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15 Common English Words That You Probably Didn't Know Were Still Trademarked

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15 Common English Words That You Probably Didn't Know Were Still Trademarked

The English language is a voracious eater, consuming words and digesting them into whole new things. Sometimes words that used to be trademarked by companies pass into generic use—like escalator, thermos, and aspirin. And sometimes words live in limbo: still trademarked, but used all the time as generic terms. Here are 15 of those words.

These are all words (except one) that the United States Patent and Trademark Office lists as being registered and “live”:

1. Astroturf

You’re supposed to use “artificial turf” instead of the brand name, which is technically “AstroTurf.”

2. Auto-Tune

This isn’t actually just a generic way to describe how a lot of singers are produced today, it’s actually a specific program from Antares Audio Technology. Not that you hear people say “That sounds like pitch correction” often.

15 Common English Words That You Probably Didn't Know Were Still Trademarked

3. Band-Aid

This one is so ubiquitous it’s hard to remember that there is another name you’re supposed to use: adhesive bandage. Despite Johnson & Johnson’s fairly intense drive to remind everyone that Band-Aid Brand Adhesive Bandages is a brand name, it’s fairly generic.

4. Botox

Allergan is very serious about protecting its anti-wrinkle treatment brand. It sued to keep “Botulex” out of stores.

5. Bubble wrap

“Bubble wrap” is a trademark of the Sealed Air Corporation.

6. Dumpster

Technically, this is a slightly gray area—because Dempster only lost its trademark on the word “Dumpster” in April of this year. As the name of the company kind of hints, the name “dumpster” was a portmanteau of “dump” (as in “where trash lives”) and “Dempster” (the name of the company that made it, Dempster Brothers). Why you’d want your name forever linked to trash is a different question.

7. JumboTron

The trademark for JumboTron is literally “large television screens” and owned by Sony. It’s only a JumboTron if Sony says it is.

15 Common English Words That You Probably Didn't Know Were Still Trademarked

8. Kleenex

Despite how often it’s used for any type of facial tissue, Kimberly-Clark still holds onto the trademark for Kleenex.

9. Onesies

Yes, that one-piece garment is a trademark of Gerber. And they’ve got it for children and adults.

10. Ping-Pong

Parker Brothers registered this trademark for what is properly and generically named “table tennis” in 1930. It’s now owned by Escalade Sports, who are more than happy to tell you that it is a registered brand.

12. Popsicle

Unilever (as Conopco) has the trademark on “popsicle” as a frozen treat. Unilever is another company that wants to make sure it keeps this trademark from becoming genericized, and thus they have a whole page devoted to the names. With this horribly punned conclusion:

So now that you know the cold facts, do the cool thing and stay on the right side of the law. Use Popsicle®, Creamsicle®, Fudgsicle® and Yosicle® only to identify our products, use these trademarks correctly, and don’t use them for any other purpose without our permission. We appreciate your cooperation.

12. Realtor

I bet you didn’t think a job could be trademarked, did you? And yet, only members of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) are really real realtors. Don’t believe me? Here’s a three-minute video produced by the NAR about how realtors can help protect their licensed name:

13. Rollerblade

I’m sorry, did you think you were going to go rollerblading? Because the Tecnica Group has something to say about that (spoiler alert: it’s “don’t say that.”) Instead, consider going inline-skating instead.

15 Common English Words That You Probably Didn't Know Were Still Trademarked

14. Seeing Eye dog

As “The Seeing Eye” is actually a training center in New Jersey, only dogs who come out of that program are “Seeing Eye dogs.” Everyone else is just a guide dog.

15. Tupperware

Here’s another one where coming up with another name for the product is really hard. “Plastic container”? “Plastic food container”? “Plastic containers for food with lids that always go missing”?

Top image: Astroturf Finish by mricon/flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0. Other images: Health Care by Bob ~ Barely Time/flickr/CC BY 2.0; Novelty Kleenex by Jennifer Feuchter/flickr/CC BY 2.0; Guide-dog at work by smerikal/flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0


Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.


WHAAAAAT: Maybe Louis Isn't the Father After All (This Is a MUST Read)

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WHAAAAAT: Maybe Louis Isn't the Father After All (This Is a MUST Read)

Might Louis Tomlinson not have impregnated Los Angeles-based stylist Briana Jungwirth? An In Touch source says: [suggestive shrug and raising of eyebrows].

http://defamer.gawker.com/michael-straha...

Until Michael Strahan sprung his gotcha congratulations on Louis Tomlinson in early August, the boys of One Direction had been steadfastly tight-lipped about Tomlinson’s supposed impregnation of Los Angeles-based stylist Briana Jungwirth. Many believe this is because Tomlinson was waiting to confirm the allegation until he could obtain the results of a paternity test, an idea echoed in July by a separate In Touch source.

Now this other In Touch source says Jungwirth was totally doing it with another dude when she was doing it with Louis, and maybe that dude is the father—who knows??:

“Someone very close to Briana says Louis wasn’t the only guy she was hooking up with when she got pregnant,” a source tells In Touch. “She was having sex with someone else at the same time, so the baby may not be Louis’.

“Once the baby is born, it looks like Briana will have no choice but to get a paternity test,” the source explains.

Damn, bagging the most beautifully feminine-looking member of One Direction and some other dude? Check out this chick.

The source concludes his or her confession, woefully: “The situation is so messed up.”

Man—true.


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

500 Days of Kristin, Day 220: Balancing on Fringe

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500 Days of Kristin, Day 220: Balancing on Fringe

Nine days of Kristin ago, Kristin Cavallari—author of the forthcoming book Balancing in Heels, formerly titled Balancing on Heels—issued a decree. “Chance is the ultimate boot for fall,” she wrote in an Instagram caption.

“Chance” is a boot designed by Kristin for her line with Chinese Laundry. It has fringe:

500 Days of Kristin, Day 220: Balancing on Fringe

Can you imagine someone wearing that?

You don’t have to, because today, Kristin did.

“The drum major in a high school marching band” is the ultimate look for fall.


This has been 500 Days of Kristin.

[Photos via Getty and Nordstrom]

A judge ruled this afternoon that the six officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray will be trie

EXCLUSIVE: Taylor Swift Did Blow Her Nose Backstage During the VMAs

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Taylor Swift, America’s cool freshman roommate and prominent part of this year’s MTV Video Music Awards, did not partake in cocaine backstage at this year’s VMAs, contrary to claims made about a video that circulated on the web today.

The above video, titled “Taylor Swift Doing Coke?”, netted 6,700 views on YouTube before a legal takedown notice from Viacom (MTV’s owner) scrubbed it off the site. Before its removal, a link to the video was sent to Gawker via SecureDrop, a platform for secure, untraceable communications between journalists and sources. In the video, which looks to be a recording of an official online livestream of the VMAs, Taylor Swift walks through a corridor with her phalanx of assistants. At one point, directly in front of a camera, Swift pauses, and one of her aides hands her something. At this point, the entourage forms a protective wall of arms and sisterhood, shielding Taylor’s face from view. Others look around uneasily, and a man who appears to be hired muscle stares directly at the camera. At least one distinct, loud nasal sniffling sound can be heard above the backstage din.

Gawker contacted Swift’s publicist Tree Paine about the video and the claims made by the person who uploaded it. Paine said Swift was merely blowing her nose, and didn’t want that image to appear on MTV. She also threatened to sue Gawker Media if we reported that Taylor Swift was doing cocaine, so do not draw that conclusion from this article. It would appear that Viacom invoked the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to suppress an image of Taylor Swift engaging in an authentically human act.

EXCLUSIVE: Taylor Swift Did Blow Her Nose Backstage During the VMAs

This story checks out, anyway: according to AirNow, the Environmental Protection Agency’s air quality forecaster and tracker, the AQI, a measure of air quality, in the area around the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles on Sunday was 61, which is “moderate.” But a high resolution, frame-by-frame analysis of the footage confirms Paine’s explanation, as you can clearly see Swift holding what appears to be a kleenex or hanky:

EXCLUSIVE: Taylor Swift Did Blow Her Nose Backstage During the VMAs

EXCLUSIVE: Taylor Swift Did Blow Her Nose Backstage During the VMAs

Followed by Paine and another assistant crouching down and looking directly up Swift’s nose with a flashlight to check for errant boogies:

EXCLUSIVE: Taylor Swift Did Blow Her Nose Backstage During the VMAs

You can view the controversial scene in slow-motion here:

If Taylor Swift’s grinning glass of Pepsi persona is so carefully manicured that her publicist has to physically block a camera from capturing the act of her blowing her nose, imagine if it actually had been cocaine?

Note: it was NOT cocaine.


Contact the author at biddle@gawker.com.
Public PGP key
PGP fingerprint: E93A 40D1 FA38 4B2B 1477 C855 3DEA F030 F340 E2C7

Gizmodo Physicists Discover “Hidden Chaos” Lurking Everywhere | Jalopnik You’re Gonna Want To Watch

Sheriff: Man Fatally Shot by Police With Arms Raised Held "Something" in His Hand

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According to a Texas sheriff, investigators are reviewing a second video of a San Antonio man who was shot and killed by police while appearing to surrender on Friday, one that shows what they believe to be a knife in his hand.

http://gawker.com/video-shows-te...

In a bystander video released by KSAT on Monday, 41-year-old Gilbert Flores can be seen standing motionless with his arms raised before deputies standing several feet away fire their weapons and he falls to the ground. In that video, however, a utility pole obscures one of Flores’ hands.

“I have seen the [second] video. It appears he has something in his hand,” Bexar County Sheriff Susan Pamerleau said at a press conference on Wednesday. “We believe it was a knife.”

Pamerleau told reporters she does not recall whether a knife was recovered from the scene and that her office doesn’t plan to make the second video available until the investigation is concluded. From CNN:

The second video will be examined by the Texas Department of Public Safety’s crime lab, which will “try to enlarge and slow down the sequence” so investigators can get “a better idea of exactly what he had in his hand,” the sheriff said.

Meanwhile, the FBI opened a federal civil rights investigation into the incident “to determine whether a civil rights violation took place as a result of a deputy willfully engaging in the use of excessive or unjustified force,” the agency’s San Antonio office said Wednesday.

“There’s no doubt that what was shown in that video is of grave concern to all of us,” said Pamerleau, “but we also want to get this right.”

When asked if Flores was holding both arms up in the second video, Pamerleau said, “We saw that.”

Fox News Anchor Files $5 Million Lawsuit Over Toy Hamster With Same Name

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Fox News Anchor Files $5 Million Lawsuit Over Toy Hamster With Same Name

Harris Faulkner, co-host of Fox News’ Outnumbered, filed a $5 million lawsuit this week over “Harris Faulkner,” plastic hamster, alleging that toymaker Hasbro “willfully and wrongfully” appropriated her persona when creating the same-named member of their “Littlest Pet Shop” line.

“Faulkner is extremely distressed that her name has been wrongly associated with a plastic toy that is a known choking hazard that risks harming small children,” read court papers obtained by Deadline on Tuesday. “Further, Hasbro’s portrayal of Faulkner as a rodent is demeaning and insulting.”

In addition to bearing her name, Faulkner claims the doe-eyed hamster physically resembles her, particularly the “tone of its complexion, the shape of its eyes, and the design of its eye makeup.” From the Associated Press:

The lawsuit says Faulkner never gave permission for Hasbro to use her name or likeness and that she even demanded in January that Hasbro stop using it. More than three weeks later, it was still for sale on Hasbro’s website, the lawsuit contends. It says that as of July, Faulkner’s name was still being used on a Hasbro website to sell Littlest Pet Shop products, and the plastic hamster that bears her name can still be bought at other online retail stores.

While Hasbro has declined to comment on the ongoing litigation, the company vigorously denies that Harris Faulkner (the hamster) poses a choking risk.

“The Littlest Pet Shop product identified, and all products in the Littlest Pet Shop line, meet and exceed all safety standards,” a Hasbro spokesperson told The Washington Post.

[Images via AP Images/Hasbro]


Here's the Mr. Robot Scene That Caused USA To Postpone Its Finale

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Last Wednesday, the first season finale of USA’s cult hit and utterly enthralling show Mr. Robot was supposed to air. But after WDBJ’s Alison Parker and Adam Ward were shot live on air by Vester Lee Flanagan last Wednesday morning, USA announced that it was delaying the finale. The network’s statement read:

The previously filmed season finale of Mr. Robot contains a graphic scene similar in nature to today’s tragic events in Virginia. Out of respect to the victims, their families and colleagues, and our viewers, we are postponing tonight’s episode. Our thoughts go out to all those affected during this difficult time.

And now we know why: because of a scene in which an exec for the show’s Microsoft-/Apple-esque tech company E Corp shoots himself on live television. Before Wednesday, it merely would have merely been unsettling (and reminiscent of R. Budd Dwyer’s on-air suicide in 1987). If it ran last week as planned, just hours after Parker and Ward’s deaths, it very well could have come off as distasteful, if not outrageous. Postponing the finale was clearly the smart, considerate thing to do.

Cops: Man Shot in Groin Over Potato Chips in Detroit

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Cops: Man Shot in Groin Over Potato Chips in Detroit

A routine snack-snatching turned violent on Tuesday when a Detroit man confronted a potato chip thief and was shot in the groin, WXYZ reports.

Authorities say the 59-year-old victim was walking outside a McDonald’s when a stranger grabbed a bag of potato chips out of his hands. The Detroit News reports the man then told the suspect, “Yo, man, give me back my chips,” and took the chips back.

“The suspect produced a weapon, shot him and fled the scene,” a police spokesperson told WWJ-TV.

The victim was subsequently taken to a nearby hospital, where he’s listed in stable condition. He is reportedly expected to recover.

According to police, the gunman escaped with the potato chips.

[Image via WDIV]

Job Seeker Accidentally Sends Naked Selfies to HR Manager

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Job Seeker Accidentally Sends Naked Selfies to HR Manager

A 23-year-old Chicago man recently made the misdial of a lifetime when he accidentally sexted a potential employer, sending the company’s HR manager a nude picture of himself. Then, the Chicago Tribune reports, he did it again.

Authorities say the HR manager contacted police after receiving two naked selfies between August 11 and August 13, only realizing the sender was the job applicant when he made a followup call the next morning.

According to the police report, officers then “contacted the offender who admitted to sending the photographs, explaining they were actually meant for another individual and were sent to the victim in error.”

Officers subsequently advised the sexter to cease all contact with the sextee.

“There was a conditional offer of employment made to this particular applicant,” Elmhurst Police Chief Michael Ruth told the Tribune. “My understanding is they’ve rescinded the offer.”

[Image via Shutterstock]

Reports: The Two Vice News Reporters Arrested in Turkey Have Been Released

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Reports: The Two Vice News Reporters Arrested in Turkey Have Been Released

Jake Hanrahan and Philip Pendlebury, the two Vice News journalists arrested on terror charges in Turkey last week, have been released, according to Turkish officials who spoke with the Associated Press and CNN Turk. The journalists’ Iraqi fixer and translator, Mohammed Rasool, reportedly remains in prison.

From the Associated Press:

The government official told The Associated Press that Hanrahan and Pendlebury were freed on Thursday. He did not know if they would be allowed to leave Turkey or were required to remain in the country pending trial. A lawyer representing the journalists could not immediately be reached for comment.

http://gawker.com/two-vice-news-...

Hanrahan, Pendlebury, and Rasool were arrested in Diyarbakir, Turkey, last Thursday, reportedly as they filmed fighting between Turkish security officials and the outlawed pro-Kurdish PKK militant group. On Monday, all three were charged with “deliberately aiding an armed organization” because, according to a report in Al Jazeera, the same encryption software occasionally used by ISIS was allegedly found on one of their computers.


Contact the author at taylor@gawker.com.

Remember Concussion Director Peter Landesman's Sketchy, Unprovable Sex Trafficking Exposé?

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Remember Concussion Director Peter Landesman's Sketchy, Unprovable Sex Trafficking Exposé?

Emails released in the Sony hack reveal that Concussion director and screenwriter Peter Landesman altered his upcoming film, which seeks to shed light on the deathly consequences faced by NFL players after getting hit in the head repeatedly, to prevent possible legal action by the NFL. Landesman, a former journalist for The New York Times Magazine, admitted as much to the Times on Tuesday, explaining that he wanted to be careful with the facts and evidence presented in his movie to protect its credibility.

“We don’t want to give the NFL a toehold to say, ‘They are making it up,’ and damage the credibility of the movie,” he said. “There were things that might have been creatively fun to have actors say that might not have been accurate in the heads of the NFL or doctors. We might have gotten away with it legally, but it might have damaged our integrity as filmmakers. We didn’t have a need to make up anything because it was powerful and revelatory on its own.”

So careful was Landesman to verify the story presented in Concussion, the Times reports, that he attempted to broker a meeting with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell last September. (Sony execs put the kibosh on that, per the Times.)

With the possible threat of legal action bearing down on him, it’s clear that Landesman avoided taking creative license to make the story more shocking or entertaining. But has he always been so cautious?

In January 2004, Landesman published a blockbuster report on U.S. sex trafficking in the Times magazine, titled “The Girls Next Door.” In it, he claimed that thousands of young female sex slaves were being held “captive and pimped out for forced sex” in hundreds of “stash houses” in the U.S., like one in Plainfield, New Jersey, that cops raided in 2002. After other journalists questioned the veracity of this and other claims made in the story, the Times appended several corrections to the story as well as an editor’s note defending it.

Landesman suffered no serious professional consequences for the errors in the piece, nor for what critics saw as prurient exaggeration throughout.

Unverifiable Numbers

Landesman’s reporting was strongly criticized in 2004 by then-Slate reporter Jack Shafer (now at Politico) and blogger Dan Radosh (now a Daily Show writer). While Shafer and Radosh praised Landesman and the Times’ editors for shedding light on U.S. sex trafficking at the time—which surely existed, based on Landesman’s description of a successful prosecution of sex traffickers and the aforementioned N.J. raid—the two pointed out that Landesman offered little evidence to support the huge numbers cited in the piece.

In “The Girls Next Door,” Landesman described the scope of the sex trafficking problem in the U.S. thusly:

[T]he United States has become a major importer of sex slaves. Last year, the C.I.A. estimated that between 18,000 and 20,000 people are trafficked annually into the United States. The government has not studied how many of these are victims of sex traffickers, but Kevin Bales, president of Free the Slaves, America’s largest anti-slavery organization, says that the number is at least 10,000 a year. John Miller, the State Department’s director of the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, conceded: ‘’That figure could be low. What we know is that the number is huge.’’ Bales estimates that there are 30,000 to 50,000 sex slaves in captivity in the United States at any given time.

He asserted that these 10,000 trafficked individuals were being held captive in “dozens of active stash houses and apartments in the New York metropolitan area—mirroring hundreds more in other major cities like Los Angeles, Atlanta and Chicago,” though he only cited the one confirmed “stash house” in N.J.

The day after “The Girls Next Door” was published, Shafer questioned Landesman’s decision to use Free the Slaves president Kevin Bales’ numbers to bolster the 10,000-per-year figure (emphasis added):

When Landesman cites the 18,000 to 20,000 number in his article, he acknowledges that the government has yet to determine how many are sold into sex slavery, but then he lets Kevin Bales of the nonprofit group Free the Slaves hype his premise with the speculation that the number is “at least 10,000 a year.” How credible is Bales? How credible are his numbers? Bales claims 27 million slaves around the world, which is only 10 times larger than the estimate of the Anti-Slavery Society, which puts the number at 2.7 million.

State Department go-to guy on slavery John Miller tells Landesman that the 10,000 new sex slaves a year estimate by Bales “could be low.” But the fact is nobody in the field seems to have a good handle on slave traffic numbers or the sex slave population in the United States. So, when Bales surmises that there are between 30,000 to 50,000 sex slaves in the United States at any time, don’t feel the need to believe him. Nobody really knows the true answer, but we do know whose interests are served by any inflation of the numbers.

Landesman’s defense: In the story, Landesman quoted Laura Lederer, then a senior State Department adviser on trafficking, to account for the huge number of sex slaves apparently hidden in the U.S. She said, “We’re not finding victims in the United States because we’re not looking for them.’’

The Times’ defense: In the editor’s note added to Landesman’s story, the Times’ simply defended using Bales as a definitive source:

Some readers have questioned the figure of 10,000 enforced prostitutes brought into this country each year. The source of that number is Kevin Bales, recommended to the magazine by Human Rights Watch as the best authority on the extent of enforced prostitution in the United States, who based his estimates on State Department documents, arrest and prosecution records and information from nearly 50 social service agencies.

There is still, obviously, no way to know how many sex slaves are trafficked into the U.S. each year. In 2007, The Washington Post reported that the Bush administration had “identified 1,362 victims of human trafficking brought into the United States since 2000.”

More recent statistics from the Department of Justice indicate that the Department prosecutes tens of trafficking cases annually. From its website: “From 2009 to 2011, the Department brought an average of 24 forced labor cases annually, more than doubling the average of 11 cases brought annually over the prior 3-year period from 2006 to 2008.”

Problems with Sources

Landesman’s cited statistics would certainly have been more believable had he backed them up with credible reports from witnesses. Landesman did provide harrowing anecdotes about the way the sex trade allegedly works in the U.S., but the majority of them came from anonymous, single sources. Wrote Radosh at the time:

Notice that the most salacious charges (and make no mistake, from the cover photo on, this is a disturbingly prurient article) come entirely single-sourced by anonymous young women. At one point Landesman writes, “All the girls I spoke to said that their captors were both psychologically and physically abusive,” implying that there are many. But throughout the article he identifies only two (“Andrea” and “Montserrat”) and never mentions speaking to any others on background. Considering that much of their stories are so literally fantastic (girls being dressed in color-coded outfits for open trade at Disneyland; Johns who read the Bible to girls before raping them) you’d think he, or the editors, would want some confirmation.

One of Landesman’s primary sources, “Andrea,” had multiple personality disorder, which Landesman did not disclose in the story. Landesman did note that Andrea could not remember her real name or age, but she did remember many details about her life as a sex slave being trafficked back and forth between the U.S. and Mexico for 12 years. As Shafer pointed out at the time, “much of the sensational material in ‘The Girls Next Door’ comes from ‘Andrea.’” She told Landesman that “one American businessman read to her from the Bible before and after sex, that she witnessed a 4-year-old boy being purchased for $500, that she was regularly passed off to customers at Disneyland, and that one regular john was a child psychologist.”

Landesman’s defense: In a comment on Radosh’s blog, Landesman insisted that Andrea was a reliable source. “‘Andrea’ has been fully vetted and confirmed as reliable and credible by a higher body of journalism than you or I,” he wrote.

The Times’ defense: In the editor’s note, the Times admitted that Landesman did not make editors aware of Andrea’s diagnosis before publication:

After the article was published, [Landesman] made an impromptu comment in a radio interview, noting that Andrea has multiple-personality disorder. The magazine editors did not learn of her illness before publication. Andrea’s account of her years in slavery remained consistent over two and a half years of psychotherapy. Her therapist says that her illness has no effect on the accuracy of her memory. Her hours-long interview with the author, recorded on tape, is lucid and consistent.

An independent expert consulted by the magazine, Dr. Leonard Shengold, who has written books and papers about child abuse and the reliability and unreliability of memory, affirms that a diagnosis of multiple-personality disorder is not inconsistent with accurate memories of childhood abuse. Because multiple-personality disorder has been associated with false memory, however, the diagnosis should have been cited in the article.

There were many other smaller errors the story (two chronological problems; one hotel was referred to incorrectly; one instance of hearsay was presented as a firsthand account; etc), which were corrected in the editor’s note.

In 2007, Shafer reflected on “The Girls Next Door” in a Slate piece titled, “The Sex-Slavery Epidemic That Wasn’t.” He cited the Post’s reported statistics from the Bush administration (1,362 confirmed victims from 2000-2007) and argued that none of the estimates given by activists in Landesman’s piece seemed “remotely accurate.”

In 2007, Trade, a movie “inspired” by Landesman’s ostensible exposé starring Kevin Kline, was released in theaters. Since then, Landesman’s built a healthy career as a screenwriter and director—a career that will almost certainly reach new heights once the Oscar-bait that is Concussion hits theaters this Christmas.

Landesman’s admission that he altered parts of Concussion because “we don’t want to give the NFL a toehold to say, ‘They are making it up,’ and damage the credibility of the movie” could be evidence that he’s learned be more careful with the facts when going after a huge, national story. Or he could have just realized that the NFL is more likely to sue than a coalition of non-existent pimps.


Image by Jim Cooke. Contact the author at allie@gawker.com.

A Who's On First Email Exchange With Hapless Skins PR Boss Tony Wyllie

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A Who's On First Email Exchange With Hapless Skins PR Boss Tony Wyllie

Earlier tonight, the Washington football team released a statement on behalf of GM Scot McCloughan’s wife Jessica, apologizing for having sent tweets accusing an ESPN reporter of trading sexual favors for access. But just a few hours before releasing the statement, Washington PR svengali Tony Wyllie told both Black Sports Online and Pro Football Talk that the Twitter account was a fake and that the team had reported it to NFL security. Here is how Black Sports Online recounted their conversation with Wyllie:

http://deadspin.com/wife-of-skins-...

SVP of Communications for the Redskins Tony Wyllie tells BlackSportsOnline exclusively that it definitely a fake account and they have contacted NFL security to have it shut down.

That is an exact statement from the team.

The obvious takeaway here, once McCloughan apologized for the tweets, was that somebody lied. Either Tony Wyllie lied when he said the account was a fake, or McCloughan lied and told Wyllie the account didn’t belong to her, or there was, perhaps, a third, more benign explanation that isn’t apparent to me.

In an attempt to do due diligence before accusing anybody of lying, I called Wyllie up on the phone. I am in an area with terrible cell phone reception, so all I heard was Wyllie repeating, “Hello? Anybody there?” So I followed up with an e-mail, which turned into 12 emails, in attempt to get to the bottom of the situation. Here is our correspondence, unedited.

From: kevin.draper@deadspin.com

To: wylliet@redskins.com

Subject: McCloughan Statement

Time: 8:35 p.m.

Hi Tony,

I was the one that just called you on the phone, but I’m in an area with bad reception and I guess you couldn’t hear me.

Earlier today it seems that you talked to both Black Sports Online and Pro Football Talk regarding the McCloughan tweet. While both organizations reported that you said that account was a fake, neither of them ran an actual statement from you. Can you let me know what statement you gave them?

Thanks
Kevin

__
Kevin Draper
Staff Writer, Deadspin
510-300-xxxx

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 9:16 p.m.

“I deeply apologize for the disparaging remarks about an ESPN reporter on my personal Twitter account. The comment was unfounded and inappropriate, and I have the utmost respect for both the reporter and ESPN. I regret that my actions have brought undeserved negative attention to the Redskins organization and its leadership. My comments in no way reflect the opinions or attitudes of the organization and I regret that my behavior has in any way negatively impacted the team and its loyal fan base.” – Jessica McCloughan

Sent from my iPhone

From: Kevin

To: Tony

Time: 9:22 p.m.

Hi Tony,

Thanks for the response, but I’m looking for the statement you gave PFT and BSO when you told them the account was a fake, and being forwarded to NFL security for investigation.

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 10:23 p.m.

What is your telephone number?

Hey KevIn,

Our email at work went down.

That was our first statement.

Here is the second one

“I deeply apologize for the disparaging remarks about an ESPN reporter on my personal Twitter account. The comment was unfounded and inappropriate, and I have the utmost respect for both the reporter and ESPN. I regret that my actions have brought undeserved negative attention to the Redskins organization and its leadership. My comments in no way reflect the opinions or attitudes of the organization and I regret that my behavior has in any way negatively impacted the team and its loyal fan base.” – Jessica McCloughan

Sent from my iPhone

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 10:23 p.m.

I see it now in your signature.

Sent from my iPhone

From: Kevin

To: Tony

Time: 10:29 p.m.

Yeah, it’s 510-300-xxx, but I’m guessing it won’t work because I am in the hills in a place with very bad service, but please feel free to try!

And what I’m wondering is what the first statement actually was. Neither BSO nor PFT published a statement or anything from you in quotes, they just paraphrased what you said. I am trying to figure out how this story went from a fake account to Jessica apologizing in a couple of hours.

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 10:33 p.m.

That is accurate among PFT and BSO

We made two statements.

I will reach out to you in the am.

Sent from my iPhone

From: Kevin

To: Tony

Time: 10:44 p.m.

Hi Tony,

I am trying to run a story on what exactly happened before the morning. To be clear, this is what PFT wrote:

Redskins Senior Vice President Tony Wyllie tells PFT that Jessica McCloughan did not post the tweet, it came from a fake account, and it has been forwarded to the NFL’s security department.

And this is what BSO wrote:

SVP of Communications for the Redskins Tony Wyllie tells BlackSportsOnline exclusively that it definitely a fake account and they have contacted NFL security to have it shut down.

You are saying that both of these recollections of your conversations are accurate, correct?

If they’re accurate, it seems that somebody lied here. Either you lied when you said the account was a fake, Jessica McCloughan lied and told you it wasn’t her account, or there is something else going on here that isn’t clear to me. Do you have an explanation for this apparent lie?

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 10:58 p.m.

Kevin

Our last statement stands. If you have any further questions call me tomorrow.

Have a good night!!

Tony

Sent from my iPhone

At 11:27, I received a phone call from Wyllie. He was unhappy that I called him a dipshit and incompetent in my previous post, but our conversation was cut short after less than a minute by the aforementioned service problems.

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 11:27 p.m.

Kevin

You can disagree all you want and I can respect that but I don’t appreciate the insults and personal attacks. I’m being professional and would like the same from you.

Sent from my iPhone

From: Tony

To: Kevin

Time: 11:29 p.m.

Have a good night. Let’s chat tomorrow

Sent from my iPhone

From: Kevin

To: Tony

Time: 11:40 p.m.

Hey Tony,

Sorry the phone call didn’t work; I’m at my parents’ house and have never gotten service here.

I understand that you don’t appreciate my namecalling, and I won’t deny that it’s a bit childish. That said, I’m just trying to get the answer to a simple question: why did you tell BSO and PFT that the Twitter account was fake? Either you lied purposefully, or you passed on a lie you were told, or there’s some other explanation. Which is it?

We also took our conversation to text message (it’s a west coast time stamp):

A Who's On First Email Exchange With Hapless Skins PR Boss Tony Wyllie

We still have no idea who lied here, but maybe Tony—who once compared my colleague, the legendary Dave McKenna, to the Egyptian government and the Skins to protestors in Tahrir Square (this actually happened)—will clear it up tomorrow morning. Hope springs eternal!


E-mail: kevin.draper@deadspin.com | PGP key + fingerprint | DM: @kevinmdraper

Kentucky Clerk Kim Davis Jailed for Refusing to Issue Same-Sex Marriage Licenses

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Kentucky Clerk Kim Davis Jailed for Refusing to Issue Same-Sex Marriage Licenses

Kim Davis, the Rowan County, Kentucky, clerk who made headlines for refusing to issue marriage licenses after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled to legalize same-sex marriage in June, has been jailed in contempt of court, local news outlets are reporting.

According to Bluegrass Politics, U.S. District Judge David Bunning ruled to imprison Davis until she begins issuing marriage licenses. “Crowd outside erupts in applause,” the outlet tweeted this afternoon.


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


Weekend Rain Should Help Firefighters Battle Raging Fires in the Northwest

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Weekend Rain Should Help Firefighters Battle Raging Fires in the Northwest

The United States is in a weather drought right now—there’s not much to talk about outside of the tropics. However, this weekend will feature some active weather in an area they need it the most. Heavy rain is possible in the interior northwest around Idaho and Montana over the next several days, potentially aiding firefighters in their war against raging wildfires that are burning hundreds of thousands of acres of land, covering the region in a thick blanket of smoke.

People who live west of the Rocky Mountains often complain that the media (and this blog) seem to only ever cover weather that happens east of Denver. It’s like the western half of the country doesn’t exist, they say. The only problem is that the west really hasn’t seen much weather lately. There’s not much to talk about when it’s sunny, hot, and dry for months on end.

Weekend Rain Should Help Firefighters Battle Raging Fires in the Northwest

Just about every piece of land west of the Rockies is in some level of drought as of this morning’s update of the Drought Monitor. Extreme drought—the second-highest level—stretches from southern California up through Canada, with the worst fires squarely in the areas hardest-hit by the ongoing, slow-motion disaster of dryness.

A couple of days ago, a powerful storm made landfall in the Pacific Northwest, producing extensive wind damage in Vancouver, B.C., and bringing up to five inches of rain to parts of Washington and British Columbia. That was great for their drought, but it didn’t do much to help the widespread fires plaguing the northern tier of the Intermountain West.

Weekend Rain Should Help Firefighters Battle Raging Fires in the Northwest

There are dozens of large fires burning across Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington right now, and months of warm, dry weather has made it exceptionally difficult for crews to extinguish the flames. That storm did leave behind cool, damp weather in its wake—which is at least helping to prevent the rapid spread of the fires—and more change is on the way.

A sharp trough in the jet stream will trigger the development of a low pressure system near the Canadian border this weekend, bringing the potential for widespread rainfall over areas that need it the most.

Weekend Rain Should Help Firefighters Battle Raging Fires in the Northwest

The latest forecast from the Weather Prediction Center shows a good soaking across many areas experiencing fires right now. Much of Montana and northern Idaho could see an inch or more of rain by this time next Thursday, and locations that get caught under heavier showers and thunderstorms could see even more than that.

If current forecasts hold true, the heaviest rain will miss the bulk of the fires centered around far western Montana and the neck of Idaho (or whatever you call it), but an inch of rain is more than nothing at all, and any rain is positive at this point. Even a little bit of steady precipitation could help firefighters gain the upper-hand against the world’s most destructive force.

[Images: NOAA via AP, USDA Forest Service, author]


Email: dennis.mersereau@gawker.com | Twitter: @wxdam

If you enjoy The Vane, then you’ll love my upcoming book, The Extreme Weather Survival Manual, which comes out on October 6 and is now available for pre-order on Amazon.

"Gone Girl" Kidnapping Suspect Confesses to Reporter Off the Record

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"Gone Girl" Kidnapping Suspect Confesses to Reporter Off the Record

Matthew Muller, the prime suspect in a California kidnapping that’s become known as the “Gone Girl” case because police initially believed the victim faked the crime, agreed to tell a reporter a few things “off the record” in a jailhouse interview. One of those things was apparently that he did it, Wired’s Kevin Poulsen reports.

http://gawker.com/fbi-arrests-su...

Although KPIX-TV reporter Juliette Goodrich wasn’t allowed to record the interview or even write it down, Muller’s apparent confession made it into the record anyway—the jail records conversations between inmates and visitors, and forwarded the tape of the interview to the FBI.

Muller is accused of kidnapping a woman named Denise Huskins last March after drugging Huskins and her boyfriend and demanding their bank account numbers, Wi-Fi password, and other internet account passwords.

When Huskins reemerged two days later, hundreds of miles away, police at first suspected she had faked the kidnapping to frame her boyfriend, Aaron Quinn—a setup similar to the plot of Gillian Flynn’s revenge novel Gone Girl.

The FBI determined that wasn’t the case—instead, they suspected Muller, a Harvard Law grad and former Marine who had been arrested in a separate home invasion.

In a 9,000-word manifesto mailed to the San Francisco Chronicle, the kidnappers claimed to be a group of three “gentleman thieves” who were trying to pull a few big jobs and use the ransom to retire. The writer claimed the group had let Huskins go after determining they’d kidnapped the wrong woman.

A tape the suspect played for Quinn and Huskins while they were bound with zip-ties in their apparent also described “a professional group collecting on financial debts,” the FBI said.

But in the taped jailhouse interview, Wired reports, Muller claimed there was no such group. Wired reports:

[A]ccording to the FBI affidavit, the gang was just one of Muller’s fantasies.

“In the context of discussing the kidnapping of [Huskins] ‘off the record and on background,’ Muller said that there was no gang and that it was just him,” special agent Wesley Drone wrote in the affidavit.

The interviewer, Goodrich, also said that Muller described his declining mental health over the past half-decade.

The FBI now believes Muller had carried out, or attempted, a number of similar home invasions around Silicon Valley as early as 2009, and that he’d done extensive research on the victims beforehand.

“The fact that Muller knew facts about his victims indicates that he probably conducted online research of his targets,” Drone wrote in the affidavit, per Wired. “These recurring crimes involving nighttime home intrusions in which passwords are demanded indicates some plan for further use of computers and/or the Internet for crime.”

The two alleged 2009 burglaries, committed when Muller was still a practicing lawyer, each had the same M.O.: a woman drugged with Nyquil and interrogated about her computer password. Muller was stopped and questioned about one of them in the middle of the night, but was never charged due to lack of evidence.

Wired also notes that two months after being questioned by police about those crimes, Muller disappeared, leaving his wife a note that he was going “off the grid.”

“I have problems beyond my mental health,” he wrote, “I live in terror most of the time and can’t keep up appearances any longer, and this is perhaps the least extreme thing I can do to resolve it that does not also expose everybody to criminal liability.”

He’s also suspected—but hasn’t been charged—in another 2012 break-in and attempted rape.

Muller has pleaded not guilty to the suspected home invasion that resulted in his arrest last June.

[Photo provided by Muller’s attorney to ABC News]

Morgan Freeman Is a Mummy Now

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Morgan Freeman Is a Mummy Now

Check out Morgan Freeman on the set of this movie—he’s a mummy now.

Morgan Freeman Is a Mummy Now

Morgan Freeman is a mummy now
Se7en, Invictus, wow oh wow
Morgan Freeman is a mummy now
Deal with it


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

Is Shop Jeen's Viral Success Story All Window Dressing?

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Is Shop Jeen's Viral Success Story All Window Dressing?

For a certain type of internet-fluent teenager, Shop Jeen is an unsurpassed mecca of cool. The retailer’s homepage looks as if a sex-crazed Hello Kitty threw up after drinking 1,000 jello shots, selling things like “Turnt Jesus” iPhone cases, “University of Bad Bitches” sweatshirts and T-shirts screaming “Ask Your Boyfriend How My Ass Taste.” It’s irreverent and exceptionally topical, a store for young women who don’t buy clothes as much as they buy costumes. But it is also, by many accounts, a black hole of dysfunction: money goes in, but very little comes out.

On August 13, The Cut published an exceedingly positive article about Erin Yogasundram, the 23-year-old CEO of the internet teen-focused retailer. The website isn’t the only one to do so. People are obsessed with Yogasundram: users of the site call her “Mom,” MTV recently referred to her as “Queen Bee of the Internet,” and Racked included her in a series of interviews with women who are “killing it in the fashion-tech industry.”

The article paints Yogasundram as an ambitious, perpetually on-trend chick who found fun, cool success and is now dealing with its slightly less fun, less cool consequences:

Product wasn’t being tracked properly, people weren’t getting their orders on time — basically, there were no official protocols in place. “We wanted to use this as an opportunity to really do things right, lay out processes, and build it back up from day one,” Erin says. She admits that she’s not a great manager. “It’s my weakest point. I’ve literally only been alive for 23 years.”

The rest of the piece mentions a few other blips the company has had (Chanel sued Shop Jeen for selling knock-off iPhone cases; Yogasundram and her business partner had to lay off ten of their 15 employees), but mainly focuses on her rising star.

The company’s successes, to be sure, are impressive—the brand has an enormous web footprint, with over 400,000 Instagram followers and 60,000 Facebook likes. Yogasundram says she made $50,000 in her first month, a number that has likely only skyrocketed since she founded the company in 2012. This type of rapid success would pose a challenge to any CEO, let alone one who’s 23 with no real business experience. But the troubles Shop Jeen is facing aren’t just the usual bumps that come along with building a brand, nor are they the minor hiccups glossed over in the Cut profile. Rather, according to people who have interacted closely with the company, Shop Jeen’s troubles appear to be the result of legitimate misconduct within an environment of little-to-no accountability. Many ex-employees and vendors portray Yogasundram’s business as distinctly unprofessional; they say her style of management is avoidant, irresponsible and dysfunctional behind the scenes.

Is Shop Jeen's Viral Success Story All Window Dressing?

Jenna Bumgardner is the owner of Space Trash, a jewelry Etsy shop that worked as a vendor for Shop Jeen for several months. During that time, Bumgardner alleges the company was often late on their payments, if generally never more than a week or two; it didn’t seem worthwhile to make the delays a thing, she says.

Then the delays got worse. Bumgardner finally reached out to Jezebel after waiting over 100 days for almost $900. Yogasundram had ignored her repeated requests for payment, until Bumgardner threatened to bring her to small-claims court. At that point, Yogasundram finally responded that she would withhold an employee’s paycheck to foot the bill.

In another email to Bumgardner (provided via screen grab to Jezebel), Yogasundram wrote:

I’m sort of baffled that you think we are intentionally withholding money from you and that it would be beneficial for us not to pay you. We’ve always paid in the past, much larger bills at that- not sure why we would decide to all of a sudden not be able to unless there was an actual legitimate problem with being able to do so.

Also sad to see your posts all over the internet about how we are STEALING from you. That’s hardly what is happening here. I flew to New York to close up our office there since we can no longer afford to have it and we were given free tickets to the VMAs...that isn’t something you pay for.

But to avoid continuing this extremely stressful and anxiety inducing conversation over $800, I am going to call my dad whom I barely speak to and ask to borrow it to pay you since asking an employee to withhold a paycheck does not suffice. I am concerned about you continuing to act irrationally on a public forum.

“She’s really trying to make us feel like the bad ones [for having asked for payment],” Bumgardner wrote in response in an email to Jezebel. “Honestly I do feel bad because I am a nice, patient person... but I have rent to pay, a cat and dog to feed, and a boyfriend who is struggling with student loan debt. My business partner can’t even afford to pay rent, and still lives with his parents while he attends community college.”

Yogasundram argued in an email that her intentions were good:

“My offer to compensate her personally and from outside the business was a gesture that was meant to show that I was willing to do whatever was necessary to make her whole; it is in an issue that has now been resolved definitively.”

Bumgarner threatened legal action against Shop Jeen if she received no payment by August 31. She was finally paid, she tells Jezebel, the afternoon of September 1.

But she was one of the persistent ones, somebody who had the time to threaten legal action and to hound Yogasundram every day until she relented. Jamie Glassberg, Vice President of Top Trenz, Inc., tells Jezebel he’s had similar, repeated experiences of nonpayment from Shop Jeen. But he hasn’t threatened to sue, and hasn’t gotten any substantive response from Shop Jeen management.

Glassberg first met Shop Jeen representatives at a trade show in 2014. At another show in March 2015, the company put in a sizable order for a number of Top Trenz’s candy-print accessories, but asked for time to pay it off. Since Shop Jeen had such a huge social media following, Glassberg and his colleagues agreed.

But, when it came time to pay the bill, nothing happened. After Glassberg found himself in repeated conversations with Shop Jeen’s buyer, it became clear to him that Top Trenz was not the only stiffed vendor. “[The Shop Jeen buyer] was like, ‘Yeah, I’m really upset. My name’s getting smeared here. All the vendors that I buy from, none of you guys are getting paid and it’s hurting my reputation,’” Glassberg said.

In June 2015, the buyer was let go, along with ten other employees in advance of the company’s big move out west. Shortly after they were fired, Glassberg saw a call for applications to work at the retailer: Shop Jeen was hiring again. Currently, Shop Jeen’s jobs board lists eight open positions, as well as a call for interns.

(Yogasundram claims that the issue with Top Trenz is “being worked out with our accounting team” and that she has had “multiple exchanges” with Glassberg.)

The buyer in question, who wishes to remain anonymous, confirmed Glassberg’s story, suggesting that the company got itself into trouble “shortly after Black Friday” in 2014, when Yogasundram “decided to stock the site with product we didn’t actually have quantity on, in an effort to maximize sales.” Customers placed orders that Shop Jeen knew it couldn’t fulfill, and the complaints and subsequent problems became an “avalanche” for the buyer, who was the vendors’ main point of contact.

The former buyer noted that the company worked on Net 30 terms, in which Shop Jeen pays a given vendor 30 days after their wholesale goods are received. “[Yogasundram] very rarely had any intention whatsoever on paying vendors on time. Unless of course it was in her favor to do so, as in to clear balance for another order.”

Whether or not it was Yogasundram’s initial intention to stiff her vendors, such a move quickly became an acceptable solution to the company’s ongoing financial problems.

“She exhibited a complete lack of moral compass, screwing over vendors both large and small,” the buyer continued. “At the time that I was let go, the vendor debt was six figures with over 20 vendors.”

Yogasundram denies that this is still the case: “Shop Jeen has gone through pretty standard restructuring which has included a new, streamlined accounting framework, new priorities with regards to staffing our team and a new geographic location. As young entrepreneurs, we are improving our practices every day, but I can say confidently that all our vendors have been fully recompensed.”

Is Shop Jeen's Viral Success Story All Window Dressing?

The buyer noted that Shop Jeen staff was as unhappy as the vendors they were disappointing.

“[Yogasundram] rarely graced us with her presence and preferred to manage and give input via email or Slack... where she was rude, insensitive, and unrealistically demanding,” the employee wrote. “Occasionally she would try to inspire us with long-winded emails sent to everyone or (even more rare) an in-person talk where she would dish out empty promises on a myriad of things such as benefits, vacation plans, employee discounts, and improved office equipment/furniture. All things she never made good on.”

The source said that eventually, several employees’ checks bounced, an inevitability that Yogasundram reportedly claimed was beyond her control.

Kacie Medeiros was hired to be the Customer Service Lead this past January, shortly after leaving a job at Burberry, according to her LinkedIn profile. Upon arrival, she learned that she was the only customer service rep at the company—the others had quit.

“I generally enjoyed my time at the company due to my coworkers,” she said in an email. “Having said that, it was not well organized and it was very difficult to [do] my job well due largely to internal issues such as money and lack of communication from management.”

Medeiros noticed that the company was troubled basically as soon as he got there

“Sorry to be blunt,” she continued, “Erin was not a good boss. She was very distant and awkward. I never felt comfortable expressing problems I saw with her. Nor did I feel she was open to any suggestions from any of my coworkers.”

“At one point I saw a Snapchat of our creative director rolling her eyes while I was clearly speaking in the background,” she wrote.

One day in June, Medeiros recounted, every employee was let go without notice. “One by one we were told we were being let go or temporarily asked to stay on ‘till they could be fully located to LA.”

Reviews on Glassdoor.com echo these reports, alleging that Yogasundram was frequently absent from the office and is “disrespectful of her current employees, demand[ing] extra weekend/holiday work from them without appropriate compensation.” The reviewer adds that Shop Jeen employees receive no benefits and poor pay.

“Like most CEOs, I work 20 hour days and routinely pull all-nighters, so the idea that I was not a consistent presence in the office is misleading at best,” Yogasundram countered. “Just yesterday I worked very hard from 8 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. nonstop.”

The company currently has an F rating on Better Business Bureau, with over 50 registered complaints claiming that products were never delivered, but no refund was granted despite numerous attempts to get in touch. Others claim that, when products were delivered, they were damaged to the point of being unwearable. One customer writes about receiving an email that an ordered item was “unable to be packed” and that the company did not send a refund but said they were “SO sorry.” Another customer writes about an order sent with a false tracking number—an item that never arrived. “This business is a fraud,” the customer writes.

Another website features what seem to be screen grabbed posts on the Shop Jeen Facebook page (that may have since been deleted), complaining about orders that were never received and refunds that were never given.

Medeiros says she received similar complaints “all day every day.”

“When I started there were about 5,000 emails or so that needed to be resolved,” she wrote, “not really due to bad service, but more not being allowed to answer them via Erin’s guidelines... We all did what we could.”

But these are all things to be expected from a rapidly growing company, Yogasundram insists.

“Our customer service team is working hard to respond to all order issues that transpired during our move from coast to coast,” Yogasundram said in an email. “Traditional growing pains that a young, start-up, boot-strapped business faces can be challenging and we are doing everything we can to have our operations running smoothly again.”

She added: “Shop Jeen received over 50,000 orders over the holiday season. During that time, we were a team of six people and our business literally quadrupled with volume that could not be anticipated. Kacie and a team of two others were brought on after to help go through and fulfill a backlog of 3,000 customer inquiries.”

Is Shop Jeen's Viral Success Story All Window Dressing?

Yogasundram told The Cut: “I think that the angle for the story is how I’m this emotional 23-year-old girl, yet I have to combat these crazy 50-year-old-CEO work problems.” Her youth, a major asset for the company’s ability to capitalize teen-focused trends, is also undeniably a factor in her workplace difficulties. However, there’s plenty of precedent for a 23-year-old to negotiate the business world successfully, and paying people on time is not necessarily an obligation that grows clearer with age.

Glassberg, the VP of Top Trenz, stated things more plainly. “I see this and I’m just like, wow. The guys are scam artists. This girl just doesn’t care. People are dumb enough to give them credit and she’s just not paying her bills. What are you gonna do? Are you gonna go there and beat her up? There’s nothing to do.”

Yogasundram agrees with Glassberg in the sense that there isn’t really anything to do about the business hiccups other than wait them out:

“I’m a 23-year-old woman with a business that I have boot-strapped completely, taking no outside investment to this date,” she wrote to Jezebel, although the New York Magazine article notes she has received private loans. “Anyone who has ever operated a small business understands that managing vendor and customer obligations is a core concern, and one that we have addressed in our recent restructuring which we are confident will improve our operation.”

“Immense growth can be a blessing but also a tremendous challenge,” she continued. “We wholeheartedly appreciate the support from our customers and vendors as we adjust some of our practices and mature as a company. We are very excited for the future.”


Contact the author at joanna@jezebel.com.

Images courtesy of Shop Jeen.

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

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Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

My new favorite app is: myPill, a pink- and purple-colored period and birth control pill tracker that costs $4.99 in the app store. I bought it this week on the recommendation of my younger sister, and I’m glad I did. The price is probably not worth it for the main pill reminder feature—just set a regular alarm!—but it pays for itself considering how much good advice from teen girls is on there.

In addition to a pill reminder and a period tracker that lets you use emojis to document your mood swings, myPill has a message board where, once you log in through email or Facebook and create a username, you can ask fellow period-havers questions. It’s like Yahoo! Answers, but all the questions and answers are coming from young women using contraceptives for the first time.

(We blurred the faces and usernames in the following photos because myPill users are, ostensibly, teenagers.)

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

The majority of questions concern all the doomsday, “what if?” pregnancy scenarios that run through your mind every time your period is over an hour late (or not—maybe you are a “chill” person—I don’t know). “Took yesterday’s pill 10 hours late and now I’m spotting, it’s normal right?” one girl asked yesterday. “Also about 12 days ago I took a pill 12 hours late, could this have anything to do with the spotting? I’m probably going to take a pregnancy test in about a week... so stressed out right now [monkey emoji].”

To be honest, IDK if that’s normal. Could be? Kinda getting freaked out about this? Good thing another girl had an answer: “It’s okay, but yeah the spotting can be attributed to that.”

We feel better now.

This kind of soothing advice is not limited to pregnancy scares. Got boyfriend troubles? Your myPill friends know what to do.

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

Ditto about weird sex things.

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

You can even ask the myPill boards for job advice.

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

Or make (perhaps futile) customer service complaints.

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

At its core, however, myPill is about commiseration.

Teen Girls Give the Best Dating Advice On This Period Tracking App

I hope this app does not get sued for providing sketchy medical advice to potential minors, because its real function is clear. Engaging in this kind of communal catharsis, for teen girls, is necessary. Sure, you could write about your pregnancy fears in a diary or a YouTube comment or on Reddit (lol—JK), but what’s a better sanctuary than a pay-to-play period tracking app? Parents will never find you on there.

Also: I can’t stop reading it!


Photos via myPill. Contact the author at allie@gawker.com.

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