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The Weather Channel Will Soon Start Geotargeting You on Twitter

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The Weather Channel Will Soon Start Geotargeting You on Twitter

Everyone jokes that when hurricane season arrives, all you see on The Weather Channel are ads for Home Depot and batteries. Well, they really do target advertising based on the seasons, and now they're going to use your location on Twitter to show you ads tailored to your current weather.

Mashable reports that The Weather Company, the parent company to The Weather Channel, is teaming up with Twitter to use its advertising application programming interface (API) to "gain access to the users' information" to help them target where you are. The process is called "geotargeting," which is where companies show you ads based on the location from which you're accessing their website.

If you're at work and it starts snowing, for instance, you might start seeing Twitter ads for hot chocolate or a big cup of coffee from Starbucks. If you're under the gun for major hail, Nationwide is on your side(bar).

It's markedly less invasive than Facebook's plan to use your browser history to 'enhance' your annoying ad experience, but probably unnerving for privacy-minded Twitterers nonetheless.

While users won't see The Weather Channel's name anywhere in the ads (they're just providing the weather data), the Wall Street Journal notes that the Atlanta-based behemoth stands to make commission off of any deals struck through the partnership.

[Image via AP]


NBC Paid Chelsea Clinton $600,000 To Be Chelsea Clinton

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NBC Paid Chelsea Clinton $600,000 To Be Chelsea Clinton

A few years ago, NBC News hired Chelsea Clinton as a “special correspondent”—which meant, in practice, that Bill and Hillary’s daughter didn’t have to do any actual reporting. It turns out that coddling a child of privilege is very expensive! Politico reported on Friday morning that NBC News paid Clinton $600,000 per year to star in hard-hitting segments such as:

The network, which closely guarded the details of Clinton’s compensation, reportedly converted her yearly contract to a month-to-month one several months ago, due to the possibility that Clinton’s mother, Hillary, would formally announce a 2016 presidential campaign sometime in 2014. It’s not clear if that means she’s paid more or less than before.

If you know more, hop in below.

To contact the author of this post, email trotter@gawker.com

[Photo credit: Associated Press]

Zen Koans Explained: "Three Kinds of Disciples"

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Zen Koans Explained: "Three Kinds of Disciples"

Most of what we think of as information is merely noise. Random signals, differentiated from the background only by meaningless fluctuations. What if one of those signals—randomly—sounded like sex noises? Scientists say it is possible.

The koan: "Three Kinds of Disciples"

A Zen master named Gettan lived in the latter part of the Tokugawa era. He used to say: "There are three kinds of disciples: those who impart Zen to others, those who maintain the temples and shrines, and then there are the rice bags and the clothes-hangers."

Gasan expressed the same idea. When he was studying under Tekisui, his teacher was very severe. Sometimes he even beat him. Other pupils would not stand this kind of teaching and quit. Gasan remained, saying: "A poor disciple utilizes a teacher's influence. A fair disciple admires a teacher's kindness. A good disciple grows strong under a teacher's discipline."

The enlightenment: Gasan took so much abuse during his discipleship, and after all that, Tekisui told him, "U fail bro."

"What!" Gasan ejaculated. "U crazy bro how did I fail after I took all those beatings and etc...?"

"There's another kind of disciple," Tekisui said. "Gangster Disciples. This was a training program for the Gangster Disciples. We're looking for more, like, badass types. Your humility is actually not what we're going for. It's not on-brand for us."

"Gangster Disciples—totally forgot about them!" laughed Gasan. "There is egg on my face I assure you of that. Better change the name of this koan to 'Four Kinds of Disciples!'"

And so they did. Not in time for today's publication, but for later.

This has been "Zen Koans Explained." Goals are holes.

[Photo: Shutterstock]

Waffle House Cook Shoots Customer to Death

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Waffle House Cook Shoots Customer to Death

Diner Adrian Mosley, 33, is dead after getting into an altercation with Waffle House cook Quintavius Martin, 25, in the wee hours of Friday morning. This is the second Atlanta-area Waffle House shooting this month.

According to witness Ontray Haley, Mosley came into the Waffle House with another man and a woman around 4 a.m. Friday morning. "The girl got into it first with the security guard and they told her she had to leave the property," Haley tells The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "So she left but the other two guys hung around and they told them they had to leave. The cook refused to serve them because they were getting unruly." Then Mosley and the other man "got into it with the cook and the guy that got shot [Mosley], he threatened the cook. He told him, you come outside and I'm going to fire you up, which basically meant he wanted to shoot him." According to Haley, the shooting happened right at the counter.

Martin has been charged with murder, using a firearm, and carrying a concealed weapon without a permit. Earlier this month, an off-duty cop working as a security guard at another Atlanta-area Waffle House was shot and killed by a customer.

[Image via AP]

Nextdoor CEO Sentenced to 30 Days in Jail for Hit-And-Run

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Nextdoor CEO Sentenced to 30 Days in Jail for Hit-And-Run

Nextdoor CEO Nirav Tolia plead down a felony hit-and-run charge to a misdemeanor yesterday in court, receiving an immediate sentence of 30 days in county jail.

The original felony charge alleged he fled the scene of an accident he caused while attempting to overtake another vehicle with his BMW X5 on 101 outside of San Francisco. He plead no contest to the reduce charges.

However, it seems likely Tolia will be able to avoid jail thanks to his good standing in the community, reports Forbes.

Instead, he'll complete the 30-day sentence through a weekend work program, where he will "put in eight- or 10-hour days doing paper pickups, washing school graffiti," said San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe.

Tolia's charge was reduced because of Tolia's background and his side of the story, Wagstaffe said.

"His defense attorneys gave us a full background on what this guy is, what he's done, how he's a pretty community-oriented person, and that's something," Wagstaffe said. "And his description of what occurred … He didn't know he had a duty to call in, as opposed to someone who said, 'I knew I screwed up and was trying to get away.'"

The notion that the CEO of Nextdoor was blamelessly unaware of his neighborly duty after a car accident is a pretty hard sell. Tolia has a lengthy history of lawsuits, including one for defrauding former business partners. In the court documents for a trademark suit, Tolia is even quoted calling himself "an angry driver." The road rage admission was in the context of explaining how services like Nextdoor make it harder to be "nasty," and force you to become a better neighbor.

Nextdoor CEO Sentenced to 30 Days in Jail for Hit-And-Run

[Photo: Getty]

The Bliss of Ignorance: The Signal

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The Bliss of Ignorance: The Signal

I spent the last 20 minutes of William Eubank's intimate sci-fi thriller The Signal with my jaw hanging open. The movie's a slow burn that keeps its characters in the dark about what the hell is happening to them. Eubank's greatest feat is that he keeps the audience in the dark, too (or at least, this member of the audience). And then, when there is light, the movie explodes like a fireworks display. It's bright, exciting, and from moment to moment, unpredictable.

That is all I think you should know about this movie. Not knowing is crucial to your enjoyment of it, a point that was only reinforced during my second viewing, which was a relative slog. When you know where it's going, The Signal takes too long to get there. When you know that the curiosities don't amount to much, that the explanation for everything is simpler than the red herrings suggest, The Signal reveals itself as tedious.

The less you know about this movie, the better. If you're interested at all, I hope you stopped reading before the last paragraph. I'm not going to spoil anything to any great extent below, but you only get to enjoy this movie once, and I suggest doing so.

The plot concerns Nic (up-and-coming eye candy Brenton Thwaites), his girlfriend Haley (Oliva Cooke, who you may recognize as the oxygen-tank-toting Emma on Bates Motel), and his friend Jonah (Beau Knapp). Nic and Jonah are MIT students that a hacker familiar to them pings as they drive across the country. They decide to track him down and, in a hand-held scene reminiscent of the climax of The Blair Witch Project, stumble into an abandoned house. They are abducted by what might be an alien and wake up in what seems to be a hospital, where they're being held. Their main handler Damon (Laurence Fishburne) asks many questions and tells them very little. Frustration ensues, an experimentation plot is revealed, an escape is inevitable.

A lot here will remind you of other things you've seen: a conspiracy similar to that of Dark City, bodily mechanization that's like Akira, a decoy town of not-quite-right people like Alexandre Aja's remake of The Hills Have Eyes. Eubank tempers this with more derivation, some overly meditative, Malick-esque slow-mo slices of life as they were before this whole mess began—a footrace, a carnival. Nic and Haley are shells of humans whose stock conflict—she's moving away for a year, he wants to breakup—only serves to make them less remarkable…until they become utterly extraordinary.

Eubank does an excellent job of confounding for over an hour straight before exploding the film's dazzling climax all over the screen. (I was reminded of Mark Romanek's Never Let Me Go here, and how that movie didn't even attempt to maneuver the knowing/not knowing aspect of its source material, Kazuo Ishiguro's novel of the same name. The Signal does much better.) But the the thrill of The Signal is not in the journey but the arrival. As one seemingly insane female stranger tells Nic and Haley as they attempt to get their bearings after escaping from the research complex, "Just push from the inside out." It's not so crazy, after all.

Benevolent Rich Guy to Hide Cash-Filled Envelopes in NYC This Weekend

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Benevolent Rich Guy to Hide Cash-Filled Envelopes in NYC This Weekend

A formerly anonymous rich person recently whipped up frenzies in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas by hiding envelopes full of cash around each city, then tweeting clues about where they're located. This weekend, @hiddencash is coming to New York.

Jason Buzi, whose identity was revealed last week, will hit NYC on Saturday. Apparently, it's not just Buzi behind the curtain, as the game is also coming to Houston and Mexico City:

Usually, each envelope contains about $250. Good luck.

[Image via Twitter]

Game of Thrones Writer to Pen Magic: The Gathering Movie

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Game of Thrones Writer to Pen Magic: The Gathering Movie

After acquiring the rights last January, 20th Century Fox is getting closer to bringing their Magic: The Gathering franchise to life with the recent hire of Game of Thrones writer Bryan Cogman. Your weird friend is going to be so happy!

Cogman has written five episodes of Game of Thrones, most recently "The Laws of Gods and Men," and is a producer and story editor for the show. The movie will be produced by Hasbro and Fox-based producer Simon Kinberg.

No word yet on a plot or director, but Deadline does have a handy description of the Magic: The Gathering game for those, like me, who are unsure of what Magic: The Gathering even is:

There are creatures, wizards and magic spells and players use all of them to defeat each other.

Hmm, I think I get it! Sign me up for your weekly game, weird friend!

[image via Deadline]


America's Catholic bishops are considering whether their voter's guide's "discussion of evil, now fo

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America's Catholic bishops are considering whether their voter's guide's "discussion of evil, now focused on abortion and racism, should be revisited in light of the pope's description of economic inequality as a social evil." Well... let's not be hasty.

Nick Offerman Gives the Media a Refresher Course on the Bill of Rights

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Speaking at the Radio and Television Correspondents' Association Dinner Thursday night, headliner Nick Offerman—who plays anti-government government employee Ron Swanson on Parks and Recreation—took the assembled news media to school with a timely lecture on the Bill of Rights.

"I feel like we, as a country—present company included—are a little unclear these days about the first 10 amendments, so if it's alright with you, I'm going to run us through a brief Bill of Rights refresher course," he led off, before riffing on Texas's open-carry yahoos, the NSA's omnipresence, and basically everybody's misunderstanding of "censorship."

Of course, some amendments require a little more explanation than others. On guns, Offerman—an avid hunter—had this to say: "The Second Amendment is not there to protect our right to intimidate the teenage cashier at Chipotle." He also called anyone who wants to settle a dispute with firearms rather than honorable fisticuffs "nothing short of cowardly."

Amen, Ron Swanson. Class dismissed.

[H/T Mediaite]

Do You Have What It Takes to Work at this Arkansas P.F. Chang's?

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Do You Have What It Takes to Work at this Arkansas P.F. Chang's?

What is the correct way to answer the phone?

Who are the managers of the P.F. Chang's located on South Promenade Boulevard in Rogers, Arkansas?

For what purpose were the Terra Cotta Warriors and Horses created?

If you do not know the answers to these questions, idiot, do not presume that you are qualified to work as a server at the P.F. Chang's located on South Promenade Boulevard in Rogers, Ark.

On Friday, Twitter user @brownpau came across what appears to be a study guide (and corresponding quiz) created for newly-hired servers at an Arkansas P. F. Chang's, hosted on the user-generated quiz website Quizlet. (It may have been inspired by this study guide created for newly-hired servers at a P. F. Chang's in Winter Park, Fla.)

Perhaps, at this stale hour on this muggy, mid-June Friday, you are pondering a career change. Perhaps you are crave a job that combines the stimulation of solo travel across mainland China with the familiarity and railroad history of northwest Arkansas. Perhaps you are considering sliding your letter of resignation under your boss' office door right now, and leaving for the weekend...forever.

But maybe your new career at the Rogers, Ark. P.F. Chang's will not be the piece of P.F. Chang's "Great Wall of Chocolate" cake you are expecting it to be.

For instance: What question should you ask when a guest orders egg rolls or spring rolls: Are you sure? Would you like those on a plate, or on the table itself? Did you say "spring rolls"?

No. All wrong. The correct answer is: "2 or 4?"

It should be noted that, although the information provided in the guide is valuable and engrossing, Quizlet's term-matching platform is not necessarily ideal format to administer an assessment of server aptitude.

For example:

Do You Have What It Takes to Work at this Arkansas P.F. Chang's?

The correct response here is d. Describe the organic agave margarita, because "Topshelf patron, agave juice with fresh sqeezed lime juice served over ice with salt" is neither the recipe for Thai beef noodle salad, nor a twisted whiskey sour, nor is it a list of six hot teas available at P. F. Chang's.

Do you see?

Those seeking a more comprehensive understanding of the inner workings of the Rogers, Ark. P.F. Chang's should also peruse the supplement titled "Changs Day 4 Test," which features additional material not covered on the final exam, such as this explanation of the concept of yin[g] and yang:

Do You Have What It Takes to Work at this Arkansas P.F. Chang's?

How do you determine the guest to whom you should give the dessert menu?

Stop stammering. It's clear you're not ready. This is a trick question. Everyone gets a dessert menu.

[h/t @brownpau // Art by Jim Cooke]

Severe Thunderstorms Will Threaten New York City by 6:00PM

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Severe Thunderstorms Will Threaten New York City by 6:00PM

A line of severe thunderstorms is moving into the New York City metro area from the west, and should start to threaten the city itself around 6:00PM. The storms are capable of producing damaging straight-line winds in excess of 60 MPH, as well as torrential rainfall and "continuous cloud-to-ground lightning."

Severe Thunderstorms Will Threaten New York City by 6:00PM

Even if you don't experience severe winds, lightning itself is extremely dangerous. The lightning-tracker network Blitzortung is showing a ton of lightning with this storm (pictured above at 5:13PM), and it's important to remember that this only manages to catch about 10% of the total number of lightning strikes that actually occur.

The heavy rainfall will bring with it the risk for flash flooding. If you encounter any flooded roadways, please don't drive through them. No matter how badass you think you are, you can't judge the depth and even a little bit of water can leave you stranded and put your life (and those of your rescuers) at risk.

You can keep up with the latest forecasts and warnings from the National Weather Service office in Upton, New York, which covers the city itself.

[Images via Gibson Ridge and LightningMaps.org]

UPDATE:

Judge Allows LinkedIn Lawsuit Because Spammy Emails Hurt Your Rep

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Judge Allows LinkedIn Lawsuit Because Spammy Emails Hurt Your Rep

U.S. District Judge Lucy H. Koh cares about your reputation. That's why she decided that LinkedIn members can sue the company for accessing their external email accounts in order to send their contacts spammy marketing.

It was not merely a privacy violation. The judge allowed the lawsuit to go forward because LinkedIn's ADHD approach to email—I've received at least 12 this week—can ruin your reputation. Bombarding your contacts, she said, makes members look like a business loser who can't "take the hint":

Users of the world's most popular professional-networking website consented to LinkedIn's sending an "endorsement e-mail" to recruit their contacts to the site, Koh said in her ruling. The judge said the company's practice of then sending reminder messages to contacts who hadn't responded was grounds for the lawsuit to go forward.

LinkedIn's sending repeated e-mails could impair reputations by allowing contacts to think the network member is "unable to take the hint" that they don't want to join the website, Koh said.

Her ruling will allow plaintiffs to seek damages from the money LinkedIn made by snooping in your email address books and using your name as marketing ploy, reports Bloomberg:

"Nothing in LinkedIn's disclosures alerts users to the possibility that their contacts will receive not just one invitation, but three," she said.

Wait until Judge Koh hears that LinkedIn got into the birthday reminder business.

[Image via Shutterstock.com]

Dave Chappelle Describes His Amazing First Encounter With Kanye West

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Dave Chappelle stopped by The Tonight Show last night, after making an appearance on Late Show earlier this week, and spoke about the first time he met The Roots, as well as the first—amazing—time he met Kanye West.

His interview (gratefully) stayed away from the topic of leaving Chappelle's Show, which he and David Letterman talked about earlier in the week, focusing on social media impostors, living in Ohio, and his upcoming shows at Radio City Music Hall. Here's the first half of the interview:

[via NBC]

Pope on Ditching Bulletproof Popemobile: “I Don’t Have Much to Lose”

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Pope on Ditching Bulletproof Popemobile: “I Don’t Have Much to Lose”

In a recent interview with a Spanish newspaper La Vanguardia, Pope Francis spoke about why he prefers not to use the bulletproof Popemobile, explaining that at his age he doesn't have "much to lose."

The bulletproof Popemobile was introduced after the attempted assassination of John Paul II in 1981, and favored by Francis's predecessor Benedict XVI. Cool Pope, however, does not have time for that bullshit. He told La Vanguardia:

"I remember in Brazil, they'd provided for me an enclosed Popemobile, but I cannot greet the people and tell them I love them inside a sardine can, even if it is made of glass. For me it is a wall."

Less chill Vatican officials aren't particularly happy with this choice, and are said to have voiced fears for his safety during recent appearances in Jordan, Jerusalem, and Bethlehem. They were also unhappy with his decision to, last July, tour Rio de Janeiro in, according to The Independent, "an open-topped white jeep along the sea front of Copacabana beach."

He continued to La Vanguardia, somewhat disconcertingly:

"It is true something could happen to me but let's be realistic, at my age I do not have much to lose. I know what could happen, but it is in God's hands."

God, you better not fuck this one up or who knows when we'll get another Cool Pope!

[h/t CNN, image via AP]


Wisconsin Judge Puts Same-Sex Marriages on Hold

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Wisconsin Judge Puts Same-Sex Marriages on Hold

After striking down the unconstitutional ban on same-sex marriage in Wisconsin last week, a move that allowed—in eight days—more than 500 couples to finally wed, U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb has ruled to put same-sex marriages on hold while an appeal from Republican Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen is pending.

Van Hollen, who said that there was confusion and uncertainty about Crabb's ruling, argued that allowing marriages while the underlying case was pending created confusion about the legality of those marriages, and requested that she put her ruling on hold. Judge Crabb expressed mixed feelings about her decision to do so:

"After seeing the expressions of joy on the faces of so many newly wedded couples featured in media reports, I find it difficult to impose a stay on the event that is responsible for eliciting that emotion, even if the stay is only temporary. ... Same-sex couples have waited many years to receive equal treatment under the law, so it is understandable that they do not want to wait any longer. However, a federal district court is required to follow the guidance provided by the Supreme Court."

Speaking to the AP, John Knight, attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, called Crabb's decision to put her order on hold disappointing:

"But we will fight for a quick resolution on appeal and are confident that marriage will be a reality in Wisconsin very soon for lesbian and gay couples who have waited much too long already."

Van Hollen said he was "very pleased" with the ruling.

[image via AP]

Florida Mom Kidnaps Daughter to Avoid Vaccines, Learning Black History

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Florida Mom Kidnaps Daughter to Avoid Vaccines, Learning Black History

A mother in Sunrise, Florida is now facing a federal criminal charge after disappearing with her two-year-old daughter last month in order to avoid having her vaccinated. (This served the dual purpose of keeping her from being "brainwashed" and keeping her out of school, where she might learn about black history).

According to the Sun-Sentinel, Megan Elizabeth Everett, 22, disappeared on May 6th after Robert Baumann—with whom she shares custody of their daughter, Lilly—dropped Lilly off at her home. Everett was supposed to return Lilly a week later, in compliance with a shared custody agreement, but never showed up. She instead left a note for Baumann, saying:

"You are a great dad. If I let them take her and vaccinate her and brainwash her, I wouldn't be doing what's right. I cannot let a judge tell me how my daughter should be raised. We will miss you. But I had to leave."

A warrant for Everett's arrest was issued on May 19, on charges of kidnapping, interference with custody, and concealing a minor contrary to a court order. The federal charge accused Everett of crossing state lines to avoid prosecution for the state charges.

"In the state of mind my daughter is in, Lily would be better off with Robert," Everett's mom, Pam Everett, said Friday. "I have four kids, and Megan is my baby. I don't know what happened to her." Everett and Lilly had lived with Pam until Everett became involved with a man named Carlos Lesters, at which point she severed ties with her family.

The Sun-Sentinel states that court documents describe Lesters as a "Confederate-flag-waving gun enthusiast with family members in Georgia and Kentucky."

Robert Baumann, who had planned to vaccinate his daughter and enroll her in preschool the next time he had custody, said:

"One of the issues we had was, she wanted to home-school my daughter. I didn't want that to happen. She didn't want Lilly to learn about black history. She just wanted her to learn about the Confederacy." ... "She found this new idea that vaccines are horrible. I think she wanted to keep her from being vaccinated because that would keep her out of day care."

After Lilly's disappearance, Sunrise police went to her last known address, where they found Lesters. He told them that Everett and her daughter were gone and "not coming back." The federal criminal complaint states:

"Lesters informed detectives that Everett … knew she would have to live her life as a fugitive. However, in her mind, the time that she spent with her daughter 'free' of Baumann would be 'worth it,' regardless of how brief the time was."

Everett and Lilly are still missing.

[image via Sun-Sentinel]

What A Difference A Loving Dad Made

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What A Difference A Loving Dad Made

My father — an old lion of a man — would bark, "They don't give a fuck about you," any time I called a rapper, athlete or actor a "beast" for their artistic or athletic feats.

"Your mother, she's the real beast," he'd huff, quickly resuming whatever activity my star-fucking had interrupted.

Of course my dad was right. He and my mother had thrown themselves into financial ruin to put my sister and me through the best schools, to give us opportunities and a quality of life they could never have fathomed. So, it made sense that the old man didn't wanna hear about how much Diddy was worth in '99.

For many years, I despised the man I'd called "DaDa" as a toddler, holding him in contempt as a harsh authoritarian who, although accounted for throughout my life, I felt didn't do enough to provide for us growing up. But as I've entered "real" adulthood (constantly fucking up in my early 20s being the primer coat for becoming a man), my perspective has shifted wholly, and I've realized how lucky I am to have had a present, if not perfect, father in my life.

The son (and grandson) of a Chicago preacher, my father would get into the typical misadventures of a black youth in '50s Chicago, with all the attendant throwing bricks through windows and getting chased first by Vice Lords through Cabrini Green.

The sky would come crashing down on him when his mother died when he was just 15. Unable to reconcile his father's hasty remarriage to a woman he found, at best, disagreeable, he would ask not to return to Chicago during a family trip to his grandmother's farm in Virginia. After working in Woodbridge, Virginia, cutting timber, he finished school and ended up in Job Corps before being drafted into the Army at the height of the Vietnam war.

As an MP, he did nineteen months in country, stationed at the sprawling Long Binh compound not long after a none-too-often discussed race riot had broken out in the base's prison complex. He returned home to Virginia and quickly started a family—though to the detriment of his first family, some of the demons of war had followed him across the Pacific.

I used to dismiss his tough-guy tales of brandishing a revolver at backwoods bars and generally fucking with local law enforcement as embellished macho bullshit, but I know now that the most absurd and vulgar stories are usually the truest, and that even without some of the hyperbole, he was still a hard man, living in a hard place.

He would meet my mother selling his handmade jewelry at a party in Baltimore some 40 years ago, and I would come onto the scene shortly thereafter. Throughout my childhood, my father seemed to be nothing but loving towards my mother, and I never got the sense that they were anything other than partners, in love and in charge. Upon the birth of my younger sister, he even quit his job to assume a Mr. Mom role.

He was pleasant and gentle towards me when I was smaller, but things changed for us around the time I turned ten. He lost his first son, Reggie Jr., in a brutal double murder, and though he remained stoic around us, it was clear to me, even then, that a part of him died along with my half-brother.

In the wake of Reggie's death, my father became far more stern, far less forgiving of childhood transgressions, coping with outliving his elder son the only way he knew how. This man, who'd seen a war, didn't want to see me go the way of my brother. My father always seemed like he was made of steel, so it must've been especially painful when it became clear that I was heading down the same rabbit hole as my half-brother.

As my adolescence hit full tilt, and my mouth began to write checks my ass couldn't cash, things occasionally got physical. I remember vividly having my head smacked into the monitor of a computer after mouthing off, the computer's display dancing with ASCII characters, almost as dazed as I was.

Our relationship grew progressively more acrimonious as I approached the age that Reggie Jr. had been when he was killed, and the resentment towards the man I'd called DaDa burned white hot within me. It didn't matter to me when I was in the throes of alcoholic insanity, but I now had only the slightest grasp on how it must have eaten my father from the inside to see me trying to commit slow suicide with booze and drugs.

Just as vividly as I remember the pain and confusion of my head being battered against that monitor, I remember calling the old man in a state of delirium one horrific Saturday morning in a stranger's apartment on the Lower East Side.

My younger sister was performing with her choir at Carnegie Hall that Monday night, and inexplicably, my parents had given me $100 to give to her when she arrived in the city. I'd spent it on drinks and blow at Studio B within an hour, and it wasn't until the sun began to rise and the strangers I'd befriended the night before had gone to bed that I'd realized what I'd done.

I frantically called the people in my phone I thought most likely to bail me out (because someone always bailed me out). It was only upon reaching a high school friend who'd been drafted into the NFL that I knew the jig was up. After I stated my case for ten minutes, he flatly denied my pleas.

"Call your father," he said, and hung up.

Before I knew what was happening, I was dialing home. He picked up after two rings.

"I'm a crackhead," I sheepishly whispered into the phone.

"I had an idea," he answered, sighing loudly into the phone. There was appreciable concern in his tone, as though he wanted to hop on his bike and ride all the way up from Baltimore to extract me from the spiritual prison in which I was locked. Caught off guard, I cried into the phone for a minute or two.

Up to this point, it had always been my mom who dealt with scraping me up off the pavement or being an audience to the rantings of my drunken despair. So this day was stark, the first time in years I'd felt a connection to him, even under these ridiculous and shameful circumstances. That I had so often forced my mother to live through my hell with me was a source of strife and pain for my father that I hadn't even considered until I got sober.

To this day, I don't remember if I even told him about the money (which I ended up trudging through the rain to Midtown to borrow from my roommate's corporate-lawyer girlfriend, much to the chagrin of my roommate). What I do remember is that feeling of ease and comfort in knowing that my father, even at my worst, still loved me.


Coming up, I was constantly told how "cool" and "awesome" my father was by kids and their parents alike. As a young black middle class kid at a top-flight private school, I was obsessed with the notion that my father, this man of humble origin who'd bike to school with my sister in a carrier and my BMX bike in parts strapped to his back, was not like the dads I'd seen around me, in their seven-series Beamers and Brooks Brothers gear.

Completely oblivious to the legion of sons and daughters living without their fathers and longing for them, until recently, I could only focus on the few things he didn't do for us, rather than all that he did. I now realize what's more valuable.

Even when things got dark, there was never a question as to whether he loved us as a family, but in my own sick mind, I found myself wishing that I'd been one of the kids who'd never known their dad. Now approaching the age that my father was when he had me, I know, if he could do it all again, by his own admission, he'd have handled things with me a bit differently. And I don't blame my father or his treatment of me for my long struggle with substance abuse. I've met plenty of peeps in recovery who grew up in "Leave It To Beaver"-like conditions and ended up as bad out as me, if not worse.

In retrospect, mine was the "cool" dad like they all said. Throughout the '80s and '90s, he'd bike to DC from Baltimore every year, and he still bikes everywhere. He built furniture for our home, painted and built musical instruments like his prized kalimba just for the hell of it. And he taught me a lot about being present, a lesson that has admittedly taken until now for me to even begin to learn.

He taught me to question experts and their conventions. A true autodidact, he trained himself to troubleshoot and build computers simply using books found at the library. And though it's been a hard lesson, he's schooled me even more about love, commitment and redemption.

I'm compelled to write this now, at 29 years old, whereas I may not have been at 15. The embodiment of post-American, self-centered teen angst then, I wanted to kill him. There was a long stretch where I couldn't even see him as my father, but rather an abusive interloper who'd somehow convinced my mother to let him set up shop permanently in our home. I wasn't stable.

Even in my preteen years, I was rather insane actually. And I certainly couldn't (or more like wouldn't) see how I was in fact breaking his heart. But people change, and by some sort of fucking miracle, the both of us did.

I wish nothing more than for this to be a testament to the healing power of time, and a lament for a society where fatherlessness becomes normalized. We seem to have become numb to the sight of the bodies falling into the chasm of addiction, poverty and violence caused by the condition of the fatherless home, foreshadowing of a bleak future.

Yet, when we turn down the noise on the stereotyping of this only being a "black thing," or something that's happening to somebody else, somewhere else, we can easily see that this is a problem facing us all, because the kids, of all colors, who grow up without loving fathers are our weakest link, and therefore, really our strongest. There are certainly those who've grown up under the wing of strong single mothers, and thus turned out to be strong and successful individuals themselves.

For so long, I'd been unable to realize (and wholly ungrateful for) the distinction of being a kid who grew up with his dad present and genuinely involved in my life.

If my father had made any number of choices differently, if he'd simply split when my mother, hard-working, loving and iron-willed in her own right, announced my impending arrival, I wouldn't be the person I am today. Thankfully, I've been able to give him credit where it's due while he's still here.

We recently took a stroll through the woods behind the house, recounting summers gone by nursing briar wounds and shooting the bow and arrow in the backyard. I never imagined I'd have a relationship with my old man like the one I have now, as though he hadn't been under the same roof as me all those years and has just come home to roost.

As much as I'd like to, control freak that I am, I have no way of forcing fathers-to-be to stick around for their kids. The best I can do is to be grateful that mine did — to teach me to bait a hook, to stand up for me against the neighborhood bully who just wouldn't stop fucking with me, to protect me when those crazed Dobermans cornered us in that alley on the way home from school, to build me that awesome puppet at the last minute for my play, to call me on my shit when I was truly adrift, to speak truth to foolishness in his no-nonsense manner borne of love above all else.

Thank you DaDa.

Kasai Richardson is a writer living in Baltimore. You can follow him on Twitter @KasaiREX.

[Illustration by Jim Cooke]

49 Dead After Pro-Russian Rebels Shoot Down Ukrainian Military Plane

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49 Dead After Pro-Russian Rebels Shoot Down Ukrainian Military Plane

Pro-Russia separatists shot down a Ukrainian military transport plane today, killing all 49 people on board.

Only a week after Ukraine's new President, Petro Poroshenko, spoke of a plan for peace in his inaugural address, Ukrainian forces have experienced the deadliest single incident yet in their battle against armed separatists.

Ukraine's defense ministry issued a statement saying that the plane, which was transporting military personnel, was shot down by insurgents using anti-aircraft machine guns.

According to the AP, Poroshenko called an emergency meeting of Ukraine's national security council:

Afterward, the president scolded the head of the country's SBU security service, referring to "omissions" in measures to protect military aircraft from attack. He called for "a detailed analysis of the reasons" and hinted that personnel changes were imminent.

The AP has video of the wreckage:

Poroshenko has declared Sunday a day of national mourning.

[image via AP]

Appropropriate: Watch Cats "Play Soccer" on a Tiny Little Field

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Check out this exciting new clip from a World Cup match featuring anywhere from one to four cats and up to two finger puppets, depending on the moment!

What I don't understand, though, is: why wasn't this included in the guide to sounding informed about the World Cup? "I love the part with the cats. Mostly what I love about it are the finger puppets, I guess? Like, I mean—definitely I love the cats themselves, but I feel like the finger puppet really lets you know you're watching the World Cup."

[h/t TastefullyOffensive]

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