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This Is How Hillary Clinton Gets the Coverage She Wants

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This Is How Hillary Clinton Gets the Coverage She Wants

Hillary Clinton’s supporters often argue that mainstream political reporters are incapable of covering her positively—or even fairly. While it may be true that the political press doesn’t always write exactly what Clinton would like, emails recently obtained by Gawker offer a case study in how her prodigious and sophisticated press operation manipulates reporters into amplifying her desired message—in this case, down to the very word that The Atlantic’s Marc Ambinder used to describe an important policy speech.

The emails in question, which were exchanged by Ambinder, then serving as The Atlantic’s politics editor, and Philippe Reines, Clinton’s notoriously combative spokesman and consigliere, turned up thanks to a Freedom of Information Act request we filed in 2012 (and which we are currently suing the State Department over). The same request previously revealed that Politico’s chief White House correspondent, Mike Allen, promised to deliver positive coverage of Chelsea Clinton, and, in a separate exchange, permitted Reines to ghost-write an item about the State Department for Politico’s Playbook newsletter. Ambinder’s emails with Reines demonstrate the same kind of transactional reporting, albeit to a much more legible degree: In them, you can see Reines “blackmailing” Ambinder into describing a Clinton speech as “muscular” in exchange for early access to the transcript. In other words, Ambinder outsourced his editorial judgment about the speech to a member of Clinton’s own staff.

On the morning of July 15, 2009, Ambinder sent Reines a blank email with the subject line, “Do you have a copy of HRC’s speech to share?” His question concerned a speech Clinton planned to give later that day at the Washington, D.C. office of the Council on Foreign Relations, an influential think tank. Three minutes after Ambinder’s initial email, Reines replied with three words: “on two conditions.” After Ambinder responded with “ok,” Reines sent him a list of those conditions:

From: [Philippe Reines]
Sent: Wednesday, July 15 2009 10:06 AM
To: Ambinder, Marc
Subject: Re: Do you have a copy of HRC’s speech to share?

3 [conditions] actually

1) You in your own voice describe them as “muscular”

2) You note that a look at the CFR seating plan shows that all the envoys — from Holbrooke to Mitchell to Ross — will be arrayed in front of her, which in your own clever way you can say certainly not a coincidence and meant to convey something

3) You don’t say you were blackmailed!

One minute later, Ambinder responded:

From: Ambinder, Marc
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2009 10:07 AM
To: Philippe Reines
Subject: RE: Do you have a copy of HRC’s speech to share?

got it

Ambinder made good on his word. The opening paragraph of the article he wrote later that day, under the headline “Hillary Clinton’s ‘Smart Power’ Breaks Through,” precisely followed Reines’ instructions:

When you think of President Obama’s foreign policy, think of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. That’s the message behind a muscular speech that Clinton is set to deliver today to the Council on Foreign Relations. The staging gives a clue to its purpose: seated in front of Clinton, subordinate to Clinton, in the first row, will be three potentially rival power centers: envoys Richard Holbrooke and George Mitchell, and National Security Council senior director Dennis Ross.

Based on other emails released in the same batch we received, Ambinder’s warm feelings toward Clinton may have made him uniquely susceptible to Reines’ editing suggestions. On July 26, 2009, he wrote to Reines to congratulate his boss about her appearance on Meet the Press:

From: Ambinder, Marc
Sent: Sunday, July 26, 2009 12:05 PM
To: Philippe Reines
Subject: she kicked A

on MTP

On November 29, 2010, he sent along another congratulatory note, apparently in regard to a press conference Clinton had held that day to address the publication of thousands of State Department cables by WikiLeaks:

From: Ambinder, Marc
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 12:05 PM
To: Philippe Reines
Subject: This is an awesome presser...

She is PITCH f#$*& PERFECT on this stuff.

The emails quoted above are particularly remarkable given Ambinder’s understanding of Clinton’s press strategy, as he articulated in a column for The Week last year. Predicting how Clinton’s widely documented aversion to reporters would play out in the 2016 presidential race, Ambinder wrote, “The Clinton campaign will use the press instrumentally. ... Good news for us, though: The reporters covering Clinton are going to find ways to draw her out anyway, because they’re really good, they’ll give her no quarter, and they’ll provide a good source of accountability tension [sic] until Walker (or whomever) emerges from the maelstrom.”

When asked for comment about his correspondence with Reines, Ambinder wrote in an email to Gawker, “I don’t remember much about anything, but I do remember once writing about how powerful FOIA is, especially as a mechanism to hold everyone in power, even journalists, accountable.” When asked to elaborate, he followed up with a longer message:

Philippe and I generally spoke on the phone and followed up by email. The exchange is probably at best an incomplete record of what went down. That said, the transactional nature of such interactions always gave me the willies.... Since I can’t remember the exact exchange I can’t really muster up a defense of the art, and frankly, I don’t really want to. I will say this: whatever happened here reflects my own decisions, and no one else’s.

In a subsequent phone exchange, Ambinder added:

It made me uncomfortable then, and it makes me uncomfortable today. And when I look at that email record, it is a reminder to me of why I moved away from all that. The Atlantic, to their credit, never pushed me to do that, to turn into a scoop factory. In the fullness of time, any journalist or writer who is confronted by the prospect, or gets in the situation where their journalism begins to feel transactional, should listen to their gut feeling and push away from that.

Being scrupulous at all times will not help you get all the scoops, but it will help you sleep at night. At no point at The Atlantic did I ever feel the pressure to make transactional journalism the norm.

Ambinder emphasized that the emails did not capture the totality of his communication with Reines, and said they were not indicative of his normal reporting techniques. When asked if the exchange was typical of the magazine’s reporting and editing process, a spokesperson for The Atlantic told Gawker: “No, this is not typical, and it goes against our standards.”

Reines didn’t respond when we asked if he engaged in similar transactions with other reporters covering the State Department. But on the day of his trade with Ambinder, at least one other journalist used Reines’ preferred adjective—“muscular”—to describe the speech at the Council on Foreign Relations. That reporter was none other than Mike Allen of Politico:

This Is How Hillary Clinton Gets the Coverage She Wants

Allen even took note of the seating arrangement, just as Reines had requested of Ambinder:

A look at the CFR’s guest seating chart shows that arrayed in the front row will be top members of her team — the envoys she has called her “force multipliers”: Richard Holbrooke, George Mitchell, Dennis Ross, Philip Goldberg and Stephen Bosworth.

We can’t say for sure that Reines implored Allen to describe Clinton’s speech as “muscular” and emphasize where particular audience members were seated, but that kind of request would hardly be out of the ordinary. As we noted above, Allen allowed Reines to ghost-write an item for his Playbook newsletter; and, in the course of attempting to secure an interview with Chelsea Clinton, told Reines he was prepared to submit interview questions to Clinton’s team in advance for their approval.

Allen referred our questions to Politico’s spokesperson, who told Gawker via email: “Mike’s preview of this speech includes multiple ‘aides say’ qualifiers and is transparent in that it’s based on ‘prepared remarks’ and a ‘seating chart.’” (If Allen and Reines did indeed email about Clinton’s speech, however, we expect to receive a copy of their correspondence in a subsequent batch as the State Department continues to process our request.)

In any case, Reines’ strategy worked out nicely. For an article aggregating Allen’s piece, New York magazine quoted his use of “muscular” in the headline, and even commissioned an illustration of Clinton wearing the arms of a body builder.


The most recent batch of emails revealed another notable sausage-making exchange between Reines and a prominent reporter. In several emails sent in early September 2009, Mark Halperin—then at Time, now at Bloomberg News—appears to have arranged for a computer pre-configured with Microsoft’s Outlook calendaring software to be delivered to Reines’ house in Washington, D.C., so that Reines would be able to open particular documents in his possession, including Hillary Clinton’s travel schedules during the 2008 presidential campaign, and relay their contents to Halperin. In one email, the reporter writes to Reines:

the computer is ready to be delivered. I could have it there in 20-25 minutes

It has a newly downloaded version of Outlook, which has not been installed, because it has to be done linked to an email. I am hoping/assuming you can do that.

Is now a good time to have it brought over? Should it be left with a doorman or left upstairs?

It’s unclear from the exchange whether Reines actually provided any documents to Halperin or simply relayed the information therein. But perhaps the more interesting aspect of Reines and Halperin’s correspondence is that, the day after Halperin had the computer delivered, Reines began asking Halperin whether he and his co-author John Heilemann would include him in Game Change, the book-turned-movie they were writing about the 2008 campaign: “Do I have a big enough role to warrant a role in the movie, a la Jeremy Bash in Recount?” To which Halperin responds: “Well, the first response is, do you want that?” The thread continued:

Reines: “Yes, I want to be an amalgam like he was!”

Halperin: “ok then. the book doesn’t do amalgams. but the movie just might. let me puzzle on that.”

Reines: “There’s gotta be a scene where I hand the phone to CVC: That’s good TV.”

Halperin: “agreed, although hard to get your name in the film in said scene.”

Reines: “True”

Halperin: “we could make you the kennedy character or the mills character. going all postal on the wednesday call.”

In the end, Reines rated only two mentions in the finished book—on pages 46-47 and page 52 in the paperback—and none in the movie. (Neither Reines nor Halperin responded to a request for comment.)

http://www.amazon.com/Game-Change-Cl...


You’ll find highlights from the last two rounds of Reines emails we received from the State Department’s FOIA office. (The release from December 31 consisted of only 211 pages, so we consolidated it with the January release.) You can read and search through the rest of the emails on DocumentCloud.

Page 58 Reines emails Andy Alexander, then the ombudsman of The Washington Post, to complain about sexism in Howard Kurtz’s profile of Chuck Todd “What does it say when a paper’s ombudsman takes a paper to task for sexist writing and then only days later features a piece laced with so much blatant sexism that it’s laughable (profile of Chuck Todd)?”

Page 75 — After asking, on page 72, for quotes about Politico’s newsroom culture, Jeremy Peters of The New York Times praises Reines’ response (“If a lightbulb is out that’s a story”): “That’s brilliant. You should totally let me use that on the record. … That’s great. Anything else you can recall like that—their greatest hits of non-news—would be great.”

Page 79 Reines appears to flirt with a Miami-based media personality named Tara Gilani: “How did I look in HD?” To which Gilani responds: “You look/are the same: cocky, smart ass. Don’t take it as a compliment—it’s not.” To which Reines responds: “Oh yeah it is.”

Pages 110 through 111 Greta van Susteren emails Reines a photo of Reines laughing with the subject line: “what is so funny?”

Page 151 — Van Susteren complains to Reines about a grudge she perceives Bill Clinton to be holding against her:

I think it weird — if bill clinton is holding a grudge against me that is really weird I think I may be the only one in media who has never been smarmy towards him or repeated stuff that I have heard from him or hugh or dorothy etc which I know was said off the record because they feel comfortable talking in front of me. I have always carefully drawn the line with the clintons (and others) because I hate the media trying to destroy. I admire people in public service and never do anything rotten to people in govt so it is stunning that bill clinton would hold a grudge against me. I will still be one hundred percent fair with him (bill richardson did something really dirty to me and I have never retaliated — I have continued to do my job fair) but I am curious if it is clinton or matt [Bill Clinton spokesperson Matt McKenna] thinking he is clinton and creating problems.

Pages 227 and 250New York Times reporter David Kirkpatrick appears to engage in—or deny engaging in—some sort of quote approval protocol with Philippe Reines: “I can’t imagine I imagined a quote approval since I cleared them all, so as I said, I’m puzzled.”

Page 518 through 519 — These pages contain and unusually large redaction, apparently based upon a personal privacy exemption, that appears to concern something Reines ate while aboard a State Department aircraft.

Page 551 — Reines asks ABC News reporter Dana Hughes to “add a line taking a small poke at ‘BuzzFeed and others’ for getting this wrong,” a favor for which he would be “very appreciative.” According to the finished story, Hughes appears to have complied with Reines’ request.

Page 607 — Kimberly Dozier, then at the Associated Press (and now at The Daily Beast), appears to allude an interaction she had with Michael Hastings in an email to Reines: “I just read you had with another member of the press, who shall remain nameless in this email. I’ll tell you my run-in with the same person, over a drink sometime, if I run into you at State Dept. event.”

Page 740 — Tina Brown emails Reines about an upcoming forum called “The Hero Summit,” scheduled for November 14-15, 2012 and headlined by David Petraeus. However Petraeus does not appear to have attended the event, given that he resigned several days prior to it over his extramarital affair with his biographer, Paula Broadwell.

Page 748 — Here you can find the official copy of Reines’ infamous email exchange with Michael Hastings.

Pages 830 through 832 — Reines emails with Maureen Dowd and her research assistant, and claims that he was fired that last time he helped Maureen Dowd with a column.

Pages 971 through 980 — The State Department redacted the entirety of what appears to be ten pages of email correspondence between Reines and Carolyn Greenspan Rosen, a producer at Entertainment Tonight. The pages are marked with the exemption code “B6,” which is used to justify withhold information that, if disclosed, “would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.”

Page 1030 — Greta van Susteren emails Reines: “How come you ignore my emails?”

Page 1082 — Anne Kornblut of The Washington Post emails Reines: “I know you’re on the other side of the earth, but if you get bored in a meeting, want to send me some examples of politico’s most flagrant stupidity or errors?”

Page 1155 — Tara Palmeri of the New York Post writes to Reines about Hillary Clinton’s plans to endorse a candidate in the 2013 New York City mayoral race: “I wanted to reach out to you about Hillary’s status on Weiner. Last time we chatted you said she would likely endorse him for Mayor of New York over Bill de Blasio. In light of recent events, will Hillary still endorse Weiner for Mayor?” To which Reines responds (after asking Palmeri to identify him as a “friend”): “Her support of him remains unchanged.”


Email the author: trotter@gawker.com · PGP key + fingerprint · Photo credit: Getty Images


Ghostface Killah Deflates Goofy Martin Shkreli Beef With Deadly Serious Video

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When he decided to further his surreal feud with the Wu-Tang Clan by trolling Ghostface Killah, Martin Shkreli probably assumed he would have the upper hand in a battle of making dumb videos for the internet. But today, Ghostface released his response to Shkreli (I Love the 2010s!) and it turns out to be not dumb at all.

http://gawker.com/cool-martin-sh...

The video runs nearly 12 minutes, and if at any point in the last several months you’ve wanted to tell Martin Shkreli what a bad man he is, I suggest you watch it. It will be very cathartic. Though Ghostface lobs some benign disses at Shkreli—calling him Peter Pan, showing a meme that compares him to Pee-wee Herman, and repeating that he must have been on Ritalin as a kid, which strikes me as true—he spends much of the video excoriating Shkreli not for inflaming a legendary rap group but for his original sin: raising the price of his life-saving AIDS drug by 5000%.

“How they gon’ live, man?” Ghost asks, referring to the people who need Shkreli’s drug. “You a real killer, man. But you a soft killer. You a baby, man.”

Later, Ghostface brings out his sister and mother, who tell Shkreli that he needs to be spanked. It’s very good. If Martin Shkreli’s aim in provoking Ghostface was to be told at-length that he’s a deeply shitty person then I guess this all worked out for him? The video ends with a clip of Shkreli pleading the fifth at a recent Congressional hearing when asked what he would say to a pregnant woman with AIDS who could no longer afford the drug owned by his company. Ghostface has a real point!

Now, there is one thing about the video I have to mention. It also kinda doubles as a sales pitch for a product Ghostface hawks called Wu Goo, a hemp oil that he says can be an effective treatment against cancer:

Ghostface Killah Deflates Goofy Martin Shkreli Beef With Deadly Serious Video

One might point out that Ghostface, in hoping to sell an acutely modern version of snake oil to people with severe illnesses, isn’t as far removed from Martin Shkreli as he might think. That’s probably true, but, uh, it still sure is great to hear him disembowel a particularly deserving villain.


Contact the author at jordan@gawker.com

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

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Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

Last night, in front of thousands of people, Donald Trump stood on stage and called Ted Cruz a pussy. And while you are not supposed to say the word “pussy,” members of the media are especially not supposed to say the word “pussy.” So instead, they got creative.

Here are some of our favorite feats of linguistic gymnastics done in the name of moral decency, ranked.


11. CBS

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

10. Bustle

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

9. NBC

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

8. Bloomberg

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

7. Mother Jones

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

6. Politico

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

5. The Daily Banter

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

4. Fox News

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

3. CNN

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

2. The New York Times

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

1. Time

Journalists’ Euphemisms for the Word ‘Pussy’, Ranked

Hillary Clinton Has a Big Honking Goldman Sachs Problem

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Hillary Clinton Has a Big Honking Goldman Sachs Problem

Since the beginning of her campaign last year, Hillary Clinton has steadfastly refused to disclose what exactly she said during the speeches she gave at several large banks, including three at Goldman Sachs, after her tenure as Secretary of State. Attendees of two of those Goldman speeches, both of which took place in October 2013, are now hinting at why Clinton has been so reticent. As one attendee explained to Ben White at Politico:

When Hillary Clinton spoke to Goldman Sachs executives and technology titans at a summit in Arizona in October of 2013, she spoke glowingly of the work the bank was doing raising capital and helping create jobs, according to people who saw her remarks. ...

She spent no time criticizing Goldman or Wall Street more broadly for its role in the 2008 financial crisis. “It was pretty glowing about us,” one person who watched the event said. “It’s so far from what she sounds like as a candidate now. It was like a rah-rah speech. She sounded more like a Goldman Sachs managing director.”

Another attendee of a separate speech in New York told White that Clinton’s remarks were “mostly basic stuff, small talk, chit-chat. But in this environment, it could be made to look really bad.” Yes, yes. Very bad.

In a hilarious act of chutzpah, Clinton spokesperson Brian Fallon dismissed White’s questions as “pure trolling”—while still refusing to release the transcripts of the speeches. You can read the rest of White’s piece here.

http://www.politico.com/story/2016/02/...

By the way: If you happen to have access to the transcripts of Clinton’s bank speeches, do send them our way. Anonymity guaranteed.

Email the author: trotter@gawker.com · PGP key + fingerprint · Photo credit: Getty Images

The Future of This Great Nation Will Be Determined By Vapers

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The Future of This Great Nation Will Be Determined By Vapers

Perhaps the question we should be asking of our candidates is not who would we most like to grab a beer with, but rather, who can blow the gnarliest o’s?

With 10 million American vapers and counting—at least some of whom are presumably registered to vote—the vape life might guide the outcome of the upcoming e-lection, says conservative icon Grover Norquist.

“I think that the next election, at the presidential level, and a lot of other levels, is going to be determined by the vaping community,” Norquist, who happened to be lobbying for the Smoke-Free Alternatives Trade Association, predicted last week. “Vaping is not a product. It is a movement. It is a community, it is a political movement in support of a community and it’s changing the country in very good ways.”

http://gawker.com/yes-i-vape-con...

Democracy has spoken, and its breath smells like e-cigs.


Gawker alum Adrian Chen—now a staff writer at The New Yorker!

500 Days of Kristin, Day 381: Reebok Ad

Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

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Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Corsair PC peripherals, Valentine’s day gift cards, and discounted Sonos speakers kick off Tuesday’s best deals. Bookmark Kinja Deals and follow us on Twitter to never miss a deal. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more.

http://deals.kinja.com/todays-best-ap...


Top Deals


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Today only, Amazon’s offering big discounts on a variety of PC parts and peripherals from Corsair.

The deal doesn’t include everything you’d need to build a PC, but you’ll find cases, RAM, power supplies, an SSD, and more to get you started. And even if you’re not interested in upgrading the guts of your rig, you’ll find some great mechanical keyboards (including several from your favorite Corsair K series), mice, and other popular peripherals.

http://co-op.kinja.com/your-favorite-...

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As with all Gold Box deals, these prices are only available today, but the most popular items could very well sell out early. [Corsair Gold Box]

Note: There are two pages of deals. The navigation buttons are at the top of the page, and easy to miss.


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Dorco makes some of the best razors on the market, including the ones you get every month in your Dollar Shave Club box. If you don’t mind buying directly from the source though, you can save even more with an excellent promo code today, plus free shipping. [$10 off any $20 Dorco order, promo code SECRETFIFTY]

http://lifehacker.com/5903771/forget...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Apple’s expansive (and expensive) iPad Pro is finally starting to get some discounts, and today, you can save $100 on the base 32GB Wi-Fi model. Plus, most buyers won’t have to pay any sales tax. [Apple iPad Pro 32GB, $700]

http://gizmodo.com/what-its-like-...

http://www.ebay.com/itm/4010645723...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Once every few months or so, we’ll see the fantastic Sonos Play:1 speaker discounted to $170, and basically never less. Today on Groupon though, a discount stacked with a promo code will knock it down to $161, the best price we’ve ever seen. I can think of worse ways to spend your tax refund. [Sonos Play 1 Speaker, $161 with code EXTRA15]

http://gizmodo.com/sonos-play-1-r...

https://www.groupon.com/deals/gg-sonos...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

We see Xbox One console deals almost every day. The PS4...not so much. So if you’re in the market for one, I wouldn’t hesistate with this deal. [PS4 Uncharted Bundle + 1 Year PlayStation Plus, $350]

http://www.walmart.com/ip/46258199

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-pl...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that a 10,000mAh external battery pack for $9 is a screaming deal. That’ll get you at least two full phone charges. [Kmashi 10,000mAh Battery Pack, $9 with code JDI3KZ3Y]

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-km...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

If you still haven’t picked up a Valentine’s Day gift, Amazon’s here to bail you out with a trio of relevant gift card deals.

$50 1-800 Flowers.com Gift Card ($38) | Amazon | Promo code FLOWERS12

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

$100 Spafinder Wellness 365 Gift Card + $20 Amazon Card ($100) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01...

$100 Bedandbreakfast.com Gift Card + $15 Amazon Card ($100) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Want to get into espresso without breaking the bank? This refurbished Cuisinart can make a single or double shot with 15 bars of pressure for just $75. Sure, there are better espresso makers out there, but you’d be hard pressed to find one for under $100. [Refurb Cuisinart 15-Bar Espresso Maker, $75]

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Cuisinart-...


Amazon’s Prime Pantry program is great for stocking up on household goods and non-perishable foods without actually having to visit a store, but the $5.99 per box shipping charge has always been a drag. This month though, if you buy five select items, you can get that fee waived.

There are hundreds of eligible items running the gamut from granola bars to bandages to toilet bowl cleaner, so you shouldn’t have any trouble finding five that you need. Just add them to your box (plus anything else that will fit), and use code PANTRYFEB at checkout to get free shipping. [Free Prime Pantry shipping with five eligible purchases, promo code PANTRYFEB]

Bonus: If you already have a no-rush free shipping credit in your account, this deal actually appears to stack, netting you an extra $6 discount.


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Whether you need more space to store your photos, an extra hard drive for your Xbox One, or a backup drive to replicate all of your files, you usually won’t find a better price than $70 for a 2TB portable drive. [Toshiba Canvio Basics 2TB Portable Hard Drive, $70]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00N2S6W86/...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Normally I’d say that you don’t need to buy post-apocalyptic survival products, but...have you been watching this Presidential race? [Survival Seed Vault - Heirloom Emergency Survival Seeds, $15]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JUHTBA4/...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

We post a lot of deals on Brother mono laser printers, but if you’d prefer a Canon, the imageCLASS MF212w is on sale today for $90. That gets you a workhorse of a printer that can spit out 24 pages per minute, and includes a flatbed scanner and wireless networking. The best part though? It’s not an inkjet. [Canon - imageCLASS MF212w Wireless Mono Laser Printer, $90]

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Canon-imag...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, this attractive wine aerator is within a few cents of its all-time low price on Amazon. The alternative is of course pouring your wine in a blender, though that’s a bit less romantic. [Rabbit Wine Aerator Pourer, $12]

http://lifehacker.com/5895929/hyperd...

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0028LI9JS/...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Update: Sold out

Gym bags, sweaty shoes, and luggage after a long trip can smell pretty ripe, but these natural charcoal purifier bags can make them a little less noxious. Today on Amazon, you can get a two pack of two packs (so four bags total) for just $10. [[BOGO free] Ohuhu [Set of 2, 75g] Natural Air Purifying Bags, $10. Add two to cart and use code JP592X9F]


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Rather than try to sell you on this pillow, I’m going to turn it over to our deal researcher Corey, who actually owns one:

The pillow slowly conforms to my head position each night and remains comfortable. If it ever gets flat or bulgy in a way that’s not to my liking, a couple squishes here or there makes it perfect. Never going back.

Original Bamboo Memory Foam Hypoallergenic Pillow with Carry Bag ($19) | eBay

http://www.ebay.com/itm/2913528962...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

If you’re trying to eat healthier at work, this portable salad holder includes separate compartments for all of your different ingredients, including the dressing, plus a perfectly sized ice pack to keep everything cold and crisp. [Stay Fit Deluxe Salad Kit, EZ Freeze, $8]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003N3IF30/...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Amazon’s running a tidy little sale on digital PC games today, including the complete Mass Effect trilogy for $10, Fallout: New Vegas for $2, and a lot more.


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

If you’re a fan of fighting games, this specialized PS4/PS3 controller is designed specifically for you. And at $30, it’s never been cheaper. [HORI Fighting Commander 4 Controller for PlayStation 4/3, $30]

Need a game to go with it? Mortal Kombat X is marked down to $25 right now.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Mortal-Kom...

And Prime members can preorder Mortal Kombat XL for $48. Discount shown at checkout.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

If you never got around to playing Sleeping Dogs, the PS4 definitive edition is just $10 today on Amazon, with digital delivery. If you’re on the fence, Kotaku can help you decide. [Sleeping Dogs Definitive Edition [Digital Code], $10]

http://kotaku.com/should-you-get...

http://www.amazon.com/Sleeping-Dogs-...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

You spend a good chunk of your computing time on phones and tablets these days, so why should your desktop be the only one that can use external storage? These flash drives include a microUSB connector to interface with your Android phones and tablets, and you can pick one up for just $12-$17.

These would be perfect if you were on vacation, and didn’t have enough free space on your phone to store all the photos you wanted to take. Or if you wanted to store some HD movies to watch on your tablet during a long plane ride. And of course, it never hurts to have an easy, offline way to move files back and forth between different devices. These prices are right in line with what you’d expect to see on normal flash drives, so if you own any microUSB devices, there’s really no downside to picking one up.

SanDisk Ultra 64GB USB 3.0 OTG Flash Drive With micro USB Connector ($17) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00RBGYGPG/...

Samsung 32GB USB 3.0 Flash Drive Duo (USB / MicroUSB) ($12) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B013UHK1M6/...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Like the idea of a Belkin WeMo Switch, but not willing to spend $40 to try one out. This TP-Link alternative has a nearly identical feature set for half the price.

Just like a WeMo switch, TP-Link’s Smart Plug will let you turn appliances on and off from your smartphone, and set schedules to toggle them automatically. The only major feature it’s lacking is IFTTT support, but it will integrate with an Amazon Echo for voice control. [TP-Link Smart Plug, $20]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

I’m guessing that most of you already own an external battery pack or two, but if your new phone includes Quick Charge 2.0 support, you’ll want to upgrade your portable charger to take advantage.

$19 is a pretty solid price for any 15,000mAh battery pack; the Quick Charge port is just a cherry on top. [Aukey 15000mAh Portable External Battery Power Bank with Quick Charge 2.0, $19 with code JWRHH5I9]

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/AS...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

I was hoping Amazon would have a deal on the Echo today in light of its Super Bowl commercial appearances, but alas, we’ll have to settle for a $40 Fire tablet and $20 off Kindle e-readers.

Amazon Fire 7" ($40) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/Fire-Display-W...

Amazon Kindle ($60) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00I15SB16/...

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite ($100) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00OQVZDJM/...

Amazon Kindle For Kids Bundle ($80) | Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00XIV00EO/...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

If you’re in the market for a new Xbox One, Microsoft’s giving out $75 gift credits, plus an extra game of your choice with the purchase of select bundles. That’s in addition to any games you get with the bundle anyway, so you’ll be starting out with a solid little library. [Xbox One Bundles + Free Game + $75 Gift Credit]


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Smartphone armbands and Bluetooth headphones get along even better than Peyton Manning and Papa John, and you can get both today for just $16. [Aukey Universal Waterproof Case Bag Pouch with Armband and Aukey Wireless Stereo Sport Bluetooth Headphones, $16. Add both to cart and use code TMOG2Y8Z]

Note: The code only works with the blue earbuds.

http://www.amazon.com/Aukey-Waterpro...

http://www.amazon.com/Aukey-Bluetoot...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Aeration is an important part of any healthy lawn, and these strap-on shoe spikes make it easy (and cheap). Also great for combat! [Ohuhu Lawn Aerator Shoes, $20 with code KKPJADB2]

http://www.amazon.com/Ohuhu-Aerator-...


Today's Best Deals: Corsair Peripherals, Valentine's Day Gift Cards, and More

Today at Best Buy, if you buy one gift card to PSN, Xbox Live, Nintendo’s eShop, and more, you can get a second for 20% off. Buying digitally usually isn’t the cheapest way to buy full games, but this deal should pay off when it comes to DLC. [Gaming Gift Card Sale]

Protip: Xbox Owners can use the discount on this particular gift card pack, which includes a $5 free bonus credit. That means you can get $100 of credit for $81.


Tech


Storage

Power

Audio

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B019QRF50W/...

Home Theater

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00D4MQ06E/...

Computers & Accessories

PC Parts

Mobile Devices

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0196JFF2S

Photography


Home


http://www.amazon.com/Etekcity-Wirel...

Kitchen

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B014R3WPJY

Fitness

Apparel

Camping & Outdoors

Tools & Auto

http://www.amazon.com/Etekcity-PH-20...


Media


Movies & TV

Books & Magazines


Gaming


Peripherals

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00M5DUJQ0/...

PC

PlayStation 4

Xbox One

PlayStation 3

3DS


Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.

Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker


How to Debug Marco Rubio, According to a Roboticist 

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How to Debug Marco Rubio, According to a Roboticist 

Marco Rubio is broken.

Ever since last Saturday’s debate when Chris Christie maimed him on national television, the man that was once the Tea Party’s golden boy has seemed a bit... off. The glitch first appeared that night, as Rubio spouted off variations of the line, “Let’s dispel once and for all with this fiction that Barack Obama doesn’t know what he’s doing” not once, not twice, but four separate times.

Then again, just yesterday, the now-questionably human candidate seemed to repeat and reboot right before our very eyes. So what’s actually going on with our thrashing hard drive of a candidate? We asked Professor Chris Atkeson at the Carnegie Mellon Robotics and Human-Computer Interaction Institute to perform a little Rubiobot troubleshooting from afar.

And unfortunately for Marco, it’s worse than we thought. As Professor Atkeson explained to Gawker over email:

In terms of debugging Marcobot, there are several reasons robots repeat the same behavior, and thus several possibilities that might explain the faults and glitches we are seeing. I have to caution the public that it is often difficult to debug a robot remotely, and we really need to get Marcobot back in the lab. It appears our Turing test is failing.

The hypotheses:

  1. The behavior works. Given positive results, continuing to produce a behavior makes sense. Most robots, and many humans, feel no need to vary behavior or try or think about new things. This is an unlikely hypothesis given the media response (which may not actually reflect the impact on voters). It does not seem the behavior is working.
  2. It is sometimes hard to detect repeated behaviors or behavioral loops. Small variations in behavior or context may make detecting “similar” behaviors difficult. In the case of Marcobot, the behaviors are so similar this is not a likely hypothesis either.
  3. Sometimes computational overload requires the use of a standard set of safety behaviors, which leads to repetition of these simple safety behaviors that do not require any thinking, and may actually be just filler in that they don’t actually mean or do anything.

This seems to be the most likely explanation.

So Marco, wherever you are (you’re in New Hampshire), go home—before things get worse. Remember what happened to Hitchbot in Philly? You and Hitchbot are too fragile for this cruel and heartless world.

After all, your friends are waiting.

How to Debug Marco Rubio, According to a Roboticist 

Kanye, What Do You Think About Bill Cosby?

The bees are dying because people keep moving them around, facilitating the spread of a wing-breakin

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The bees are dying because people keep moving them around, facilitating the spread of a wing-breaking virus. Also: “A picture with an earlier version of this article, using information from a photo agency, was published in error. It was of a fly mimicking a bee, not a bee.”

Racist New Hampshire Voters Probably Going Trump

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Racist New Hampshire Voters Probably Going Trump

According a CBS exit poll, a vast majority of Republican New Hampshire voters support at least a *temporary* blanket ban on all Muslim immigrants. Which is to say, a vast majority of New Hampshire Republicans are pretty racist and probably voting Trump.

It’s still much to early to tell whether Trump will actually take the lead (right now, him, Cruz, and Kasich are sitting neck-and-neck). But if these exit polls are anything to judge by, New Hampshire has Trump’s name written all over it.


The Freedom Tower Appears to Be on Fire Right Now—But Appearances Can Be Deceiving

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Vanity Fair’s digital director, Mike Hogan, tweets that what appears to be fire pouring out of the top of the Freedom Tower (a.k.a. One World Trade Center) is a “steam condition,” citing the Fire Department.

Sure looks like fire.


Contact the author of this post: brendan.oconnor@gawker.com.

Here's Some of What We Learned From Tonight's New Hampshire Exit Polls

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Here's Some of What We Learned From Tonight's New Hampshire Exit Polls

Well folks, it’s that lovely election night limbo after the polls have begun to close and before anyone actually knows anything, and so instead we have to look at exit polls! Exit polls are only ever indicative of bad things. How bad? Let’s find out.

Two-thirds of New Hampshire Republicans interviewed by CNN said that the most recent debate was “important to their choice” on Tuesday. Half said they felt “betrayed” by the GOP (fair!) and about half said they were “angry” about the federal government.

New Hampshire Republicans are also looking for a candidate with personality. From NBC News:

About a third (34 percent) of Granite State Republicans said they were looking for a candidate who shares their values when deciding whom to support. Another 30 percent wanted a candidate who can bring about change, and 21 percent were looking for a candidate who “tells it like it is.” Just 11 percent placed priority on a candidate’s electability.

Fifty-three percent of Democrats also told NBC that the debates were an important factor in their decision today. Only 12 percent of Democrats in the state are upset about the federal government, and 37 percent have “positive feelings” about Washington.

Also, well more than half of Republican voters polled by CBS in New Hampshire want to ban Muslims.

http://gawker.com/racist-new-ham...


Image via AP Photos. Contact the author of this post: brendan.oconnor@gawker.com.

Martin O'Malley Barely Edging Out Vermin Supreme in Early Results

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Martin O'Malley Barely Edging Out Vermin Supreme in Early Results

With 3% of New Hampshire precincts reporting, boot-as-hat wearing crazy sorcerer man Vermin Supreme has 0.2% of the Democratic vote. Martin O’Malley, who ran a modern political campaign, currently has 0.3%.

[Photo: AP]


Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Win New Hampshire

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Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Win New Hampshire

With ten percent of precincts reporting, CNN and us here at Gawker are calling it for Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump.

It is still early in the night, but with leads this clear—and since New Hampshire’s voting process actually makes sense—we can predict with confidence that we have tonight’s winners.

The Democratic vote so far, according to Decision Desk HQ:

Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Win New Hampshire

And the GOP:

Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Win New Hampshire

Contact the author at ashley@gawker.com.

Early Returns Indicate That Bill Kristol Is Extremely Wrong

Everything You Need to Know About New Hampshire's Attempted Assassination of Our Democracy [Updating]

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Everything You Need to Know About New Hampshire's Attempted Assassination of Our Democracy [Updating]

New Hampshire’s polls are closed. CNN’s graphics team hasn’t slept in weeks. And we’re about to find out who the weirdos in New Hampshire want to be our next president.

[Top image last updated 9:22 p.m.]

Here’s everything you need to know:

http://gawker.com/msnbcs-chris-h...

http://gawker.com/the-clinton-ca...

http://gawker.com/can-you-deciph...

http://gawker.com/racist-new-ham...

http://gawker.com/its-a-cold-jeb...

http://gawker.com/exit-rubio-pur...

http://gawker.com/martin-omalley...

Keep checking back! We’ll be updating all night long.


Martin O'Malley Voters Just Can't Stop Voting For Martin O'Malley!!!

Can You Decipher Karl Rove's Mysterious Cryptogram?

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While some networks (including Fox News) prefer to rely on human-sized iPads and holograms of a young Reagan to read the night’s primary results, still-frozen Thanksgiving turkey Karl Rove has chosen to go a different route. More specifically, the Zodiac Killer route.

For whatever reason, Fox refuses to stop inviting Karl Rove back on his show—despite him being aggressively wrong the last time around. Either way, Rove likes to do things his way. And his way apparently involves some paper, a whiteboard, and Karl Rove’s riddles three.

Can you decipher the Karl’s prophecy of 2016? Do you know who the Zodiac Killer is? We’re not saying the two are necessarily related, of course. We’re just asking questions.


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