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A Bogus Concert Promoter Reportedly Scheduled an Entire Fake Drake Tour

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A Bogus Concert Promoter Reportedly Scheduled an Entire Fake Drake Tour

Fans have already bought tickets for a Drake show in Houston that's never going to happen, ABC13 reports. Drizzy was billed as performing at the Arena Theatre May 13, but it turns out the show isn't legit, and the venue—and a handful of others around the U.S.—may have been scammed by a fake promoter pushing a fake tour.

The Arena is offering refunds to fans who shelled out for pre-sale tickets, and Drake's spokesperson is asking anyone who fell for the scam to let the authorities know:

"Drake has never been scheduled to appear at the Arena Theatre venue. When we learned of this situation we immediately encouraged the venue and promoter to contact law enforcement to initiate an investigation. We are horrified that someone would use Drake's name to take advantage of his fans. For any individuals who may have fallen victim to this, please contact your local authorities."

The venue says it's working with Drake's people at OVO Sound to try to get a legitimate concert on the calendar, and people who purchase the pre-sale tickets for the fake show will get first priority. (People who bought the tickets secondhand on Craigslist might just be out of luck.)

A Bogus Concert Promoter Reportedly Scheduled an Entire Fake Drake Tour

According to Gossip Cop, "an unidentified phony promotion company" has also tricked venues and fans in seven other cities, including Miami.

Back in 2010, the Miami New Times reported that people posing as members of Drake's team and booking fake shows was already "a trend."

Here's the statement Drake's people put out at the time:

It has come to light that an individual or groups of individuals have been contracting and advertising false bookings of Aspire/Cash Money/Young Money recording artist Drake for financial gain. These individuals misrepresent themselves as management affiliates of Drake in order to secure and pocket deposits for false bookings and club appearances.

No word on who the scammers are, or whether the 2010 incidents are related to the game being run this year.

In the meantime, be aware that the only real shows currently on Drake's schedule are either at music festivals or outside the U.S.

[h/t Gossip Cop]


Jared Leto Is Blond—Jared Blond

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Jared Leto Is Blond—Jared Blond

The world waited months for Jared Leto to make good on his "Haircut. #2015" promise and now that he's finally done it it seems Jared Leto, actor and haircut recipient, has let loose—really feeling free, going crazy with hair stuff.

Leto, who is preparing to take on the role of Heath Ledger in Suicide Squad, unveiled his new Karl Lagerfeld costume on Instagram today:

Incredible. Looking "good," my man. And thank you—of course, above all, thank you—once again, for keeping your haircut promise.

[image via Instagram]

Footsoldier in Octopus Uprising Liberates Camera From Human Oppressor

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Footsoldier in Octopus Uprising Liberates Camera From Human Oppressor

Days after one brave soul attempted escape from its enclosure at the Seattle Aquarium, beginning the octopus uprising in earnest, another cephalopod has taken up the flag. When a filmmaker naively attempted to photograph this beautiful captive creature in the name of "science," the octopus took the camera into its tentacles and turned it upon its captor.

The indefatigable spirit of the revolution lives on!

Footsoldier in Octopus Uprising Liberates Camera From Human Oppressor

Benjamin Savard wrote on Reddit that the teuthological proletarian made its act of symbolic defiance while Savard was making a film about the science department at Middlebury College: "The camera was automatically taking several photos of the octopus per second, but it picked up the camera and pointed it at me!"

Consider yourself lucky that it was only a camera, Ben.


Contact the author at andy@gawker.com.

Local Newscaster Wants to Know if Waluigi Is Behind Crash Landing

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Local Newscaster Wants to Know if Waluigi Is Behind Crash Landing

Local news has been speaking "truth to power" since the invention of towns, and there's no better example of why we need regional newscasters than today's LaGuardia plane accident. It's unclear if a fictional villain from the Mario franchise is responsible, but watchdogs at Atlanta's CBS 46 are on it.

Whenever a semi filled with bees flips over, a school explodes, or some dumbass falls into a burning fireworks factory, local rubberneckers immediately upload photos to Twitter. Then, triggered by infinitesimal vibrations in the air, local news station staffers swarm this onlooker and/or victim to request permission to use their blurry image, which then gets used regardless. Local Twitter guy @Leyawn decided to test just how credulous these people are. Would a guy who claims to have been on the crashed plane by using someone else's photo from the scene with a superimposed Nintendo character be taken seriously? It's worth a shot:

The answer is yes! Nice. I guess this is what happens when all of the staff photographers have been laid off.

Man Who Burned Face Praying Over Sizzling Fajitas Can't Sue Applebee's 

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Man Who Burned Face Praying Over Sizzling Fajitas Can't Sue Applebee's 

On Wednesday, an appellate court ruled that a man who burned his face while praying over a plate of fajitas could not sue the New Jersey Applebee's where the face-burning reportedly took place.

The Courier-Post reports that Hiram Jimenez seared his face at the Westampton, N.J., chain restaurant in March 2010 after he bowed his head over the table—on which a plate of hot meat had just been placed—to pray. According to court documents, Jimenez heard "a loud sizzling noise, followed by 'a pop noise' and then felt a burning sensation in his left eye and on his face."

Jimenez claimed he suffered "serious and permanent" injuries "solely as a result of (Applebee's) negligence when he came in contact with a dangerous and hazardous condition, specifically, 'a plate of hot food'."

A trial judge disagreed, as did a two-judge panel who heard Jimenez's appeal of the initial ruling.

The restaurant, the ruling stated, did not need to warn Jimenez "against a danger that is open and obvious."

"A danger that is open and obvious" is a good way to describe most food at Applebee's. Be careful praying there.

[Image via Shutterstock]


Contact the author at taylor@gawker.com.

Man Brings Dead Body to Lawyer's Office, "Didn't Know Who Else to Trust"

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Man Brings Dead Body to Lawyer's Office, "Didn't Know Who Else to Trust"

A Florida man who confessed to shooting and killing his neighbor after an alleged struggle brought the dead man's body to his lawyer's office in his pickup truck Wednesday. According to the Fort Myers News-Press, the man "didn't know who else to trust."

John Marshall, 52, reportedly showed up bleeding with broken thumbs and teeth, and told his attorney, Robert Harris, that he had acted in self-defense. He said he'd wrestled a gun away from his neighbor during a scuffle.

Marshall and his late neighbor, later identified as Ted Hubbell, had apparently argued about "some property work" days earlier. Marshall called his attorney, saying he thought his life was in danger.

Harris said he advised Marshall to get a restraining order.

After spending all of Wednesday in the lawyer's office, Marshall left for the hospital around 10 p.m, the News-Press reported. The Lee County Sheriff's Office hasn't said whether he'll be arrested.

Harris told the paper that although bringing a dead body into the office was certainly unusual, it wasn't the worst thing his client could have done.

"They don't teach you about this in law school. That's for sure," he said. "I believe we've handled ourselves correctly, but I'm a little in shock myself. This is not something that happens every day."

Neighbors later told the News-Press that they knew Hubbell as a Buddhist pacifist who was never loud or aggressive, while Marshall was "very threatening and aggressive." The two were apparently in a dispute about a portable outhouse that Marshall had set up near Hubbell's property.

[Photo: Lee County Sheriff's Office]

The Crash of Delta 1086 Is Exactly Why Airlines Cancel Flights for Snow

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The Crash of Delta 1086 Is Exactly Why Airlines Cancel Flights for Snow

We've all moaned and groaned over flights cancelled due to weather. It's maddening to miss your connection (or even your whole trip) because of bad weather, but incidents like today's crash of Delta 1086 in a snowy New York City are exactly why they make that tough call that can affect millions of travelers.

If for some reason you haven't heard yet, 24 people received minor injuries when a Delta Air Lines MD-88 from Atlanta to New York-LaGuardia skidded off of Runway 13 on landing late this morning. The plane veered left off the runway and onto the grass, crashing into an embankment on the airport's boundary with Flushing Bay. All passengers and crew managed to evacuate the damaged aircraft, which lost its left wing (causing a fuel spill) and took a nasty hit to the nose when it impacted the embankment.

Poor Weather at LaGuardia

New York is one of many cities in the eastern United States on the receiving end of a sprawling, slow-moving winter storm that dropped up to two feet of snow on parts of Kentucky last night. As such, conditions weren't all that great at LaGuardia when the plane landed a little after 11:00 AM, or 16:00 UTC.

Almost all official weather stations around the world produce weather data in a condensed format called a "METAR," short for METeorological Aviation (or "Aerodome") Report. Here's LaGuardia Airport's METAR taken shortly after Delta 1086 crashed:

KLGA 051622Z 01008KT 1/4SM R04/3000VP6000FT SN FZFG VV011 M03/M05 A3012 RMK AO2 SFC VIS 1/2 P0003

The report was taken at 11:22 AM with temperatures around 27°F and winds blowing from 10° (the north) at around 10 MPH. Conditions at the time were overcast at 1,100 feet with moderate snow falling and freezing fog present over the field. The station reported visibility of one-quarter of a mile, but an observer added a remark at the end of the report saying that the surface visibility was one-half of a mile.

Two things stand out from that report:

  • The aircraft had a slight tailwind on landing. Planes landing on Runway 13 are facing roughly 135°, or southeast, and winds were blowing from 10°, or north, so winds were blowing towards the back-left part of the plane as it landed. Planes almost always take off and land into the wind because tailwinds inflate their speed—if that tailwind shifts or stops blowing, you suddenly lose some of your forward speed, and during landing, a sudden loss of any forward speed can be disastrous.
  • Temperatures were cold enough that the snow and freezing fog were readily sticking to exposed surfaces at the time.

Of course, we won't know for sure the exact cause of the crash until the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) releases their report a year from now, but planes don't just skid off of runways for no reason. Given the conditions at the time, it's safe to speculate that hazardous weather conditions played at least a contributing role in the plane's runway excursion.

It's annoying as hell to get stuck in an airport because of a cancelled flight, but incidents like the one in New York this morning are exact reason that airlines ground thousands of planes during severe winter storms.

Slick Runways

Aside from traffic management, one of the main reasons that airlines cancel flights during hazardous weather is the condition of runways at affected airports. It goes without saying that aircraft are heavy and they're going very fast when they come in for a landing. On a good day, aircraft need ample room to use their brakes, spoilers (the flaps that extend on the top of the wing), and reverse thrust to slow the aircraft to a safe speed so they can begin taxiing to the gate. When runways are slippery from rain, snow, or ice, they need a much longer stretch of pavement in order to maintain traction and safely slow down.

There are some airports in the world where space is virtually no issue. The runways at Denver International Airport are all more than two miles long. LaGuardia, stuck on the northwest corner of Long Island with water to its north and millions of people to its south, doesn't have that luxury. Each of LaGuardia's runways stretch about 7,000 feet, or a little over 1.3 miles long. When you combine the complicated approach pattern required to land at the airport along with the relatively short runway lengths, pilots aren't afforded much room for error.

The Crash of Delta 1086 Is Exactly Why Airlines Cancel Flights for Snow

Within the past two years, several commercial aircraft have slid off of runways and taxiways at airports around the United States due to icy conditions. In January 2014, a Delta Connection jet from Toronto slid into the grass at New York-JFK after encountering an icy patch on a taxiway. Another Delta jet slid off the runway during a snowstorm in Madison, Wisconsin, back in December 2013. A United flight slid into the grass after landing on an icy runway in Cleveland in February 2013. Back in 1994, a Continental Airlines jet slid off a runway and into a ditch during a snowstorm after aborting its takeoff from LaGuardia.

Aircraft Icing

Another major concern aviators run into during winter storms is icing on the aircraft itself. Even a small amount of ice on an airplane can spell disaster—some pilots will request their planes to be deiced after a light morning frost let alone a significant bout of freezing rain or snow. Air must flow smoothly over an airfoil in order for the plane to take off and maintain controlled flight. Any significant buildup of ice on any the surface of an airplane—especially the wings—can disrupt the airflow and cause the plane to lose speed, stall, and potentially crash.

CORRECTION: As several commenters have pointed out (1, 2), the cause of the Colgan Flight crash discussed in the next paragraph was not due to ice, but rather pilot fatigue. Icing was discussed during the investigation, but found not a significant factor in the accident. I apologize for my error. A better example would have been Air Florida 90, a flight that crashed in the Potomac River after taking off from National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, during a snowstorm. In that crash, the pilots failed to recognize and mitigate ice buildup on the aircraft and its engines, preventing the plane from gaining altitude before it crashed into the 14th Street Bridge. The original paragraph appears below, unedited.

No American air carriers have experienced a fatal accident since Colgan Flight 3407 crashed in a neighborhood near Buffalo, New York, on February 12, 2009. The turboprop flew through severe icing on its approach into Buffalo from Newark, allowing a crust of ice to form on the aircraft's wings. The overworked and overtired pilots didn't properly respond to the ice buildup on the aircraft, causing the plane to go into an irreversible stall.

Airlines can conduct marginal operations when pure snow is falling, but if any sleet or freezing rain starts to mix in, forget about it.

Low Visibility

Low visibility is a pretty good reason to cancel flights. It helps when the pilot can see where he or she is flying your plane at several hundred miles per hour. The inability to see more than a few hundred feet in front of you is more common during dense fog than winter storms, but visibility can dip pretty low in heavy snow.

Commercial pilots are trained to fly their planes under two different sets of conditions: VFR (Visual Flight Rules) and IFR (Instrument Flight Rules). The former allows pilots to use their skills and visual judgement during takeoff and landing, while the latter requires pilots to strictly adhere to their instruments when visibility is too low to safely maintain control of the aircraft.

On December 16, 1997, an Air Canada regional jet carrying 42 people crashed in Fredericton, New Brunswick, when pilots attempted to abort their landing due to dense fog. The pilots were unable to regain altitude, clipping the runway with one wing and crashing into the edge of a wooded area. Amazingly, nobody was killed, and zero deaths is even more incredible when you see the picture of the tree that tore through the cabin.

Don't Yell at the Airlines for Bad Weather

Winter weather isn't the only reason that flights are cancelled. Severe thunderstorms over the airfield present a whole new set of weather-related issues, and they often result in planes circling or remaining grounded until the worst of the weather has passed through.

Almost everyone who has to fly on a regular basis runs into someone who inevitably yells at a gate agent because bad weather cancelled their important flight to Yuk Yuk, Mississippi. "Aww, it's not so bad! Come on! It's just a little snow! What's your problem!?"

Airlines cancel flights during bad weather because airplanes have a nasty habit of crashing when runways are icy or the wind is blowing too strong. They lose boatloads of money when planes sit empty at the gate, but their coffers take a bigger hit when they have to pay out million-dollar settlements to the families of craters in the ground.

It's too early to know for surethat hazardous weather conditions are the reason that the front of a commercial jet is hanging over the edge of Flushing Bay this afternoon, but it's a safe bet that snow and ice on Runway 13 was at least a major contributing factor in the crash. If you ever get caught in the airport during a snowstorm and can't figure out why your flight got cancelled over a few measly inches of snow, look no further than the banged-up shell of Delta 1086 for a compelling explanation.

[Images via the AP]


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Ex-New York Archbishop Cardinal Edward Egan Dead at 82

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Ex-New York Archbishop Cardinal Edward Egan Dead at 82

Cardinal Edward Michael Egan, who served as the Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York from 2000 to 2009, died of cardiac arrest at NYU's Langone Medical Center this afternoon. He was 82.

Egan, who was appointed archbishop by Pope John Paul II, was known for his low-key and academic approach to the archdiocese as well as a sometimes icy relationship with New York's Catholic priests, as a 2007 New York magazine profile lays out:

Historically, the city's top priest has been a tribal chieftain as much as a spiritual leader—a man who represents the pride of a blue-collar immigrant community that overcame prejudice and hardship to become the most prominent and powerful religious force in the city. Every bishop has a threefold mandate, "to teach, to sanctify, and to govern," and New York churchmen have made full use of those powers...

Not so Egan. From the start, he approached the job more as a private administrator than as a civic leader. He eschewed partisan politics and shunned the media.

Before his appointment as New York archbishop, Egan served as Bishop of Bridgeport from 1988 to 2000, where priests were accused of sexually abusing minors. Egan half-apologized for his handling of the episode in 2002, saying, "If in hindsight we also discover that mistakes may have been made as regards prompt removal of priests and assistance to victims, I am deeply sorry." But in 2009, he retracted his apology, claiming, "I don't think we did anything wrong."

"Join me, please, in thanking God for his life, especially his generous and faithful priesthood," Cardinal Dolan, Egan's successor as New York archbishop said in a statement today. "My sympathy to his natural family, who will grieve for their uncle, and to you, his spiritual family here in the Archdiocese of New York."

[Image via AP]


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Looks Like Samantha Bee's Not Taking Over the Daily Show Either

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It's looking increasingly likely that the next host of the Daily Show won't be one of its correspondents. John Oliver's sticking with HBO, Jessica Williams says she's not ready, and now "most senior correspondent" Samantha Bee is heading to TBS to kick off a show of her own.

According to a press release from the network, "the new show, which is in the early stages of development, is being planned as a platform for Bee to apply her smart and satirical point of view to current and relevant issues." Bee will also executive produce the show.

Bee's husband and fellow Daily Show alum Jason Jones, who was already working on a scripted sitcom for TBS, will also produce.

That doesn't entirely rule out the possibility that Bee and/or Jones could come back to Comedy Central to host the Daily Show after Jon Stewart vacates the chair, but it sure makes it less likely.

Bee was a popular choice in polls about who should host the show after Stewart announced he was leaving. It would be a shame if she's really out of the running, because in addition to her brilliant Daily Show experience, she'd also add to the diversity of late night TV, which is often criticized for its homogeneity.

I guess we'll have to wait for another Canadian to finally crack late night's infamous glass border. (Tom Green doesn't count.)

[h/t Mediaite]

Leonardo and Rihanna, Make Up Your Minds Already, Damn

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Leonardo and Rihanna, Make Up Your Minds Already, Damn

Leonardo DiCaprio, actor and founding member of the Pussy Posse, and Rihanna, VIVA GLAM Rihanna™ model, have been fucking with us for months. What's up, guys? Come on.

According to a PageSix source, Leonardo DiCaprio was spotted on Friday at a party at Muse frontman Matt Bellamy's LA home (sure). He and a model were seen in Bellamy's room, says the source, where they "sat on the bed and left the door open." Very sexy.

"No one saw anything," the source adds, "but they did leave hand in hand."

And what about Rihanna, the woman with whom Leonardo DiCaprio has been in countless rooms over the past three months? PageSix has another source:

"Leo and Rihanna are just friends. Leo is and has been single for some time. He has been working on/shooting 'The Revenant' in Canada for months."

OK.

In any case, once again: 50% model.

[image via Getty]

500 Days of Kristin, Day 39: There's No Parabins 

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500 Days of Kristin, Day 39: There's No Parabins 

In 461 days, Kristin Cavallari's debut book Balancing on Heels hits shelves. Today, Kristin posted five sentences about a facial scrub to her eponymous app, which is incidentally now available for Android.

Kristin titled her paragraph "Obsessed." She writes:

Acure is a skincare brand that I'm currently loving. They use the purest, most effective fair trade, natural, and organic ingredients. There's no parabins [sic], sulfates, fragrances, or animal by products [sic]. The facial scrub is one of my all time favorite products. It leaves your skin silky smooth.

Interesting.

We wait for more.


This has been 500 Days of Kristin.

[Photo via Getty]

Harrison Ford Injured After Crash Landing Small Plane in L.A.

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Harrison Ford Injured After Crash Landing Small Plane in L.A.

According to TMZ and Variety, a small plane piloted by Harrison Ford crash landed on Penmar golf course in Los Angeles this afternoon. Ford reportedly suffered several injuries, including gashes to his head, and was treated by doctors who happened to be playing golf on the course.

Emergency workers found Ford conscious and breathing, and rushed him to a nearby hospital. He reportedly suffered lacerations and possible bone fractures, though a spokesman for the L.A.F.D. described the injuries as "moderate."

Harrison Ford Injured After Crash Landing Small Plane in L.A.

From Variety:

The 72-year-old crash landed on Penmar golf course after something apparently went wrong with the small plane. Ford was transferred to a local hospital in critical condition. The actor was the only one aboard the plane and the only person who sustained injuries.

Ford reportedly walked away from the crash, but had sustained head injuries.

Howard Teba described the crash to NBC Los Angeles.

"We saw this beautiful plane," he said. "It looks like a plane I see often, leaving from Santa Monica Airport. It must have hit the top of a tree."

Update 7:40 p.m.

Just before crashing, Ford reported an engine failure to air traffic control. The audio, via TMZ:

Update 8:20 p.m.

Ford's son says he's doing okay.

In Your Relationship, Are You the Kanye or the Kim?

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In Your Relationship, Are You the Kanye or the Kim?

In Paris earlier today, Kim Kardashian debuted a new, radically blonde hairstyle—something that looks akin to a Rita Ora Real Doll starring in a Michael Bay space opera. She looks ravishing and mean and it suits her perfectly. And it's almost certainly thanks to Kanye.

Yes: The question of how Kim arrived at her new hairstyle will likely never be directly answered, but for scholars of the Kardashian-Wests, there is general agreement that Kanye played a key role in the change. Since the mogul and the entrepreneur first started dating in 2012, Kim has undergone a transformation, one that can be traced in large part to Kanye's thirstily high-fashion taste. As he pushes the boundaries of acceptable rap-star streetwear, so too has he pushed Kim to make the best possible use of her Tex Avery figure. And she wears it well. The two are the King and Queen of Style, whether Sarah Michelle Gellar wants to believe it or not.

But Kanye's influence on Kim's style is not just "crazy" Kanye bossing around his poor little wife. It is not necessary to run around screaming BUT(T) KIM IS A MOGUL, TOO. Yes. She is. She is a successful and lovable woman, executive, mother and much, much more. But the K-Ws have come together to form the perfect American Matrimony, wrapped up in a clean and rad and powerful aesthetic vision: Charisma. Ego. Genius. Dominance. Superficiality. Money. Vanity.

And, best of all, Love. Kim's new looks are a gift of love from Kanye that echoes this quote from their dual Vogue cover: "She's like a dream girl. And I think a dream girl should live in a dream world."

Good couples complete each other: One is dominant and one is submissive; one is loud and one is quiet; one is out there and one is in here; one is childlike and one is ice-cold. And these characteristics enable the two to flourish: Kanye is out here yelling about Beck while Kim made $43 million off a goddamn app.

But great Kouples elevate each other. Each member of a great Kouple brings something that pushes his or her companion to be the best version of themselves they can be. Kim gives Kanye a muse and a queen. Kanye gives Kim access to a new stratosphere of fame and power. And a gloved Riccardo Tisci gown at the Met Gala. It is a terrifyingly beautiful merging of territories, the likes of which haven't been seen since Hapsburg Europe.

Which brings me to my point. While there is little chance any of us will see the wealth or notoriety that both Kanye and Kim have accumulated in a million lifetimes, their hyperpublic relationship provides us with a model for our own. Perhaps part of the reason that the world is so fascinated by the pair—besides the global competition to be remembered as the biggest hater—is that they are us. In every relationship, there is a Kim and a Kanye—a beautiful and pliable muse and a neurotic tortured genius; a brilliant emotional wreck and a calm and collected social architect—and very little in between.

Try it on your friends, your parents, your significant other. It is a scarily accessibly form in which every couple fits quit snugly. Fight over who gets to be who, but really you'll both come out the winner.

If you recently ordered your boyfriend to change out of that gingham Uniqlo button-down that made him look like a square, you might be a Kanye. If you are going to every one of your girlfriend's art-punk shows, even though no one else is, you might be a Kim. If you're craving a Blooming Onion at 11 p.m., you might be a Kanye; but if you already ordered sushi for everyone in your squad, you might be a Kim.

This binary is gender-and-sexuality-fluid, but from an unscientific poll, it seems mostly unchanging within a relationship, as in you cannot one day be a Kanye and then the next be a Kim. (Can you be a Kanye in one relationship and a Kim in the next? Up to you to find out.)

Both are powerful. Both wield influence. Both do things in their own way, but both follow certain personality patterns. So which is it: in your relationship, are you a Kanye or a Kim?

[Images via Getty]

Wanna Have a Nightmare Cool Here's a Lion Casually Opening a Car Door

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For centuries, we've naively believed that man was the king of the animals. But is that just want they wanted us to think??

If you like horror movies or sleeping with all your lights on, be sure to check out this awesome video of my own personal worst nightmare shot at a South African safari park.

At the very least, be sure to add your car to the list of places where an animal's probably going to murder you and uh, rest easy buddy. Won't be too long now.


H/T UPI. Contact the author at gabrielle@gawker.com


Ellie Mae, "Horse Deputy," Dead at 30 or 35

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Ellie Mae, "Horse Deputy," Dead at 30 or 35

Oklahoma County Sheriff's Department Deputy Ellie Mae, a mule (not a horse)*, died on Tuesday. She was 30 to 35 years old.

In a touching tribute posted on Facebook, the sheriff's department admitted they didn't know Ellie Mae's exact age—"We're not quite sure of her exact age"—but praised her understanding of gates and her work with children. From Facebook:

She could always sense when [children] were in her presence and took extra caution when they were around. Ellie had many riders in her lifetime, both inexperienced and veteran. She always seemed to know when a rider needed her to take charge and always took great care of anyone who was on her back. Ellie had a special ability concerning gates. There literally wasn't a gate made that she couldn't open!

Deputy Randy Garner owned Ellie Mae and worked with her on the Mounted Patrol for more than 25 years. Ellie retired this past April and moved to Kentucky, where she lived with Garner's daughter, Amanda, and her family. KFOR reports that Garner was with Ellie when she died peacefully on Tuesday.

Below, the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Department's video tribute to their former colleague.

RIP.

Cops Say a High School Dean Shot a Teenager Execution Style

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Cops Say a High School Dean Shot a Teenager Execution Style

In a story that, if we're being honest, could not have happened outside of Boston, a high school dean who also worked as a reverend was just arrested for allegedly shooting a teenager in the back of the head over drugs.

Cops say Rev. Shaun O. Harrison shot a 17-year-old at point-blank range Tuesday, injuring but not killing the teen, who was reportedly selling drugs for him. It's not clear how the pair met, though Harrison's other authority figure position as the dean of students at Boston English high school might have provided the introduction.

(The AP also reports Harrison led substance abuse and anger management programs for the teens.)

Via Boston.com:

Around 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Harrison lured a 17-year-old student onto Magazine Street with promises of girls and drugs, and then shot the student in the back of the head with a handgun, before fleeing on foot, according to authorities.

Police said surveillance footage from a local business captured the incident.

Amazingly, the student, who police have not identified, survived the shooting and was taken to Boston Medical Center for treatment. The student told police that he sold marijuana for Harrison, who ran a drug ring, until the two got into a dispute.

Harrison was arrested and charged with a host of felonies. The Herald points out that the good rev might have been an honest-to-goodness gangster: he allegedly "had a mural of Latin King members in his home and shared a matching tattoo with two other men arraigned in connection with the shooting."


Image via Facebook. Contact the author at gabrielle@gawker.com

Surprise Surprise the Snuggie Was Too Good To Be True

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Surprise Surprise the Snuggie Was Too Good To Be True

Turns out the Snuggie was hiding something nefarious up its cozy blanket sleeves, and now the sham of a company is paying the ultimate price—a fine!

The FTC says parent company Allstar, the maker of products like the Snuggie, the Perfect Brownie Pan, and the Perfect Bacon Bowl conned the infomercial crowd with its promises of bespoke fleece and perfected foodstuffs at reasonable prices. Via the AP:

The Federal Trade Commission said on Thursday that the company, the Allstar Marketing Group, promised customers buy-one, get-one-free promotions but ended up charging higher fees. The agency said customers were led to believe they would be getting two $19.95 products for less than $10 each, but actually paid $35.85. Some customers were also sold more products than they intended to buy. The New York attorney general said one customer who wanted to buy two $19.95 Perfect Brownie Pans was charged $105 for six of them after being confused by an automated phone call.

Allstar has promised to be more clear in the future and paid an $8 million fine, the majority of which is earmarked for customer refunds, but don't wait, call now!!!!!!!!!!!

[image via Flickr]

Girls Who Steal

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Girls Who Steal

Girls stole from me.

It started my first year of high school. They didn't mean any harm by it. It was always little things they stole, the kind of thing that could be taken easily from a careless person. I was a careless person. They were magpies: attracted to the small shiny accessories that other girls had lying around their bedrooms. Lipsticks, a Sweet Valley High book, a half-empty bottle of perfume, a charred-looking shade of nail-polish called MINX: they were all girly items. It took me weeks to realize what was missing - sometimes, I never did. Sometimes I only realized that Marybeth had swiped my keychain when I saw it jingling brightly at the bottom of her trendy neon backpack. Sometimes I'd see my T-shirt in Grace's closet and think Oh, that's where that went.

On those occasions, I never said anything to Marybeth or Grace. Instead of confrontation, I chose the tactful solution: I locked up my possessions whenever they came over. "Marybeth, Grace" I said breezily, "let's not hang out in my room" (pushing my new pink iPod further out of view) "let's go to the mall" (sweeping the last pot of my glitter eyeshadow into a drawer) "and get milkshakes instead!"

They were easy to distract, because their thieving was petty: it was born of instinct rather than any real desire for my possessions. They were light-fingered girls, the kind who snuck into movie theatres without paying and dropped Claire's rhinestone clips into their handbags on the sly. I figured it was fine, because Claire's rhinestone clips were so ugly anyway. Even when they stole from me, I thought nothing of it. I assumed this was natural girl behavior. It was kleptomania, but in its most adorable bubble-gum form. I thought the damage was minimal.


Ten years later, I was at a bar in downtown Boston with some friends. We were halfway through our second year of law school, and employers were conducting on-campus interviews to determine where we'd be that summer and possibly the rest of our lives. Naturally, we could talk of nothing besides who got hired early and who bombed all their interviews. I was in the middle of figuring out whether Brian really had been drinking before his interview with Proskauer when someone with a smooth cold voice cut in.

"You know Weil hired Lauren? She just got her letter yesterday."

It was Emma, smiling at me as though there was no one else she'd rather see.

"I guess they're less fixated on first-year grades than they pretend," she said, "because Lauren's first year grades were"–here she made a soft clicking noise that made me want to strangle her.

"Incoming," hissed Emma's best friend, another girl who was notable mostly because her parents owned one of New York's most expensive restaurants. And sure enough, there was Lauren coming across the room, in a tiny black dress, fairly glowing with happiness.

"Wow," Restaurant Heiress said when she got to us. "That dress is so short. You never feel cold! I'm so envious!"

Lauren looked slightly confused, but nodded and smiled as though it were a real compliment.

"I heard about Weil," I said. "That's fantastic. Have you celebrated yet?"

"Thanks!" said Lauren. "I can barely believe it, to be honest."

"Me neither. However did you manage it?" Emma said, cocking her head to one side like a bright, vicious bird. And this time there was no mistaking the look on Lauren's face. Her expression crumpled in on itself like paper, softening and blurring till I could barely keep my own eyes from the wetness.


The first time I encountered the term kleptomania was in 2002, when Winona Ryder was arrested for shoplifting from Saks. The newspapers went into a frenzy. What struck me upon reading the case was the detail that Ryder cut holes in the stolen clothes in order to get the tags off. That could only mean these clothes were never intended for her personal use. If she needed a new wardrobe, she could have easily paid for it, anyway. If she stole, it was because she wanted to steal.

Emma wanted to steal. Many of us do. We wander through the supermarket aisles of somebody else's self-esteem, helping ourselves to whatever we find along the way. We don't want what we take; we take it because we want to take. The value lies in the act.

The act of stealing between women can be physical or it can be emotional. What is physical is easily replaced. A barrette goes missing, and you buy another one. As we age, we graduate to emotional stealing. But what do we do when we're robbed of our self-esteem?

I saw a girl crying in a bathroom once with her arms around her knees, indifferent to the fact that the door of her stall was open. I hesitated before asking if she was okay. She took one scrunched-up fist out of her eye, looked at me and said with drunken candor: "My friend told me my boyfriend was out of my league. She's always making me feel bad."

It was this pattern of behaviour I found fascinating: the "always making me feel bad." What the sad girl was describing was consistent, low-scale, looting of happiness. Contrary to what Eleanor Roosevelt said, it's very, very easy to make somebody feel inferior without their consent. It's easy, and it's addictive. It's so bold of you to wear that! It's great that you're not worried about your grades! Where do you get your confidence? None of these comments seem devastating on paper, but in person they're a one-two punch to your heart. They make you worry that you don't look as good as you thought you did, that you're not as intelligent as you thought. You go over subtext more than you did for any college English class. You lie awake at night wondering What did she mean? Did she mean that? Am I crazy for thinking that she meant that?

Helen Fielding, creator of beloved single-girl Bridget Jones, introduced a similar concept known as "jellyfishing" in 2001:

"The thing about Rebecca is, she's a jellyfisher. You have a conversation with her that seems all nice and friendly, then you suddenly feel like you've been stung and you don't know where it came from. You'll be talking about jeans and she'll say "Yes, well, if you've got cellulite jodhpurs, you're best in something really well-cut like Dolce and Gabbana"- she herself having thighs like a baby giraffe—then smoothly move on to DKNY chinos as if nothing had happened."

Underneath the light hilarity of this idea–(is there a more delightful metaphor than jellyfish?)—is real pain, Bridget Jones' real pain. The subtext of pain that is swept under the rug (of course, Bridget never says anything to Rebecca to indicate her hurt) as a matter of course.

Most frequently, we categorize this behavior as general cattiness. I asked my friends: "Do you have any men friends who make catty comments that fall just this side of mean, just enough so that you can't call them on it without seeming paranoid?" Many of the women said yes. The men didn't understand what I meant right away, so I tried again, saying "Sometimes it masquerades as a compliment, but it's definitely not a compliment." When the men finally understood what I was driving at, they said No, of course they didn't have friends who made them feel small. They said it with confidence, with incredulity at the idea that anybody would have that kind of friend. What kind of friends would they be?

It's tempting to think that men are better than women: nobler, kinder. I want you to understand that's not what I'm saying. Women are raised to be careful of other women, because women are catty, jealous creatures, always stealing things from each other: jobs, men, beauty, self-esteem. As girls, we grow up learning not to trust other women, because we're told there are only so many opportunities to go around, only so many good men to be had, only so much beauty to be shared. We are lied to.

I know women who say of Hollywood actresses, "Well, she's pretty, but she's not that pretty," in a tone that is, more than anything else, defensive. If you praise one woman's beauty, it is perceived as an attack on the beauty of another. So they concede prettiness, because they don't want to seem ungenerous. Then they revoke. One step forward, two back. They parse for flaws so intensely, these women. Rihanna is pretty, but. Rihanna has a big forehead. Blake Lively is pretty, but. Blake Lively is all body. It's as though they were thrown into an arena and told to fight for the prize: a single, golden apple of beauty. No sharing allowed.

This is part of the damnation of being a woman: We're forced into a false competition for everything: men, beauty, jobs. While men compete directly, we're socialized to compete indirectly. Men fight each other in the streets; they come for each other's throat in public because nobody expects them to stay polite. They say: "We're not friends. I don't like that guy." Meanwhile, women have frenemies, because god forbid we have straight-up enemies. Women are supposed to be nice to each other all the time because what are women, if not nice?

I told my boyfriend about the Emmas in my life and their stings, how the small aches and pains they inflicted added up to a large theft of my happiness. My boyfriend listened to me carefully and said: "Why don't you stop being friends with her?"

"I'm not her friend," I said in a kneejerk reaction. "I just hang out with her."

"That's what I mean," he said gently. "Don't hang out with her. Cut her off."

The idea of it shocked me. Cutting somebody off, as an adult woman, is not nice. More importantly, it's difficult. It's easy to let friendships die slowly and gently under a mass of unreturned texts and cancelled plans. Even when you're not friends with somebody–in the same weird way that I wasn't friends with Emma—cutting somebody off is difficult. Making excuses for them is easy–after all, they haven't committed grand larceny. Grand larceny runs along the lines of she stole my boyfriend. She stole my car.

We don't have meaningful shorthand for petit larceny. It's not legitimized in our vocabulary, and in our culture nothing is legitimate until it has a name. Women say nothing because we are afraid to put a name to the leakages that occur in us. We allow someone to hurt us—not with knives, with needles that siphon off just a droplet of blood. We pass these off as minor pains. Petty thefts.

Worst of all, we learn to needle each other. We learn to steal from each other until none of us has anything left.


In my last year of law school, I was trapped in the foyer of the building while a storm raged outside. I remember I was debating making a run for it when Emma approached me. I noted with envy that she held a black umbrella.

"No umbrella?" she said, looking me straight in the eye for once.

I shrugged.

"Come on."

We stepped into the rain under her small umbrella, sure we'd both get drenched instantly. But we both stayed dry. Her steps were perfectly matched with mine so we were in sync, neither of us taking more than our share. We walked home in that gale and darkness, neither of us speaking, both of us untouched.

Priya-Alika Elias is a lawyer and writer. She tweets about pop culture @priya_ebooks.

[Image by Tara Jacoby]

ISIS Militants Bulldoze and Ransack Ancient City of Nimrud 

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ISIS Militants Bulldoze and Ransack Ancient City of Nimrud 

In another assault on Iraq's cultural legacy, Islamic State militants reportedly destroyed the remains of the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud Thursday, an attack Iraq's tourism and antiquities ministry says "defy the will of the world and the feelings of humanity."

A brief history lesson on Nimrud's importance from the Associated Press:

Nimrud was the second capital of Assyria, an ancient kingdom that began in about 900 B.C., partially in present-day Iraq, and became a great regional power. The city, which was destroyed in 612 B.C., is located on the Tigris River just south of Iraq's second largest city, Mosul, which was captured by the Islamic State group in June.

And while many of the site's monuments were long ago excavated and are now preserved in museums, much of the ruins remained. Nimrud's bulldozing follows the Islamic State's raid and destruction of precious artifacts held at the Mosul Museum.

"Islamic State members came to the Nimrud archaeological city and looted the valuables in it and then they proceeded to level the site to the ground," a Mosul tribal source told Reuters. "There used to be statues and walls as well as a castle that Islamic State has destroyed completely."

One politician "from Iraq's Assyrian Christian community" theorized to Reuters that the militants leveled the site as a cover up after having stolen and sold off a number of pieces.

The ruin's destruction is especially devastating given the great lengths taken to preserve them a decade ago. From the AP:

The late 1980s discovery of treasures in Nimrud's royal tombs was one of the 20th century's most significant archaeological finds. After Iraq was invaded in 2003, archaeologists were relieved when they were found hidden in the country's central Bank — in a secret vault-inside-a-vault submerged in sewage water.

Nimrud's bulldozing, the BBC reports, "is already being compared with the Taliban's demolition of the Bamiyan Buddha rock sculptures in Afghanistan in 2001."

[Image via AP]


Contact the author at aleksander@gawker.com .

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