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Over 200 Of Hillary Clinton's Emails Contain Classified Information

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Over 200 Of Hillary Clinton's Emails Contain Classified Information

Hillary Clinton has been dealing with a months-long migraine atop her many other migraines after it was revealed that she used a private email server to conduct official secretary of state business. Nothing classified was sent over the insecure server, she insisted, and the hype was partisan overreaction. It turns out, however, that that’s not really true.

On Monday, 150 new emails were “upgraded” to classified, according to the State Department, pushing the total number of emails containing confidential information to approximately 213. Still, it isn’t immediately clear whether the information was classified when the emails were sent, although the fact that they are classified now indicates that they were of a sensitive nature to begin with.

“It’s not an exact science,” said the department’s spokesperson Mark Toner in a press briefing. “When we’ve upgraded, we’ve always said that that certainly does not speak to whether it was classified at the time it was sent.”

ABC News reports:

It is not possible to send a properly marked and classified email through an unclassified State Department account or a private email account, according to multiple senior government officials familiar with handling sensitive materials in the government email system.

Each of the 150 emails newly deemed classified were considered exempt from public release using a specific guideline of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Specifically, the regulation states that anything deemed to contain “classified information for national defense or foreign policy” is exempt from public release.

The State Department also announced that it would release about 7,000 pages of emails from Clinton’s first two years in the position.

“My use of personal email was allowed by the State Department,” Clinton said last week. “It clearly wasn’t the best choice. I should’ve used two emails: one personal, one for work. And I take responsibility for that decision.”


Contact the author at joanna@jezebel.com.

Image via Getty.


One Police Officer Killed in Clashes Outside Ukrainian Parliament

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One Police Officer Killed in Clashes Outside Ukrainian Parliament

After a measure granting a degree of autonomy to eastern Ukraine was passed in Parliament, clashes between protestors and police intensified, the New York Times reports. One policeman was killed after a grenade was thrown at police lines.

According to the Times, Ukrainian nationalists (and others) see Monday’s vote as a concession to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who demanded the change of status for the eastern regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, currently in rebellion, as part of peace talks in Minsk, Belarus, last winter. The war there has claimed more than 6,500 lives.

The measure won preliminary approval on Monday, the Associated Press reports. 265 deputies voted for it out of 450:

But three parties that are part of the majority coalition in parliament refused to give their support, showing the difficulty that [Ukrainian President Petro] Poroshenko faces even within his own pro-Western camp in fulfilling the peace agreement.

When the decentralization bill comes up for final approval, he will need to get at least 300 votes as required for amending the constitution.

“This is not a road to peace and not a road to decentralization,” said the leader of one of those dissenting parties, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. “This is the diametrically opposite process, which will lead to the loss of new territories.”

Interior Minister Arsen Avakov told reporters the police officer who was killed was a 25-year-old conscript. He also said 122 people—mostly officers, but also some Ukrainian and French journalists—were hospitalized.

According to the AP, no injuries were reported amongst the several hundred protestors outside parliament, although about 30 people were detained, including the man accused of throwing the lethal grenade.

Russia denies any involvement in region’s unrest, but no one believes them. “Everything is created by Russia and supported by Russia,” a researcher at the Kiev School of Economics, Ilona Sologoub, told the Times. “If Russia doesn’t want it to exist, it will not exist in a few days.”


Photo credit: AP Images. Contact the author of this post: brendan.oconnor@gawker.com.

Cops: Man Shot Outside WWE Performance Center Had Knife, Obsession With Female Wrestler

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Cops: Man Shot Outside WWE Performance Center Had Knife, Obsession With Female Wrestler

Police officers shot a man outside of the WWE Performance Center near Orlando, Fla., on Monday afternoon. According to police, the man was armed with a knife and was at the performance center, where police had previously encountered him three times, because of an obsession with a female wrestler.

An Orange County sheriff provided some details in a news conference:

WWE Executive Vice President Paul “Triple H” Levesque claims that the man had previously been banned from the property by a court order. He is currently in the hospital with life-threatening injuries.

Top image via Shannon Butler

That's Not a Shark—This Is a Shark

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How big was that shark? That shark was so big it scared famed Australian television personality Karl Stefanovic out of the water forever: “That’s the biggest thing I’ve ever seen.”


H/T Digg. Contact the author of this post: brendan.oconnor@gawker.com.

Homeowner Injured and Dog Killed After Police Respond to Wrong House

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Homeowner Injured and Dog Killed After Police Respond to Wrong House

A homeowner was injured and his dog killed when three Georgia police officers responded to the wrong residence after receiving a report of a suspicious person on Monday night, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports.

A Dekalb County police officer was critically injured as well, the director of public affairs, Cedric Alexander, said. The officer was in critical condition and underwent surgery. He had been shot in the thigh. The homeowner’s condition was unknown. He was also being treated.

According to the Journal-Constitution, the officers went to a home matching the description given by the 911 caller who reported the suspicious person:

When officers got to the rear of the house, they found an unlocked screen and unlocked door and believed an intruder was inside, according to police. Officers announced their presence, but it wasn’t known how it escalated to gunfire.

Both an officer and a homeowner, whose names were not released, were shot and a dog was killed inside the home, Alexander said. But officers determined it was not the correct home.

“The residence that these officers responded to is the wrong residence that was in question,” Alexander said.

At least one of the cops fired his gun. It is not known whether the homeowner, who has not been identified, also had a gun. “A lot is yet to be determined here as to what and when shots were fired, how the officer received injuries, how the homeowner received injuries,” Alexander said. “But we did respond to the wrong residence tonight.”

The officers involved have been placed on administrative leave.


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

ISIS Demolishes Second 2000-Year-Old Temple in Ancient Syrian City

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ISIS Demolishes Second 2000-Year-Old Temple in Ancient Syrian City

One week after detonating the 2,000-year-old temple of Baalshamin, ISIS has destroyed a second ancient temple in the Syrian city of Palmyra. Tuesday morning, the UN released satellite photos confirming the demolition of the Temple of Bel, which dates back to 32 B.C.
http://gawker.com/isis-fighters-...

“We can confirm destruction of the main building of the Temple of Bel as well as a row of columns in its immediate vicinity,” UNOSAT Manager Einar Bjorgo said, according to the Guardian.

ISIS Demolishes Second 2000-Year-Old Temple in Ancient Syrian City

The photo above was taken on August 27. It shows, according to the UN, the temple standing, surrounded by a row of columns. The photo below was taken four days later.

ISIS Demolishes Second 2000-Year-Old Temple in Ancient Syrian City

Earlier this week, Syria’s antiquities chief Maamoun Abdulkarim called the temple, which was visited by more than 150,000 people a year before the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011, “the most important temple in Syria and one of the most important in the whole Middle East.”

“I feel very sad and I am very pessimistic... for the future of Palmyra,” he told the BBC.

Before destroying the Temple of Bel and the Temple of Baalshamin, ISIS fighters beheaded Khaled al-Asaad, an 82-year-old Syrian scholar. Al-Assad, who spent more than 50 years as the head of antiquities in Palmyra, was reportedly killed because he refused to reveal the location of hidden artifacts in the region. http://gawker.com/archeologist-b...


Contact the author at taylor@gawker.com.

Video Shows Texas Cops Fatally Shooting Man Who Apparently Raised Arms in Surrender

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Yesterday, San Antonio’s KSAT released a video of two Bexar County sheriff deputies fatally shooting a 41-year-old man who appeared to have his arms raised in surrender.

The video, shot on a cell phone by a college student, shows the man, Gilbert Flores, walking shirtless in front of a home and behind several parked cars. As deputies Greg Vasquez and Robert Sanchez approach—they were responding to a domestic disturbance call—Flores jogs into the driveway and walks towards the deputies with his arms outstretched. He then turns his back and walks away, disappearing out of the camera’s view behind a police SUV. A moment later, he reemerges, seems to exchange words with the deputies, and appears to raise both arms, as though he were surrendering (the camera’s view of one arm is obstructed by a pole). Seconds later—as Flores’s arms are still apparently raised—one deputy opens fire, shooting Flores at least two times.

Flores was flown to a local hospital, where he later died. Neither of the deputies were injured, and both have been placed on administrative leave pending investigations by the county sheriff and district attorney’s office.

“Certainly, what’s in the video is a cause for concern,” Sheriff Susan Pamerleau said at a news conference on Friday, according to the New York Times. “But it’s important to let the investigation go through its course so that we can ensure a thorough and complete review of all that occurred of the evidence and the actions of the officers.”

Pamerleau also claimed Flores assaulted a woman and 18-month-old child inside that house, and that the officers tried using non-lethal methods including a Taser and a shield before opening fire; the video does not appear to show the use of either.

The full video, via KSAT, is embedded below.


Contact the author at taylor@gawker.com.

150 High Schoolers Walk Out Over Trans Classmate Using the Girls' Locker Room

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150 High Schoolers Walk Out Over Trans Classmate Using the Girls' Locker Room

Around 150 students at Hillsboro (Mo.) High School walked out of school Monday to protest against a trans classmate using the girls’ locker room during gym class. Thirty or forty students also protested in support of Lila Perry, a Hillsboro senior who has identified as female since age 13 and came out as trans last school year.

The protest followed a contentious school board meeting last Thursday, where some parents voiced their concerns about their girls sharing a locker room with another girl.

“There’s a lot of ignorance, they are claiming that they’re uncomfortable. I don’t believe for a second that they are. I think this is pure and simple bigotry,” Perry told local news station KMOV.

As if to make her point for her, the protesters, including a number of adults who claimed to have relatives at the school, seemed to be in denial that trans women are women.

“Boys needs to have their own locker room. Girls need to have their own locker room and if somebody has mixed feelings where they are, they need to have their own also,” protester Jeff Childs, holding a sign that read “Girl’s Rights Matter” [sic], told KMOV.

The station also reported that some parents claimed to be worried that Perry’s gender identity is just a complicated ruse to gain access to the girls’ locker room. Apropos of nothing, the year is 2015.

Perry declined the school’s offer of a Title IX-compliant gender neutral locker room on principle, deciding to drop gym class altogether. She tries to avoid using the bathroom at school, but when she does, she uses the girls’ bathroom. And she will continue to do so.

“I am a girl,” she said, “I am not going to be pushed away to another bathroom.”

[h/t Opposing Views, Photo: KMOV]


How to Ask Your Partner for Sex So They'll Enthusiastically Say Yes

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How to Ask Your Partner for Sex So They'll Enthusiastically Say Yes

Let’s get real: couples can start getting lazy initiating sex. Who here hasn’t tried to initiate sex by clumsily groping at their partner, or blurting out, “I guess it’s been a while. Should we do it?” It might feel easier, but it can also feel wildly impersonal. Let’s talk about how to initiate sex in a way that will make your partner actually want to say yes.

One great way to stop sabotaging yourself is to extend a more personal invitation to your partner. Make your partner feel special and desired when you ask, and incorporate some of the unique elements of your relationship. Here are some ways to bring more excitement to those times you want to pull your partner to the bedroom, along with specific examples!

Think About What has Worked in the Past

One of the best ways to improve your initiation skills is to find inspiration in the past. Jot down a list of four or five of your hottest sexual experiences with your partner, then try to look for similarities in how those experiences were initiated. Were you laughing and teasing each other? Was it slow and sensual? Did any of those experiences end up creating lasting inside jokes between the two of you? This can be a fun conversation to have with your partner too, so don’t feel like you’re the only one who has to make an effort.

Give a Compliment

The best way to make your initiation feel more personal is to tell your partner exactly why you want them in that moment. Say something like, “Your ass looks so incredible in those pants. I want to get my hands all over it”, “I can’t control myself when I see you stepping out of the shower”, or, “I can’t believe how lucky I am to get to look at you every day.” If your partner is sensitive to feeling like you want sex just to get off, tell your partner why you’re wanting to connect with them in that moment. For example, “I love how close I feel to you when we’re in bed together.”

Help your Partner Relax

Some people need a bit of time to unwind and get excited for sex. If your partner has a hard time relaxing, ask them, “What can I do to take care of you tonight?” or “What can I take off your plate right now?” Better yet, suggest something specific that you know your partner would appreciate, like, “I’m going to take the dog on a walk. You just stay here and kick up your feet.” If your partner has been sorely lacking alone time, try to support them in getting some. Try, “I know how much you love baths. Want me to draw you one?”

Be a Tease

Drawing out your initiation can be really freaking hot. It gives both of you the chance to prepare for sex mentally and build anticipation. Send your partner a text during the day saying, “I’m wearing those underwear you love. See you tonight!” Or parade around in said skivvies but tell your partner you’re “off limits” until later that evening. You can try stringing initiation and foreplay out over the entire day, by exchanging kisses and meaningful touches, then tauntingly walking away.

Go the Sentimental Route

Incorporate some of those aforementioned favorite sexual memories directly into your initiations. Say something like, “Do you remember that time in Hawaii where we didn’t leave the bed all day long? What do you say we try to repeat that this weekend?” Or, “I can’t stop thinking about how incredibly sexy you looked on our last anniversary.”

Turn up the Heat

When we’re dating or early in a relationship, those moments leading up to sex—or asking for sex—are insanely erotic. As time goes by with the same partner, that intensity tends to fade. It’s understandable, but of course unfortunate. We all want to feel wanted by our partners, even if we’ve spend more of our lives with them than without. Try to channel some of that original passion you used to feel for your partner. Bust out that move you used to do all the time but haven’t in a while. Maybe on your first date, you pushed your partner up against their door and kissed her until you were both panting. Or perhaps you’ve forgotten how much your partner loves when you sneak up and kiss the back of his neck. Or channel your intensity through your words. Tell your partner, “I need to have you right now” or “I’ve been driving myself crazy thinking about you all day.” Of course, being this direct can feel super vulnerable, and it can make a lower-desire partner feel taken off-guard, but nurturing passion in a relationship is important enough to run these risks!

Be Playful

Sex doesn’t always have to be so serious. You might feel way more comfortable (and even way more sexy) being silly and playful. A friend of mine once shared a technique she learned from her favorite TV show: Either she or her partner would text a simple question mark to the other during the day when they were both at work, which was a signal that they were interested in having sex later. The other one would respond with an exclamation point if they were in the mood. It made them both laugh, but it still felt enticing. Or try making bets where the winner gets an-extra special prize. For example, “If the Niners beat the Seahawks, I’ll give you a blowjob.”

You don’t need to strategize or overanalyze every single interaction with your partner. Rolling over to their side of the bed for some lazy Sunday morning sex is great. But it is nice to put in a little extra effort every once in a while. It helps your partner realize what makes sex between the two of you so special, and makes them want to hop into bed with you!


Vanessa Marin is a licensed psychotherapist (#78931) specializing in sex therapy. It’s her mission to take the intimidation out of sex therapy and bring the fun back into the bedroom. Have questions about sex? You can reach her at vanessa.marin@lifehacker.com, or at VMTherapy.com.

Title illustration by Tara Jacoby.

Lifehacker: After Hours is a new blog aiming to improve your sex life. Follow us on Twitter here.

Here Is a Good, Correct Reading of What's Bad About Jonathan Franzen

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Here Is a Good, Correct Reading of What's Bad About Jonathan Franzen

Jonathan Franzen makes it deceptively easy to criticize Jonathan Franzen. Yes, he sounds like a boob when he talks about himself, but that’s not really what’s wrong with him, or not really what’s wrong with his writing, if you are one of the people who has the feeling that there is something wrong with his writing. This feeling is deeply subjective and hard to express, a sort of literary Uncanny Valley effect, but if you sense it, you sense it—and, luckily for those of us who do, so does Grantland’s Brian Phillips. Of Franzen’s novels, and their “weird, spiraling cluelessness,” Phillips writes:

They are full of people who talk and act exactly as you imagine such people would talk and act in real life; everyone in them is forever buying the right brand of granola bar or having believable thoughts about their mother or fantasizing in a particularly characteristic way about fucking on a hotel-room air conditioner. And yet they don’t feel like real life. They feel like real life irritably recreated from a spreadsheet, by someone who is a genius at reading spreadsheets. Whether a novel ought to feel like real life is of course a separate question. Many novels that I love don’t, but those novels aren’t trying to, and as far as I can tell, Franzen’s are.

There is more (including a particularly ruthless aside in a footnote). “It’s possible that I am simply wrong, that my own equipment for measuring life is faulty,” Phillips allows. Nope, it’s not just you.


Image via Getty. Contact the author at scocca@gawker.com.

Georgia Cops Shot Homeowner and Killed Dog After Responding to Wrong House

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Georgia Cops Shot Homeowner and Killed Dog After Responding to Wrong House

A man who was injured after three DeKalb County police mistakenly responded to his Georgia home Monday night was shot by one of the responding officers, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said in a statement today. Police also killed the homeowner’s dog and may have seriously wounded a fellow officer.

News of the incident was reported shortly after it occurred Monday, but it was not immediately clear that police officers had fired the shots.

http://gawker.com/homeowner-inju...

The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that the officers were responding to call of a suspicious person in the area, but did not receive a precise street address. According to GBI spokesman Scott Dutton, they arrived at the home of Chris and Leah McKinley on the 1500 block of Boulderwoods Drive because it fit the 911 caller’s description, but it was not the correct house. “Officers approached the residence and attempted to contact occupants at the residence,” Dutton said. “No contact was made.”

The officers encountered and shot the McKinley’s dog in the home’s kitchen after entering through an unlocked screen door, then shot Chris McKinley in the leg when he entered the kitchen. Dutton said the officers believed there was an intruder in the home, but found “no indication of criminal activity” there.

McKinley was treated and released from Atlanta Medical Center. An officer who was shot in the hip during the incident is in “serious but stable condition,” according to the Journal Constitution. Dutton said that the officers cop was “likely shot accidentally by one of the other officers on the scene.” All three officers have been placed on administrative leave.


Screencap via WSBTV. Contact the author at andy@gawker.com.

God, Get a Life!!!!

We Need a Black Power Mountain

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We Need a Black Power Mountain

Every so often a rumor begins to circulate and, for whatever reason, you think: “I hope it’s true.” I had such a moment this week.

After President Obama decided to rename Mount McKinley to Denali, a meme spread across Facebook timelines alleging that “Denali” was a “Kenyan word” for black power. Unfortunately, this rumor was not true.

We Need a Black Power Mountain

But I am here to tell you that we need Black Power Mountain. Not only do we—the American people—need it, we deserve it.

Look, it’s been a rough few years for blacks (and by years, I mean lots of years—centuries full of years). A mountain affirming our monumental impact on society—in politics, television, sport, business, education, film, music, etc—would be a true testament to the enduring contributions of trailblazers like Malcolm X, Fannie Lou Hamer, Arsenio Hall, LeVar Burton, my mom, Anita Baker, Julian Bond, ‘70s R&B group LTD, Angela Davis, and you—fellow black person!

And what better place to have Black Power Mountain than in a state that is 70 percent white?

It’s not too late to change your mind, President Obama.

[Image via AP]

Cool Pope to Allow Women Who Have Had Abortions into Heaven (For One Year)

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Cool Pope to Allow Women Who Have Had Abortions into Heaven (For One Year)

Cool Pope Francis announced today that for one year only, the “Jubilee Year of Mercy,” coming to a soul in you on December 8, priests may forgive contrite women who have had an abortion. “Couldn’t they already do that?” you might be wondering. Hey, guess what—NO!!!!

Abortion is one of only a handful of sins—including heresy and physically attacking the pope, punching him right in his little pope face—that will get you excommunicated from the Catholic church. “What about murder, will that get you excommunicated?” you’re wondering. No, it won’t! “What about torturing someone right up until the point of death but then letting them live?” No! “What about, uh—” NO! Nothing you’re thinking of, unless you’re thinking of “schism,” which you are not, will get you excommunicated—just abortion, punching the pope, and then a bunch of church shit like throwing away communion. Did you know that? (A rhetorical question.) I did not.

Un-excommunicating can only be done by a bishop, and guess what: you still have to go to mass during your excommunication. Damn. A raw deal for women. Cool Pope Francis announced in a letter today that for one year only, the deal for women (contrite women) who have gotten abortions will be a bit less raw:

“I know that it is an existential and moral ordeal. I have met so many women who bear in their heart the scar of this agonizing and painful decision. What has happened is profoundly unjust; yet only understanding the truth of it can enable one not to lose hope. The forgiveness of God cannot be denied to one who has repented, especially when that person approaches the Sacrament of Confession with a sincere heart in order to obtain reconciliation with the Father. For this reason too, I have decided, notwithstanding anything to the contrary, to concede to all priests for the Jubilee Year the discretion to absolve of the sin of abortion those who have procured it and who, with contrite heart, seek forgiveness for it.”

Cool as hell. Ladies, you have one year to get as many abortions as you want.


Image via Getty. Contact the author at kelly.conaboy@gawker.com.

500 Days of Kristin, Day 219: What Is the Nap Time Workout? 

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500 Days of Kristin, Day 219: What Is the Nap Time Workout? 

Sixty-nine days of Kristin ago, Kristin Cavallari made a business decision regarding the Official Kristin Cavallari App for iPhone and Android: She started charging her followers $2.99—per month—to access “exclusive” content on the app. In the intervening weeks, however, she has relented slightly; she’s posted several articles like “Menswear Trends,” “Handbags,” and “Will New ‘Spray GMOs’ Reignite the FrankenFood Debate?” that are free to access, should anyone desire to read them.

Today Kristin is not feeling generous.

Today she posted an article called “Nap Time Workout,” and it is not free. If you want to read “Nap Time Workout” by Kristin Cavallari, you’ll have to pay $2.99 (per month). Gawker is not paying for Kristin’s app, so I can’t tell you anything about the Nap Time Workout.

I would like to count a nap as a workout, but I don’t think that’s what Kristin means.


This has been 500 Days of Kristin.

[Photo via Getty]


"Your next article should just be nothing more than a quote from someone else, nothing more"

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To: scocca@gawker.com

From: matt mcewen <REDACTED@gmail.com>

Subject: Hey, cool article about nothing.

“Here is an “article” I will “write” that is somebody elses opinion of an authors “writing”. I’ll maybe say a sentence or two after their opinion, and then my Gawker “article” for the day will be done and I can check that off my to-do list.” - you.

http://gawker.com/here-is-a-good...

To: matt mcewen

From: Tom Scocca

Subject: Re: Hey, cool article about nothing.

Thanks for reading!

To: scocca@gawker.com

From: matt mcewen <REDACTED@gmail.com>

Subject: Re: Hey, cool article about nothing.

Your next article should just be nothing more than a quote from someone else, nothing more. The quote should be the headline as well. See if Gawker will pay you. I am guessing they will.


Contact the author at scocca@gawker.com.

We Took The World's Craziest Street Legal Drift Car To Times Square

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The swamp muck tourist trap Times Square is unquestionably the most crowded, busy, garbage place to take a car just about anywhere in the world. So we took this 500 horsepower “street car” built by professional drifter Ryan Tuerck there to see if it could handle it.

When Ryan Tuerck — professional in Formula Drift and star of his own YouTube show on Network A — built this so-called “street car,” the Internet called bullshit. It’s a stripped, caged, widened, engine-swapped 500 horsepower monster of a Scion FR-S. It has no windows, it has no A/C, it has no radio. It has racing suspension, seats, belts, and a roll cage. To better go completely sideways at over a hundred miles an hour, Tuerck built it wider in the front than it is in the back.

We Took The World's Craziest Street Legal Drift Car To Times Square

I didn’t care who he banged at the DMV; I had to put this thing to the test and see if its “street car” title actually meant something. So that’s how we ended up in Times Square.

We Took The World's Craziest Street Legal Drift Car To Times Square

How Ryan and I didn’t get arrested, how we didn’t get heat stroke, I do not know.


Contact the author at raphael@jalopnik.com.

Bruce Springsteen Has Been Shitting on His Biggest Fan Chris Christie Since Time Immemorial

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Bruce Springsteen Has Been Shitting on His Biggest Fan Chris Christie Since Time Immemorial

Like the narrator of the Bruce Springsteen classic “I’m Goin’ Down,” Chris Christie just can’t stop lovin’ somebody who doesn’t seem to love him back. Except in Christie’s case, it’s not the dying flame of an old relationship he wants, but the love of Bruce Springsteen himself. Recently unearthed emails show that the New Jersey governor’s adoration has gone unrequited since long before Bruce Springsteen or anyone else even knew who Chris Christie was.

Capital New York points to a cache of messages that Christie sent to a Springsteen-centric email listserv back in 1999 and 2000, when the New Jersey governor and presidential candidate was just a humble lobbyist. The longest of these, written in January 2000 and signed “Chris from Mendham, NJ,” details Christie’s unforgettable first face-to-face meeting with his hero, on a flight from Minnesota to Jersey.

“I am mostly a lurker, but now that the holiday craze is over, I have time to sit down and impart my great experience from the last show in Minnesota,” Chris from Mendham wrote. He continued:

We board the 11 am Northwest flight back to NJ the day after the show. My wife and I are sitting in 1st row of 1st class and getting out our books out of our bags and putting the luggage away in the overheads.

Books, luggage, overhead compartments—an ordinary flight so far. But then, a voice.

From behind me I hear a voice say,”I think I’m sitting right back here.”

Whose voice? No. Could it be? Really? Were Chris from Mendham’s wildest dreams coming true? He knew immediately—it was Bruce.

I knew immediately—it was Bruce!

Bruce was all by himself—“no Patty, no bodyguards—just Bruce, a baseball cap, jeans jacket, NY Times and Minneapolis Star-Tribune,” Chris from Mendham noted. And in a moment of the divine providence that characterizes all such fateful meetings, the plane was delayed on the runway for 30 minutes before takeoff. Chris from Mendham knew it was the perfect time to strike.

He approached the boss with a swelling of the heart and maybe also a sweating of the palms. It was now or never. He walked down the aisle, effusive, and introduced himself. He thanked Springsteen “for the great performance the night before (and for all the great nights).” He told Bruce that he and his wife had flown halfway across the country to see him and were heading back home to Jersey. And what did his hero say in return for all that devotion?

He said, “Me, too.”

He said, “Me, too.”

At the end of the flight, after Chris from Mendham regaled Springsteen with a story about his son’s experience at an earlier concert, Springsteen agreed to sign some autographs for the kids. But still: “Me, too.” Two words. It must have stung a little.

“I love you, Bruce Springsteen.”

“Thanks, Chris from Mendham.”

I’m sick and tired of you settin’ me up/Settin’ me up just to knock-a knock-a knock-a me down!


Image via AP. Contact the author at andy@gawker.com.

Kate Bosworth Likes Her Husband

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Kate Bosworth Likes Her Husband

It makes me sick that—in 2015!!!—unfettered access to the thoughts, feelings, and desires of those we know from television, film, and photograph is still—somehow??!—out of reach. It is unacceptable. Luckily, in a recent interview with Express, Kate Bosworth let us know what she thinks about her husband.

(She likes him.) From Express:

“I just couldn’t imagine being with anyone else. It hasn’t diminished at all, we love living and working together. I feel more confident with him. Outside of being his wife, I’ve been a fan of his work long before I knew him. I’m confident he won’t let me fall. We both love football and I feel like he’s the quarterback and I’m the receiver. He knows I’m going to make the play and I know he is going to make the play. It’s a dream team – there is so much safety and confidence. He pushes me harder than anyone else and makes me stretch myself.”

We both love football and I feel like he’s the quarterback and I’m the receiver. He knows I’m going to make the play and I know he is going to make the play. It’s a dream team – one of us writes down the play in our play notebook, the other one looks at it, and we don’t even need to say a word. We nod at each other and our football helmets clank together and we say at the same time “HUT, HUT—HIKE!” We know that each of us will make our way down the football field, tossing the football to each other the whole way, before finally approaching the end zone. He knows I’m going to make it to the end zone and I know he’s going to make it to the end zone and once we’re nearly there I wrap myself around the football, he takes both of us in his arms, and we get a touchdown.

That’s just love, baby.


Image via Getty. Contact the author at kelly.conaboy@gawker.com.

Men Consume, Women Are Consumed: 15 Thoughts on the Stigma of Sex Work

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Men Consume, Women Are Consumed: 15 Thoughts on the Stigma of Sex Work

Last week, federal agents arrested the founder and five staffers of male escort site Rentboy.com. Two days later, GQ published “The Real Life of a Sugar Daddy,” a feature on SeekingArrangement.com’s buyers and sellers of sex. Here, Charlotte Shane, who’s been a sex worker for 11 years and a writer under this name for five, weighs in on the public allocation of stigma when it comes to sex work—where it lands, and why.

1. The only time what sex workers say is relevant to a public audience is when it can be used against us or when it can be used to entertain. Often those times coincide.

2. Before I was a sex worker, I was a fresh feminist who didn’t like sex work. Or rather, I thought I didn’t like sex work—I don’t think I was entirely clear on what sexual labor could entail. But thanks to second-wavers like Andrea Dworkin, Catharine MacKinnon, and Susan Brownmiller, I knew pornography was bad; adult male desire was rapacious and sadistic; patriarchy incentivized women to either accommodate degrading lust or else be forced to. I knew sexual desirability, our only true currency, was a system rigged so no woman could win. There is no such thing as hot enough, and the hottest among us conscript themselves to nothing more than fading glory and perishable rewards. Women who worked hard to be lusted after were pitiable. But what became of women who opted out of the desirability game altogether, I wondered. They worked harder, received less appreciation, struggled to find a mate, and their consolation prize was mere righteousness? The world felt like a very scary place.

3. GQ recently published a piece on sugarbaby/sugardaddy relationships—just a handful of them, uncontextualized by numbers or governing facts or cited expertise. Within it, Taffy Brodesser-Akner takes a narrative position of superiority to her subjects, whose egotism and foolishness is maximized to cartoonish effect. The men are selfish, immature, crude and buffoonish; the women are younger, poorer, vapid, and facile.

The tone posits that men who want responsibility-free sex are gross, but the women who provide it (for a price) are grosser. One young woman profiled, who recently lived in a homeless shelter, is given the fake name “Kitten Babypuss.” She’s trying to put herself through school and was once fired from her straight job because her sugar dating came to light. But these details fade under the description of her fake furs and trashy lip liner, infinitely truer to stereotype. We are meant to recognize this woman as a slut first and foremost.

A different woman, also covering her own tuition by sugar dating, is introduced through a litany of the sex acts she performed on each day of one week. (“Keep in mind, it’s only Wednesday,” the author interjects wryly in the middle, amazed at the other woman’s stamina for taking dick.) Later, Brodesser-Akner indulges in a bit of self-deprecating self-aggrandizement by saying she herself has “spent far more time and energy writing this story than a commensurate amount of blow jobs would require.” She also tweeted that when her mother found out her daughter had to write about sugar dating, she said, “Life is a series of small degradations.” Just being near these people was an affront to her dignity.

4. Women opposed to sex work even in a disguised and ostensibly innocuous way focus a lot on penises—how many a woman interacts with in a day, what that interaction entails. If a woman isn’t “penetrated” by a penis, is she allowed to speak as a sex worker? “Sucking dick” is an especially popular point of attention, and it’s usually referenced as the most disgusting act a human being could endure. It’s shorthand both for how illegitimate sex work is—can you imagine, treating a blowjob as real work?—and also how degrading, how dehumanizing. Here, women who want to eliminate prostitutes evince the same attitude a lot of the men hiring us do: it’s the easiest money one could ever make. You need only be a body to do it.

5. A few days before the GQ article came out, federal authorities raided Rentboy, the largest American site for advertising male escort services. This bust came 13 months after the MyRedbook bust, a takedown of a site in California that primarily featured independently working women. “It is unknown why authorities took action after the site operated for years,” one outlet said of the MyRedbook arrests. The site had been online for over a decade. Rentboy is over two decades old.

Authorities have tirelessly harassed female escort ad sites in recent years, most notably Craigslist’s Adult Services section and Backpage. In our contemporary context of anti-sex worker sentiment disguised by “sex trafficking” hysteria, neither bust is surprising, although both landed like a punch to the face. To sex workers, it’s just more evidence of the campaign against us. But, unlike any response to the FBI’s targeting of women selling sex, the backlash against Rentboy’s bust was so powerful that Manhattan’s DA asked to have his name removed from the press release, and the New York Times ran a story on gay activists’ outrage.

My fellow sex workers and I took note of the bald sexism. We saw this as a reminder of how vulnerable we are, that it is only a matter of time before the sites we use are next or we ourselves are arrested, and we watched as the country decided working men are worth speaking up for but the rest of us are not. Not the women. Not the whores.

6. Among those arrested in the Rentboy raid was Hawk Kinkaid, a lovely, kind activist I’ve met once or twice. In the wake of the bust, some people began sharing his post on sex workers’ roles in advancing gay rights. The piece ran on Tits and Sass, a site for and by sex workers that I co-founded in 2011, at which point I’d been a sex worker for seven years.

Hawk’s personal history was cited by the DHS in light of the bust. They pointed to interviews in which he identified as a prostitute and claims he referred to Rentboy as part of “the sex industry.” In the $pread anthology, Hawk contributes a sensitive reflection on his emotional state while working (and not working.) He writes, “Like everyone, I wanted not only to be adored, but to be important to someone.”

7. I don’t want to work as an escort anymore, but I continue to see a few clients for financial reasons. I’ve fallen in love with a man I hope will become my husband. I never wanted to get married to someone before, so this is a novel experience for me. Also new is the desire to have sex with only him. Physical intimacy wasn’t something I was sentimental about in the past; monogamy was not my natural orientation. To now be governed by these somewhat conservative urges excites me. It feels beautiful and pure to be devoted to him so completely in every dimension.

Allowing men access to my body wore thin before I met the man I’m in love with. But since being with him, it is an increasingly unappealing situation. When I work, no one tries to cause me pain or discomfort; I am not asked to participate in anything unusual or harmful. If something physical happens, I endure it, it ends, I’m ok. I just want it to stop soon. I want this chapter of my life to be over. But if “this chapter” is understood to be earning income through any labor as opposed to specifically earning income through sex, I will have to wait many years for it to end.

8. A few years ago, an editor emailed Tits and Sass looking for a New York City escort to write a piece about the city’s hotels. He admitted he was unclear about what exactly his publication wanted, and I told him I would not write something titillating, along the lines of “this hotel is CRAWLING with hookers.” We batted back ideas about a specific angle, and eventually he mentioned he wanted anecdotes involving clients, which I flat-out said I would not do. He backpedaled, while continuing to shoot down my suggestions.

Our exchange nosedived to its conclusion when he mentioned doormen and mattresses, and other “things that would be specific to my line of work.” For me, there was nowhere to go with the knowledge that he imagined me nervously eying hotel staff every time I entered a lobby, petrified of being thrown out on my whorish ass, or making mental notes about wallpaper while bouncing up and down over a businessman. When I said he had expectations about my experiences that didn’t align with reality, he responded we had “different visions” for the piece. But “vision” is not how I’d describe the force behind stories catering to what non sex workers imagine happens on the job.

When I told this story to the man I love, I felt shame flooding me at the point when I’d said too much to stop yet hadn’t gotten to the worst part. I realized I made a mistake; I didn’t want him to hear about this. I started sharing because I was trying to explain what it feels like to pitch and write while I know this is what editors really want to run, what readers want to read. How thoroughly degraded and humiliated I felt by the email exchange. And how I felt that way all over again, talking now about hotel mattresses, about how this stranger saw me and what he asked of me, how other strangers might see me. How he himself, this man I loved, might see me regardless of everything else I am.

9. I’ve spent only a short amount of time throwing myself into networking and pitching and attempting to jump-start a career as a freelancer. But already, on multiple occasions, I’ve thought it would be less degrading to keep selling sex.

I’m not making a comment on how alienating or exploitative it is to sell labor, period, or talking about how people mistakenly focus on sex work as having a high potential for mistreatment while giving a pass to so many low-paying jobs. I’m thinking about the way most people in media think of sex workers, the type of content they find acceptable to run and solicit, and how they respond to criticisms about the real harm that these pieces do to all the people trading or selling sexual services. Stigma’s effects are active; almost all media is complicit in further entrenching and normalizing it. This is all a way of saying selling sex may be the career that allows me to keep my integrity, if selling my writing proves to make self-respect impossible.

10. The first time I performed sex work I was 20 years old. I used dating sites to try to find a sugar daddy situation like the ones detailed in the GQ article. I wasn’t in New York, which that made the search harder. When I finally found someone who seemed like a good candidate, I traveled there at my own expense to meet him. I was so naïve.

What happened could have been worse, much worse. But it wasn’t good. I’ve still never written about it, only told some sex-working friends when our conversation turned to how sex work itself has hurt us. We don’t say this much publicly because it will only be used against us and others like us to drown out everything else we say. In the court of public opinion, conveniently, some of what we say is truer than the rest. Or rather, some of what we say about our own lives is relevant but most is not.

I remember sitting in the train station afterwards, too cold in my dress, feeling like I had failed at something and yet been subtly transformed in the mere attempt. Not substantially—I wasn’t a different or lesser me than I had been that morning. But it was like having a neck tattoo. I’d broken a barrier that could not be restored. This would be with me forever.

11. The root of contemporary feminist antipathy towards sex work concerns male entitlement. Thus it seems ironic to me that you can’t talk about the needs of people who sell sex without a self-identified feminist demanding that men who buy it occupy equal space in the conversation. You can observe this in the insistence of those who opposed Amnesty International’s vote in support of decriminalization. They maintained the proposition enshrined the “right” of men to buy sex, when in fact the policy centered the safety of those who sell.

In this mentality, sex work, specifically prostitution, is seen as the logical culmination of all other commodification/commercialization of female sexuality and physicality. It’s a loose chain that starts with Axe ads and the “Blurred Lines” video, links to Hooters restaurants and Girls Gone Wild, and terminates in massage parlors, full-service Vegas bachelor parties, the infamous scene from Requiem For a Dream. The end point is men using women’s bodies for their own sexual pleasure, violently or at least callously. Men consume, women are consumed. This engineered universe circumvents consent by erasing the possibility of no; men are never confronted with denial of sexual gratification because there are endless outlets through which they can purchase it. Money, the story goes, gives the men irrevocable sexual license.

This is a terrifying state of affairs. It’s such a convincing nightmare that merely summarizing it leaves me momentarily paralyzed. And I know that the same emotional reaction swims underneath most feminist contemplation of the sex industry, particularly when they are confronted with a microcosm of it in the form of one night out at the strip club or a conversation with an elderly rich man who rents his girlfriends. We are all acquainted with malicious men who revel in their privilege. Catching a whiff of one can deliver us into hopelessness.

But here are some other things I know. Laws against sex work are used to control and punish already marginalized women. They are tools for enforcing poverty and state violence. Prostitution is illegal, and rape is still rampant and unpunished. Furthermore, male sexuality does not thrive on violence; it often gravitates toward tenderness and connection. Men are not monsters just because they’re paying, and the men who pay for it are beloved husbands and fathers and sons. Women can successfully subvert systems that would destroy us, but doing so never entails demonizing another group of women in the process, or treating those women as disposable clowns.

12. I don’t want to write about sex work anymore. Every time I start another piece on the topic, I feel as if I’m weighing my pockets with stones and standing before a river. Cementing myself into a one-trick (no pun intended) pony. I want to be known as a writer, not a prostitute. Not because I’m ashamed of my past but because there’s no good reason for my past to eclipse my future. I want to write books on different subjects, in different genres. I want editors to approach me for high-paying profiles, interviews, reviews, and personal essays in which I’m never required to talk about my history of selling sex. This may be the most outlandish dream I could have, but its improbability doesn’t make it any less dear to me.

13. I keep writing about sex work because I keep seeing media that denigrates those who perform it and those who perform or have performed it constitute most of the important people in my life. On whatever level I am personally hurt or afraid, there is always a much larger part of me, even closer to the surface, which rages on behalf of my friends. Though painful, this is clarifying. It reminds me that my principles matter more than professional success in this arena. I think about sex work, the work I emphatically no longer want to do, and I feel grateful that I have it as an option in case the complicity demanded in media becomes unbearable.

14. When I started writing this piece it was because I thought, I know the emotional process that allows women to hate other women for selling sex. If I articulated it, maybe I could disarm it. I thought I could empathize with and therefore evoke change in those who can’t or won’t interrogate their own aversions. I ended up with a list because didn’t know how to fashion an inviting introduction to an essay addressed to would-be peers who despise me. I didn’t know how to disguise how much I, consequently, despise them.

15. I present well enough now that some people incapable of respecting sex workers will treat me nicely to my face. At least four editors I’ve worked with shared the GQ piece approvingly, calling it a masterpiece. Brodesser-Akner defended herself against criticism by saying the women in the piece didn’t identify as sex workers, as if that meaningfully counts as a defense.

Hawk writes, “There must be a reminder that who we are is worth more than the world’s ignorance would have us believe.” My reminder is that I come from the club that produces writing like this, instead of articles that revel in misogyny and scorn. My reminder is that it may feel safer but is never better to laugh and call someone deluded instead of recognizing we are all making compromises to live our best life in a hard world. She’s the dumb one, I’m the smart one. She’s the lazy one, I’m the hard-working one. It’s easy to despise someone for not having more power, or for not responding to their powerlessness the way you think they should. It’s easy to embrace the idea that some people deserve to be exploited by virtue of who they are, or that they’re already less human than you by virtue of being more vulnerable. It’s how I feel about jokes about sex workers being molested: thank you for mining my life “in search of reasons for my vileness.” Tell me more about why I’m pathetic, and you’re definitely not.

In the conclusion of the GQ article, Brodesser-Akner writes, “You can tell yourself whatever story you want, and eventually you forget you’re telling a story and you’ll find yourself in the parking lot of a Pizzeria Uno getting sucked off by someone who thinks she’s getting the better end of the deal. And she’ll give you that blow job, all the while wondering how she could get so lucky.” Like “luck” and “wonder” are the dominant thoughts in the head of any woman trying to pay her tuition. Like she, in her disdain, could manage any insight into what that other woman thinks, or feels.

Charlotte Shane is a writer living in New York and tweeting from @charoshane. Her TinyLetter is famous among those who love emotions and long emails.

Illustration by Jim Cooke

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