Quantcast
Channel: Business Insider
Viewing all 76301 articles
Browse latest View live

7 'Bachelor' and 'Bachelorette' stars who broke up on air

$
0
0

jason mesnick

  • There isn't always a happy ending at the end of "The Bachelor" or "The Bachelorette."
  • Most recently Arie Luyendyk Jr. ended his engagement with Becca Kurfin on camera, but he isn't the only one.
  • These are the stars and contestants who broke up on TV.

The end goal of the contestants and stars of "The Bachelor,""The Bachelorette," or "Bachelor in Paradise" is to find the person they're going to spend the rest of their life with — after a series of awkward group dates, cocktail parties, and rose ceremonies, of course.

But sometimes that doesn't quite pan out and there have been times in the franchise's history where the star has walked away without their winner or ended things on air.

Read on for all of the past "Bachelor" and "Bachelorette" stars who have broken up with contestants on TV. 

Brad Womack rejected his final two women in 2007.

During the season finale of season 11 of "The Bachelor," Womack had to choose between DeAnna Pappas and Jenni Croft, but in the end, he decided he didn't want to marry either of them.

According to Reality TV World, Womack said he could envision both women being his wife, he ultimately decided he didn't feel comfortable proposing to either of them.



Jason Mesnick changed his mind at the last minute in 2009.

After Mesnick popped the question to Melissa Rycroft on his "Bachelor" season finale, somewhere between filming and the finale airing, he changed his mind.

On "After The Final Rose," he broke up with Rycroft on air and got back together with his runner up, Molly Malaney, who he is still married to today.



Arie Luyendyk Jr. dumped Becca Kufrin on camera in 2018.

Luyendyk Jr. asked Kufrin to marry him on "The Bachelor" season finale, but by the time it aired, he'd completely changed his mind. In footage that ABC aired along with the finale, he broke up with Kufrin during one of their secret visits while the show still aired. After getting back together with Lauren Burnham, he asked her to marry him on "After The Final Rose."

Luyendyk Jr. and Burnham recently got married and are expecting a baby girl



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Jayme Closs was forced to hide under her captor's bed for hours on end during her 88 days in captivity. Here's everything we learned from the police report.

$
0
0

jayme closs

  • Jayme Closs was held captive for 88 days in Gordon, Wisconsin, after being kidnapped from her Barron County, Wisconsin, home on October 15. 
  • Her alleged kidnapper, 21-year-old Jake Patterson, was charged on Monday with two counts of intentional homicide, one count of kidnapping and one count of armed burglary. 
  • While captive, Jayme was kept under her kidnapper's bed for hours at a time, going without food, water, or a bathroom. 
  • She escaped on Thursday, while her kidnapper was out of the house, and neighbors helped her call 911. 

For 88 days, 13-year-old Jayme Closs was forced to hide under her kidnapper's bed, going without food, water or a bathroom for up to 12 hours.

Her suspected captor, 21-year-old Jake Patterson, would put boxes filled with weights around the bed, so he would know if the Wisconsin teen tried to get out, according to a criminal complaint released on Monday by the Barron County District Attorney.

But on Thursday, when Patterson was out of the house for six hours, Jayme was able to crawl out from under the bed, put on a pair of Patterson's shoes, and escape the home, the complaint said.

She was found by neighbors, who helped her call 911, and Patterson was arrested minutes later.

"I did it," Patterson told police when they pulled over his red Ford Taurus, according to the criminal complaint.

The criminal complaint revealed details into the case, which had mostly remained a mystery to investigators until Jayme escaped and described her captor to police.

Patterson was charged on Monday with two counts of intentional homicide, one count of kidnapping and one count of armed burglary. His bail was set at $5 million cash.

Here's everything the complaint revealed:

Patterson told police he saw Jayme boarding her school bus and "knew that [Jayme] was the girl we was going to take"

Jake Thomas Patterson appears in court for the first time.

Patterson told police that he saw Jayme boarding the bus when his car was stopped behind the vehicle as he drove to work at a cheese factory one day.

Police say there were no signs that Patterson knew anyone in the Closs family before Jayme was kidnapped from her Barron County, Wisconsin, home on October 15.

There is no evidence of any online interactions between Patterson and Jayme, investigators say, and the teen's family insists they didn't know the man.

Patterson told investigators that he'd stopped by the Closs family home on two previous occasions with plans to take Jayme, but both times it was clear there were other people in the house, and he thought he'd be caught, the criminal complaint said.

Patterson returned to the home for a third time on October 15, the night Jayme was kidnapped and her parents were killed

Patterson dressed in all black and armed himself with a 12-gauge Mossberg pump shotgun when he returned to the home a third time, according to the complaint.

To keep from leaving DNA evidence behind, he shaved his head, and to hide his identity further, attached stolen license plates to his car so police couldn't track him.

The complaint said also he disabled his car's dome light and removed the cord that would allow his trunk to open from the inside.

Jayme told police that on the night she was kidnapped, she awoke in her room when her family dog started barking, and noticed a car coming up the driveway.

Read more:Everything we know about Wisconsin teen Jayme Closs, who was found alive 3 months after her parents were brutally murdered

After waking her parents up, she and her mother, Denise, hid in the bathroom, while her father, James, investigated. They heard a gunshot and knew Jayme's father had been killed, according to the complaint.

Denise Closs started to call 911, but Patterson broke the bathroom door down, told her to hang up and tape Jayme's mouth shut, the complaint said.

Denise complied, and Patterson shot her before taping Jayme's hands and ankles and dragging her to the car, the complaint said.

According to the complaint, he threw her in the trunk and took her to his remote cabin in Gordon, Wisconsin.

Jayme told police she could hear squad car sirens as she was driven away from her home.

Jake Thomas Patterson (1)

Jayme was trapped in the cabin for 88 days

Patterson told police that he forced Jaime to take off her clothes and put them in a bag, which he threw into a fireplace in the cabin's basement.

He said he gave Jayme his sister's pajamas to change into.

Jayme told police that Patterson would make her hide under his bed when he had friends over, and made it clear "that nobody was to know she was there or bad things would happen to her," according to the complaint.

He would also turn music on in his room so Jayme couldn't hear if anyone else was in the home, the complaint said.

Patterson "would make her stay under the bed for up to twelve hours at a time with no food, water, or bathroom breaks," trapping her behind containers filled with heavy weights, so he would know if she tried to move them, according to the complaint.

The space under the bed was two-and-a-half-feet high.

Patterson said Jayme tried to escape twice, and the first time he banged on a wall and screamed in an attempt to scare Jayme from doing so again.

At one point, Patterson struck Jayme "really hard" on her back with what Jayme believed to be a handle of something used to clean blinds, the teen told investigators.

It's unclear what Patterson may have done to Jayme while they were in the cabin alone.

Patterson has not been charged with sexual assault, and charging documents do not say if he ever attempted sexual assault.

Patterson was gone the day Jayme escaped

On the 88th day of captivity, Jayme crawled out of the space beneath the bed while Patterson was out of the house for six hours.

She found of pair of Patterson's sneakers, putting them on so quickly that she put them on the wrong feet. She then left the home and ran into a neighbor, Jeanne Nutter, who was walking her dog.

Nutter took Jayme to another neighbor's home, and they called 911.

Patterson was captured minutes later as he drove around the area looking for the teen.

"She’s 13 years old, and if you read the criminal complaint, you can see the amount of control that he was exerting over her," Barron County District Attorney Brian Wright told The Associated Press. "And at some point, she found it within herself at 13 years old to say, 'I'm going to get myself out of this situation.' I think it's incredible."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Bernie Madoff was arrested 10 years ago — here's what his life is like in prison

The keto diet was accidentally discovered in 1862 by a funeral director who lost 52 pounds on a diet of cordial and meat

$
0
0

salmon asparagus vegetables fish healthy meal dinner plate

  • The keto diet is a popular wight-loss strategy, but many people don't know that the high-fat plan has been around since at least the late 1800s.
  • Victorian-era funeral director William Banting lost over 50 pounds in the 1860s on a diet remarkably similar to the eating plan we now know as keto.
  • After eliminating starches and sugars from his diet, Banting said he felt more comfortable and happier than he had in decades. So he wrote a booklet describing his daily meal plan, hoping others might follow his lead.
  • But even Banting admitted that a keto diet probably isn't right for everyone.

In the late 1800s, wealthy Londoner William Banting knew that many people were battling the same "insidious creeping enemy" that he was: fat.

Banting, a former funeral director, wanted to help. And finally, after three decades of his own failed attempts at losing weight, he'd found a promising way to shed pounds: a regimen remarkably similar to today's trendy keto diet.

The keto diet is designed to force the body into a state of ketosis, in which it burns fat for energy instead of carbohydrates. Carbs are our default energy source, but when you don't consuming any, the body goes into a fat-burning state to stay alive.

Banting didn't know his new diet was a ketogenic routine, but that was the effect — he strictly limited how much bread, sugar, beer, and potatoes he ate, subsisting instead on small quantities of meat, fish, vegetables, and of course the occasional "large cup of tea."

Banting's weight-loss success led him to believe that neither the public nor the medical community properly understood obesity. He knew that a non-expert like himself couldn't get his own case study published in a top medical journal, but he wanted to call attention to his method. So he wrote a free booklet in 1863 called "Letter on Corpulence, Addressed to the Public," in which Banting described what he'd been eating and how the diet made him feel.

The novel strategy "might almost be termed miraculous," Banting wrote, "had it not been accomplished by the most simple common-sense means." 

Banting changed his eating completely but didn't starve himself

For most of his life, Banting had followed a fairly traditional British diet heavy on bread, sugar, beer, milk, butter, and potatoes. Then, in his sixth decade of life, Banting said, he "found the right man" in doctor William Harvey, who  "prescribed a certain diet" that banished many of those foods. They were all too starchy and sweet, Harvey cautioned.

"At the first blush it seemed to me that I had little left to live upon," Banting wrote. But he soon found the diet to be "luxurious and liberal." In total, the regimen helped him lose 52 pounds.

Here's the sample daily menu Banting offered his readers:

banting diet keto diet

The Victorian-era regimen Harvey suggested started with a morning tablespoon of cordial mixed into a glass of water that Banting called the "balm of life." He endorsed the occasional bedtime nightcap as well — a glass of gin, whiskey, sherry or brandy.

The diet wasn't perfectly keto — while a shot of alcohol or glass of red wine is generally considered a fine once-in-a-while habit for people on keto diets, drinking too much can throw people out of their fat-burning state, especially if cocktails involve mixers or juices. A bit of toast could push people out of ketosis and back into carb-burning mode.

Banting also nixed butter, a fat source that modern-day keto dieters adore. What's more, his plan may have relied more on red meat and protein than is healthy. 

Read More: A cancer researcher who's been on the keto diet for 6 years explains how he does it

Still, the sugar-banning principle behind Banting's diet was the same as today's keto technique, which is used therapeutically to treat epileptic seizures and holds some promise for managing Type 2 diabetes cases. Some cancer researchers and doctors treating obese patients also suggest it.

A high-fat diet pioneer

Harvey's advice was hundreds of years ahead of its time, as other nutrition experts have only recently embraced sugar as a major contributor to the obesity epidemic. The idea that a low-carb, high-fat diet might benefit certain people was largely brushed aside by the medical community until ketogenic diets began being used clinically in the 1920s. 

Banting was so dedicated to his cause, however, that he gave out the first two printings of his "Letter on Corpulence" free to readers. By the time the the third printing rolled around a few months later, Banting said he could no longer cover the costs, so he sold that edition at-cost, asking his readers for the six pence it cost to print the slim volume.

Banting's book became a bestseller: over 63,000 copies were sold in the UK alone in the 1860s.

He hoped, he said, "to confer a benefit on my fellow creatures... the same comfort and happiness I now feel." 

Today, some people who follow a low-carb diet are still said to be"banting." Acclaimed South African exercise scientist and low-carb guru Tim Noakes, a self-proclaimed"Banting proponent" has even developed a foundation that aims to educate people "about the dangers of excessive sugar and carbohydrate consumption." 

Banting managed to shed 50 pounds in his mid-60s

Banting's pamphlet described a torturous cycle of failed weight-loss attempts that may still sound familiar to many people. Even though Banting said he'd led a fairly active life, exercise hadn't decreased the size of his waistline. He recounted how once, on the advice of a surgeon friend, he'd started rowing a few hours every morning in order to lose weight. That plan didn't help because it only made him hungrier.

He also tried Turkish baths when those became popular, but only dropped six pounds that way. 

"I could not stoop to tie my shoe," he wrote.

Banting described how he'd felt pained by the "remarks and sneers, frequently painful in society" that he'd endured as a fat man. These difficulties led him to sometimes avoid crowded places, he added.

He offered his new diet as a solution.

"I am now nearly 66 years of age, about 5 feet 5 inches in stature, and, in August last, weighed 202 pounds," Banting wrote in the first edition of the pamphlet. "I now weigh 167 pounds, showing a diminution of something like 1 pound per week."

William Banting

In the second edition, Banting announced that his weight loss had continued: he was down 46 pounds and was 12.25 inches skinnier around his waist. When the third edition was published in December 1863, Banting proclaimed he weighed 150 pounds. 

He also suggested that the diet improved his hearing, sight, and fitness level. "I have not felt so well as now for the last 20 years," he wrote. 

But despite his own success, Banting discouraged anyone from trying the diet without "full consultation with a physician." That jibes with modern advice that no single diet strategy is right for everyone. (The keto diet is especially risky for people with kidney or liver issues and those who've had gout. Pregnant women shouldn't try it, either.) 

Banting died in 1878, about 14 years after the third edition of his booklet was published. He remained a keto evangelist (though he didn't yet have that term), believing that the diet was, "in a certain sense, a medicine."

As he wrote in the closing lines of his book: "I feel quite convinced [the diet] sweetens life, if it does not prolong it."

SEE ALSO: A Harvard doctor says it's harder than ever to lose weight right now, but there are 5 ways to do it well

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The amazing ways intermittent fasting changes your body and brain

Jayme Closs's captor took meticulous steps to hide his identity after deciding to abduct the teen

$
0
0

Jake Thomas Patterson appears in court for the first time.

  • Jake Patterson, 21, told police he took several steps to hide his identity after deciding to kidnap Wisconsin teen Jayme Closs. 
  • On the night Jayme was kidnapped and her parents were murdered, Patterson had shaved his head and face to ensure no DNA was left at the crime scene, according to a criminal complaint released Monday. 
  • He also wiped down his shotgun and every shotgun shell while wearing gloves to make sure there were no fingerprints left behind, the complaint said. 
  • Once taking Jayme captive, Patterson made the teen change her clothes and burned what she had originally been wearing to hide evidence, the complaint said. 
  • Patterson was charged on Monday with two counts of intentional homicide, one count of kidnapping and one count of armed burglary.

The man accused of kidnapping Wisconsin teen Jayme Closs three months ago methodically took steps to hide his identity and abduct her, according to a criminal complaint released by Barron County District Attorney on Monday.

Jake Patterson, 21, was charged on Monday with two counts of intentional homicide, one count of kidnapping and one count of armed burglary.

Ahead of his formal charging, he told investigators how he took steps to ensure no DNA was left at the crime scene and no identifying factors led police to believe he was a suspect.

Police say there were no signs that Patterson knew anyone in the Closs family before Jayme was kidnapped, and Patterson told police he decided to kidnap the teen after seeing her board her school bus.

jayme closs

On October 15, the night Jayme was kidnapped and her parents were murdered in their Barron County, Wisconsin, home, Patterson arrived at the home just after 1 a.m.

He wore all black and armed himself with a 12-gauge Mossberg pump shotgun, according to the complaint.

Patterson chose the Mossberg "because he had done research and knew that the Mossberg brand shotgun was one of the most heavily manufactured or owned shotguns and assumed it would be more difficult to trace," according to the complaint.

He also wiped down all of the shotgun shells while wearing gloves, and cleaned and wiped down the gun to ensure no fingerprints would be left behind, the complaint said.

Read more:The man accused of kidnapping Jayme Closs and murdering her parents told investigators he saw the teen boarding a school bus and decided to abduct her

He then loaded the gun while wearing gloves to avoid leaving fingerprints on the shells, according to the complaint.

To keep from leaving DNA evidence behind at the crime scene, Patterson shaved his face and head, and to hide his identity further, attached stolen license plates to his Ford Taurus so police couldn't track him, the complaint said.

Investigators said Patterson also he disabled his car's dome light and removed the cord that would allow his trunk to open from the inside.

After taking Jayme captive in his Gordon home, Patterson made her change her clothes, and burned the ones she was wearing to hide the evidence, the complaint said.

Jayme told police that Patterson would make her hide under his bed when he had friends over, and made it clear "that nobody was to know she was there or bad things would happen to her," according to the complaint.

He would also turn music on his his room so she couldn’t hear if anyone else was in the home, the complaint said.

On the day Jayme escaped last week, Patterson was driving around looking for the teen when he was confronted by police.

"I did it," Patterson told police when they pulled over his red Ford Taurus, according to the criminal complaint.

He is being held on a $5 million cash bail.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This tiny building in Wilmington, Delaware is home to 300,000 businesses

A University of California frat has been suspended after the suspicious death of an 18-year-old freshman member

$
0
0

sae frat

  • A University of California-Irvine fraternity has been suspended after a member was found dead.
  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon was barred from all activities as authorities investigate the death of 18-year-old Noah Domingo, who was found dead in an off-campus house Saturday.
  • The frat held a winter rush event the night before, which Domingo had attended, according to The Los Angeles Times.

The University of California-Irvine chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity has been suspended as authorities investigate the death of a freshman member.

After police found 18-year-old Noah Domingo unresponsive and not breathing at his home near campus Saturday afternoon, the university sent an email to students with limited details about the ongoing investigation.

Later, a follow-up letter from the school's head of Student Affairs confirmed the fraternity's interim suspension, which barred all activities until the investigation is finished.

Domingo's cause of death remains unclear and is pending further tests, according to multiple reports. 

KABC reported that Domingo's father, Dale, was called to campus on Monday to clean out the student's dorm room.

"Devastating to have to clear out your kid's clothes," he told KABC. "Walked in there and first thing I did was grab his pillow and pretty much just cry and weep a little bit."

Mike Sophir, chief executive officer of the national chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon said in a statement released to the Times that the organization was "heartbroken" over Domingo's death, and headquarters had officially suspended all chapter operations during the investigation.

The Los Angeles Times reported the fraternity had held an event Friday night as part of its winter rush, which a member had confirmed Domingo attended. The school's winter term began last week.

UC Irvine reportedly doesn't have a traditional fraternity row, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon does not have a house on campus. 

A neighbor of Domingo's told NBC Los Angeles that he wasn't surprised by the news. He had reportedly called police about noise at the house on Friday and Saturday night, saying that "something happened because all of the sudden I heard a lot of cars disappear."

More than 77 fraternity-related deaths have occurred across the country since 2005, according to a December 2018 CNN report.

Penn State sophomore Timothy Piazza's death in February 2017 after consuming 18 drinks in 90 minutes in a hazing ritual set off a legal battle and public campaign led by his parents, who said the fraternity members who called for medical attention fourteen hours after he arrived at the event had treated him like "roadkill."

After an extensive grand jury report and review of video footage from inside the house, 26 former Beta Theta Pi brothers were charged in relation to Piazza's death.

Forty-four US states and the District of Columbia have anti-hazing laws, most of which impose minor charges and fines if an individual is convicted in connection to a hazing incident. 

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 7 science-backed ways to a happier and healthier 2019 that you can do the first week of the new year

Gretchen Carlson spotlighted McDonald's workers speaking out against about sexual harassment at the fast-food giant in her new series (MCD)

$
0
0

McDonald's kim lawson fighting harassment

  • McDonald's workers around the country are speaking out against sexual harassment.
  • Former Fox News anchor Gretchen Carlson spoke with three of these advocates in her documentary series "Breaking the Silence."
  • The current and former McDonald's employees said that the fast-food giant and its franchisees failed to stamp out harassment in the restaurants.
  • "It continues to happen because it’s overlooked," former McDonald's employee Kim Lawson told Carlson.

Gretchen Carlson took on Roger Ailes and Fox News over sexual harassment in 2016.

And now she's working to document what she called the "epidemic" of sexual harassment in the United States. Her new docuseries "Breaking the Silence" premiered on Monday and featured interviews with McDonald's workers Tanya Harrell, Kim Lawson, and Kristi Maisenbach.

All three women described dealing with harassment while working at the fast-food giant. McDonald's did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment on their claims. 

"I was really surprised the first time I encountered sexual harassment at McDonald's," Lawson told Carlson in the episode. "I thought like if you were going to be sexually harassed it would have to be on the streets or something like that or you had to be maybe a celebrity or in big business or something like that. That's the only place I had heard about that ever happening. Now I know it happens everywhere."

Read more:Fast-food workers are striking after a McDonald's customer attacked an employee

By filing lawsuits, participating in protests, and calling attention to the issue in the media, Harrell, Lawson, and Maisenbach have joined the ranks of the scores of workers taking action against McDonald's over sexual harassment.

"Telling your story and telling your truth is the most important thing," Harrell told Carlson.

"Breaking the Silence" also investigated the role of the company's franchise-based model when it comes to workplace harassment. Most of the approximately 14,000 McDonald's restaurants are owned by franchisees. In the episode, Carlson noted that the McDonald's corporate office and franchise owners kept directing her back to one another as she attempted to request a comment.

She managed to track down the owner of one such franchise: John DeVera. Lawson was fired from one of DeVera's Kansas City, Missouri, restaurants after she spoke out about her experience.

DeVera declined to comment and told Carlson and her crew that they couldn't film in the parking lot.

"The company isn't taking responsibility and the franchise owners aren't taking responsibility and so you end up with employees being caught in the middle," Carlson said, reflecting on the exchange.

Lawson has worked with the worker advocacy group Fight for 15 in order to organize trainings on sexual harassment for fast food. She told Carlson that she wants McDonald's to start taking the issue of sexual harassment "seriously."

"It's not a joke," she said. "It's happening. It continues to happen because it's overlooked."

Lawson, who is a single mother to a toddler, added that she's taking a stand for her daughter.

"I don’t want her to ever be scared to stand up for herself," she said.

SEE ALSO: Nicole Kidman will play former Fox News host Gretchen Carlson in a movie about the network's ousted CEO Roger Ailes, who Carlson sued for sexual harassment

DON'T MISS: Miss America chairwoman Gretchen Carlson says she was 'surprised and saddened' by pageant winner Cara Mund's claims that she was bullied by organization leadership

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Legislation is being introduced to close a legal loophole that prevents workplace sexual-harassment stories from going public

Barr’s confirmation hearing just kicked off, and he’s already gone against Trump in big ways

$
0
0

William Barr

  • Attorney General nominee William Barr on Tuesday went against President Donald Trump in significant ways early on in his confirmation hearing.
  • Barr rejected Trump's perception and characterization of several issues, from special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference to the president's pardon powers. 
  • "I don't believe Mr. Mueller would be involved in a witch hunt," Barr said as he was questioned by the Senate Judiciary Committee. 

Within the first two hours of Attorney General nominee William Barr's confirmation hearing on Tuesday, he had made significant breaks from President Donald Trump. 

Barr made it clear he does not agree with the president on array of issues, perhaps most notably special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference and the Trump campaign's alleged collusion. 

The former attorney general, who seems poised to be confirmed and get his old job back, rejected Trump's characterization of the Mueller probe as a "witch hunt."

Read more: William Barr: Mueller and I are 'good friends' and 'I don't believe' he 'would be involved in a witch hunt'

"I don't believe Mr. Mueller would be involved in a witch hunt,"Barr said as he was questioned by the Senate Judiciary Committee. 

Barr, who has a personal relationship with Mueller, also said he would allow the special counsel to finish the investigation if he's confirmed as attorney general. 

Trump has repeatedly called for the investigation to end, and apparently even sought to have Mueller fired but ultimately backed down after senior White House officials vehemently objected. 

Read more:William Barr says in prepared testimony that Mueller should be allowed to 'complete his work' on the Russia probe

Barr also said he believed former Attorney General Jeff Sessions was correct to recuse himself from the Russia investigation, a move that outraged Trump and led to his deteriorating relationship with Sessions.

Sessions ultimately resigned at the request of the president last November after repeatedly being publicly lambasted by Trump on the recusal issue.

In his opening remarks, Barr also seemed to take a veiled jab at Trump's attacks on the Department of Justice, arguing it should not be politicized in any context.

Read more: Rudy Giuliani doubles down on his dubious claim that the White House should be able to review and correct Mueller's report before it's released

"In the current environment, there are places in the government where the rule of law — not politics — holds sway... The Department of Justice must be that place," Barr said. 

Trump has at times claimed he has virtually unlimited power to pardon people as president—including himself. This has been a point of concern surrounding Mueller's investigation and Trump associates who've landed in legal trouble, particularly his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

During Tuesday's hearing, Barr rejected the notion Trump has a blank check to use the pardon power. Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy asked Barr if a president could offer a pardon in exchange for a witness promising not to incriminate the president. 

Barr told Leahy: "No, that would be a crime."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: MSNBC host Chris Hayes thinks President Trump's stance on China is 'not at all crazy'

What women eyeing a run for the White House can expect from voters and the media in 2020

$
0
0

female presidential candidates and the media 2020 4x3

  • Elizabeth Warren's 2020 campaign was only a few hours old when a story questioning whether the Massachusetts senator was "likable" enough to be president went viral. Many immediately pointed out the sexism in the piece, noting that male candidates are often not given the same scrutiny.
  • Warren is the only woman so far to launch a 2020 campaign, but she could soon be joined by Senators Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, and Kirsten Gillibrand. 
  • INSIDER spoke with political experts about what female presidential candidates can expect from voters and the media in 2020. 

Elizabeth Warren had just announced her bid for the presidency when a POLITICO story about her went viral — for the wrong reasons. 

The story posed the following question: "How does Warren avoid a Clinton redux — written off as too unlikable before her campaign gets off the ground?" On Twitter, readers immediately hit back, saying the criticism — being "unlikable"— is one often ascribed to women, rarely men. The story sparked a debate online: Will women running for president in 2020 face the same kind of gendered scrutiny that Hillary Clinton often had to deal with in 2016? 

Some experts say yes.

"It would be nice to think that there's been some kind of mass learning from the mistakes of the last two election cycles," said media critic Soraya Chemaly, author of "Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women's Anger.""I'm a little more cynical than that."

Society, Chemaly said, is still "so profoundly shaped by sex segregation culturally that the news thinks that women compete against women and men compete against men."

"You see that constantly in the way they talk about a woman candidate and compare her, for example, not to the entire field of candidates, but to other women," she said. "We see that over and over and over again. And that's a pretty subtle but still not benign kind of sexism that sort of separate spheres of politics."

Warren is the first woman to announce a bid for the 2020 Democratic nomination bid. Many expect fellow Senators Kirsten Gillibrand, Amy Klobuchar, and Kamala Harris to join her in the race. If they do, the 2020 Democratic primary field might have the most women ever in a presidential race. And though the majority of the likely candidates are men, that still might mean that many of the women running for the White House will receive different scrutiny than their male counterparts. 

elizabeth warren

'The rhetoric around women's places hasn't changed much.' 

Brandeis University professor Amber Spry, who specializes in political attitudes and behavior in United States politics, said that media coverage of the 2016 election focused a lot on Clinton's fitness for the role "in ways that were very, very obviously gendered."

"In a lot of ways, 2016 revealed that even though we've made a lot of progress as a country in the way that we think about women and their place in work and their place in politics," she said, "we still saw the media kind of gravitating towards these very familiar tropes about whether she was dressed appropriately ... or her mannerisms and the way she was speaking." 

Mary-Kate Lizotte, a political science professor at Stony Brook University, said she doesn't "expect a lot of differences" between the way voters and the media treated women running for the White House in 2016 and the way they're angling to talk about women candidates now. 

"It's going to take much longer for a woman who's running for president to be treated and perceived differently than Hillary Clinton was," she said. 

Female candidates, she said, often have to find the balance between "being a woman, but not too feminine, but not too masculine, and being 'likable.'" For Warren, she said, this examination is already happening. 

Lizotte quoted research by political science professors Nichole Bauer and Kathleen Dolan that found that voters are more likely to respond favorably to a female candidate if she appears "knowledgeable on masculine issues such as the economy and foreign affairs, instead of simply focusing on issues voters associate with women — such as welfare and abortion." 

Female candidates, Dolan's research found, are perceived as less competent on dealing with military and economic issues. 

In her own research, Lizotte has studied the adverse effects of discussing female political candidates' attractiveness — from the 2008 commentary on Sarah Palin's beauty pageant background to discussion of the way Clinton and Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina dressed in 2016. Lizotte's study found that the more a female candidate is described as attractive, the more she will be perceived as more feminine and, thus, "not possessing the traits necessary to fulfill the role of an elected official." 

Lizotte's research found that male candidates described as attractive will be viewed as more masculine, "which may enhance perceptions of their suitability for office." It may also, however, lead to negative assumptions about their vanity and intellect. 

"Female candidates, when they're described as being very physically attractive, they're seen by voters to be less intelligent and less qualified," she said.

'Some democratic voters might be a little hesitant to nominate another female candidate' 

Hillary Clinton.

For some voters, the scars of the 2016 election remain, and Clinton's underperformance might deter them from supporting a new female candidate. Though this is a possibility, Lizotte said she doesn't think it is enough justification to scratch women out of the race. 

"I'm not sure if that's going to be enough of an influence to prevent that, even if they are a little bit hesitant," she said. "If ultimately someone is performing well and seems electable, I think they'll probably overcome that hesitancy." 

Voters may have sent a record 103 women to Congress during the 2018 midterm elections, but if the Democratic presidential nominee is a woman, she will likely face the same level of criticism Donald Trump gave Clinton in 2016. Chemaly pointed out that, had Clinton tried to leverage anger against her critics the way male candidates do, she would've been reviled. 

"There's still a stunning lack of self-awareness in media about the ways that the language and the headlines and the photo choices in the framing shape public opinion, subtly biasing people against seeing women as leaders," she said. 

Trump's adversaries, particularly the women running against him, will similarly have to measure the ways they react to his attacks, which range from poorly-crafted nicknames, to late-night Twitter rants, to threats disguised as rally chants. 

Any candidate who faces Trump in the general election, Lizotte said, must be prepared to face him and these attacks with authentic emotion. Female candidates, she added, might face the same dilemma women in business often encounter: proving that they can be many things at once — competent and tough, but also as nice and empathetic as possible.

As long as women are able to show that they have "a multitude of emotions and they're not always angry or always saddened by something, if they kind of show a full range of authentic emotion," voters will likely perceive them positively, she said. 

Another challenge for female candidates in 2020 will likely be a deeper inspection of their qualifications than their male counterparts. Chemaly pointed out that, while female candidates tend to be extremely qualified for office — Barack Obama once said nobody was more qualified to be president than Hillary Clinton — there is still an overabundance of "mediocre" men who are not qualified for office, and not enough underqualified women. 

The women who are likely to run for the presidency, she said, are "exceptionally smart, driven, ambitious, competent people."

"Women are held to different standards," Chemaly said. "In truth, what we want to see is mediocre women that are unexceptional. We want it to be that case that not every woman has to be excessively overqualified. While that would be great, in fact what we have is a situation where there are far too many unqualified men, not under-qualified, but downright unqualified." 

'This is not just just a political moment, a blip on the scale'

Kamala Harris

As the country waits for Harris, a Democrat from California and the daughter of an Indian mother and a Jamaican father, to announce a 2020 bid, Spry wants the media to consider an important point. Harris has already emerged as a potential candidate, with or without a formal announcement, which says a lot not just about her leadership potential, but about the kind of leader people want in this political moment. 

"We've had this history as a country of exclusion and restrictions for people who look like Kamala Harris," she said. "People are excited to engage with the idea that, this, this thing that we hold as the American dream, which is that anybody can achieve and do incredible things — Kamala Harris embodies that possibility." 

For Spry, the success of many women in the midterm elections proves that what we're in living now is "not just a political moment, a blip on the scale." 

"This is the voices of Americans saying we believe in equality, we believe in change, we believe that people can make a difference," she said. "It's exciting to see that possibility come to fruition for an increasingly diverse crop of political candidates." 

When picking a 2020 frontrunner, the Democratic Party has to figure out not just how to develop ideological unity and what that will look like in a candidate, but it also has to decide what identities they want reflected in a presidential nominee, Spry added. 

"Race, gender, class — these kinds of identities are always present in politics," she said. "But there are times when social identity rises to the surface in particularly important ways, and right now those those things that are at the top of voters' minds." 

These issues, she said, include gender equality and women's rights — politically and otherwise — and will likely be championed by all Democratic female candidates. Male candidates should hope to do so too. 

Spry said she expects to see more broad conversations about women's rights and sexism in the upcoming election cycle as the #MeToo movement has left behind "a shared vocabulary for people to engage with these kind of issues." 

And while Democratic voters might be energized by identity politics, Lizotte warned against emphasizing identity in the general election, saying female candidates might fare better if they chose a slogan more populous than Clinton's "I'm With Her." 

Chemaly said she remains hopeful that the women who won in the midterms — and even those who lost such as failed Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams — are the first in a new generation of female candidates who have publicly called out institutional injustice in the US political sphere. 

"It's important to call out sexism and racism when it's happening," Chemaly said. "For a time, the traditional wisdom was just 'don't say anything and soldier on,' and it turns out that that's not great.'"

SEE ALSO: 7 Democratic women to watch in 2020

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: MSNBC host Chris Hayes thinks President Trump's stance on China is 'not at all crazy'


10 'facts' everyone believes that aren't actually true

$
0
0

bubble gum girl

  • Some common "facts" that everybody knows aren't actually true.
  • Although it has been proved that The Great Wall of China is not visible from space, many textbooks haven't caught up to the new information.
  • Other facts, like that cracking your knuckles causes arthritis aren't true but became known to stop people from certain activities.

There are some facts that everybody just knows. Maybe none of us can remember where we first heard it, but it definitely wasn't from a textbook. These facts become such a part of pop culture because they're just weird enough to be true, but with a little research, turns out they're totally false.

Here are the facts you've accepted as true all your life that are actually false.

A penny dropped from the top of the Empire State Building will kill you.

On Mythbusters, the scientists determined that a penny "traveling at terminal velocity cannot penetrate concrete or asphalt." It won't cause serious damage to a person, and even at the speed of sound, will still not damage flesh. At most, it could sting a little.



You can see The Great Wall of China from space.

NASA confirms that The Great Wall of China "frequently billed as the only man-made object visible from space" can't actually be seen from the final frontier. Although the fact was debunked by Chinese astronaut, Yang Liwei, the textbooks were never changed, and will often still claim this as true.



Cracking your knuckles will give you arthritis.

This was probably told to you by people who can't stand the sound of bones popping, cracking your knuckles or other body parts will not give your arthritis. Dr. Robert Klapper, an orthopedic surgeon at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and co-director of their Joint Replacement Program, explained on the hospital's site that there is no harm to cracking your knuckles. "The noise of cracking or popping in our joints is actually nitrogen bubbles bursting in our synovial fluid," he wrote. "It does not lead to arthritis."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Nearly three-quarters of bills will be paid digitally by 2022 — this is how banks can stay ahead of the trillion-dollar opportunity

$
0
0

This is a preview of a research report from Business Insider Intelligence, Business Insider's premium research service. To learn more about Business Insider Intelligence, click here.

Between housing costs, utilities, taxes, insurance, loans, and more, US adults paid an estimated $3.9 trillion in bills last year.

Bill Pay MarketThat market is growing slowly, but it’s changing fast — more than ever before, customers are moving away from paying bills via check or cash and toward paying online, either through their banks, the billers themselves, or using a third-party app.

Thanks to rising customer familiarity with digital payments, an increase in purchasing power among younger consumers more interested in digital bill pay, and a rise in digital payment options, nearly three-quarters of bills will be paid digitally by 2022, representing a big opportunity for players across the space.

In theory, banks should be in a great position to capitalize on this shift. Nearly all banks offer bill payment functionality, and it’s a popular feature. Issuers also boast an existing engaged digital user base, and make these payments secure. But that isn’t what’s happening — even as digital bill pay becomes more commonplace, banks are losing ground to billers and third-party players. And that’s not poised to change unless banks do, since issuer bill pay is least popular among the youngest customers, who will be the most important in the coming year.

For banks, then, that makes innovation important. Taking steps to grow bill pay’s share can be a tough sell for digital strategists and executives leading money movement at banks, and done wrong, it can be costly, since it often requires robust technological investments. But, if banks do it right, bill pay marks a strong opportunity to add and engage customers, and in turn, grow overall lifetime value while shrinking attrition.

Business Insider Intelligence has put together a detailed report that explains the US bill pay market, identifies the major inflection points for change and what’s driving it, and provides concrete strategies and recommendations for banks looking to improve their digital bill pay offerings.

Here are some key takeaways from the report:

  • The bill pay market in the US, worth $3.9 trillion, is growing slowly. But digital bill payment volume is rising at a rapid clip — half of all bills are now digital, and that share will likely expand to over 75% by 2022. 
  • Customers find it easiest to pay their bills at their billers directly, either through one-off or recurring payments. Bank-based offerings are commonplace, but barebones, which means they fail to appeal to key demographics.
  • Issuers should work to reclaim bill payment share, since bill pay is an effective engagement tool that can increase customer stickiness, grow lifetime status, and boost primary bank status.  
  • Banks need to make their offerings as secure and convenient as biller direct, market bill pay across channels, and build bill pay into digital money management functionality.

In full, the report:

  • Sizes the US bill pay market, and estimates where it’s poised to go next.
  • Evaluates the impact that digital will have on bill pay in the US and who is poised to capitalize on that shift.
  • Identifies three key areas in which issuers can improve their bill pay offerings to gain share and explains why issuers are losing ground in these categories.
  • Issues recommendations and defines concrete steps that banks can take as a means of gaining share back and reaping the benefits of digital bill pay engagement.

Join the conversation about this story »

The best coffee and espresso pod machines you can buy

$
0
0

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.

best pod machine

  • Pod machines bring speed, convenience, and consistency to the coffee making process.
  • You're not going to get the best shot of espresso or cup of coffee ever made, but you will get a nicely made drink that tastes good with minimal effort.
  • The Nespresso Pixie by De'Longhi is the best pod machine you can buy because it makes a wide variety of coffee and espresso-based drinks quickly and efficiently.

Is a pod machine going to produce the perfect shot of espresso? No, and as a matter of fact, there's a lot of controversy as to whether these machines actually make espresso. That said, the coffee produced by pod machines comes pretty close. Pod machines are a great way for anyone to cut back on spending money at the cafe without shelling out for a $500 Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine, or fiddling with manual espresso machines like the Flair or a stovetop espresso maker.

Pod machines are ideal for the working professional on the go who's looking for fast and affordable coffee and espresso-based drinks. But affordable is relative here: Keep in mind the cost of pods. You're still looking at spending roughly fifty cents to a dollar on each pod, which holds only about five grams of grounds.

In contrast, a true shot of espresso is roughly between seven and 11 grams. A one-pound bag of coffee beans will deliver more than 40 shots, and a pound of artisanal coffee generally won't run you more than $15 (about $.038 per shot), so depending on how much coffee or espresso you consume, a pod machine could be a more expensive investment over time.

The other major argument against pod machines is that they're not environmentally friendly. While almost all pod manufacturers offer recycling programs, participation involves a little more work than many people are willing to commit to, and the plastic and aluminum pods tend to end up in the garbage because recycling them isn't terribly convenient for most people. Fortunately, there's a whole host of companies making compostable and reusable pods for Nespresso machines.

All in all, if you're not terribly picky, or just want a backup for when you don't have the time or energy to buy or brew coffee and espresso your own way, a pod machine is a good buy. I keep a pod machine on my office desk, and while I have several other ways to administer caffeine into my person, I take solace in knowing it's there and I end up using it more often than not.

We've spent countless shaky, teeth-gritting hours testing all the coffee and espresso pod machines we could get our hands on to find the best.

Here are the best pod machines you can buy:

Read on in the slides below to learn more about our top picks.

The best pod machine overall

Why you'll love it: The Nespresso Pixie by De'Longhi is small, sleek, offers a wide variety of pod flavors, and accepts a host of third-party pods.

The Nespresso Pixie by De'Longhi is an easy-to-use, easy-to-clean machine that has very few working parts and consistently pushes out foamy espresso-like coffee for the caffeine fiend on the go. I've had this machine for about three years, and never once had a problem with it.

There are two settings for the Pixie: espresso (denoted as a little cup) and a lungo (big cup). The two settings produce more or less the same thing, but if you want to make a cappuccino or macchiato, the lungo might be the way to go.

The best thing about Nespresso machines is that the pods are simplistic enough that they can be produced by third parties that offer everything from compostable to reusable pods— both of which will save you money in the long run.

Consumer Reports chose the Pixie as the best Nespresso pod machine, and Amazon reviews (4.4/5 stars, based on 900+ reviews) are remarkably and consistently favorable, with titles like "Love this machine,""Worth every penny...," and "Great espresso, without the drama."

I don't end up using mine all that much, but I'm a purist and like to grind and make my own espresso every morning as part of my daily routine. But that's laborious, and I get that not everyone is willing to rise and shine a whole 10 or 15 minutes early to go through the process of prepping and pulling a shot of espresso.

If you just want to drop in a pod, press a button, and occasionally fill a reservoir with water, look no further. The Nespresso Pixie by De'Longhi is really all anyone needs.

Nespresso makes two different lines of machines and single-use pods and pouches, and the pouches (compatible with the VertuoLine) don't quite generate the pressure the capsules do, resulting in a decent crema, but a drink that resembles a milder coffee more than espresso according to Caffeine in My Veins and my own testing.

Pros: Simple, affordable, doesn't look half bad on the kitchen counter, you can change out the side plates for any of Nespresso's signature colors

Cons: Doesn't quite stack up to a proper espresso from a $2,000 machine, but what does?

Buy the De'Longhi Nespresso Pixie machine on Amazon for $173.87 (originally $229)



The best Illy pod machine

Why you'll love it: Illy's Y3.2 iperEspresso Machine is the slimmest, most compact espresso and coffee pod machine we've tested, and Illy's pods also contain some of the best grounds we've tasted from any pod.

I keep Illy's Y3.2 Espresso Machine on my desk at work, much to the chagrin of my nearby colleagues who have to hear its subtle but still very audible and distracting hum however many times a day (I'm a little too ashamed to count).

Illy's pods, while too complex for third-party alternatives or compostable solutions, are packed with some of the tastiest pod grounds we've tried, and the company offers both tins of espresso and packages of coffee, both sealed airtight for freshness. Our favorite at Insider Picks, however, is the Arabica Selection, and especially the Ethiopian and Colombian blends.

Consumer Reports also calls the Y3.2 the best of the Illy iperEspresso machines, and all around, I agree. If you do want to dole out for a slightly better espresso, and a much prettier machine, however, consider the Illy X7.1 by FrancisFrancis!, which, admittedly, is more than twice the price, but looks and works slightly more like an espresso machine. It's also cute as a button and comes with a warming rack on top.

Amazon reviews are mostly positive, though many point out how pricey the pods are, which makes sense: They're much more complex, and therein lies their greatest issue. While they probably work better than simpler Nespresso or Keurig Cup pods, a lot of plastic is required to make them, and it would be extremely difficult for anyone to reproduce them, especially in any biodegradable form.

Like Nespresso, Illy does have a pod recycling program. If you're looking for the most eco-friendly version, this is most certainly not it, and you might rather consider the Nespresso Pixie by De'Longhi.

Pros: Affordable, some of Illy's pods are the best-tasting we've tried

Cons: Not eco-friendly, not likely to find third-party compostable or reusable options, pods are expensive

Buy Illy's Y3.2 iperEspresso Machine on Amazon for $99 (originally $149)

Buy Illy's X7.1 iPerespresso Machine by FrancisFrancis! for $228

Buy a tin of 21 Etiopia, Brasile, or Decaffeinated blend iPerespresso pods on Amazon for $17.99

Buy a tin of 21 Colombia blend iPerespresso pods on Amazon for $17.99

Buy an 18-pack of Illy Arabica coffee pods on Amazon for $15.68



The best pod machine with a frother

Why you'll love it: The Nespresso Latissima One is a slightly more powerful answer to the Pixie, with a detachable, easy-to-clean frother for macchiatos and cappuccinos.

De'Longhi's Nespresso Latissima One is only slightly larger than the more baseline Pixie, but it has a bit more power (1300 watts vs. the Pixie's 1260) and a milk frother, so if you like cappuccinos or lattes, this is your pod machine.

The biggest difference, though, is the price. Usually selling for close to $400, this is an investment, and for a lot of people, it's a hard expense to justify, especially when there are some perfectly good espresso machines that sell for just a bit more or even less.

But, again, if space and time are your main constraints to your morning caffeine ritual, you could do worse. The De'Longhi also goes on sale on Amazon frequently, making it a much more reasonable purchase.

Australian review blog Pickr put the Latissima One through its paces and found that while the frother is a bit of a pain to clean, it's best for kitchens that lack counter space but want quick and easy pod drinks and are content with pod coffee.

Oprah included it in her list of favorite things of 2018, and almost 80% of the 50-odd reviews on Amazon are four-star ratings and above.

Pod machines with frothers can be finicky things, and their price can lead many to pause and wonder whether a hundred dollars more or so is worth a proper espresso machine.

But when time and space is of the essence, and a cappuccino is a must, the De'Longhi Lattissima One is our top pick.

Pros: Small, pretty, milk frother with optical view

Cons: Price, no self-cleaning

Buy the De'Longhi Nespresso Lattissima One on Amazon for $379.99



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Whole Foods killed its 'Meatless Mondays' discount in several states — and some people are fuming (AMZN)

$
0
0

Whole Foods meatless Monday

  • Amazon-owned Whole Foods has ended its "Meatless Mondays" promotion, which was offered in several states including New Jersey, Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
  • Meatless Mondays allowed shoppers to pay a flat rate of $8 for as much food as they could fit on a single plate, as long as it didn't include meat.
  • Some shoppers earned a discount of up to 70% using the deal. 
  • "For me, this was the nail in the coffin for Whole Foods," said Kristen Angelucci, who spent about $200 weekly at Whole Foods before the end of Meatless Mondays. "This company no longer has a brand identity." 

Whole Foods stores have ended a beloved promotion called "Meatless Mondays" that offered steep discounts on vegetarian options from the grocery chain's prepared-food bars. 

The deal allowed shoppers to pay a flat rate of $8 for as much food as they could fit on a single plate, as long as it didn't include meat. It was available at Whole Foods stores in several states including New Jersey, Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

The discount was a steal.

Whole Foods charges shoppers by the pound for prepared foods. In Richmond, Virginia, shoppers pay $8.99 per pound of food from Whole Foods' hot bars.

Read more:Whole Foods halts growth of its cheaper '365' stores

The grocery chain's plates can hold more than three pounds of food, which means shoppers could get a discount of up to 70% off a plate of food on Meatless Mondays. 

That's all coming to an end now. Signs posted in Whole Foods' stores announce: "A change is on the way. As of December 31, 2018, the $8 flat rate Meatless Monday Program will come to an end. We are excited about the fresh new Meatless options we are working on that will be rolling out in 2019."

Whole Foods declined to comment on this story.

Some shoppers are fuming over the change.

Kristen Angelucci said her family ate dinner at Whole Foods every Monday to take advantage of the deal, then spent about $200 on groceries for the week.

Whole Foods

She said she was shocked to find a sign announcing the end of Meatless Mondays at the Whole Foods in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, in December. Shoppers around the hot bar seemed similarly surprised by the news, and some blamed it on Amazon, which acquired Whole Foods in 2017, she said.

"Everyone was saying: 'This is what happens when Amazon buys Whole Foods,'" she said.

Angelucci said she has stopped shopping at Whole Foods as a result of the change. She's now buying her groceries at Wegmans instead.

Read more:'I ultimately am not afraid to get fired': Leaked audio captures Whole Foods CEO John Mackey describing clashes with Amazon

"Maybe Meatless Mondays wasn't always profitable, but it said Whole Foods stood for something — that it believed in a lifestyle — whether it was profitable or not," she said. "For me, this was the nail in the coffin for Whole Foods. This company no longer has a brand identity."

Pennsylvania Whole Foods shopper Alicia Uhl said she's also disappointed by the news.

"I went to Whole Foods on Mondays a few times a month," she said. "I also hosted a monthly dinner there with my meet-up group for Meatless Mondays. ... I wish instead of discontinuing the program they had simply revised it or updated it in some way."

SEE ALSO: Whole Foods halts growth of its cheaper '365' stores

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: How Columbia House sold 12 CDs for as little as a penny

LIVE: Theresa May battles through final hours to fight off historic Brexit defeat

$
0
0

Theresa May

  • LIVE: MPs prepare to vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal.
  • The House of Commons will vote on the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement at after 7 p.m. this evening, five weeks after it was postponed. The result is expected some time between 8 and 9 p.m.
  • The prime minister is set for a big defeat. Government sources say the margin of defeat will be around 150 votes.
  • House of Commons Speaker John Bercow refuses to let MPs vote on amendments that could have helped the prime minister. 
  • Jeremy Corbyn is preparing to launch a vote of no confidence in the government.
  • May is set to make a statement immediately following the vote.

LONDON — Members of Parliament will tonight vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal after weeks of debate and delay.

MPs will finally vote on the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement on Tuesday evening after the prime minister postponed the so-called meaningful vote last month amid fears of a huge defeat.

Despite assurances from May and the European Union on the most controversial aspects of the deal, specifically the Northern Irish backstop, MPs are set to inflict a big defeat on the deal, potentially by a majority of over 200 votes.

If, or when, May's deal falls the big question will be what the prime minister will do next.

She is expected to make a statement immediately following the result in which she could spell out a Plan B. Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party is also poised to table a motion of no confidence in the government as early as this evening if the deal is voted down by a huge margin, according to multiple reports.

MPs are set to vote on amendments to the Withdrawal Agreement shortly after 19:00 (GMT) with the main vote coming afterwards and a final result expected later in the evening. 

Scroll down for the latest developments in a historic day in British politics. All times are in GMT.

SEE ALSO: The EU sends letter of reassurance to Theresa May in last ditch attempt to prevent Brexit deal defeat

16:42: Tory Brexiteer U-turns twice

Conservative Brexiteer Sir Edward Leigh has pulled off the remarkable feat of two U-turns.

Leigh initially opposed May's deal. Earlier this week, he said he had changed his mind and declared his support for it. This came after Theresa May decided to give him a knighthood.

However, speaking in the Commons just now, Leigh suggested he was again planning to vote against it, telling MPs he "reserves the right" to reject the PM's deal.

 

 

 



14:37: Here are the amendments in full

1. CORBYN (LABOUR) AMENDMENT: Line 1, leave out from "House" to end and insert "declines to approve the negotiated withdrawal agreement and the framework for the future relationship because it fails to provide for a permanent UK-EU customs union and strong single market deal and would therefore lead to increased barriers to trade in goods and services, would not protect workers’ rights and environmental standards, allows for the diminution of the United Kingdom’s internal and external security and is likely to lead to the implementation of a backstop provision in Northern Ireland that is neither politically nor economically sustainable; declines to approve the United Kingdom’s leaving the European Union without a withdrawal agreement; and therefore resolves to pursue every option that prevents the United Kingdom’s either leaving the European Union without a withdrawal agreement or leaving on the basis of the negotiated withdrawal agreement laid before the House."

2. SIR JOHN BARON (TORY) AMENDMENT:At end, add "subject to changes being made in the withdrawal agreement and in the Ireland/Northern Ireland Protocol so that the UK has the right to terminate the protocol without having to secure the agreement of the EU."

2. IAN BLACKFORD (SNP) AMENDMENT: Line 1, leave out from "House" to end and insert "declines to approve the negotiated withdrawal agreement and the framework for the future relationship in line with the views of the Scottish parliament and the Welsh assembly that they would be damaging for Scotland, Wales and the nations and regions of the UK as a whole; notes the legal opinion of the advocate general of the European Court of Justice that the United Kingdom has the right to unilateral revocation of the notification of the intention to withdraw from the EU, until such time as the withdrawal agreement is formally concluded; therefore calls on the UK government to request an extension to the period of negotiation under article 50 of the treaty on European Union so that the UK does not leave the EU without a withdrawal agreement or on the basis of the negotiated agreement laid before the House on Monday 26 November 2018; and calls on the UK government to respect the will of the Scottish parliament in its vote on 5 December 2018 and the Welsh assembly in its vote on 4 December 2018, which both rejected the withdrawal agreement as it now stands."

3. SIR EDWARD LEIGH (TORY) AMENDMENT: "At end, add "notes that the Northern Ireland backstop is intended to be temporary; notes that the Vienna convention on the law of treaties makes it absolutely clear that a sovereign state can abrogate any part of a treaty with an international body in case of a fundamental change of circumstances since the Treaty was agreed; notes that making the Northern Ireland backstop permanent would constitute such a fundamental change of circumstances; and therefore calls for an assurance from the government that, if it becomes clear by the end of 2021 that the European Union will not agree to remove the Northern Ireland backstop, the United Kingdom will treat the indefinite continuation of the backstop as a fundamental change of circumstances and will accordingly give notice on 1 January 2022 to terminate the withdrawal treaty so that the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland shall become an independent country once again."



14:30: Michel Barnier tells the UK: "Keep calm!"

Meanwhile, in Brussels, the European Union's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has offered a message for Westminster: "Keep calm!"

Here's a clip of Barnier speaking to the BBC in Belgium earlier today.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

22 things you didn't know about Bradley Cooper

$
0
0

Bradley Cooper

  • Bradley Cooper is an actor and director who has become a household name thanks to his tremendous film success.
  • Cooper didn't always want to be an actor — he actually wanted to be a ninja at some point. 
  • In 2011, Cooper was dubbed People's Sexiest Man Alive.
  • Cooper is dating and has a daughter with model Irina Shayk. 

Ever since "A Star Is Born" hit theaters this past fall, Bradley Cooper's media presence has been pretty much nonstop. The triple threat actor, director, and musician has made headlines recently thanks to the avalanche of award nominations he's receiving for the film.

Of course, this isn't the first time we've seen him. Bradley Cooper has been navigating Hollywood for the better part of the last twenty years. He is perhaps most known for his roles in "The Hangover" series, "Silver Linings Playbook, "Guardians of the Galaxy," and "American Sniper."

Here is everything you need to know about the A-lister to watch this awards season.

When he was a kid, he dreamed about being a ninja.

It seems young Bradley Cooper had other plans for his future.

He told The Philadelphia Inquirer that from an early age, he was obsessed with soldiers and asked his dad if he could go to Valley Forge Military Academy.

His father, Charles Cooper, refused, however, and as a result, young Bradley said he wanted to go to Japan and become a ninja instead.



He was once married.

Back in 2006, Cooper married "Blue Bloods" actress Jennifer Esposito. The pair divorced after a four-month marriage in 2007. 



He is dating Irina Shayk.

According to Harpers Bazaar, Cooper and his current girlfriend model and actress, Irina Shayk, started dating in 2015. People magazine reported that they exchanged a kiss outside of a production of Hamilton in 2015.

The pair made their first ever Red Carpet debut at this year's Golden Globes and currently have a daughter together.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The incredible story of the Native American code talkers who outsmarted Japan during World War II

$
0
0

trump navajo code talkers

  • Navajo Code Talkers played an instrumental role in the allied victory of World War II.
  • The group of Native Americans used their language as a code that proved to be uncrackable to the enemy.
  • One of the last surviving members of the group died earlier this week.

One of the last surviving Navajo Code Talkers — a group of Native Americans who played an instrumental role in the defeat of Japan during World War II — had died, according to the Associated Press.

Alfred K. Newman was 94. He had served as a Marine between 1943 and 1945. 

The Navajo "code talkers" were recruited during the second World War to help communicate messages on the battlefield. Their language, which at the time was still unwritten, proved to be an uncrackable code.

Here is the remarkable story of the Navajo code talkers, helped the United States win World War II.

SEE ALSO: The dark history of Pocahontas, whose name Trump keeps evoking in order to slam Elizabeth Warren

The Navajo are a Native American ethnic group living in the American Southwest, and their main reservation, which occupies the Four Corners area of Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico, is the largest reservation in the United States today.

The Navajo are the largest Native American ethnic group in the United States today. Although their language was the one used to create code in World War II, people from other Native American groups like the Hopi and the Comanche were recruited as code talkers as well.

Sources: NavajoPeople.org, Indian Country Today



At the beginning of US involvement in WWII, the Japanese were breaking every code the Americans came up with. In response, World War I veteran Philip Johnston suggested a novel idea to the US Marine Corpse in 1942 — using the Navajo language as a code.

Johnston was the son of missionaries, and had grown up speaking Navajo on the Navajo reservation even though he himself was not Native. He was inspired to use the Navajo language as a code after seeing Native Americans communicating with each other in the US Army during the First World War.

Sources: Newsweek, National Museum of the American Indian



The Navajo language was the perfect language to use because it had no alphabet, and as a result, there were no materials the Japanese could use to learn it. The Marine Corps loved Johnston's idea, and began recruiting young Navajo men as code talkers.

One of the code talkers at Trump's event on Monday, Peter MacDonald, said the new recruits were initially not told they were going to be used to speak in code. 

"They were just asked, 'Do you want to join the Marines? You want to fight the enemy? Come join the Marines.' So they volunteered," MacDonald said.

Some, though, were drafted. 

"We were drafted. They made us go. I didn't volunteer," Franklin Shupla, a code talker from the Hopi tribe, said.

Sources: Newsweek, National Museum of the American Indian



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

11 myths you should stop believing about sperm

$
0
0

sperm microscope

  • Lots of common myths about sperm and ejaculation isn't actually true.
  • From the amount of ejaculation to sperm quality, there is a lot of information that people get wrong.
  • We talked to Dr. Damian Jacob Sendler to answer all our sperm-related questions.

Most people with penises produce between39 million to 929 million sperm per ejaculation, according to the World Health Organization. But how much do you really know about sperm?

INSIDER consulted with  Dr. Damian Jacob Sendler, chief of the division of clinical research at Felnett Health Research Foundation to get to the truth behind a few common myths about sperm and semen.

MYTH: You can't get pregnant from pre-ejaculate or "pre-cum."

Most of the time, pre-ejaculate – the semen-like fluid that sometimes comes out of a penis before ejaculation – is just a lubricating substance produced by the prostate. However, there is a small chance that it might contain enough viable sperm to result in a pregnancy.

"There is always the chance that there are some sperm present in the pre-ejaculate, especially if someone masturbated briefly before sexual intercourse as part of foreplay. Technically, anything that is being produced as part of ejaculate could include some cells of sperm," Dr. Sendler told INSIDER.

If you're concerned with avoiding pregnancy, using a barrier method like a condom is always a good idea.



MYTH: Semen has a high nutritional content if swallowed.

Sorry – semen isn't a good replacement for your daily multivitamin.

"It has a lot of fructose, which nourishes sperm. But don't count on getting full of energy after swallowing anyone's load. Our stomach acid will effectively burn up the relatively tiny nutritional value of the ejaculate," said Dr. Sendler.

Though a healthy diethas been shown toimprove semen quality, consuming semen itself won't have much of an impact on your nutrition.



MYTH: Sperm can live for days on items like sheets, towels, and underwear.

Sperm can't normally live on clothing, skin, and other surfaces for longer than a few moments. When semen dries or is exposed to extreme temperatures, the ability for the sperm in that semen to fertilize an egg diminishes significantly.

"Some people believe that laying in bed where a man ejaculated before could make them pregnant — that's not true at all. The sperm needs to be present inside of the woman, freshly after being ejaculated from the penis to successfully cause pregnancy," Dr. Sendler stated.

However, sperm can live inside the uterusfor up to five days. This is why it's technically possible to get pregnant as a result of unprotected sex during menstruation.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

10 pieces of restaurant etiquette from around the world

$
0
0

drinking tea

  • Dining etiquette differs from place to place.
  • You might want to be prepared to get a round of drinks for your table in Ireland.
  • Making noise while you chew or eat in the presence of others is considered rude in the US, but in Japan, it shows appreciation for your meal.

Much like how tipping etiquette differs around the globe, proper manners and what's considered rude or polite when dining differs, too. Although it's easy enough to remember to cover your mouth when you cough and to not talk while you have food in your mouth, when you visit restaurants around the globe dining etiquette can be different than what you're used to. In order to be a proper guest when visiting a new country, it can always be handy to know a bit of restaurant etiquette as you travel.  

Here are 10 pieces of dining out etiquette from around the world. 

In Ireland, you might want to be prepared to offer up a round of drinks when you're out with a group.

It's considered courteous to go to the bar to bring back drinks for your entire table. This is called "getting your round in," according to IrishCentral. Generally, everyone in the group should get up to offer up a round at some point whether you're asked to or not. 



You should probably avoid asking for extra cheese on your pizza in Italy.

And you won't want to try to add cheese to your seafood dish, either. In Italy, it's sometimes considered rude to ask for anything that isn't explicitly offered to you while dining out, according to Revealed Rome. 

Read More: The 13 biggest differences between restaurants in Italy and America



You might be insulting the chef if you ask for salt and pepper in Portugal.

It's OK to add a little extra salt or pepper to your plate as long as the condiments are already on the table. But according to Lonely Planet's "Portugal Travel Guide," asking a server to bring you salt and pepper is considered an offense to the chef's seasoning skills.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Meet William Barr: What you need to know about the possible once and future attorney general

$
0
0

Bush Barr

President Donald Trump in early December nominated William Barr to head up the Justice Department. 

His nomination could have major implications for special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference.

Barr's confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee began on Tuesday.

Here's what you need to know about the man who could potentially be the next attorney general. 

Read more:Barr’s confirmation hearing just kicked off, and he’s already gone against Trump in big ways

Read more:William Barr: Mueller and I are 'good friends' and 'I don't believe' he 'would be involved in a witch hunt'

Read more:William Barr says in prepared testimony that Mueller should be allowed to 'complete his work' on the Russia probe

William Barr, 68, is a Republican lawyer who previously served as attorney general under former President George H.W. Bush from 1991 to 1993.



Barr was born in New York City and is Roman Catholic. He attended Columbia University, receiving his bachelor’s degree in government in 1971 and a master’s degree in government and Chinese studies in 1973.



He worked at the CIA as an analyst and assistant legislative counsel and studied law at night at George Washington University in Washington, DC, graduating in 1977.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Chrissy Teigen reveals the relationship lesson she's learned to quickly get over fights with husband John Legend

$
0
0

chrissy teigen and john legend

  • Chrissy Teigen opened up to Good Housekeeping about her relationship with John Legend, who she's been married to since 2013. 
  • The cookbook author revealed that she and Legend don't get into disagreements too often, but she's learned from their past fights.
  • "I've learned to listen to what the other person is upset about and try to make sure that I'm doing everything to not let that same, dumb fight happen again," she said.
  • Teigen added that she and Legend balance each other because she gets "very passionate and loud" while the singer is "a diffuser."

Chrissy Teigen says she's learned to minimize fights with her husband, John Legend

"I've learned to listen to what the other person is upset about and try to make sure that I'm doing everything to not let that same, dumb fight happen again," she told Good Housekeeping during an interview. 

"It helps that John and I fight very differently," Teigen added.  

The "Cravings: Hungry for More" author also said that she and the Grammy-winning singer balance each other out on the rare occasions when they do get into disagreements.

"I get very passionate and loud, and he's very much a diffuser," she said. "But in the end, we're both apologizers; we don't like to dwell on the same thing. A lot of our fights revolve around — we don't have them often — scheduling, communication, or 'You told me this, but I was holding Luna [their daughter], and I was baking cookies at the same time, how was I supposed to listen to this and have a conversation?!'"

Read more: Chrissy Teigen and John Legend are celebrating 5 years of marriage — here's a complete timeline of their relationship

chrissy teigen john legend

In the past, the couple has spoken openly about their disagreements. Back in 2016, Teigen revealed that she and Legend "got in the biggest fight at Kim and Kanye's wedding that you've ever seen in your whole life." 

Teigen explained that she was worried that Legend's performance at the 2014 event would take the spotlight away from the newlyweds.

"You know when you think everything's about you? I was like, 'We ruined the wedding and everyone noticed' and everyone's like 'no, not really, nobody noticed,'" she said.

More recently, the mother of two called out Legend for his use of the word "simmer" and sparked a Twitter debate about the meaning of the cooking term. Legend told the Daily Beast that he believes simmering refers to a low temperature, while Teigen says it's specifically about the "little pops of bubbles" that happen with the water.   

chrissy teigen john legend

Despite small quarrels and playful trolling online, the couple, who met in 2006 and got married in September 2013, has revealed other keys to making their relationship work. 

While Teigen was experiencing postpartum depression following the birth of her daughter, she revealed that Legend would go out of his way to do things that made her happy, like going to Medieval Times and wearing a goofy hat. She also said that he "cooked seven days a week" when she was pregnant. 

Visit INSIDER's homepage for more.   

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Saturn is officially losing its rings — and they're disappearing much faster than scientists had anticipated

Three Mark's, two Rob's, one Rich: Meet the 6 potential successors to replace Larry Fink as head of the world's largest asset manager

$
0
0

Larry Fink

  • Six BlackRock executives are in line to replace chief executive officer Larry Fink – who has made no public plans to retire. 
  • One of these potential successors, Mark Wiedman, was promoted to a new role last week. This prompted speculation about who could eventually take over for Fink. 
  • Depending on how long Fink plans to stay at BlackRock, some top executives may not want to wait for years, one industry observer noted.  

Larry Fink isn't going anywhere. 

The chief executive officer of BlackRock is too busy trying to solve America's retirement crisis and turn the world's largest asset manager into a technology company, among other priorities.

But the 66-year-old is planning for his successor, and a major promotion announced last week fueled speculation about his eventual successor. In a memo, Fink hinted at more personnel changes to come, which sources say includes further executive shuffling beyond the 500 staff BlackRock said on Thursday it would lay off.

BlackRock insiders identified six men who could eventually replace Fink. 

Besides common names – three Mark's and two Rob's, with one Rich as the outlier – the men share longtime tenure at the firm. They've led the firm's highest growth areas, including exchange-traded-funds and technology, and all sit on BlackRock's global executive committee.

A spokesperson for BlackRock declined to comment on succession planning. One industry insider cautioned that the list could change over the years, as executives may tire of waiting for their chance to be considered CEO and look elsewhere for leadership opportunities. 

In a 2016 memo about leadership changes at the time, Fink and president Rob Kapito wrote "We regularly review, with the Board, leadership and succession planning for all of our businesses and seek to ensure we are developing leaders with broad experience across the entire firm." 

See also:The power behind the throne at Morgan Stanley: Here's who insiders say is in line to replace CEO James Gorman

As Wall Street has grappled with how to replace founders and longtime leaders, having multiple options is not uncommon. Blackstone, for example, elevated former real estate head Jon Gray to president last year after grooming multiple leaders to run the world's largest private equity firm. Goldman Sachs had two co-presidents under CEO Lloyd Blankfein, before one retired this spring, leaving David Solomon to replace Blankfein this fall.

Here's who could replace Fink:


Mark Wiedman, head of international and of corporate strategy

Mark Wiedman croppedWiedman, 47, moved up last week from head of the firm's wildly successful exchange-traded-funds and index investing businesses iShares to an even more visible role that reports to Fink directly. 

In his new role, Wiedman will focus on "high-growth markets" in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia-Pacific. He'll also oversee marketing, which is led by former BuzzFeed chief marketing officer Frank Cooper, who will report to both Wiedman and Fink.

Wiedman has overseen explosive growth in ETF platform iShares, which saw a record $44 billion in new money in December. He left a previous role overseeing corporate strategy in 2011 to lead iShares, which has since expanded its assets by 14.8% annually on average.

He joined BlackRock in 2004 to help start what became the Financial Markets Advisory Group, advising financial institutions and central banks on capital markets exposures. 

Before BlackRock, he was senior advisor for the Under Secretary for Domestic Finance at the US Treasury, and a management consultant at McKinsey. 


Mark Wisemen, global head of active equities; chairman of alternatives

Mark WisemanWisemen, 47, also chairs the firm's global investment committee. He's the most recent entrant of the bunch, joining BlackRock in 2016 with the critical perspective of a longtime institutional investor. 

Before BlackRock, Wisemen was president and CEO of the $368 billion Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board since 2012, where he worked in investments since 2005. Previously, he worked at the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan. Earlier in his career, he had private markets experience as an officer at a Canadian merchant bank, and as a lawyer with Sullivan & Cromwell in both New York and Paris. 

In addition to his leadership in active equities, Wisemen is helping BlackRock tap into the explosive growth of the alternatives industry, with platforms including real assets, hedge funds, and private credit. The strategies produce higher fees than passively-managed investments and capture capital that's locked up for longer. Fink has called the $140 billion alternatives business "a strategic growth priority." 


Mark McCombe, head of Americas

Mark McCombeMcCombe, 51, has hopped around the world's financial centers in his career. He has worked out of the firm's San Francisco office since 2017, as part of his remit to expand the Americas business outside of New York since he became Americas head that year. While other regions are growth focuses, the Americas continues to constitute the vast majority – 67% – of the firm's assets under management, according to third-quarter earnings. 

McCombe joined BlackRock in 2011 to lead Asia Pacific, and has also served as chair and global head of BlackRock Alternative Investors, as well as global head of the institutional client business.

Before BlackRock, he spent more than 20 years with HSBC in global roles ranging from CEO of the bank's asset management division in London to CEO of its Hong Kong business. 


Rob Kapito, co-founder, president 

Rob KapitoKapito, 61, met Fink years ago working at investment bank First Boston. He left in 1988 to join a group founding what would become BlackRock and now focuses on the day-to-day operations.  

Kapito became president in 2007, a role that includes oversight of the firm's key business platforms, including investment strategies, client businesses, technology and operations, and risk and quantitative analysis. He's also a director of iShares and chairman of the firm's global operating committee. 

Before he was president, Kapito was head of the firm's portfolio management business, overseeing groups including fixed income, equity, liquidity, and alternatives. 


Rob Goldstein, chief operating officer, global head of BlackRock Solutions

Rob Goldstein

Goldstein, 44, has long been a rising star at BlackRock. He started at the firm in 1994 as an analyst in the portfolio analytics group and later worked as a risk advisor to mortgage and insurance clients. 

Kapito also led the firm's institutional client business, then took over as COO in 2014. 

As COO, he helps oversee day-to-day global business. He also leads the BlackRock Solutions business, underpinned by the wildly successful Aladdin operating system. That investment platform is used by over a 200 institutional investors, such as the California State Teachers' Retirement System and touches $18 trillion of assets – and, showing its commitment, BlackRock is the biggest user. Though technology services makes up just 6% of the firm's revenue, which is largely dependent on fees paid for assets under management, the segment jumped 18% year-on-year for the third quarter, to $200 million.

See more: The COO at BlackRock explains why the $5.7 trillion investment giant is a 'growth technology company'


Rich Kushel, head of multi-asset strategies and global fixed income

Rich KushelKushel, 51, can fly under the radar – he prefers to stay out of the public view – but the BlackRock veteran should not be dismissed as a Fink successor, insiders said. In his current role, Kushel oversees $2.4 trillion, according to the firm's third-quarter earnings. 

Kushel joined BlackRock in 1991, and his responsibilities since then have included running alternatives and wealth management. In 2009 and 2010, he moved to London to chair the firm's international businesses, and from 2010 to 2012, he led the BlackRock's portfolio management group.

Before his current role, he was the chief product officer and head of groups for strategic product management and stewardship, as well as for the BlackRock Investment Institute.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
Viewing all 76301 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>