‘Who cares what anybody else says?’ Alicia Keys applauds son for rainbow nail polish
Alicia Keys is urging fans to pursue “less labels, more expressions” after her son voiced an insecurity about his rainbow nail polish.
In an Instagram video shared over the weekend, Keys recounted to followers how her younger son, 4-year-old Genesis, had been excited to join her at the nail salon, where he decided he wanted each finger to be pained a different color like a rainbow.
“After she painted his nails, he looked at me and said, ‘Mommy, I don’t want this on my nails,'” Keys recalled. “And I was like, ‘Why? You were so sure you were good.'”
“People are not going to like it,” she recalled her son saying.
“Can you believe this?” Keys asked viewers. “He’s four years old. Four. And he already understands the concept that someone’s going to judge him because he chose a rainbow color on his nails.”
The singer kept things positive with her son, applauding his creative idea and telling him others would do the same.
“You had this idea, stick with it,” she told him. “You chose it, you liked it, you do it. Who cares what anybody else says? Plus, you know, a lot of guys paint their nails. It’s not, like, some strange thing that you only do.”
Keys said the experience got her thinking about “how completely judged we are all the time.” She became frustrated that people often get held back from being able to explore both “masculine and feminine energies.”
“It gets concerning to me that we can’t just explore these different sides of ourselves,” she added. “Even for me, myself, I often explore the masculine energy that’s inside of me. It’s very natural to me. That’s how I feel… For my boys, (it’s) similar: if they want to express the feminine energy that’s inside of them, there’s all these judgements and all these rules and stereotypes and vibes, and it’s really frustrating to me.”
Article via USAToday
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Frank Ocean Defends His Exclusive Inclusive Queer Party
We’ve all had to send a few texts the morning after a party. But the day after his first PrEP+ party in New York City, Frank Ocean felt compelled to issue a whole statement. The event, billed as a recurring queer club night that pays “homage to what could have been of the 1980s’ NYC club scene if the drug [PrEP+] … had been invented in that era,” received criticism for erasing queer history, not being queer-inclusive, and just being hard to get into. But it’s all okay, Frank says! “Club culture around late 70s and 80s nightlife in NYC was a special, much talked about and written about thing,” he writes on Tumblr (where he may be the only one still with an account). “I recognize NY wasn’t all lasers and disco lighting and that simultaneously, there was a lot of crime and poverty and that a huge part of club culture, the gay community, at that time were being wiped out by HIV + AIDS.” As for his decision to name the night after an HIV-prevention drug, Ocean writes, “The pricing strategy behind it is malicious in my opinion and so it’s public perception is marred and rightfully so. But the fact remains that despite price being a very real barrier to this potentially life saving drug for some, the other very real barrier is awareness.”
At the end of the day, Ocean is “happy that folks are talking about the subject in the first place.” And if you’re a hater, you’re now invited: “I saw someone say that this was a PR stunt etc etc, pshhh bitch pls come get a drink next time and I’ll put several barstools out so you can have as many seats as you need.” See you next week, then?
Article via Vulture
Chick-fil-A’s first UK location will close after pressure from LGBTQ rights group
- The British shopping center leasing Chick-fil-A’s first U.K. location has already said it will not extend the restaurant’s six-month lease, BBC reported Friday.
- The Atlanta-based company has faced criticism and boycotts for its past donations to anti-LGBTQ groups and CEO Dan Cathy’s public comments opposing gay marriage.
- In April, the company lost out on two potentially lucrative airport contracts in the U.S. after local politicians raised concerns over the company’s anti-LGBTQ history.
Chick-fil-A opened its first location in the United Kingdom in early October.
A little more than a week later, the British shopping center leasing the location has already said it will not extend the restaurant’s six-month lease, BBC reported Friday.
The Oracle shopping center in Reading faced pressure from a local LGBTQ rights group, Reading Pride, according to the BBC.
The Atlanta-based company has faced criticism and boycotts for its past donations to anti-LGBTQ groups and CEO Dan Cathy’s public comments opposing gay marriage.
Chick-fil-A’s controversial past has slowed its rapid expansion previously. In April, the company lost out on two potentially lucrative airport contracts in the U.S. after local politicians raised concerns over the company’s anti-LGBTQ history.
Still, the chicken chain is the third-largest U.S. restaurant company by sales, just behind McDonald’s and Starbucks. Chick-fil-A is trying to catch up with its competition by expanding outside of its stronghold in the Southeast. In 2018, it announced plans to open its first international location in Toronto, with at least 14 more locations planned in the greater Toronto area in the next five years.
A Chick-fil-A spokesperson told CNBC in a statement: “Chick-fil-A is always evaluating potential new locations in the hope of serving customers great food and award winning service. This six month pilot licensed location in Reading, UK is part of our exploration in international markets.”
The Oracle did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CNBC.
Read more about the shopping center’s decision not to extend Chick-fil-A’s lease here.
Article via CNBC
North American bird population has dropped by 3 billion since 1970, study reveals
There are almost 3 billion fewer birds in the United States and Canada now than in 1970, according to a disturbing new study.
That amounts to a 29 percent drop in the avian population over the past half-century.
“Three billion is a punch in the gut,” Peter Marra, a conservation biologist at Georgetown University, told Science News. “Our study is a wake-up call. We’re experiencing an ecological crisis.”
For their study, which was published Thursday in Science, researchers examined a dozen databases covering decades of bird observations in the U.S. and Canada. They used statistical analysis to estimate trends since 1970.
“This loss of bird abundance signals an urgent need to address threats to avert future avifaunal collapse and associated loss of ecosystem integrity, function and services,” the study’s abstract states
The population loss affected common and rare birds alike, as well as invasive species.
Although the study does not specifically address why the birds are disappearing, experts believe that many species face habitat damage or loss.
“As habitats diminish, birds have nowhere to go,” Kenneth Rosenberg, an ornithologist at Cornell University, told Science News.
However, the study shows that some populations of birds — such as mallard ducks and Canadian geese — have actually increased in number since 1970.
“This increase is no accident,” Rosenberg said. “It’s a direct result of decades of conservation efforts made by hunters and billions of dollars
to protect these birds and their habitat.”
Rosenberg added that he hopes the study will spur similar concern for all types of birds.
Article via FOXNews
He was a Yale graduate, Wall Street banker and entrepreneur. Today he’s homeless in Los Angeles
Article via CNN
Shawn Pleasants has the kind of resume that would attract the attention of any job recruiter: high school valedictorian, economics major from Yale University, Wall Street banking jobs, small business entrepreneur. But a few wrong turns in life 10 years ago left him homeless, and today he’s living underneath a tarp in the Koreatown section of Los Angeles. He’s been told before that a smart and capable person like him should not be in this situation.”But I’m like, should anybody be here? Who should, then?” Pleasants said.
Last week, Trump administration officials came to Los Angeles to examine the homelessness crisis. The President, who clashes with California politicians on a number of issues, has made frequent reference to the state’s failure to solve the problem.
Trump is visiting the West Coast this week, amid reports that his administration is about to launch a crackdown on homelessness — potentially involving dismantling encampments and moving the homeless en masse into a government facility, according to the Washington Post. (It’s not clear how this would work or whether the President has the authority to order this kind of action.)Against that backdrop, Pleasants’ story is a reminder of how complex the problem of homelessness can be. “It means it can happen to anybody. It’s a problem we all could face,” Pleasants said, standing on a sidewalk in front of his weathered belongings. A couple of unopened cereal boxes that he just collected from a food pantry sit atop his things.
“I am responsible for my own choices. I own all my decisions,” he said plainly before telling his story.Pleasants, 52, is one of 60,000 people living on the streets of Los Angeles County. The situation has been worsening in recent years — between 2018 and 2019, the number of homeless people went up 12% in the county and 16% in the city, according to the Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count. Along LA’s skid row downtown, tents line entire blocks, and encampments in other neighborhoods have been growing.Mike Dickerson, an organizer for the homeless advocacy group Ktown for All, says the stories of many people living on the streets might surprise you.
“I think a lot of people have this perception that danger lurks in the encampments,” he said. “And for myself and for other volunteers, what we found is people who are just people like everyone else, who have fallen into hard times, whether that’s because of their own personal issues of because their landlord evicted them or because the rent rose in a way they could no longer pay.”
One man’s journey into homelessness
Pleasants grew up in San Antonio, Texas, the product of a stable, loving family who always excelled in school, according to his younger brother, Michael.Their mother was a teacher, while their father made a career in the Air Force.”He was always as a young child taking things apart and putting them back together,” said Michael Pleasants, who followed his brother’s footsteps to Yale. “He was a whiz kid.””He (Shawn) played trombone and won several civic awards around the city.”
Pleasants also overcame a physical disability. He was born with a club foot and wore leg braces throughout his childhood, his brother said. His doctor joked he would never run a marathon. In fact, his brother said, he’s run several, and was in peak physical condition through his 20s.Pleasants was a high school valedictorian, who had offers from multiple colleges, according to his brother.Shawn chose Yale and said he received grants and several academic scholarships, which covered most of his tuition. CNN has verified that he graduated from the university.
He majored in economics, and after a few years toiling on Wall Street, including jobs at Morgan Stanley, he landed in California. Trying to fulfill a Hollywood dream, he started a photography and filmmaking company. It was the mid-’90s, and as the DVD industry soon exploded, his company got involved in the then-lucrative world of the adult film industry. They made so much money that Pleasants wound up buying a large home in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles. “It was a beautiful house, something you’d see on MTV,” said his brother.
But amid squabbles with his co-founders, the income dried up. “By the time it was all sorted out, there was no business,” Shawn Pleasants said.
About 10 years ago, around the same time, he also lost his mother to cancer, and her death sent him into an emotional and physical tailspin.He went from living one place to another, eventually living out of his car before he lost that as well, his brother said.
Pleasants is gay, and considers himself to be married to another homeless man he’s been with for 10 years, since before they were on the streets.They live on the streets together, acting as a sort of team. They’ve held court on the same Koreatown sidewalks for six years. “We’re actually in the middle of a move,” he said, explaining that some of their things are few blocks away.
He grimaced at the notion of ever going to a shelter.”They’re always set up with such rigid protocols. I would leave the place immediately,” he said.
Pleasants believes a shelter would restrict his freedom and is concerned he wouldn’t be able to keep all of his things due to a lack of space. “I would prefer to be somewhere where I can still go to the library and do the things I need to do when I need to do them.”
Like many of the nation’s homeless, drugs, specifically meth, are a part of Pleasants’ life. He said he began using the drug before he became homeless, but insists it’s not what led him to the streets.His brother says his path toward addiction began while he was recovering from a back injury before he was homeless. “It started with pain killers, and then when they were too expensive or not accessible he medicated with other things.”Shawn Pleasants said he takes meth a few times a week as both an escape and to help him stay awake at night.”Every time you sleep, that’s when you lose and when people come and take your things,” he said.”I’m a heavy sleeper. I lose a lot.”
Surviving on the streets
Pleasants has both a laptop and a cell phone. The phone and its service are free under an Obama-era program. He spends a lot of time at the library, accessing the internet and staying on top of current events.
He has sustained himself by understanding the schedule of where and when to get free meals — using his natural intelligence to develop an efficient schedule.
“There’s certain churches (that provide meals), certain food pantries — you learn those schedules,” he explained.When asked whether Pleasants suffers from mental illness, his brother said, “I think he has episodic depression. He can go through periods of extreme depression where he will self-medicate, but then he can go through periods of being equally upbeat, resilient, and energetic.” The family has tried repeatedly to get him help, his brother said. There is a standing offer for him to move in with his 86-year-old father in San Antonio. Long-term, they would like to see him find an affordable option close to them — perhaps through a government assistance program. But Pleasants is defiant.”I am not trying to bring another family member down,” he said.
“I fell into it. I have to climb my way out of it.”
The fact that he graduated from an Ivy League school, owned a house and made a nice living, he said, should not come as a shock.Gesturing to a nearby tent encampment, he said, “You’ll find musicians, there’s a photographer, you’ve got all different types of people.”Dickerson says that to get people off the streets, more affordable housing needs to be created.”I think people point to things like mental illness or like drug abuse, which do exist in this population, but they aren’t the primary problem,” he said.”The idea that we’re going to force people into a facility that’s probably located in a very remote area is not a solution. That’s not going to connect people to jobs, to housing, to services (like) mental health and addiction treatment.” “And more importantly, putting thousands of people into a giant building isn’t going to get them housed if there’s nowhere for them to permanently live that they can afford,” he added.Pleasants said more practical measures such as bathing facilities are desperately needed.”We need places to shower, if you don’t want us to have hygiene issues,” he said. “And in order to get a job, we need to have clean clothes. Where do I iron? How do I keep them pressed?”When asked how he’ll eventually find his way out of this life, Pleasants expressed the kind of confidence that originally made him a standout. “I’m gonna start a small business again,” he said, flashing a smile.
Pizza Hut introduces massive Cheez-Its stuffed with cheese
Pizza Hut finally found a new place to hide cheese… inside of a giant Cheez-It.
The pizza chain just announced the addition of a brand new item to their menu, called the Stuffed Cheez-It Pizza. It’s pretty much exactly what it sounds like.
Now available nationwide, the new “pizza” looks like a giant Cheez-It, albeit stuffed with mozzarella cheese (pepperoni is also available). A single order comes with four large squares containing the mozzarella inside a cheese-baked crust. It also comes packed with a side of marinara sauce for dipping.
The concept was apparently born when Pizza Hut realized that Cheez-Its were popular among the chain’s largest fan base: college students. According to a press release, customers crave “these kinds of mashups between beloved food brands.”
“We pride ourselves on being the go-to for unexpected pizza innovations, and I can’t think of a better partner than Cheez-It to bring our next original menu item to life,” said Marianne Radley, chief brand officer of Pizza Hut. “Not to mention, as fellow NCAA partners, this collaboration is the perfect way to kick off football season, combining America’s go-to gameday cravings into one next-level snack.”
“The Stuffed Cheez-It Pizza is an example of two great companies leveraging their strengths to delight guests with a new experience on a classic favorite,” adds Wendy Davidson, President of Kellogg’s U.S. Specialty Brands.
The Stuffed Cheez-It Pizza is available for a limited time nationwide, starting today.
Article via FoxNews
TSA bans Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge ‘thermal detonator’ Coke bottles
- TSA will not permit the stylized Coke bottles from Galaxy’s Edge on flights.
- The souvenir has been banned because its looks like a replica explosive.
- Travelers who visit the planet of Batuu are permitted to bring hand-built lightsabers and astromech droids sold at the Black Spire Outpost in carry-on and checked bags.
As Disney prepares to open its Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge park in Orlando, Florida, on Thursday, TSA is cracking down on one of its most collectible items — its $5 Coke bottles.
There are more than 1,000 unique items that parkgoers can purchase at Galaxy’s Edge, and one of the most popular (and cheapest) is the bottles of Coke, Diet Coke and Sprite that have been stylized to fit in the world of Batuu. The sodas are reminiscent of thermal detonators from the Star Wars films and feature the name of each brand in Aurebesh, the fictional language of Star Wars.
Fans became enamored with these plastic bottles even before the California iteration of Galaxy’s Edge opened in May. Many have collected the bottles and brought them home from the park to display on shelves or, in some cases, turn into Christmas tree ornaments.
However, the Transportation Security Administration has banned the souvenir from flights because it looks like an explosive.
A reply Tweet from a TSA-verified Twitter account posted in early August was first spotted by The Orange County (Calif.) Register.
Fans were quick to ask if removing the cap from the bottle and transporting them separately would allow them to bring the bottles on flights or stow in their luggage. However, the TSA was quick to squash that loophole.
“Even with a normal bottle cap, this item is still considered a replica and is not allowed in carry-on or checked bags,” a tweet from the account said Tuesday. “If our officers discover a replica item during screening and believes it’s real, the item will be treated as such until advised otherwise by law enforcement.”
Representatives for Disney did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.
Travelers who visit the planet of Batuu are permitted to board flights with hand-built lightsabers and astromech droids sold at the Black Spire Outpost.
The TSA’s “What Can I Bring” guide even has a sense of humor about it, saying: “Sadly the technology doesn’t currently exist to create a real lightsaber. However, you can pack a toy lightsaber in your carry-on or checked bag. May the force be with you.”
Looks like fans will have to get creative if they want to take home the unique Coke bottles. Or hit up a local post office in Orlando or Anaheim, California, before heading home.
Article via CNBC
Olive Garden Is Selling a Lifetime Pasta Pass This Week
Olive Garden’s famed unlimited ‘Pasta Pass’ returns this week.
The passes will officially go on sale Thursday at 2pm, but this year
they’ll also be a new addition to the Pasta Pass lineup: a Lifetime
Pass.
Yes, you can purchase a pass that literally gets you all the carbs you can physically consume in one sitting for the rest of your life.
Just like the traditional Pasta Pass, the Lifetime model will also include unlimited soup, salad, and breadsticks.
The passes will be for sale for 30 minutes only starting at 2pm Thursday, with the waiting room opening up at 1:55pm ET.
In total, Olive Garden is selling 24,000 Pasta Passes this year at $100 a pop, which means you stand a decent chance of being able to snag one if unlimited pasta sounds intriguing to you.
If you
successfully buy a pass, the traditional version gives you unlimited
food for 9 weeks from September 23rd to November 24th of this year.
To get the Lifetime pass, you have to purchase a traditional pass and opt-in to potentially buy the lifetime model. The first 50 people that do will be upgraded to the lifetime option for $500.
If you’re one of the lucky 50, you’ll get an email Friday letting you know you’re one of the chosen ones. From then, you’ll have 48 hours to pay the additional $400 to secure the pass.
Article via LifeHacker
Jamie Foxx Thanks Chris Brown For Showing Love To His Sister With Down Syndrome
Chris Brown shared a special moment with Jamie Foxx’s younger sister, who has Down Syndrome while celebrating his latest number one album Indigo.
Foxx’s sister, 33-year-old DeOndra Dixon, was seen in a video posted to his Instagram Tuesday morning telling Chris Breezy “I love you.” Brown then leaned over and kissed her on the forehead. It looks as though Foxx, Chris Brown, and DeOndra were all in a studio session listening to Chris’s new project.
“Congratulations @chrisbrownofficial on your number 1 album INDIGO… #indigoseason,” the caption read on Jamie’s Instagram. “… you are beyond talented… and I salute uu… and thank u for the beautiful moments you share with my sister @deondradixon You lift her so high that the tears well up in her heart and mine… thank u #love #music when @chrisbrownofficial says “I love u” and @deondradixon says “I love uu back”…[cloud] 9.
Back in August, the comedian/actor/singer opened up about his sister’s condition in an interview with Dateline NBC. He said that DeOndra taught him how to live, and that helps to keep him grounded. DeOndra lives with the 50-year-old icon in LA.
This isn’t the first time the Grammy and Oscar winner was seen with Chris Brown. In June Chris posted a photo of the two superstars together with the caption “ME AND BIG BRO COOKING,” leaving fans to guess that Jamie Foxx would make an appearance on Indigo. However as it turns out, Jamie Foxx did not have a feature on the album.
The two R&B singers have previously collaborated in the past. Chris Brown was featured on Jamie Foxx’s single “You Changed Me” in 2015 and Jamie hopping on “Text Message,” a single that Chris dropped in 2017.
And with this recent showing off how close Chris is with Jamie’s family, it’s clear the two have a special bond.
Article via UrbanIslandz