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Big Businesses and Nick Lachey Are Trying to Dominate Ohio's Future Legal Weed Industry

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Nick Lachey. Image via Wiki Commons

Tomorrow, Ohio voters will vote on Issue 3, a measure that will have profound effects on the future of marijuana in their state. If it passes, the state's constitution would be amended to legalize the possession, cultivation, and use of marijuana and marijuana-infused products such as edibles and concentrates for Ohioans 21 or older. This wouldn't just legalize medical marijuana—it would be a full-on legalization of marijuana for recreational use.

There's a catch to Issue 3, and it's a fairly significant one: only ten facilities would be allowed to grow and sell marijuana commercially, and they just so happen to be owned by the ten LLCs that make up ResponsibleOhio, the political action committee that proposed the initiative.

The names behind the ResponsibleOhio come with a whiff of big business: Paul Heldman of NG Green Investments is a former executive at the grocery giant Kroger; Alan Mooney of Abhang Co. is a former advisor at AIG and owns a wealth advisory company. Frank Wood of DGF LLC is a venture capitalist. Also on the list of ResponsibleOhio backers are NBA Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson and fashion designer Nanette Lepore.

Perhaps the most surprising name attached to the group, however, is Nick Lachey: former boy band star, ex-husband of Jessica Simpson, and perennial D-list celebrity. He's part of a company called Verdure GCE LLC, along with William "Cheney" Pruett and John Humphrey, both of whom ResponsibleOhio lists as "finance executives." If Issue 3 passes, Verdure would own a 30-acre grow site in Summit County, Ohio.

Through a representative, Lachey declined to speak with VICE about his involvement in the ballot initiative. He did, however, take the time to appear in this 30-second ad that's been airing on Ohio television. In the ad, Lachey, using all the gravitas a dude who once took the lead vocal on "Because of You" can physically muster, looks into the camera and says, "Ohio is my home. I care very deeply about the people here, which is why I'm very proud to be part of the movement that's going to create jobs, reinvigorate our economy and improve the safety of our cities."

The ad then cuts to a young woman in a coffee shop, who offers, "It'll give me a chance to open a business! Or pay off my college loans!" Then it cuts to another young woman, holding a backpack in the street, says, "Legalizing marijuana will provide tax revenue for local safety services. Let's do what the politicians haven't done. For marijuana legalization, vote 'No' on 2, and 'Yes' on 3."

This last part is a reference to a second ballot initiative that Ohioans will vote on Tuesday, one that makes the legalization situation even more complicated. That initiative, know as Issue 2 or the Ohio Initiated Monopolies Amendment, would "prohibit an initiated constitutional amendment that would grant a monopoly, oligopoly, or cartel, specify or determine a tax rate, or confer a commercial interest, right, or license to any person or nonpublic entity." While the amendment doesn't specifically mention marijuana, it seems specifically designed to block the passage of marijuana legalization in the state. Because as its name suggests, the amendment could nullify Issue 3 for violating Ohio's constitution.

"Lawmakers don't want marijuana legalization to come to Ohio," ResponsibleOhio spokesperson Faith Oltman told VICE.

Aaron Weaver, the president of Citizens Against ResponsibleOhio, sees things a bit differently. His group supports marijuana legalization, but opposes Issue 3 on the basis that it would create an unfair business environment. "There's a fine line when it comes to public policy," Weaver said in a phone interview last week. He described ResponsibleOhio's stance as, "Hey, we'll legalize , we'll even make it a free market for you guys, but everybody's gotta chop off their left foot if they want it to pass."

Oltman denied that Issue 3 would create a monopoly. "It's been tough to communicate to people because 'monopoly' just makes sense to people," she said in a phone interview. "You know, 'monopoly' is one word and people don't like the idea of one or two people getting wealthy off of something, but when you look a little bit deeper and you learn more about the proposal and what we're putting forth, it's about a lot of people sharing in the wealth of this multi-billion dollar industry at all levels."

Watch "Baked Alaska," VICE News' documentary on marijuana legalization in America's last frontier

Morgan Fox of the Marijuana Policy Project, a group that lobbies on behalf of marijuana law reform, told VICE that the hodgepodge group of investors that make up ResponsibleOhio is another sign that the marijuana industry is taking steps towards legitimacy. Still, he said, "It's concerning that these don't seem to be people with knowledge about marijuana, the industry, or marijuana policies. But I'm sure they can hire people that do."

Fox noted that ResponsibleOhio has already hit one minor PR snafu. The group's mascot—yes, the PAC has a mascot—is "Buddie," a superhero whose head is a giant marijuana bud.


The VICE Guide to Right Now: Anonymous Says It Just Outed a Bunch of Members of the Ku Klux Klan

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Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Watch: The KKK and American Veterans

In the latest move in a ongoing feud between two of America's most famous masked groups, the online hacktivist collective Anonymous announced plans to reveal the identities of 1,000 members of the Ku Klux Klan last week. And as the International Business Times reports, they seem to be following through on that pledge.

Beginning on Sunday, the nebulous online collective began publishing dozens of email addresses and phone numbers on the text-sharing site Pastebin that it says are tied to the KKK. The information hasn't been independently verified, but the group apparently plans to release even more data around November 5—the same day it will stage its annual "Million Mask March," a global protest that coincides with the anniversary of Guy Fawkes Day.

So far, Anonymous has released 23 email addresses and 57 phone numbers as part of the group's "Operation KKK," along with the message, "There is no place for racism now we're more connected, the time to cooperate and better the world is now." A separate Pastebin post claimed to share the names of five mayors of southern states and four state senators, but the official Operation KKK Twitter account seemed to disavow that dump before deleting the tweet in question, casting the veracity of the post into even more doubt. (Some of the named politicians, including Lexington, Kentucky, mayor Jim Gray, have already denied any involvement with the KKK.)

According to the IBT, Anonymous has sparred with the KKK for about a year, ever since a local KKK chapter threatened to use "lethal force" against activists in Ferguson, Missouri, following Michael Brown's death in August 2014. Around that time, hackers took control of the chapter's Twitter account, publishing what it claimed where the identities of several of its members. Now the group says it's wrested control of a private Twitter account associated with the KKK that holds a trove of information on Klan membership.

Living as a 'Digital Nomad' Is Like One Super-Long Vacation

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All photos courtesy of Amy Truong

If you're a human, at some point, somewhere down the line, your ancestors were nomads, constantly uprooting their homes to travel to new locations in search of food. In most cases it was out of necessity rather than choice, following the migrating patterns of wildlife and the shifting weather conditions so that people wouldn't freeze or starve to death.

Sounds miserable, right? Or does it sound like an opportunity to travel the world, no strings attached? That's the philosophy behind a certain breed of travelers who call themselves "digital nomads." They've given up permanent homes for the chance to see the world, constantly on the move, like nomads. And in the age of remote employees, full-time freelancers, and entire industries that take place not in an office but on the internet, they've found a way to do it without sacrificing regular income.

Amy Truong is one of those people. A software tester for Github (about 60 percent of the company works remotely), Truong doesn't have a true home base—she picks up and moves to a new city, a new country, every few months. She also moderates Hashtag Nomads, an online community for digital nomads to connect to each other and meet up IRL. While Truong was in San Francisco, we met up to talk about how she makes the traveling lifestyle work for her, the tricks she uses to make moving easier, and the loneliness that comes from constantly being on-the-go.

VICE: Let's flash back to five years ago—what was going on in your life and how did you decide to become a digital nomad?
Amy Truong: OK, let's see. I was in IT consulting over on the East Coast. After working hard, graduating, and having three to four weeks of vacation to travel, I'd started my career, as people do. The problem for me was once I got home from vacation, I just wanted to travel more. So I thought about it and I knew I needed to figure out a way to do this seriously. There are lots of options actually: You can go work for a travel agency; you could be a flight attendant or a pilot; you could work in consulting, just traveling around to different places every week; and then of course you've got the vagabonds, or the forever bartenders that pack up and move to a new area when they feel like it.

I thought about my options and I knew I wanted to travel, but I also knew I didn't want to be a bartender forever hopping from place to place. There had to be another way to do this and have a stable income. One way of doing things : There are freelance developers, graphic designers, writers, authors, journalists, bloggers, and stuff like that. But that's not realistic for most people. It's pretty tough to make that happen as a long-term option.

But you decided to try to make it work.
For me, I had a single moment of clarity. I was in Washington, DC, getting on the metro; it was a hot summer day and I had my backpack on with my laptop and heels inside, because you totally can't walk on the metro in heels. And I was just sitting on this hot car, with no AC, and I was just like, "Wow, this sucks. This really sucks. I am going to end up spending the rest of my life like this if I don't do something." I had to decide if that's what I wanted to do. I was literally in a rat race. There I was underground, in a maze, on an escalator, just trying to find what makes me happy—it definitely wasn't this. I realized that I was in my 20s, I wasn't married, I didn't have any kids, I didn't have any overwhelming responsibilities tying me down to any one place, so why not make this happen?

Truong hiking Hamama Falls in Hawaii

How did your friends react when you decided to make that change?
Basically everyone thought I was crazy. My friends asked me if I needed help and that they would be there for me to help me through "this phase" of my life. I guess they view traveling a lot as one thing, but making it my life entirely is just taking it too far in some people's eyes. I had one friend even ask me, "What are you running away from?"

Well, are you running away from something?
I don't know. I mean, yeah. It makes me doubt myself for sure sometimes. It makes me feel bad about what I want, I feel guilty sometimes, like, why don't I just want the normal things like everyone else? Is something wrong with me? But ultimately, if I look deep down, yeah, I think I was running away from that boring conventional life I was living on the East Coast before. I just have a lot of fear inside me about quickly slipping back into that rhythm if I let myself. At the same time though, I'm not saying there is anything inherently bad about that sort of traditional lifestyle. It works for most people, but I guess it just doesn't feel right for me.

How is being a digital nomad different than a permanent vacation?
I travel more slowly. Instead of staying a week or two somewhere, I'll stay a month or two. I'll hang around the places locals do, enjoy the local hole-in-the-wall restaurants, go to the grocery store, and see the sights on my own when I want, instead of racing through with a group of tourists. Instead of eating at all of the top restaurants, I like to just take my time and have a nice meal at home like a local would. It really helps me get a better feel for a culture and an area than if I were to treat it like any other vacation.

Do you think that throws you off, though? If every time you go to a new place you have to reset your entire way of life, that could get really hectic.
I have a routine that I stick to every morning, which helps. I wake up pretty early once my sleep schedule the timezone, have my green tea, check my email, maybe go for a walk or get in a quick workout, that sort of thing.

So instead of having a consistent place to call home, you rely on your consistent routine to make wherever you are feel like home.
Exactly!

Looking for travel recs? Check out The VICE Guide to Europe.

Does it ever feel weird to be constantly on the move? I mean, do you have friends?
It really helps with how big the digital nomad community has gotten these days. We've got websites, subreddits, Facebook groups, Twitter, and so much more out there for people to connect on. If I'm going to Switzerland, I'll pop into a group and ask if anyone has any friends or family there. We meet up and it immediately gives me a friend or familiar face in an otherwise new area.

What about family? How do your parents feel about your volatile lifestyle?
At first, my father was very concerned and worried. But then after I started traveling alone and, more importantly, actually coming back safely, he realized I might know a bit about what I'm doing. When I told them about my decision to sell everything and fully commit to this lifestyle, they immediately asked me if I was crazy. But after we talked about it, they were OK with it. Deep down they want me to be happy. If I found a way to do what I truly wanted to do, chase my dreams, and be happy, then that's all they wanted. It sounds cliché, but it's the truth. I have wonderful parents.

What's dating like as a nomad? I mean, is it even possible?
All of these dating apps out there now like Tinder make it so much easier to date if you want to. As a digital nomad, there is a very skewered male to female ratio. Making friends and going out to have a good time is extremely easy for me, but finding something more long-term is obviously a struggle. Do I care enough about this person to lay down roots and stay in one place for a while? Do they care enough about me to warrant me staying? There are just a lot of factors at play.

Truong at the top of the Sathorn Unique skyscraper in Bangkok, Thailand

How do you choose where to stay?
I use Airbnb—that website is seriously a godsend like no other. Usually people on there love to rent out their places for several weeks or a couple of months at a time and I get a better deal that way. There's even a subletting section on the site as well. I have used Craigslist before too, subleasing places the traditional way, that sort of thing. In fact, one big trend that's getting more popular now are what's called "co-working houses" and it's just a big group of nomads getting together in a house—with WiFi of course, that's a necessity—and sometimes people even set up retreats for communal living arrangements for big groups. WiFi is such a huge deal for nomads and that's where resources like NomadList come in handy because we can rate things like the internet, cost of living, weather, safety, nightlife scene, and a lot more.

Can't leave your desk job? Try a virtual reality vacation.

Have you ever had negative experiences traveling?
Well, I will say that all of the traveling I've done, as a woman, has really opened my eyes to how women are treated in a lot of other countries. For example, as an Asian woman visiting Thailand, I was able to sort of blend in myself. Most people that talked to me or watched my mannerisms could probably tell that I wasn't a native from Thailand at all, but at first glance maybe you couldn't tell. So on many occasions I've ended up on the receiving end of ill treatment from a lot of tourists, or visiting Americans or Europeans, that assume I'm a local—being ignored, talked down to, disregarded, and just generally not treated like an equal person. It hurts, to put things simply. No one should ever be treated like that but it happens every day around the world.

One moment in particular sticks out in my mind still to this day. I was with a group of fellow nomads, clearly in a social meetup. And a guy in the group just assumed I was a local server girl or something at the place that we were meeting up at. What really got to me isn't that I was mistaken for a local, that's fine, but it was the way he treated me because of who he thought I was. Not that I was being ignored, but that no one should be treated like that.

FYI: You Can Hire a Personal Instagram Photographer to Travel with You

I noticed a lot of veteran nomads on the subreddit were extremely skeptical and borderline judgmental of "new" nomads. It's almost like they don't believe they are "real" or "serious" enough about it. Do you have any insight into why people could treat newcomers like that?
Yeah, I think if you are an aspiring nomad and you ask for all this advice and guidance, it just seems like in most cases those people never even actually end up taking the advice. And people just get so sick of giving the same advice over and over and then they don't even care. It's like, why even put forth the effort if they don't even care? This is our passion and our way of life, so don't trivialize it by treating it like your cool new hobby. It's not a fun little vacation, or a side hobby. It's a serious commitment.

A lot of digital nomads like to talk about their lives like it's just one nonstop, super-long vacation. Is that really what it's like?
Traveling so much makes me happy and it's my passion, but it's not like I'm always on the beach or anything like that. A lot of work goes into this and it takes dedication, discipline, and above all else, the ability to motivate yourself. I work a lot sometimes and that's just how it is. And there are a lot of times where I really just feel lonely. I miss my family. I miss my friends. When I get food poisoning or something and am sick at home but still have all of this work to do and I wish my mom could take care of me but she's on the other side of the planet—yeah, I get homesick.

I've had those low moments where I'm laying in my bed at night crying and thinking, "If I died right here in this bed right now, no one would know or care!" You totally get those moments. This is not all sunshine and butterflies. But loneliness is just a symptom of what's ailing you on the inside. If I go back home to treat my loneliness, it might help for a while, but ultimately I'll still feel lonely inside. The most important thing, I think, is finding what truly makes you happy and doing that until you can't anymore. That's my secret.

Follow David Jagneaux on Twitter.

What We Know About the Confederate Flag Lover Who Allegedly Bombed a Walmart This Weekend

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Photo via Flickr user frankieleon

After the devastating murder of nine African-American parishioners at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina this spring, the Confederate flag was the subject of a heated national debate. Because Dylann Roof, the 21-year-old suspected of the slaughter, was known to be fond of the symbol, the flag's ugly history and meaning could no longer be ignored. Activist Brittany "Bree" Newsome shimmied her way 30 feet up the flagpole at the South Carolina state capitol and into social media stardom when she snatched it down in protest. Lawmakers went on to officially remove it soon after.

Perhaps most remarkably, the retail giant Walmart, along with major American businesses, announced they'd stop selling the flag at their stores.

None of that seemed to sit very well with Marshall Leonard, 61, of Tupelo, Mississippi. Local cops allege he set off a small explosive device at a Walmart in his hometown early Sunday, a twisted Halloween outing that could land him in prison for the rest of his life, as the local Daily Journal reported.

Leonard was apparently notorious around town for flying a four-foot Mississippi state flag—which contains the Confederate battle flag—through the sunroof of his silver Mazda. His car is also reportedly adorned with several Confederate flag stickers. Leonard also showed up to at least one city council meeting draped in the Confederate stars and bars.

"He's a strong supporter of keeping that flag flying... This is his way of bringing attention to that," Police Chief Bart Aguirre told the Associated Press.

The explosion apparently did very little damage—though it made a loud bang—and no one was injured. But local authorities are still charging Leonard with detonating an explosive.

Last Wednesday, October 28, Leonard seemed to tease his racist sortie with threats on the Facebook page of the Daily Journal: "Journal corporate, you are on final warning," he began. "You are part of the problem. As a result of this, y'all are going down, along with Walmart, WTVA, Reeds department store, and all the rest of the anti-American crooks. I'm not kidding. No messing around anymore!"

On Sunday night, at around 1:30 AM, Leonard allegedly made good on that promise. According to Aguirre, "a white male got out , lit the package and threw it in the vestibule" of the discount super store. "An employee was sitting the vestibule taking a break. He told the employee to run—that he was going to blow the place up. He throws this package into the front entrance of Walmart. He flees and the employee flees."

Bomb technicians determined that the package held enough explosive to wreak havoc had it been assembled more competently. A sergeant with the Lee County Sheriff's office told VICE Tuesday that Leonard's bond was set at $150,000.

Follow Brian McManus on Twitter.

The VICE Morning Bulletin

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(Photo by Raquel Baranow via)

Here is everything you need to know about the world this morning, curated by VICE.

US News

  • Ohio Won't Be Legalizing Weed
    Voters in the state of Ohio rejected plans to make marijuana legal. It looks like Issue 3, which would have legalized both personal and medical use for anyone over 21, will be defeated by a two-to-one margin. —The Washington Post
  • Clinton and Carson Neck-and-Neck
    A new poll shows Hillary Clinton would tie with Republican Ben Carson in a hypothetical matchup, 47 percent to 47 percent. Carson has surged ahead of Donald Trump in GOP primary voter polls to become his party's frontrunner. —NBC
  • Houston Rejects LGBT Protections
    After an 18-month-long battle, voters rejected an ordinance that would have established nondiscrimination protections for the gay and transgender community. Social conservatives had boiled their case down to "no men in women's bathrooms". —The New York Times
  • Millionaire Becomes Kentucky Governor
    The Republicans won a key governor's seat in a bitterly contested election in Kentucky. Millionaire businessman Matt Bevin narrowly beat Attorney General Jack Conway and helped extend GOP power in the South —The Wall Street Journal

International News

  • Egyptian Police Killed in Bomb Attack
    At least three officers have been killed and more injured in a bombing outside the Police Officers' Club in North Sinai. It is not yet clear who is responsible for the attack. —CNN
  • Afghan Women Stoned to Death
    A young woman accused of adultery has been stoned to death in central Afghanistan, officials say. A video appearing to show the stoning inflicted by "Taliban, local religious leaders and armed warlords" has been posted online. —BBC News
  • Indonesian Volcano Grounds Flights
    Ash from the erupting Mount Rinjani volcano has forced the closure of airports and blanketed villages and farmland across three Indonesian islands. Thousands of tourists are stranded after nearly 700 flights were cancelled. —Reuters
  • Hello, it's Me
    Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou is to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping—the first time leaders from the two lands will have talked in 66 years. China has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since 1949, and anti-China protests have taken place ahead of the talks. —AP

(Photo by Cliff via)

Everything Else

  • FBI Investigated Wu-Tang for Murders
    New documents show the Feds looked into the possibility that RZA and Raekwon ordered a hit on two drug dealers in 1999. The lawyer of one of the men actually convicted for the murders now wants more documents released. —New York Post
  • John Stewart Is Back
    The Daily Show retiree is heading to HBO to create "topical short-form" videos on digital platforms. "I'm pretty sure I can produce a few minutes of content every now and again," said Stewart. —The Hollywood Reporter
  • Parallel Universe Discovered, Just Possibly
    An astrophysicist says he may have found evidence of parallel universes. Ranga-Ram Chary found a strange glow in the cosmic microwave background map, something he reckons could be a neighboring universe "leaking" into ours. —USA Today
  • Amazon Opens Proper Bookstore
    The online retail giant has been pissing off independent bookstores for two decades. Now it's raised the resentment stakes even higher with its first brick-and-mortar store in Seattle. —VICE

Done with reading for today? Watch our new documentary 'Revisiting the Cleveland Strangler'.

Red Right Hand: How 11 Black Women Fell Victim to the Cleveland Strangler - Part 2

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Read more about this case in the column 'The Cleveland Strangler'

At least 11 black women were raped and killed on Cleveland's East side between 2007 and 2009 by a man named Anthony Sowell. It's one of the worst cases of serial murder in recent history and has been largely left untold.

For Wilbert L. Cooper, who was born and raised in Cleveland, the real story lies in how Sowell was able to get away with these heinous acts for two years. These crimes say as much about the depraved killer as they do about race, class, and law enforcement in the city of Cleveland.

In part two of our series, Wilbert meets with witnesses and survivors of Sowell's crimes. He retraces the timeline of when the victims went missing and chronicles law enforcement's missteps along the way.

To support the survivors of rape and their families, donate to the Cleveland Rape Crises Center. To support greater awareness around missing persons of color, donate to the Black and Missing Foundation.

Saskatoon Cops Make Good on Promise to Crack Down on Pot, Raid Medical Dispensary

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Mark Hauk stands beside his now empty display cases after the medicinal marijuana dispensary he owns was raided by police. Photo by Geraldine Malone

Only a week ago Mark Hauk was the owner and operator of Saskatoon's only medicinal marijuana dispensary but a police raid has left him facing trafficking and possession charges.

Last Thursday, the Saskatchewan Compassion Club, an unlicensed dispensary located only blocks from City Hall and the Saskatoon Police (SPS) Headquarters, was suddenly filled with police officers—some wearing Kevlar vests.

"They rolled in single file, 10 deep through the front door, plain-clothed officers," Hauk told VICE.

"Shamefully, they lined up their squad cars in the back so no one could see what was happening. I told them that too, as they took me out the back door, I told them to have some balls and pull their police cars out front to let everyone see what was happening."

Even with Justin Trudeau's promise to move toward legalization, Saskatoon Police appear to be gripping onto old Conservative policies and an ideological stance against medicinal marijuana. With legalized weed's uncertain future, Hauk is seriously concerned he could end up behind bars before any changes happen.

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Medicinal marijuana seized from the Saskatchewan Compassion Club on Oct. 29. Photo from Saskatoon Police

The club started around six months ago after Hauk had a bad experience trying to navigate getting his medicinal marijuana through Health Canada. The storefront dispensary began operating in August, but before opening its doors, Hauk tried to take the proper route to encourage a special license from the city, much like there is in Vancouver and Victoria.

The club quickly expanded to more than 600 members who purchased dried cannabis and other marijuana products or came to find out how to get a prescription. They range in age, but Hauk said most members are 35 to 65 years old and suffer from cancer, multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease, or chronic pain.

"I've had people say to me that they need derivatives, they need edibles. Lung cancer patients who can't smoke, they need derivatives, which the Supreme Court has very clearly said months ago that Canadians citizens have a right to consume and possess," Hauk said. "Also for someone to come in and interact with a human being, see their medicine, ask questions about their medicine, or buy only $5 or $10 worth."

Hauk understands that he was operating illegally but said it's a bad law—besides, city officials were looking into permits and the national opinion around medicinal marijuana is quickly changing. It's just not changing as fast in Saskatoon.

Just before the police raid, SPS Inspector Dave Haye told VICE his officers are instructed not to issue warnings to recreational weed smokers.

"We will charge on a leftover roach if we can," he said. "It's how we feel about the use of illicit drugs in this area."

They didn't give the dispensary a warning either. Police would not talk about the charges now that the matter is before the courts but pointed to 15-bullet points on a press release to "clarify" the charges. The points reiterated that selling marijuana is illegal, people with prescriptions have legal suppliers, and that "if action was not taken, more 'clubs' would open."

"There is a misconception that the Saskatoon Police Service has the highest charge rate for possession of marihuana. This is not accurate," the release said, referencing a recent CBC analysis that put Saskatoon in the top five Canadian cities for the highest per capita rate of marijuana charges.

SPS provided VICE with numbers from the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics of charges per 100,000 population which kept the city near the top of the list, but showed the number was decreasing.

2015-0662_attached.jpg

Statistics provided by Saskatoon Police on marijuana possession charges per 100,000 population

Police also referenced a cease-and-desist letter sent by Health Canada in September to 13 illegal marijuana dispensaries and compassion clubs across the country, which warned that RCMP could be raided if they don't shut down. So far, Saskatoon Police are alone in their action on the warning.

Hauk isn't buying that it's the letter that led to the raid and doesn't think all of the charges will stand up in court.

"I don't need to be a lawyer to tell you that I'm not worried about Haye was so ignorant today, he made a comment about the fact that my house was messy. Since when is that a fucking crime, right?"

Hauk said ideally the charges will get thrown out of court, he will go back to his operations, and the federal program will be amended to provide reasonable access to medicinal marijuana.

"Worst case scenario is that one or more of those charges somehow stick," he said.

But what brings Hauk to tears is thinking about the three other people arrested during the raid. Two women also face trafficking and possession charges, while the other man arrested was a national champion pole vaulter and former University of Saskatchewan Huskies star with Crohn's disease, according to the Saskatoon StarPhoenix.

"The three people I was arrested with are three of the kindest, gentlest, people you could ever meet in your life," he said.

"These are just incredible people that contribute to our community. They are just the opposite of the people that we should be prosecuting."

The province's only other medical marijuana dispensary in Whitewood, Sask. is still open.

Follow Geraldine Malone on Twitter.

I Spent a Frenzied Night Saving Children Washed Up on a Greek Island

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As more Syrian refugees try to reach Europe, worsening weather is making their sea-crossing from Turkey to the Greek islands more perilous. There have been numerous reports of capsized boats, and the toll of drowned refugees, including children, is rising. The following is the diary of a volunteer on Lesvos.

Wednesday, October 29, 2015, Lesvos, Greece:

5:00 PM:
Like so many things here in Lesvos, it starts with a WhatsApp message, "FIRST BOAT HAS 10 unconscious children." So I run to the harbor, armed with nothing but a desire to help, a handful of emergency blankets, and a dim memory of CPR training undertaken over a year ago. Rushing down the hill, I see an ambulance, sirens blaring. We have had flimsy, overcrowded dinghies stuffed with refugees arriving in the harbor before, but this time, the increasingly alarmed messages on my phone tell me that something is more badly wrong than normal.

I arrive to see people everywhere, faces pale and drawn. Scrambling to unwrap blankets with my fellow volunteers, I'm informed that one of the wooden refugee boats sent by Turkish people smugglers has sunk, leaving an estimated 300 people in the sea. Ten children are in a critical condition and have been taken to Mytilini hospital, over 65 kilometers away. We prepare makeshift beds out of rescue blankets on the cold stones of the harbor.

Then the coastguard comes in. They take the children off the boats first. There are so many. Nothing prepares you for being confronted with the sight of an unconscious child. No breath—just foam-covered blue lips. I am handed a girl. She looks Syrian, around seven years old. I pull her clothes off and wrap her in an emergency blanket. Where is the doctor? They are all busy with other children. I tilt her head to try to check her airway, but her jaw is clamped shut from the cold. I hold her face and say "habibti." No response. I start chest compressions. The nearest medic is doing to the same to a little boy, whom I later learn is her brother. I check for her breath again. Nothing. So I turn her around onto her front and try to knock the seawater out of her. Still nothing. More chest compressions, more foam at her mouth, still no breathing. I turn her again and strike her from behind once more. This time, she vomits, but her breath is weak and ragged. Finally, a doctor comes. It's been barely a minute, but it felt like hours. My body floods with relief as he takes over. She and her brother will survive.

6:00 PM:
The coastguard brings more people. We desperately need oxygen as there are children teetering on the brink of life and death. We are lucky. The Frontex team are in the harbor and they have O2 to spare. The next few hours are a blur of emergency blankets, car runs for dry clothes, food distribution. And howls of grief from mothers of missing babies, men who can't find their wives. Many bodies are still floating in the darkness.

9:00 PM:
Several of us volunteers look after children who have lost their parents. Some of them we might find, some definitely not. The smallest ones don't understand, but the teenagers understand all too well. I don't know what to say them. I just distract them and keep them warm. We order them chips. We try to hide our tears from them.

10:00 PM:
The village of Molyvos opens the church and a restaurant so that traumatized people have shelter. We have 118 people in the harbor and 124 of the rescued refugees are transported to us from the neighboring village of Petra. But there is not enough space for everyone. Some people may have to sleep outside. I see mothers and fathers reunited with their children. Relief is tainted with the despair of those who are still searching for loved ones.

A refugees child is comforted by a volunteer on Lesvos. Photo via Oscar Webb

2:00 AM:
I meet a woman from Iraq and her husband. She is is 35 weeks pregnant. She was in the water for hours, along with her two sons, aged eight and three. I tell them "Yalla, you are staying at my house tonight." I take them home and put them to bed. They are asleep within minutes but I can't catch a wink.

8:00 AM:
The woman tells me she can feel her baby kicking. Then the family share their story. They paid $3,000 each for their voyage, more than double the normal price, as they were told this was the safest kind of vessel. The same journey would cost me about ten euros. The smuggler captain left the ship after ten minutes, going back to Turkey on a little boat. The ship began to creak and nails began springing out from the timbers. Then it fell apart. The husband and wife managed to find a life-ring and kept their children close. They told their boys, "Today is not the day we are going to die." While the woman was swimming, she felt the limbs of drowned people brushing against her belly. One of her sons was scared of sharks. She told him that Jaws didn't live here and when they got to dry land she would buy him the roller-skates he always wanted.

Related: Watch VICE News' documentary 'Death Boats to Greece: Europe or Die'

10:00 AM:
I take the Iraqi family to the harbor to wait for their bus. There's an Afghan girl there and she is screaming. She has lost her whole family. She speaks no English. She will not get up from the floor. Grief consumes her. She is undone.

12:00 PM:
I have a coffee. I reflect. I am surrounded by broken people—volunteers and refugees alike. But we have to keep going. While big aid agencies are doing their best, it's the volunteers across Europe who keep this refugee crisis from collapsing into the biggest humanitarian disaster since the Second World War. But we are very, very tired. My organization, Starfish, was started by one woman, Melinda McRostie. One year later we have over 30 volunteers, run a transit camp, and we work alongside the UN, the IRC, the Red Cross, and many others. But we need more help. We need more money, medical staff, volunteers, and translators. And we need more compassion so that men, women, and children stop dying on the water.

I say goodbye to my Iraqi family as they leave for registration in Mytilini. We will meet again. They give me their prayer beads to keep me safe from harm. I can't help but feel they need them more than I do.


The VICE Guide to Right Now: Gonorrhea Rates Are Spiking in the Yukon

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If every couple just laid in bed angrily like this one, maybe we could all solve this problem. Photo via Flickr user Tina Franklin

Read: A Drug-Resistant 'Super Gonorrhea' Is Spreading Through the North of England

Rates of gonorrhea, the STI that sometimes makes it burn when you pee, are spiking in the Yukon.

There have been about 90 confirmed cases of the bacterial infection this year—double the rate from last year and a ninefold increase from 2013, according to Brendan Hanley, Yukon's chief medical officer of health.

While that number may not sound like a lot, Hanley said without testing "we start to see a potential acceleration of transmission."

Gonorrhea is a fairly common STI amongst young people that is passed on through oral, anal, and vaginal sex. Many people don't show symptoms, but those who do might experience a burning sensation when peeing and, in women, unusual discharge. If untreated, the infection can make both men and women sterile and increase the risk of contracting HIV.

In Ontario, gonorrhea made a big comeback in 2014, with 5,825 reported cases, up 42 percent from 2012. In one part of the province, the trend was blamed in part on online hook-up apps like Tinder.

A bigger problem could be that increasingly strains gonorrhea are becoming resistant to antibiotics.

Hanley encouraged young people to get tested for STIs regularly, even in the absence of symptoms.

The conventional wisdom for not getting infected hasn't changed—don't be an idiot, use a condom when you have sex.

Follow Manisha Krishnan on Twitter.

Introducing Justin Trudeau’s Cabinet: Here’s Why You’ll Hate Them Within Five Years

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All the people that will disappoint you in one comforting picture. Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS

There have been a few words spilled recently over Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (god, that feels weird to write) actually going through with his promise of a cabinet split 50-50 along gender lines. "The cabinet should be based on merit, goddamit!" a bunch of crusty political writers have told us, as if they have forgotten the merit-based appointments of Julian Fantino, Bev Oda, Maxime Bernier, and This List Could Go Back To 1867 So I Am Stopping.

So, here we are: Trudeau unveiled his cabinet Wednesday and we writer types get to say things like "generational change" and "I've actually never heard of this person." But while I'll leave to the regular pundits to bitch about why cabinet minister X is a disgrace and why MP Y should have been cabinet minister X, I'll stick to the singular truth—we will be angry with all of these people within five years.

Photos courtesy the Government of Canada

Name: Justin Trudeau
Portfolio: Prime Minister
Region: Quebec
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Real change turns out to be more of the same, but with a smile.

Name: Bill Morneau
Portfolio: Finance
Region: Toronto
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X (barely)
Likely scandal by 2020: We discover his gold-plated car and when questioned about it, says, "Well, we ran on running deficits, so that one is on the people of Canada."

Name: Stéphane Dion
Portfolio: Foreign Affairs
Region: Quebec
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: Dion gets lost in the Berlin airport and a crack team of Canadian Forces special ops must be dispatched to find him. Many good men are lost to the EDM scene.

Name: Catherine McKenna
Portfolio: Environment
Region: Ontario
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Greenhouse emissions are barely cut despite lofty goals, still no national carbon reduction system. Ocean swallows Newfoundland.

Name: Ralph Goodale
Portfolio: Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
Region: The Prairies
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Whatever born in 1949 is.
Likely scandal by 2020: He is not prepared for incontinence.

Name: Chrystia Freeland
Portfolio: Trade
Region: Toronto
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: After finally pissing off one too many journalists by passive aggressively saying, "When I was a journalist, I would never ask that question that way," it is revealed her pen name is Heather Mallick.

Name: Marc Garneau
Portfolio: Transport
Region: Quebec
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: Loses cool with Quebec construction union, screams, "I went to fucking space, you asshats, I don't need your goddamn excuses!" Also, is caught on Periscope calling Chris Hadfield "a shitty musician and a worse astronaut." Double also, gives billions to Bombardier to build a spaceship, which they fail to deliver on time.

Name: Jane Philpott
Portfolio: Health
Region: Ontario
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: Threatens violence across the aisle after Conservative Party interim leader Michelle Rempel won't stop making marijuana jokes about her last name in Question Period.

Name: Hunter Tootoo
Portfolio: North and fisheries
Region: The North
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Cod stocks return, collapse again, Newfoundland gives up (before being swallowed by ocean).

Name: Harjit Sajjan
Portfolio: Defence
Region: Vancouver
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: He is unable to defend himself from Andrew Leslie's coup.

Name: Dominic LeBlanc
Portfolio: House Leader
Region: The Maritimes
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: After Buzzfeed Canada figures out how to play an old VHS tape, it discovers video of Leblanc and Trudeau dancing to Milli Vanilli in the early 1990s. Numerous staffers are trampled to death as they try to make GIFs of the incident.

Name: Judy Foote
Portfolio: Public Works
Region: Newfoundland
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: Federal-funded Scarborough Subway is named after Rob Ford, who is mayor of Toronto again.

Name: Jody Wilson-Raybould
Portfolio: Justice
Region: BC
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Doesn't get Justice's shit together on legalizing pot. A single person spends another day in jail for simple pot possession.

Name: Mélanie Joly
Portfolio: Heritage
Region: Quebec
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Catalano
Likely scandal by 2020: Heritage minute about the Drake-Meek Mill feud of 2015 comes under fire for overplaying Norm Kelly's role. Found wandering through downtown Ottawa after a year in office, demanding to know "what the fuck people do for fun in this one-horse town."

Name: Scott Brison
Portfolio: Treasury Board President
Region: Maritimes
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: When he takes over he finds that Tony Clement left the computer logged into Twitter. As a joke Brison starts tweeting nonsense. Like just utter drivel. "Really enjoying the new Our Lady Peace album," he tweeted, snickering to himself in late 2015. The Twitter jokes continue until May 2018, when Clement realizes he stopped paying his Twitter ghostwriter months ago.

Name: Carolyn Bennett
Portfolio: Indigenous and Northern Affairs
Region: Toronto
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: Holy shit, where to start. A national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women results in few substantial changes. Many First Nations still don't have access to clean water. Inadequate housing is still a thing. Little is accomplished about higher rates of incarceration of Indigenous people....sadly, this list could go on for a while.

Name: John McCallum
Portfolio: Immigration
Region: Ontario
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: He falls asleep.

Name: James "Jim" Carr
Portfolio: Natural Resources
Region: Manitoba
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Timeless
Likely scandal by 2020: Is reported to HR for continually asking people to call him "Big Jim."

Name: Kirsty Duncan
Portfolio: Science
Region: Ford Nation
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: An appearance on Quirks and Quarks goes awry when she cannot properly explain quantum field theory. Bob MacDonald calls it "our great national shame."

Name: Maryam Monsef
Portfolio: Democratic Institutions
Region: Ontario
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Millennial
Likely scandal by 2020: Canadians shocked to learn that the Senate still exists, then get saddled with an electoral system that involves math. Resigns in shame.

Name: Amarjeet Sohi
Portfolio: Infrastructure and Communities
Region: Alberta
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Xish
Likely scandal by 2020: A national infrastructure program spends billions in Quebec. Weirdly, no one knows where the money went.

Name: Lawrence MacAulay
Portfolio: Agriculture
Region: PEI
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: He's 69!
Likely scandal by 2020: Is found to be in the pocket of Big Potato. Eats too many carbs.

Name:Jean-Yves Duclos
Portfolio: Families, Children and Social Development
Region: Quebec
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: The Liberals introduce a tax credit that does not directly target families with children.

Name: Marie-Claude Bibeau
Portfolio: International Development and La francophonie
Region: Compton, Quebec
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Makes a not terrible 'Straight Outta Compton' parody, causing Eazy-E to rise from the dead to ask 'What the fuck?'

Name: Kent Hehr
Portfolio: Veterans Affairs, and Associate Minister of National Defence
Region: Alberta
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Whenever he's asked tough questions about veterans issues, he responds 'Would you rather Julian Fantino was taking care of this?' Nobody challenges him.

Name: MaryAnn Mihychuck
Portfolio: Employment Workforce Development and Labour
Region: Manitoba
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Boomer
Likely scandal by 2020: Crosses the floor to the NDP to challenge Tom Mulcair's leadership in 2017.

Name: Diane Lebouthillier
Portfolio: National Revenue
Region: Quebec
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Grandmother
Likely scandal by 2020: Gently suggests tax system is getting too complicated.

Name: Carla Qualtrough
Portfolio: Sport, and Persons with Disabilities
Region: BC
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Supports Toronto's winning bid for the Olympics, which Rob Ford fights against and rides a wave of populism back into the Mayor's Office.

Name: Bardish Chagger
Portfolio: Small Business and Tourism
Region: Ontario
Gender: F
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: Close enough to millennial
Likely scandal by 2020: All you still reading this? I dunno, something involving an Uber driver?

Name: Navdeep Bains
Portfolio: Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development
Region: Ontario
Gender: M
Will this affect their job performance: No
Generation: X
Likely scandal by 2020: Meets with a young programmer in 2016 from Waterloo's Cyb3rdyne Syst3ms, claiming he has developed advanced new defence technologies that will assist in drone warfare and missile defence. Bains enjoys the young programmer's moxie and assists in getting Cyb3rdyne Syst3ms a significant grant towards building their new technology. When the machines finally reach his office in 2019 after laying waste to most of Ottawa, they offer their gratitude.

Follow Josh Visser and Justin Ling on Twitter.

The Elective IV Industry Wants You to Think Pumping Fluid into Your Veins Is the Best Way to Cure Your Hangovers

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All photos courtesy Vida-Flo

In a former tanning salon in midtown Atlanta, three athletic-looking guys recline on pleather La-Z-Boys, occasionally glancing at a flat-screen TV while plastic tubing pipes yellow fluid into their arms.

One of the guys has stopped talking to me because we've just disagreed about how much water is safe to drink in a day. But the other two are still friendly, telling stories of preternaturally quick hangover recovery after epic ragers, exercise extravaganzas, and flu-season barf marathons.

Their secret, they say, is intravenous treatments with that yellow fluid, which hangs in bags on walls behind them. Treatments like these are sold at this and other Vida-Flo "hydration stations" for anywhere between $40 and $99 a pop.

The elective IV industry is a growing one, marketing its product as an elixir for the "ain't got time to feel shitty" young professional with cash to spare. Although there's no way to know for sure how many elective IV providers exist, internet searches suggest IV boutiques have been popping up in every major North American city since 2010.

Among them are Atlanta's Vida-Flo—which has opened two local outlets since 2013 and has two more planned in Breckenridge, Colorado. and Charleston, South Carolina—and Toronto's VitaminDrip, which offers services in six Canadian locations and over 20 operations internationally, including many franchisees.

Despite its roots as a naturopathic treatment, elective IVs really gained traction with use as a hangover cure, building on the experience of generations of medical professionals who self-administered bags of saline post-bender. (A well-behaved cardiologist told me it was common practice during his residency training.) For profitability, many IV therapy providers are now refocusing on marketing the therapies in the "health and wellness space."

It sells, even to people who have no idea what the health and wellness space is. That's due in part to the treatment being plastered all over celebrity Instagram and Twitter feeds, alongside photos of Miley Cyrus, Rita Ora, and Ryan Phillippe, all crumpled glamorously in luxurious armchairs while tanking up. Depending on their target demographic, company websites depict guys clinking glasses of brown liquor or miles of white-sand beaches with distant twinkling lights.

Fans of the therapy embrace it for what they insist are measurable health benefits. In Toronto, Daniel Myerson has gotten 15 to 20 similar treatments from VitaminDrip over the last six months. "I used to get colds all the time," he claims, "but I haven't gotten sick once since starting to get the drips."

The therapies they're receiving are similar to what you'd get if you showed up dehydrated at a hospital. Typically they include sterile saline or lactated Ringer's solution—saline plus potassium and calcium—along with a cocktail of a half-dozen vitamins and/or anti-nausea or pain-relieving medications. The difference in this case is that they are elective. Meaning, they're completely medically unnecessary.

"There's really a minimal chance of something going wrong with this," says David Lee, the director of the Adelaide Health Center, a VitaminDrip franchisee. But experts disagree, warning that not only are the risks very real, they are invisible, underreported, and all but lost in a thick layer of crafty marketing.

Joseph Perz is an injection safety specialist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta. Much of the risk for infusion-related infection, he says, is in the manipulation of the material being infused. "Any time you handle a bag of fluids, even if you're not putting anything into it, there's a risk of bacterial contamination."

Consider Vida-Flo's "Illness Recovery" drip, which contains Toradol, Zofran, and Pepcid in saline. Most of those medications are stored in multi-dose vials, which contain enough of whatever's inside to treat more than one person. To get the medication into the drip, a provider uses a syringe and needle to withdraw each dose from one of these vials, then adds that dose to a bag of fluid using the syringe.

If any one of those steps is done without proper precautions, bad things can—and do—happen. A CDC publication listing recent outpatient outbreaks describes multiple clusters of hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and bacterial bloodstream infections, almost all resulting from unsafe injection practices by providers.

While systematic violations of injection safety might be quickly noticed and shut down in a hospital due to their accreditation procedures—which include unannounced inspections—outpatient facilities aren't subject to the same amount of regulation in either Canada or the US. Unless there's a complaint about an outpatient clinic, it might never be inspected.

No large outbreaks of infection associated with elective IVs have been made public—but that doesn't mean they aren't happening.

"Even if multiple patients were infected in the same day, if they were at different hospitals—or even had different doctors—nobody puts the pieces together. The outbreaks we know about are the tip of the iceberg," Perz says.

VitaminDrip's patient safety procedures include an exhaustive intake form and an informed consent procedure. Like any clinic performing invasive procedures, all providers of VitaminDrip products must comply with an infection control plan and are required to maintain an emergency plan. On paper, the company is doing everything it can and should to minimize the likelihood of infectious complications. We asked VitaminDrip for an overview of their safety regulations but did not hear back by time of publication.

Infectious risks aside, elective IVs aren't cheap. VitaminDrip charges between $75 and $250 CAD for each of its treatments, and most US services charge between $100 and $400 US per treatment, more for additional supplements or treatment in your own home. Meanwhile, a large bottle of water costs nothing, tastes fine, and involves zero people sticking you with needles.

This is a particular problem when there is no scientific evidence that these treatments actually do anything. Despite the anecdotal evidence, several good medical studies have shown that in otherwise healthy people, vitamins—whether administered IV or in pill form—have essentially no effects, and that IV hydration offers no benefit to athletes over oral hydration and may actually reduce performance in elite athletes.

So why bother getting an elective IV? Despite the scientific evidence, fans of the procedure say they feel it works. Glen Schaffer, the Vida-Flo client who looks most likely to have just done an obstacle course marathon, says the relief he gets from an IV treatment is stronger, faster, and more palatable than if he were to down a few Gatorades after a workout. "If you're sick, if you've lost a lot of fluids during a workout, it's instantaneous relief," he says, "whereas you might not have the stomach to drink a whole lot of fluids in that situation."

"Also, if you party," adds Steven Cundari, a customer at Vida-Flo. He makes a point: Dehydration—i.e. what causes many hangover symptoms—is one of the few conditions IV fluids can treat faster than oral hydration. A somewhat shorter hangover won't be worth the infectious risk and the cost to everyone, but elective IV services don't need to sell their therapies to all people—just to a few hundred a week.

According to VitaminDrip's website, "taking vitamins orally last season." But is marketing enough to convince people that an expensive, invasive procedure is preferable to, you know, drinking fluids and eating food? If nothing else, says Perz, it builds on peoples' assumption that elective IV services are regularly evaluated for compliance with hygiene and safety regulations.

"They might be thinking, like when similar protections in place for this therapy. And that's usually not the case," Perz says.

Follow Keren Landman on Twitter.

VICE Vs Video Games: ‘WWE 2K16’ Is Better Than Its Predecessors but Still Not Very Good

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It's still real to me. As real as it was 12 years ago, when WWE SmackDown! Here Comes the Pain came out. That was the last time I was truly, unashamedly happy with a wrestling game based on old man Vince McMahon's traveling circus of grappling men and women of superhero proportions and soap opera storylines.

With WWE 2K16, even though its makers have gone down the route of making every 30-something in the world happy by centering the game on Stone Cold Steve Austin, another year passes without that same joy returning. And it hurts, it really does. Because for all of its scripted falls and backstage histrionics, this wrestling world is real to me, and it deserves a video game that reflects how WWE has evolved in the years since Here Comes the Pain.

Last year's game was, if we're honest, 2K's first real stab at the WWE license. It had released 2K14, but that was for all intents and purposes a THQ (RIP) product. Alas, 2K15 was one of the worst pieces of shit I've ever played, and I've been playing games for a long time. Which makes this year's entry the grand hope, the shot at redemption and reinvention, from the studio that brought us the ludicrously good NBA 2K series.

All screens courtesy of 2K

This third collaboration between Japanese studio Yuke's and Californian developers Visual Concepts is essentially being sold as "year one" for 2K's WWE series. But with that sales pitch comes expectations built upon years of disappointments, the sort of anticipation that no entirely new game will ever be released into. And there's good news: WWE 2K16 is a lot better than last year's game. Unfortunately, it doesn't do enough to make me, a wrestling fan through and through, completely happy (reading on, that may be an understatement), and nor can I honestly recommend it to other followers of all things wrasslin', at least not at full price. Find this in a half-decent sale? Well, it's your money.

The actual in-the-ring (and beyond) action is much improved on what's come before—everything is smoother than it's ever been, and while there's still some total bullshit on show, like the opening chain wrestling exchange. I mean, I get it, and it's sort of how it happens in real life; but fuck me if it isn't tedious to begin every bout with a game of rock-paper-scissors and some god-awful stick twiddling. Who the fuck would want to actually do that? An idiot, that's who. Get beyond that, though, and generally speaking you can see where things have been fixed and tweaked over last 2014's cruddy effort.

There are times when you can have a lot of fun with 2K16. It plays a lot more like wrestling is on TV, with unavoidable distractions, cheating heels, hot tags, and other elements we've either not seen or seen very little of in a game, in the past. And that's all very welcome.

But it's not long before issues you'd have thought—you'd have rightly hoped—would have been fixed by now pop up, and a feeling of resignation washes over you, and all of a sudden all you can do to ease the situation is open another beer. "Hey, at least I'm playing it like Stone Cold would want me to," your brain thinks, but you put an end to that thought because for fuck's sake there's an air of shoddiness about 2K16 that becomes hard to ignore.

Charlotte is the WWE's women's ("Divas") champion at the time of writing. So obviously you can expect to be able to play as her in 2K16. Obviously. Only, wait. No, you can't. Can you imagine a WWE game not having the reigning men's champion in it? Of course not, because that would be fucking stupid. So there's no Charlotte here, but do you know who is? The Terminator. Twice.

Article continues after the video below

Related: Watch VICE's film, 'The British Wrestler'

I'm not even kidding. 2K has devoted resources to creating Terminator characters based on the first and second movies, available as DLC, rather than bothering to make one of the WWE's major champions. Because of course. I don't want to dwell too much on Arnie's turn in the game, as he looks like a shitty create-a-wrestler any asshole could make (and it's not restricted to him), and... Just, for fuck's sake, they haven't even bothered, nor are they bothering, with the actual women's champion. Nonsense.

This attitude bleeds in elsewhere, too. On the surface, everything looks fine—brilliant, at times, especially when the likes of Finn Balor and the Vaudevillains are making their entrances. But then you see more glitches, standard moves that entirely fuck up animations, and hilarious failings in 2K16's front-of-the-cover mode, and you realize that maybe not everything under the hood has been worked on as hard as those superficial, draw-in-the-unthinking-masses elements.

Related, on VICE Sports: Whatever Happened To the Finishing Move In Wrestling?

But then, who cares that ground grapples are more or less broken, because 2K16 has Savio Vega in it. What does it matter that the AI balancing is off, resulting in reversals about 75 percent of the time, because you can upload your face to the game. Never mind that the create-a-wrestler system no longer allows "live" previews of hair, clothes, and other elements you're adding to your creation, instead requiring you to select them and sit through a ton of loading before you can see what they look like on your crafted wrestle-person—it has lots of videos of Stone Cold Steve Austin on the disc to make you forget about actually playing it.

I don't hate WWE 2K16 anywhere near as much as I did 2K15. But it's not worth any more of my time beyond what I've already spent to produce these words; it's not worth your time, unless it's cheap and you're desperate, as you're not even being paid to play it (probably); and it's absolutely not the best thing 2K could have put out there. Let's see how it ends up next year, because right now I'm left with only Here Comes the Pain (and No Mercy for that matter) as evidence that wrestling can translate to video games in a way that doesn't have fans of either wondering what the fuck went wrong.

WWE 2K16 is out now for PlayStation 3 and 4, Xbox 360, and Xbox One.

Follow Ian on Twitter.

Documents Show How the FBI Tried to Connect the Wu-Tang Clan to Two Murders

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The Clifton neighborhood of Staten Island. Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Cops have been accusing rappers of involvement in violent gang activity pretty much since the inception of hip-hop in the 1970s. But it's less common—if not exactly unprecedented—for the feds to try and connect murders to marquee members of America's most iconic rap groups. According to the Staten Island Advance, however, after a pair of drug dealers were killed there in 1999, the FBI explored whether they might have been targeted at the instruction of the Wu-Tang Clan or its affiliates:

The victims, those documents revealed, may have been marked for death in part because they robbed the family members of two of the famed Staten Island rap collective's founding members, RZA and Raekwon.

Now, the lawyer of one of those drug kingpins is asking for more police reports about the rap group's alleged involvement, as his client's sentencing looms.

The case in question concerns Anthony and Harvey Christian, a pair of brothers who last year were found guilty of running a local drug empire. The former was also found guilty of arranging the killing of a 17-year-old, but Anthony's lawyer is apparently bringing up the FBI documents as a way to deflect blame from his client.

"I'm not suggesting that Wu-Tang committed these crimes. The FBI did," the attorney told the Advance. "What I'm trying to ascertain is their stated belief in an official file that Wu-Tang ordered this homicide."

What's tricky about this flashy bit of legal maneuvering is that we basically knew the FBI probed Wu-Tang's alleged involvement in the murders after the late Ol' Dirty Bastard's (largely redacted) FBI file got released via Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request three years ago. That raises the question of whether this is a legit attempt by Gold to get a better sentence for his client, or just a way to generate press and revisit a salacious old allegation—for which no charges were ever filed—in hopes of muddying the waters.

Update: 11/04: In a phone conversation with VICE on Wednesday, Gold said his primary concern is why the alleged Wu-Tang connection was documented by the FBI two months after the government's key witness implicated his client. "There's an inherent and obvious conflict there," he said.

Wu-Tang Clan court filing by Staten Island Advance/SILive.com

Meet Britain's New Generation of Pissed Off Student Radicals

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A student protester from the 2013 cohort. Photo by Oscar Webb

"I knew paying £9,000 fees is bullshit and I knew I was prepared to do something about it," says Angus O'Brien, who's studying European Social and Political Studies at UCL. "It isn't simplistic to say that universities should be a free and open space for learning, but when students are forced to act as consumers, the purpose of education is lost."

To be a freshman in college, in 2015, the consensus is that you can't idealize. Putting it mildly, it's a complicated time to be undertaking a degree in Britain. Admissions may be at a record high, but graduate prospects are, for most, rapidly fading. George Osborne, amongst other things, intends to abolish the maintenance grant and a raise in tuition fees is widely anticipated. Many students are feeling monumentally screwed over, and some are yet to even set foot in a lecture theater. Today, students are holding a national demonstration ambitiously titled: "Free education and living grants for all—no barriers, no borders, no business!" But who are the new crop of campus lefties, railing against a government that wishes students looked less like Rick from The Young Ones and more like the cast of the Young Apprentice?

Ele Boiling is 18 and started her law degree at The London School of Economics in September. She has just joined the Free University of London, the campaign group that received backing from David Graeber and Russell Brand after it occupied an LSE building for six weeks earlier this year. "Most of us are going to graduate in tens of thousands of pounds of debt, we'll then be pointed towards unpaid internships in a desperate scramble for jobs," she explains.

"It's a certainty that direct action will be an increasingly regular occurrence under this government," says Boiling who, before moving to London, was part of the successful anti-Farage campaign in South Thanet where the UKIP leader contested the general election. "There can be a tendency to give up hope and acquiesce, but if we organize in even greater numbers and resume occupations and demos, we will be a force too large to ignore."

The view from the top of Millbank on the day it was stormed by angry students in 2010. Photo by Henry Langston

Five years have passed since activists stormed the Conservative Party's Millbank HQ, and now a new generation of student radicals is taking shape. In an evolving political landscape, the student movement could find itself at a strategic advantage. Recent occupations have already brought worldwide attention to the fight for British universities, and following the rise of Jeremy Corbyn—propelled to leadership by the enthusiasm of the young—there is an expanding pool of primed and practiced activists converging on campuses across the country.

"I volunteered on Corbyn's leadership campaign—it's one of the reasons I've become more politically active this year," says Demaine Boocock, a new recruit at The Free University of Sheffield, whose favorite bands include The Smiths and The Clash owing to the social message ingrained in their lyrics. "The atmosphere around the campaign was really special, and it's so invigorating to now have a Labour leader unashamedly supporting free education."

Of the 13,000 people who volunteered on his campaign a vast amount were students. Huge swathes of the allegedly apathetic youth flocked to his rallies; The average age of a Labour member dropped by 11 years over the summer, and "Team Corbyn" T-shirts are now being sported around campuses by left-wing students almost as much as keffiyehs.

What this really means for the student movement is simple: Some tactical barriers have, at least temporarily, been lifted. The events of this summer could present an opportunity for the latest cohort to multiply its efforts.

Cops vs. student protesters in 2012

O'Brien, who was briefly a Labour member under Ed Miliband until "he said something terrible about immigration," believes that Corbyn's election means that for the first time in a generation there is an opposition leader around which a movement can be built.

"Currently I devote a lot of my time to the fight against extortionate accommodation fees on campus," explains O'Brien, "now can you imagine what would happen should students at a London university go on a rent strike and win?"

And just a few weeks after speaking to O'Brien, the UCL rent-strikers—campaigning against what they saw as "unbearable" living conditions—did win. Despite unlawful threats of academic sanctions, and even expulsion, the campaign triumphed. These are activists who know their politics, their aims, and—most importantly—their rights.

Campaigners today feel equipped to aid those challenging exorbitant rents throughout the capital and beyond. The forging of links with wider social movements is well under way. For example, in Manchester, a growing coalition of activists has emerged in defense of the city's rising homeless population. Such co-ordination, on both a local and national scale, is symptomatic of a breakout from the isolation of student politics.

The building of momentum will be dependent on resilience to any backlash, though. Stuart McMillan, 19, concedes that press coverage can often be "damaging and depressing," however, he insists, "we should remember that it is slowly losing its grip on public consciousness." McMillan, who was influenced by the Situationist International and its role in the Paris uprisings of 1968, after taking an Art Foundation course prior to university, strongly identifies with their ideas of decentralized power, syndicalism, and spontaneous action.

Related: Watch 'Teenage Riot,' VICE's documentary about the 2010 student movement

"This, right now, is the opportunity we've been waiting for to change the political narrative," explains 18-year-old Rebecca Easton, in her strong Leeds accent. "After the election result in May, I thought optimism had been written off for our generation, but things have changed so quickly," says Easton, who has been part of local anti-hunger campaigns since her mid-teens. And that mood of resurgence is at the epicenter of this fresh group of student radicals, and a summer of re-awakening for the British Left has provided focus.

"We will win—the rules are changing fast, and power can't keep up," declares Dan Mulroy, another freshman and a self-described anti-consumerist with a penchant for charity shop attire and home-brewed cider, whose timetable is far more taken up by public meetings than lectures. "People are rightly incensed and it's great, because they're all coming together. If this keeps growing, who knows where we'll be in a few years?"

For those who, soon enough, will lead this fight, their future is one of uncertainty. They don't know what sort of Britain they'll graduate into, nor what sort of university they'll leave behind. But their resolve is unwavering, their experience is authentic, and their motivation runs deep.

Follow Ben on Twitter.

California Has the Most Peaceful Bullfights on Earth

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All photos by the author

I've lived in California my entire life and never knew there was a vibrant tradition of bullfighting in the Central Valley. And for good reason: The brutal sport is banned in California on the basis of animal cruelty. No animal deserves to die that way, spears jammed into their neck until they're too tired to struggle against a knife dragged across their throat. But here in the Central Valley, where there's a sizable population of Portuguese immigrants, that's not how the bullfighting is done. Here, it's bloodless; bulls wear a Velcro patch on their shoulders while men on horseback try to tag them with Velcro-tipped darts.

My friend Angela, who grew up deeply involved in the California's Portuguese community, invited me to see the bullfights for myself at a festa. It's a weekend-long gathering of Portuguese immigrants and their families, complete with parades, dancing, a Catholic mass, feasts of traditional food, and of course, the bullfights. There are multiple festas throughout the summer in towns up and down the state, but the one Angela brought me to in Thornton, California, is among the largest.

Thornton is a rural town with a population of 1,131, but it swells to a massive 30,000 during the festa, when everyone fills what seems to be the only street in town. Most of the people there when I visited spoke in Portuguese, and everyone seemed to know each other. It would've felt like trespassing on the world's most gargantuan family reunion had everyone not been so welcoming, offering up blood sausages and sweet rolls without hesitation.

Within moments of our arrival, Angela and her young daughter ran into people she hadn't seen in over a decade—old friends, cousins, great-uncles, and a lot of people who, like Angela, hadn't come to a festa since they were much younger. Now that they had kids of their own, they were back to expose the next generation to Portuguese culture.

Angela is a third-generation Portuguese-American, and the festas are where she learned the most about her heritage. California is home to the nation's largest population of Portuguese immigrants, with some 330,000 Portuguese-Americans in the state, but Angela's family was the only Portuguese-American one in her Sacramento neighborhood, so the festas and related events were it for her.

On MUNCHIES: You Gotta Murder the Rooster Yourself in Portugal

As kids, Angela and her peers discovered solace in the festas because they were free to be themselves. They were all-American in school, but here, they were free to worship in their Catholic traditions, to eat Portuguese food, to dance uninhibited while other American teenagers struggled to peel themselves away from the walls of high school gymnasia. It was like a Fourth of July parade and a school dance and a family wedding, all rolled into one.

"My great-grandparents initially had planned to go back to Portugal, but like a lot of immigrants, never did," Angela told me. "So then this becomes a way to hold onto something familiar."

Like many celebrations, festas are rooted in the stories of old—in this case, Our Lady of Fatima, a title given to the Virgin Mary when she appeared to three shepherd children in Fatima, Portugal, with messages from God. Thornton has a statue of Our Lady of Fatima, which has been rumored to cry actual tears, and is considered a miracle among the Catholic community.

To honor these old stories, there's a parade, with floats paying homage to traditional food, dance, and Portugal's Queen Isabel, known for her extreme charity. Her sacrifices are commemorated through countless forms of symbolism, some of which go beyond metaphor and literally just provide free food to the poor during the celebrations. When Portuguese immigrants game to the States, they gathered in farming communities, and the parade honored that legacy too. Cows bigger than I've ever seen waddled down the street, drool lazily dripping from their mouths. A young boy stopped to pose for my camera, a bullfighter's hat on his head and a goat at the end of his leash. It all seemed to evolve from Portuguese roots, but with American sensibility. Nowhere was this clearer than in the bullfighting ring.

VICE travels to Mérida, Mexico to meet the country's youngest bullfighter.

The main attraction in Spanish and Mexican bullfighting (by far the better-known version of the sport) is the matador, which translates to killer. But in Portuguese bullfighting, you watch a cavaleiro, a word that means something more like a horseman. Portuguese-style bullfighting is performed on horseback, and when all's said and done, the bull is just an excuse for the rider to show off his riding skills. The bulls leave the ring alive, although in traditional Portuguese fights, the cavaleiro wields several small spears and jabs the bull repeatedly in the back.

But at the festa, the bullfighting was entirely "bloodless." Each bull that entered the ring left not only alive, but wholly uninjured. There were no spears; instead, the bulls were adorned with a small cloth on their back, onto which Velcro "spears" could be attached, and the object of the performance was to wrangle them, not to stab them.

I had never been to a bullfight before, but it was easy to get caught up in the electricity of the crowd. Every time a cavaleiro successfully caught his Velcro spear onto the bull's cloth, narrowly avoiding a charge from those leather-capped horns, I leapt out of my seat, cheering with everyone else.

Six bulls in total entered the ring, one after the other, but not before facing the pega, a team of young men lined up behind their main man, who dons a silly green hat that betrays the severity of what follows. He stamps and taunts the bull, which charges him. He has to catch the bull between the horns, and ride him face to face as the rest of the men latch onto him, slowing the bull until he stops.

Three of the cavaleiros had traveled from Portugal to take part in the bullfight. There are only about 20 bullfights in the US annually, so they're a relatively big deal, and the safety of everyone involved—human and animal alike—depends on the skill of those involved, so it's worth it to have the best. One of the cavaleiros who'd flown from Portugal, Alberto Conde, told me this, to him, was his heritage. "There's motion, color, music, art... This is Portuguese culture."

Read: Meet Portugal's Gang of Graffitiing Grandparents

When it was over, teenagers ran around wrapped up in their budding love lives, eagerly awaiting the upcoming nighttime dance—the same one where Angela met her husband. Thousands gathered for the outdoor mass and candlelight vigil, accompanied by busloads of Filipino-Americans who came to join in the major Catholic celebration. Old friends reconnected and introduced their kids, who began to form relationships like the ones that their parents built over the course of many festas.

"My father told me, 'You're American first and Portuguese second. Never forget that," Angela recalled to me. "And I never have."

Follow Ali Wunderman on Twitter.


VICE Vs Video Games: Watching the ‘League of Legends’ World Championship Final with Thousands of Diehard Fans

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Three thousand people sit, tightly packed, in a dimly lit hall. All eyes are fixed on the screens hanging from the ceilings. The audience consists mainly of young males, somewhere between 15 and 25. Most of them are holding big, blow-up clubs, as people do when sponsors eagerly hand such things out.

All photography by Grey Hutton

We're at The Main in Berlin, at a public viewing event for one of the world's biggest eSports finals, taking place only a few miles away at the Mercedes-Benz Arena. The game is Riot's immortal MOBA League of Legends, and the competition is the World Championships, the discipline's premiere tournament, a traveling knockout contest that's already called at London and Brussels. Its climax is staged here, in the German capital. And the capital is buzzing.

The prize, the money aside, is the Summoner's Cup, a beast of a trophy that dwarfs most found in "proper" (you know what we mean) sports. Two Korean teams, SK Telecom T1 and the KOO Tigers, have made it to the final. SKT has already won the Worlds once and is considered to be the favorite for the title ahead of play.

"They always win everything," one audience member whispers to his friend. Today, this "everything" could be, in addition to the honor of becoming LoL world champions and a pretty big cup, a million dollars. Such rewards are becoming increasingly common in the world of eSports, but it's no sum to be sniffed at, and only one team can claim it as their own. The audience is pumped, and has been for some time—this Main event sold out in under 24 hours.

Some attendees around us have travelled for over eight hours to be here, across the country, to watch the LoL action unfold in the company of fellow fans. Others have IKEA bags packed with sleeping bags—it turns out that people don't just camp outside Justin Bieber concerts and Apple Stores to get the best place in a line.

You don't have to be a League of Legends expert to understand the fascination. The longer you stare at the screens, with the thousands of others in this hall, the more you get what's going on. It begins to click: why this player just decided on that move, and why nothing seems to happen for minutes. If there's an especially spectacular attack, the whole hall starts screaming and hooting, some of them even jump out of their seats, fists in the air. At points it feels like you're in a football stadium, except you don't know who is rooting for which team. People get excited at about every good action, no matter which team or player carries them out—or, at least, that's how I see it, as a relative outsider to this world.

In stark contrast to the crowd's liveliness are the rigid faces of the professional gamers themselves. Super concentrated, they display no obvious signs of emotion. "Faker is on a killing spree!" is sprawled across the screen in big letters when one of the SKT players lays waste to a particularly large amount of his enemies. But when the camera pans to the player responsible for the action, he doesn't crack even a sniff of a triumphant smile.

I'm impressed. Not only at the level of sportsmanship on show, the concentration and precision of these players, but also on a more human level. It must be insanely exhausting to stay that focused for hours. And that's the other thing: Unlike sports like football or basketball, there's no clock running that decides when an eSports contest like those of LoL is over. If the two teams are well-matched, effectively canceling each other out, a single round can last well over an hour. They're playing a best-of-five model for the LoL Worlds final—so whichever team wins three rounds is the victor, and the competition comes to an end there and then. And by the early afternoon, it looks like the match, which only started at midday, might end sooner than expected.

Article continues after the video below

Related: Watch VICE's documentary on the world of eSports, which features the 2014 'League of Legends' final in Korea

SKT take the first two rounds. That doesn't kill the positive attitude (or the appetite for hot dogs) in the hall, but the whole thing could be a little bit more exciting. Which it then becomes, as the KOO Tigers take round three in a win that's as masterful as it is surprising, and the hall goes nuts—and I'm all of a sudden entirely emotionally engaged. I have to make a call. Who am I rooting for: the underdog, or the perfectly oiled winning machine? I just don't know. And then I register for the first time that a lot of people have come here today dressed up in ghoulish costumes or sporting bloody make-up. It's Halloween. I almost forgot.

The fourth round goes the way of SKT, who win the championship and the trophy, and the money, and the majority of the audience seems to be satisfied. This is the point when tears of rage or despair would be flowing down the players' faces after a football game. Instead, the pro-gamers politely hug each other before the losers leave the stage just in time for it to rain confetti on the winners and their cup. At The Main, many leave the seats they fought so hard to get to rush the stage—an after-party is about to kick off, where community icons and German pro-gamers will discuss the final, and several greats from the YouTube scene get to prove their LoL skills.

It's been great hanging out with these fans. They clap when someone does something good, laugh when someone fucks up, and in the end it doesn't seem to matter which team was better so long as the match was entertaining. The rougher elements amongst supporters of other sporting pursuits could learn something from this kind of fairness and serene sportsmanship.

Follow Lisa on Twitter.

Follow Grey onTwitter.

A Guide to the Groundbreaking Board Games You Should Be Playing Right Now

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Board games on shelves at the UK Games Expo. All photos courtesy of the author

I was sitting in the middle of a crowded coffee shop, and my wife was holding a gun to my head.

It was a troubling situation, alleviated only slightly by the fact that our son had taken aim at his mom from the other side of the table. He, in turn, was squarely in the sights of a bearded, grinning, pistol-wielding guy who'd joined us just a few minutes previously. It was a Mexican standoff playing out over bagels and Americanos, and it was clearly confusing the shit out of the waitress who'd only stopped by to gather up our empty cups.

Fortunately, no one died that day. The firearms were made of foam, props in a board game called Cash 'n Guns. It puts players in the shoes of gangsters dividing up a pile of loot after a successful heist. Rather than working things out sensibly, like adults, they hold one another at gunpoint and threaten to cold-bloodedly murder anyone who dares to make off with a share of the ill-gotten gains.

'Cash 'n Guns' in session

If the very mention of board gaming has you rolling your eyes in disgust, I can't say I blame you. The overwhelming majority of games people are introduced to as kids, like Monopoly and Clue, are crap. But as a pure, primal, social experience, Cash 'n Guns manages something with a few bits of cardboard and plastic that the most technically sophisticated video games couldn't hope to match.

Improbably, it's both agonizingly tense and ludicrously funny. Each player has a limited supply of ammunition, and you never know whether the weapon pointed at your face is loaded or not. Players do ridiculous things like brandishing their guns sideways, gangsta style, or busting out quotes from Taxi Driver and Dirty Harry—an almost involuntary reaction to being handed a squishy handgun and a stack of fake banknotes.

If you hadn't already noticed, board games are getting to be kind of a big deal. Recent years have seen a wave of critically acclaimed releases from independent designers and publishers, and while the stereotypical image of a tabletop gamer might be an unkempt and socially inept dude with crippling BO and Cheetos-stained fingers, the truth is that more and more people from all sorts of backgrounds are discovering these games. Sales have been growing steadily for over a decade, and cafés and bars with in-house gaming libraries are opening up everywhere from London to Toronto to Los Angeles.

Space strategy game 'Forbidden Stars' is recommended for sci-fi fans

Where has this all of this enthusiasm come from? Well, it depends who you ask.

Some people will tell you it's part of a general trend for all things analog. Just as vinyl record sales have defied expectations by increasing in spite of digital streaming services, players are turning to board games for a tangible alternative to pixels and polygons.

Others say board games' biggest draw is their fundamentally sociable nature. In an era where much of our entertainment is consumed in a solitary setting, usually while sitting in front of a screen, there's a real thirst for anything that can bring people together in meatspace for some shared fun over a couple of beers.

Both of those theories have some merit, but they overlook the simple fact that board games are amazing these days. Must-play games are coming out on an almost weekly basis, and wherever your gaming preferences lie, there's something out there for you to fall in love with.

Article continues after the video below

Related: Watch VICE's film on the mystical universe of 'Magic: The Gathering'

Fancy some epic, Civilization-style empire building? You might want to try Clash of Cultures, which puts you in charge of a small tribe and challenges you to explore strange lands, discover new technologies, and form mighty armies to beat the crap out of your rivals.

Prefer something more lighthearted? Snake Oil casts you and your friends as slimy salespeople attempting to pitch a series of ludicrous products dictated by randomly-drawn cards. How would you try to sell someone a Poop Hook, a Shame Eraser, or a Danger Monkey? More to the point, what the hell are they? It's up to you, and it's hilarious—an infinitely better alternative to the popular but deeply shitty Cards Against Humanity.

Or if you're looking for something to really get your teeth into, a couple of recently released games have experimented with adding ongoing plot elements to their designs—essentially board games with a story mode.

'T.I.M.E. Stories' up close

T.I.M.E. Stories is a science fiction game where players travel through time attempting to prevent paradoxes that threaten to destroy reality. A bit like a mix between classic point-and-click video games like The Secret of Monkey Island and films like Duncan Jones's temporal-tinkering adventure Source Code, it deposits players in a mental institution in 1920s Paris.

It's a captivating setting with gorgeous artwork, twisted characters, and an atmosphere of mounting, pervasive dread. As you play you'll discover hidden locations, see off deadly threats, and piece together information in an attempt to unravel the mystery of what's really going on at the asylum.

It's a hell of an achievement, not just as a game but as a piece of interactive fiction. But it's not alone putting its storyline front and center.

Read on Motherboard: The First Virtual Reality Board Game

Pandemic Legacy revolves around a group of medics fighting deadly diseases around the globe. Designed to be played a finite number of times, it changes with every game session. Cities fall into chaos as rioting mobs take to the streets. Players' characters form relationships, pick up injuries or suffer mental scars from exposure to traumatic scenes. The result is a gripping, unpredictable plot that can branch off in any number of unexpected directions, gaming's answer to a hit TV drama.

This is the best time there's ever been to get into board games. Is it all a bit geeky? Yes. But if you can park your prejudice for ten minutes, you'll find that that's no bad thing. The cleverest, most exciting, original ideas in gaming today aren't on your PC or your console, they're on your kitchen table. Why would you want to miss out on that?

Follow Owen on Twitter.


​What Happened to the Mafia in Williamsburg?

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Fortunato Brothers, the coffee spot in Williamsburg where a lawyer reportedly withdrew a suit over wheelchair access after learning of its alleged Mafia ties. Photo by the author

In a city like New York, the past dies a fresh death every day. As you read this, something special is being built over, transformed, forgotten, or turned into a Pret a Manger. That's the consequence of constant change: Nothing is permanent, and what memories we have are destined to be demolished by, or for, our descendants.

We're now building faster than we ever have before, and the sheer breadth of differences separating today's New York from what the city was 30 or even 15 years ago is extreme. One could argue that there has never been a time in New York where its incoming citizens have been more detached from—or completely unaware of—the city's recent history.

What was and what now is are nearly unidentifiable twins. And one of the most visible examples of this can be found in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, a neighborhood that enjoys a storied legacy of organized crime and Mafia activity.

"It was not necessarily the center of a lot of violence, but it's where many future bosses got their start."—Christian Cipollini

As anyone who has ever read the New York Times style section is well aware, Williamsburg is now synonymous with a hodgepodge of conflicting labels: hipster, yuppie, gentrifier, bourgeoise. In a way, the fire last year at a Williamsburg archive became an unfortunate symbol of the times: Developers have essentially pressed the restart button on newcomers' consciousness. You don't need to remember shit, just make sure you've got first and last month's rent.

Condos glisten above the once-abandoned East River waterfront; empty warehouses are now "loft-inspired luxury townhouses," and Bedford Avenue, a thoroughfare once littered with syringes, is now swarming with selfie stick–carrying tour groups and SoHo-style boutiques. But before it was a playground for real estate brokers, Williamsburg was a mob stronghold. In fact, the Brooklyn neighborhood stretching from the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway down to Grand Street—now known primarily by the broker-invented monicker of East Williamsburg—was not only a hangout for members of the five families of New York, but also one of their original locales.

"It was not necessarily the center of a lot of violence, but it's where many future bosses got their start," Christian Cipollini, a well-known mob expert and editor of Gangland Legends, told me. "When they came to America from Sicily, they chose their spots. And a lot of them came and settled in Williamsburg."

Long before Whole Foods announced plans for a block-sized store there, the Castellammarese crime clans called Williamsburg home. And at the tail end of Prohibition, a bloody war broke out between those loyal to a man named Salvatore Maranzano on one side and Joseph "the Boss" Masseria on the other. Both men were killed in 1931, and Charles "Lucky" Luciano stepped in to help establish five distinct crime families and offer some sense of structure to the American Mafia.

"What began in small places, like Williamsburg and Brownsville, spread across the country," Cipollini continued. "It changed the face of organized crime in America."

On a recent jaunt in Williamsburg, I stepped into Fortunato Brothers, an ornate Italian cafe on Manhattan Avenue, for a cup of coffee. The place itself is a rarity in New Brooklyn, where overpriced coffee shops are the rule, not traditional pastry makers with an autographed photo of Tony Bennett on the wall. And that showed in the spot's clientele: Mostly Italian-speaking residents ordered at the counter, and no one plugged into a Macbook was spotted anywhere near it.

For those who pass it on their way to the L train, it looks like an ordinary Italian bakery full of artifacts from the homeland, rainbow-colored cookies, and cannoli. Nowhere, of course, does it say that the co-owner of the place, Mario Fortunato, was once charged and convicted for the 1994 murder of a loan shark named Tino Lombardi at the San Giuseppe Social Club just up the block. (The conviction would later be overturned on appeal; in fact, Fortunato won a $300,000 settlement last year.)

But the man's status as an alleged Genovese associate is apparently still so entrenched that the lawyer of a handicapped woman who sued the bakery for not providing an access ramp dropped the case this past June because he was concerned "for safety," the woman told the Daily News. "I used to make a joke about the men standing outside," she told the paper. "I called them 'The Godfathers.'"

Michael D'Urso, a cousin of Tino Lombardi who was wounded in the shooting that killed the loan shark, later handed the government 500 hours worth of tape, leading to the arrests of 45 alleged Gambino family goodfellas in 2001. By doing so, D'Urso, who was known for hanging out at social clubs in Williamsburg, became one of the most prolific rats in Mafia history.

At the time, the Daily News described East Williamsburg as "an old-fashioned Italian-American neighborhood, with pork stores stocked with plump salamis and fresh smoked mozzarella and cafes that serve espresso." Now a tattoo spot sits next to Fortunato Bros., and the sound of jackhammers at new condo sites can be heard along the street outside. The social club where bullets once flew is long gone, and the bakery's sign looks a bit decayed.

...even the mob can't afford the rent anymore.


Yet the Italian-American energy of the area is lingers. Longtime residents hang red, white, and green flags from their windows, while restaurants' doors remain plastered with signs for upcoming Italian festivals. Graham Avenue itself is alternatively called "Via Vespucci," and you can overhear Italian heard on some corners. Still, the ethnic enclave seems strange for a neighborhood as developed as Williamsburg now is. The immigrant is increasingly out of place here.

Up Graham Ave, I met an older man named Jimmy, who told me he moved to the neighborhood in 1952, during the post-war boom, and has lived there ever since. He pointed to all the stores in front of us—a hummus market, an "urban puppy hotel," another damn coffee shop—and said, "None of this was ever here before." The area, he added, was "much more Italian"; now it's prime real estate. "Everywhere you go, there's a condo being built. It's terrible."

The corner on which I spoke to Jimmy features an architect's office and one of those expensive old-school barbers that are popular now, but was once a well-known crime family headquarters called the Motion Lounge.

An FBI surveillance photo of Joseph D. Pistone—a.k.a. Donnie Brasco—and Mafia associates from the 1980s. Photo via Wikimedia Commons

It was there that Joseph D. Pistone, the undercover FBI agent better known as Donnie Brasco, infiltrated the Bonanno crime family for six years. That's the same clan at the center of the trial of Vincent Asaro, an alleged participant in the Lufthansa heist of Goodfellas fame. The undercover operation ultimately led to more than 100 convictions of capos, soldiers, made men, and wiseguys, and a pretty decent movie starring Al Pacino and Johnny Depp.

I asked Jimmy if he remembers how long the Motion Lounge, and the Mafia life it brought with it, had been closed. "For a while now," he replied. "It left with the rest of the neighborhood."

Apparently, even the mob can't afford the rent anymore.

Graham Avenue Meats & Deli, just a few buildings down, also began to fade from the collective memory last year. The now-shuttered spot was once notorious to old-timers and newcomers alike for its enormous sandwiches—"The Godfather" being one of them—and was run by an alleged Bonanno wiseguy named Michael "the Butcher" Virtuoso, who died after pleading guilty to running a loan sharking business out of the back of the store.

According to FBI testimony, Virtuoso had a Rolodex of mob contacts there, with entries that are just fun to say out loud: "Vinny Gorgeous," "Johnny Sideburns," "Little Anthony," to name a few. He faced two and a half-years in prison at the time of his death.

But local business owners I spoke with were completely unaware. They just had heard the owner had passed away—not that he was apparently deeply entrenched in a Mafia crime family as of last year. No one seemed to know, really. When I asked a young guy at a cafe about it, he shrugged, and looked back down at his phone. Others followed suit.

Based on my observations, it was safe to say that the young woman jogging by, wearing a shirt that read, "The gym is my happy hour," probably has no idea that this used to be an area where you could get killed if you saw something you weren't supposed to see.

Bamonte's in Williamsburg. Photo by the author

In the times I've dined at Bamonte's Restaurant, the last stop on my mini Williamsburg mob tour, it felt like I was transported back to the scene in Goodfellas, shot from Henry Hill's point of view, when he's introducing the litany of mobsters to the viewers ("And then there was Johnny Two Times...."). The women still come in wearing flashy fur coats, with blown-out bobs, and the men are in slick suits, carrying thick accents. The food is great, too.

"I used to go there three, four times a week," Anthony "Fat Tony" Rabito, the alleged consigliere of the Bonanno family, told a friend in 2009, according to the New York Post. "They got great mussels."

After being released from prison for racketeering and extortion, Rabito was reportedly told by the feds in 2009 that he could no longer dine at Bamonte's, nor three other New York Italian restaurants, because they were "hot."' Prosecutors said then that the Williamsburg hang, which is nestled near McCarren Park and now boxed in by high-rises, was where Rabito held court to discuss mafioso matters, although the restaurant itself didn't have any crime ties. But the location makes sense: Rabito was one of the many mobsters who were booked back in the day by Donnie Brasco, in his case on drug charges.

Peering inside Bamonte's window, I was surprised to see a bearded bartender on the younger side, cleaning up before the day's work. I had this weird sense then that this is how the mob relics of the neighborhood will continue to function— as a culinary institution, not a hangout—while organized crime becomes less and less compatible with the city in 2015. Even if some ephemera are fresh, it's safe to say the Mafia has largely been outmoded by modernity, completely avoidable to those moving through the safer, glitzier neighborhood.

Still, the Mafia persists in some form in modern New York—increasingly toothless, perhaps, after years of prosecution, but functioning in different modes. In Williamsburg, the remnants of the former nabe are pretty deeply buried. It's not the seedy past of a neighborhood that we ought to romanticize or long for, but it is something we would do well not to forget.

"Of course, you need that change to happen," Cipollini, the mob expert, told me. "But really, you're losing a part of the city's history. And you have to ask yourself: What legacy did they leave behind?"

Follow John Surico on Twitter.

Correction 11/4: An earlier version of this story suggested John Gotti was a member of the Genovese crime family, but he was in fact a leader of the Gambino family. We regret the error.

What TV Won't Tell You About the Wealth, Violence, and Boredom of North Dakota's Oilfields

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Photo by Fred Hayes/courtesy of ABC

I ran into a friend at a wedding in Salt Lake City who had been scouting locations for the new TV show Blood and Oil, which is shot in and around Park City, Utah, the scenic home of the Sundance Film Festival. Blood and Oil is supposed to take place in western North Dakota, a region whose terrain is characterized by plainness, if not barren desolation, and has been disfigured in recent years by an oil boom. I asked my friend if it was difficult to find locations in one of the most beautiful parts of the country to film a show that's supposed to be set in one of the ugliest.

"Oh, no," he told me. "I initially left out all the photographs of sites that had mountains in them, since North Dakota has no mountains. But the director saw them anyway and said, 'These are great! The mountains are gorgeous! Who cares if North Dakota has no mountains! This is a fictional show!'"

Blood and Oil follows the fortunes of Billy and Cody Lefever (played by Chace Crawford and Rebecca Rittenhouse), a young couple from the Florida panhandle who borrow money from relatives to finance a small chain of Laundromats they plan to open in the boomtowns of the Bakken Oil Field. In case you hadn't heard, the Bakken—in real life—is an oil-rich underground rock formation where, beginning in 2006, new methods of drilling have allowed companies to extract unprecedented amounts of fossil fuels, spurring an all-out, old-fashioned oil boom in North Dakota. In the first scene of Blood and Oil, Billy and Cody are driving through "North Dakota"—in front of a sweeping vista of snow-capped mountains—on their way to humdrum financial mediocrity when they wreck their truck, destroying the (uninsured) washing machines they were hauling and, as a result, their plans for the immediate future. Determined to persevere, the couple tries their luck in the fictional boomtown of Rock Springs—presumably based on the real town of Williston, North Dakota—where, thanks to a highly improbably series of events, they fall into cahoots with the Bakken's biggest oil tycoon, Hap Briggs (played by Don Johnson).

Over the course of the first four episodes, Billy scrambles to become a player in the boom alongside Briggs, who initially seems to act as a mentor to Billy but then double-crosses him. Drama ensues, mostly involving Briggs's family—such as Briggs fucking his bratty son's smoking-hot girlfriend, Jules (played by India de Beaufort)—and each episode ends with a cliffhanger. In other words, Blood and Oil never pretends not to be a soap opera.

"You'd go to Walmart, and the shelves were empty," Brad told me. "It was like Black Friday every day, for, like, some fucking toothpaste. They'd just roll shit out with a pallet jack and set it there and rip the Visqueen off of it and stand back."

A couple of my best childhood friends, Cliff and Brad (those are fake names), worked up in the Bakken. When I left home for college in 2001, they stuck around Wyoming and got jobs in the oilfield. This was the dawn of the modern age of fracking, and southwest Wyoming had just been thrust into a boom of its own. Both started out doing menial labor but worked their way into office jobs, and by 2010, when the Bakken had really gotten rolling, they were in management positions. As the boom in Wyoming died down and North Dakota exploded, the companies Cliff and Brad worked for decided they needed experienced managers up north. Both men sold their houses, packed up their families, and got shipped off to Williston.

"When you rolled into Williston, it was eerie," Cliff said. "There was train tankers as far as you could see, and campers everywhere. The roads were busy with traffic and schlummy-looking oilfield dudes everywhere in greasy fucking coveralls. They wear them everywhere. You go to the restaurant, everything's fucking dirty, man. Just disgusting. You'd have to wait in line for 45 minutes to get through the McDonald's drive-thru. You'd go to Walmart, and the shelves were empty—they didn't have enough supply to fill the shelves and they didn't have employees to actually put the shit on the shelves. It was like Black Friday every day, for, like, some fucking toothpaste. They'd just roll shit out with a pallet jack and set it there and rip the Visqueen off of it and stand back."

If this sounds like an improbable setting for a soap opera, it is. The appeal of "soaps"—such as Blood and Oil 's famous primetime predecessors Dallas and Dynasty, which depicted the glamorous affairs of oil families in the 80s—is that they offer viewers escape into characters' lives that are more attractive, exciting, and alluring than our own. I sat down to watch a few episodes of Blood and Oil with Cliff and Brad, who are both now back in Wyoming—the glut of oil that resulted from the balls-to-the-wall drilling in the Bakken helped raise the global supply of oil beyond the demand for it, driving prices down and killing the North Dakota boom. I wanted them to point out for me the incongruities between the show and reality that morphed the Bakken into a suitable fictional venue for dramatic fantasy.

This proved to be an exercise in the obvious. Instead of arriving in a town of tanker trains and greasy coveralls, Billy and Cody walk into a street party where people are hanging off the buildings. They enter a bar with attractive dancing ladies a la Coyote Ugly, and the bar's scintillating owner—who we're later introduced to as Jules—dishing out drinks. Brad said the crowded bar blaring rap music seemed pretty spot-on, but the similarities to what he saw in Williston ended there.

"There's more hot girls in this show than in the entire town of Williston," he said. "People up there would always say that there's a beautiful woman behind every tree... You know, because there's no trees."

Cliff said some of the bartenders looked kind of like Jules, "except a lot heavier, and with beards."

Whether or not fracking is evil, it's certainly banal. The best parts of Todd Melby's interactive documentary Black Gold Boom are specifically about how boring life is in the Bakken.

The show promptly whisks us out of the workingman's milieu where we might glimpse places like McDonald's and Walmart when Billy gets his hands on a million dollars in the first episode. From that point forth, we're in the world of Briggs and the Bakken's 1 Percent—prime territory, it would seem, for escapist soap-opera hijinks.

Except it isn't. Even a ritzy, fictional version of the Bakken with an attractive cast and picturesque mountains falls short of feeling enrapturing. In one of the show's many lukewarm reviews, Brian Moylan complains in the Guardian that while 80s-era oil-tycoon soaps like Dallas and Dynasty "were known for their luscious furs and glittering diamonds, the only luxury in Blood and Oil is Hap's private jet. He lives in a large but not ostentatious house, wears jeans and a cowboy hat, and drives around in a pickup truck." Moylan goes on: "It's even hard to buy that North Dakota is some kind of boomtown for the oil business. I know it actually is, but the way it's depicted in the show, the nightlife looks more like Mardi Gras with caribou or a sanitized version of Deadwood. Yes, there might be a lot of money, but if the money isn't translating into some sort of aspirational and heightened reality, it's just no fun."

The oil industry has historically done its business behind a veil, out of sight. This is partly due to the logistics of the business. Companies drill most wells and build pipelines in remote areas, and until the fracking boom major oil exploration has tended to take place offshore and outside the United States. Catastrophes like the Exxon Valdez and Deepwater Horizon oil spills have occasionally revealed the potential pitfalls of our country's oil lust, but the rise of fracking on US soil has raised awareness of what the process of extracting fossil fuels entails, and shown us just how messy that process is.

"Fracking means that the United States is producing more and more of the energy it consumes in its backyard," Wall Street Journal energy reporter Russell Gold writes in his book The Boom. "As of 2013, more than 15 million Americans lived within a mile of a well that had been fracked in the past few years. This new proximity between wells and homes is one of the defining features of the new energy landscape."

Debates over the environmental and economic impacts of fracking are often heated—in his public announcement that New York State would ban fracking, Governor Andrew Cuomo said it's probably the most emotionally charged issue he'd ever experienced, with people on both sides "passionate and emotional and scared, and they're not listening and they're not hearing and they're yelling." But other than excited individuals shouting their opinions, the ubiquitous media coverage of fracking has been... well, dull. (Naomi Klein makes a similar point in her documentary about capitalism and climate change, This Changes Everything.)

Even stylish, in-depth investigative productions like the New York Times Magazine 's three-part-series on the Bakken feel boring—albeit dread-inducing—despite telling complex tales of corruption and murder. But it's not the reporting's fault—it's the subject's. Whether or not fracking is evil, it's certainly banal. The best parts of Todd Melby's interactive documentary Black Gold Boom are specifically about how boring life is in the Bakken—at one point Melby hangs out with a couple young roughnecks roping a fake bull in a parking lot who tell him, "Wasting time is the only thing to do in North Dakota." Later, he interviews an oilfield worker who laments of his evenings off: "I've never seen so many movies with guys in my life. It's horrible." The oil industry looks nothing like Dallas. The boom in North Dakota has made people rich, like Harold Hamm the CEO of Continental Resources who pioneered drilling in the Bakken and is probably the closest real-world equivalent to Blood and Oil's Hap Briggs—but he looks more like Rip Torn than Don Johnson.

"There was an underground group of rich people that didn't mingle with the regular schlubs of society," Brad told me. "I seen their houses, I seen their Ferraris driving down the potholed streets of Williston. But I guarantee you Harold Hamm wasn't cruising around the Bakken banging broads and running the show. He was no center of gravity. He was no Don Johnson."

Perhaps Blood and Oil doesn't aspire to the ultra-glamour of Dallas and Dynasty because its creators didn't think its contemporary audience would buy such a depiction. It's hard to say. When Hap Briggs asks his daughter (played by Miranda Rae Mayo)—who's young and hip and raised in California rather than with Hap in North Dakota—if she's excited to sit in on her first Briggs Oil meeting, she replies, "Yes, pop. A Friday night of looking over earnings reports with old men in suits. It's a dream come true." So, the show's writers are at least somewhat aware that the oil business isn't actually sexy.

But if the show doesn't want to sell us a pulpy melodrama about powerful people in a glamorous industry (a la Empire), what is Blood and Oil good for? Last month in High Country News, Jonathan Thompson explains how he initially had high hopes for Blood and Oil, which were ultimately dashed: "Reality shows have us demanding more authenticity—or at least the illusion of it—from the tube, and critically acclaimed hits like Breaking Bad and Mad Men have raised the bar, quality-wise, as well. Would it be too much to hope for a Bakken Bad, Fracking Bad, or Land Men—a smart, well-acted exploration of the dark side of the oil boom? Apparently that would be too much to ask."

Related on VICE: 'The Bros of Fracking':

An alternate-universe version of Blood and Oil would grapple with topics like politics, climate change, and pollution, which are inherent to the oil industry, but also issues specific to a boom. For western North Dakota, such issues might include overburdened infrastructure resulting from thousands of people descending at once on small towns; radical spikes in drug use, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault; the highest rates of workplace deaths in the nation; skyrocketing rents and evictions; and the inevitable economic downturn that leaves thousands of people—many of whom have picked up and moved their lives—without jobs, often overextended by mortgages and car loans they took out after hearing assurances that the boom would last for decades.

A show like that could also portray the crippling social isolation many people feel trying to make a normal life in the absurd, awful conditions of a boomtown. Brad said his life in Williston felt like jail—nothing to do and nowhere to go. At least he had work. His coworker's wife was put on Prozac to cope with the tedium of sitting through North Dakota's long winters alone in a company trailer. Many roughnecks left their families back home, not wanting to subject them to boomtown life.

"There was one guy," Brad's wife, Nina, told me, "we didn't really know him, he just lived across the way. We were having a barbecue, the kids were already down there, and he came over completely drunk—like, bad, not really speaking real words. But one thing he said was, 'I just miss my family.' He scared the shit out of the kids, and he was forcefully made to leave. But the reason he came wandering over was because he missed his kids."

Blood and Oil contains no such commentary on the ailments caused by the oil boom. But it might be more "authentic" than Thompson gives it credit. After all, it's an unexciting show in a dreary place populated by characters who are motivated solely by money. If that's not—at least in broad terms—an accurate depiction of the Bakken, I don't know what is.

Follow Nathan C. Martin on Twitter.

Blood and Oil airs on Sundays at 9 PM EST on ABC.

The Daily Reality of Britain's Mental Health Crisis, According to a Psychiatric Doctor

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Illustration by Dan Evans

This article originally appeared on Vice UK.

Imagine something terrible happens to you, like you get hit by a car. You're bleeding, disorientated, confused. Maybe you need major surgery. You get rushed to the emergency room, operated on, you get looked after.

Imagine, then, that you are a teenager with severe mental health problems. You try to kill yourself. The police pick you up, you get taken to hospital. But there is no bed for you. They're all full. Because the government says there isn't enough money for any more.

Mental health problems account for 23 percent of ill health in the UK, but spending on mental health services accounts for only 11 percent of the National Health Service (NHS) budget. It's because of this disparity that 200 or so famous names—including Danny Boyle, Louis Theroux, and Ade Adepitan—have signed an open letter calling for equality in the way mental and physical health is treated and funded in the UK.

Despite the number of patients being referred to community mental health teams rising by 20 percent from 2010 to 2015, mental health trusts in England saw their budgets fall by more than 8 percent over the same time.

The Bethlem Royal Hospital in South London. Photo via Wikimedia Commons

Doctors have responded with an unprecedented attack on the government. The outgoing president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists called the current state of mental health services a "car crash," while other doctors have warned that these cuts to mental health services are leading to preventable deaths and suicides. Take that—as well as the proposed new contracts that would monumentally fuck over younger doctors—and it's not hard to see why medical professionals are becoming more politically outspoken than ever.

So what is life currently like for doctors on the frontline of NHS mental health services? I spoke to psychiatrist David McLaughlan at Bethlem Royal Hospital in London to find out. Below are his thoughts, edited for length and clarity.

Related: Watch 'Being Ida,' our film about a young Norwegian woman struggling with borderline personality disorder.

I see things on a daily basis that would never happen on wards where people were being treated for physical health conditions. I was working on a night shift recently and we had a 14-year-old boy who had tried to kill himself by jumping onto a train track. The police had found him, pulled him off and brought him into us. He's had a tough life. He'd been in foster care since he was a baby; it was likely he'd been abused. He was a very vulnerable child who couldn't see any other way out.

When he got to us he was put in what we call a 136 suite, which is a bare, white and windowless room with no door handles, sharp corners or ligature points. We use it for adults temporarily waiting to be assessed by a psychiatrist. It's not suitable for adults for long periods of time, let alone frightened children. But this boy ended up stuck there, in isolation, for 48 hours, because there was not one single adolescent bed in the entire country. That is how we are treating frightened and vulnerable children with mental health problems. Can you imagine treating a child with an asthma attack like that?

Every time I'm on call there's always someone in a desperate situation who has been waiting in A&E (accident and emergency) for at least eight hours. It's just cruel.

It's not uncommon for us to send people around the country because of the beds crisis—and it is a crisis. A few weeks ago, a young woman came in who had attempted to kill herself. She was at high risk of causing more harm to herself. The only available bed for her was in Liverpool, 200 miles away from her friends, family and support network. One of the most frustrating things for us is that when you have to send patients that far away, that obviously influences their decision about whether they're willing to go to hospital or not. This woman was very worried, anxious and scared. She was having hallucinations, hearing voices. She was willing to be treated in a local hospital, but when she found out the nearest bed for her was so far away, she refused to go. So we were then forced to use the Mental Health Act to detain her. We're having to do this more and more because of the bed crisis, which is appalling. It's just not acceptable.

The psychiatric intensive care unit in our hospital was closed a few years ago. We are cutting beds—because the NHS is supposed to be saving £22 billion —but the clinical need for them is not disappearing. Every time I'm on call in south London—in Lewisham, Southwark, Croydon—there is always someone in a desperate situation who has been waiting in A&E for at least eight hours, because there are no beds. It's just cruel. If that was someone who'd come in having a heart attack, they wouldn't be sitting in a trolley with no idea where they're going. And then we're shoving them in a taxi up to Liverpool at 5AM. Often, because we're not willing to discharge seriously unwell people, we are forced to admit people to private beds. So we are essentially cutting public beds to give to the private sector.

The government can smile to the newspapers and say they are ring-fencing funding for the NHS, but they've just taken it away from social care and housing. If you're someone already living in poverty—relying on food banks, and now your tax credits are being cut—for someone already vulnerable to mental illness, this is the kind of stress that will tip you over the edge. And it's putting huge pressure on mental health services. A few months ago, I treated a young man with bipolar disorder. He'd been sleeping in train toilets and had been admitted to A&E with bilateral pneumonia. He was well enough to go home, but where was I supposed to discharge him to? Back on the streets? Sometimes we have people who are well enough to leave stuck on the ward for months. It costs the NHS £600 a night to keep someone on the ward overnight; it would actually be cheaper to put them all up in the Ritz.

This new campaign with the celebrity signatories is making the economic case for mental health services. And there are others, like a recent report published by LSE that says for every £1 . But as doctors, the fact that we are having to break down the value of somebody's life into pounds is outrageous. But that's the only way we can translate this to the politicians.

READ: The VICE Guide to Mental Health

Historically, doctors like me would have been really nervous talking about these things. We like to follow hierarchy, we respect our seniors and we are quite stoic – we do our best and work hard. But I think we are so under-resourced that doctors are having to become politicized. In the past, I would never have criticized my hospital and my consultants and my trust. But I'm not criticizing any of those people—I'm criticizing our lack of resources. And that comes straight from the government.

Mental health has always been underfunded, but the situation is now desperate. We have to speak up for our patients because many of them can't speak for themselves. It's not like they're—for example—part of a society for arthritis sufferers who can send beautifully written letters to their MPs (a member of parliament) like people with physical health problems often do. Our patients don't have power or influence. And they are the ones being ignored.

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