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2 Girls, 1 Cup, 4 Years in Jail

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You may have forgotten the legendary gross-out porn-turned-viral video sensation "2 Girls, 1 Cup" — which sparked a wave of "reaction videos," some of which are compiled above — but the American justice system hasn't. (Poor American justice system, too, because, man, is that video disgusting.) Yesterday, Ira Isaacs, the man behind "2 Girls, 1 Cup" (though hopefully not in that way) was sentenced to four years in prison after being convicted on five counts of felony obscenity in April 2012.

His crimes? Recording and distributing porn featuring the following: women performing sex acts involving animals and human waste. Depending on how you feel about women fucking animals and eating shit, you'll consider yourself either lucky or unlucky that you were not one of the jurors in last April's trial forced to view those videos. Yesterday's ruling commenced a prosecution that lasts back to the Bush (heyo) years:

The jail time ends a long-running legal saga that saw two mistrials, including one in which sexually explicit material was found on a personal website of the chief justice of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, who was overseeing the case.

Isaacs was indicted as part of an effort by a Bush administration task force to crack down on smut in the United States. The unit has since been disbanded.

Isaacs's case is believed to be the last case of its kind in federal court.

Isaacs' 2008 trial was halted after Alex Kozinski, chief judge of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, had sexually explicit material on a personal website.

That old saying about what "they" do to men in prison might need to be appended depending on what Isaacs does to "them." A hint for his fellow prisoners: It's not chocolate.

[UPDATE: So, Isaacs did not create "2 Girls, 1 Cup." Instead, he cited it in his defense. The Brazilian man who directed "2 Girls, 1 Cup" is not in prison, on account of being in Brazil. Isaacs' gross fetish porn is much less of a sensation — except, of course, to people into bestiality.]

[via Daily Mail, image via AP]


If Manti Te'o Wants Another Fake Girlfriend, He Can Buy One From This Brazilian Web Site

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If Manti Te'o Wants Another Fake Girlfriend, He Can Buy One From This Brazilian Web Site Manti Te'o, the Notre Dame linebacker whose dead girlfriend was discovered by Deadspin to not have ever existed, is very visibly on the market right now. Maybe he's looking to pick up the pieces of his shattered personal life by falling into the arms of another fake girlfriend? If so (and who wouldn't be?), may I suggest that he consults namorofake.com.br, a Brazilian web site that allows you to buy a fake Facebook girlfriend.

The web site offers four packages, as translated from Portugese into English by Google Translate: "Signifier," "Ex-girlfriend," "Girlfriend" and "Virtual Girlfriend." Here's what Te'o would get:

  • "Signifier" would run Te'o $10 for three comments and lasts for three days, just enough for his friends to believe that he once made contact with a Brazilian female.
  • "Ex-girlfriend" offers five comments across seven days for $19, maybe enough to convince people that he once had a one night stand... with a woman in Brazil.
  • "Girlfriend" offers 10 comments across those same seven days for $39, which isn't much of a girlfriend, but, hey, maybe he could make it work.
  • "Virtual girlfriend" will run him a cool $99 with 30 comments for 30 days. The upside here is a public relationship that does actually mimic real life, the downside is that at some point in his life he would have to disclose that he paid $99 for a fake girlfriend. The upside of that, though, is that it's still not as embarrassing as the story behind his first fake girlfriend.

As Tumblr user necktomace points out, all of those options are currently sold out, which means there are a lot less happy Brazilian men than you might think. Manti Te'o is currently an unhappy American man, who could spark up a new truism of online dating: Once you become a national news story for having a girlfriend that you said died of leukemia after being in a coma following a car crash but never actually existed, you never go back.

[via necktomace, image via Getty]

Tom Cruise Gets 'Swatted'

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Tom Cruise Gets 'Swatted' Hijinks are afoot in Los Angeles, where a SWAT team was dispatched to Tom Cruise's Beverly Hills mansion after receiving a call that there was a gunman on the premises. There was no gunman at Tom Cruise's house. There was also no Tom Cruise at Tom Cruise's house — and if there's ever a gunman at Tom Cruise's house, it's probably Tom Cruise being a weirdo.

So who called a SWAT team to Tom Cruise's house? A prank caller following in the footsteps of some of Los Angeles' coolest teens, who have had SWAT teams sent to the houses of various celebrities. This is apparently called "swatting."

Cruise isn't the first celebrity targeted in a "swatting," a prank in someone calls to report a nonexistent emergency at a location, which often results in the deployment of a SWAT team. Several others have been victims of similar incidents in recent months, including Charlie Sheen, Miley Cyrus, Simon Cowell, Ashton Kutcher and Justin Bieber.

In December, Los Angeles police arrested a 12-year-old boy believed to be behind several "swatting" incidents at the homes of Kutcher and Bieber, along with local businesses.

Lt. Marc Reina said the boy used a computer program that allowed him to make TTY calls used by people who are hearing-impaired. The boy set up a fake account and began making the swatting calls via message to LAPD, he said.

Swatting! Knowing Hollywood, swatting is probably being developed into a film script as we speak, with a plot that centers on a vengeful father whose young daughter was accidentally shot and killed by a SWAT team called to the family's house by a prankster. Starring Tom Cruise.

[via LA Times, photo via Getty]

Lance Armstrong Admits to Cheating in Frustrating Oprah Interview

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Last night, Oprah aired the first part of her interview with Lance Armstrong, who admitted to her that he took performance enhancing drugs for the entirety of his career. Of course, we already know that Armstrong had all types of blood and substances flowing through his veins during his record setting seven Tour de France titles (since stripped from him) because he's been outed by everyone from his ex-teammates to Sports Illustrated. So, what do you get when you admit to truths that have long been held as such by the public in a reportedly explosive interview? An interview that is pretty damn boring.

Armstrong came clean on a number of lies of which he had long been the only prominent truther. The first of which is the fact that he took drugs. A lot of drugs.

He took drugs while winning the Tour de France races that propelled him to fame and fortune beyond anything that anyone in his sport had ever come close to achieving.

Armstrong acknowledged that not only did he cheat, he was a mega-asshole to anyone that outed him as a cheater.

He admitted that shaming his disbelievers by asking them why they didn't believe in miracles was an incredibly arrogant and stupid thing to do.

He copped to bullying Betsy Andreu, a one-time confidant who has long refused to lie on Armstrong's behalf.

Aaaaand, that's about it. Out of a whole 90 minutes, mind you. Buzzfeed Sports has video, too, but trust that the tweets are as animated as Armstrong and Oprah were.

[via @BuzzfeedSports, image via Getty]

Cross-Dressing, Show-Tunes-Loving Connecticut Priest Busted for Selling Meth and Laundering Money Through His Sex Shop

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Cross-Dressing, Show-Tunes-Loving Connecticut Priest Busted for Selling Meth and Laundering Money Through His Sex Shop

Following news that one of their former priests was arrested earlier this month for his alleged involvement in a cross-county meth ring, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport, Connecticut, released a statement expressing "shock and concern" for the "gifted, accomplished and compassionate" Monsignor.

But sources tell the Connecticut Post that the Diocese had been aware of Msgr. Kevin Wallin's "personal problems" since receiving complaints nearly two years ago from rectory personnel at St. Augustine Cathedral that Wallin was "engaging in sex acts" with "odd-looking men" while "sometimes dressed as a woman."

And then there's this:

Wallin's arrest sent shock waves through the Bridgeport and Danbury communities where he was known as a charismatic speaker who was involved in many charitable activities, and who enjoyed Broadway musicals and show tunes. He often attended musicals with his mentor, former N.Y. Cardinal Edward Egan and parishioners.

Wallin, who was St. Augustine's pastor, was granted a sabbatical in July 2011 to seek a health assessment, but was suspended in May 2012 after failing to show up for follow-up examination.

Still, he continued to receive a stipend from the Diocese up until his January 3rd arrest for possession and distribution of methamphetamine.

The Diocese stuck by Wallin even after he became the owner of a North Haven sex and smoke shop called Land of Oz & Dorothy's Place shortly after leaving the priesthood.

The Statewide Narcotics Task Force, which worked with the Drug Enforcement Administration on the joint investigation that led to Wallin's arrest, believes the man nicknamed "Monsignor Meth" used his adult entertainment business to launder much of the $9,000 he was allegedly making in weekly meth sales.

The 61-year-old was ultimately busted along with co-conspirators based in Connecticut and California after reportedly selling meth to an undercover cop on multiple occasions since September of last year.

"There is an evil invading our world and it has come to our church," St. Augustine parishioner Maria Spencer-Fonseca told the CT Post. "This was a work of evil — and I am praying for the monsignor."

The Diocese has also asked for prayers for Msgr. Wallin, saying he has "difficult days ahead for him."

[screengrab via WPIX]

Harrowing Surveillance Footage Shows Woman Getting Punched, Dragged, and Thrown Onto Subway Tracks in Philadelphia

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Harrowing Surveillance Footage Shows Woman Getting Punched, Dragged, and Thrown Onto Subway Tracks in Philadelphia

A man was arrested yesterday and charged in connection with a horrifying assault on a subway passenger in Philadelphia.

Disturbing footage of the Tuesday afternoon attack was captured by surveillance cameras inside the Chinatown SEPTA station, and ultimately led to the man's arrest two days later.

Harrowing Surveillance Footage Shows Woman Getting Punched, Dragged, and Thrown Onto Subway Tracks in Philadelphia

In the video, the attacker can be seen asking a woman for a lighter before suddenly erupting in a barrage of punches. The assailant attempts to choke the victim, then grabs her leg and drags her over to the edge of the platform, tossing her over.

He then grabs the victim's cell phone and leaves the station.

Happily, the 23-year-old woman emerged from the violence relatively unscathed, with only minor injuries to her head and face.

Following a city-wide pursuit, police apprehended 36-year-old William Clark and charged him with aggravated assault and robbery.

Clark, whose "Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resorts" jacket helped police identify him as the suspect, had a substantial rap sheet which includes priors for burglary, theft, and carjacking.

[screengrab via MyFoxPhilly, mug shot via NBC Philly]

Convincing a Coworker You Hate His Wife and Baby, Yelling (Literally) at Strangers on the Bus, and Other Questionable Advice

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Convincing a Coworker You Hate His Wife and Baby, Yelling (Literally) at Strangers on the Bus, and Other Questionable AdviceWelcome to Thatz Not Okay, a regular column in which I school inquiring readers on what is and is not okay. Please send your questions to caity.weaver@gawker.com with the subject "Thatz Not Okay."

I've been working for my boss for almost six years. During the early years while in a recession, we worked as a two man company which makes me the longest tenured hired employee at our company that currently employs eight people. We hired a guy back in June who had been fired from one of our competitors and in his first week announced that he had found out that he had knocked up his girlfriend and had decided to surprise her with a marriage proposal and a house. His girlfriend said yes to both. Now the baby is coming in a couple months and this guy has invited the whole office to the baby shower. I plan on not going to the shower and not giving a gift. For as long as I've been working we've not done office parties or gifts for birthdays or babies and people generally mind their own businesses. Also, this same guy sent out invitations for a house warming party a few months ago that I didn't attend or give a gift for. I'm not friends with the guy because I find his all around stupidity tiresome and frustrating. I anticipate another invitation later this year for his wedding which I will also ignore.

Is there proper office etiquette on how many times you can solicit gifts from your coworkers? Is that okay?

Thatz okay.

First of all, you're being a little generous with yourself if you're anticipating an invitation to the wedding of a person you openly despise. Getting on the guest list for a wedding is not the same thing as getting on the guest list for a house party. Weddings are involved and inviting people to them is expensive. Weddings are when people stop being polite and start getting real. If by some miracle you are invited to this wedding, I wholeheartedly encourage you to go, because the person getting married is obviously a living saint who operates on a more serene plane of existence than do we humans, and the wedding will probably feature some pretty cool celebrity appearances (I'm thinking Virgin Mary? Jeanne D'Arc?) for that reason.

Now that we've gotten that out of the way:

Here is a table illustrating our discordant narratives of this guy's life. Your version is on the left. Mine is on the right.

  • This guy "got fired" from one of your competitors.
  • He "found out that he had knocked up his girlfriend."
  • Since she was knocked up, he asked her to marry him
  • Since then he's been demanding gifts left and right.
  • He's stupid.
  • Your company hired an experienced new employee
  • Surprise! He and his girlfriend are expecting a baby
  • It wasn't planned but they're thrilled to build a new life together. Wedding!
  • He's hosted a few parties and taken care to invite everyone—even the grouch.
  • You're mean.



I highly doubt your coworker is playing the long con for presents. There are more cost-effective ways of acquiring clear vases and coasters than hosting parties and hoping people happen to bring them. For example: shoplifting. Also: purchasing.

Based on your email, you seem like the kind of person who corners a coworker in his office and asks him to make good on that binder clip he "borrowed" last week; who leaves your light off on Halloween to discourage "grift-or-treaters," because "if you feed them once, they'll come back next year, palms outstretched for the candy dole"; the kind of person who, if the baby were stillborn, would ask for your gift back.

I don't believe the Cratchits are inviting you to housewarmings and baby showers because they are eager for your gifts, and certainly not for your company. I believe they are doing it because they are polite.

Because when you work in an office with eight people and invite all of them but one to your parties, that person could feel left out.

So as you sit, hunched over your figures, scratching your quill onto parchment late into the night, I ask that you remember two things: one, that it is customary in the Western world to celebrate births, marriages, and even new homes with social gatherings. Two, that it's unlikely these celebrations will become recurring affairs.

Do you suspect that's why this guy was let go from his previous employer? Because he bled the company dry by soliciting a constant stream of baby clothes and wine racks?

I promise that you will not be invited to any future birthdays of the child you hate ("One more mewling mouth to feed...born in the backroom of a public house, no doubt...will end up a ward of the state in three months' time—look at the father. Anyway, how was your weekend, Janet?"), nor will you be called upon to commemorate the family's two week anniversary of living in their house with a costly gift.

If for some reason you are invited to the wedding, you are under no obligation to attend. You are under no obligation to socialize with your coworkers outside of the office ever, if you don't want to—and, hoo boy, it sounds like you don't.

However, planning to "ignore" the invitation completely is not okay. What's the rationale there? "An RSVP from me in the self-addressed stamped envelope you provided is more of a gift than you deserve"?

If you get an invite, say you'll be unable to attend and give them your regrets.

It's the best present you can give them.

Frequently, after a day of work where I am surrounded by endless chatter, I am surrounded by as many as 4 or 5 different loud cell phone conversations on the No. 31 bus in Manhattan. I don't want to hear the details of a doctor's appointment, the office politics, the fact that he finally called nor the dreaded "I'm on the bus. I'll be there in 5 minutes."

During these stressful situations, I read my book out loud. Or, in the alternative, I comment on the conversation closest to me. Yes, people do get very annoyed but they do shut up. Is that ok?

Thatz not okay.

Is there some quality in the human voice that induces stress in you? If so, my advice would be to take steps to block that out, rather than adding to the din with your own ranting and raving.

It sucks when people are loud and obnoxious on public transportation (and studies have even found that it's harder to tune out half a conversation than it is a natural back-and-forth), but that's part of the trade-off for getting a ride across town for $2.

The difference between what they're doing and what you're doing is that you are being obnoxious to them. And not just to them; to everyone. (And why is "I'm on the bus. I'll be there in 5 minutes" so dreaded? That sounds like a pretty short conversation, unless it's a running countdown of minutes and seconds. "I'll be there in 4 minutes and twenty-seven seconds. I'll be there in 4 minutes and twenty-five seconds.")

My guess would be that the reason people stop talking when you start commenting on their conversations or very pointedly reading your book aloud is that they believe you're mentally ill. Most people shut-up if they think they're at risk of getting stabbed. If a person can be moved to such fury by overhearing a mundane phone conversation, it's probably best to remain silent and hope you can slide by under their radar.

They have already adopted a philosophy you might consider: Don't willfully antagonize strangers.

And let's not forget about the other innocent bystanders here: the quiet passengers who have to put up with even more noise just because you want to make a point. You have become that which you hate.

Now their only recourse is to comment on your comments, which means the spiral of commenting, and commenting on commenting, will grow wider and wider until everyone on the bus is talking at once, the windows blow out from the sheer volume, and the driver, startled, swerves into oncoming traffic. Think how unpleasant your ride would be then.

If the sound of people talking in public enrages you, I suggest investing in headphones, earplugs, or prayer.

You could also just try a more engrossing book.

It would not be okay if we failed to acknowledge the passing of Pauline Phillips, best known as the creator of "Dear Abby," who died Wednesday at age 94. Phillips, along with her identical twin sister Esther Lederer (AKA "Ann Landers") helped keep the tradition of stranger asking strangers for advice alive for decades.

Last year Phillips' daughter, Jeanne, who took over the Dear Abby column following her mother's retirement, fielded a question about allowing a child to put stickers on the face of the deceased at the funeral. (Her advice: Nope.)

Submit your "Thatz Not Okay" questions here. Image by Jim Cooke

'Middle Aged Bored Couple' in Virginia Seeks Someone to Play Pat Robertson in Their Salvation-Themed Sex Game

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'Middle Aged Bored Couple' in Virginia Seeks Someone to Play Pat Robertson in Their Salvation-Themed Sex Game

Who among us hasn't at one time or another experimented with having Pat Robertson in the bedroom trying to save our souls while we got it on with our partner in front of him? That's what college is for!

But one "middle aged bored couple" from Kempsville, Virginia, seems intent on taking that household fantasy to the next level by adding a Home Shopping channel salesperson to the sexy picture.

'Middle Aged Bored Couple' in Virginia Seeks Someone to Play Pat Robertson in Their Salvation-Themed Sex Game

From their Craigslist ad (via Uproxx):

Both male and female late 40′s seek adventurous couple for fun times. We seek another couple for a night of fun so we can check off another on our bucket list. We would like the man to dress up and play the part of Pat Robertson and the female to wear a tight blue dress and act like she is a sales spokesperson on Home Shopping channel. My husband I would be naked and making love in our bed all the while Pat Robertson will be constantly attempting to save our souls and the female to have ongoing dialogue trying to sell us an Ab Rocket in 3 easy payments. We are open to possibly videoing the event as long as each of you sign a disclaimer. Pl;ease place the word "damnation" as subject line

Get me Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman on the phone! I have a great idea for a sequel.

[screengrab via 700 Club]


If This Dude Gets One Million Facebook Likes, His High School Crush Will Sleep with Him

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If This Dude Gets One Million Facebook Likes, His High School Crush Will Sleep with Him

Taking his cue from the kids who convinced their parents to give them a puppy after getting 1 million likes on Facebook, Petter Kverneng of Norway got his high school crush Catherine to agree to sleep with him if he secured as many Facebook likes himself.

"It was meant as a joke for our group of friends," Kverneng, 20, told the local press.

Joke or not, the "status upgrade" soon hit 4chan's /b/ imageboard, where users naturally felt compelled to help Kverneng out.

Within a matter of hours, the solicitation gained over 900,000 likes, and is presently steamrolling ahead to the 1 million mark.

Kverneng, who has been friendzoned by Catherine for years, told Norway's Nettavisen that the two plan to "keep what we promised."

His only concern now, he said, is that her father might find out.

[photo via Facebook]

Concerned Citizen Pulls Over Drunk Cop, Locks Him Up in His Own Cruiser

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Concerned Citizen Pulls Over Drunk Cop, Locks Him Up in His Own Cruiser

A South African driver is being praised for taking charge after spotting a cop allegedly driving under the influence through the streets of Pietermaritzburg.

Russell George of Prestbury told a local newspaper that he saw a police van making erratic moves and decided to follow it.

After the officer behind the wheel made several illegal maneuvers, including stopping abruptly and driving into oncoming traffic, George decided to phone emergency services and report the incident.

"After five minutes, no one had arrived," George told The Witness. "So I jumped out of my car and I approached the driver's side and asked him to come out. He looked at me and I could smell that he had been drinking."

The cop refused, so George snatched his keys and physically removed him from the car. He then dragged him over to the back of the van and locked him inside.

George noted that the cruiser appeared to have been involved in an accident.

One eyewitness said the cop told her mother he was returning for his own birthday party where he was having drinks with some friends.

Later, at the police station, it was revealed that the officer was allegedly involved in a hit-and-run accident earlier in the day, and may have also held his girlfriend at gunpoint at a nearby nightclub.

The cop was charged with driving under the influence and had his firearm taken away pending an investigation into the incident involving his girlfriend.

[H/T: Neatorama, photo via The Witness]

Road Raging Florida Man Severs Girlfriend's Thumb with His Teeth

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Road Raging Florida Man Severs Girlfriend's Thumb with His Teeth

Police in Palm Bay, Florida, say a lovers' spat ended with a man biting off his girlfriend's thumb and spitting it out on the floorboard of his car.

Ricardo Marquis Davis reportedly admitted to severing his unidentified girlfriend's thumb with his teeth after she pushed his head during a "verbal argument."

Davis, 35, was driving his significant other to her job at Taco Bell when an altercation erupted over an undisclosed topic. "She kind of pushed his head, and he responded by biting [her thumb]," Palm Bay police spokeswoman Yvonne Martinez told Florida Today.

The woman managed to get to a hospital, but doctors were unable to reattach the digit. While being treated, the victim was heard saying "I can't believe he bit my finger off."

Davis was arrested an booked on a charge of aggravated battery. He is due to undergo a mental health evaluation.

[mug shot via Florida Today]

The 2013 Guidelines for Coming Out

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The 2013 Guidelines for Coming OutJodie Foster's second public mention of Cydney Bernard — her ex-girlfriend/ partner/ roommate/euphemism/whatever, of something like 16 years -– at Sunday's Golden Globe Awards, left people confused. They argued loudly, angrily on Twitter and elsewhere, about whether this counted as Foster's real coming out and, if in fact it did, whether she did it correctly by voicing apparent anger, frustration and conflict over her cultural obligation of having to discuss her private life at all.

Unlike Mike Signorile, his noted gay peer Michael Musto was unimpressed. Musto told Out, "I thought it was a convoluted coming out speech framed as a NOT-coming-out speech, and it would have been more effective if she'd just said, ‘Yep, I'm gay,' 20 years ago."

It all solidified the prescience of Mark Harris' influential Entertainment Weekly article from last year, "By the Way, We're Gay. The New Art of Coming Out." He wrote:

Nearly five years after Jodie Foster, at an awards breakfast, thanked ‘my beautiful Cydney, who sticks with me through all the rotten and the bliss' - with no subsequent allusion to a same-sex relationship - writers, editors, and gay-rights advocates are still arguing among themselves about whether that counted as coming out.

Maybe what was so jarring about Foster's speech was how it contrasted with the "new way of dealing publicly with one's sexual orientation" that Harris wrote about:

[S]peaking in a manner that's subdued but up-front; leading by example, but not necessarily from atop a pride-parade float; setting boundaries so that some aspects of their lives remain private.

Foster was anything anything but up-front (sideways and to the left, really). She clearly was wary of disclosing her sexuality much less assuming the role of leader as a result of it. And, after opening the smallest of small windows of the protected fortress of her personal life, she seemed intent on retaining all of its boundaries.

These were her biggest downfalls where her dissenters were concerned. Granted, in some ways, Foster's speech mirrored the comings out of those who have made the the transition without so much resulting flack. Overall, though, it did not adhere to modern guidelines that we can glean from the more successful public declarations of sexuality by celebrities over past year or so. These guidelines include, sometimes simultaneously, sometimes not (see them mix and match!):

Have something tangible to lose.

Until gay people have equal rights around the globe, coming out remains a risk that can render people alienated, ignored and considered lesser. That said, some people have more to lose than others, given the states of their careers. Among those whose timing was particularly courageous are:

Frank Ocean – He came out via a narrative posted on Tumblr a week before the release of his debut album channel ORANGE, risking being shunned by the disproportionately straight-identifying worlds of R&B and hip-hop. (He's doing just fine, though.)

Matt Bomer – As a masculine, handsome potential leading man, Bomer previously shrugged off gay rumors (in a 2010 Details article, he explained, "I have a network and a show riding on my shoulders," in reference to USA's White Collar). And with good reason (probably): Jackie Collins claimed that the open secret of Bomer's sexuality kept him from being cast in 2003's ill-fated Superman: Flyby, and a troll no less prominent than Bret Easton Ellis said that a MSM such as Bomer playing the lead in Fifty Shades of Grey would be "absolutely ludicrous." That kind of discussion alone (regardless of its veracity) is just a small sample of the shit no straight actor has to deal with.

Omar Sharif, Jr. – In his coming-out essay in The Advocate, he wrote: "And so I hesitantly confess: I am Egyptian, I am half Jewish, and I am gay. That my mother is Jewish is no small disclosure when you are from Egypt, no matter the year. And being openly gay has always meant asking for trouble, but perhaps especially during this time of political and social upheaval. With the victories of several Islamist parties in recent elections, a conversation needs to be had and certain questions need to be raised. I ask myself: Am I welcome in the new Egypt?" 'Nuff said.

Anderson CooperCooper's coming-out letter via Andrew Sullivan hit the Internet two months ahead of the season premiere of his newly revamped talk Anderson Live. The world of daytime talk shows had already accepted Ellen DeGeneres, but not yet a gay man. Just a few months later, it was announced that this would be Anderson's last season. That probably has less to do with his sexuality than his stiff personality not being really suited for the job, but who knows, ultimately.

Get creative.

Frank OceanHis coming-out essay was lovely and poetic.

Anderson CooperHis coming-out essay was unadorned and straightforward.

Lana Wachowski – We'd already known that the Matrix director is transgender even when she finally spoke out about it at length for the first time in a New Yorker piece from September 2012 that devoted a lot of space to her "gender situation." But her speech the following month to accept the Human Rights Campaign's Visibility Award was more eloquent and artful than any of her public communication thus far.

Don't label yourself.

You might think that leaving things open would frustrate or confuse an audience that values the ease of black-and-white declarations, but most of these people have come out with little hassle despite not actually ever declaring a label.

Frank Ocean – He merely discussed falling in love with a man. Later, he argued against labels to GQ.

Matt Bomer – He came out by acknowledging his male partner and he, too, later voiced his disdain for labels: "What we really have to do is stop the adjective before the job title — whether it's 'black actor,' a 'gay actor' or 'anything actor. Everybody thinks that equality comes from identifying people, and that's not where equality comes from. Equality comes from treating everybody the same regardless of who they are. I hope the media and the press catches on to that because it's time to move out of 1992."

Others who have come out as having or having had a same-sex partner without specifically declaring an affiliation and/or have expressed a wariness of labeling include: Sam Champion, Todd Glass, Kristy McNichol, Azealia Banks, and, yes, Jodie Foster, who has acknowledged her sexuality only via her relationship with Bernard.

Be dead.

Sherman Hemsley and Sally Ride were only outed as a result of their deaths (and the former still isn't 100 percent confirmed). Oh, and the aforementioned issue with labels? Sally Ride had it, too, says her sister.

Be like, "Everyone already knows."

This approach has been taken by Girls/The New Normal actor Andrew Rannells ("I wasn't closeted for any amount of time") and Victor Garber ("I don't really talk about it but everybody knows").

Do it in a retweet.

One of the quietest comings out came via Insanity creator Shaun T, who merely retweeted his friend's picture from his wedding.

Explain the reluctance you overcame to get to this moment of public disclosure.

Anderson Cooper: "I've always believed that who a reporter votes for, what religion they are, who they love, should not be something they have to discuss publicly. As long as a journalist shows fairness and honesty in his or her work, their private life shouldn't matter. I've stuck to those principles for my entire professional career, even when I've been directly 12039_084asked "the gay question," which happens occasionally. I did not address my sexual orientation in the memoir I wrote several years ago because it was a book focused on war, disasters, loss and survival. I didn't set out to write about other aspects of my life."

Hong Kong pop singer Denise Ho: "For many years, when I faced questions from the media, I always felt that sexual orientation is a personal matter, that there is no need to label yourself or tell the public. But in 2012 when one would expect more acceptance and progress (in terms of gay equality), I find that there is still discrimination and prejudice. I feel that silence is no longer an option."

Singer Mika, who in 2009, came out as bisexual, revised his declaration last year: "If you ask me am I gay, I say yeah. Are these songs about my relationship with a man? I say yeah. And it's only through my music that I've found the strength to come to terms with my sexuality beyond the context of just my lyrics. This is my real life."

Poker player Jason Somerville: "I was worried that no matter what I ever accomplished or did, I'd be labeled 'that gay poker player' above all else, and it would be a title of shame. I feared that I'd lose friendships that meant a lot to me, that I'd ring a bell that could never be unrung and I'd be miserable, somehow. It took me a long time to mostly get over all those somewhat irrational anxieties (fingers crossed!) and to truly start being myself, regardless of what that might mean or look like to others."

Acknowledge the importance of what you are doing.

Anderson Cooper: "In a perfect world, I don't think it's anyone else's business, but I do think there is value in standing up and being counted. I'm not an activist, but I am a human being and I don't give that up by being a journalist."

Boxer Orlando Cruz: "I want to try to be the best role model I can be for kids who might look into boxing as a sport and a professional career. I have and will always be a proud Puerto Rican. I have always been and always will be a proud gay man."

The Hard Times of RJ Berger's Paul Iacono: "I didn't have much to look up to as a kid. I had to search to find like-minded images. I'm happy to be that person so kids won't have to grow up and be afraid of their sexuality and this won't be an issue."

U.S. Olympic soccer player Megan Rapinoe: "I feel like sports in general are still homophobic, in the sense that not a lot of people are out," she says. "I feel everyone is really craving [for] people to come out. People want — they need — to see that there are people like me playing soccer for the good ol' U.S. of A."

Omar Sharif Jr.: "I anticipate that I will be chastised, scorned, and most certainly threatened. From the vaunted class of Egyptian actor and personality, I might just become an Egyptian public enemy. And yet I speak out because I am a patriot."

Orchestrate a casual mentioning of it in the middle or even toward the bottom of an article that's profiling you.

Harris' piece contends that such matters as placement and whether or not the coming out will be announced in the headline are generally decided by the star (and/or his or her people). Those whose sexuality announcement has been slipped in to larger pieces about their life and career include: Zachary Quinto, Nate Silver, Azealia Banks and The Big Bang Theory's Jim Parsons.

Don't be complex, especially if you are a woman.

That is, if you don't want to get any shit for it. Gillian Anderson had a multi-journalist ordeal after talking to Out about once having a relationship with a woman. Ezra Miller was widely mocked for coming out as "queer." Cynthia Nixon, who's been out for years, faced scorn last year, when she suggested that her sexuality is a matter of choice.

And then there is Foster, whose admittedly convoluted speech violated several rules of public communication. However, by expressing internal conflict, for having the gall to reject the idea that her personal life must contribute to the greater good, for openly struggling with past and present mores, for having an obviously altered brain by virtue of fame that she has had almost since birth through now (which she could never understood the repercussions of as a child actor, especially one who got her start 50 years ago), Foster was ridiculed. In typical Internet fashion, people were angry that the way Foster expressed herself was not the way they would have expressed themselves given the situation. There is a widely held belief that Foster came out wrong, but I think that's bullshit: Her shortcomings were made up for in the discourse that they provoked. Aside from giving us something to occupy ourselves with for a few days, what was left unsaid in her speech was taken up by those who discussed an dissected it, filling in the holes, like we always do. There's no wrong way to come out and come out again, even if a host of current trends suggest otherwise.

Security Officer Hired by School in Response to Sandy Hook Shooting Forgets to Take Handgun With Him When Exiting Student Restroom

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Security Officer Hired by School in Response to Sandy Hook Shooting Forgets to Take Handgun With Him When Exiting Student Restroom

Just days after calling its newly hired armed security guard "a tremendous asset to the safety of our students," a Michigan school released a statement saying the retired firearms instructor had caused a "breach in security protocol" by leaving his handgun unattended in the school's bathroom.

Clark Arnold, formerly of the Lapeer County Sheriff's Office, was hired as a security officer by the Chatfield School in Lapeer following a review of security procedures in the wake of last month's shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary.

"It's probably slim to next to none that someone's going to be needed in the school, but it's that slim you have to worry about," Arnold told TV5 earlier this week.

The interview was posted one day after Arnold had accidentally left an unloaded gun in the students' bathroom "for a few moments," according to a Chatfield School official.

The school, which serves grades K through 8, insists that no students were in danger, and vowed to "continue to work on improving school security."

No charges are pending against Arnold, and Chatfield School Director Matt Young would not say what punishment, if any, the security officer might receive.

"It's almost like no harm no foul," said Lapeer County Prosecutor Byron Konschuh.

[screengrab via WNEM]

Presenting the Most Awkward Moment from Lance Armstrong's Oprah Interview: His Failed Fat Joke

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Last night, Oprah Winfrey hosted the first installment of Better Know a Psychopath, with special guest Lance Armstrong.

While the entire interview could be described as one uncomfortable moment that lasted for ninety minutes (with Armstrong never once successfully recreating the look of "remorse" he saw a human make on TV once), there was one exchange that managed to be even more cringe-inducing than all the rest:

The failed fat joke.

In the above clip, Winfrey has just shifted the conversation to Betsy Andreu, the wife of Armstrong's former cycling teammate Frankie, whose family Armstrong "tried to destroy" (her words), after she publicly criticized him for failing to admit he used performance enhancing drugs.

A smirk smeared across his face, Armstrong wistfully recalls how he called Besty "crazy" and "a bitch."

Then, for one horrible moment, you can and watch Lance sit back "read the room."

Time for a little comedy.

"I did call her crazy….I did. I did. I think she'd be okay with me saying this, but…I'm gonna take the liberty to say it. [When we spoke on the phone recently,] I said 'Listen, I called you ‘crazy,' I called you ‘a bitch.' I called you all these things…but I never called you ‘fat.'"

Then, Armstrong pauses for laughter.

He pauses a little longer for laughter.

He waits and waits for the laughter to come, while the camera cuts to a brilliant shot of Oprah blinking at him, her eyelids heavy under the weight of gravitas.

"'Cause…" he begins. Maybe Oprah didn't get the joke? Maybe if he explains the joke it will become funny and he and Oprah will laugh and laugh and she'll scrap the whole interview and take him to OS-TRAIL-YAAAAA instead?

"…She thought I said ‘You are a fat, crazy bitch,'" he flails, reaching out for a lifesaver. Unfortunately Oprah's soul has already left her body; she floats above the room and watches him die.

"…And I said," he repeats "‘Betsy…I never said you were fat.'"

Okay, Oprah's done. She moves on.

[via OWN]

The SpongeBob SquarePants Porn Parody You Never Asked For Is Here Anyway

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The SpongeBob SquarePants Porn Parody You Never Asked For Is Here Anyway

Award-winning parody porn director Lee Roy Myers of Seinfeld: A XXX Parody and Cheers: A XXX Parody fame has released what is sure to be the magnum opus of his celebrated oeuvre: A porn parody of the children's cartoon, SpongeBob SquarePants.

Featuring alt porn star Skin Diamond in her classiest role to day, SpongeKnob SquareNuts (NSFW link) follows the adult misadventures of a grown-ass man being sexually serviced by a grown-ass woman while pretending to be characters from a TV show for kids.

Much more disconcerting than the movie itself is the thought of someone actually getting off to it.

T. S. Eliot was wrong: This is the way the world ends.

[H/T: Guyism, screengrab via WoodRocket (NSFW)]


Group Arrested for Posing as TV News Crew, Tasering Unsuspecting Interviewees

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From the What the Fuck Files, police in Cleveland have arrested three people accused of posing as a TV news crew, then tasering their interviewees.

Police made the arrests after two separate incidences were reported last Saturday. 19-year-old Solomon Herbert was allegedly filming while 25-year-old Derek Rowell shocked the group's unsuspecting victims. The third suspect, a juvenile, has not been identified.

As for a motive, Rowell told police they were doing it just for fun. The presence of a camera suggests that the group were intending to upload their prank to YouTube.

They are expected to be charged with felonious assault.

[WKYC-TV]

Inexperience required

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Inexperience requiredAnd now for a message from Nick Denton, the Founder and Publisher of Gawker Media.

We've always prided ourselves on saving young talent from the spirit-dulling indoctrination of journalism schools and genteel media companies — and the conventional thinking, cosiness with sources and addiction to junkets that often go with them.

This personnel policy has paid off, never more dramatically than this week. Jack Dickey — one of the Deadspin reporters who exposed the hoax of Manti Teo's dead girlfriend — is a senior at Columbia.

The Deadspin exclusive shows what can be done by young journalists who don't know better. There is another reason for this reminder. Newspapers and magazines — their ranks clogged by veterans with nowhere else to go — are not hiring. We are recruiting — and we value raw talent and attitude over the long resume — in not only Editorial but also our Technology, Advertising, and Operations teams.

Aside from the usual job openings, Gawker Media's new Fellows program offers paid work experience for potential hires, and a path towards a full-time job with benefits. For general inquiries, email Scott Kidder — scott@gawker.com — himself a former intern who joined us from NYU at the age of 20 and now runs Operations.

Right now there are openings for Editorial Fellows at Gawker itself and at Gizmodo (as well as a number of other positions — especially in our growing Commerce group). The advertising department has just hired four apprentices. (The number two in Sales — James Del — joined us at the age of 20 out of NYU.)

And the full Kinja publishing system, rolling out over the next three months, will create a farm system for the main Gawker teams. By setting up personal blogs under Deadspin, Gawker and other sites, writers, photographers and others will be able to audition for potential staff jobs. (We have a history of hiring writers, such as Richard Lawson and Ryan Tate, after they impressed us with their contributions on our sites.)

A Gawker job isn't for everybody. You have to withstand criticism — from celebrities, gun nuts, the politically correct, aggrieved subjects and pompous journalists — with good humor. You need a certain amount of principled prickishness, as former TV critic Richard Lawson argues here. And — earnestness warning — the truth will set you free. You should believe that.

But if you've got the personality, a Gawker job can accelerate a career. I'll leave you with our best advertisements, the career paths of some of our current and former colleagues.

  • 22-year-old Dickey's new boss, incoming Deadspin managing editor Emma Carmichael, started interning at the sports site three months out of college.
  • Elizabeth Spiers, the first blogger on Gawker, became the youngest editor of the New York Observer.
  • Erin Pettigrew started as a corporate intern five months out of Yale. After several years running sales marketing and operations, she is now building our new Commerce team from the ground up.
  • Jezebel's editor Jessica Coen was lured to Gawker Media as she was preparing to start Columbia Journalism School.
  • Whitson Gordon, Lifehacker's new Editor-in-Chief, started as an intern at Lifehacker in October, 2009 while a Senior at University of Michigan.
  • Alex Pareene was 19 when he dropped out of NYU to write for Gawker. He's now one of the most influential columnists at Salon.
  • Sam Biddle started as an intern two months after graduating from Hopkins and was rapidly promoted to Editorial Assistant and is now a Senior Staff Writer at Gizmodo.
  • And many more...

Racist Business Owner Fires Obama-Supporting Employees to 'Cover New Obongocare Costs'

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Racist Business Owner Fires Obama-Supporting Employees to 'Cover New Obongocare Costs'

In the comments section of a recent Salt Lake Tribune story about a smoothie bar owner who charges liberal customers more for their drinks, another Utah business owner expressed his support for the initiative, and said he was also doing his part in the fight against different points of view.

"We had to let two employees go to cover new Obongocare costs and increased taxes," wrote Terry Lee of Terry Lee Forensics, a digital forensics company based in Cedar City. "Found two Obongo supporters and gave them the news yesterday. They wanted the idiot in the Whitehouse, they reap the benefits."

(Urban Dictionary defines Obongo as "a play on Barack Hussein Obama II's last name, citing his roots as a typical Apefrican, bongo beating, bush monkey.")

When the Tribune followed up with him, Lee tried to walk the comment back some, saying "[the employees] were not top performers."

But he readily acknowledged that the part-timers' political views weighed heavily in the decision. "Is your political affiliation protected?" he asked the Tribune rhetorically. "I don't believe it is, but I don't know."

Sadly, it isn't: According to AOL Jobs, only five states currently protect employees from being fired on the basis of their political beliefs — California, New York, Connecticut, Colorado and Mississippi.

However, the employees could potentially file a civil lawsuit against Lee for wrongful termination.

As for Lee's claim that he was offsetting the impending increase in his company's taxes and operating costs due to Obamacare? The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act imposes penalties on companies that don't provide a healthcare plan only if they have over 50 employees.

Terry Lee Forensics has nine.

[photo via AP]

Did Manti Te'o Violate Notre Dame's Stringent Code of Conduct By Lying About His Dead Girlfriend?

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Did Manti Te'o Violate Notre Dame's Stringent Code of Conduct By Lying About His Dead Girlfriend?To hear Manti Te'o tell it, he's a victim of one of the greatest web hoaxes in the internet's relatively short lifespan. Te'o, the Notre Dame football star presently embroiled in a fake-dead-girlfriend scandal thanks to Deadspin, says that he was deceived for years by internet pranksters who led him to believe he was dating a woman named Lennay Kekua—a woman who, it turns out, never even existed. Te'o says those same pranksters eventually convinced him Kekua was in a serious car accident and then stricken with leukemia, only to die from leukemia in September of last year on the same day his grandmother died. In a word, it's fantastical. So fantastical, in fact, that a lot of people are having a hard time believing Te'o himself wasn't in on the scam at least partially. Though a lot of questions remain, one thing that's certain is that if Te'o is lying, he will have violated at least some of the regulations in Notre Dame's famously sacrosanct "du Lac" student code of conduct, which is when things get even more complicated.

Though we still don't know all the twists and turns of this truly Byzantine tale—and may never—we do know that Te'o claimed in a statement released on Wednesday that he developed feelings for Kekua "by communicating frequently online and on the phone" with her. If that were always the story, people might be a bit less skeptical of Te'o's innocence. But a wave of inconsistencies are quickly eroding the linebacker's credibility.

Firstly, there are conflicting reports about whether Te'o communicated with Kekua primarily—or solely—via phone and internet or whether he actually interacted with Kekua in person on numerous occasions. For instance, according to an article from the South Bend Tribune, the story goes that Te'o met and exchanged numbers with Kekua, a student at Stanford, after a football game in Palo Alto. Teo's father, Brian, went on to tell the Tribune that Te'o and Kekua were "just friends." "Every once in a while," he added, "she would travel to Hawaii, and that happened to be the time Manti was home, so he would meet with her there."

So which is it? Was Te'o a guy who got suckered by a sham internet girlfriend, or did he meet a girl at Stanford—Stanford has no record of any Lennay Kekua, by the way—who would then occasionally fly to Hawaii to spend time with him and his family? In retrospect, the shadiness of all of this was presaged by a now infamously vague quote Te'o gave to Sports Illustrated writer Pete Thamel, who interviewed Te'o last year and just published the full transcript from that interaction on Thursday:

SI: How did you meet her?

TE'O: We met just, ummmm, just she knew my cousin. And kind of saw me there so. Just kind of regular.

"Just kind of regular."

What also doesn't add up is Te'o's assertion that he knew Kekua's life and death were hoaxes on December 6, and then waited until the day after Christmas to tell Notre Dame officials what happened. Here's how Jack Swarbick, Notre Dame's athletic director, explained the story to a press conference on Wednesday evening, according to Deadspin:

Te'o told him that when he was at the ESPN awards, which aired Dec. 6, he took a phone call from a woman whose phone number matched Lennay Kekua's. "When he answered it," Swarbrick said, "it was a person whose voice sounded like the same voice he had talked to, who told him that she was, in fact, not dead."

Even if that is true, and Te'o was innocent until the night of the ESPN awards, he nevertheless continued to speak about "his girlfriend," Kekua, at least twice following December 6, including once on December 9 to allege that Kekua "made him promise" to stay and play an important game instead of coming to see her in her last moments in the hospital.

Once again, which is it? Did Te'o really find out the whole thing was a lie that night in December, or did he simply tell Notre Dame authorities that later? If he did find out what was going on December 6, why did he abet his victimizers by continuing to lie about Kekua days after he learned the truth?

In the hours since Deadspin's initial Te'o story first broke, so have stories saying that Te'o's teammates, the people he spent most of his time with at Notre Dame, suspected something was amiss with the vaunted linebacker all along. Sports reporter Jackie Pepper interviewed an anonymous Notre Dame player who said that other players had questioned Kekua's authenticity for months, though they never brought it up to Te'o.

Another reporter, Tyler Moorehead, a Notre Dame student journalist, says the word amongst the football team was that Te'o's fake relationship was a cynical attempt to curry favor from Heisman voters:

The debate among teammates wasn't whether or not Manti actually knew this girl—it was clear that they had been in contact; no, players just didn't think that it was fair to call Lennay Kekua Manti's girlfriend, period (it is well-known on campus that he has had relations with other girls during his time at Notre Dame). They recognized what was going on for what it was—a terrible publicity stunt used to fuel Manti Te'o's Heisman campaign. In fact, many of the players privately commented that they didn't want the students to wear leis in support of Manti and wouldn't participate themselves—they cited that the team never responded so publicly to tragic events for other players. But there was also the feeling that Manti didn't deserve to benefit from publicity from the death of somebody he barely knew.

Regardless of exactly how and in what order things went down, it would appear that at least somewhere along the line Manti Te'o—and possibly his family—was complicit in the mendacity that surrounds this mess. Knowing that, an obvious question to anyone familiar with the eminently pious Notre Dame's code of student conduct, du Lac, is what Te'o's punishment should be for violating that code.

The du Lac guidebook, which is separate from the academic honor code and regulates students' personal behavior, is introduced with a passage that notes that, being a Catholic university, Notre Dame "seeks to nurture in its students a love of knowledge and a keenly developed moral sense." As such, there are sections in du Lac about drug possession, alcohol use, and sexual activity ("students who engage in sexual union outside of marriage may be subject to University sanction"). There is also a section called "General Standards of Conduct," which are the guidelines most applicable to Te'o's case. In that section, rule number seven clearly states that any "dishonesty, forgery or taking advantage of another" will be considered "clearly inconsistent with the University's expectations for membership." Five spots down, rule 12 says that Notre Dame bans "[a]ctions which seemingly affect only the individual(s) involved but which may have a negative or disruptive impact on the University community and/or concern a student's personal and academic growth."

Again, thus far it is very difficult to piece together whether Te'o was mostly just an innocent god-fearing man taken advantage of by some malicious trolls or if he had a hand in creating and then cultivating the Lennay Kekua story from the very beginning. But what is clear based on Te'o's own testimony is that he at least continued to lie about Kekua days after he says he knew she never even existed. Beyond that, as this story develops, it seems as if there are far too many holes in Te'o and his family's narrative of how they grew to know Kekua to make sense, which would mean that, indeed, Te'o had a big hand in an action that had a "negative or disruptive" impact on Notre Dame. Almost anyone can see that. Anyone but Notre Dame officials, that is.

I called Notre Dame and asked if Te'o would be disciplined if it does indeed come out that he was telling one of the grandest lies in university history. Spokesman Dennis Brown said that Notre Dame did "a full investigation" into the matter and discovered that Te'o did nothing wrong. When I asked him about Te'o continuing the Kekua narrative days after the fateful night of December 6, Brown told me that these are questions Te'o would have to answer himself one day. "So there is no plan to punish Te'o?" I asked. Brown responded: "Any time we're made aware of a student acting contrary to the rules put forth, we look at it very closely and act upon it appropriately."

Erin Gloria Ryan, a former writer for Jezebel and a member of Notre Dame's class of 2005, said this is all par for the course. She told me in an email that because Te'o is an important figure on campus and has probably completed all his academic requirements—which she notes are difficult even for prestigious athletes—the university is probably content to let him walk on with nary a slap in the wrist. "As long as the University is sticking with their story (OUR STORY AND HIS STORY MATCH THEY ARE THE SAME!) there is no violation," she wrote. "But if [Notre Dame] and Te'o weren't in lockstep, there would definitely be an issue." In other words, it's good to be a star football player, as usual.

The Weinstein Company is the Last to Realize the Offensive Line of Django Unchained Action Figures is Offensive

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The Weinstein Company is the Last to Realize the Offensive Line of Django Unchained Action Figures is Offensive The Weinstein Company, the studio behind Django Unchained, has asked toy maker NECA to halt production on a line of action figures based on the controversial movie. Several civil rights groups had taken issue with them, saying they are offensive to children and trivialize the brutality of slavery.

The studio claims the action figures were intended for people over the age of 17, since every 18-year-old is dying for more dolls. The studio also claims similar toys have been created for the characters of all of Quentin Tarantino's films. A Mr. Blonde doll does sound like a lovely gift idea.

"We have tremendous respect for the audience and it was never our intent to offend anyone," The Weinstein Co. said in a statement.

NECA has not responded to the Associated Press' request for comment.

Of course, now the toys already out there become collectors' items and are worth much more money, so, congratulations to The Weinstein Company.

[Image via Amazon]

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