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NYPD Officer Knocks Teenager Out for Smoking a Cigarette

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The family of a Brooklyn teenager is suing the NYPD, claiming an officer knocked their son out and gave him brain damage after mistaking his cigarette for marijuana.

Seventeen-year-old Marcel Hamer was reportedly walking home from school smoking a cigarette when a plainclothes officer stopped him, apparently suspecting the cigarette contained marijuana.

The stop turned into a physical confrontation, partially captured on film. Hamer's family says, in their civil suit, that the officer struck Hamer so hard he passed out. In the video, Hamer appears to be unconscious, and the teen says he's suffered headaches, dizziness and memory loss. According to Brooklyn Paper:

The moment of the apparent knockout blow is partially obscured in the footage, but the officer appears to punch Hamer in the face with his left hand, prompting protests from Hamer's friends.

Hamer was eventually charged with—and pleaded guilty to—disorderly conduct. The NYPD told reporters Internal Affairs is investigating the matter.

[h/t NYMag]


Report: Records Implicate White House in Secret Service Hooker Scandal

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Report: Records Implicate White House in Secret Service Hooker Scandal

According to the Washington Post, Secret Service agents weren't the only ones hiring hookers in Cartagena—a fact the White House reportedly tried to keep quiet.

Twelve Secret Service agents were sent home from the president's 2012 Colombia trip when they were implicated in the Colombian hookers-and-blow scandal.

But it turns out they weren't alone. According to the Post, a presidential advance-team member, Jonathan Dach—at the time, a 25-year-old Yale University law student—also brought a prostitute back to the hotel, a fact that the White House apparently resisted acknowledging.

The Post reports:

Dach this year started working full time in the Obama administration on a federal contract as a policy adviser in the Office on Global Women's Issues at the State Department.

Dach's father, Leslie Dach, is a prominent Democratic donor who gave $23,900 to the party in 2008 to help elect Obama. In his previous job, as a top lobbyist for Wal-Mart, he partnered on high-profile projects with the White House, including Michelle Obama's "Let's Move!" campaign.

He, too, joined the Obama administration this year. In July, he was named a senior counselor with the Department of Health and Human Services, where part of his responsibilities include handling the next phase of the Affordable Care Act.

But according to the Post, both the Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security determined that Dach definitely, no question-about-it brought a prostitute back to the hotel.

Many hotels in Colombia, for security reasons, maintain detailed records of additional overnight visitors. At the Hilton, prostitutes are required to show identification to ensure they are not underage. That identification is photocopied by the hotel and stored with the records of the guest staying in the room.

The Post reviewed copies of the hotel logs for Dach's stay, which showed that a woman was registered to Dach's room at 12:02 a.m. April 4 and included an attached photocopy of a woman's ID card. Through his attorney, Dach declined to discuss these details as well.

Although twelve Secret Service agents were sent home for the same offense, the Post reports inspector general's investigators were put on administrative leave when they raised questions about White House involvement.

Former and current Secret Service agents said they are angry at the White House's public insistence that none of its team members were involved and its private decision to not fully investigate one of its own — while their colleagues had their careers ruined or hampered.

And now it all makes sense.

[image via AP]

Secondary Cop Fatally Shoots Teen in St. Louis Who Allegedly Fired at Him

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Secondary Cop Fatally Shoots Teen in St. Louis Who Allegedly Fired at Him

An off-duty city officer shot and killed an 18-year-old Wednesday night in St. Louis, Mo., after the teen allegedly opened fire on the officer, police said. According to a witness in the report with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the officer then shot the teen 16 times.

The report says that the officer was not in uniform and that he was "working a secondary job for a private security company" when he stopped to engage with four pedestrians around 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday night near Klemm Street and Shaw Boulevard in St. Louis. The four men fled and the officer attempted to chase them down.

Via the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, according to Assistant Chief Alfred Adkins:

The man the officer was chasing jumped from some bushes and struggled with the officer, Adkins said. The man then pulled a gun and fired at the officer, Adkins said. The officer returned fire and fatally shot the man.

The officer was not injured, and a gun was recovered from the scene, police said.

The officer, 32, is a six-year veteran of the police department, Adkins said.

Relatives of the shooting victim, eighteen-year-old Vonderrick Myers Jr., claim that the victim was unarmed. A cousin of Myers claims that he was merely carrying a sandwich when he was gunned down. Protests have already begun in the Shaw neighborhood of St. Louis.

This story is developing and will be updated as more information comes in.

[Image via Twitter]

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

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"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

Earlier this week, actor Stephen Collins—whose claim to mainstream fame was playing a minister and the father to seven kids on the pseudo-religious WB series 7th Heaven—became ensnared in controversy after TMZ published a secret audio recording of the actor allegedly admitting to having molested multiple underage girls.

In hindsight, Collins' constant contact with young people on screen might make one want to throw a remote at the television. Less well known is the fact that Collins, 67, is also a published author of two erotic mystery novels: Eye Contact, which hit shelves in 1994, and Double Exposure, which came out in 1998. 7th Heaven debuted in between, in 1996.

Taken at face value, Collins' books are throwaway pulp fiction: sexualized without being sexy, using violence as a shorthand for drama. Smut. But certain imagery in the sex scenes—and the sexual compulsion depicted by the narrators—becomes uncomfortable to read in the light of the reported specifics of the abuse accusations.

The novels are fiction. But where they fall on the timeline is unnerving: the alleged abuse and molestation reportedly happened two decades before Collins put these psychosexual imaginings into print. "The sources of her first and most heightened sexual experiences," he wrote of the first novel's protagonist, "were not merely frowned upon, but illegal and sick." http://gawker.com/wife-claims-st...

Scans of the pages from the books are included below; I've added some context to set up scenes as needed, but largely, the passages speak for themselves.

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

Eye Contact is told from the perspective of a struggling actress in New York named Nicolette "Nick" Stallings, who—beyond not seeming to be a very good actress—is in a constant state of mental duress, continually at grips with an internal struggle to expose her naked body to others.

The character's predilection would square with the accusation made by a woman who stayed with Collins and his wife in New York in the late 1970s and early 1980s, who claimed Collins would enter her bedroom with nothing but a towel on before exposing himself and molesting her.

Frequently, especially in the leading chapters of Eye Contact, Nick is powerless to head off her overpowering sexual desires. Just 20 pages in, Nick initiates oral sex with a man she brings home with her from a date, leaving the front door of her apartment wide open. The man, Todd, is terrified someone will walk in, that someone will see. Nick is undeterred:

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

A mere 20 pages later, Nick is in the hotel room with a different man, whom she dubs "Wally Wall Street." Room service knocks at the door, and Nick revels in maneuvering to have her towel drop in front of male hotel staffer:

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

This paragraph, from page 172, in which Nick recalls her earliest sexual experience, is especially unsettling to read now:

During her emerging swanhood, she discovered a power previously unimagined. She experienced the effect of removing her clothes in front of the opposite sex. It became her deepest secret.

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

Three pages later, the character goes on to describe a life of exposing herself to others as sexual thrill:

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

The following passage feels especially pointed. Nick remembers how she experienced her first orgasm—by masturbating while wearing her father's bikini (it's not clear why her father had in his possession a bikini) and dress shirt in her parents' bedroom:

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

In subsequent pages, Nick expresses feeling like Norman Bates from Psycho—that "she felt she must certainly be some kind of criminal," that "she became convinced, deep down, that she was sick":

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

The following scene, in the book's second half, is less explicit, but feels informative. Nick once again is internally negotiating whether to expose herself, and arrives at the following, from page 264:

They'd see each other, he might apologize and perhaps look the other way. But the point was that she could bare herself to him and no one would appear to be out of line. It would seem like a natural little accident.

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

Collins' second book, Double Exposure, published in 1998, is comparatively less tawdry. It's about a male TV critic for a New York daily and it's more straightforward, but not devoid of seemingly salient passages. In the following four pages, a couple encourage the other to share their sexual fantasies. His? To watch as someone has sex with her. Again Collins dwells on exposure and the thrill of getting caught.

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

And then there's this curious scene, in which the main character, Joe, consoles his young daughter, who expresses a fear of intruders entering their home and hurting her (emphasis mine):

"Daddy, would anybody sneak in here and hurt me?"

"No, sweetie," he assured her as Gayle had directed. "That'll never happen. We're ten stories up, the windows are locked, our front door is locked, and there are two more locked doors downstairs. You're completely safe."

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins

It's also worth pointing out, as Uproxx did, that when Jessica Biel, eager to shed her wholesome daughter-of-a-fictional-TV-minister image, posed topless for the cover of Gear magazine in 2000, Collins got his man-bikini in a twist and decried the photos as "child pornography."

"It Would Look Like an Accident": The Erotic Novels of Stephen Collins


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

Former Y Combinator Stars Secretly Slink Off to Dropbox

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Former Y Combinator Stars Secretly Slink Off to Dropbox

The idea of an economic safety net for the general populace makes Silicon Valley squirm, but they'll rush to strap a parachute on one of their own.

For instance, sources tell Valleywag that three cofounders from the relationship app Couple—a former Y Combinator darling, with $4.2 million in funding from Ashton Kutcher, Dave Morin, Michael Arrington, and 17 others—are now employed by Dropbox, Y Combinator's most dependable recycling machine.

The fourth remaining cofounder, Oleg Kostour, seems to still be working as Couple's CEO. But the startup hasn't even bothered to make sure their app works with Apple's latest software. Is the company winding down or is Kostour going solo?

If this reshuffling were a sign that the "social network for two" has been acqui-hired, i.e. purchased for the talent potential and not the product, it will be at least the fifth Y Combinator startup acquired by Dropbox. Airbnb, the other Y Combinator alum on track for an IPO, has subsumed at least one Y Combinator startup as well.


"Investors win because they get shares of a big company, Dropbox gets good engineers."


"Investors win because they get shares of a big company, Dropbox gets good engineers, and the small founders get a simple exit/job security," one source told Valleywag, stressing the difficulties of finding good developers who know how to work together: "When an iOS YC startup struggles, if they're small enough, it's no surprise when Dropbox or Airbnb picks them up." Of course, with that many investors, no one's swimming in Dropbox stock, no matter what the deal is.

I've reached out to Dropbox, Kostour, his cofounders, Couple, and some of its investors and will update the post if I hear back.

The Dropbox conversion came to light because of LinkedIn's hyperactive email disorder. Last month or so, people connected to Couple cofounder Aswinkumar Rajendiran were notified to "Say Congrats" on his new job as "Engineer at Dropbox." He quickly switched his profile back.

Former Y Combinator Stars Secretly Slink Off to Dropbox

Rajendiran's Facebook pages says he left Couple in August.

Former Y Combinator Stars Secretly Slink Off to Dropbox


The other big clue? Rajendiran and two other Couple cofounders—Michael Petrov and Anton Krutiansky—have been seen at Dropbox's decked out SoMa headquarters with employee badges.

In late August Kostur, the CEO, emailed the Y Combinator list-serv to try to find a job for his quality assurance engineer and office manager—not the kind of message you'd expect from a company trying to stay in business. Kostur is not an iOS developer like his three cofounders.

Former Y Combinator Stars Secretly Slink Off to Dropbox

Neither Dropbox nor Couple have said a word about this publicly. One source mentioned rumors about disagreements between the founders. Apparently Kostour also made a LinkedIn change last year, from CEO to Product designer.

The same source mentioned that Couple has been trying to use its investor network to sell the company, but potential acquirers bowed out because "the team was a mess."

This was not the expected outcome when Couple, then called Pair, launched in 2012. Pair's concept had been done before. The app got attention for a feature that let users send a vibrating "thumbkiss" from smartphone to smartphone, but mainly because of its many financiers.

On "Demo Day," the startup already had funding from SV Angel, Ron Conway's firm, and Path founder Dave Morin. According to TechCrunch:

[Morin] told Pair's team that Facebook has created social networking's "cities," Path is building its "houses," and Pair is like its "bedroom."

Two months later, the seed round was up to $4.2 million. In addition to Ashton & Co., investors include: PR maven Brandee Barker (formerly a top flack at Facebook), Betaworks, Lerer Ventures, Tencent (the Chinese Internet powerhouse), Susan Wu (a founding partner of Obvious Corp), and a bunch of Y Combinator partners and insiders: Paul Buchheit, Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, Garry Tan, Harjeet Taggar, and Sam Altman, who was named Y Combinator president this February.

The tech press greeted the app's technological potential, Internet famous investors, and fast growth with forced exuberance. Kutcher tweeted about this app.

Lindsay Lohan (was probably paid) to tweet about this app.

Other investors chimed in.

Now, three million people who bought the hype have intimate moments with their significant other sitting in limbo on a server somewhere.


"Now, three million people who bought the hype have intimate moments with their significant other sitting in limbo."


When management structure is crumbling, a "party round" of investors aren't a big help. The practice seemed to reach a crescendo in 2012. In fact, a year later Altman, the president of Y Combinator, chastised the same kind of festive financial arrangement that he participated in:

In a typical party round, no single investor cares enough to think about the company multiple times a day. Each investor assumes that at least 1 of the N other investors will be closely involved, but in fact no one is, and the companies sometimes wander off into a very unfocused wilderness.

Altman also tightened the rules about funding from Y Combinator partners because of "signaling issues." Since Altman doesn't spell out the signals, I will. If a startup is backed by a YC partners, that means the startup's mentors "buy the dream." And if the dream comes up empty, at least the landing will be soft.

Six months ago, Dropbox acquired two YC alums: Loom and Hackpad. In 2012, Dropbox acquired another two Y Combinator grads: TapEngage in July, 2012 and Snapjoy in December 2012. In June, Dropbox CEO Drew Houston was named to Y Combinator's Board of Overseers.

I'm loathe to quote Mark Cuban again, but even a broken billionaire is right twice a year:

What Silicon Valley does better than anyone is create exits. They know how to get people who they have made money for to turn over a lot of that money to buy the companies they have invested in.

Cuban also advised cities aspiring to be the next Silicon Valley to: "Brag about the exits and how there is capital waiting for amazing entrepreneurs to reach their goals."

In July, Y Combinator president Sam Altman claimed: "Total market cap of all YC companies: >$30 billion." How much of those billions are the same dollars reused?

Market cap will make no difference to Couple's users if the app that promised to be your digital bedroom "forever," sputters out. The last blog post (about a digital teddy bear sticker) was in July; its last tweet in August. According to iTunes, it hasn't been updated since mid-June.

In the Huffington Post last November, Kostour talked about how Couple's trove of intimate correspondence was used to apply for green cards:

Kostour said that in the last few months, dozens of couples have reached out to the Couple app via email, asking for a data file of their timeline history because they want to include it with their green card petitions. One man who reached out was looking to bring his fiancé to live with him in the U.S. Data experts were able to help him by providing him with the data file of the digital timeline that he and his fiancé share through the app.

That kind of bedroom data needs more than an emoticon:

If they're not gonna update for iOS8, can Couple at least stop using the f-word?

[Image via Shutterstock]

An Unnatural Birth: In Praise of the Caesarean Section

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An Unnatural Birth: In Praise of the Caesarean Section

I'm sitting, exhausted, in a tiny circle of new mommies, almost all of us first-timers, with our two-month-old babies in our laps. Some of the babies are sleeping, some are awake. For most of us, I assume, it was a struggle to even get here, to this meetup. It certainly was for me. The mommies are trading birthing stories, everything still fresh enough in our minds that we need to spill the details. Hours of labor, some easier than others, are logged and added up. Some women made it through without any pain medication, some ended up needing a bit of help. One woman gave birth in her apartment, a beautiful experience the way she tells it. All of the babies were born, all were well: healthy and fat and sitting in this circle, including mine.

Then it's my turn—I haven't offered, but people look over and I can see that I'm now expected to tell my story. I say—somewhat flippantly, for complicated emotional reasons—"Oh, my daughter was breech and I had a scheduled C-section."

"I'm so sorry to hear that," says one mother, who genuinely seems sad for me.

I nod in agreement. "Yeah, it was too bad it didn't work out how we wanted. But it all turned out fine, I guess."

I'm lying. We move on.

It took me months to come up with a better, more accurate, and more honest response to the, "I'm sorry to hear about your C-section" comment, but I've got it down now, and I need to, because I hear this fairly often. It is always, always, delivered with genuine caring and disappointment on behalf of my subpar birthing story. Like my well-worn "My face just looks like this" response to "You look like you're having a bad day!" or "Why aren't you smiling?" comments, my response to the C-section question can come off cutting, even rude—even though I don't intend it that way, not really.

"Actually, it was fantastic," I say now. "I slept well the night before, checked into the hospital, she was born healthy in about fifteen minutes, and I healed up in a few days."

It's all true: it was a wonderful experience. But it's not what a lot of people expect (or maybe want) to hear about a C-section birth.

About 33 percent (nearly 1 in 3) of babies in the US are born via Caesarean section every year, a number which steadily increased from the 1970s to 2009 and has remained stable since. Many are born under the same conditions as mine: medical complications force the parents to decide, as near to the end of the pregnancy as possible, to schedule a surgery that cuts into your abdomen and uterus to remove the baby. You don't labor, and neither does your baby. One moment she's cozy in your womb, and the next, poof! Out in the world and unhappy about it.

Many, however, are born via C-section after the mother has labored for hours and hours, and maybe hasn't slept in a day or more by that point. Referred to as an emergency C-section, it's basically the worst of all possible healthy birthing scenarios when "planning" or envisioning your birth, because you labor (which is super hard, as I understand) and when that comes to nothing you need to have major abdominal surgery anyway. This sounds, indeed, like a horror show. But then again, the end is the beginning: you get a baby!

The point is, very few people choose to have a C-section (I suspect partly because they're incredibly expensive if not medically necessary) but many do. And despite the huge amount of babies born this way, and with the best intentions possible, this "birthing experience" is seen as somehow unfortunate, a last resort, which you'll have feel regret for in the months to come.

But it's not. It is scary and weird to experience no pain in childbirth, but the fact that there is no pain doesn't make it a lesser experience. It's just a different one.

It's taken these months to figure out how I feel about people unintentionally making me feel like I've missed out on something with my lame, over-medicalized birthing scene. But I've never had any confusion about the experience itself: it was great. It was an awesome day all around and I wouldn't change a thing. The baby (who was both upside down and backwards in there) was calling the shots, so why wring my hands and wish it could have been another way?


In the past two decades or so there has been a growing backlash to the "over-medicalizing" of childbirth, resulting in a lot of positive reforms. This was for good reason. Children born in the '50s and '60s often had moms who, for no medical reason, welcomed them into the world zonked out on painkillers or cut open to make room for what nature could accommodate, and often both. Mostly, parents have a lot more options now, which is a good thing. Rather than a one-size fits all hospital birth, women are now routinely asked "what kind of birthing experience" they'd like to have. We are encouraged to form a "birthing plan." You can have your baby with a doctor or a midwife, in a hospital or at home, in water or in a bed.

Always, the most important question you need to answer while formulating your "birthing plan" is whether or not you want a "natural" childbirth. This means: no drugs, no epidural, and out through the birth canal, with as little medical intervention as possible. Women who labor at home or in special birthing centers rather than in hospitals don't have monitors for themselves or their baby. When I was pregnant, my doula (a "birthing coach" who I ended up not requiring) told me, "If you want a natural childbirth, you should not even think about the other options. You're going to do it. Don't say you'll try. If you keep the epidural on the backburner in your mind, you'll probably end up needing it."

But months before I knew that I would have to have a C-section, I wasn't really committed to the "100% natural at all cost" mentality. The "birthing experience" seemed like a means to an end: the end being a baby, who is awesome, and who I was very excited to meet. I had scenarios in my mind which were more ideal than others (and no, the one I ended up with wouldn't have ranked very highly at the time), but it never occurred to me that I would feel like a failure or be disappointed if I changed my mind mid-labor and wanted an epidural, or if I needed to have a C-section, because that is preposterous. I can find no evidence that either I or my baby would have been better off for a little suffering between us. If that's how you want to do it, go for it, I applaud you: awesome job. It's a good thing that medicine has advanced far enough to know when to step back and let nature take over sometimes. But that doesn't mean that one birth story is better than the next.

Speaking of nature. I'm all for nature. Totally on board with nature. I understand that babies have been being born the way they're born for however long humans have been around for, and it's all worked out fine. But a lot of the time it actually hasn't worked out fine. Many mothers and babies have died along the way, for things which medicine routinely corrects for these days. Prematurity. High blood pressure. Babies in wrong positions. All of these could and often did spell death for both parties not so very long ago. The Caesarean section is a marvel. Medications which can help labor along and reduce pain without permanently damaging mother or child are wonders of modern medicine.

Sure: I love nature. But when nature wants you dead, fuck nature. Take medicine and science. Hell, if nature just wants you to be less comfortable than you'd like to be, fuck it. Take the epidural, and don't feel bad about it.

I remember the moment my daughter was born. I don't have any more "natural" scenarios to compare it to, but I can't imagine anything could be better than those few minutes. My husband had just finished telling an anecdote about the song "Blue" by Eiffel 65, and there she was, spitting mad. It was perfect.

Every birthing experience where the end result is a healthy mother and healthy baby is equally awesome. You can argue that having an epidural should be considered under the umbrella of "natural" childbirth, but maybe we shouldn't even bother. Maybe calling one birth natural and the others… "unnatural" (I guess?) is fucked up and childish, perpetuating the myth that there are definitively better routes to getting a baby out than others. Remember: this day isn't about you. It's about your baby, who will probably seem unhappy regardless of the delivery system.

The best way to have a baby is to have it the way that you want to, and hopefully that's how you'll have it. If, like me, you don't get to decide, don't feel bad. It really doesn't matter, you will likely remember the day as one of the best of your life, and your baby will be amazing. There is no reason to get too attached to any one scenario of your child's birth, because it probably won't be anything like you imagined it. But it will still be yours, and as long as you are happy and healthy, with a healthy, beautiful son or daughter, at the end of it, it will be the best "birthing experience" ever. And don't let anyone convince you otherwise.

Laura June is a freelance writer and editor.

Illustration by Jim Cooke

​Couples Therapy Asks: When Do You Say "I Love You"?

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Couples Therapy got INTO IT Wednesday night by bringing in a "human lie detector," a very nice lady with the piercing aquamarine eyes of a white Bengal tiger who has worked with the CIA and FBI calling out liars.

Just going around the room introducing themselves and explaining what they were doing here besides getting paid, she called out Juan Pablo for "tongue protrusions" which sounds like CSI: Victoriana but actually indicates stress; such as the stress of lying your ass off.

Circling back to Juan Pablo and Nikki, they quickly got to the heart of the matter, the very issue everyone who watched the last "After the Final Rose" episode knew was the problem in the first place: Juan Pablo has never said "I love you" to Nikki. Nikki says it to him no problem, and he dances around it like he's wearing conversational go-go boots. However with the Human Lie Detector sitting across from them, Juan Pablo had to break it down for the room.

He's not saying "I love you" because that's not how he feels. Not because he's trying to spite Chris Harrison or the Bachelor franchise, but because he can't with integrity say the words. He can say he's "falling" for her. He just can't put it in the perfect tense.

Nikki definitely grasps that's there a major disparity there, that she loves him and he loves her, but he is confusing the issue by claiming it's a cultural disparity: if she were Venezuelan, she wouldn't expect to hear I love your or say it herself, Juan Pablo claims. He seems to think Americans are more flippant with the words "I love you" although any American single who has said it first in a relationship could probably give Juan Pablo a passionate rebuttal on that point.

Still, I am shocked and rocked that Couples Therapy, of all shows, crystallized a universal relationship problem so well. At what point do you stop waiting for someone to say "I love you"? When does giving someone time turn into wearing them down/stringing yourself along ?

If I were Nikki's friend and she called me up (from inside a giant macrame vase where she'd hidden to escape cameras) I'd ask her to imagine how she'd really feel if Juan Pablo said "I love you" all the time, and meant it, and showered her with affection. Not the first day or even the first week but like, month number two of that shit. Because I don't think she'd be happy with that version of him either. I'd tell her the trophy you're playing for isn't gold it's gold plastic. Now take off your helmet and assorted protective gear and walk into the uncut grass beyond the playing field. Feel the air. See if you can't spot the fireflies.

[Videos via VH1]

Morning After is a new home for television discussion online, brought to you by Gawker. Follow @GawkerMA and read more about it here.

Investor Says Marc Andreessen "Screwed More People Than Casanova"

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Investor Says Marc Andreessen "Screwed More People Than Casanova"

There's nothing quite like watching two billionaire blowhards fighting it out on basic cable. This time, Carl Icahn and Marc Andreessen are bickering over eBay.

It all started when Icahn, a notorious activist investor, successfully pressured the auction site to spin-off PayPal. That caused a miffed Andreessen—an eBay board member—to start blurting out insults on CNBC, saying Icahn was like an "evil Captain Kirk."

But Icahn later phoned in with his own brilliant brand of pettiness:

"I'm no great fan of Andreessen ... I tried to listen to him but he talks in a high squeaky voice and, you know, when he talks you can't really hear him in my opinion," Icahn said on CNBC's "Fast Money: Halftime Report."

Icahn also said Andreessen represents the bad side of the tech industry, saying that "it's sort of a known fact" that he has "screwed more people than Casanova."

Sadly, the both of them walked away winners. According to Business Insider, eBay's stock climbed 12 percent following news of the PayPal spin-off.

To contact the author of this post, please email kevin@valleywag.com.

Photo: Getty


George Clooney Takes You to Tomorrowland in Soothing New Trailer

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Britt Robertson goes to a wheat field for a sec (she touched a pin—you'll see) while George Clooney speaks soothingly about "a secret place where nothing was impossible" in the new teaser trailer for Disney's upcoming feature Tomorrowland.

The trailer for the film, which Disney says takes George (Frank) and Britt (Casey) on "a danger-filled mission to unearth the secrets of an enigmatic place somewhere in time and space," was debuted today at New York Comic-Con. For fans of: George Clooney, wheat fields, Disney, enigmatic places somewhere in time and space, pins, and movies to see when you visit your family.

The film is set to premiere on May 22nd 2015.

Touch every pin you can find!

[via Disney]

First Shipment of Weed-Laced Sodas Explodes off the Shelves

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First Shipment of Weed-Laced Sodas Explodes off the Shelves

A marijuana-laced soda sold legally in Washington State has turned out to be extremely dangerous. Not because of the totally reasonable 10mg of THC in each bottle, but because the sodas have been randomly exploding on store shelves.

Employees of a Bellingham pot shop say that one day after receiving their first shipment of Mirth Provisions' pot-infused pomegranate soda—cleverly branded "Legal"—they came in to find broken glass everywhere, Seattle's KOMO News reported.

They quarantined the soda inside a steel container, where bottles would periodically explode for the next 10 days.

"It sounded like a shotgun going off," Top Shelf Cannabis manager Zach Henifin told KOMO, "You can actually feel it, it was that explosive."

The problem was too much yeast. Although the pressure inside the bottles was acceptable when they were shipped, the carbon dioxide buildup over a period of days eventually overwhelmed the glass. Two Vancouver, BC, shops told KOMO they'd had the same problem.

Why didn't Top Shelf just destroy the rest of the bottles instead of building a tremendously loud "bomb box"? Well, Washington's Liquor Control Board requires the manufacturer to dispose of any marijuana products, and Mirth Provisions—located more than 3 hours away from the shop—didn't send someone to pick them up until 9 days later.

And when bottles of the soda started blowing up while they were being loaded into the driver's van, he bailed, abandoning the rest of the shipment. As of Tuesday, almost every one of the 330 bottles had popped.

"Sometimes when you're creating new products in a new marketplace, there's a little bit of a learning curve," Mirth founder Adam Stites shrugged. He's sending someone for the rest of the bottles this week, and waiting for the Liquor Control Board's ruling on what to do with them.

[h/t Seattle Eater, Photo: KOMO]

Political Conventions To Be More Easily Corrupted

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Political Conventions To Be More Easily Corrupted

If there is any institution that perfectly embodies the vacuous, superficial, money-centric nature of America's ill-concealed oligarchy, it is our national political conventions. They are useless pieces of shit. Now, it will be slightly easier for moneyed interests to buy them.

An example of something that could be done about political conventions that would benefit our nation as a whole would be: carpet bomb them from the air, while they are underway. That is not the direction in which our regulatory bodies are moving. Today, the Federal Elections Commission (over the objections of public interest groups, but at the request of the Republican and Democratic parties) decided that the parties can form new fundraising committees explicitly to fund their political conventions.

There can be little doubt that this step, designed to allow the parties that ostensibly represent your interests to more easily swallow money vomited from the mouths of special interest groups, will make our democracy better.

Let us not make jokes; the political parties had a very important reason for their urgent plea, reports Sabrina Eaton in the Plain-Dealer:

A lawyer for the Republican National Committee, which will hold the 2016 GOP convention in Cleveland, thanked the FEC for recognizing the plight of the political parties after Congress took the roughly $18 million the federal government had spent on each convention and redirected it to pediatric disease research.

I would like to award Sabrina Eaton our "Sly Impartial Journalistic Hero of the Day" for the devastating way that she phrased that paragraph. Keep the bastards honest, Sabrina.

In conclusion: you whores.

[Photo: AP]

Microsoft CEO Tells Women Not to Ask For a Raise at Women in Tech Event

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Microsoft CEO Tells Women Not to Ask For a Raise at Women in Tech Event

Congratulations to new CEO Satya Nadella for making people give a fuck about Microsoft for the first time in years. Nadella achieved this emotional engagement by offering up the most deplorable and incorrect advice to women in the workplace since Joan Holloway told Peggy Olson to wear something that showed off her darling ankles.

Nadella made those remarks on stage at an event to celebrate the marginalized accomplishments of women in the technology industry. Seriously. ReadWrite reports:

"It's not really about asking for a raise, but knowing and having faith that the system will give you the right raise," Nadella told a confounded (and predominantly female) audience at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing on Thursday.

Ascribing to mortals the fictional abilities of comic book heros, Nadella advised that women embrace their innate "super powers" and confidence, and trust a system that pays women 78% as much as men.

His belief in the imaginary didn't stop with super powers:

Nadella made the comments in an on-stage conversation with Maria Klawe, a computer scientist, president of Harvey Mudd College, and member of Microsoft's board of directors. He seemed to suggest that "faith in the system" is akin to magic.

"That might be one of the initial 'super powers,' that quite frankly, women (who) don't ask for a raise have," he told the straight-faced Klawe. "It's good karma. It will come back."

Dual kudos to Nadella today. He might have knocked Tim Armstrong off the most hated dinosaur in tech list.

Update: Karma has compelled Nadella to do some damage control on Twitter:

Nope, I'd say Nadella was incredibly articulate on stage. His thoughts on how women should be compensated came across loud, clear, and very telling. This line from his tweet not so much: "Our industry must close gender pay gap so a raise is not needed because of a bias."

Update II: The New York Times gives more context to Nadella's statement from the video below. It does not make him sound better. What Nadella apologists (including Nadella himself) don't seem to get is that his language and phrasing are not the issue. The issue is that in an unguarded moment, the CEO of a major technology corporation said he thinks the current system is efficient and that women eventually get appropriately compensated, despite the persistent wage gap. That doesn't even address getting a job offer from Microsoft, which is 70 percent male.

The system has always been rigged. By telling women that silence related to salary is a virtue that demonstrates "trust" and "responsibility," the CEO of Microsoft lays out his bias—a bias he didn't seem to realize he had. Here it is, from the top of the corporate ladder:

During the discussion, [Klawe] prompted Mr. Nadella for advice for women who are uncomfortable seeking promotions and career advancement [...]

Mr. Nadella said his own thinking on the matter was influenced by Mike Maples, a former Microsoft executive, who had a memorable saying about how human resources systems were inefficient in the short term and efficient in the long term. "It's not really about asking for the raise, but knowing and having faith that the system will actually give you the right raises as you go along," Mr. Nadella said, according to a webcast of the event.

But then he continued: "That, I think, might be one of the additional superpowers that, quite frankly, women who don't ask for a raise have. Because that's good karma. It'll come back because somebody's going to know that's the kind of person that I want to trust. That's the kind of person that I want to really give more responsibility to. And in the long-term efficiency, things catch up."

Klawe disagreed, recalling the time she was paid roughly $50,000 less than she should have been as dean of engineering at Princeton University because she waited to discuss salary.

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

[Image via Getty]

Passenger Pulled from US Airways Plane After Yelling "I Have Ebola"

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A US Airways flight from Philadelphia to Punta Cana, in the Dominican Republic, was held upon landing yesterday after a sneezing passenger joked about having been to Africa.

"I have Ebola, you are all screwed," the 54-year-old man said, according to the Dominican news site Diario Libre. Fox News reported he also screamed, "I've been to Africa!"

The director of operations of the airport in Punta Cana confirmed a medical team boarded the plane in hazmat suits and took the passenger to a separate medical health area, where he was examined and found not to have the lethal disease. The Ministry of Public Health also confirmed the scare was a false alarm.

The dumbass and/or hypochondriac, who was also found not to have been to Africa, is being returned to the United States, where he will be checked again.

According to the person who posted the above video, the other passengers were held for 2 hours before they were allowed to disembark.

No cases of Ebola have yet been confirmed in Latin America.

[h/t Barstool Philly]

Stink Bug Triggers False Code Red Air Quality Alert in Charlotte, N.C.

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Stink Bug Triggers False Code Red Air Quality Alert in Charlotte, N.C.

A stink bug triggered a false code red air quality alert in Charlotte, North Carolina yesterday after it landed on a sensor that monitors the city's air quality.

The North Carolina Department of Environmental and Natural Resources sent out a Tweet this morning with a photo of a stink bug sitting on the sensor, complete with a perfect caption:

10/8 Code Red for particle pollution in Charlotte caused by 1 large particle: a stinkbug on the air monitor.

To be clear, the stink bug stank didn't cause the code red reading (though they can funk-up the air quality in your house). Air monitors measure the amount of fine particles (such as vehicle exhaust and smoke from fires) and coarse particles (dust) floating around in the air. High levels of particulates in the air can cause health problems when inhaled, especially in people with asthma and others who are considered at-risk.

As the sensor measures particulates that are less than ten micrometers in diameter, the stink bug (length = 12,700 micrometers) was more than enough to trigger a false alarm for particle pollution.

The air quality index (AQI) runs on a six-category scale ranging from "Good" to "Hazardous." Today's AQI in and around Charlotte is "Good."

[Photo: NCDENR | h/t Brad Panovich]


You can follow the author on Twitter or send him an email.

Danny Gold's Vice story about Ebola in Liberia is terrifying, and not just for the lack of protectiv


Texas Tech Frat Bros Booted for "No Means Yes, Yes Means Anal" Banner

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Texas Tech Frat Bros Booted for "No Means Yes, Yes Means Anal" Banner

The Greek community at Texas Tech is getting into all kinds of trouble lately. Today, Phi Delta Theta's national headquarters kicked out 29 members of Tech's Phi Delt chapter after the bros hung a "No Means Yes, Yes Means Anal" banner up at a party last month. They also displayed a "vagina sprinkler."

Texas Tech Frat Bros Booted for "No Means Yes, Yes Means Anal" Banner

Bro Bible collected Snapchats from the event on September 19, which are as gross as you'd imagine. The event's theme was "hurricane."

According to the Associated Press, the chapter's charter is in escrow until the frat completes its sanctions. Those include "performing 10,000 hours of service to rape crisis and sexual assault prevention organizations."

The bros left in Phi Delt, who ostensibly weren't involved in the party, will have "limited" activities which "will include education in sexual assault prevention and bystander behavior."

[Photos via Snapchat/Bro Bible]

Barack Obama Writes to Millennials: A Style Guide

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Barack Obama Writes to Millennials: A Style Guide

"History has dubbed you 'the Millennials,'" writes President Barack Obama, the latest celebrated writer to bring his work to the elegant platform at Medium. He is telling the younger segment of his public something about jobs.

More importantly, though, he is investing his authority as Chief Executive in a series of decisions about style and usage. History—or at least a couple of high-concept quasi-historians—has dubbed young people "the Millennials." President Barack Obama makes sure to give them a capital M.

Here is an overview of President Obama's stylistic preferences, as expressed today on Medium.

• "Millennials": capital M

• "internet": lowercase

• "book bags": two words

• "landline": one word

• serial comma: yes ("we've expanded grants, tax credits, and loans")

• "touch screens": two words (adjective form: "touch-screen")

• "coffee shops": two words

• "smartphones": one word

He also might be using "their" as a singular pronoun, but there's a sort of wobbly single/plural parallel structure involved: "nearly all of the students graduate, and along with their diploma, they've earned real-world skills."

[Image via Getty]

Deadspin The Worst Motivational Coaching Gimmicks In History | Gizmodo A Brief History of Scientists

SNL Star Jan Hooks Dead at 57

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SNL Star Jan Hooks Dead at 57

Actress Jan Hooks, best known for her five years as a cast member on Saturday Night Live, died Thursday morning in New York City from a "serious illness," TMZ reports. She was 57.

Hooks was on SNL from 1986 to 1991, acclaimed for her impressions of Bette Davis, Sinéad O'Connor, Hillary Clinton, Kathy Lee Gifford, and as one-half of the Sweeney Sisters with Nora Dunn.

After SNL, she starred in the final two seasons of CBS' Designing Women, replacing Jean Smart. She worked with fellow SNL alum Tina Fey on 30 Rock, playing Jane Krakowski's scheming mother Verna.

[Image of Hooks at the 1988 Emmys via Wikimedia]

Thursday Night TV Remembers Tim Burton Fondly, Vaguely

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Hey shoppers let me tell you it has been a crazy week. Real life, work life and TV show life have all turned it up to eleven and I don't know what is even going on! Do you feel that way? Do you blame the Supermoon, with vestal livery sick and green, or the adverse motions of Mercury? My advice is, do both, even if you don't believe any of it. Nobody can argue with the sky. Too big.

At 8/7c. Fox has your Bones needs covered ("The Purging of the Pundit," heh), NBC's got Biggest Loser, Vampire Diaries seems to be returning immediately to the '90s dimension from last week's excellent/crazy reveal with "Yellow Ledbetter," and Legend of Korra wraps its third season on-air with a two-part finale about Henry Rollins's anarchic revolution taking place in the Earth Kingdom. That show is great but you can never tell if I'm kidding, which is one of the great things about it.

Finally, of course, ABC enters the Shondalands with a new Grey's Anatomy. I am completely loyal to that show so my opinion doesn't mean much, but this season is really great so far. The new lady, Maggie Pierce, is a true champion and I am in love with her. I'm enjoying the other two as much as a person possibly can, but Grey's will always be my first love and I'm trying to be as transparent as possible about that with people so they know who they are dealing with.

At 9/8c. NBC forces Bad Judge and A to Z on you no matter how hard you resist, Gracepoint lumbers on into the future at Fox, there's new Reign and Scandal—which have a lot in common if you think about it, like how Motown became our ancestors' Mumford & Sons—while Project Runway is 90 minutes of draping, sewing and making it work as usual.

Are you watching Gracepoint? I am honestly curious. I talk a big game but the fact is that I enjoyed parts of Broadchurch very much. Just not as much as I disliked the parts I did not.

At 10/9c. that wretched Nadia G would like you to Bite This on the Cooking channel ("this" being in tonight's case "Silicon Valley," of which I would not like the taste, I think), while Breaking Amish continues its third season chronicling violence among the nonviolent. There's also new Parenthood, new How To Get Away With Murder, and the fifth season premiere of Animal Planet's most popular show about monsters inside you, Monsters Inside Me.

If I had a monster inside me I think it would probably act like Billy Idol. Or no, Gwyneth. Maybe both. Maybe I should draw a picture of that, hang it on the wall. Gwyneth dressed up like Spike from Buffy, watchin' some Grey's Anatomy, talkin' back to the screen. Truly monstrous.

At 11/10c. what is going on is a new Black Jesus and an episode of Jean-Claude Van Damme: Behind Closed Doors set in Dubai, of course, while Teresa and Joe Giudice join Andy for another round of Watching What Happens: Live.

Stay safe, don't go to any haunted houses before this time next week, and it's okay if you secretly want to watch Freak Show again. Like as many times as you can, totally normal. Think nothing of it. You are no freak, even if you do get a little freaky sometimes. That's called life.

Morning After is a new home for television discussion online, brought to you by Gawker. What are you watching tonight? What are we missing out on? Recommendations and discussions down below.

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