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74 unique gift ideas from startups that are worth having on your radar

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The Insider Picks team writes about stuff we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships, so we get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

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Startups are often seen as incubators or think tanks making better, smarter, or cooler products faster than traditional companies can. And thanks to the lean businesses models made possible by the internet, those products don't have to cost more than the status quo they're replacing. 

Their uniqueness, cool origin stories, and — on average — more sustainable and ethical business practices also make them particularly good gifts. Below are 74 up-and-coming startups we love to shop at, plus a cheat sheet for what to buy from each of them.

Below, you'll find 74 of the best gifts you can buy from startups this year.

Looking for more gift ideas? Check out all of Insider Picks' holiday gift guides for 2018 here.

Atlas Coffee Club

What to buy:
Three-Month Subscription, $60

Atlas Coffee Club is a monthly coffee subscription that curates freshly-roasted, micro-lot coffees from around the world and sends them to your door. Since the coffees span the globe, each shipment is meant to connect recipients with the culture that produced it. Shipments include a corresponding postcard (plus flavor notes and brewing tips), and the coffee bag designs are inspired by local landscapes and textiles. 



Allbirds

What to buy:
Women's Wool Loungers, $95
Men's Wool Loungers, $95

This is the footwear company responsible for the merino wool sneakers and loungers often called the "most comfortable shoes in the world"— a statement we agreed with after trying them. They're great for everyday use or for traveling, and you'll find them in high concentrations in hubs like Silicon Valley and New York City. 

Allbirds are also a great gift for environmentally-conscious shoppers. The company is well-known for practicing "better business" and engineering its shoes from sustainable wool, eucalyptus leaves, or foam made from sugar cane.



AUrate

What to buy:
Tribar Ear Jacket, $180

Instead of making concessions on quality, pricing, and ethical practices, AUrate makes beautiful jewelry that combines all three. They use durable luxury materials, original designs, transparent pricing, and sustainable production that women can feel good about supporting. In partnership with Mastery Charter, the startup has also given thousands of books to NYC students and schools. 



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'Adam, please don't fine me': Steve Kerr heaps praise on Duke freshman Zion Williamson before comparing him to LeBron James

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Zion Williamson Duke

  • No college basketball player has more buzz surrounding him right now than Duke's Zion Williamson.
  • The 6-foot-7, 285-pound power forward poured 28 points and 7 rebounds into the Blue Devils' 118-84 rout of the Kentucky Wildcats Tuesday night. 
  • Williamson's performance caught the eye of Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, who was so impressed that he compared him to four-time NBA MVP LeBron James.
  • Kerr quickly remembered that he could be fined for speaking about players on his team directly and apologized to NBA commissioner Adam Silver.


Duke freshman Zion Williamson is taking the whole basketball world by storm.

The Blue Devils absolutely annihilated No. 2 Kentucky at the Champions Classic to deal head coach John Calipari the worst defeat of his career at any level. In just 23 minutes on the floor, the 6-foot-7, 285-pound power forward racked up 28 points and 7 rebounds on 85% shooting.

Read more: Duke's much-hyped freshman class dominated No. 2 Kentucky, and the rest of the college basketball world should be scared

Check out some highlights from Tuesday night's top-five matchup:

Aside from putting the earthquake-inducing dunks that made him a social-media sensation on full display, Williamson demonstrated a polished handle and even drained a shot from beyond the arc for his first points in a Duke uniform. He is, without a doubt, a complete package, the likes of which come only once in a generation.

Or so Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr thought.

"I saw some kid on Duke last night who was pretty impressive," Kerr said, per The Athletic's Anthony Slater. "I thought LeBron was a one-shot deal, but apparently the next guy is coming."

In speaking to the media on Wednesday, Kerr gushed over Williamson's next-level talent but knew better than to mention his name outright. When asked which one of the Blue Devils' top-ranked freshmen he was referring to, the eight-time NBA champion simply said: "the one who is 285 [pounds]."

"Before I get fined, I'm going to change the subject," Kerr joked, drawing a chuckle from the press around him. "I dug my own grave on that one. [NBA commissioner] Adam [Silver], please don't fine me, wherever you are!"

When a reporter quipped that the Warriors likely will not have a high enough pick to acquire Williamson in the 2019 NBA Draft, Kerr began to answer before miming out zipping his lips and walking away.

Something tells me that Silver — who graduated from Duke in 2014 and currently sits on the university's Board of Trustees — may be sympathetic to Kerr on this one.

Take a look at the full video below:

 

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Jeff Sessions got a spirited send-off as he left the Justice Department after stepping down as attorney general

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jeff sessions firing

  • Attorney General Jeff Sessions received a standing ovation as he left the Justice Department building following his forced resignation on Wednesday.
  • President Donald Trump asked Sessions to resign, just hours after the close of what has been a heated midterm-election season.
  • "It's been an honor, sir," acting attorney general Matthew Whitaker said to Sessions.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions received a standing ovation as he left the Justice Department building following his forced resignation on Wednesday.

Sessions reportedly shook hands with acting attorney general Matthew Whitaker, his former chief of staff, amid a crowd of around 150 people.

"It's been an honor, sir," Whitaker said to Sessions, according to the Associated Press.

Sessions waved and thanked the crowd, at one point giving them a thumbs-up. Other senior Justice Department officials, including deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein and solicitor general Noel Francisco, were also reportedly at the send-off.

After months-long reports of a frayed relationship with Trump, the former attorney general offered his resignation in an undated letter.

Two months after Trump became president, Sessions attracted his ire after recusing himself from special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.

Sessions, who backed Trump early on in his 2016 presidential campaign, cited a Justice Department regulation that prohibits officials from investigating campaigns they were involved in.

Trump publicly berated Sessions in fiery statements and tweets as the months dragged on, fueling rumors Sessions would be on his firing line. According to Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward's book, "Fear: Trump in the White House," Trump made pointed remarks against Sessions, such as calling him "mentally retarded" and "dumb Southerner."

You can watch the video here »

SEE ALSO: Trump denied calling Jeff Sessions — or anyone — 'mentally retarded,' but old records show he has

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NOW WATCH: This top economist has a radical plan to change the way Americans vote

T-mobile's incredible $300 discount off the $580 OnePlus 6T ends tomorrow, November 8

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OnePlus 6T bokeh

  • T-Mobile and OnePlus' $300 trade-in discount for the OnePlus 6T ends on Thursday, November 8 at midnight. 
  • It's the best deal for a smartphone as good as the OnePlus 6T in recent memory. 

T-Mobile and OnePlus' trade-in deal that gives you a $300 discount off the $580 OnePlus 6T when you trade in an eligible device ends tomorrow on Thursday, November 8 at 11:59 p.m.

The OnePlus 6T for $580 from T-Mobile is already a great price for such a good smartphone, but a $280 price tag for the OnePlus 6T is the best deal for a high-end Android device in recent memory. 

To be sure, you don't get everything you'd get with a smartphone that costs north of $800, like wireless charging or official water resistance. But you do get a beautiful device with performance that's just as fast, or even faster, than the top Android smartphones out there. The camera has also proven to be excellent so far. The OnePlus 6T is also the first smartphone sold in the US that comes with a fingerprint sensor hidden underneath the display, and it works surprisingly well for a first-generation effort.

oneplus 6t back

Those taking advantage of the trade-in deal can expect to make 24 monthly installments of a little more than $11 per month. Compare that to the usual monthly installment of around $30 or so per month for other top smartphones.

Sure, that $300 discount isn't technically a discount, since you're trading in an old phone that has some value. But for people who would've just let their old phone gather dust in a drawer, rather than going through the trouble of trying to sell it, that $300 is essentially a discount. 

Eligible trade-in devices include:

  • Apple: iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus
  • Samsung: GS8 series, Note 8, GS7 series, Note 5, GS6 series
  • Google: Pixel 2, Pixel 2 XL, Pixel, Pixel XL
  • LG: V30, V30+, G7, V20, G6
  • Motorola: Z2 Force, Z2 Play, Nexus 6
  • OnePlus: 5, 5T, 6, 3, 3T, X, 2, 1

The trade-in is available for anyone on any carrier. They'll just have to switch to T-Mobile, of course. 

SEE ALSO: The $550 OnePlus 6T makes me feel like I'm cheating in a world where top smartphones cost $750 or more

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NOW WATCH: After using Samsung Galaxy phones for 5 years, I made the switch to the iPhone XS

Vice Media is cutting its staff by up to 15% amid missed revenue and a traffic slump

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Nancy Dubuc

  • Vice Media CEO Nancy Dubuc, who took over for Shane Smith in March, is cutting staff at the digital publisher, The Wall Street Journal reports.
  • The Brooklyn-based company is reportedly shedding 10% to 15% of its workforce and is on track to miss its revenue goals for this year.
  • Vice Media had 27 million unique visitors in September, down from 49.1 million in March 2016, according to Comscore. 


Nancy Dubuc, Vice Media's CEO who replaced Shane Smith in March, is making cuts at the digital publisher.

According to a report from The Wall Street Journal, Brooklyn-based Vice Media is lowering its headcount by 10% to 15% of its workforce and is on track to miss its revenue goals for this year.

To make the cuts, Dubuc ordered a companywide hiring freeze six weeks ago and plans to trim staff through both the freeze and attrition.

Vice Media had 27 million unique visitors in September, down from 49.1 million in March 2016, according to Comscore. Vice Media's total Comscore numbers each month are comprised of traffic from its own properties plus third-party websites like SEO-focused Ranker, Metalinjection.net, and ModernFarmer.com.

Per the report, Vice Media is expected to make $600 to $650 million this year, which is flat with its 2017 revenue. The company reportedly is on track to lose more than $50 million this year in addition to losing $100 million in 2017.

“At a time of seismic change across the media landscape, Vice has never been better positioned to continue its remarkable growth, further cementing its status as one the most impactful and innovative youth brands worldwide," the company's board of directors said in a statement. "From its deep library of critically-acclaimed programming, to its diversified revenue streams and channels across digital, mobile, television, film and branded content, Vice's audience has never been bigger, more global, more diverse or younger.”

Vice's web audience is shrinking

Vice Media has built scale in digital media by focusing its coverage on specific verticals like Noisey (which covers music), Broadly (for women), Munchies (for food), and Vice News. Dubuc reportedly plans to fold several of its existing verticals together to form three to five core verticals, according to The Wall Street Journal's sources.

Instead of focusing on web publishing, Vice Media plans to beef up its television and movie business to make third-party programming.

Vice’s in-house agency Virtue (formerly Carrot) is also a priority. Virtue recently signed a deal with entertainment brand El Rey to launch an agency catering specifically to the Hispanic market in the US.

According to a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Vice Media is preparing to launch a live news show called “Viceland Live” on Viceland, the channel operated by A+E Networks. Vice’s current weekly show on HBO is also in the process of winding down this season.

Dubuc took over Vice Media earlier this year amid sexual-harassment allegations and financial concerns over whether or not the digital media company could live up to its $5.7 billion valuation, including a $450 million investment from private equity firm TPG last year.

"Of course, there's pressure," Dubuc told The Hollywood Reporter. "Like any good Hollywood story, people look for the Caped Crusader. The reality is never as simple."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: A sleep expert explains what happens to your body and brain if you don't get enough sleep

Eric Schmidt takes the blame for Google's social networking failures: 'I suspect we didn’t fully understand how to do it' (GOOG, GOOGL)

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  • In a recent podcast interview with economist Tyler Cowen, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said the company's failure to build the next, big social network was mostly his fault. 
  • "I think it would be fair to say that the rise of Facebook, etc., occurred on my watch," Schmidt admitted. 
  • The former top executive blamed his age, in part, for the company's social failures, saying: "Because we didn’t collectively use it, I suspect we didn’t fully understand how to do it." 

Google has never been great with social networks.

In a recent podcast interview with economist Tyler Cowen, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said this was mostly his fault. 

Schmidt was asked about the reason for Google's missteps with social networks — specifically Google Groups.

"Well, first place, I need to take responsibility for that failure," Schmidt said referring to Google Groups, a product that most people have only used to create email groups but was initially thought of as a social network. "There were plenty of things that went unwell, but I think that in my CEO-ship, that was probably the one that I missed the biggest."

Cowen proposed the idea that perhaps Google didn't have the right DNA as a company to create the next, big social network. 

"My answer is because we didn’t use it, that we were of the age where we were more comfortable with telephones and email and that kind of stuff, and this was emerging," said Schmidt, who served as the company's top exec between 2001 and 2011. "And there really was a slightly younger generation that was really driving it. The stuff was invented well past when I was in college." 

Schmidt completed his undergraduate degree at Princeton in 1976. 

"Because we didn’t collectively use it, I suspect we didn’t fully understand how to do it," he said. 

Google+, perhaps the company's most aggressive attempt to enter the elite social network class, was launched in June 2011, months after Schmidt turned over CEO duties to Larry Page that January.  But there were several other social networking misfires, including the ill-fated Google Buzz and Google Wave.

Read more:  Former CEO Eric Schmidt says Google had to revamp its whole hiring process because they were interviewing candidates 16 times

One of the few bright spots in Google's history of social woes was its 2006 acquisition of YouTube. 

"Today we have quite a powerful social network embedded inside of YouTube, but I think it would be fair to say that the rise of Facebook, etc., occurred on my watch," Schmidt said. 

Interestingly, Cowen stayed clear of asking Schmidt about the bombshell New York Times article published in late October that detailed Google's mishandling of sexual misconduct cases and helped to incite the recent, company-wide walkouts

Schmidt was cited in the report for hiring a former mistress to be a consultant for the company while he was CEO. 

SEE ALSO: Google used to ask these interview questions, but they're so tricky they were eventually banned

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NOW WATCH: Review: Google Pixel 3 and 3 XL are the best smartphones you can buy right now

White House suspends CNN correspondent Jim Acosta's press pass after heated exchange with Trump

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CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta

  • CNN senior White House reporter Jim Acosta's "hard pass" press credentials has been suspended "until further notice," White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement.
  • The decision comes after a tense standoff between Acosta and President Donald Trump during a press conference on Wednesday.
  • During the press conference, Trump dodged a question from Acosta when a White House intern walked up to take his microphone away. Acosta held on to the microphone.
  • Sanders suggested Acosta had laid hands on the intern.
  • Acosta said the White House's account of the incident is "a lie."

CNN chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta's press credentials has been suspended "until further notice," White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement on Wednesday evening.

The decision comes after a tense standoff between Acosta and President Donald Trump during a press conference on Wednesday, one day after the 2018 midterm elections.

Trump was dodging Acosta's questions regarding a wide range of subjects, including the Russia investigation and the group of migrants traveling from Central America toward the US, when a White House intern walked up to take his microphone away. Despite multiple attempts to pry the microphone away, Acosta held on.

"CNN should be ashamed of itself having you working for them," Trump said to Acosta at one point. "You are a rude, terrible person. You shouldn't be working for CNN. You're a very rude person."

"That's enough, put down the mic," Trump said as Acosta continued his line of questioning.

But the White House appeared to suggest Acosta had laid hands on the intern. Sanders said in her statement that the White House "will never tolerate a reporter placing his hands on a young woman just trying to do her job as a White House intern."

"This conduct is absolutely unacceptable," Sanders said.

Citing Trump's willingness to answer 68 question from 35 reporters at the event, Sanders said that "contrary to CNN's assertions, there is no greater demonstration of the President's support for a free press than the event he held today."

Read more:CNN reporter Jim Acosta blasts Kim Kardashian's trip to the White House: 'She shouldn't be here talking about prison reform'

"The fact that CNN is proud of the way their employee behaved is not only disgusting, it is an example of their outrageous disregard for everyone, including young women, who work in this Administration."

Acosta said Sanders' account of the incident was "a lie." Video footage and photographs showed the intern grazing Acosta's arm in trying to pry the microphone away, and briefly making contact with the hand holding the microphone.

Shortly after the incident, CNN released a statement describing Trump's "ongoing attacks on the press" as "dangerous" and "un-American."

jim acosta

"While President Trump has made it clear he does not respect a free press, he has a sworn obligation to protect it," CNN said in a statement. "A free press is vital to democracy, and we stand behind Jim Acosta and his fellow journalists everywhere."

Acosta was denied entrance on White House grounds on Wednesday evening for his nightly segment, and instead, recorded a conversation with a uniformed officer.

"We have been working at the White House for five years covering two administrations," Acosta said to the officer, as he voluntarily gave up his hard pass. "So yeah, it's been on that thing for a while."

CNN's reporters, namely Acosta, have been frequently seen on the front lines of the White House's tense press briefings. Following one of many fiery exchanges with the Trump administration, Acosta railed against Trump in 2017 and called him "a purveyor of fake news."

"[Trump] came out right after his inauguration and said his inauguration crowds were bigger than President Obama's, when they weren't," Acosta previously said in a CNN segment. "We had photographic evidence from the National Parks Service to prove that point."

SEE ALSO: The moment a White House intern confronted CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta during a tense exchange with Trump, in 3 photos

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Companies are holding off hosting holiday parties this year — and it may be because of #MeToo concerns

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#metoo

  • While companies are feeling better about the economy, many aren't hosting holiday parties because of concerns about #MeToo, according to a new survey.
  • Only 65% of companies surveyed say they're holding a holiday bash this year — the lowest percentage since 2009.


While the economy is going strong, fewer companies are holding holiday parties this year. That's because some executives are concerned about inappropriate conduct as highlighted by the #MeToo movement, according to a new survey released this week by staffing consultancy firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.

Only 65% of companies say they're going to hold a holiday celebration this year — the lowest level since the depths of the financial crisis in 2009, the survey shows.  

“The low number of corporate celebrations does not appear to be due to economic reasons. Companies are sitting on tax savings and generally report a thriving economy,” said Andrew Challenger, vice president at Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Rather, unease about holding holiday festivities stems from the potential for sexual harassment and inappropriate workplace behavior, according to the firm.

In the survey, 58% of companies that are having a celebration this year reported they have talked about inappropriate behavior with their staff.

"The fact that nearly 60% of companies that are having parties have real concerns about inappropriate behavior shows that HR departments nationwide are responding to this particular issue," Challenger said. 

In addition, 27% of companies said they've never held a holiday party, the lowest percentage since Challenger first issued the survey.

“We have never seen so many companies report that they never have holiday parties. The number could be due to several factors, including potential liability following the #MeToo movement,” Challenger said.

Meanwhile, companies surveyed reported higher confidence in the economy compared to a year ago. The percentage of respondents who said they thought the economy had improved over last year rose to 62% from 48% in 2017.

The firm pointed out that another factor in the decline of corporate celebrations is probably the rise in the number of staff working remotely, which makes it harder for employees to convene for an office party. 

The survey spoke to 150 human resources executives during October for the survey. 

Join the conversation about this story »

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The moment a White House intern confronted CNN correspondent Jim Acosta during a tense exchange with Trump, in 3 photos

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jim acosta

  • The White House on Wednesday suspended CNN correspondent Jim Acosta's press credential, citing a heated exchange between Acosta and President Donald Trump at a press conference earlier in the day.
  • Acosta had asked Trump about a group of migrants traveling from Central America toward the US. Trump became visibly agitated, berating the reporter and his employer. At points, Trump stepped away from the lectern while a White House intern moved in to take the microphone from Acosta.
  • Acosta angled away from the intern and held on to the microphone as he and Trump talked over each other.
  • Images captured by Reuters photographer Jonathan Ernst show how the scene unfolded.

jim acosta

jim acosta

jim acosta

SEE ALSO: White House suspends CNN correspondent Jim Acosta's press pass after heated exchange with Trump

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

Amazon is likely to build two new offices — take a look at the controversial spectacle leading up to 'HQ2' (AMZN)

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Jeff Bezos

It's been 14 months since Amazon, the world's largest online retailer, declared its intention to build a second headquarters.  Founded in Seattle some 23 years earlier, Amazon said it had gotten so big that it needed a second home base in another city.

The company's year-long selection process had a decidedly sweepstakes-like feel to it. Amazon laid out its expectations for what it wanted in a second hometown and promised a bonanza of 50,000 jobs and a $5 billion investment to whichever lucky city it picked.

City governments and officials scrambled to outdo each other and woo the online retailer, dangling tax breaks, exemptions of all types and even promises to change their names.

Now, Amazon has reportedly zeroed in on New York City and Virginia— and "HQ2" will likely actually be two separate offices.  The move, which has yet to be confirmed by Amazon, has left a sour taste with some people who accuse Amazon of having deviously gamed the system. 

Here's a look at the sequence of events during Amazon's controversial "HQ2" adventure, and the strange spectacle that Amazon whipped up in the process.

SEE ALSO: Trump called Foxconn's Wisconsin factory an 'incredible investment,' but evidence is mounting it's a terrible deal

Amazon's current and first headquarters is located in Seattle, Washington. Around 400,000 workers are employed there.



In 2017, Amazon announced that it was searching for a location for its second headquarters.

The retailer said its new headquarters would come with 50,000 new jobs and a $5 billion investment in the new home city. 



Along with the announcement, Amazon listed out its expectations for cities that were applying. It asked for "incentives" like tax breaks and exemptions, and fee reductions.

Here are some additional requirements that Amazon laid out:

  • A site within 30 miles of a "population center."
  • Mass transit options located on-site 
  • The ability to travel to/from an airport within 45 minutes
  • Up to 8 million square feet, after the initial requirement of 500,000 
  • Fiber connectivity and acceptable cell phone service 
  • A "business-friendly environment and tax structure" that provides tax breaks and exemptions, fee reductions, workforce grants, and utility incentives, among other incentives. 
  • A "highly-educated labor pool" and a "strong university system."
  • "Elected officials eager and willing to work with the company."
  • A high quality of life for the 50,000 employees to be located there. 


See the rest of the story at Business Insider

'Riverdale' fans finally know what the parents' big secret is and there's a murder involved

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Sierra Tom Hiram Penelope Fred FP Alice riverdale

Warning: Spoilers ahead for "Riverdale" season three, episode four, titled "The Midnight Club."

"Riverdale" has been teasing a deadly secret between some of the parents, and the truth has finally been revealed.

On Wednesday's flashback episode of the hit CW show, Alice Cooper explains to Betty what happened one fateful night when the parents were juniors in high school. Little did they think their high school secret would come to haunt them as adults. 

Here's everything we know about the secret.

The parents' pact is connected to "Gryphons and Gargoyles."

Hermione riverdale

The second episode of season three ends with Hermione and Hiram Lodge, Tom Keller, Sierra McCoy, FP Jones, Fred Andrews, Penelope Blossom, and Alice seated in Hermione's mayoral office.

"We made a vow in high school," Hermione says. "Look, now that the scout is back, safe and sound, thank God, we can only assume that he'll start talking and that whatever he says might lead back to us, to the secret that we buried all those years ago." 

Hermione then tells the parents about Dilton, who is dead, and Ben, who is in a coma, being found with blue lips. Because Jughead is the one who found the bodies, the parents know that they won't be able to sweep that detail under the rug. 

"We made a pact to never revisit that night," Tom says. "Not to mention it, not to even think about it. My vote is we stick with that." 

Hermione says they won't be able to do that if it's putting their children at risk. 

Jughead and Betty learn that the blue lips are a consequence of a game called "Gryphons and Gargoyles." Jug decides to play the game with Ethel to gain access to the game's manual. 

Read more: Everything we know about the deadly role-playing game 'Gryphons and Gargoyles' on 'Riverdale'

When FP discovers the manual, he and Alice freak out on Betty and Jughead. 

"This game is pure evil," FP says before burning the manual in a fire. 

Betty goes to Alice to find out what the parents know about the game, and Alice tells the whole story. 

They kept a deadly secret from junior year.

jug as fp cheryl as penelope flashback riverdaleAfter ending up in detention together their junior year, FP, Alice, Fred, Penelope, Sierra, and Hermione find "G&G" in a teacher's desk. They start to play and quickly become addicted. They dress up, they follow quests, and they even sneak into the school after hours to continue their game. 

One night, as they are prancing around the halls in costume, they hear noises and run into Hiram, Marty Mantle, and Daryl Doiley also dressed up and on a quest for "G&G." The two groups unite for an even bigger game.

They all receive invites to a special night to "ascend to the next level of the game." Daryl and Penelope each think each other set the party up, but neither of them did. At the ascension party, Hiram hands everyone a drug called Fizzle Rocks, and everyone except for Alice takes it. The teens embark on a crazed night and run around the school.  

Alice runs into the bathroom to throw up, but when she emerges, she finds the bathroom covered in symbols and the words "flip for your fate." On a sink sits two chalices and a coin. She runs out of the bathroom before running into the Gargoyle King.

Read more: Everything we know about the 'gruesome' Gargoyle King on 'Riverdale'

As she is running out of the school, she sees Principal Featherhead walk in. The next morning, Featherhead is missing. After days of searching, they find his decomposing body in a school closet with symbols carved on the door and a blue tint to his lips. 

Alice gathers the group together to ask what happened.

"There was blue liquid in the chalices when I saw them," she says. "Featherhead's corpse had blue lips, and the police said he had poison in his system. What did you guys do to him?"

Everyone says they didn't see him or the Gargoyle King at the school. Alice wants to go to the cops, but the group doesn't want to. Penelope tells them that neither she nor Daryl set the quest up.

"The chalices were just sitting there," Alice says. "Anyone of us could have drank from them, so whoever invited us to the ascension party was trying to kill one or more us."

Despite Alice's protests, everyone decides to destroy the game by burning the manuals and hiding the pieces. They make a pact to hide the secret and everyone split off from each other.

What this means for the kids in Riverdale.

betty riverdale

Betty asks her mom who could have done it, and Alice says they thought it had to have been one of the group members. 

"One of us was a murderer," she says. "Whoever poisoned those cups meant for one of us to drink it at the end of the quest."  

Alice begs Betty not to play the game, and she promises she won't.

Betty goes to school to check on some of the facts Alice shared with her, and she finds two G&G chalices in the trophy case at school. She goes to tell Jughead what she learns, but finds him at Dilton's bunker playing the game with Toni, Cheryl, Sweet Pea, and Fangs. 

"It's all making sense," Jughead tells her. "All of this is becoming clear...I'm a level three, and it's only a matter of time until I ascend, and I get to meet him." 

Now that Betty knows the truth and her friends are in too deep, it's up to her to figure out a way to stop it.

Read all of our "Riverdale" coverage here.

"Riverdale" airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. ET on The CW.

Visit INSIDER's homepage for more.

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NOW WATCH: A sleep expert explains what happens to your body and brain if you don't get enough sleep

The young stars of 'Riverdale' are playing their parents on the 90s flashback episode — here's how they compare

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riverdale the midnight club

Warning: Spoilers ahead for season three, episode four of "Riverdale" titled, "The Midnight Club." 

"Riverdale's" flashback episode did not disappoint.

Alice sat down with Betty to tell her a story from the parents' junior year of high school. To depict young versions of the adults, the young cast of The CW's "Riverdale" transformed into younger versions of the adults. The actors did a tremendous job portraying teen versions of the adults. 

Here's how the teens stacked up to young versions of the adult actors. 

Lily Reinhart was convincing as a young Mädchen Amick.

Reinhart, who normally plays Betty, played Alice when she was still in the Southside Serpents. 



KJ Apa nailed his transformation into young Luke Perry.

Apa, who plays Archie, played Fred when he was a musician and baseball star. 



Michael Consuelos made his TV debut as a young version of his real father Mark Consuelos.

Mark plays Veronica's dad Hiram. 



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Everything we know about the deadly role-playing game 'Gryphons and Gargoyles' on 'Riverdale'

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Griffins and Gargoyles

Warning: Spoilers ahead for season three of "Riverdale."

"Gryphons and Gargoyles" (G&G) is a dangerous game on "Riverdale." 

The role-playing game, similar to "Dungeons and Dragons," has resulted in two deaths so far — RIP Dilton and Ben— and it's sure to affect more residents as the third season of the hit CW show progresses.

Betty and Jughead are working together to uncover the mystery surrounding the game, and viewers are trying to do the same. 

Here's what we know so far.

How is the game affecting Riverdale?

jughead ben dilton riverdale

The first introduction to the game comes when Jughead tries to ask Ben and Dilton what they are playing at Pop's Diner during the premiere. Dilton tries to answer, but all he gets out is "Gryphons and..." before Ben tells him to shut up.

Later, when Jughead is preparing to go to Archie's trial, Dilton knocks on Jug's door in a panic.

When Jughead asks who, Dilton eventually responds with, "The Gargoyle King."

Jughead finds a paper covered in weird symbols and what looks to be a stick creature in his home after a visit from Dilton. The symbols lead Jughead to the woods where he finds Ben and Dilton unresponsive and kneeling in front of an altar with symbols carved into their backs. Dilton dies in the park due to cyanide consumption after mixing the poison with Fresh-Aid. After recovering in the hospital, Ben then leaps to his death out of the hospital window mentioning that he isn't afraid to "ascend" like Dilton was.  

Betty and Jughead learn that Ethel is also playing the game. When they confront her, she reveals that Dilton had a secret bunker in the woods.

Betty and Jughead later find the bunker and discover that the poisoned chalice Ben and Dilton drank from was part of G&G. 

How do they play the game? 

jughead ethel gryphons game riverdale

In the bunker, Betty and Jug find coins with the Gargoyle King on them, drawings of the king, and various knick-knacks from the game. Betty and Jug also find the missing boy from Dilton's troop who tells them that Ben and Ethel were dating in the game.

Betty and Jughead go to Ethel to ask more questions and Jughead asks what the "kingdom" means. He also inquires about the rulebook, which Ethel refers to as the "scripture."

She tells him that he "isn't worthy of the king's scripture," so he asks if she can show him. But she says that only Jughead can play because Betty "will never be worthy, no matter how hard you try." 

When Jughead goes to the bunker and meets Ethel, she is dressed in her Princess Etheline gown. She has him choose a character, and he picks the Hellcaster.

"Good choice," she says. "That was Ben's avatar. I was supposed to ascend with him but then he betrayed me and finished the game with Dilton instead." 

The game consists of a die and quests that the players must compete. Sometimes, they dress up in costumes to match their characters. 

After getting through part of the game, Ethel presents Jughead with two chalices. When he incredulously asks if one of them is poisoned, she says it's "gargoyle blood." He drinks it to get the manual and is fine. But before she hands it over to him, she makes him kiss her because it's all part of the "scripture." 

Ethel then drinks from the other chalice and starts to get ill. He saves her life by getting her to the hospital. She denies being suicidal and then threatens Jughead if he spills the secrets. 

"I told him you were worthy enough to spread his gospel," she tells him. 

What are all of the connections? 

Gargoyle King drawing

The Gargoyle King himself is a terrifying creature who seems to be behind the rules of the game. Ben and Dilton die for him and Ethel bows to the creature in her hospital room claiming that she spread his gospel and soon everyone will join them. 

Betty also suspects the Farm may be involved became the game seems sort of cultish. But Evelyn shuts that theory down when she says the first time she'd ever heard of the game was from Alice.

FP and Alice also freak out when they find the player's manual Jughead hid. FP takes it outside and burns it after calling it "pure evil." 

Alice, FP, and the other parents found the game their junior year of high school and played it. Alice found the two chalices and coin but left the school without drinking. Their principal is later found dead with blue lips in a closet with symbols carved in the door. 

Read more: 'Riverdale' fans finally know what the parents' big secret is and there's a murder involved

But it turns out that it wasn't the only copy. Someone, possibly Ethel, distributed a manual to every student's locker at Riverdale High.

"By next weekend, almost every student at Riverdale High would be playing Gryphons and Gargoyles, and the real game was just beginning," Jughead says.  

G&G isn't going away any time soon. 

Read all of our "Riverdale" coverage here.

"Riverdale" airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. ET on The CW.

Visit INSIDER's homepage for more.

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NOW WATCH: Why you shouldn't be afraid to fly, according to a pilot with over 20 years of experience

10 details you may have missed on the latest episode of 'Riverdale'

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riverdale flashback

Warning: Spoilers ahead for season three, episode four of "Riverdale," titled "The Midnight Club."

Wednesday night's episode of "Riverdale" flashed back to when the parents were teens and finally revealed the secret they'd been hiding. 

Alice tells Betty how "Gryphons and Gargoyles" became a dangerous game and resulted in the death of their principal. But when Betty goes to tell Jughead, she finds him absorbed in the game. This role-playing game is dangerous, and Betty has to figure out how to stop it. 

And as always, The CW show included a number of pop culture and comic references. We worked with Archie Comics to find 10 details you may have missed.

The episode is called "The Midnight Club."

Inspired by John Hughes' "The Breakfast Club," the flashback episode shows how the parents all became friends in high school. FP, Sierra, Penelope, Hermione, Alice, and Fred all end up in detention together like the cast of "The Breakfast Club."



Anthony Michael Hall plays Principal Featherhead.

Principal Featherhead was the principal at Riverdale High when the parents were teens and monitored the students in detention. 

Hall played Brian Johnson, the "brain," in Hughes' "The Breakfast Club." 



The teens make references to some items that may sound familiar.

  • Veronica mentions wanting to make "Fibes 20 Under 20" list, instead of Forbes. 
  • Young Hermione wants to get her Gamelad back, instead of Gameboy. 
  • Young Hiram gives the teens a drug called Fizzle Rocks. The name is reminiscent of the fizzy candy Pop Rocks.


See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Democrats are sounding every alarm now that Trump has forced Jeff Sessions to resign

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jeff sessions

  • Democrats are sounding the alarm in the wake of President Trump's booted Jeff Sessions as Attorney General on Wednesday. 
  • Top Democrats including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York and Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, have raised fears that firing Sessions could hint that Trump plans to undermine the special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.
  • A chorus of Republicans, including Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and the Senator-elect Mitt Romney of Utah, have also issued warnings following Sessions' departure.

Democrats are sounding the alarm after President Trump's booted Jeff Sessions as Attorney General on Wednesday. 

On Wednesday, the Attorney General stood down after months of speculation, writing to Trump that he was submitting his resignation at Trump's request. 

The president repeatedly criticized the way Sessions ran the Justice Department and most particularly his early decision to recuse himself from all matters related to Russia's meddling in the 2016 US presidential election.

Several prominent Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York and Rep. Adam Schiff of California, who serves as ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, have raised concerns that Sessions' departure could throw a wrench in the special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation.

"The firing of Attorney General Jeff Sessions places the Special Counsel’s investigation in new and immediate peril," Schiff said in a statement.

"It is abundantly clear that Sessions was forced out for following the advice of ethics lawyers at the Department of Justice and recusing himself from the Russia probe, and for failing to bring about an end to an investigation that has produced multiple indictments and convictions and may implicate the President or others around him," Schiff said. 

Democrats have major concerns regarding the newly appointed Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, who has previously lashed out at Mueller and the Russia probe at large.

Schiff noted that Whitaker has argued that Mueller is prohibited from investigating Trump's finances if they are relevant to the Russia investigation. The congressman said Whitaker had made that assertion "without legal basis."

"In fact, this may be precisely why the President has chosen to put Whitaker in this role," Schiff added. 

Schiff said it was imperative that Mueller "continues his work without interference," and said that any officials at the Department of Justice "with conflicts" should recuse themselves. Echoing the sentiments of many of his Democratic and Republican colleagues, Schiff declared, "no one is above the law."

Read more: Jeff Sessions resigns as attorney general at Trump's request

Schumer also called on Whitaker to step away from oversight of the Mueller probe. 

"Given his previous comments advocating defunding and imposing limitations on the Mueller investigation, Mr. Whitaker should recuse himself from its oversight for the duration of his time as acting attorney general." 

Matt Whitaker

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey called Session's exit an "alarming development that brings us one step closer to a constitutional crisis," and reiterated that Whitaker should recuse himself from the investigation.  

"I’m concerned that President Trump made this decision based on his fear of being implicated by Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and frustration with Sessions’ recusal from that investigation," Booker said in a statement. 

Dianne Feinstein, the Democratic senator from California, said Trump "has made abundantly clear that he’ll take any action he can to undermine the Mueller investigation." Feinstein praised deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein's work before turning back to Whitaker: "No one who lacks Senate confirmation should be placed in charge of this investigation, especially Matthew Whitaker who publicly criticized Robert Mueller’s work just last year." 

Read more: Jeff Sessions' replacement is good news for Trump and bad news for Mueller

robert mueller

Sen. Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire said in a statement she is "deeply concerned" about Sessions' departure.

"Neither the President nor his appointees should interfere with the Special Counsel’s investigation – which has already resulted in indictments or guilty pleas of three companies and 32 people, including four senior leaders in the President’s campaign and Administration."

"The investigation must be allowed to continue and to follow the facts wherever they may lead."

Rep. Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland, ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, stated that while he disagrees with Sessions' positions on some issues, the circumstances surrounding his departure are unacceptable. 

"There are many, many reasons to remove Attorney General Sessions," Cummings said. "From his failure to disclose his communications with the Russians to his inhumane policy of separating children from their parents at the border —but one reason that is not acceptable is to interfere with or obstruct the Mueller investigation."

A chorus of Republicans have also issued warnings

susan collins

Several Republicans have also issued warnings following Sessions' departure.

Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee said that no attorney general "can be confirmed who will stop that investigation."

Susan Collins, the senator from Maine, is among the first members of her party to warn against Whitaker's appointment. "It is imperative that the Administration not impede the Mueller investigation."

And Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican presidential nominee and former Massachusetts governor who just won a Senate seat in Utah on Tuesday, said in a tweet it is crucial that Mueller's investigation "proceeds to its conclusion unimpeded."

John Haltiwanger and Sonam Sheth contributed to this report. 

SEE ALSO: Jeff Sessions' replacement is good news for Trump and bad news for Mueller

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NOW WATCH: Trump once won a lawsuit against the NFL — but the result was an embarrassment


It's been 33 years since rebels allegedly backed by Pablo Escobar stormed Colombia's Palace of Justice

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Colombia Palace siege army

  • In late 1985, left-wing rebels stormed Colombia's Supreme Court building in Bogota, taking hundreds of people hostage.
  • Colombian forces stormed the building and freed the hostages, but scores were killed, including many justices.
  • The Colombian government has been accused of abuses during the siege, and leaders have apologized.

On Wednesday, November 6, 1985, the guerrilla group M19, or the April 19 movement, stormed Colombia’s Palace of Justice and held all 25 of the country's Supreme Court justices and hundreds of civilians hostage.

The M19 rebels had been frustrated by the government's violation of a ceasefire, and they were allegedly there with the backing of the country's most powerful drug lord, Pablo Escobar.

Over the next two days, the Colombian army mounted an operation to retake the building and free the hostages.

By the time the crisis was resolved, almost all of the 30 to 40 rebels were dead, scores of hostages had been killed or "disappeared," and 11 of the court's 25 justices were slain.

'Restore order, but above all avoid bloodshed'

Colombia Palace hostages

The M19 rebels, a left-wing group, took the court with the goal of forcing the justices to try then-President Belisario Betancur and his defense minister for violating a peace deal the Colombian government had reached with the rebels a year and a half earlier.

M19 also opposed the government’s move toward extraditing Colombians to the US — a point on which the rebels and Colombia’s powerful drug traffickers, led by Pablo Escobar, agreed. According to both Mark Bowden's "Killing Pablo" and Escobar’s son, the Medellin drug boss paid the rebels $1 million for the job.

During a radio broadcast from inside the court after the rebels seized the building, an M19 member said that their aim was "to denounce a Government that has betrayed the Colombian people."

The initial response of Betancur was, "Restore order, but above all avoid bloodshed." But after that, he reportedly"encouraged the army to do its dirty work in the name of preserving legality" and refused to end the siege.

He also refused to take phone calls from the president of the Supreme Court, Justice Alfonso Reyes, who was being held hostage, or to order a ceasefire to permit negotiations.

Colombia Palace raid fire

Not long after the rebels seized the five-story building, government forces used explosives and automatic weapons to retake some of the lower floors. In the process, they reportedly rescued about 100 of the hostages. Colombian security forces soon launched more attacks on the rebels, eventually using tanks to assault the building.

On Wednesday night, a fire broke out and destroyed many of the documents that court was using to decide whether to extradite drug traffickers. Records for about 6,000 criminal cases were destroyed, including files for the criminal case against Escobar, according to Bowden.

In 1989, a judge ruled that the fire had been intentionally set. Witnesses have said security forces lit the blaze, while some suggested the rebels set the fire at the behest of drug traffickers who wanted to destroy evidence against them.

By the afternoon of November 7, the siege was over, and reporters were allowed to enter the building. Freed hostages said that rebels had decided to kill their prisoners, including Supreme Court justices, that morning, "when they felt their situation was 'hopeless.'"

At the time, news reports quoted Col. Alfonso Plazas, who commanded government troops during the assault, as saying that the rebels had been "annihilated."

But testimonies and rulings that have been issued in the decades since depict an army that was indiscriminate in its efforts to end what has been called Colombia’s "holocaust."

'The basic truth … has not been provided'

Colombia Palace raid soldiers

The attack had immediate political consequences for Colombia.

According to Bowden’s account, the siege "crippled the Colombian legal system" and sank President Betancur’s efforts to reach peace agreements with both M19 and FARC rebels.

In the three decades since the Palace siege, numerous reports and allegations have implicated government officials and security forces in human-rights abuses related to the attack.

Mounting evidence suggested that civilians were taken into custody and tortured by government forces after the attack. A report composed after the attack contained photos that suggested some hostages were killed by someone other than the rebels.

In June 2010, Plazas, who led the army’s assault, was convicted of the forced disappearance of 11 people who survived the attack on the building but were taken away by the army afterward and never seen again.

Colombia Palace raid victims

A US embassy cable from 1999 that was released by George Washington University’s National Security Archive corroborated the finding against Plazas, saying that his soldiers "killed a number of M-19 members and suspected collaborators hors de combat ["outside of combat"], including the Palace's cafeteria staff."

Allegations of rights abuses and extrajudicial killings have persisted. In a 2012 session of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR), IACHR President Jose de Jesus "was unequivocal in his conviction that Colombian authorities had 'coordinated' torture and forced disappearances" during the Palace siege.

In that same session, the Colombian government admitted it deserved some blame for the deaths and disappearances, with a government representative saying that "the Colombian state will not cease efforts to know the truth and create justice."

Since that admission, investigations and accusations have continued. A lawyer working for many of the families of the disappeared said a 2013 Truth Commission showed that some in the military knew of M19's plot but let it happen, hoping to launch a "ferocious response" against the guerrillas.

Colombia Palace raid troops

Humberto Murcia, a judge who witnessed the killing of some of his fellow justices, said a few days after the attack that authorities should have anticipated it.

"And I remembered a month before, in the court chamber," Murcia said at the time. "I had read letters from the justice minister and security forces in which they told us they had discovered a terrorist plan to assault the Justice Palace."

In 2014, retired Gen. Jesus Armando Arias was sentenced to 35 years in prison after being convicted for the forced disappearance of a judge, several court workers, and Irma Franco Pineda, an M19 guerrilla who was seen leaving the building alive.

The convictions of Plazas and Arias were seen by many as positive steps after so many years of impunity for abuses committed during the siege and throughout recent Colombian history. Others have see it as insufficient.

"The basic truth, which we have always longed for, has not been provided because there has not been a policy by the state to seek out the truth behind the events,"said Jorge Franco Pineda, Irma's brother, in 2014.

Colombia Palace raid tanks

In October 2015, Colombia’s attorney general announced an investigation into 14 members of the military and security services, including Iván Ramírez Quintero, a senior intelligence official at the time of the attack.

The attorney general said there was "sufficient evidence to infer the participation and knowledge of senior military commanders in the torture carried out."

That investigation announcement was followed the next month by an apology from Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, who acknowledged to the families of the victims that the government had failed to protect their rights during the siege.

"Today I recognize the responsibility of the Colombian state and I ask forgiveness,"Santos said at the time, standing outside the rebuilt Palace of Justice in central Bogotá.

"Here there occurred a deplorable, absolutely condemnable action by the M-19, but it must be recognized there were failures in the conduct and procedures of state agents," he added.

People attend the Colombia’s lower house, during voting on whether to approve the transitional justice courts established in the peace agreement with the FARC in Bogota, Colombia November 27, 2017. REUTERS/Jaime Saldarriaga

The M19, a largely urban rebel movement, was the first of Colombia's armed groups to disarm, becoming a political party in 1989. The group frequently kidnapped victims for ransom, and the abduction of the sister of a prominent member of Escobar's Medellin cartel in 1981 is believed to have led traffickers to form "self-defense groups," which eventually led to the formation of right-wing paramilitary groups.

But the M19's demobilization became an example for future transitions. A number of right-wing laid down their arms in the mid-2000s. A peace deal between the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, a left-wing group, and the Colombian government was approved in late 2016, and that group has formed a political party with the same initials.

Many of rebels and guerrillas who've disarmed have turned to criminal activity, and political violence has persisted. In the two years since the FARC demobilized, scores of former rebels and other social leaders and activists have been harassed, attacked, and killed.

But there are signs of progress.

Gustavo Petro, a former M19 rebel who was a congressman, senator, and mayor of Bogota, made it to the final round of Colombia's presidential election in June, losing to conservative politician Ivan Duque.

SEE ALSO: Pablo Escobar's death cleared the way for a much more sinister kind of criminal in Colombia

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NOW WATCH: Pablo Escobar: The life and death of one of the biggest cocaine kingpins in history

Walmart is kicking off Black Friday on Thanksgiving with millions of free cookies and cups of coffee (WMT)

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walmart shopping black friday

  • Walmart'sBlack Friday in-store event starts at 6 p.m. local time on Thanksgiving, which falls on November 22.
  • The company is throwing a party two hours before the sales start, complete with free cookies and coffee.
  • Meanwhile, select Black Friday deals on Walmart.com will begin cropping up November 8.
  • Walmart's online Black Friday sales will be out in full force on November 21 at 10 p.m. ET.

Walmart is launching its in-store Black Friday sales at 6 p.m. local time on Thanksgiving this year.

For online shoppers, Black Friday deals will appear on Walmart.com on November 21, starting at 10 p.m. ET.

But the store is also offering a selection of online Black Friday sales much sooner than that.

"If customers can't wait until Thanksgiving, we have deals starting tonight," Walmart US' chief merchandising officer Steve Bratspies said during a call with reporters.

A total of 18 select Black Friday sales will appear on Walmart.com Thursday night, featuring discounts on products like LED TVs, laptops, and a basketball hoop.

Bratspies expressed excitement about Walmart's upcoming holiday season.

"We look forward to it all year," Bratspies said. "We've been planning for it for a long time now."

He pointed out a number of innovations to Walmart's strategy for this year's Black Friday. Online Black Friday sales will kick off a day earlier than last year. What's more, Walmart will host a special pre-Black Friday gathering in the hopes of hyping up shoppers.

Read more: What you need to know about Black Friday this year

"We're throwing a big party before the event begins," Bratspies told reporters.

The chain will host its inaugural Light Up Black Friday party from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. local time on Thanksgiving, just before the deals land. The company expects to pass out four million cups of free Keurig coffee and two million Christmas cookies from the store's bakery to customers.

Once the in-store sales get started on Thanksgiving, Walmart will implement a few measures to help customers navigate their way. The company's app will feature color-coded Black Friday store maps. The updated map will feature pins directing shoppers "to the top eight Black Friday deals" in the store.

This Black Friday map will be color-coded to highlight hotspot departments like home, apparel, electronics, and toys, as will Walmart's event circular. Associates will also distribute printed-out maps, and the store will sport signs and balloons in order to signal special deals.

To avoid long lines at the cash registers, Walmart plans to situate yellow-sash-wearing "check out with me" associates throughout the store. These associates have the ability to check out customers within the department itself.

When it comes to Walmart's associates, Bratspies said that they will all get a 25% discount — their usual 10% discount, plus an additional 15% — on a basket of goods at some point during the holiday season. Those working Thanksgiving also will receive a free dinner.

Speaking with reporters, he added that Walmart still views Black Friday as an important event, despite the perceived decline of the sales-oriented day.

"We expect it to be a good event, like it has been in past years," Bratspies said. "The season has been stretched out a bit, but we don't think that will take any of the wind out of our sails. We just want customers to choose Walmart and we're agnostic about what channel they use."

Read more about Black Friday 2018: 

SEE ALSO: Walmart is building 'town centers' in its parking lots — and it could redefine the one-stop shop

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NOW WATCH: Walmart undercut Amazon's most valuable perk

'I already learned from Vegas. Get out of there as fast as you can.' Survivors describe the shock and horror of the Thousand Oaks shooting

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sarah rose DeSon gma

  • Survivors are speaking out to detail the shooting that left 13 dead at the Borderline Bar and Grill in Thousand Oaks, California late Wednesday night.
  • Many of the survivors were young college students, taking part in a night that's open to people 18 years and older.
  • They described a quiet gunman, dressed all in black who started shooting as soon as he entered the premises.

The gunman was dressed in black. He stormed the bar and started shooting without saying a word. Patrons went from drinking and country dancing to hiding under bar stools and jumping out of windows to avoid the dozens of bullets.

This is according to the survivors of Wednesday's shooting at the Borderline Bar and Grill in Thousand Oaks, California — what was supposed to be one of the safest city's in America.

Speaking from the scene of what is now the 15th worst mass shooting in American history, survivors spoke about what the gunman looked like, how the bar erupted into chaos when he started firing and how they managed to escape.

thousand oaks

A few of the survivors still hadn't heard from the friends they had gone to "College Night" at the bar with, when the bar lets in people 18 years and older to cater to students at nearby Pepperdine University, Moorpark College and CSU Channel Islands.

Teylor Whittler went to the bar with 11 friends to celebrate a friend's 21st birthday. She said the gunman was oddly quiet and looked like he was no stranger to shooting.

Read more: What we know about the Thousand Oaks shooter, identified as Ian David Long

"He didn't say anything. He wore all black. He had a black baseball cap on. Because of his posture and his stance and the way he was holding the gun, it looked like he knew exactly what he was doing and he know how to use it," she told the "Today" show.

One of Whittler's friends, Rose DeSon, told "Good Morning America" that she hid underneath a table when she heard the first shots. Then the shooter ignited a smoke bomb.

"As soon as we all saw that, we jumped up," she said. "I ran out the front door, down some stairs, face-planted in the parking lot but I was lucky enough to get out alive."

Whittler told ABC News that as they were leaving, multiple men surrounded their group to protect them as they escaped. She said the heroic men were "ready to take a bullet for every single one of us."

Ador Dionisio Fox 11

Whittler and DeSon say they were separated from two of their friends they went to the bar with, and the two girls have yet to make contact with them or their families.

"I'm terrified," DeSon said. "We're just praying for our friends that we haven't heard from. ... You never think it's going to be you until it happens. That is a problem. This is real and it's awful."

Madison Cummings was similarly disappointed that shootings have become so common in America.

"It's 'just another shooting in America.' This is not what our country should be about," she told Fox 11.

madison cummings

'I already learned from Vegas. Get out of there as fast as you can.'

Many at the country bar said they also survived last year's Las Vegas shooting at the Route 91 country music festival.

"I heard pop, pop, pop," Richard Ador Dionisio told Fox 11. "I already learned from Vegas. Get out of there as fast as you can."

"It's the second time in about a year and a month that this has happened," Nicholas Champion told CBS News. "It's a big thing for us. We're all a big family and unfortunately this family got hit twice."

Many at the scene were emotional as they recalled their efforts to survive, which included hiding in the attic and throwing chairs through windows to escape the bar.

John Hedge was at the bar with his stepfather, Tim, when the shooting broke out.

john hedge tim

'I should've stayed.'

"I thought it was a joke when the shots started firing," Hedge told ABC 13."I don't know how I didn't get shot."

His stepfather was just outside the entrance of the bar, getting ready to leave after playing some pool, when he heard the first gunshots and went back in to rescue his stepson.

Tim broke down crying as he spoke about his efforts to save his stepson, saying he wished he would have gone back in and rescued more people.

"I was worried about my boy," he told ABC 13. "I should've stayed. I apologize to anybody who got hurt or passed."

He said all of the people in the club appeared to be between 18 to 20 years old.

"They're all young," he said. "This shouldn't happen to them."

Join the conversation about this story »

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This LA-based startup is making sustainable cashmere sweaters for $145 — here's why that matters, and how they feel in person

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The Insider Picks team writes about stuff we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships, so we get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

Reformation cashmere

It’s hard to find cashmere that deserves to be called “conscious” or sustainable. In fact, a lot of people would say it's hard to find because it does not — and cannot — exist. The process of creating cashmere is so inherently detrimental — requiring lots of resources, and incurring lots of environmental degradation — that it can't be had in a way that isn't harmful. 

The problem for all of us would-be conscious shoppers is that cashmere also happens to feel like you’re being hugged by a cloud every time you move. It’s warm, it’s soft, it’s cozy — it somehow feels like the first moment you ever really feel warm after a chilly day outdoors put on a never-ending loop. In other words, it’s impossibly pleasant, and the demand is understandably high. But that demand has led to dangerous overgrazing in Mongolia, and it's turning grasslands we need into deserts.

The imperfectly perfect solution is to recycle the cashmere we already have on earth, rather than creating more. It’s a sustainable logic many retail startups are adopting— phasing out virgin materials and swapping in ready-made alternatives. Everlane’s Renew outerwear is one example.

For cashmere, that's Reformation's Conscious Cashmere line. Each sweater is made of 70% repurposed, regenerated cashmere clippings. It feels the same, costs about the same ($148) but has markedly less impact on the environment. On average, one kilogram (about two pounds) of recycled cashmere has 80% less of the environmental impact than conventional cashmere. 

Reformation cashmere crew neck sweater

Reformation's conscious cashmere is limited but covers the classics: crews, cropped crews, cardigans, boyfriend sweaters, and boxy sweaters— all priced at $148. Fisherman sweaters are priced at $228.  Colors range from one to five options per style, and most are classics like tan, black, pink, ochre, grey, and green with some striped patterns in the mix. 

I personally have the Cropped Double V Cardigan ($148), and it's about what you'd expect from any other Reformation piece: an elevated classic that's a little cooler than you remember cropped cardigans being. It's slim-fitting with a double V-neck and V-back, and it's cropped so you can tuck it into a pair of high-waisted jeans without an excess of material. The cashmere is thick and lends enough rigidity to look appropriately slimming while still being cozy. In other words, it's pretty great. It would be great regardless of being made from 70% recycled cashmere, but that's the figure that makes me feel more justified about spending $140+ on it. 

reformation cashmere

To be blunt, though, it's an imperfect solution. If 70% is recycled, that means 30% is still conventional cashmere from Mongolia. While offset by recycled materials, nothing truly "new" is ever as sustainable as something not new. And though the company has stated they’re currently working on their traceability initiatives to ensure the supply chain is ethical, it seems they are not in place as of fall 2018. 

But make no mistake: Reformation's 'conscious cashmere' line is still exciting. It's a have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too option that the average person can appreciate, and would probably still want to buy ignorant to any hint of sustainability ethos.

Rather than convincing everyone to swear off cashmere, Reformation's recycled cashmere makes it so that their most desirable options (stylish, of-the-moment clothes from an "it girl" brand with a cult-following) are some of the most sustainable on the market. It may not be perfect, but it's a good solution for now. And, best of all, the cashmere is just as good as anything else on the site.

Shop Reformation's Conscious Cashmere here, $148 - $228

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This stylish blogger recreates iconic fashion moments — and she's only 6 years old

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cardib aili

A 6-year-old blogger is giving the fashion world a run for its money. 

Detroit native Aili Adalia and her mother Kanaya Monet are getting the attention of some big celebrities after recreating their most iconic fashion moments. From Zendaya to Tracee Ellis Ross, Aili is turning heads with her perfectly crafted gowns and runway-ready poses. 

INSIDER spoke with Aili's mother to learn more about what it takes to create these homemade replicas. Keep scrolling to see some of Aili's best recreations. 

It all started in 2017 when they recreated Zendaya's look from the Met Gala.

zandaya and aili

"Last year, during the 2017 Met Gala ball, Aili accompanied me while watching it," Monet said. "Zendaya’s Yellow Dolce & Gabbana dress captured Aili’s eyes and she literally went bonkers over it!"

After mostly teaching herself about fashion design, Monet decided to recreate the dress for her daughter and took a picture for social media. The next day the "Greatest Showman" actress posted the picture of Aili on her page, so they decided to try to create more iconic looks.

The next year, the mother-daughter duo recreated Cardi B's gown from the 2018 Met Gala.

The pair loved Cardi B's look from this year's gala, so they decided to make their own version of the "Heavenly Body" dress. The result was a perfectly crafted white gown and headpiece adorned with jewels. 

Monet said it typically takes two to five hours to create a look like this, and it only takes Aili "literally like five minutes to nail the shot — not fair!"

They both love Tracee Ellis Ross, so the duo knew they had to recreate one the actress' most memorable looks. 

"Our family loves her entire existence, especially on 'Black-ish,'" Monet said.

For Halloween, Monet and Aili decided to make an almost exact replica of Ross' outfit from an InStyle photo shoot. Ross immediately reposted the photo of Aili, praising Aili for the recreation.  

Read more: A teen with 8 siblings dressed as a 'tired mom' for Halloween and completely nailed it

Most recently they recreated a look from Karrueche Tran's PAPER Magazine photoshoot. 

They chose to put their own twist on one of Trans' looks because the "CLAWS" actress believes in the importance of confidence. 

But it also comes down to one simple fact:  "All these women have a love for fashion just like us," Monet told INSIDER. 

When they're not recreating celebrity looks, they are crafting original looks for Aili. 

"I teach her to wear whatever makes her feel confident, happy, and great inside," Monet said. "Confidence comes from within — not from the clothing that you wear. She knows to wear whatever makes her feel free."

Now, they hope their fashion photos will help inspire other girls to feel confident in their own skin. 

"We wish to inspire and encourage young girls around the world to believe in themselves, to practice self-care and love daily, and to go after their dreams," Monet said. "No matter what your age is, anything is possible."

Visit INSIDER's homepage for more.

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