Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Aurora Movie Theater Shooting Victim: "I Had To Leave Jesse"

Trial observers exit the Arapahoe County Justice Center on the second day of the trial of Aurora movie theater massacre defendant James Holmes.

Brennan Linsley / AP

CENTENNIAL, Colorado — Katie Medley spoke with composure about some of the worst moments of her life: Saying "I love you" to her husband for what she thought would be the last time. Worrying for her unborn son. Slipping in a pool of blood.

Then there was the phone call to family members to tell them that, no, the baby hadn't come yet. There'd been a shooting at the Aurora, Colorado, movie theater and her husband was probably dead. In the following months, it was her husband's multiple brain surgeries and continued recovery.

After testifying Tuesday in the trial of movie theater shooter James Holmes, Medley took her seat among other survivors. And then, for a moment, the composure was gone, and she rested her head on her husband's wheelchair.

Survivors of the 2012 shooting massacre at the Century 16 theaters described how their confusion turned to terror as shotgun blasts were followed by automatic gunfire. Almost all who testified described how they believed they would die.

The testimony, photographs, and 911 calls played in court on Tuesday were graphic, and the emotional impact was palpable among jurors.


Aurora theater shooting suspect James Holmes is seated in court in this 2013 file photo.

Andy Cross / AP

Defense attorneys for Holmes have argued that a number of the exhibits unfairly prejudice the jury against the 27-year-old, who is accused of killing 12 people and attempting to kill 70 others. The judge disagreed, acknowledging that prosecutors must sometimes present graphic evidence as they work to prove every aspect of the charges.

"The larger the magnitude of a crime, and the more gruesome the crime, the more gruesome the evidence is going to be," Judge Carlos Samour Jr. said.

At 12:05 a.m. on July 20, 2012, Theater 9 was full of energy. The stadium seats filled with friends, families, and coworkers who had anticipated the new Batman movie for weeks. Some showed up in costumes, and happy chatter rang out before the previews began.

About 15 minutes later, confusion set in. A canister thrown through the air was not a prank by rowdy kids, it was tear gas. Its flash and bang were mistaken for fireworks. The floor was sticky not with soda, but with blood.

Prosecutors began the testimony — which is expected to last for four months — by calling Medley. The night of The Dark Knight Rises' premiere, she was nine months pregnant, but suggested going out after she saw how excited her husband was watching an ad for the movie.

They and a friend sat near the theater's exit in case she went into labor. But when she saw a figure in body armor come through the emergency exit and toss a canister in to the air, she knew something was wrong. As shots rang out, she and her friend huddled on the ground, trying to avoid laying on her belly.

Then she noticed her husband, Caleb Medley, was still in his seat.

"That's when I saw blood pouring from his face," she said.

He had been shot through the eye, into his brain, and she didn't think he could survive. When the shots quieted, she slowly stood up. She poured a bottle of water into his mouth, trying to wash out the blood and keep him from choking.

The exit opened again, this time police yelling for anyone who could move to get out of the theater. Medley squeezed her husband's hand and said she loved him. She didn't want to leave, but thought of her unborn son.

"That's going to be the last piece of [Caleb] I have," she said. "I have to save him."

But Caleb Medley did survive — his wife giving birth while he was in brain surgery at the same hospital. He first held his son while he was in a medically induced coma.

On Tuesday, he took the witness stand in his wheelchair and testified with the aid of an alphabet board.

The traumatic brain injury still limits his movement and speech. Almost three years after the shooting, he can understand everything around him, but speech comes one word at a time and can be difficult for strangers to understand, his wife said.

Prosecutors asked him who he was, and if Katie was his wife. His voice thick, he said, "Yeah," then spelled out y-e-s for the court's records. It was far cry from the aspiring comedian who had performed a standup set just days before the theater shooting.

Holmes' defense attorneys have asked no questions of the Medleys or other victims — they do not dispute what happened in the theater, or that Holmes was the gunman.

The Century theater is pictured in Aurora, Colo., in 2013.

Ed Andrieski / AP

Husband and wife Anggiat Mora and Rita Paulina took their then-14-year-old son Prodeo Patria to the movie for family bonding. That was important, Mora said, even though he was exhausted from working that day.

Paulina, via an Indonesian interpreter, said her husband had to tell her to get to the ground three times before she realized what was happening. During a lull in the shooting, Mora told his son and wife to run.

They moved toward the hallway to the lobby, where Paulina saw a solitary figure holding "something long," though she could not identify it as a rifle. Mora thought the family was headed the wrong way, but he kept following.

"Well, if we die together," he said he thought, trailing off.

Paulina managed to tell her son to turn around, and they made it to the emergency exit, where they found a woman with an injured man. The teen helped the woman support the man as they walked out.

Paulina said she felt her arm turn loose and warm.

"What happened to my arm? It's like a zombie," she told her husband.

He told her to keep moving. But then her leg was struck, and she fell to the ground.

Her husband pulled her out the door, then carried her on his back for about 30 feet to the sidewalk and set her against the theater's wall. Flashing lights were already making their way into the parking lot.

The first officer to see them pointed his gun and told them to put their hands up.

"I don't care if you want to shoot me again, shoot me," Paulina said.

Then the officer saw their injuries — a shot in her son's lower back, three bullets to her arm and leg, and her husband covered in blood from carrying her.

Many in the theater never saw the shooter, dressed entirely black and standing in a corner.

After the first bangs, Derick Spruel said he tried to keep watching the movie — he was sure it was just a prank. His friend and coworker from Buckley Air Force Base, Jesse Childress, stood up in their row, jolted, then fell.

"When he fell down, I told everyone to get down," said Spruel, who was sitting with his wife and another coworker.

When the lights came on and police arrived, he screamed Childress' name and tried to lift him.

"I really tried to pick him up," Spruel said, adding that the moment sticks out in his mind. "I could not. I wanted him to come with us."

He didn't find out until the next evening that Childress had died.

Spruel's voice lowered on the stand.

"I had to leave Jesse."



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Twitter Spooks Investors With Bungled Earnings Release, Shares Plunge 18%

Twitter was forced to release its quarterly numbers early after a markets data company found a copy online. Investors didn’t like what they saw.

Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

Twitter shareholders were spooked on Tuesday when the company's quarterly results, showing disappointing revenue growth, were released early by an upstart data firm.

Shares of Twitter fell as much as 6%, as investors digested the lackluster results, before trading was halted by the New York Stock Exchange. The stock fell as much as 26% after the halt was lifted, and closed the day down by 18%.

The results were published during trading hours by Selerity, a data company, which said it had found the information already posted on Twitter's investor relations website. Twitter was scheduled to release the information after the market closed.

But the leak forced Twitter to publicize its results ahead of schedule, showing lower revenue than anticipated and a dialed-back forecast for the coming year. Investors, already unnerved by the glimpse provided by Selerity, registered their disappointment when the full picture came into view.


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Maple: Another Food Delivery Startup, This Time With Momofuku's David Chang

Plenty of websites and apps will help you get a meal delivered. But Maple gets big-time Manhattan food cred from its chief culinary officer, Momofuku founder David Chang.

Maple

There's the open office, with bookcases filled with business tomes, standing desks, and exercise-balls-as-chairs. Then there's the venture capital funding and the dot-com veteran founders. But this is a company where more than half of the full-time, paid-with-benefits employees work preparing food or delivering it.

Maple is a food startup launching today in Lower Manhattan, a place with no shortage of restaurant or food delivery options. A quick look on Seamless shows hundreds of places ready to deliver almost any cuisine imaginable; opening Yelp anywhere in Maple's delivery zone (for now, Manhattan below Chambers Street) will show dozens of restaurants within a few minutes' walk.

It's a brutally competitive market, and Maple's founders, Caleb Merkl, Akshay Navle, and Will Gaybrick, don't have a background in the food business. But the company's street cred on that front is delivered in spades by David Chang, the Momofuku founder, who is serving as its chief culinary officer. Chang was introduced to Maple via an investor last summer, and helped the company recruit Soa Davies, who led menu development at Le Bernardin, as executive chef.

"We had nothing when we first talked to him; we didn't even have a name," Merkl told BuzzFeed News. "He has his Momofuku empire, but he really just cares about food. He's a progressive guy and is interested in where food is going."

Maple, Merkl said, has "one mission and vision, which is to make every touch point in the food ordering process exceptional." Right now, the service is limited to Lower Manhattan, with plans to move out farther over time. Although Maple wants to serve restaurant-style food, it's able to cut down on costs by not needing the trendy location or dining room of a regular restaurant.

It has also trimmed down the options: three choices for dinner and three for lunch, rotating daily. The prices, including tax, tip, and delivery, are $15 for dinner and $12 for lunch.

Similar businesses are gaining ground in San Francisco: SpoonRocket sells meals for $8 or $9 and has attracted over $10 million in venture capital funding, while others like Sprig and Munchery have also set up similar delivery services with minimal menus and simplified pricing. All of them compete with the Seamless-GrubHub empire, which has become the go-to company for ordering from tens of thousands of restaurants across the country.

The way Maple's founders see it, delivered food is often low-quality, deceptively priced, and inconsistent when it comes to timing. So the goal for Maple is charging a flat fee for high-quality food and fast — but more importantly, accurate — delivery.

"Our thought around speed is that it's definitely important," Merkl said, "but it's not the number one thing. I wouldn't do something to deliver in 10 or 12 minutes that would affect food quality."

And the way Maple plans to manage quality is to own the entire process, from food preparation at a kitchen in Brooklyn to vans that move the food to a delivery kitchen on Liberty Street in Lower Manhattan, and then the delivery crew, made up of full-time employees.

That kind of work — operating a kitchen, owning a fleet of vans, employing cooks and delivery people — led to raised eyebrows when the company was raising money. It's a major departure from the trend of the highest-valued and fastest-growing logistics and delivery apps like Seamless and Uber, which operate as software-based middlemen, leaving most of the physical work to be done by others.

"When we went around and started talking to people about a series A [funding round], there was definitely a lot of groups who were like, this is not a marketplace, not everyone is 1099 [contractor], there's a line that's called capex" Merkl said.

Matthew Zeitlin

When I visited Maple's Financial District offices, we had the day's options delivered: baked arctic char with green olive relish, roasted fennel and leeks, and broccoli rabe; lemon rosemary chicken on a bed of mushrooms with roasted potatoes; and a green chile enchilada with lime and radishes. I had just eaten lunch an hour before, so I focused on the char, and it was delicious: meaty, substantial, a little salty, and I could easily pull away the meat with a fork. The greens were not soaked and sitting in a puddle of water, as is so often the risk with delivered food.

"We can't have the flimsy mixed greens that everyone serves, because by the time it rattles around in the delivery bike it deflates to nothing. If we put a lot of liquids in here it's all going to slush," Davies said.

The meals come in small, separate compostable boxes with folded tops. "One of the things we thought about a lot was packaging and branding," Merkl said. "We looked at 200 different pieces of packaging."

But plenty of people have started restaurants and plenty of people have started delivery services. Both are famously difficult businesses, as plenty of people are happy to remind Maple's founders.

"When you tell someone you're starting a restaurant," Merkl said, "they feel the need to sit you down and tell you why starting a restaurant is a bad idea."


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Opening Statements Begin In Aurora, Colorado, Movie Theater Shooting

James Holmes, 27, is accused of killing 12 and injuring 70 others in the 2012 rampage at a midnight showing of The Dark Knight Rises. He is charged with 166 felonies and has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. Follow BuzzFeed News reporter Claudia Koerner, who is in the courtroom, for updates.


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Two Arrested As Protesters, Police Clash In Baltimore After Freddie Gray Death

Authorities have said they believe Freddie Gray’s fatal spinal cord injury happened in a police transport van. The Baltimore mayor plans to meet Friday with local activists and clergy members to discuss protests.


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

William Shatner Thinks A Pipeline Can Solve California's Water Woes

One plan in 1991 to pipe water from Alaska to Los Angeles, though, was estimated to cost $110 billion. And even if the money is there, experts still doubt it’s the best option.

Sci-fi icon William Shatner said last week he's got a fix to the massive drought facing California: an above-ground pipeline from somewhere in the Northwest.

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Shatner spoke about his idea to Yahoo Tech's David Pogue.

"It's simple," he said. "They did it in Alaska," referring to the oil pipeline.

Shatner told Yahoo he'd be starting a $30 billion campaign on Kickstarter for the project. He said he hoped to use the campaign to highlight how California needs to think about tackling the drought issue with something other than just "cutting back."

"So why not a pipeline?" Shatner said.

As of Tuesday, a spokesperson for Kickstarter said Shatner had not yet launched a drought-related campaign — though he could at any time, if the project met Kickstarter's rules.

Chris Carlson / AP

A 1986 editorial in Maine's Bangor Daily News heralded the lasting impact a national pipeline could have, comparing it to building a highway.

And former Alaska Gov. Wally Hickel suggested selling water to Southern California in the late '80s. Engineering company Fluor took a look at the feasibility of the idea in 1991, and told L.A. County officials it would cost $110 billion.

In 1975, the U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of Reclamation considered an undersea pipeline from northern to southern California — also a costly project with even more logistical hurdles.

Ultimately, a 1992 review by the federal Office of Technology Assessment found a pipeline to be an unlikely solution to California's water troubles.

"Even the more expensive supply options, such as large-scale desalination, appear to be less expensive than importing water from Alaska — and a virtually unlimited supply of ocean water is available for desalination," the report said.

In 2010, researchers from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory said an ocean pipeline from the Columbia River, which borders Washington and Oregon, to Northern California would be technically possible using more modern materials than previous plans. They estimated the cost of construction alone at $140 billion.

In general, pipelines and other projects, such as dams and desalination plants, are very costly, as well as being damaging to the environment, said Kimiko Martinez of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

A recent report by the environmental advocacy group focused on ways California could manage its water supply long term — without depending on imported water.

"In fact, we found that California could be saving up to 14 million acre-feet of untapped water – providing more than the amount of water used in all of California's cities in one year – with an aggressive statewide effort to use water-saving practices, reuse water, and capture lost stormwater," Martinez said.

Creating a more sustainable California water system should start with more efficiency from farmers, Martinez added. Residents in the suburbs and cities can do their part by replacing lawns — most urban water use goes to landscaping.

"We're using precious drinking water to feed our thirsty lawns, which isn't suited for much of California's landscape — particularly in Southern California. So ripping out lawns and replacing them with native plants and drought-resistant landscapes could have huge benefits," Martinez said. "Also, agriculture uses 80% of California's water, so increasing efficiency in that sector could amount to some huge, huge savings."


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Blue Bell Is Recalling All Of Its Products Over Listeria Fears

Chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream samples tested positive for listeriosis, the company said Monday, after an outbreak first prompted a recall last month.

Orlin Wagner / AP

The company first recalled several of its products in March after three people in Kansas died. The recall expanded earlier this month to include five other people who had become ill with the same strain of listeria.

The outbreak was originally linked to several products made at a plant in Oklahoma, but the company said Monday's decision came after listeria was found elsewhere — half gallons of chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream produced March 17-27. Several tests showed listeria to be present in different places and plants, the company said.

The voluntary recall of all ice cream and other products was their attempt to do the right thing, the CEO of the Texas-based company said Monday. Blue Bell sells ice cream in 23 states and internationally.

"The best way to do that is to take all of our products off the market until we can be confident that they are all safe," Paul Kruse said in a statement.

"We are heartbroken about this situation and apologize to all of our loyal Blue Bell fans and customers," Kruse continued. "Our entire history has been about making the very best and highest quality ice cream and we intend to fix this problem."

The company said it was unsure how the bacteria was introduced, so it decided to take the recall company-wide. Customers should return any ice cream, frozen yogurt, or other products to the store they were purchased for a refund.

Going forward, products will only be sold after they are tested to be safe, the company said, and the Oklahoma plant will remain closed while it's investigated. Sanitation, testing, and employee training will also be increased. Limited distribution of Blue Bell products is expected to resume soon, the company said.

"We want enjoying our ice cream to be a source of joy and pleasure, never a cause for concern, so we are committed to getting this right," Kruse said.

vimeo.com

LINK: Blue Bell Ice Creams Linked To Multistate Outbreak Of Listeriosis: CDC


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Bird Flu Is Back In The U.S., And Millions Of Chickens Are Affected

An outbreak of the virus has affected 5.3 million chickens at an Iowa farm, and officials in Wisconsin have called a state of emergency. Humans are not at risk from the disease.

Bethany Hahn / AP

The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Monday confirmed 5.3 million birds in Iowa were affected by an avian influenza outbreak.

The latest cases came after about 2 million birds were affected by an outbreak in Minnesota, according to local officials. In Wisconsin, where tens of thousands of birds were also exposed to the virus, the governor called a state of emergency to assist farmers in their response. Thousands of birds were also affected by an outbreak in South Dakota.

Birds in the affected flocks will be euthanized to keep the disease from becoming established in U.S. poultry populations, according to the USDA. Equipment and facilities will also be disinfected, after which officials will test to confirm the virus has been eliminated.

No cases of the disease have been found in people, and health officials said the risk of humans transmission is very low.

"CDC considers the risk to people from these HPAI H5 infections in wild birds, backyard flocks, and commercial poultry, to be low," the USDA said in an announcement.

The birds in the affected populations will not become part of the food stream, the USDA added.



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Monday, April 27, 2015

Best Buy Will Accept Apple Pay, First Defector From Rival Payments Alliance

The electronics retailer gave a major boost to Apple’s mobile payments system, even though it’s a founding member of a competing payments alliance.

Rob Carr / Getty Images

Best Buy said today that it would start accepting Apple Pay in its app immediately and in stores laster this year, a major win for Apple in the battle over who can build the most popular mobile payment system among both customers and retailers.

Best Buy is one of the biggest retailers to join Apple Pay, and the first defector from MCX, a consortium of merchants including Wal-Mart, CVS, and Best Buy, that formed in 2012 to build a mobile payments app that avoids costly credit card interchange fees and allows merchants to keep more data and integrate gift cards and branded credit cards.

"Today's consumers have many different ways to spend their money and we want to give our customers as many options as possible in how they pay for goods and services at Best Buy," the company said in a statement.

The MCX consortium seemed to accept the move from one of its founding members. "Best Buy remains a strong MCX partner and supporter of the CurrentC initiative," MCX chief operating officer Scott Rankin said in an e-mailed statement. "We understand – and strongly support – our merchant partners' quest to do what's best for their customers. As we have stated in past, we are of the firm belief that there need to be at least 2-3 major players within the mobile payments ecosystem for it to succeed."

Jeffrey Shelman, a Best Buy spokesman, told BuzzFeed News in an email that the company "remains part of MCX" and it "will actively monitor CurrentC pilots. It is too early for us to speculate on timing."

MCX released a pilot for its CurrentC payment application last year and said it will roll out more fully later this year. The consortium was first formed in 2012.

While Best Buy is the first mega-retailer to say it will accept Apple Pay, the country's biggest retailer, Wal-Mart, told the Wall Street Journal in March that it was "open" to Apple Pay.

When Apple Pay was first introduced in October, two MCX members, Rite Aid and CVS, disabled the technology on their scanners that allows Apple Pay to work to comply with MCX rules about exclusively using their own technology.

Best Buy did not say when it would start accepting Apple Pay, meaning that CurrentC could still roll out in its stores. Best Buy is a major seller of Apple products.

"The number of locations accepting Apple pay has tripled and we continue to see great progress with merchants," Apple chief executive officer Tim Cook said on a call with analysts to discuss the company's second quarter earnings.

Adding Best Buy fully will be a major coup for Apple. While it has a wide range of merchants signed up for Apple Pay, it does not have any of the mega-retailers that are part of MCX.

Best Buy, with its $36 billion in annual U.S. revenues far outpaces, for example, the $13.7 billion in annual revenues at Whole Foods, an original Apple Pay partner.

With the introduction of the Apple Watch, millions of consumers will be able to make payments from their wrists, which could be more convenient than having to pull out their iPhone or their credit card.



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Apple's Latest Results Show China On The Rise And iPad In Decline

In the first three months of 2015, the company sold more than 61 million iPhones and pulled in almost $17 billion in revenue from the Greater China region alone.

And its profit of $13.6 billion was up 40%.

PHILIPPE LOPEZ / Getty Images

The company said the 61.2 million iPhones sold was a second-quarter record.

Cole Bennetts / Getty Images


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Saturday, April 25, 2015

12 Celebrities And Rich People Who Got Their Apple Watch Before You

All Apple customers are created equal. But some are more equal than others.

Bob Iger, chief executive officer of Disney

Steve Jobs' widow Laurene Powell Jobs is Disney's largest shareholder and Iger serves on Apple's board of directors.

vine.co

Christy Turlington Burns

Christy Turlington Burns

Stephen Lam / Getty Images

J.J. Abrams

J.J. Abrams

Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Abercrombie Says Farewell To Its Shirtless Men And Sexy Vibes

“By the end of July, there will no longer be sexualized marketing used in marketing materials including, in-store photos, gift cards, and shopping bags,” the company said today. And the men will have to put a shirt on.

Good-bye, sexy shirtless men.

Good-bye, sexy shirtless men.

Choo Yut Shing / Via flic.kr

Under new leadership, Abercrombie & Fitch is giving its namesake store and sister brand Hollister a new, less sexualized look. The company said in a statement, published in full below, that the brand "is moving to a customer-centric store-operating model and making it more convenient, friendlier and easier to shop," which will include adjusting its infamous phantasmagoria of heavy scents, dark lighting, and loud music, and desexualizing its staff and marketing materials.

And the men will need to put a shirt on: Hollister is ditching its shirtless lifeguards for store openings and store events, and Abercrombie & Fitch will no longer have shirtless models. Abercrombie's Fierce cologne, however, will continue to feature a shirtless model, "consistent with the fragrance industry."

Abercrombie has faced criticism for its emphasis on the physical attractiveness of its staff, a hallmark of its modern-day founder and Chief Executive Officer Mike Jeffries. Abercrombie recently faced a Supreme Court case over its refusal to hire a Muslim woman when her headscarf violated the company's policies.

The company said that it would institute an "improved sensory experience" in stores, including "adjust[ing] scent, lighting, music and trees to ensure a more pleasurable shopping experience."

Not only will the sensory environment undergo a change, but the store's staff will "not be hired based on body type or physical attractiveness, and we will of course continue not to discriminate on any protected category." Job titles will change to reflect the company's new shift in approach: Store staffers previously titled "models" will now be called "brand representatives."

"These changes build on other changes undertaken including shift to a brand-based organization, appointment of brand presidents, and retirement of long-time CEO, Mike Jeffries, last December," the company said in a statement.

Fierce, Abercrombie & Fitch's cologne, will stay shirtless and sexualized.

Fierce, Abercrombie & Fitch's cologne, will stay shirtless and sexualized.

Via anf.scene7.com

Abercrombie and Fitch's new look:

Abercrombie and Fitch's new look:

Abercombie and Fitch


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Mining Magnate Frank Giustra Did Get One Favor From Bill Clinton: An Interview For His Magazine

Clinton appeared in the pages of beloved hipster food lifestyle magazine Modern Farmer — which is owned by Canadian mining magnate and Clinton donor Frank Giustra.

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Bill Clinton does not give many magazine interviews, but in September 2013, he sat with Modern Farmer— a food lifestyle publication with a small but trendy audience—to discuss global agriculture and his charitable work with farmers in the developing world.

The magazine, which suspended production earlier this year, is owned Frank Giustra, a longtime friend of Clinton's and a major donor to his charitable efforts. Giustra is also a central figure in a new, in-depth New York Times story that details how one-fifth of the uranium production capacity in the United States was sold to Russian-government controlled company, in a deal requiring the approval of the State Department while Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State. The story originated with reporting from a new book, Clinton Cash, which investigates the Clinton family foundation and financial interests.

Giustra had "significant involvement in brokering" the Modern Farmer interview, a major coup for the magazine's second issue, a former staffer told BuzzFeed News. The Times noted last year that he had "persuaded" Clinton to do the interview. At the time, the magazine's founding editor, Ann Marie Gardner, reportedly asked if a reporter could fly with Giustra and Clinton, but Giustra said no. Instead, he "delivered Clinton for a conversation," the New Yorker reported last year. Gardner did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BuzzFeed News.

Modern Farmer / Via modernfarmer.com

The Modern Farmer interview itself is somewhat perfunctory — Clinton discusses some of his earliest memories of agriculture. He also describes the work his foundation had done in Malawi, and with the assistance of Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim and Giustra, work done in Cartagena, Colombia.

"Over the last few years we've added about $3.5 million dollars to the total income of our small producers, which, given what they were living on, is a very meaningful boost," Clinton told Modern Farmer. In May 2013, Clinton visited Colombia and Peru with Slim and Giustra.

On Thursday, the Times reported on Giustra's business dealings with uranium. In 2005, Giustra's UrAsia agreed to buy stake in three Kazakh mines a few days after Giustra visited the country with Bill Clinton to meet with the president, Nursultan Nazarbayev. UrAsia then merged with the South African company Uranium One in 2007; Giustra sold his stake in the company that year, a Giustra spokesperson told the Times.

Uranium One then purchased a series of American uranium assets, before eventually being taken over by a ARMZ, a subsidiary of the Russian atomic energy agency Rosatom. Several figures in the deals, including the chairman of Uranium One, made large donations to the Clinton Foundation, the Times reported.

Nowhere in the Times story is there evidence of any type of quid pro quo between donations and business favors.

A spokesman for the Clinton Foundation said Thursday that Clinton "welcomed the opportunity" to discuss the foundation's agricultural work with Modern Farmer.

"The Clinton Development Initiative (CDI) is helping more than 56,000 smallholder farmers in Malawi, Tanzania, and Rwanda increase their incomes by giving them access to high-quality inputs, better farming techniques, technology and markets, and Modern Farmer is a major journal about farming, so President Clinton welcomed the opportunity to discuss the work," Clinton Foundation spokesperson Craig Minassian told BuzzFeed News. "Frank's program also helps empower farmers in Latin America and he obviously was involved with the magazine."


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Amazon Finally Reveals The Size Of Its Massive Cloud Computing Business

“Amazon Web Services is a $5 billion business and still growing fast — in fact it’s accelerating.”

Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos.

Sajjad Hussain / Getty Images

The public finally knows a little more about Amazon's 9 year old cloud computing businesss Amazon Web Services. The company for the first time broke out revenue and profit figures for AWS, saying it had $1.57 billion in sales in the first quarter of this year and $265 million in profit, up from a $245 million profit and $1.05 billion in sales in the first quarter of last year. AWS's margins, however, declined to 16.9% from 23.3% in the first quarter of last year.

While the revenue figure was in line with what many analysts expected, the robust profit figure was a surprise, especially considering how willing Amazon is to sacrifice the profitability of a business in order to drive up revenue and win market share.

"Amazon Web Services is a $5 billion business and still growing fast — in fact it's accelerating," Jeff Bezos, the chief executive of Amazon, said in a statement. "Born a decade ago, AWS is a good example of how we approach ideas and risk-taking at Amazon. We strive to focus relentlessly on the customer, innovate rapidly, and drive operational excellence."

While analysts and industry figures always knew Amazon was the biggest player in cloud computing—streaming video giant Netflix is one prominent customer—the company's willingness to break out the numbers shows just how massive it is. Rackspace, one of Amazon's cloud competitors, had $1.8 billion in revenue in all of 2014. Amazon said it pulled in $4.6 billion in the same period.

Otherwise, it was a typical quarter for Amazon: the company lost just as much money as analysts expected (12 cents a share, or $57 million) and saw revenue grow a little faster than Wall Street expected, leaping 15% to $22.7 billion. Investors cheered the results, boosting the stock up more than 6% in after-hours trading.

"We are so grateful to our AWS customers and remain dedicated to inventing on their behalf," Bezos said.



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Small Business Lender Funding Circle Raises $150 Million

Like other online lending marketplaces, the company is growing fast, and becoming a magnet for investor cash.

Funding Cirlce / Via fundingcircle.com

Another marketplace lender, another massive funding round. The U.K.-based lender Funding Circle has raised $150 million from investors DST Global, run by Russian billionaire Yuri Milner, Baillie Gifford, Sands Capital Ventures, Temasek, Singapore's sovereign wealth fund, and an investment fund managed by the asset manager BlackRock.

Funding Circle, founded in 2010, has originated over $1 billion of small business loans in the U.S. and the U.K. and is lending some $75 million a month. The company is projecting that it will lend over $1 billion this year. It did not disclose its valuation in today's announcement.

The money will be poured back into the company's operations, including its technology.

Funding Circle expanded to the U.S. in 2013. Like other marketplace lenders, it makes loans and then sells them to investors, collecting fees in the process. Prosper, which lends to individuals, raised $165 million from investors earlier this month, while OnDeck, which makes loans to businesses, raised around $200 million in IPO late last year.

"Small commercial credit is a massive market that's poorly served," Sam Hodges, Funding Circle's U.S. managing director, said in an interview with BuzzFeed News.

Like many quickly growing companies that feed on venture capital, this latest massive round comes soon after another sizable fund raise. The company raised $65 million last year in a round led by venture capital firm Index Ventures.

Funding Circle's loans have terms of up to five years and interest rates between 6% and 21%.

"We're in a fortunate position. We didn't need to raise the money at all; we had a meaningful amount of capital left on the balance sheet," Hodges said. "If we wanted to, we could take the company cash flow positive, but we see the opportunity to accelerate and the opportunity is massive. We want to make sure we can realize that. This makes us one of the best-capitalized marketplace lenders in the world."



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

eBay Has A Problem: It's About To Lose Its Biggest Business

In results announced today, the company’s PayPal unit, which includes Venmo, reported larger revenues than the core auctions business, for the first time in eBay’s history.

Matt Cardy / Getty Images

While eBay managed to beat Wall Street's expectations for the first quarter of this year, its auctions business continued to lose ground to its payments business. And that's a problem for eBay, because the 20-year-old e-commerce pioneer will soon be split in two, with the faster-growing PayPal unit becoming a separate company.

That means eBay's core auctions business will have to stand on its own, even though its revenues shrunk to $2.07 billion during the quarter, down 4% from the same period last year. The payments unit, including PayPal and Venmo, had revenue of $2.11 billion, up 14%. It was the first quarter the payments business pulled in more revenue than the auctions site.

The company said the rising value of the U.S. dollar hammered the total amount of commerce done over its marketplace in dollar terms, saying it declined 2% to $20.2 billion, down 4% overseas and up 2% in the U.S. Stripping out the effects of the stronger dollar, eBay said that the total amount transacted in its marketplace would have gone up 5%. The total volume of payments through PayPal, on the other hand, grew 18% to $61 billion in the first quarter of this year.

Devin Wenig, the head of eBay marketplaces, said on a call with analysts that the division's results were "encouraging" considering the poor year it had in 2014, when it was hammered by a security breach and lower search traffic thanks to a punishment from Google for certain search engine optimization tactics.

"We are certainly not ready to declare a victory over last year's SEO and password reset challenges, but we are making progress. SEO-generated traffic is still impacting growth," Wenig said.

"We had a strong first quarter, with eBay and PayPal off to a good start for the full year," eBay Chief Executive Officer John Donahoe said in a statement. "I feel very good about the performance of our teams."

Donahoe also said that the "smooth separation" of the two would happen in the third quarter of this year. "We are deeply committed to setting up eBay and PayPal to succeed and to deliver sustainable value to our shareholders," he said.



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

New Item On The Shelves At Sam's Club: $350,000 Small Business Loans

The wholesale club said it will team up with loan marketplace Lending Club to offer financing for its small business customers.

Danny Johnston / AP

For the millions of small businesses that already use their Sam's Club membership to stock up on everything from bulk ketchup to office supplies, the wholesale club is about to put a new product on offer: small business loans of up to $350,000.

The chain, a subsidiary of Walmart, will operate a lending platform, with loan marketplace Lending Club offering loans between $5,000 and $350,000 and Smart Biz offering loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration. Sam's Club members will get a 20% discount on fees related to the loans.

The new lending service will sit alongside the wholesaler's growing line of small business services, which it began rolling out in 2014. Sam's Club members can already purchase health insurance through Aetna, credit card processing hardware and services from First Data, online marketing services from web.com, accounting and tax services from 1-800 Accountant, and legal services from Legal Zoom.

The new services "are not aimed primarily at generating revenue for Sam's Club," said CEO Rosalind Brewer on a call with reporters. "We're focused on increasing the value of Sam's Club membership."

With more than 47 million members, plenty of them small businesses, Sam's Club's scale is a tempting proposition for service providers looking to get their products in front of more customers. Sam's Club's $58 billion in revenue makes up about 12% of Wal-Mart's total revenues, and if broken out on its own, would make the chain America's eighth-largest retailer, just below CVS but above Amazon.

"We wanted the new services to be simple, affordable and reliable and to offer exclusive savings our members can't find anywhere else," Brewer said. "We leveraged our scale to establish these exclusive savings from our sheer size."

Overall, Sam's Club said members could save up to $2,300 a year by buying services through the retailer, with discounts for the services ranging from about 20% to 25%. The chain's foray into services is an echo of new offerings from its parent company; WalMart launched a service this year allowing customers to collect their tax returns in cash at its stores, and last year introduced a low-cost money transfer service.



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

The Senate Soup Of The Day Is Strike

Low-wage contract workers in U.S. Senate offices and other federal buildings protested Wednesday, demanding a wage increase.

The nationwide campaign for an increase to the minimum wage reached the U.S. Capitol building Wednesday, as workers in Senate offices and other federal buildings held a day-long strike.

The nationwide campaign for an increase to the minimum wage reached the U.S. Capitol building Wednesday, as workers in Senate offices and other federal buildings held a day-long strike.

Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images

U.S. Senate cafeteria workers and janitors were among those who marched through Washington D.C. on Wednesday morning, stopping on the lawns outside the Capitol to demand a $15 minimum wage.

"They feed the generals in the Pentagon, they also personally serve U.S. senators, some of whom are running to be the next president of the United States," Good Jobs Nation Campaign Director Joseph Geevarghese told the crowd. "These workers strike because they want our nation to know that their taxpayer dollars are keeping everyday Americans in poverty."

Good Jobs Nation, an offshoot of the labor federation Change to Win, is campaigning for President Obama to sign executive orders that would force federal agencies to give preference in contract bidding to privately-owned businesses that pay workers a $15 minimum wage.

In February 2014, the president signed an executive order that raised the minimum wage to $10.10 for all workers on federal construction and service contracts. However, labor activists say the increase is not enough.

Among those supporting the campaign was independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who told the demonstrators that a higher wage is needed.

Among those supporting the campaign was independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who told the demonstrators that a higher wage is needed.

Sen. Bernie Sanders addresses the crowd.

Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images

"What we're saying today is pretty simple," Sanders said. "The taxpayers of this country want to make sure that when government contracts are made those employers who get those contracts pay employees a living wage, that they allow their workers to form a union, that they provide good benefits to their workers."

BuzzFeed News has sought comment from the National Association of Government Contractors, but the group said last September, that after the president's executive order and other regulations went into effect, federal contractors have been burdened by the increasing costs.

"The changes mean rising compliance costs and barriers to entry into contracting for small to mid-sized contractors without the resources to keep up with the ever-evolving regulatory demands," wrote Simon Brody, the group's communication officer.

Across the United States, unions have been making increasing demands on all levels of government to raise the minimum wage. Earlier this month, fast food workers staged a national day of protest. Organizers labelled it the largest demonstration of underpaid workers ever. Also this year, Target and Walmart raised their minimum wages to $9 an hour.


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Protests As Baltimore Police Release Names Of Cops Suspended Over Freddie Gray's Death

Six officers have been suspended without pay while officials investigate the death of Freddie Gray. Hundreds of people marched on a Baltimore police station Tuesday evening.

Hundreds of protesters marched on a Baltimore police station on Tuesday evening, demanding justice for a man who died on Sunday from spinal injuries suffered during an arrest.

Hundreds of protesters marched on a Baltimore police station on Tuesday evening, demanding justice for a man who died on Sunday from spinal injuries suffered during an arrest.

Patrick Semansky / AP

However, according to police, when Gray was unloaded from the van he was unconscious, having suffered spinal injuries that put him in a coma and ultimately killed him one week later.

The Justice Department announced Tuesday it would conduct its own investigation into the death, but Baltimore police have said none of the officers involved in his arrest described using force or putting a knee on Gray's back.

On Tuesday, Baltimore police released to the media the names of the six officers suspended without pay while Gray's death is investigated.

On Tuesday, Baltimore police released to the media the names of the six officers suspended without pay while Gray's death is investigated.

Members of the Baltimore Police Department stand behind barriers outside of the Western District police station during a march for Freddie Gray on Tuesday.

Patrick Semansky / AP

Those named included Lt. Brian Rice, 41, a member of the Baltimore police since 1997; Officer Caesar Goodson, 45, a member since 1999; and Sgt. Alicia White, 30, a member since 2010.

Also named were three officers who joined the Baltimore Police Department in 2012: Officer Edward Nero, 29; Officer William Porter, 25; and Officer Garrett Miller, 26.

Baltimore Police Department spokesman Capt. Eric Kowalczyk told CNN that it was standard practice to name officers involved after a death in custody.

According to the Guardian, Rice was the officer who led the initial chase. The newspaper reported Wednesday that the officer was accused of domestic violence in 2008 and 2013.


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Lindsay Lohan Instagrammed Some Arabic That Actually Means "You're An Ass"

At least it’s not a tattoo.

On Tuesday afternoon, Lindsay Lohan uploaded this inspirational picture to her Instagram account.

On Tuesday afternoon, Lindsay Lohan uploaded this inspirational picture to her Instagram account.

instagram.com

Thinkstock / Getty Images

Fail.

Fail.

Paramount Pictures / Via giphy.com


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

California Man Beaten By Sheriffs After Horse Chase Receives Huge Settlement

youtube.com

A man who was filmed being beaten by sheriff deputies in California after fleeing on horseback earlier this month will receive a $650,000 payout, county officials said Tuesday.

A news helicopter captured the moment Francis Pusock, 30, was thrown from his horse on April 9 near the San Bernardino National Forest before being kicked and punched repeatedly by deputies despite appearing to have surrendered.

"The sole purpose of this agreement for both parties is to avoid the costs involved in litigation," said Board of Supervisors Chairman James Ramos in a statement. "This agreement is a fair outcome for everyone involved, including the taxpayers."

San Bernardino County has not been forced to admit any wrongdoing under the terms of the settlement agreement, which was approved by county supervisors on Tuesday and Pusok's attorney on Friday.

Francis Pusok.

San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department / AP Photo

The incident occurred after Pusok fled a home in Apple Valley when deputies attempted to serve a search warrant related to identify theft, according to the sheriff's office. After abandoning his car, Pusok allegedly then stole a horse to make his getaway.

When he was thrown from the animal in rugged terrain, police attempted to use a Taser on Pusok – but it was ineffective because of his loose clothing, the sheriff's office said. It was then that the news helicopter filmed the deputies repeatedly striking the suspect.

The sheriff's office said Pusok was treated in hospital for "minor injuries consisting of abrasions and bruising." He was subsequently charged with felony evading, theft of a horse, possession of stolen property, an an active warrant for reckless driving.

On April 10, the sheriff's office placed 10 deputies on administrative leave after launching an investigation into the use of force.

“The video surrounding this arrest is disturbing and I have ordered an internal investigation be conducted immediately," said Sheriff John McMahon in an April 9 statement. “In addition, members of the Specialized Investigation Detail are responding to conduct the criminal investigation.”

Pusok has previously faced multiple counts of resisting arrest or being aggressive toward officers, having been arrested at least six times in recent years, according to the Los Angeles Times.

"Everyone keeps asking, 'Why did he run?'" Sharon Brunner, an attorney for Pusok, told the Los Angeles Times. "[He] saw the police and knew it was going to be bad, and it was."



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Senior Australian ISIS Member Linked To ANZAC Day Plot Calls For More Attacks

ISIS Video

The man reported to be the most senior Australian fighting for ISIS has called for attacks in his native country in a new militant propaganda video, just days after counterterrorism police in Melbourne foiled a terror plot he allegedly helped to plan.

Neil Prakash, who has since adopted the nom de guerre Abu Khaled al-Cambodi, is believed to be the most senior Australian member of ISIS, serving as an important recruiter. Australian federal police are investigating his links to the five Melbourne men arrested last week for plotting to attack ANZAC Day celebrations.

ISIS Video

"I also send a message to my brothers, my beloved brothers in Islam in Australia," he says in the video. "Now is the time to rise, now is the time to wake up... You must start attacking them before they attack you."

"All I hear on the news in Australia is that this sister has been violated, this sister had her hijab ripped off, but no, you see the brothers sitting [around]," he says.

The ABC reported that the 23-year-old, who is of Fijian-Indian and Cambodian background, journeyed to Syria in early 2013. After former Sydney bouncer Mohammad Ali Baryalei died fighting in Syria in 2014, Prakash is believed to have assumed his place as a senior recruiter.

ISIS Video

"Islamic State is sort of like a comet with a long tail -- it's got a very tight nucleus then a long diffuse tail," Greg Barton, director at Monash University's Global Terrorism Research Centre, told the ABC on Monday. "It looks as if Prakash is right in that nucleus."

Numan Haider.

Facebook.

The new propaganda film, which is heavily edited and stylized in line with ISIS video production skills, appears to have been filmed before the Melbourne arrests, although the video is undated.

However, Prakash does make reference to his "dear brother Numan," who is believed to be Numan Haider, an 18-year-old man shot dead after stabbing two counterterrorism officers in Melbourne in September 2014.

ISIS Video

In the 12-minute video, entitled "The Story of Abu Khaled al-Cambodi," Prakash shares his story of how he converted to Islam. He described feeling socially lost and confused, as well as distanced about his family's Buddhism. "Don’t you ever think
all this time you’re working, working, working, and all this money goes to the
government?" he says, relaying a conversation he had with a relative. "If you think about it deeply they use that money to have war on other people."

After spending minutes sharing his wandering story, which is emblematic of the multitudes of disaffected young men who have drifted towards jihadist Islam, Prakash then blasts media coverage of ISIS recruits. "The media has
portrayed that we come here, that we are social outcasts, that we had nobody,
that we had to turn to Islam because we were just trouble makers in the past, but this is far from the reality," he says.

Australian Police Arrest Five Teens In ISIS-Inspired Terror Plot

Alleged Melbourne Terror Teens ‘Recruited From The Front Line’



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Monday, April 20, 2015

Hillary Clinton perfected her BlackBerry stare on a Game Boy

7 creative tips to make your photos stand out

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Take off the filters. Bring on the funk.

In a video by COOPH, photographers Anastasia Ehlakova and Julia Gebhardt demonstrate seven techniques for more creative pictures, including freelensing, collage and long exposure photography.

Your usual photo filters might make you look super deep, but the best way to make a picture pop is to have fun.

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Washington Post Reporter Facing Espionage Charges In Iran

Jason Rezaian has been held in Tehran since July 2014.

Vahid Salemi / AP

Iranian authorities are set to charge Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian with espionage and three other "serious crimes," the Post reported Monday.

Rezaian, the Post's Tehran bureau chief, was arrested on July 22 last year, along with three other journalists, including his wife, Yeganeh (Yegi) Salehi.

His attorney, Leila Ahsan, told the newspaper that, in addition to espionage, Rezaian is accused of collecting classified information, "collaborating with hostile governments," and "propaganda against the establishment."

Iran's Revolutionary Court has still not officially announced the charges, according to the Post.

Ahsan said the indictment accuses Rezaian of collecting information "about internal and foreign policy" and handing it over to "individuals with hostile intent," accusing him of writing to President Barack Obama.

"Jason is a journalist, and it is in the nature of his profession to gain access to information and publish them," Ahsan told the Post. "My client, however, has never had any direct or indirect access to classified information to share with anyone."

The newspaper's executive editor, Martin Baron, released a statement on Twitter:

"The manufactured charges against Jason and Yegi that Iran's courts are now putting forth represent propaganda, not justice," Baron said in his statement to the Post. "The world will be watching; any just outcome to this tragic charade can result only in Jason and Yegi's exoneration and immediate release."

The State Department said it was aware of the reports of charges. "While we cannot confirm the nature of the charges ourselves, we consider the charges that have been reported to be baseless and absurd," an official told BuzzFeed News in a statement. "Jason should be released immediately so that he can return to his family."


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Excellent timing: HBO bets big on a popular web series about a pot dealer

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Vimeo's critically-acclaimed web series High Maintenance is making the jump to the big time.

HBO announced on Monday — 4/20, natch — that it has picked up six episodes of the comedy, which features a Brooklyn pot dealer (Ben Sinclair) whose clientele is as unique as the city in which he lives.

This is big news for Vimeo, the video-sharing website, as High Maintenance was its first original series

"The pickup by HBO is incredible validation for the show as well as the global creative community developing and releasing innovative programming directly on Vimeo," Vimeo CEO Kerry Trainor said in a statement. "The barriers between online and traditional distribution continue to erode and we look forward to continuing to support High Maintenance as well as future projects from Ben and Katja." Read more...

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All of the weed smoked on 'Broad City'

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On Comedy Central's Broad City, there are three stars: Abbi Jacobson, Ilana Glazer and hundreds of dollars worth of weed

In honor of 420, Digg brilliantly edited together clips from every smoking scene on the show thus far.

Even if you're not living the high life out, you can live vicariously through Jacobson and Glazer's enduring love affair with all things weed

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.

BONUS: Beauty and buds: A weed facial experience in Colorado

Read more...

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