Quantcast
Channel: VICE CA
Viewing all 38002 articles
Browse latest View live

Can Barack Obama Really Save the Middle Class?

$
0
0

Delivering his sixth State of the Union address Tuesday night, President Barack Obama declared that the nation's crises are officially over—that after years of war and terror and economic collapse, America is finally ready to "turn the page."

"Tonight, after a breakthrough year for America, our economy is growing and creating jobs at the fastest pace since 1999. Our unemployment rate is now lower than it was before the financial crisis," he told Congress. "Tonight, for the first time since 9/11, our combat mission in Afghanistan is over."

"America, for all that we've endured; for all the grit and hard work required to come back; for all the tasks that lie ahead, know this," Obama added. "The shadow of crisis has passed, and the State of the Union is strong."

It was a triumphant message, reminiscent of the "Hope and Change" days of the 2008 campaign, and was followed by a sweeping set of domestic policy ideas on issues like income inequality, immigration, and climate change. With the economy—and his approval ratings—on the rise, it was an opportunity for Obama to open up a new chapter of his administration, and focus on the liberal priorities he's been promising to promote since taking office.

But as Obama visits Kansas and Idaho this week to promote the agenda he outlined Tuesday, he faces increased skepticism from voters who don't necessarily share his rosy view of the economy. New Yorkers I spoke to this week told me that after six years of economic recession and political gridlock, they don't expect much from the president or his proposals. And they definitely aren't convinced that the economic crisis is really over.

"A lot of people, including myself, have been wondering where's Obama's been on a lot of issues," Rumaan Alam, a 37-year-old telemarketer from Brooklyn told me. "The economy is on a lot of people's minds." He added, "I worry about working class people and I worry about myself, given how hard it has been to find work with a college education living in this city."


[body_image width='900' height='689' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='can-obama-really-save-the-middle-class-123-body-image-1422039295.jpg' id='20727']

Rumaan Alam, Brooklyn.

Sure, there are positive signs that the worst of the economic crisis is over. Unemployment is down to 5.6 percent, almost half of what it was at the peak of the recession. But Republican Senator Joni Ernst was right when she pointed out in her party's official response that the drop is due in part to the fact that many of the long-term unemployed have simply given up looking for work. The percentage of eligible workers who are either employed or actively looking for jobs is currently at 62.9 percent, the lowest it's been since 1977.

And the jobs out there are far shittier than they were six years ago. According to numbers from the National Employment Law Center, there are roughly 1.2 million fewer jobs in mid- and higher-wage industries than there were prior to the recession, while there are 2.3 million more jobs in lower-wage industries. While the wealthiest Americans have bounced back from the economic crisis, middle-income earners have struggled. The median upper-class household net worth by income is $639,400, according to the Pew Research Center, seven times that of the median middle-class income, $96,500, and nearly 69 times that of poorest households, whose median net worth comes to just $9,300. In the past year, wages have only risen by a measly 1.7 percent. With Obama's championing of the "middle-class economy" Tuesday, it's hard not to point out the problematic fact that the middle class is actually much smaller than it was when the president first took office.

[body_image width='900' height='602' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='can-obama-really-save-the-middle-class-123-body-image-1422039359.jpg' id='20728']

Claudine Isaac, Harlem

The cornerstone of the president's State of the Union proposals is a plan to raise $320 billion over the next ten years by taxing inherited assets and raising the capital gains tax on income over $500,000 from 23.8 percent to 28 percent. The revenue, Obama said, would go towards tax breaks for middle and lower income earners, including a $500 tax break for families with two working spouses. The president also renewed his calls for an increase in the minimum wage, daring members of Congress who refuse to take up a bill on the issue to try living on $15,000 a year. $15,000 a year, about what the current $7.25 an hour federal minimum wage amounts to.

People I spoke with in New York this week seemed cautiously optimistic that the president's new State of the Union promises might translate into tangible improvements in their own lives.

[body_image width='900' height='647' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='can-obama-really-save-the-middle-class-123-body-image-1422039408.jpg' id='20729']

Joey Lefitiz, Brooklyn

"I feel like if you can help people who don't have a lot it would help everybody," Michelle Simono, a 23-years-old Kingsborough Community College student from Harlem said this week. "But the people on top want to stay on top. They've worked hard — well, some of them have worked hard — in order to get what they want. They feel like we can just do the same. But we don't have the same resources that they have, so it's harder."

And others said they wished Obama had gone further. "Be real with the people," said Joey Lefitz, a 27-year-old I spoke with in Brooklyn. "The gap between the rich and poor is getting worse and worse. When I walk around the street, I keep seeing all these fucked-up people living in bad situations. I don't blame Obama, though. I understand he's just a figurehead. He's not pulling the strings. The system is bought out. People are like 'the system is broken.' But no, it's working. It's working the way people who control it want it to work. They're making their money and here we are."

Follow Peter on Twitter


This Week in Racism: I Have Solved the Problem of Racism Forever

$
0
0

[body_image width='640' height='258' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='i-have-solved-the-problem-of-racism-forever-twir-123-body-image-1422033701.jpg' id='20692']

This is the final edition of This Week in Racism. When I first began this column, it was with a clear mission in mind: "Compile all the most galling, depressing, exhausting cases of racism, either overt or covert, that I have come across in the last seven days."

I think I did a pretty spectacular job of that. Together, we learned about racist burritos, "hood pranks," pork-laced bullets, black Santa Claus, and Justin Bieber. It was a magical ride, but like Seal and Heidi Klum, all good things must come to an end. Surely, you are beside yourself with grief right now. You must be wondering where you will find racist news stories on the internet (here's a good option). You're probably preparing yourself for the dark, empty feeling you'll have every Friday when you can't find this column (though you can just read the old ones). Most importantly, you're likely asking a simple question: Why?

As straightforward as that question is, the answer is equally unambiguous. You see, I have to stop doing this column because I have solved racism. That's right, I cracked the code, like some kind of black Alan Turing.

Actually, maybe I'm more like McConaughey in Interstellar. I had to venture into the black hole of hatred in order to come out the other side with the way to save humanity. Here I am, now where's my corn field and rocking chair?

What's the solution? Why am I burying the lede? Because of the magnitude of this discovery. I was watching the State of the Union address by our first black president, Barack Hussein Obama, and as the Republican mob cheered at the thought of Obama never running for public office again (followed by his sitcom-worthy rejoinder), I thought, What if no one knew the color of Barack Obama's skin?

It's fair to say that in 2008 (and again in 2012) Barack Obama enjoyed both massive popularity and unprecedented scorn because of his race. Yes, Obama benefitted greatly from being black. Yes, he has also been vilified for the same reason. What if...

Are you ready? Here it comes:

The only solution to racism is for all of us to wear paper bags over our heads at all times.

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/9BBZVQ4zBcU?rel=0' width='700' height='525']

One of the most beloved comedians of the 70s and 80s was the Unknown Comic, a fixture on such television shows as The Gong Show and... well, pretty much just The Gong Show. Every time he appeared on stage, he wore a paper grocery bag over his head to obscure his identity. He literally could have been anyone, but in reality he was Canadian Murray Langston. With that bag on his head, we couldn't tell if Murray was Asian, Caucasian, Mexican, or Arab. Would he have been as thoroughly embraced by America if he were Latino? If we had known he was Canadian, would we have tolerated him? If it could work for Murray Langston, it could work for me and Barack Obama too.

[body_image width='1200' height='900' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='i-have-solved-the-problem-of-racism-forever-twir-123-body-image-1422035208.jpg' id='20715']

Photo via Flickr User Bart Everson

If no one knows my race, no one can judge me. I can finally be free to be judged solely on the content of my character. Say goodbye to stereotypes, dirty looks, old ladies clutching their purses in the elevator, Trayvon Martin, Ferguson, and all the rest. But this could be great for white people too. The resentment and mistrust that minorities feel for whites after hundreds of years of oppression could be wiped out. Finally, white people won't be seen as devilish oppressors or Donald Trump. We'd all just be one beige, papery family, holding hands and singing songs through the tiny slit where our mouths go. This would also benefit ugly people, severe acne sufferers, and Mitch McConnell.

Of course, not all paper bags are created equal, are they? I mean, what if I'm wearing a dollar store bag and my neighbor is sporting a Whole Foods bag made from 100 percent recycled paper? He's just rubbing his wealth in my face (not that he can see my face underneath the bag, thank God). I can't be shown up in my own neighborhood. I'll have to kick this guy's ass and take his bag in order to even things out. It's the only way.

[body_image width='1200' height='900' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='i-have-solved-the-problem-of-racism-forever-twir-123-body-image-1422035855.jpg' id='20719']

Photo via Flickr User loonshi

God, what if he got a Gucci bag? I'd have my dumb Whole Foods bag made of 100 percent recycled paper, and he'd show up to the Super Bowl party with gold letters and fancy straps. I can't keep beating the shit out of my neighbor, because he's still richer than me and beating the shit out of rich people doesn't get you anywhere except jail. I'd have to make my own "cool" paper bag that's real "DIY" and "urban."

[body_image width='700' height='933' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='i-have-solved-the-problem-of-racism-forever-twir-123-body-image-1422036392.jpg' id='20720']

Photo via Flickr User Jen Meister

Now, my bag isn't even fucking paper. It's something my neighbor has never even heard of, like a hemp/cotton/polyester blend from the future. It'd be so cool that people would start asking me where I got my bag. They'd want to know if they can wear the same bag too. We could start a "Cool Bag Club" where we all sit around and talk about about how great our bags are, how "authentic" and legit our bags are compared to everyone else's (no paper baggers allowed).

Before you know it, I'm not going anywhere near a person with a bag that's not like mine. The people with the regular bags would start asking what happened to their idyllic, homogenous paper bag society. They'd plan ways to get us out of their city. "They're nothing like us." Well, obviously not. Our bags are cool. "They keep flaunting their non-traditional bags in our faces." We're proud of our bags. "Maybe the weird bag people should have their own country," they'd say. Maybe we should...

My solution turns out not to be a solution at all. We might be cursed to endure these conflicts until the sun shuts off and the human race freezes to death. Even if we all had interracial babies tomorrow, chances are we'd still find a reason to hate each other. That's kind of our thing.

The only real solution for racism is for the entire human race to overcome its nature and become more compassionate, less paranoid, less jealous, and more empathetic. I don't expect that day to occur in my lifetime (though it's amazing what they can do with pills these days), but it might. Without that sliver of hope, what's the point? If we don't think there's a way for the state of the world to improve, then why not be a selfish piece of shit (or Donald Trump) at all times? This column had a tendency to be cynical, but over the course of the last two years (and reading all the horrible news stories I've talked about) it's become clear to me that cynicism gets you nowhere, since that's exactly where we are as a culture right now: nowhere.

The situation gets darker and more untenable the more hopeless we feel. The Obama Generation, the people like me who really bought into his message, feel burned. That State of the Union—where he seemed disturbingly cocky for a lame-duck president who hasn't accomplished nearly as much as he promised—reminded me how little the ball has actually moved toward racial harmony. But we loved him because he offered us the one thing that keeps us from the edge: hope. It'll always work on us, because it feels good to dream, even when dreaming seems corny.

So, as I leave you, I beg you to keep dreaming of a better world. That's all we've got left.

Follow Dave Schilling on Twitter.


VICE Shorts: I'm Short, Not Stupid Presents: 'Leonard in Slow Motion'

$
0
0

[body_image width='1253' height='708' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='im-short-not-stupid-presents-leonard-in-slow-motion-111-body-image-1421959551.jpg' id='20433']

Leonard, star of Pete Livolsi's hilarious new short, is a little slow. Literally, Leonard lives his life in slow-motion while everyone around him lives active, normal lives. Martin Starr from Silicon Valley plays the titular motion-challenged character who, despite every attempt to be a normal office drone, can't seem to stay up to speed.

While Leonard's slow-motion should be classified by today's workplace standards as a disability, it's treated more like a novelty or a clown show. His boss even blackmails Leonard into performing tricks at his kid's birthday party.

It's tough being Leonard. A bathroom break now lasts 20 minutes, and that doesn't include wiping or washing. He redefines the term "slow eater." And what's sex like if you can never go faster than "super slow"?

Livolsi plays beautifully with the tribulations of Leonard's life, whether it's getting to work on time or literally being too slow to get the girl. It's a fantastic tale of personal redemption that also happens to include one of the best vomit scenes in all of film. Watch the film, and then read this interview with director Peter Livolsi below.

VICE: Where in the world did this idea come from? Drugs?
Peter Livolsi: Drugs would be a way cooler answer, but the idea actually came from detergent. My commercial directing partner Martin Dix and I were doing camera tests for a laundry detergent ad where "super moms" could slow time and walk through their home to catch vases their kids had knocked off the table. The effect wasn't that interesting because we've all seen it before, but the layering technique to achieve it made me start thinking.

What if one of the Reservoir Dogs was still walking in slow motion after Tarantino called cut? Everyone would break for lunch and Mr. White would be left all alone. Suddenly, slow-mo wouldn't be such a badass thing. Life would actually be really difficult. I asked myself how this guy would earn a living, who he'd be friends with, imagined the minutia of his day-to-day, and, most importantly, how he'd meet a woman. From that, a story emerged about a slow guy named Leonard who just wants to fit in and find love.

In developing Leonard's universe, how did you come to decide the limits and effect of his slow motion? For example, why is the coffee he pours also in slow motion?
Well, some of this movie is just enjoying slow motion because it has this mesmerizing effect. I knew I wanted liquid elements to be a part of that. But it was important to all of us that we weren't just hanging our hats on an effect.

The coffee scene you mention introduces the kind of relationship he has with the world around him, which is to say that he's seen a little bit like a circus freak. People gather in the break room to watch him pour his Folgers and his boss threatens his job unless he performs slow-motion tricks at his daughter's birthday. And although we don't have time to fully explore it in the film, I think the Steve Agee character is really only interested in being friends if Leonard is in slow motion. He quickly loses interest when Leonard decides to make a change.

How did you manage to shoot and edit the effect of Leonard in slow motion?
Saying this film was a massive collaboration is a cliché, but couldn't be more true. This had to be an all-hands-on-deck thing because of the technical challenges that were achieved in three days of production and almost no budget when it came to post.

We basically shot three versions of the film. One for Leonard, filming him around 96 to 300 frames per second depending on how much movement was in his action. One for all his counterparts, at 24 frames per second. And one "clean plate" version of the film with completely empty sets. For the coffee, water balloon, and Shox vomit, we shot an additional layer at speeds ranging from 800 to 1200 frames per second using a high speed Phantom camera.

The regular speed cast and Martin acted to tennis balls on stands since they couldn't exist on the same image layer, and Martin actually had to act much faster than normal so his final performance appears slow but doesn't take forever to unfold. Our Cinematographer Bryce Fortner did a great job of making sure lighting matched perfectly between each layer.

Our editor Brian Williams and I took one week to cut the film, using some very rough comps. We then handed it off to our VFX supervisor Hugo Guerra, who enlisted an army of student compositors in London who did a beautiful job combining all the layers to make it seem like everything was captured in camera. The final touches on the slow motion were done in the mix as our sound designer Munzie Thind snuck in plenty of subconscious slow-mo sound trickery and helped finesse a soundtrack that strolls along with a couple covers by Tom Brosseau.

I love Martin Starr! He's spectacular in your short. How did you get him for the role?
I love Martin too! My wife Barbara, who produced the film with our friend Lawrence Lewis, was actually the one who suggested him. Once that was in my head, I really had trouble imagining anyone else in the part. A friend of ours had worked with Martin and passed him the script. Two days later, he agreed to do it.

He turned in this very authentic, human performance, which is extra impressive considering all the technical obstacles the job required. The rest of the cast—Beth Dover, Steve Agee, and John Ross Bowie—are all incredibly funny actor friends who I try to work with as much as possible.

What are you working on now?
Leonard is winding down its festival run with Cinequest in March and I'm also raising funds for a feature called "The House of Tomorrow." It's a coming-of-age comedy based on a novel by Peter Bognanni about sex, god, geodesic domes, and punk. Ellen Burstyn is going to play one of the leads and produce alongside my friend Tarik Karam.

2015 Will Be a Terrible Year for Alberta Oil

$
0
0

[body_image width='1200' height='800' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='2015-will-be-a-terrible-year-for-alberta-oil-166-body-image-1422032067.jpg' id='20669']

Tar sands mining site. Photo via Flickr user Pembina Institute

Less investment, less drilling, and possibly a recession: I'm no financial expert, but based on several reports from Canada's leading oil-industry stakeholders, there's no good news coming for Alberta's economy in 2015.

As you've probably heard, global oil prices are coasting just under $50 per barrel—about half the average price over the previous three years. Alberta's oil industry, which is centred on high-cost, low-payoff tar sands extraction, has a lot of money and jobs riding on the assumption that oil prices will bounce back.

But on Thursday, Alberta's premier said a bounce-back is not going to happen anytime soon. The Bank of Canada, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), and the Conference Board of Canada have all released economic forecasts this week—and right now, the outlook from all of them is pretty bleak.

For instance, a short-term review by CAPP predicts that oil companies' investment in western Canada will drop by a third in 2015. Energy-related investment, including investment in the tar sands, "will total $46 billion in 2015, down 33 percent from $69 billion invested in 2014."

CAPP, which is basically Canada's oil industry cheerleader, predicted slightly better investment numbers for producers involved solely in the tar sands: $25 billion in 2015, down from $33 billion in 2014. We've already learned tar sands mining and drilling won't suffer quite as much as fracking, because it's only economically viable with prices above $65 per barrel and the industry is largely made up of small, over-extended companies.

If oil prices remain low, the number of wells drilled in 2015 will also drop by 30 percent, according to the CAPP review. Production growth will be slower than in previous CAPP forecasts—about 65,000 fewer barrels per day in 2015 and 120,000 fewer barrels each day of 2016.

That means less work on the rigs, of course. Just last week Suncor announced it would cut 1,000 jobs, mostly short-term contract workers. Shell Canada announced 300 layoffs this month, and Canadian Natural Resources pledged it would slash $2.4 billion of its anticipated spending in 2015. The Canadian Association of Oil Drilling Contractors said net job losses in 2015 could be as high as 23,000.

Meanwhile, the Conference Board of Canada says the oil slump will translate to a loss of $4.5 billion in royalty revenues. That'll make budget gaps for Saskatchewan and Newfoundland governments, as well as Alberta and the feds. The Alberta government may even end up considering charging sales tax to make up for the shortfall.

It's the Conference Board report, titled "Regional Shakeup: The Impact of Low Oil Prices on Canada's Economy," that says Alberta will likely slip into recession in 2015. The think tank predicts that oil prices will bounce back just above $60 per barrel by the end of 2015—still a 40 percent decline over June last year. As a result, economic growth will slow by 0.4 percent across Canada as a whole.

At the same time of this brewing oil meltdown, the Bank of Canada has lowered its lending rate below one percent, hoping to encourage more borrowing and spending. Now set at an unexpectedly low 0.75 percent, the bank's prime interest rate cut may prevent a real estate crash in Alberta or at least help out businesses outside the tar sands. But one Canadian bank is refusing to drop its lending rates in step with the feds, and others may follow.

The Bank of Canada has said Canada's economy won't fully recover from the oil price shock until the end of 2016.

Follow Sarah Berman on Twitter.

Looking into the Instagram Abyss with Artist Ryder Ripps

$
0
0

[body_image width='1544' height='1024' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421954153.jpg' id='20400']

All photos by the author unless otherwise noted.

Within four months, artist and creative director Ryder Ripps went from being heralded as "the consummate internet cool kid" by the New York Times to getting accused of making possibly the most offensive artwork of the year. The thing that got so many people upset was Art Whore, the tech wunderkind's most recent art project, where he hired two escorts to make paintings in his stead during a branded artist-in-residence program for the Ace Hotel.

Just a few months later, the founder of OKFocus may be causing another stir in the art world with his first solo show, Ho. The exhibition opens this Saturday at Postmasters Gallery in Manhattan and is comprised of a series of large-scale paintings of manipulated photos of the model Adrianne Ho that were appropriated from her Instagram.

Ripps chose Ho as his muse because her internet presence occupies a complicated space between exposition and documentation. She's one of those people who gets paid by brands like Nike and Supreme to post photos not as a traditional model, but as herself. Her Instagram account embodies the idea that in today's technological landscape we can curate our personas and create a faux realism for other people to make what Ripps calls a "constant reflexive feedback loop of ego."

The warped images of Ho are meant to nod towards the aggressive painting practices of actionist painters like Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning. They also help ground him as a conceptual artist, since he hired some of Jeff Koons's assistants to do all the actual painting (some may see this move as trolling, while others will likely mock it as a gaudy attempt at self-canonization). Ripps believes the digital-to-physical process of this series represents "the new site of aggression and anxiety in the age of the 'virtual male gaze,' where the archetypal macho painter has been emasculated," because he sees Ho as the one in power as she has more social media followers than him.

This claim may raise eyebrows, considering Ripps has turned Adrianne Ho into a literal object and he is the one dictating the conversation about her online presence. But to me, the work is more interesting than just an angsty tantrum about suppressed manhood. It's the artist's personal meditation on identity in the age of the internet. Even if Ripps's dialogue around the work is problematic, as music critic Jon Carmanica once wrote in a review of Cam'ron's rap classic Purple Haze, "The avant-garde need not be moral."

I recently met with the artist to get some intimate insight on Ho. Between arguments about King Louie songs and countless tangents, our talk convinced me that he is one of the most passionate and consistently interesting artists working today—even when he's being flippant or boyishly offensive.

[body_image width='822' height='444' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421953723.png' id='20393']

[body_image width='765' height='458' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='looking-into-the-instagram-abyss-with-artist-ryder-ripps-111-body-image-1422042411.png' id='20735']

Image via Adrianna Ho's Instagram

[body_image width='815' height='489' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421953963.png' id='20396']

VICE: How do you imagine the public will reply to this exhibition?
Ryder Ripps: I think some people are going to love it. I think some people are going to hate it. And I'm not scared.

You have a penchant for pissing people off—like that tweet you recently published referencing Charlie Hebdo.
Yeah. I wrote a tweet about the fact that people attacking me for Art Whore leads to the type of extremism that drives people to kill. I still believe that. I think we live in a free country and everything, but there's no actual malice—and I mean this in my heart—behind my work. I'm not trying to hurt anybody. I am not a misogynist. I don't think women are subhuman. I don't think Adrianne Ho represents all women. It's not about that for me. It's about sexuality. It's about emotion. And I'm not scared to have that exuded in the expressions that I make.

I saw on your website that you manipulated a work by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in a similar fashion to what you've done with Adrianne Ho. How is that project connected to this new exhibition?
The whole idea of Bernini is realism, hyper-realism, but this was before screens existed. You look at an image of a Bernini sculpture, and how do you experience the realism of that image in a way that Bernini would have intended? That realism to me is an aggressive thing. The images of rape that he creates, the Pieta, these religious images—they're all very emotional, very human experiences about things that get to the root of who we are fundamentally. But who we are fundamentally has changed a great deal since 1500, you know? So what I'm trying to do with that series is capture the things that Bernini might have been trying to achieve, but in a modern context and in a realer way.

Most people think about abstraction as a farce, or something that's removed from reality. They think about it as a hallucination of reality. But I would argue that abstraction, when done well, is realer than reality—realer than an image, or a photograph. Abstraction captures an emotion, whereas reality is more than just a still life or a snapshot. It's constantly in flux.

Tell me about your term "corny-core" that's described in the slideshow attached to this exhibition.
To me, corny-core is very much about sentiment—unlike the term "basic," which is derogatory, or "normcore," which is more of a reference to aesthetics. Corny-core is about a sense of sentimentality and emotion that is supposed to be conveyed through a photograph. You stage a photo—it's like how Instagram filters are supposed to bring mood and inject a feel. Beyond nostalgia, the different filters have different moods and different emotions attached to them. And that aspect alone is very corny-core. Backlighting is very corny-core. Adding a glow to something is very corny-core. The whole aspect of "I'm exuding emotion"—being emotional and normal is corny-core. It's forced realism.

When people pose for a selfie, it's an exercise of self-awareness and an exercise of uncomfortability. It's like you pose for a selfie and you're saying "I'm uncomfortable with my own skin." It's this staged reality.

So Adrienne Ho, she triggered this idea for you?
Yes, she's like the quintessence of corny-core. There are lots of other examples of people who represent this idea, but nothing as consistent as Adrienne Ho. She's a very succinct and focused example of this one particular mode of creation of self-representation online.

Also, I like her connections to streetwear, and I like the idea that she's mediating herself and her identity, who she really is—Adrienne Ho, that's her name, it's not fake—and is willing to bend herself around brands. What's interesting to me about that is the aspect of how we can alter or create realism for other people—curate personas.

If you asked me to sponsor your brand and be real, it would be really interesting to see how I'd do that. My own idea of who I am and how to achieve realness as a paid gig is the most honest thing, because the actual branded thing would ultimately be a lie, an imagination. It's a constructed farce of reality. And it's also a projected farce because it's how you perceive a client would want you to be. It's your imagined self for another person. It's when you put your own head in someone else's head and then think about yourself.

[body_image width='1544' height='1024' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421953794.jpg' id='20394']

[body_image width='1544' height='1024' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421953983.jpg' id='20397']

So with Adrienne Ho, where do you think real-life identity stops and her online persona begins?
I've never met her, so I don't know. To me, my renderings of her images are more real than her photos. Of course she's a real person, but we've all turned ourselves into images. We've chosen how to mediate our own realities—this isn't true only for her, this is true for almost everyone. Life now is a constant reflexive feedback loop of ego. You're constantly being confronted with the reflection with yourself in a way that you weren't before. Especially if you're someone who's notable online, your reality is your online presence.

You've previously talked about how the discrepancy between Ho's documentation and exposition made you feel weird. As a result, you wanted to aggressively manipulate her through digital methods. Why did it make you feel like that?
She's a beautiful woman. I knew her images were the deduction of something I've been feeling across the board with what we just discussed, which is the representation of ourselves online. I knew she did an extremely good job at offering me the extract of that. Why I was drawn to her and started manipulating her image? To be honest, it wasn't a calculated thing. It was an impulsive thing. So when I think about impulsive desires and art, I think of action painting.

But you've said the actionist painters' whole masculinity archetype within art is irrelevant today.
It is irrelevant.

But then you go back and reference the archetype again.
Picasso didn't reference any of the mistresses he depicted. He just said "The whores of fucking Paris," or whatever. This whole thing is an ode to Adrianne Ho. The whole show is named after her. I'm devoting all this work to her. In many ways, the males who follow Adrianne Ho, me included, are doting on her. We're doting on her beauty, we're doting on her mystique. And we're doting on the composition of her images intrinsically.

This is your first solo show and it's called Ho. Whether it was intended or not, it's a double entendre. People are going to immediately zone in on that.
OK, I'm going to tell you something. When I was 11 years old, I saw an image called "Goatse" online. This was before social media. Back in the day, people used to email each other a link and be like, "Check this out," akin to Rickrolling or something like that. So there's this fucking image called Goatse on a fucking website with no explanation and it had a picture of a guy ripping his fucking asshole open with a wedding ring on. You didn't see his face. And that was it, on this nondescript URL. Goatse, what does that mean? I have no idea. I was 11. So, to me, shock value and the internet and all that stuff is a fucking game. They played me. I clicked on this thing. I got shocked. I had never seen a guy rip open his asshole before, and it was crazy and weird.

For me, the internet and shock value and pushing the boundaries of social norm is all wrapped up in one. You can't do the internet without doing that. So to me, doing things that are "controversial," or whatever, or calling it Ho—which is just her name—is gaming it. Of course I'm gaming it. And if you're getting mad at it, you don't know about the internet—and I wish you did!

Because that's what I'm trying to talk about. I'm trying to talk about Chris Ofili. I'm trying to talk about the show Sensation at the Brooklyn Museum. I'm trying to talk about fucking Damien Hirst. I'm trying to talk about shock value and the fact that y'all are still not over any of it. I'm naming the show Ho because that's the name of the woman who I am putting on a pedestal. That's the name of my muse. That's the name of the most beautiful person who's deserving of an entire fucking art show. And meanwhile you're obsessed with this one word. It's so old-school, you know? To me, that's just natural. It should be so obvious. Calling something Art Whore? That's just so obvious. Of course I'm trying to fucking ruffle feathers—and it's working! It's great.

[body_image width='1544' height='1024' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421953875.jpg' id='20395']

[body_image width='1480' height='1023' path='images/content-images/2015/01/22/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/22/' filename='ryder-ripps-body-image-1421954463.jpg' id='20403']

[body_image width='840' height='506' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='looking-into-the-instagram-abyss-with-artist-ryder-ripps-111-body-image-1422042512.png' id='20736']
Image via Adrianna Ho's Instagram.

In your slideshow, you say at the end of the day Adrianne Ho is still winning because she has more followers than you. Ultimately, don't you win? You're controlling this conversation about her identity. And why is it even about winning?
Because that's so much about the current mode of everything. We refresh our Instagram to see who follows us. Our value as human beings is about that. And it sucks and I'm a part of that. Maybe I'm perpetuating it, but I'm saying that I personally am a victim of it. My Instagram followers grew from 7.1k to 7.2k today and that actually made me feel good. Like really good. And that's so fucked up. It's so stupid. It means nothing. It has nothing to do with anything. Meanwhile, I didn't call my mom back today after she called. Am I good person? No, I'm a fucking shit person who didn't call my mom back. I should call her back. But I got 7.2k, I got 7.2k! I validate myself through that.

That's what I mean by saying she wins. A lot of people have more followers than me. She'll always win. And more people will know about her presence after this show who not might normally be interested. If people look at my art and hate her—which I don't think they will—I think the alterations of her project more on me, and my internal dialogue with the world, than they do on her.

If Adrianne Ho were at the exhibition, how do you think she'd reply?
I want her to know I'm not making fun of her. I really am not. Nor do I think what she does is gross or bad. I respect her and what she does. I just think it's worth commenting on. It's the state of the world. What she should be flattered by is that she represents a segment of the world—a huge chunk of what's going on in the past four years on Instagram and with human identity and technology. She represents the deduction of it.

I didn't invent her face. I didn't invent her motive. I didn't invent her existence or personification on the internet. I didn't invent any of those things. I didn't take the photos. I manipulated them in a way that is more realistic to my brain.

And that being said, I'm not angry at that thing. I'm not angry that people get sponsored by brands. I'm not angry that people have personas online that they live out. I'm not angry that people pose pictures. I'm not angry at any of those things. All I'm doing is saying it's a reality. And it's something that's historically significant. And for me, it's not that I'm mad at her. I'm in love with her succinct representation of something timely. The fact that anyone can see our curated "realities" on a universal stage makes us think more.

Is this what you want people to think about when they come to your show?
The anxiety of this, yes. I'm altering the image to make her anxious because I feel anxious. When I take a picture of myself I feel anxious. This is the image that has to represent it. I'm self-conscious. I'm nervous. I'm scared. I'm scared! I'm scared of being me. I'm scared to have to fucking look down and commit to this fucking image. I'm scared to commit to this personification of who I am. It's ridiculous.

Ho will be on display at PostMasters from January 24 through February 28. For more information, visit the gallery's website here.

Follow Zach on Twitter.

Riding with Kuwait's All Female Biker Club

$
0
0

[body_image width='686' height='434' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='riding-with-kuwaits-all-female-biker-club-body-image-1422026777.png' id='20640']

Photos via the Moto Lady Club Facebook Page

On a warm Saturday morning in Kuwait, a group of women are wheeling their motorbikes out into the sun. One of them is Dania Tyan, a passionate biker. Hailing from Beirut, she missed riding so much after relocating that she decided to set up Moto Lady Club, where women can ride with other women.

"I've been riding for 20 years, but it was only two years ago that I got serious about biking," she tells me. "I started riding more and more, and even went to work by bike."

That was when Moto Lady Club was born. It was in late 2013 that Tyan and a group of other women wanted to present a new approach to biking and show that motorbikes aren't just for men. What is a bike, if not just a mode of transportation, she says. Safety is a main priority for her group, but she points out: "It's not as dangerous as people make it out to be."

Only 40 percent of Kuwait's population are Kuwaiti; the rest are foreign nationals. This diversity shows in the make-up of Moto Lady Club. "We created a sisterhood on wheels, if you like; we're women riders from different backgrounds and religions, but we ride as one. Our unity keeps us safe and strong. Today, Moto Lady Club has around 30 members and we're growing daily. As well as expats, of course, we also have Kuwaiti female riders, too."

Although Kuwait has a startlingly liberal attitude towards female equality compared to the rest of the Gulf, Moto Lady Club still had to work out how to make it easy for men and women to ride together. "You would be surprised to know that Moto Lady Club is welcomed and respected by men; we get lots of support from them," says Tyan.

[body_image width='600' height='798' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='riding-with-kuwaits-all-female-biker-club-body-image-1422026795.jpg' id='20641']

If that sounds unusual, then you might want to take a look at the Global Gender Gap Report. Although Kuwait ranks 113th out of 142 countries for gender equality, it comes top of all Middle Eastern states. Around 53 percent of Kuwait's women work—they're judges, politicians, and policewomen. "Kuwait is an amazing country where women participate actively in lots of activities," Tyan says. "There's even a female racing car team here."

"I can say proudly that Moto Lady Club is the first woman's club for motorbikers not only in Kuwait, but in the Gulf. I think it's because of our team spirit and activities that everyone here knows we exist. When a woman wants to ride, they automatically come to us."

It's easy to recruit to recruit, too. "We meet people during the activities we participate in, or some women see us riding on the roads or [wearing our gear ] in restaurants, so they stop and ask us about the club," she says. "We're not exclusive: the membership of the club is open to all female riders, regardless of the brands of their bikes."

[body_image width='1040' height='585' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='riding-with-kuwaits-all-female-biker-club-body-image-1422026917.jpg' id='20643']

Moto Lady Club is trying to erase the stereotype of belonging to a motorbike gang. They're no Hell's Angels. "We're a community. We are disciplined and ride as family," says Tyan. "But we're not using the word 'gang' because it makes going out on rides sound like a villainous activity. We'd like to erase the image of a motorbike gang from people's minds."

Tyan stresses that she doesn't care about biker fashion; for her, it's all about the ride. "Women on bikes in leather is another stereotype. We focus on safety a lot and don't care about fashion. For those who race or have speed bikes, they of course wear the leather safety attire, which is either a Dainese or BMW suit."

[body_image width='472' height='572' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='riding-with-kuwaits-all-female-biker-club-body-image-1422027030.png' id='20644']

"Kuwait has around 22 motorcycle groups, but Moto Lady Club is the only one solely for women," says Tyan. "I reckon that Moto Lady Club has set an example for the others to follow. But we collaborate closely with all groups and have lots of common activities. We're like a big family, really."

[body_image width='744' height='496' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='riding-with-kuwaits-all-female-biker-club-body-image-1422026812.png' id='20642']

Moto Lady Club is exclusively for women, but that doesn't mean they're the only female riders in the Gulf. "I have female friends who ride in Dubai, Bahrain, and Qatar—here, the bike scene is booming for women; women are riding bikes like they drive cars! Believe it or not, men are happy about it: most of them are very happy for their partners or daughters to ride a motorbike, because when you train properly, and wear the right gear, being on a motorbike is safe and fun."

Since starting out two years ago, Tyan's standout ride was taking part in the 2014 Kuwait bike show. "Riders from all over the Gulf participated, and in the end there were about 990 bikers riding. It was impressive and majestic as there was what felt like a never-ending line of bikers rolling along by your side."

Meet the Lawyer Chevron Tried to Destroy

$
0
0

[body_image width='1280' height='853' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='meet-the-lawyer-chevron-tried-to-destroy-112-body-image-1422044073.jpg' id='20740']

Steven Donziger meets with Indigenous villagers in Ecuador. Photo via Lou Dematteis' Crude Reflections

Steven Donziger is the face of an international effort to collect nearly $10 billion from oil giant Chevron. Over 20 years, his efforts have consumed, and very nearly wrecked, his entire life. He's been sued, harassed, vilified in the media, and flatly accused of overt corruption. He even alleges he's been followed by ex-spooks. Worst of all, he may have sacrificed his morals in the process.

In the first part of the Lago Agrio oil fields case, VICE looked into how Donziger and his team are using the Canadian courts to force Chevron to pay their bill.

But any story about one of the world's most fiercely fought lawsuits can't be told without looking at who is arguably the central character.

Donziger stands six foot four, but his huge frame makes him look even bigger. He's a former public defender who has, since his university days, implanted himself in the fight to have Chevron clean up one of the world's most extreme environmental contaminations.

To ask the environmentalists, Donziger is a holy crusader, fighting to get justice for those who destroyed a delicate ecosystem and endangered thousands of lives. To ask Chevron, Donziger is a morally bankrupt huckster who has no problem bribing judges and falsifying evidence in his deranged campaign to make Chevron pay.

"Donziger believes he can outsmart the American court system, subvert it, manipulate it, intimidate it, and shut it down," wrote Fortune senior editor Roger Parloff, in begging the US government to file criminal action against Donziger.

Rolling Stone, on the other hand, lauded him as a "workhorse" and champion for the down and out.

"Staying in the ring against Chevron for two decades has required more than simple stamina," Alexander Zaitchik wrote. "It has demanded of Donziger a fierce slow-burn resolve he has wielded in ingenious and self-defeating ways."

Meeting Donziger, it's immediately clear that both versions can be true. Face-to-face—or, for most people, face-to-chin—Donziger exudes the sort of zealotry that is equal parts altruistic do-gooder and all-consuming need to win. That is to say, the New York lawyer seems to care as much about winning this case for the Ecuadorians whose homes and environment have been destroyed as he does about beating Chevron.

It's tough to blame him. Chevron's game plan in the Lago Agrio case has been to aggressively pursue its claims—sometimes at the expense of Donziger.

Donziger first went to Ecuador in 1993, brought by a university friend to witness the devastation caused by a joint oil exploration project between the government and Texaco.

"There was oil all over the road and people were walking barefoot with oil on their feet and bodies," Donziger told VICE. "There were fires burning in a lot of the pits because the company would deliberately set them on fire as a way to burn off their contents, which would cause terrible air pollution."

He described it as "apocalyptic."

Donziger went back to Harvard—where he was playing basketball with Barack Obama—and finished his degree. A decade later, in 2003, he became the face of the lawsuit. In 2011, they won: an Ecuadorian court sided with the plaintiffs, ordering Chevron, which had acquired Texaco, to pay $17 billion to the villagers affected by the development.

Thanks to that win, Chevron has made Donziger himself a major focus of its strategy in the ongoing case. In his personal life, in the media, and in the courtroom, Chevron has gone after Donziger at least as hard as he's gone after them.

In a briefing with VICE, Chevron maintained two things: that it's the Ecuadorian government's responsibility for both the environmental degradation and the cleanup, and the sites Texaco cleaned up when they left Ecuador in 1993 remain safe. Arguments to the contrary, they say, are just a product of Donziger's take-no-prisoners approach to the lawsuit.

Fraud-by-the-numbers-bribes-and-hush-money.jpg

Infographic produced by Chevron as part of a PR campaign against the Ecuadorian lawsuit.

Chevron has long argued two things: that it's the Ecuadorian government's responsibility for both the environmental degradation and the cleanup, and the sites Texaco cleaned up when it left Ecuador in 1993 remain safe.

Donziger, naturally, contests both points. Fighting in an Ecuadorian courtroom, he laid out a mountain of evidence and expert testimony that contradicted the company's line. Locals, like indigenous leader Humberto Piaguaje, have attested to the damage.

"For five decades, we have been affected by Chevron's contamination," he said in a statement provided to VICE. "We suffer today."

In the courts, Donziger's experts presented evidence that the areas Texaco supposedly cleaned up were, in fact, still heavily contaminated.

So Chevron went after the experts. The company produced proof that Donziger and his team hired a consulting firm to ghostwrite those experts' reports, using the scientists as trojan horses for junk science. Donziger and his team says they did nothing wrong, and that, while they did write up some of the expert testimony, they never changed the experts' findings.

The problem is, several of Donziger's experts came forward to disavow his case and claim their research was fabricated or contorted. The environmental consulting firm hired by Donziger stated publicly that it was "not aware of any scientific evidence that people in the former concession area are drinking water contaminated with petroleum."

That admission was not exactly voluntary. Months earlier, the same firm swore that "contamination was present at every single well site and station that was sampled." Stratus' reversal came after Chevron came after them with a hefty lawsuit. That lawsuit was later dropped.

It's a common theme in the case. Donziger presents evidence of contamination, often obtained through murky circumstances, and Chevron sends its legal team to destroy it.

A prime example is Alberto Guerra, a former Ecuadorian judge and the linchpin of Chevron's allegations against Donziger. He claims, in a sworn affidavit, that Donziger paid off both him and the trial judge, who delivered the 2011 ruling, in order to ghostwrite the $17-billion decision himself. Along with the testimony of the experts who turned on Donziger, it makes his case look outright fraudulent.

Guerra isn't exactly a credible witness, though. He was presiding over an earlier leg of the Lago Agrio case before he was removed from the bench for an unrelated corruption case. He was also, in Donziger's words, "nearly destitute and desperate to join his son and daughter living in the United States."

Chevron stepped in to help out— they paid Guerra $38,000 and got him and his family into America. They also kicked in health insurance, a car, and other perks. Donziger's team says the cash and benefits top out at over $2 million. Chevron's people say Guerra's life was in danger, and they were merely helping out.

The spiralling list of allegations read like the plot of a John Grisham novel and is a veritable game of flying accusations.

Donziger says Chevron buried evidence that the drill sites were dangerously contaminated. Chevron says they have video evidence of Donziger laying out his scheme to corrupt the Ecuadorian judicial system. Donziger says Chevron set up a sting operation to try and entrap an Ecuadorian judge into taking a bribe, which failed, just to have him thrown off the case.

Chevron's take-no-prisoners tactics in the courtroom highlight just how much the company cares about winning this case.

The company rolled all these allegations against Donziger into one of the most extraordinary lawsuits in American history. Chevron lawyers brought him up on racketeering charges.

The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act has been instrumental in jailing corrupt politicians and mafia families for decades. It's primarily criminal legislation. But some clever lawyers on Chevron's team had the novel idea of using civil court to bring charges against Donziger for colluding with the Ecuadorian courts in a campaign of bribery, intimidation, and forgery to extort Chevron.

Surprisingly, Chevron won. New York Judge Lewis Kaplan found that Donziger had indeed run an unscrupulous campaign against Chevron.

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/fTEhzaEKLC4' width='560' height='315']

A Chevron-produced video about the racketeering case against Donziger.

Donziger is appealing the decision, and argues that Kaplan was outright biased in favour of Chevron.

Judge Kaplan did take some extraordinary steps. He had Donziger's hard drives and personal journal entered into evidence. It was an extraordinary breach of attorney-client privilege that nevertheless uncovered clandestine meetings between Donziger's team and the supposedly corrupt officials, as well as secret bank accounts used to pay experts. However, even this evidence is mostly circumstantial and doesn't prove outright fraud—unless you consider Guerra's testimony.

The judge also ordered 600 hours of raw video footage entered into evidence. The footage supposedly proves Donziger's malicious intent. Donziger says the footage has been edited to look nefarious. But to get it, Kaplan ordered the footage be seized from a documentary filmmaker who had profiled the Lago Agrio story. Many, including Robert Redford, called it an assault on the freedom of the press.

Putting aside all the fighting over the initial 2011 decision, Donziger raises a compelling counterpoint: the initial judgement he supposedly bought with bribes was upheld by an Ecuadorian court of appeal and the country's supreme court. There's no evidence that there was impropriety in the two subsequent court cases, which re-evaluated all the evidence.

Even if Donziger wins his RICO appeal, it will be years before he's allowed to pursue the case in America again. As the fight gets nastier, it's just a matter of who cracks first.

The PR Fight
"Our [long-term] strategy is to demonize Donziger," reads an internal Chevron email.

And they're very good at it. The company runs a newspaper-like Amazon Post dedicated to countering bad press about the lawsuit, a litany of social media accounts in multiple languages, and a series of slickly produced YouTube videos to make its case.

"They believed they could take Chevron's reputation hostage and ransom it back to the company," says Chevron's ominous narrator as a gavel bangs in the background. "They were wrong."

On the other side, a team of environmental NGOs have launched their own bombastic PR campaigns, somewhat in conjunction with Donziger's team, aimed at profiling Chevron and its "human rights hitmen."

[youtube src='//www.youtube.com/embed/Be9XncS8tiA#t=50' width='560' height='315']

A cartoon produced by ChevronToxico, which was set up by one of the NGOs supporting Donziger.

Chevron has the resources at its fingertips to prolong the fight against Donziger. He reckons that Chevron has dropped around $2 billion on this case since the early 1990s between lawyers, PR firms, and private investigators.

"A central component of their PR strategy is to demonize the lawyers and, given my role in the case, I have become the primary target for the team," Donziger said.

Donziger says the company has even employed ex-CIA and FBI agents to tail him.

"They have physically followed me around Manhattan and Ecuador. They have videotaped my comings and goings in Ecuador while I was there," he says.

That might sound crazy, but it's not. Journalist Mary Cuddehe wrote in the Atlantic that she was approached by Kroll, a massive international corporate investigation firm, to do espionage on Donziger and his team in Ecuador. She said no, but Kroll almost certainly found someone else. Chevron's $15-million contract with Kroll can undoubtedly net some good spies.

Donziger's side isn't exactly a mom-and-pop operation, however. He's had his resource-intensive lawsuit bankrolled by venture-minded law firms, investment funds and wealthy benefactors. They're all in it for a cut of the eventual judgement. Chevron has been trying to put the kibosh on that. In September, lawyers filed lawsuits against three of Donziger's backers in Gibraltar. Subsequently, several of the law firms and companies helping with Donziger's case have backed out due to his lack of funds. Others have fled because of the bad press. Still others have flat-out gone after Donziger, saying they were misled and tricked.

What's clear from the whole mess is that no one—save, perhaps, the Ecuadorian villagers who've had their territory devastated—can claim a clear conscience.

Follow Justin Ling on Twitter.

A Whale Blasted an Ungodly Amount of Ass Ham All Over Some Divers

$
0
0

[body_image width='962' height='641' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='a-whale-blasted-an-ungodly-amount-of-ass-ham-all-over-some-divers-body-image-1422046762.jpg' id='20743']

The whale and its awe-inspiring "poonado." Photo via Caters.

A group of divers near the Caribbean island of Dominica were engulfed in a mighty cloud of shit churned out by a sperm whale. The men were on a routine expedition to photograph the whales when one of their subjects started blasting an ungodly amount of butt butter into the ocean while spinning in circles, causing what one of the divers called a "poonado." Showing no mercy, the beast didn't stop until a 100-foot-wide cloud of its Mississippi mud had coated the divers and their equipment.

In a show of unwavering dedication to his craft, Canadian photographer Keri Wilk managed to capture the experience on film. Some believe the torrent of rusty nuggets was a little known defense mechanism, triggered by the proximity of the divers. On the other hand, it could have just been a spastic, diarrheic beast—that's how little we understand about whales and their insane, magical shits.

"The whale bobbed up and down, spun in circles, and waved the poo in every direction for several minutes while we just sat back and watched," The Telegraph quoted Wilk as saying of the ordeal.

He went on:

After a few waves of feces were released and stirred vigorously by the whale, the water was like chocolate milk. I couldn't see my hand when I held it in front of my face. I had poop in my eyes, mouth, wetsuit, everywhere and I was soaked in it from head to toe.


But, after leaving the cloud, it quickly washed away, and didn't leave a smell on us. I did take an extra long shower once I had returned to shore later that day, just in case. I've never heard of it happening before, and I don't know anyone that has had this happen, it very well could be the first time that it has been photographically documented.

This lack of prior documentation doesn't necessarily mean that the "poonado" is new or a fluke. Despite measuring in at 50 to 60 feet long and 35 to 45 tons, and moving throughout all of the world's oceans at times in pods of 15 to 20 (although males tend to travel solo), we don't know a lot about sperm whales—not even how many there are, although we estimate about 100,000 .

"In many respects, sperm whales are still a total mystery," Christopher Kemp , who wrote a book about ambergris (a poop-ish substance excreted by sperm whales), told VICE last year. "Because they spend so much time a mile beneath the surface, we don't know about lots of aspects of their lives. We don't know how they mate, where they travel, how they get there, or when they go there. We don't know how they communicate with one another. We don't know how they manage to capture that many squid, and whether there's a particular hunting technique they use."

[body_image width='470' height='706' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='a-whale-blasted-an-ungodly-amount-of-ass-ham-all-over-some-divers-body-image-1422048113.jpg' id='20750']

Image via Caters

What we do know is that they take awe-inspiring shits that would make god himself tremble. We also know that they have the largest brains on earth (their heads are up to 40 percent of their bodies , although much of that is full of a mysterious, waxy oil called spermaceti , prized alongside their meat and oil as a lubricant that fueled the 18-19th century whaling boom and gave birth to Moby Dick). They can dive down to 4,000 feet and hold their breath for nearly two hours. They do battle with giant squids , the cephalopods constituting four-fifths of their diet. And when they die after a murky but probably human-like lifetime, their nutrient-rich carcasses foster unique pockets of life on the seafloor for ages thereafter.

From what we know about the massive colon cannonballs fired by sperm whales, they are just as extraordinary as the animal they come from. Over the past few years, biologists have determined that whale waste may actually act like a giant environmental regulation system. Full of iron and other vital nutrients , concentrated at up to 10,000,000 times their natural occurrence in seawater, when released these turds become the basis for booms in plankton. These critters in turn pull hundreds of thousands of pounds of carbon out of the air each year through photosynthesis, then fuel booms in fish populations as a food source. So the lack of the natural environmental engineering power of whale poop, thanks to whaling's decimation of the species, may be one major causes of oceanic depopulation .

Whales' alimentary tracts also produce ambergris, a fatty lump created to coat and pass squid beaks along with all the other excreta. Only shat out by some whales, and killing others through intestinal blockages, ambergris is an underground and little understood commodity (and the subject of a great Bob's Burgers episode) valued as a status symbol and (for its unique and binding scent) component of traditional perfumes, fetching $1,000 to $5,000 or more per pound.

Even if we haven't seen many whales use their filth as a defense mechanism, compared to its use as an aquacultural regulator and luxury good repository, it wouldn't be an especially odd phenomenon. Nor would whales be the only creatures to use their own toilet orphans as a defense mechanism.

Many animals, like the Komodo dragon, cover themselves in their own ass gobblins to gross out predators. Of particular note, the baby Hoopoe (the national bird of Israel) , in addition to secreting a repellant and antibacterial fluid from a gland near its ass, can squirt its shit into an attacker's face. Whereas the chrysomelidae (a.k.a. potato or cereal) beetle covers its back in a self-shit shield, scented with noxious nightshade to act as dual chemical-fecal gross out armor.

If this "poonado" was a newly observed defense mechanism, then the divers have made a great discovery. If not, they just got covered in shit. It's really hard to say what the reality is. But even if it's the latter, they got some great pictures out of the experience, and witnessed one of nature's most prolific and fascinating dumpers in action. Not a bad tradeoff for a fleeting brown shower.

Follow Mark Hay on Twitter.


Japan Is Fighting ISIS with Super-Kawaii Tweets

$
0
0

[body_image width='698' height='395' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='japan-is-fighting-isis-with-super-kawaii-tweets-body-image-1422042123.png' id='20733']

On Tuesday, a video emerged with some familiar imagery: a masked fighter standing against a desert backdrop with orange-clad captives kneeling below him. Jihadi John, as he is known, demanded that Japan pay $200 million within 72 hours or Kenji Goto and Haruna Yukawa, two Japanese prisoners of ISIS, would be executed.

That deadline has now passed, although Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he would try to save the men. And while their fates are currently unclear, the citizens of Japan have declared meme warfare on the Islamic State, which is itself known for its social media presence.

A hashtag roughly translating to "ISIS crappy collage grand prix" has been used more than 220,000 times, according to data from Sysomos, to mercilessly mock what is clearly an extremely serious situation. Stills from the video have been altered into images that are super-kawaii, surreal, or anime-referencing.

Jihadi John, or Jailer John, as he's been deemed by the press, is the head of a group of Sunni Muslims whom past prisoners have said call themselves "the Beatles." He has a British accent, and his name is apparently—and oddly—a reference to John Lennon. He's wanted by the United States, the UK, and Canada for beheading five people.

But in the crappy collage grand prix, Jihadi John can be seen floating through space or posed like Dr. Evil from Austin Powers. You can browse the latest creations here.


[tweet text="A MESSAGE TO THE ISIS      We Are Famill♥ #ISISクソコラグランプリ #ズワイガニ pic.twitter.com/XM9JkMf9xw" byline="— 白井 潤 @ 神殺しの勇敢なる波紋 (@jstensai)" user_id="jstensai" tweet_id="557921710251737088" tweet_visual_time="January 21, 2015"]


[tweet text="The Japanese Internet and ISIS terrorists are doing battle on Twitter, trading images like this. #ISISクソコラグランプリ pic.twitter.com/R498wIg46O" byline="— Peter Payne (@jlist)" user_id="jlist" tweet_id="557935330024648705" tweet_visual_time="January 21, 2015"]

"Our country will not be intimidated by terrorism, and there is no change to our policy of contributing to the international community's fight against terrorism," government spokesperson Yoshihide Suga told reporters in Tokyo when the ransom video surfaced.

But the Japanese population's response can best be summed up by one fan of the crusading trolls. "You can kill some of us, but Japan is a peaceful and happy land, with fast Internet," Japanese Twitter user jlist wrote. "So you can go to hell."

Follow Allie Conti on Twitter.

Cry-Baby of the Week: Some People Got Mad Because They Were Sent an Invoice for Missing a Party

$
0
0

It's time, once again, to marvel at some idiots who don't know how to handle the world:

Cry-Baby #1: Derek Nash and Tanya Walsh

[body_image width='900' height='579' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='cry-baby-of-the-week-123-body-image-1422044002.jpg' id='20738']

Screencaps via Google Maps and BBC

The incident: Some people were sent an invoice after they bailed at the last minute on a children's birthday party at a ski center.

The appropriate response: Apologizing and reimbursing the woman who paid for the tickets to the ski center.

The actual response: They refused to pay the party organizer any money and took their story to the local paper.

A little before Christmas, a woman named Julie Lawrence in Plymouth, England, organized a birthday party for her five-year-old son at a local ski center. Among the people she invited was the child of Derek Nash (pictured above) and his partner Tanya Walsh.

According to some Facebook correspondence published in the Plymouth Herald's extremely detailed article on the subject, a few days before the party, Lawrence called all of the people who had said they were attending to confirm that they would be able to make it. She did this because she was about to pay for tickets, which cost £15.95 ($24) per child. Nash told her that they would definitely be coming to the party.

On the day of the party, Nash, Walsh, and their son did not show up. Despite the fact that Lawrence's phone number was on the invite, they didn't contact her to let her know they wouldn't be coming. According to Nash, the reason they bailed was because they took their son to see his grandparents instead. He claims that the they didn't contact Lawrence to let her know because they didn't have her phone number or email address.

A few days later, their son came home from school with an envelope in his bag. Inside the envelope was an invoice that Lawrence had written to the couple asking to be reimbursed for the cost of a ticket to the ski center.

Now, obviously, sending an invoice over this rather than calling or emailing is a gigantic dick move. But an even bigger dick move is to be a no-show at a party after someone has paid $24 for your child to be there.

Nash went to Lawrence's house and confronted her over the invoice and told her he was not going to pay.

In an interview BBC news, Nash explained why he doesn't intend to pay: "Because I was so angry, I said, 'She's not going to get a penny out of me.'"

This is not a thing. You do not get to decide that you're not paying for something that you need to pay for because you don't like the way you were asked for payment. When I bought my TV at Best Buy, the guy made fun of me for not knowing the difference between LED and plasma. He as actually kind of a dick about it. But that doesn't mean I had the right to walk out of the door without paying for my goods.

Nash also claims that Lawrence has threatened him with legal action if they refuse to pay. Fuck him. I hope she does and I hope she wins.

Cry-Baby #2: The Cobb County Police

[body_image width='951' height='663' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='cry-baby-of-the-week-123-body-image-1422044014.jpg' id='20739']
Screencaps via WSB-TV

The incident: A man ate a cheeseburger while driving his car.

The appropriate response: Nothing.

The actual response: A cop issued him a ticket for "eating while driving."

Last week, Madison Turner went to a McDonald's drive-through in Cobb County, Georgia.

Shortly after leaving the restaurant, Madison was pulled over by a cop from the Cobb County Police. According to Madison, the cop told him that he was issuing him with a ticket because he had been following him for two miles, watching him eat a cheeseburger as he drove (creepy).

"He said specifically three times, 'You can't just go down the road eating a hamburger,'" Madison told WSB-TV.

The ticket that was issued to Madison was for "distracted driving." In the comments section of the ticket, the issuing officer had written "Eating while driving."

William Head, a traffic and DUI attorney that WSB-TV spoke to said that he suspected the ticket would end up being thrown out. "If this was the law I'd have to hire more attorneys because everybody does it including me," he told the station.

"Maybe if you had a giant pizza in both hands and you weren't holding the wheel or maybe if you had a watermelon, half watermelon and you were just diving into it holding it with both hands, maybe that would be something," he added, because he apparently thinks about this sort of thing a lot.

A spokesperson for Cobb County Police declined to comment. Madison is due in court February 3.

Which of these folks is the bigger cry-baby? Let us know in this poll down here:

Previously: A church who allegedly fired a woman for being unmarried vs a woman who freaked out because she thought she saw a pentagram in a brake light.

Winner: The pentagram lady!!!

Follow Jamie "Lee Curtis" Taete on Twitter.

A New Form of ID Allows You to Be a Citizen of the World

$
0
0

[body_image width='972' height='651' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='blockhains-first-citizen-328-body-image-1422017767.png' id='20584']

Janina Lowisz

Since the media storm around the birth of the Silk Road and its eventual takedown, Bitcoin has made its way into the popular consciousness. Even luddites are now vaguely aware of its existence, though usually tied to the idea of unsavory characters buying guns, drugs, or worse from the darkest recesses of the web.

What has received less attention—outside of tech circles, at least—is the totally revolutionary technology that underpins it, known as the blockchain. Without getting too technical, it's like a giant public ledger in which every Bitcoin transaction is recorded. But instead of it being held by one central authority, it's distributed among thousands of individual computer nodes, so the chance of faking any of the information in it—claiming you have a thousand Bitcoins when your account is empty, say, or spending the exact same coin twice—is effectively zero.

Though it was first created for digital currency exchange, the blockchain's core concept of a decentralized, free-to-access, unchangeable public record can be adapted for a whole host of other services. (We're still in the early days, but thinkers within the movement have already mapped out a fair few of them.)

[body_image width='932' height='547' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='blockhains-first-citizen-328-body-image-1422017822.png' id='20585']

It was at a meet-up for Bitcoin enthusiasts that I discovered some of these uses through Janina Lowisz, a.k.a. "Blockchain Girl," a 24-year-old management student billed as the first "World Citizen on the Blockchain." A few months back she became the proud owner of the first-ever decentralized, cryptographically signed proof of existence, in a ceremony that was live-streamed across the web. Since then she has become not just a poster girl for these crypto-IDs but an advocate for a hardline libertarian future where private contracts and distributed information replace more and more of what are now public functions.

I met up with her in the Vape Lab, London's Bitcoin hub cum e-cig café, to talk about passports, marriage contracts, and the death of the nation-state.

VICE: Hi, Janina. First things first: what exactly is a blockchain ID, and how does it work?
Janina Lowisz: Well, Bitnation [a group promoting decentralized governance] launched the BlockchainID pilot project last year in October. It's a private passport service that can validate people's existence using freely available tools that we have today. You can look up the exact steps to make one in the YouTube video, but basically it proves concretely that someone existed at a certain time and place, as verified by another certain group of people.

You got to be the first-ever "World Citizen" with it. How does that feel?
I feel very honored by it. And also I feel like now it's my responsibility to promote the blockchain and everything else you can do with it.

[body_image width='959' height='644' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='blockhains-first-citizen-328-body-image-1422017842.png' id='20586']

I heard it was invented by a guy called Chris. Didn't he want to be the first to have one?
Well, I think the creators wanted someone who wasn't already involved in the area before, to show that a person without any technical background can become a blockchain citizen—that it can be done everywhere and by anyone. And also, of course, my background is libertarian, so I grasped the philosophical basis of everything even without special knowledge of the technology.

So what exactly can you use the passport for today?
At the moment, the ID is more of an addition that you can use for things like online verification. But it can be used by stateless people—that's important—and there's a plan to develop the process in the future and make it more simple for them to get one. Or if people want to declare themselves as a world citizen and not just whatever nationality they happened to be born as, this is a good way to express that view.

Also, as it's a pilot scheme for a private passport service, it shows private solutions are capable of lots of the same functions as centralized government. There are so many things that government currently does that can actually be done in a voluntary and decentralized way; there's really no need for central governance services—people can just pay for whatever services they want.

I see. So what do you think that future would be like if people relied on government less and paid for everything themselves?
It would be great! Even now there are libertarian groups emerging everywhere—you can increasingly see that nation-states are a model of the past. They all have high debts, and even those that are seen as working well have huge debt, it's just low in comparison to all of the others. Everyone is struggling! I really can't think of a good government anywhere. So, over time, people are becoming more and more aware of that and starting to look for other voluntary solutions.

You mean the blockchain is taking us toward the death of the nation-state?Maybe not just yet, but the technology allows for a lot of new possibilities for replacing what the state provides—like, one option would be to offer government services in packages so people can pay for whatever services they're going to use. That's how government should work: Instead of paying taxes that get wasted on things you don't even want, this way you can have a free choice and see exactly where your money is going.

[body_image width='977' height='650' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='blockhains-first-citizen-328-body-image-1422017859.png' id='20587']

I gather there's lots of other stuff you could use the blockchain for, too. I heard about some people getting married through it. What's the deal there?
Yes, that was the first pilot project that Bitnation did. It means there's a smart contract: Unlike traditional marriage, you're not bound for life, but can choose how long—five years, ten years, 15 years—and then you have to renew it or it automatically ends.

The advantage of that is that people aren't committing to it forever, so if one person in the marriage causes trouble, the other one doesn't get punished for the decision to leave them. Often after a divorce, the man needs to pay for the woman, but it could be the woman's fault! With a smart contract, no one can exploit the other one once the marriage ends.

And you could marry someone you might not like that much...
Well, personally I would only marry on the blockchain. Traditional marriage is a big risk—it can destroy people's lives.

So are we all going to be using this technology a lot more from now on?
I think it will take a long time for people to use things like blockchain marriage as long as traditional options have other benefits, like tax breaks, for example. But as a libertarian, I don't think one should make important life decisions based on what the state has to say about it.

Anything else to add?
Sure, if you're interested you should look up the BlockchainID on Github and see all the Bitnation projects, like land registry, marriages, and many other things that will be possible in the future.

Follow Corin Faife on Twitter.

Britain Is Up in Arms Because of a Pair of Breasts in a Tabloid Newspaper

$
0
0

[body_image width='700' height='537' path='images/content-images/2015/01/23/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/23/' filename='britain-is-up-in-arms-about-a-pair-of-breasts-in-a-tabloid-newspaper-body-image-1422048461.jpg' id='20751']

A long, long time ago—back in 1970, if you're counting—some editors at a British tabloid called the Sun had a thought: Hey, what if we put some topless women in our paper? Would people like that?

It turned out they did, and from that day forth the Sun (soon followed by its competitors) began running photos of topless ladies on the third page of every issue. "Page 3 girls" were presented as ordinary young women, nubile products of the sexual revolution. The idea, Padraig Reidy wrote this week, was "that sweet-natured young women with absolutely no qualms about sex were out there, just needing a wink and a Sid James cackle to persuade them into a bit of slap and tickle... They were 'healthy' and 'fun,' perhaps a little 'naughty'; always girls and never women."

But what might have been a bawdy, if lecherous, feature four decades ago looks both old-fashioned and gross in the 21st century, which is why No More Page 3, a grassroots campaign to get the Sun to stop its sleazy displays, has gained so much traction in recent years. This week the Sun seemed to abruptly cave when it published a breast-free edition on Wednesday, sparking a storm of thinkpieces in other media outlets—before the editors announced that ha ha they were just kidding, Page 3 is alive and well, and here is a half-naked winking woman to prove it.

[tweet text="Tomorrow's #Page3... pic.twitter.com/pzyZ7Qhe9N" byline="— The Sun (@TheSunNewspaper)" user_id="TheSunNewspaper" tweet_id="558031936653111296" tweet_visual_time="January 21, 2015"]

There seemed to be something both nasty and immature in this bait-and-switch. The tabloid was acknowledging that these spreads had become controversial and that people now found them to be boorish, misogynist, or simply lame—and the editors were sending those people a very obvious message: Fuck you.

"In the Sun's childish taunting of any woman who expressed alignment with the No More Page 3 campaign's arguments, the newspaper has eclipsed the initial debate surrounding whether it should exist or not almost entirely," VICE's Eleanor Morgan wrote yesterday. "That is what has happened today. No woman I know was talking about whether Page 3 should exist this morning—they were talking about a national newspaper provoking a reaction against the very idea of women having opinions."

If there's an American analogue to the Sun, which has a circulation of over 2 million, it's probably the New York Post. The Sun publishes articles about unfaithful boyfriends' STDs killing their unborn children, which sex position is the riskiest, and women who go into comas after botched dye jobs—the sorts of stories that are tabloid staples the world over. But Page 3 might be the Sun's biggest contribution to British culture; some women, like Jodie Marsh and Katie Price have used it as a springboard to fame as "glamour models" and reality TV stars.

"It's become synonymous with what we would call ' white van men,' builders, plumbers, odd-job men," said Eleanor when I called her up and asked her to explain what Page 3 meant to British culture. The Sun is a cheap paper, she added, that "caters to a working-class audience," and Page 3 is of a piece with that. "The whole shtick was, 'Here's an everyday girl with her tits out.'"

Some of Page 3's detractors have argued that the Sun is sending the message that women are objects to be gawked at, that the most important thing about them is their bodies. But others object to it on simpler grounds: In 2015, is it really all that exciting to see a sorta-naked lady? Surely even the most technophobic Sun reader can figure out how to fire up some porn on his phone if he really, really has to check out some nudity in public, right?

"Today it's much less powerful or titillating than it ever was before," Eleanor told me. "Honestly, it's become such a tired thing. The whole No More Page 3 campaign was quite polite and peaceful and saying, 'God, c'mon guys, this is so tired now.'"

Even Sun owner Rupert Murdoch (whose company 21st Century Fox also owns 5 percent of VICE) thinks Page 3 is "old fashioned," as he tweeted in September, though the papers' readers seem to still love the models, at least according to editor David Dinsmore. (Sun readers presumably also love such fine entertainments as racist comedians and those pens that have naked women on them.)

The debate isn't about whether the offending mammaries are tasteless or lame or a freeing expression of female sexuality anymore, however. "It's not boobs that are priceless to the brand," wrote the Guardian's Gaby Hinsliff, "but being the paper that won't be told what to do about having boobs in it; that sticks two defiant fingers up to what readers regard as joyless feminists and sanctimonious lefties and the bossy, nannying PC brigade—all the people now so neatly suckered."

That contrarian, up-yours attitude that the Sun seems to have adopted was in full effect on Thursday, when the paper's head of PR, Dylan Sharpe, mocked Page 3's critics on Twitter, an act he got so much heat for that he later issued an apology. "Guilty of gloating I most certainly am. Icarus has well and truly plummeted to earth," was how he phrased it to BuzzFeed News—which should give you an idea of the rhetorical realm this debate over breasts has entered.

So what happens now? At the Telegraph, Rupert Myers wrote that the "loud, sustained campaign [against Page 3] has failed," and suggested that the No More Page 3 crowd should stop pressuring the Sun and allow the feature to die a natural death. Of course, that would make it look like a crew of laddish tabloid editors had successfully "beaten" the feminists, and neither side has much to gain from backing down or reducing the volume. A full day after the Sun's re-breastification, the story was still making its way through the news cycle, with Twitter users sending the paper photos of male nipples as a joke, a "feminist libertarian" denouncing Page 3 in the Belfast Telegraph, and a Guardian profile of a glamour model turned Labour politician opened with her reaction to Thursday's Sun. And if you run a paper like the Sun, you rarely stop doing something when it's getting that much attention.

Follow Harry Cheadle on Twitter.

Scientists Say We're Three Minutes from Doomsday

$
0
0
Scientists Say We're Three Minutes from Doomsday

The Huge Issue Obama Ignored in the State of the Union This Week

$
0
0

After a year of horrific headlines about substandard and sometimes deadly lapses in care at Veterans Affairs hospitals across the country, veterans advocacy groups were hoping for a little love from President Obama during this week's State of the Union speech. But they were left disappointed.

The president touched on a cornucopia of subjects during his speech , from putting an astronaut on Mars to net neutrality, but any mention of the Department of Veterans Affairs was notably absent. Despite the nationwide scandal that engulfed the VA last year, the department only got a passing mention in Obama's hour-long speech. In the middle of the speech's sole paragraph dedicated to veterans, most of which was about the administration's work on its veteran jobs programs, Obama said his administration is "slashing the backlog that had too many veterans waiting years to get the benefits they need."

Concerned Veterans for America, a veterans advocacy group, was understandably upset by the oversight. In an interview this week, the group's legislative and political director Daniel Caldwell said that the sheer size of the VA and scope of the problems demanded some mention in the president's annual speech. "Put aside the fact that this involves veterans, the VA is the second-largest government agency aside from Department of Defense," he said. "It has 300,000 employees, and it's seriously flawed. From a pure management perspective, this is not something the president should ignore."

Republican Congressman Jeff Miller, the chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, agreed, saying in a statement that presidential leverage was needed to spur real reform at the VA. "Changing the culture at VA is a monumental task, and without the president leading by example it will be next to impossible," Miller wrote.

There were early indications that the VA scandal wouldn't get any play in the White House's State of the Union blitz this week. Earlier this month, as he previewed his new proposals, Obama riled veterans groups when he didn't visit a VA hospital in Phoenix on a trip to the area, despite passing right by it in the presidential motorcade.

The hospital was at the center of the scandal last year, after several whistleblowers came forward alleging that it was using secret wait lists to hide the long, sometimes fatal delays faced by veterans trying to schedule appointments. An internal audit by the agency's Inspector General revealed that VA hospitals across the country used similar tactics to hide wait times, and that employees who tried to blow the whistle on the practice faced retaliation from their bosses. As many as 40 patients have reportedly died while awaiting treatment at the Phoenix VA hospital.

The public, however, hasn't forgotten about the controversy. A survey released Thursday by the Pew Research Center found the VA's favorability among Americans has slipped to 52 percent, down from 68 percent before the scandal first broke.

In May, VA Secretary Eric Shinseki resigned over the controversy, and several top executives at the agency have been fired since his replacement, Robert McDonald, took over. The department claims it has cut appointment backlogs and taken other steps to improve accountability and protect whistleblowers.

But the agency is far from out of the woods. Last week, the VA launched investigations into one of its hospitals in Wisconsin in response to reports that doctors there are handing out opiates like candy to patients. And on Tuesday, the agency announced it will take new steps to offer relief to about 25 employees who faced retaliation after reporting misconduct by senior officials.

In the lead-up to this week's speech this week, several members of Congress also called on Obama to address mental health issues facing veterans. Connecticut Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a ranking member of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, invited widow Joanna Eldridge, whose Marine husband committed suicide in 2013, to be his guest Tuesday night. "With Joanna in the audience and veterans and their families across the country listening at home, I urge the president to address this crisis and couple it with a call for action," the Senator said in a statement.

A bill aimed at preventing veteran suicides is currently moving through Congress.

Follow CJ on Twitter

Beware of Flaming Vodka Shots If You’re Hairy-Chested

$
0
0
Beware of Flaming Vodka Shots If You’re Hairy-Chested

VICE News: VICE News Capsule

$
0
0

The VICE News Capsule is a news roundup that looks beyond the headlines. Today: Tensions rise between locals and foreign shopkeepers in the South African city of Soweto, Chile decides to reopen its investigation into the death of Nobel Prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda, El Salvador grants amnesty to a woman accused of having an abortion, and Libya's political crisis causes its residents to struggle to keep the lights on.

Friday Night In...: Friday Night in Universal CityWalk

$
0
0

[body_image width='1600' height='1090' path='images/content-images/2015/01/20/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/20/' filename='friday-night-at-universal-city-walk-678-body-image-1421769830.jpeg' id='19524']

On Friday nights, people around the world leave their offices to fill their innards with cheese fries and booze to put the pain of the working week behind them. This makes for plenty of photo-worthy moments, so we've decided to send photographers to the planet's finest cities and towns to capture Friday night as it unfolds. For this week's installment, Megan Koester visited Universal CityWalk, a shopping promenade located at "Universal Studios Hollywood, The Entertainment Capital of LA." A playground for Midwestern tourists and service-industry employees, it serves as Extra's shooting location and the former home of Jon Lovitz's failed comedy club. Best of all? Parking's only $10!

France Is Sending More Troops to Help Iraq Fight the Islamic State

$
0
0
France Is Sending More Troops to Help Iraq Fight the Islamic State

Hanging Out at New York's Sex-Free, Alcohol-Free Bear Den

$
0
0

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857137.jpg' id='19966']

All photos by Amy Lombard

When you think about bears, you might think of heavy-set gay men in leather, but the bears of the New York Bear Den defy the stereotype. As I entered the Bear Den—a sober meet-up spot in Queens—I expected a casual bacchanalia, but instead, I found an endearing group of friends eating red velvet cake in the shape of a teddy bear.

The New York Bear Den bills itself as a "hate-free, alcohol-free, attitude-free" alternative to the gay bar scene, and most members see body positivity as a core part of bear culture.

"To be a bear is more about being a member of the bear community than it is anything about one's appearance or style," Mark, a well-spoken bear who has attended nearly every meeting in the Bear Den's six-year existence, told me. "For every description you could use of a bear there will be bears that will not fit the rule—other than being big hefty men."

Chaz, a biker with stark black tattoos on his arms, agreed: "The majority of people that come here aren't necessarily big and hairy. You're going to see skinny hairless guys [and] skinny hairy guys," he said. "There are a lot of guys out there who like the bear community because we're so inclusive. We're all strangely unique and uniquely strange."

For a subculture known for embodying a specific "type," the bears' inclusivity was striking, as was the bears' positivity about people who identify as transgender. Robert, the resident Latino bear psychic, wore a silky 70s-inspired outfit, while Edurds, a tall, squeaky-voiced black man, wore strictly utilitarian work clothes. While LGBT people are still fighting for more diverse representation of gay men on TV and in film, 30 or so out and proud men from a handful of ethnicities, ages, and backgrounds filled the Bear Den. Many guys embraced their own cutesy ursine nickname: panda bears, black bears, polar bears, grizzly bears, mama bears, cubs, and otters.

The bears also have their own set of icons and heroes, preferring celebrities like Tom Arnold, John Goodman, RuPaul, Adam Lambert, and the late Billy Mays. "It's nice to have a bear icon who is actually gay," Adam said about Daniel Franzese, the gay actor best known for playing Damien in Mean Girls.

At the Bear Den, most bears focus more on winning the afternoon's trivia game than on getting laid. Carlin Langley and many of the other bears present that Sunday founded the Bear Den six years ago, as a non-sexual, non-alcoholic space expressly created for the purpose of forging new friendships. Founded after the dissipation of Bear Cafe (a similar booze-free hookup-free organization), the Bear Den now attracts regulars and new members alike.

"Because we're a drug and alcohol free event, we're also friendly with AA, NA, and other 12-step programs, although we are not a 12-step program. We're not a support group by any means," Chaz said. "There are events that we do host that are in bars. [But] this is our safe place."

Langley acknowledged that some heavy petting does occur in the den, although no one ends up getting naked. "Whatever they want to do afterwards is up to them," he said. The bears are—in Langley's words—a largely "self-policing" crowd. No one seemed tempted to sneak in booze or poppers. In the Den, back rubs seemed far more popular than blowjobs.

Although the bears socialize together, a couple bears admitted they also date men outside the bear community. "There's a lot of body fascism that goes on in the gay community—very nice and intelligent and attractive men are more than happy to turn their backs on the bears," Mark said. "[But] coming to identify with the bears and the bear community has increased my confidence and my feelings of being attractive."

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857200.jpg' id='19967']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857871.jpg' id='19977']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857245.jpg' id='19968']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857888.jpg' id='19978']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421858020.jpg' id='19983']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857946.jpg' id='19979']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421858041.jpg' id='19986']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857283.jpg' id='19970']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857299.jpg' id='19971']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857998.jpg' id='19982']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857310.jpg' id='19972']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421858063.jpg' id='19989']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421858178.jpg' id='19997']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857330.jpg' id='19973']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421858117.jpg' id='19993']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857343.jpg' id='19974']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421858209.jpg' id='20000']

[body_image width='2000' height='2000' path='images/content-images/2015/01/21/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/21/' filename='hanging-out-at-the-bear-den-new-yorks-sober-sex-free-meet-up-for-bears-929-body-image-1421857357.jpg' id='19975']

Follow Eric Shorey and Amy Lombard on Twitter.

For more information on the New York Queens Pride House, which offers LGBT-friendly health and social resources including discussion and support groups, visit their website.

London's Nigerian Community Protested the Lack of Media Coverage Given to Boko Haram

$
0
0

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422280525.jpg' id='21225']

Photos by Jake Lewis

This article originally appeared on VICE UK.

London's Nigerian community gathered in Westminster on Sunday to raise awareness to the atrocities committed by terrorist organization Boko Haram , under the banner #NigerianLivesMatter.

The Boko Haram came to international attention last year, when they kidnapped 276 school girls from Chibok, Borno, sparking #BringBackOurGirls to trend on Twitter. Prior to this the group had carried out bombings, prison breaks, and the massacre of what is estimated to be close to 200 civilians in the village of Baga. The same village was the site of a massacre of 2,000 by the terrorist group from January 3 to January 7 this year.

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422280564.jpg' id='21228']

Unfolding on the days leading up to and including the day of the Charlie Hebdo shooting, the massacre received relatively little media attention. This has drawn criticism—a ren't 2,000 dead Nigerians worth more than a cursory mention in the press?

The rally gathered a crowd of hundreds to a patch of pavement opposite the Nigerian high Commission. When asked about how they found out about the event, many of those gathered cited social media. "I saw the event and coverage through my girlfriend's Facebook," explained Keji.

Other supporters lamented the lack of awareness from wider society. "Outside of Nigerian circles there has been little discussion," one told me. A lot of passersby didn't seem to know what the protesters were on about, which served to reinforce their general point.

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422281492.jpg' id='21249']

Speaking before the event, organizer Akinolo Davies Jr. expressed his desire to empower the Nigerian community through the rally. "This is the opportunity for those in the diaspora to mourn the dead, to show solidarity to those in the effected areas and lastly to galvanize people—t o show that mobilizing is important in civil issues and that people getting together is a form of power and part of the process of effecting change, " he said.

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422281547.jpg' id='21252']

"Change" was a buzzword among the speakers. The young crowd served as a symbol for the pressure mounting on the Nigerian government to be more accountable. When given the opportunity to hold the megaphone, one young girl announced, "we are not our parents."

There was strong focus on the potential change that could be enacted through the upcoming elections, with young people seen as the key to lasting change. Dr. Titilola Banjoko, a diaspora expert, urged everyone to use their freedom as a British citizens to influence the upcoming elections in February by talking to relatives in Nigeria.

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422280889.jpg' id='21233']

Bwalya Newton

Organizer Bwalya Newton said that they were not looking for comparison with the attacks in Paris. "We stand with the victims of the Charlie Hebdo attacks," she said. "It's more the time frame—when it happened at the time everyone concentrated on that one event, and swept the other one under the carpet."

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422280792.jpg' id='21232']

Andrew Murray

Stop the War campaigner Andrew Murray took to the loud speaker and addressed what for many there seemed to be the elephant in the room, saying the unequal coverage was "racist."A cheer went up, with many continuing to shout in agreement when Murray stated that the British government were only interested in oil and not human life.

For older people at the protest, the rally seemed to be about community. Iyabode Animashaun, a mother who was positioned at the front of the crowd explained, "There's an African saying—'a child belongs to a whole village,' and that's what we should be thinking about. "

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422281381.jpg' id='21240']

This communal sentiment was shared by invited speaker Bisi Alimi, who clutched a Nigerian flag in his hand, as he lead the crowd in chanting "solidarity forever." Other chants heard throughout the day shared this sentiment with "Nigerian lives matter, we are with you Baga," and "Up Up Niger, Down Down Terro."

[body_image width='640' height='424' path='images/content-images/2015/01/26/' crop='images/content-images-crops/2015/01/26/' filename='nigerian-lives-matter-132-body-image-1422281010.jpg' id='21234']

Skepta and Akinola

The group dispersed in the early afternoon after Akinola and surprise participant Skepta gave thanks to the attendees and all presented participated in a minute 's silence. For many, the event had provided an opportunity to turn a hashtag into a peaceful action on the streets. Whilst those organizing the event passed a letter to those at the high commission demanding action on the Boko Haram, the mentality of the crowd was captured by Alimi, when she said, "this isn't about government, they wont listen. We want the media, we want a voice. "

Follow Rachael and Jake on Twitter.

Viewing all 38002 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images