huge fan here. American Psycho is my favorite book of yours.

Easton Ellis: I waited to write those scenes until the book was finished. Since I didn't really know how to approach them. I did a little bit of research with some kind of FBI textbook that went into super-gruesome detail about serial killers. Then just being in [Patrick Bateman's] brain for three years--it all came together. Very upsetting scenes to write.

Reddit User: What did you think of American Psycho 2?

Easton Ellis: It was a breathtaking masterpiece.

Reddit User:Music has always played a large role, in many of your works. The playlists that exist for each book - were these assembled after the fact, or do the songs in your books reflect what you were listening to while writing them?

Easton Ellis:Those playlists absolutely reflected what I was listening to at the time I was writing those books. 

Reddit User: Favorite author? Besides yourself, of course.

Easton Ellis: Gustave Flaubert.

Reddit User: Could you explain the ending to American psycho to me like I'm a 5 year old?

Easton Ellis: Not really, babe. 

Reddit User: Hey there, been waiting all day, and impressed you came early! I'm a huge fan of American Psycho, and was wondering how you chose what Patrick Bateman's rants were going to be about, and how you researched them. Did you pick music artists/clothing styles that you personally like, or that you think Patrick would like? Or both? Thanks for doing this!

Easton Ellis: Well, in a lot of ways Patrick's rants are about wanting to fit into a society that he doesn't believe in. That's where I was, too. At the time. So a lot of the rants came from my frustration as well. Not a lot of research into that. I didn't like any of the music Patrick liked but it was popular at the time and it seemed to reflect a certain kind of mass-taste that PB wanted to be a part of. As for clothes: yeah, I wore a suit like a lotta guys did in that period but not nearly as fashion-conscious as PB.

Reddit User:Mr. Ellis – thank you for everything you’ve done for the first amendment. You are good for America. 1) How did you come up with the magical line from Glamorama “The better you look, the more you see?” What type of research did you do for the shower scene? 2) Do you enjoy Dexter? Who would win in a murder off – Dex or Patrick Bateman? 3) Supposedly in NYC you had the season’s greatest Christmas party every year. Did you and what made them so epic?4) Edward St. Aubyn, David Mitchell or Alan Hollinghurst?

Easton Ellis: 1. I don't remember. I think it was combining a couple of ads I saw in the '90s. And then it became a mantra for Victor Ward. The research for the shower scene was an accumulation of many shower scenes or variations thereof. 2. You know what? I never really got Dexter. I know a lot of people involved with the show. And I don't want to diss it. But it seemed too high-concept and jokey for me. I think Dexter would probably quite easily do away with PB. :( 3.  Christmas parties were packed. Anyone could come. I always liked the party scene in the film Breakfast At Tiffany's: that's the vibe I wanted. 4. I have read and admired all three authors. I think they have all written excellent novels. P r o p s

Reddit User: What do you miss about the 80s?

Easton Ellis: Well, I guess on a surface level a kind of analog/Empire way of life. But, really, the '80s didn't thrill me. So: not a lot, guys.

Reddit User: How is the current novel going, and is it a sequel to American Psycho?

Easton Ellis: Not a sequel to American Psycho. Honestly: the last month or so it has gone kind of slowly. Distracted by other things that are going on. Thinking it through, making notes, deciding which way to go.

Reddit User: In your experience, what restaurant has been the most difficult to get a reservation to?

Easton Ellis: If a restaurant is "too difficult" to get into: why the f*** bother? I don't have an answer to that because if I couldn't get in somewhere I just moved on. Unlike, of course, PB.

Read the rest of the AMA at Reddit >

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The Ultimate Guide To Atlantis, The Biggest Resort In The Caribbean

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atlantis resortFor those who have never been to Atlantis on Paradise Island, the sprawling megaresort can be daunting.

Like Disney World, there is nothing quite like it anywhere in the world.

And like DisneyWorld, Atlantis has the power to strike fear in the hearts and minds of parents who shudder the thought of wearing adult mouse ears almost as much as they dread hemorrhaging endless streams of cash.

To complicate matters, Atlantis is hard to describe as it's so many different things rolled into one: a gorgeous five-hotel Caribbean island resort, a 140-acre Aquaventure water park, the largest open-air marine exhibit in the world complete with dolphin and seal habitats, countless beaches and pools, a casino, a true culinary scene with restaurants from Bobby Flay and Nobu Matsuhisa, a seriously pimpin’ marina, and more.

All the confusion can make it hard to wrap your head around a visit. Where should you stay? How should you spend your day? What’s awesome and what’s overrated? How expensive will it be? Is there a shred of hope for some adult downtime or is it a kid bonanza all day all the time? You might be tempted to throw in the towel.

Just back from a recent visit, we thought it was time—at long last—to demystify the epic resort. The ins and outs, the highs and lows, and every reason why we’ll be back, slide wedgie and all; find it here in our Atlantis Survival Guide.

Lay of the Land 

Atlantis occupies most of the western corner of Paradise Island, which is connected to Nassau by a short, steep bridge. At the west end of the resort you find the luxurious and family-friendly Reef and adults-only Cove, both built in 2007. The Royal Tower sits at the center of the resort and opened in 1998. At the east end of the resort, you find Coral Towers and Beach Tower which were the first hotels here when Atlantis first opened in 1994; further east by about five minutes, you find the super-luxe One&Only Ocean Club.

We heard an excellent flight class analogy that sums up all five Atlantis hotels to a tee and really helps paint a picture of what to expect. Let's start with Beach and Coral Towers, which represent coach class. Royal Towers at the heart of the resort is business class. Reef and Cove are first class. One&Only Ocean Club is private jet. If you know how you like to fly—voila!—now you know what hotel to stay at when you visit Atlantis.

Where to Stay 

For us, The Reef and The Cove are the only way to go at Atlantis, and not just for the luxury, but for some exclusivity and space from the crowds. Cove is a modern, stunning adults-only hotel with an fantastic adults-only pool, Cain at the Cove, complete with plenty of daybeds, posh cabanas that open to the beach and the pool ($500 a day), and gambling tables under the shade of a thatched roof.

Reef is for families, a 497-room tower that still manages to feel boutique-y and is the only hotel on property at Atlantis to include kitchens as a standard hotel room amenity. (Tip: pay your cab driver an extra $15 to let you make a quick stop at the grocery store for breakfast and snacks, else you’re stuck with the expensive sundries shop in the lobby). Between both resorts sits the excellent, uncrowded Paradise Beach and Cascades pool, both of which are family-friendly, serviced by the bar and exclusive to guests at Reef and Cove. Guests at Reef also share access to the adult’s only Cain at the Cove.

When you stay at Reef and Cove, you are situated at the far west end of the resort, away from Aquaventure which becomes inundated with cruise ship passengers and Disney-like crowds for most of the morning and afternoon. We recommend shielding yourself from the mayhem and holing up in your semi-private escape, complete with a family-friendly zero-depth pool, awesome beach and that adult's only pool we keep talking about.

Fair Warning 

First things first, don’t for a second think you’ll do it all. Atlantis is a behemoth—at times, even a walker's nightmare— and despite all of the trekking you’ll do to get to and fro, you just won’t get to see everything. Besides, cramming it all in would defeat the purpose of a beach vacation.

You $$ should also know $$$$ that Atlantis is a big fat cash cow $$$$$. Everything is pricey and the nickel and dime-ing never seems to end. But, like Disney, blowing the bank here is unavoidable, so just make peace with it, target a few key activities and have fun while you throw your cash around.

What We Dig 

Speaking of target activities, here are our favorite things about Atlantis:

  • Beaches: We asked around and both kids and parents agree that the beaches are one of the best things about Atlantis. By our count, there are at least three beaches to enjoy on resort, with the semi-private Paradise beach being our favorite simply because it doesn't feel crowded,

  • Paradise Lagoon: Flowing into the heart of the resort is a man-made lagoon into which sea water and only small ocean creatures enter. This is a great place to introduce children to snorkeling and kayaking as you'll definitely see fish, but nothing too scary or deep. 

  • Aquaventure: This water park is the biggest in the Caribbean and all the cruise ships know about, hence the crowds, But come after 3 p.m. or so when passengers return to their ships and the lines lighten up dramatically. Like Disney, Atlantis does a great job of delivering mesmerizing, richly executed thrills. Everyone talks about Leap of Faith, which plummets you from the Mayan Temple through an impressive shark tank. If you like water shooting into your eyes while you attempt to see those sharks whiz by, be our guest. We'll be on the Serpent Slide, which carries you through the shark tank at a much more leisurely pace complete with longer, scarier views. For a long lazy river ride with some interesting twists, The Current is also great.

  • Cabanas: If you've got $500 to spare, the Cabanas at the adults-only Cove pool are pretty solid, with one door opening directly onto the beach and the other to the pool. Families tired of walking back and forth to rides might want to invest $150 for a minimalist cabana by the Baths pool, complete with a locker. 

  • Dining: The culinary options at Atlantis get overshadowed by rides and beaches, but really, this place beats the crap out of most Caribbean resorts, let alone theme park destinations, when it comes to cuisine.Bobby Flay's Mesa GrillJean-Georges' Café Martinique and DuneNobu and come mid July, the new Mediterranean-inspired Olives from Todd English—find them all here.

  • Atlantis Kids Adventure (AKA)It may be be the coolest kids club ever and we could yammer on and on about it ad nauseum, and we'd fork over the $45-60 to bring our kids again, no hesitation. We were gobsmacked by the top notch offerings within this giant kids club within a theme park. The caregivers, known as Adventure Guides, were warm and—according to our little ones—super fun. The club is divided into multiple, creative spaces that include a theater with a sound box and stage, fun themed bathrooms, a neon wizard room, a lego room, a grocery store, a giant doll house, a game room with a Wii tree, Xbox and Play Stations, an art room and, best of all, an amazing kitchen for classes taught by a chef (typically two classes offered daily, with themes like Pizza Toss, The Candy Ocean and Molten Maddness). Kids can come just for the cooking class, or for morning or evening AKA sessions. Starting June 17 at AKA, 3-day Cartoon Network Camps kicks off and kids get the chance to meet favorite characters, watch CN shows and play CN games.

  • Cain at the Cove: Your kids will love the kids club so much that you should take advantage with an afternoon by the adults-only pool. If you don't have kids, this is your pool. 

  • Marina Village: It's touristy, but come on Wednesday and Saturday to see the Junkanoo parade after grabbing a bite to eat. Mega yacht gawking is available 24/7. 

  • Lunch at the Lagoon Bar & Grill: It's not the food, but the chance to sit above a predator lagoon that rocks. It's where we saw that shark shown at top.

  • The Dig: No extra charge for guests to wander this 2.3-million gallon exhibit, where you can see the spell-binding giant manta. It's open late into the evening too, which is a really neat time to see it. 

  • The Casino: We might like the 60,000-square foot casino because last time we were there, we were on a winning streak. It also might be because the dealers are some of the friendliest and laid-back that we’ve ever met.

    What Is No Bueno 

We found ourselves regularly annoyed by the high price of everything as well as the cost for things that should have been included. WiFi is not reliable resort-wide and is an absolute killer at $19.95 per day, with the only free option being 15 minutes on a public computer in one singular resort library. To use the fitness center costs $15. Given all the walking, we considered renting a locker near Aquaventure, but decided not to when the prices ranged from $9-14. We needed a snorkel mask for the lagoon, and that with the tube cost $35. We picked up Ben & Jerry's ice cream bars for a treat: $14 for two.

We also were not big fans of the dolphin experience. Sure, you get to touch, hug and kiss a dolphin, but you end up feeling bad for the dolphins who "kiss" stranger after stranger as group upon group are ushered to the shallow waters like cattle. These experiences start at $135. For the safety of the dolphins, you are not allowed to take photos, and that makes sense; what does not is the robbery that happens when your only other option are images captured by their photographer with prices starting at $70. No thanks.

Do It All Over Again 

The high cost is real, but tell you what; we'd be back in a flash given the chance. Atlantis is beautiful, big and bad in the Michael Jackson kinda way. And unlike the typical family resort that focuses largely on the children, Atlantis does a fantastic job of offering something for everyone at every age.

Rates 

We found rates in May as follows: 

  • One&Only Ocean Club from $700/night 

  • The Cove Atlantis from $655/night 

  • The Reef Atlantis from $420/per night  

  • Royal Towers from $390/per night 

  • Coral Towers from $295/per night 

  • Beach Tower from $245/per night

SEE ALSO: The 20 Most Expensive Hotels In New York City

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NYC Has A Morbid New Way To Let Drivers Know They Are Speeding

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skeleton nyc

CLINTON HILL — The city's Department of Transportation is warning drivers on Park Avenue in Clinton Hill to take the pedal off the metal.

An electronic sign was recently placed on the busy thoroughfare telling motorists to "slow down."

And if a passing driver goes above the 30 miles per hour speed limit, an image of a skeleton appears warning drivers of what might happen if they don't obey the law.

“Speeding is a menace that endangers everyone on our streets, and it is particularly deadly for pedestrians,” DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan said in a statement. “These speeds boards deliver the equally chilling message that speeding kills and slowing down can save lives.”

The skeleton sign is part of DOT's "That’s Why It’s 30” anti-speeding safety campaign and was installed on Park Avenue at the request of The Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership.

The local group has been working to slow traffic on Park Avenue since 2009 and finished the Park Avenue Pedestrian Safety Plan last year. The plan proposes to retime safety lights, increase NYPD enforcement of the speed limit and add new streetlights.

From 1995 to 2009, there were 96 crashes with injuries on Park Avenue between Navy Street and Grand Avenue, according to Transportation Alternatives.

Earlier this year, a 13-year-old boy was hit by a cargo van while crossing the busy street and was treated for head trauma.

The skeleton sign will remain on Park Avenue for one month before it is moved to a new location.

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NYC's American Folk Art Museum Is An 'Ugly Brown Mediocrity' That Should Be Torn Down

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American Folk art museum Glenn Lowry

The architectural cause célèbre of the past few weeks has surely been the fate of the former American Folk Art Museum, which opened in 2001 and was designed by Tod Williams and Billie Tsien.

Located at 45 West 53rd Street, the unoccupied building sits on land that the Museum of Modern Art has purchased in order to expand even further toward Sixth Avenue.

When MoMA announced its plans to raze the structure, many in the architectural community were up in arms.

Just this week, the New York Times’s architecture critic, Michael Kimmelman, gave full-throated expression to this conviction in a front page story headlined, “Defending a Scrap of Soul Against MoMA.”

For some, the clash between this tiny building and the corporate museum next door recalls the battle between David and Goliath — if not a meeting of Bambi and Godzilla.

Obviously the building must, in the name of architecture itself, be preserved! (Let me say in passing that it never ceases to amaze me how admirably high-minded New Yorkers are when it comes to other people’s property.)

Perhaps you saw, a few days back, the video of that “ice tsunami” on a lake in Minnesota that bizarrely crept from the water onto the land, mercilessly crushing any structure in its path. A perfect metaphor, it would seem, for the relentless westward expansion of MoMA.

And yet, MoMA may have a soul after all. Before announcing the demise of the Folk Art Museum, the museum’s director, Glenn Lowry — doubtless concerned about a possible public relations disaster — personally visited Williams and Tsien to hold their hands and help them through the difficult days ahead.

In the interests of balance, however, I offer up this slightly more nuanced assessment of the building in question: Tear it down!

The façade, which frankly plagiarizes Christian de Portzamparc’s overrated LVMH Tower at 19 East 57th Street, is an ugly brown mediocrity that, from the day it opened, was as dysfunctional as it was ungainly. Occupying a tiny site originally meant for a row house, its interior was all circulation core — elevators and stairs — and almost no space for galleries. And in order to pull off the clumsy, value-engineered façade, the architects and the museum shut out almost all of the natural light that might have entered the space.

Following the outcry over the planned demolition, MoMA floated the idea that it will leave the building intact. This would surely be the worst possible solution. Not only would it leave standing a building that never was and never will be a functioning space for a museum or anything else. It would also gall the pedestrian with two examples of bad architecture: the structure in question and whatever is destined to rise up around it.

Neutered and hobbled by this misplaced respect, the new building would have to preserve a poorly designed and poorly executed structure that should never have been built in the first place.

More from The Real Deal:

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The 12 Trendiest Hotel Bars In The US

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Rose Bar New YorkMany hotels have on-site bars, even if they’re merely situated in the glorified outskirts of the lobby, where guests can grab standard drinks after a day of sight-seeing.

But these days, some of the best hotels across the country are making sure they step up their scene by providing not only comfy rooms and high-end services, but hotspot bars that attract locals as well as guests.

We’ve traveled across the country and have found the 12 trendiest hotel bars in the U.S.

So check ‘em out, and maybe offer your friends a round at one of these hip locales.

Bar Marmont, Chateau Marmont; Los Angeles

With its butterfly-covered ceiling, stuffed peacock in the corner, and plush banquettes, this 1930s Vietnam-inspired bar is one of the best places in Hollywood to share a drink with a starlet in hiding.

Beyond the celebrity factor, the Chateau’s comfortable bar is a wonderful place to enjoy the fantastic food.

The “damn good burger,” we can assure you, lives up to the name.



Rose Bar, Gramercy Park Hotel; New York City

The Rose Bar, a velvet-heavy lounge filled with celebs and beautiful people, is still one of the coolest scenes in town — a testament to the staying power of this super-trendy Ian Schrager-Julian Schnabel project.

When our reporter stopped in for a drink, he ran into Sting.

Original paintings by Andy Warhol, a massive fireplace, and a pool table all add to the ultra-chic vibe.



Alibi, Liberty Hotel; Boston

Alibi is located in the “drunk tank” of the former Charles Street Prison, where those arrested for public intoxication were kept overnight — a unique place to relive a little Boston history (hopefully on better terms).

Thick brick walls with cell doors and windows, original stone floors from the jail, mugshots of celebrities such as Sinatra, Morrison, and Nolte hanging on the walls, and jail-themed cocktails like “Doin’ Thyme” “Jailbait,” and “Ryekers Island,” are unsubtle reminders of the bar’s theme.

But leather couches, dark wood tables, and candle light make the experience much pleasanter today than it was for its former visitors.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Jamie Oliver's Restaurant Fined For Serving Pasta That Made A Woman 'Violently Sick'

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jamie oliver

Jamie Oliver is under fire once again.

The Telegraph is reporting that the British celebrity chef's Italian restaurant chain has been fined $12,200 after a customer became violently sick at the Portsouth location in 2011 while enjoying an anniversary dinner.

Kristy Richardson has Coeliac disease  — a painful disorder that causes the immune system to reject wheat — so she instructed three members of the British restaurant's staff that she needed gluten-free pasta, The Telegraph reported.

But instead of gluten-free, she was given an ordinary pasta dish, which caused her to become violently sick for five hours after the meal.

And as if that weren't enough, Richardson was also on a strict regimen of immunosuppressants in anticipation of a heart and lung transplant, which also prohibited her from ingesting gluten, according to Grub Street.

She was temporarily disqualified from the waiting list for replacement organs after eating at Jamie's Italian, according to The Sun.

The restaurant originally claimed in court that the waitress had taken the wrong order, thinking that Richardson had ordered the vegetarian meal rather than the gluten-free and vegetarian option.

The restaurant has since apologized, and pleaded guilty to "selling food not of the nature, substance or quality demanded by a purchaser," according to The Telegraph. It has also implemented new restaurant procedures and extra training sessions.

SEE ALSO: Inside The Biggest Celebrity Chef Restaurant NYC Has Ever Seen

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A Connecticut Chef Plans To Take Advantage Of The Coming Cicada Storm

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cicada

Bun Lai, a sushi restaurant owner in New Haven, is saying that instead of dreading the coming Cicada invasion, we should take advantage of all the tasty protein.

The well-known Connecticut chef is planning on cooking the cicadas for himself and possibly for select customers, The New Haven Register has learned.

“I plan to get a big freezer for them,” said Lai to The New Haven Register. “I’m going to catch a whole bunch of them and preserve them for future eating. I plan on eating a whole bunch of them myself.”

“I’m definitely considering the possibility of including them in some thematic dinners I do,” the chef went on. “Insects are far healthier for our bodies than eating meat.”

The United Nations would agree. It released a 200-page report earlier this week saying insects could be the cure to world hunger and the food crisis.

Cicadas are already consumed in places like Thailand and China, usually deep fried with spices.

Lai, however, told The New Haven Register that he will not be deep frying the insects, and instead choosing to steam or boil them with ground herbs and spices.

SEE ALSO: These Insect Dishes Are The Solution To World Hunger

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