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Why married couples are struggling more than ever before

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the notebook ryan gosling rachel mcadams

Marriage has always been a gamble, but the modern game is harder — with higher stakes than ever before.

Struggling marriages make people more unhappy today than in the past, while healthy marriages have some of the happiest couples in history, according to a comprehensive analysis published in 2007 regarding marital quality and personal well-being.

When Eli Finkel sought to understand why marriage is more extreme at both ends today than in the past, he discovered something intriguing yet discouraging: Marriages in the US are more challenging today than at any other time in our country's history.

Finkel is a professor of social psychology at Northwestern University and is known for developing a surprisingly simple marriage-saving procedure, which takes 21 minutes a year. (The procedure involves three seven-minute online writing sessions, where couples describe their most recent disagreement from the perspective of a hypothetical neutral bystander — something they are also encouraged to try out in future arguments.)

Finkel, together with his colleagues of the Relationships and Motivation LAB at Northwestern, have gone on to publish several papers on what they call "the suffocation model of marriage in America."

In their latest paper on this front, they explain why — compared to previous generations — some of the defining qualities of today's marriages make it harder for couples to cultivate a flourishing relationship. The simple answer is that people today expect more out of their marriage. If these higher expectations are not met, it can suffocate a marriage to the point of destroying it.

couples

Finkel, in an Opinion article in The New York Times summarizing their latest paper on this model, discusses the three distinct models of marriage that relationship psychologists refer to:

  • institutional marriage (from the nation's founding until 1850)
  • companionate marriage (from 1851 to 1965)
  • self-expressive marriage (from 1965 onward)

Before 1850, people were hardly walking down the aisle for love. In fact, American couples at this time, who wed for food production, shelter, and protection from violence, were satisfied if they felt an emotional connection with their spouse, Finkel wrote. (Of course, old-fashioned, peaceful-seeming marriages may have been especially problematic for women, and there were an "array of cruelties that this kind of marriage could entail," Rebecca Onion wrote recently in Aeon.)

Those norms changed quickly when an increasing number of people left the farm to live and work in the city for higher pay and fewer hours. With the luxury of more free time, Americans focused on what they wanted in a lifelong partner, namely companionship and love. But the counter-cultural attitude of the 1960s led Americans to think of marriage as an option instead of an essential step in life.

This leads us to today's model, self-expressive marriage, wherein the average modern, married American is looking not only for love from their spouse but for a sense of personal fulfillment. Finkel writes that this era's marriage ideal can be expressed in the simple quote "You make me want to be a better man," from James L. Brooks' 1997 film "As Good as It Gets."

as good as it gets jack nicholson with puppy

These changes to marital expectations have been a mixed bag, Finkel argues.

"As Americans have increasingly looked to their marriage to help them meet idiosyncratic, self-expressive needs, the proportion of marriages that fall short of their expectations has grown, which has increased rates of marital dissatisfaction," Finkel's team writes, in their latest paper. On the other hand, "those marriages that succeed in meeting these needs are particularly fulfilling, more so than the best marriages in earlier eras."

The key to a successful, flourishing marriage? Finkel and his colleagues describe three general options:

  • Don't look to your marriage alone for personal fulfillment. In addition to your spouse, use all resources available to you including friends, hobbies, and work.
  • If you want a lot from your marriage, then you have to give a lot, meaning that in order to meet their high expectations, couples must invest more time and psychological resources into their marriage.
  • And if neither of those options sound good, perhaps it's time to ask less of the marriage and adjust high expectations for personal fulfillment and self discovery.

wedding couple first dance bride groomOther researchers, like sociologist Jeffrey Dew, support the notion that time is a crucial factor in sustaining a successful marriage.

Dew, who is a professor at the University of Virginia, found that Americans in 1975 spent, on average, 35 hours a week alone with their spouse while couples in 2003 spent 26 hours together. Child-rearing couples in 1975 spent 13 hours a week together, alone, compared to couples in 2003 who spent 9 hours a week together. The divorce rate in America was 32.8% in 1970 and rose to 49.1% by 2000.

While that doesn't necessarily mean less time together led to divorce or that the people who stayed together were happy, Finkel's research suggests that higher expectations and less investment in the relationship may be a toxic brew.

Marriage has become as tricky but also as potentially rewarding as climbing Mt. Everest: Obtaining a sense of personal fulfillment from your partner is as hard as achieving the summit. This is both good and bad because it means that you are reaching for the pinnacle of what marriage has to offer — which explains why couples in healthy marriages are happier now than in the past — but it also means that meeting those expectations and feeling satisfied in marriage is harder than ever.

"The good news is that our marriages can flourish today like never before," Finkel writes for The New York Times. "They just can't do it on their own."

SEE ALSO: Scientists Have Discovered How Common Different Sexual Fantasies Are

CHECK OUT: 5 Ways To Tell If Someone Is Cheating On You

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Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model reveals her diet and exercise routine

When we showed people the food of the future, they were shocked

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The world's population is projected to grow from 7.2 billion to 9.6 billion people by 2050. So, what needs to be done to feed an extra two billion mouths?

We need to eat more bugs

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations makes a compelling case that insects are key to our future food security. Insects are chock-full of protein, good fats, calcium, iron, and zinc — making them viable alternatives to chicken, pig, and cow meat. Bugs are also much easier on the environment. 

Much of the world has already discovered this. Eighty percent of nations, from Southeast Asia to Latin America, already consume more than 1,900 different insect species. Fried locusts and grasshoppers, for example, are extremely popular street foods in Thailand. The Western world has been the only holdout, but that is perhaps starting to change.

Restaurants in New York and other major cities are featuring items such as grasshopper tacos. Meanwhile, Tiny Farms, Bitty Foods, and Don Bugito are three startups in San Francisco betting on bugs. Tiny Farms offers open-source farm kits encouraging individuals and businesses to raise their own insects, Bitty Foods makes baked goods using flour made of ground-up crickets, and Don Bugito sells flavorful cooked insects in snack-size packages.

These startups are leading the way in putting insects on your plate.

Produced by Will Wei and Graham Flanagan. Edited by Sam Rega.

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This $20 million Indian wedding included 16,000 guests and a performance by Jennifer Lopez

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A member of India’s billionaire Hinduja dynasty got married on Thursday and the multi-million-dollar-affair was the place to be for India's rich and famous.

Sanjay Hinduja, the son of business legend Gopichand Hinduja and chairman of Gulf Oil International, married designer Anu Mahtani on Thursday after a week of celebrations that reportedly cost upward of $20 million.

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Here are the best President's Day deals for online shoppers

A day in the life of the President of the United States

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Obama nighttime White HouseHe's the Commander in Chief of the world's most powerful military, head of his political party, and leader of the free world. His decisions can help quell a crisis or trigger war, and his words will be heard across the globe.

He's the President of the United States, and he's got the world's toughest job.

Plans and schedules can change in a heartbeat when a crisis happens, so there is no "typical day" for the President. Every day yields new challenges.

But if all goes well for the President on a normal day in Washington, D.C., he'll get about six hours of sleep before he starts it all over again. 

Paul Szoldra wrote the original version of this story.

The President wakes up pretty early, but his routine usually includes a morning workout before heading into the office.

Source: NBC News



He arrives at the Oval Office between 8:30 and 9 a.m., and gets a rundown on the day's schedule from his personal secretary, Ferial Govashiri (right).

Source: NBC News



At around 10 a.m., he receives the classified Presidential Daily Briefing from his National Security Advisor. Sometimes the briefing is delivered via tablet.

Source: White House



See the rest of the story at Business Insider






Authorship is quickly dying, and artist Richard Prince is in legal trouble again

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runaway nurse by richard prince

Richard Prince is in copyright trouble again, Hrag Vartanian reports

The artist, who is represented by one of the world's most famous art dealers, Larry Gagosian, received a cease-and-desist letter from the Seattle-based photographer Donald Graham after Prince reproduced one of Graham's photographs without permission in a 2014 gallery show. 

Prince is an appropriation artist, meaning that he takes the work of others and reapproprates it into something new with a different meaning (see: Sherrie Levine's After Walker Evans series). But Prince is a little different — it can be unclear whether Prince is really making a comment on others' works or just taking them without attribution.

Another artist, Patrick Cariou, famously sued Prince for reusing his photos of Rasafarians in a 2008 show at Gagosian Gallery. The case wound its way up the court system for several years. In the end, a judge decided that most, but not all, of Prince's works were protected by the fair use clause in copyright law, and Prince settled with Cariou earlier this year.

In October 2014, Prince had another show at Gagosian. He once again used appropriated images of Rastafarians, but this time, he reproduced large version instagram posts from other people. And this is where we fall down a copyright rabbit hole.

Prince made artwork based on Graham's photograph, which he exhibited and presumably sold for many thousands of dollars more than Graham would ever get for the same photo. That's why why Prince got the cease-and-desist. 

But Prince didn't take the work from Graham. He took from an Instagram user, @rastajay92. In the artwork reproduced for the Prince show at Gagosian, Prince had commented on the Instagram post “Canal Zinian da lam jam,” though the comment has since been taken down. This it what it looks like now: 

Real Bongo Nyah man a real Congo Nyah ✊ repost @indigoochild

A photo posted by Jay Kirton A.K.A Ka Assante (@rastajay92) on May 5, 2014 at 1:48pm PDT

The problem with this Instagram post is it doesn't attribute the work of Graham. Looking at it, you can't tell where it's from. Prince could very well argue that he didn't know Graham took the photo. He appropriated @rastajay92's photo. In an artistic sense that would make the Prince piece much less interesting, but for the moment that's neither here nor there.

This is where it gets really complicated: Graham's image on Instagram didn't originate with @rastajay92. He clearly attributes where he took it from, and it wasn't Graham. The comment notes that the photo is a "repost @indigoochild." Sure enough, by searching through @indigoochild's feed, you find the image back in February 2014: 

The original post by @indigoochild doesn't have any text associated with it. It would appear (although who knows), that this is actually the person who first appropriated Graham's photo. But you never know. It's possible that @indigoochild took this photo from someone else, and didn't attribute it to them, rather than taking it straight from the artist. 

Prince's Instagram show is all about how normal it has become to take and repost a photo, with a continuous cycle of non-attribution. Sampling, with or without notes as to where images came from, is quotidian.

And the fact that Prince got a cease-and-desist letter, but the Instagram users who originally appropriated the work did not (to our knowledge), actually makes Prince's work much more interesting. It makes it art, instead of just a dumb Instagram show. No one cares about sampling on the web until someone makes a boatload of money off of it. In some sense that seems fair, but is it really?

Shepard Fairey The internet is changing the way that society thinks about image appropriation. It might not be intuitive to someone who grew up with screenshot + paste that attribution is important. The notion of authorship is disappearing, particularly with images, because anyone can post any photo to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, or Instagram. No one asks who took the photo. Why should anyone think that information is important?

(Tangentially: Tumblr prompts users for a source when posting a quote, but not when uploading an image.)

This is anathema to the pro-copyright community, and really scary for the legion of professional photographers who make a living through authorship of images. It's in many ways worse than what illegal downloading did to the music industry, because it says that not only should images be free, but they should also be authorless.

Fixing this might be as easy as platforms requiring authorship information in order to post images. But no one asks for that information. So we don't give it.

And thus continues to steady creep to the complete annihilation of the author.

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NOW WATCH: We got into Kanye's free show in New York City and it was absolutely incredible


The 'Fifty Shades of Grey' book is way steamier than the movie — so read it before you head to the theater

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No matter how bad or good the "Fifty Shades of Grey" movie might be, women might still prefer the book.

The reason? Researchers have found that women prefer to read about sex rather than watch it.

According to TIME Magazine

"There’s overwhelming evidence that women prefer erotica to be textual rather than visual," says Ogi Ogas, a neuroscientist and co-author of A Billion Wicked Thoughts, in which he analyzes billions of web searches and millions of erotic sites to quantify what people truly desire. He found that women make just 1 out of every 50 purchases on porn websites, but that they buy 9 out of every 10 romance novels."

Part of the reason this might be the case is that women "leave certain things to the imagination," according to TIME.

In other words, the viewer just has to go with what's presented to her when she's watching a movie. But with a book, the reader can fantasize and use her imagination.

So if you (or a woman you know!) were a little disappointed with the "Fifty Shades of Grey" movie this weekend, maybe check out the original — and let your imagination run wild.

Get the first Fifty Shades of Grey book for $8.97 [44% off].

Or if you're a bit bolder, get the whole trilogy for $28.71 [40% off].

SEE ALSO: Here are the best discounts on luggage this President's Day [everything 60% off or more]

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NOW WATCH: Learn what all the fuss is about — here's the regular guy's guide to 'Fifty Shades of Grey'









Why Everyone Is So Excited About Ultra-HD TV

The strengths and weaknesses of every personality type

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Even though the Myers-Brigg Type Indicator personality test is controversial, it’s still extremely popular in today’s business world. 

It tests four behavioral binaries to come up with 16 distinctive personality types. To give you an idea of how important it is, 80% of the Fortune 500 companies and 89 of the Fortune 100 companies use it to analyze their employees.

The Career Assessment Site created a helpful infographic to show what the strengths and weaknesses of each type as well as how common your personality type is and average household income.

First take the test to see which type you get, and then check out the infographic below.

myersbriggs personality types

SEE ALSO: The best jobs for every personality type

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NOW WATCH: Here's The Mistake Employees Make Early In Their Career That Hurts Their Productivity








The 25 most elite boarding schools in America

The sex is the only redeeming quality in 'Fifty Shades of Grey'

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fifty shades of grey

The "Fifty Shades of Grey" movie is terrible.

But the movie does have one redeeming quality: the sex. 

The movie is slightly more complicated than the book (which is terrible), I think, because it makes some attempt to respond to the book's major critique — that the relationship between Christian Grey and Anastasia Steele is not actually consensual.

The movie addresses this without overcoming it. The sex in the movie seems pretty clearly consensual, and, with the exception of the last scene, appears to be enjoyable.

The problem, of course, is that the sex scenes are completely at odds with the actual plot of the movie, which depicts the beginnings of an abusive and coercive relationship. The sex scenes are important, though, and not just because they're softcore porn being shown on giant screens all over America. They're strangely progressive.

(I don't mean the bondage, that's awful. Rope and cable ties bought at a hardware store are torture devices, not restraints.)

"50 Shades of Grey"

Within the realm of mainstream Hollywood film this movie is something of a breakthrough.

There's oral sex, performed by a man on a woman. There's even a hint that Anastasia may have had an orgasm that was asynchronous and unrelated to her partner's.

Despite everything else in the film suggesting the opposite, the sex scenes are closer to actual sex between two people who like each other than almost anything I've ever seen in a theater.

They're not even really that good, but they are better than the male-centric sexual cliché that Hollywood usually churns out.

It's really depressing that it takes a story about a man who coerces a college student into being his sex slave to make a mainstream Hollywood movie that includes a woman enjoying sex.

SEE ALSO: Authorship is quickly dying, and artist Richard Prince is in legal trouble again

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This 'Fifty Shades of Grey' trailer recreated with Legos is way better than the original








We've partnered with General Assembly to give away a free trip to Austin, Texas

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SXSW party

Business Insider and General Assembly have partnered to bring you a chance to win a trip to everyone’s favorite tech festival in Austin, Texas this March. We'll cover the flight  for you and a friend, provide VIP access to private events and parties, and set you up in exclusive 1-on-1 meetings with entrepreneurs & influencers from the tech and music scene. Enter by February 22, 2015.

One Lucky Winner And A Friend Will Receive:

  • Round-trip airfare to Austin, Texas March 13 - March 17, 2015
  • Four nights of accommodations in downtown Austin and a boozy gift bag from Drizly to greet you
  • VIP access to the third annual Lunar Kaleidoscope party on 14 March, hosted by General Assembly & Splash
  • Two VIP passes to the full-day ff Massive party on March 15
  • Coffee meetings with hand-picked startup founders and industry influencers
  • Exclusive seats at a private dinner with influential entrepreneurs from NYC, SF, & LA
  • $1,000 Uber credit to ride in style around the city
  • Free access to all GA Educational Programs at the festival

Enter to win here

 

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NOW WATCH: What Happened When A Bunch Of Young Boys Were Told To Hit A Girl








Read about the secrets, scandals, and affairs behind 'Saturday Night Live' in these 4 books

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Over the last 40 years, loads of "Saturday Night Live" sketches have made television history.

But even if you know all the famous sketches, we're betting that you haven't heard about all the scandals and affairs that happened behind the scenes.

Failures, drugs, loneliness, and stardom — get the inside scoop with these books.


"Saturday Night Live: The Book" by Alison Castle

saturday night life snlHere's a great coffee table book to have around.

This one comes with over 2,300 images from the studio's archives — many of which have never been published before.

And there's also an exclusive interview with the founder and executive producer Lorne Michaels.

Hardcover: $34.35


"Live from New York: The Complete, Uncensored History of Saturday Night Live as Told by Its Stars, Writers, and Guests" by James Andrew Miller

saturday night life snlThis book was originally published for SNL's 30th anniversary. But now the authors have returned and added over 100 pages of new material on the fourth decade of the sketch show.

Check out all the stars, the secrets, and the controversies you didn't see on stage.

Hardcover: $21.52
Kindle: $14.99


"Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live" by Doug Hill and Jeff Weingrad

saturday night live snlTake a tour through the first ten years of SNL. There are scandals, drugs, betrayals, failures, and affairs.

"It reads like a thriller," said the Associated Press, "and may be the best book ever written about television."

Kindle: $6.29


BONUS: "Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life" by Steve Martin

saturday night live snl steve martinTechnically, this one isn't about SNL — but Steve Martin was a frequent host and guest on SNL (and Lorne Michaels was even his best man).

Martin's autobiography details his early career as a comedian. He writes about the sacrifices he made, the loneliness of stardom, and the focus and discipline required for success.

And there's plenty of great career advice in here — even if you're not planning on becoming a comedian.

Kindle: $6.29


 

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NOW WATCH: What Happened When A Bunch Of Young Boys Were Told To Hit A Girl








Here's what people instantly assume about you from the way you walk

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models walking

Whether or not they're accurate, people are constantly forming opinions about everybody else's personality with just a glance. 

Psychologists call it thin slicing — we draw conclusions about people's sexuality, dominance, and earning potential within seconds of seeing their faces

But that impression-making isn't limited to appearances; it's also in the way people move. 

In a British study, students were shown looping video clips of 26 other students walking a single "gait cycle," or a completed step with each foot. They were asked to rate the walker on a range of personality traits: adventurousness, extroversion, neuroticism, trustworthiness, and warmth.

Naturally, some students had longer strides and others had shorter steps. 

That one gait cycle was all that was needed to give a sense of the walker's personality. Overall, students equated looser gaits with extroversion and adventurousness, while the more clipped walkers were seen as neurotic.

Perhaps surprisingly, these third-person impressions didn't match up with the walkers' scores on personality tests. 

"It appears that trait impressions based on motion data ... are reliable but not valid," write authors John C. Thoresen of Durham University, Quoc C. Vuong of Newcastle University, and Anthony P. Atkinson of Durham University. 

"Observers agree with each other about which walkers look, say, extroverted or conscientious," they write, "but their impressions do not correspond to how the targets rated themselves." 

So while you may think you look like a carefree adventurer while strolling around downtown, passersby might get the impression that you're emotionally unstable. 

The takeaway: If you want to look like you're personable and open to new experiences, you're probably going to want to lengthen your steps — and give the impression that you can take it all in stride.

SEE ALSO: Science says people decide these 9 things within seconds of meeting you

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NOW WATCH: How To Respond To 8 Illegal Interview Questions









Here's where President Obama dined with Elon Musk and Marc Benioff this weekend

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President Obama was in San Francisco this weekend after visiting Stanford for the White House Summit on Cybersecurity and Consumer Protection on Friday.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Obama attended a Democratic party fundraising dinner at the Russian Hill home of tech investor Sandy Robertson, where about 60 guests paid between $10,000 and $32,000 a plate. 

Obama then dined at Michelin-starred restaurant Spruce with about a dozen big names from the tech industry, including Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Inside Scoop reports.

Spruce serves "California-inspired American cuisine," with dishes like a house-made tagliatelle and a grilled rib-eye steak running between $29 and $42. 

spruceA source told Inside Scoop that Benioff made the reservation in the restaurant's Laurel room, where a private party has a $3,000 minimum. The restaurant's interior also includes a Baccarat crystal chandelier and faux ostrich chairs.

spruce

Though we don't know what the group ate, Spruce confirmed the president's visit on its Facebook page.

Obama finished off his California weekend with a trip to the Palm Springs area, where he reportedly took part in a round of golf at Oracle billionaire Larry Ellison's Porcupine Creek Golf Course. 

SEE ALSO: Where to get all your favorite foods in San Francisco

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NOW WATCH: 14 things you didn't know your iPhone headphones could do








We got inside Shake Shack and found out what the hype is all about

The 25 smartest boarding schools in America

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St. Albans School, Washington DC

We recently published a list of the most elite boarding schools in the US by using data from BoardingSchoolReview.com.

But because strong academics are a major reason why people opt to attend boarding school, we decided to re-rank the data by highest average SAT score.

The SAT, which is scored out of 2400, is one of the top factors colleges look at when deciding which applicants to admit. The schools whose students have the highest average SAT scores — 2140, 2130, and 2104 — are St. Albans School, The Hockaday School, and Groton School, respectively. Many of the schools on this list offer SAT tutoring in advance of the exam, which can give students a leg up on their scores.

Data that was unavailable on BoardingSchoolReview.com was taken from the schools' websites or from Niche. When two schools reported the same average SAT scores, we used average ACT scores as a tiebreaker.

25. St. Mark's School — Southborough, Massachusetts

Average SAT score: 1940

Advanced or AP classes offered: 32

St. Mark's students can choose between 32 advanced and AP courses, including Latin, studio art, and physics, as well as 70 extracurricular organizations including yearbook, badminton, and jazz band. St. Mark's is constructing a new campus building that will provide state-of-the-art facilities for STEM subjects.



24. The Madeira School — McLean, Virginia

Average SAT score: 1945

Advanced or AP classes offered: 17

From freshman year, Madeira girls study along a rigorous academic curriculum and a co-curriculum, which provides students with additional experiential and social learning opportunities. Co-curriculum opportunities involve off-campus internships, personal-finance classes, and outdoor field trips.



23. Emma Willard School — Troy, New York

Average SAT score: 1950

Advanced or AP classes offered: 23

Emma Willard girls take AP classes in subjects like English, foreign language, math, science, history, art, and computer science. The school also expresses a belief students should be free to pursue their own interests, offering an intense personalized studies program.



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Here's how much San Francisco home prices have exploded in the last decade

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Renting a one-bedroom apartment will cost you more in San Francisco than anywhere else in the U.S. — and the market for buying a home isn't any better. 

PropertyShark did an in-depth analysis of home sales over the last decade, seeing how the median price per square foot has changed since 2004. While some neighborhoods, like Russian Hill in the northern part of the city and Excelsior in the south, saw no change at all, most neighborhoods saw at least a modest rise in median sale prices.

The neighborhoods that saw the greatest increases are highlighted in red in the map below. 2004 prices were adjusted for inflation. 

propertyshark sf map

The areas that are home to tech companies like Zynga, Dropbox, and Yelp had the biggest 10-year increases by far.

In the Inner Mission, home sale prices have risen a full 47% since 2004. SoMa saw home prices rise by 32%, while the Dogpatch recorded an increase of 43%. 

propertyshark sf map

SEE ALSO: This $800,000 San Francisco apartment comes with a year of free Uber rides

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NOW WATCH: 14 things you didn't know your iPhone headphones could do








The most admired people in the world

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Angelina JolieAdmirable people can be world leaders, humanitarians, or movie stars. The common thread is that they're often making a difference in the world.

International market research firm YouGov conducted a global poll people in 34 countries to come up with the most admired people in the world.

YouGov gathered open-ended nominations in December, used these to compile a list of 25 men and 25 women, and polled people again to choose who they admire most from the two lists.

The most admired man on the list is Bill Gates, followed by US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping. 

Gates, known first for co-founding Microsoft, is better known these days for his philanthropic Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which supports initiatives in education, world health, and poverty. In 2014, Gates noted breakthroughs in particular on the global health front, especially when it comes to access to vaccinations and health care. He's also changing the way high school history classes are taught with the holistic, multi-disciplined Big History curriculum which enriches student learning of history beyond the typical chronological method.

The most admired woman is Angelina Jolie, followed by Malala Yousafzai, and Hillary Clinton.

In 2014 Jolie began moving away from acting and toward writing and directing, as well as work in the humanitarian field. A UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) special envoy, Jolie was honored in June by Queen Elizabeth II as an honorary dame for her PSVI campaign against sexual violence. A political career may be in her future, as she revealed in an interview with Vanity Fair that she's very "open" to the idea.

See the graphic below for the full list of the world's most admired men and women (click to enlarge):

World's Most Admired 2015, YouGov

SEE ALSO: The 24 most impressive people of 2014

THE LATEST LISTS: Follow @BI_Lists on Twitter!

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