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Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts

Friday, January 1, 2016

Kanye West debuts new track 'Facts', slams Nike (a lot)

West
Kanye West just dropped his outsized version of a brag-filled New Year's Eve Facebook status — a new track called "Facts".
For the second year in a row, West chose New Year's to release new music, but it's unclear if the three-and-a-half minute track will appear on his forthcoming album Swish, expected sometime in 2016.
The new track opens with a sample of "Dirt and Grime" by Father's Children before West lists off some of his biggest achievements of the past 12 months.
"Yeezy, Yeezy, Yeezy, they line up for days... I ain't dropped the album but the shoes went platinum," he says taking multiple swipes at Nike while praising his own collaboration with Adidas.
As well as referencing Drake ("Yeezy, Yeezy, Yeezy just jumped over Jumpman") and giving wife Kim Kardashian's Kimoji a mention ("Plus Kimoji just shut down the app store"), West takes aim at Bill Cosby: "Do anybody feel bad for Bill Cosby? Did he forget the names just like Steve Harvey?"
He also takes a moment to reaffirm his intention to run for president: "2020, I'ma run the whole election."

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Ice-T And Coco Welcome Baby Girl, Chanel Nicole

Ice-T and his wife Coco officially have a baby girl on board.
The couple welcomed its bundle of joy on Saturday (Nov. 28). Arriving early at 37 weeks into Coco’s pregnancy, baby Chanel Nicole made her Instagram debut hours later. Sharing that her and Ice-T’s baby clocked in at 5.7 pounds, Coco posted a precious first photo of her daughter’s face.
“Surprise!!! Look who came early!! Welcome the new arrival of Chanel Nicole.. A beautiful healthy 5.7 pound and 18 inch baby girl .Ice and I are so proud! I cried while she was coming out I was so excited to meet her!” she wrote.
READ: Ice-T Is Not A Fan Of Kanye West’s ‘Yeezy Season 2’ Fashion Collection
On the day of her debut, Chanel Nicole was also given her very own Instagram and Twitter accounts where the couple will share photos. Coco noted that she successfully delivered their baby girl after just three pushes, and shared another photo of she and Chanel making skin-to-skin contact after she was born. Ice-T took to Twitter following his daughter’s birth to thank his followers for their well wishes.
“Thank you for ALL the LOVE all of you have given us today.. You are truly appreciated… And we are humbled,” he wrote.
And in just a matter of hours, Chanel Nicole rounded up tens of thousands of followers online. Peep more pictures below:
READ: The Smurfs, Care Bears & Dora The Explorer Will Never Be The Same, Thanks To Ice T
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Adele's '25' sells 3.38M in first week

What did we do without her soulful sound before? Take

Ladies and gentlemen, we have a number.
Adele's blockbuster 25 has sold a record-shattering 3.38 million copies in its first week, according to Nielsen Music. It easily bests early projections of 2.5 million made more than a week ago.
As Billboard reports, that's the largest sales week since Nielsen started tracking album sales in 1991. It's the first album to ever sell more than 3 million copies in one week and only the second to pass 2 million (the first was NSYNC's No Strings Attached, with 2.416 million sold in 2000).
Already, 25 is the biggest selling album of the year so far (nearly doubling the 1.8 million copies Taylor Swift's 1989 has moved in 2015). It will debut atop the Billboard200 album chart this week, making it Adele's second No. 1 album after her similarly mammoth 21. For comparison, 21 started with 352,000 copies sold its first week in March 2011, going on to sell more than 11 million in the USA

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Marvel’s First Abortion

Marvel's Jessica Jones
Given the GOP’s anti-abortion rhetoric—as well as Friday’s shooting at a Planned Parenthood in Colorado—the abortion storyline in Netflix’s ‘Jessica Jones’ seems all too timely.
Last Thursday, Scandal’s Planned Parenthood episode showed Olivia Pope receiving a vacuum aspiration abortion. But last Friday, Marvel’s new Netflix series Jessica Jones depicted something even rarer: a medical abortion, after a rape, behind bars.
A week later, any conversation around abortion is inevitably refracted through the lens of Friday’s tragic shooting at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, which left three dead. Details of that shooting, including the suspect’s motive, are still emerging. But in the wake of a string of arsons at Planned Parenthood clinics and a renewed wave of extreme rhetoric following this summer’s doctored undercover videos, it is safe to say that honest media representation of abortion has rarely been more timely, or more poignant.
One abortion on ABC’s Scandal was already enough to send extreme pro-lifersinto a tizzy last weekend, especially because Olivia’s procedure was set to the soundtrack of “Silent Night.” But two abortions on television in the same week is practically unheard of. That’s not just a coincidence; it’s an unprecedented sign that female showrunners like Shonda Rhimes and Jessica Jones boss Melissa Rosenberg aren’t going to shy away from showing a common medical procedure for women—controversy, critics, and extremists be damned.
For those who didn’t bingeJessica Jones over the holiday, here’s a primer for context: Jessica (Krysten Ritter) is a superhero who gave up her cape to be a private investigator after a period of being mind-controlled and repeatedly raped by a villainous Brit named Kilgrave (David Tennant). At the start of the series, Jessica rescues another of Kilgrave’s victims, Hope (Erin Moriarty), who then goes to jail for the murder of her parents, which she committed while still under Kilgrave’s control. It’s there that Hope realizes that she is pregnant, and decides she wants an abortion—a first in Marvel history.
“I can feel it growing like a tumor,” she tells Jessica, who suggests notifying the on-call doctor.

But Hope is already one step ahead of her: “Two months. That’s the soonest the doctor can get to me.”

For her, that’s not soon enough. In the previous episode, she was so determined to terminate the pregnancy that she hired another inmate to beat her up with the intention of causing a miscarriage. When Jessica checks in on her after the beating, Hope explains her need to have an abortion in the context of rape-related PTSD. She clarifies that she does want to have a child in the future, just not like this.
“Every second it’s there, I get raped again and again,” she says.
Her choice to have an abortion in this situation is not uncommon. A 1996 studyfound that 50 percent of women who became pregnant as the result of rape chose abortion. When miscarriage and adoption were factored in, less than one in three women opted to keep the child.  
What is uncommon is for a predicament like hers to be shown on television. An honest look at the challenges incarcerated women face in accessing the procedure? That’s subject matter so criminally underexplored that it apparently took a superhero to get it on the small screen.
Eventually, Jessica agrees to help Hope end her pregnancy by smuggling in an abortion pill. Dangerous? Potentially. Illegal? Yes. Unrealistic? Not necessarily.
Incarcerated women can legally receive abortions, but barriers to access sometimes lead them to consider desperate measures. A 2009 survey of health professionals who provided care in correctional facilities painted a spotty picture of abortion access behind bars. Only 68 percent of respondents said that inmates in their facilities could receive elective abortions, and only 54 percent of those respondents reported that they help inmates arrange appointments.
Providers in red states also indicated more limited access than those in blue states—a reflection of the fact that standards for reproductive healthcare in prison are largely decided at the local level.
In New York, where Jessica Jones is set, a 2008 NCLU investigation found that less than half of the state’s counties had policies on abortion access for women in prison, and less than a quarter provided “unimpeded access” to the procedure. In this context, Hope’s conclusion that she has no choice but to seek outside help is, sadly, all too believable.
“Once you take this, there’s no do-overs,” she warns her, placing the bright yellow pill in the palm of her hand. “You’ll be sick as shit for about eight hours so I need you to be 1,000 percent sure.”

Without hesitation, Hope gulps it down and starts repeating, “Please work fast. Please work fast.”

“That’s… sure,” Jessica observes.
Most abortion storylines on television, as Kevin Fallon noted last week, present the procedure as a decision that requires “grand, emotional handwringing.” Not Scandal, and certainly not Jessica Jones. For some women, abortion is indeed a difficult decision. For others, like Olivia Pope and Hope, it is more straightforward. Television has focused so predominantly on examples of the former that any instances of the latter still seem shocking. But they shouldn’t be. A longitudinal study of 667 women who had received an abortion published in July found that 95 percent did not regret their procedure “at all time points over three years.” In fact, it’s common for women to feel relieved and happy after an abortion.
Hope chanting “please work fast” after taking the pill instead of, say, crying is not some sign that she’s so hardened by her circumstances that she doesn’t feel the emotional pain that abortion opponents insist must stem from the procedure. Many women, especially women with a rape-related pregnancy, actively want an abortion without second-guessing or regrets.
Television has just rarely acknowledged that truth. Nor has it gone anywhere near recognizing the overall frequency of abortion.
Nearly three out of ten 10 women in the United States will have an abortion by age 45. The ratio of female television characters under 45 who have had abortions probably has a denominator in the hundreds of thousands. The fact that television shows so rarely depict abortion—and that, when they do, it’s usually presented as an agonizing decision—isn’t just an error of omission; it’s a complete break from reality. As Shonda Rhimes told Vulture in 2011, the rarity of abortion storylines is “ridiculous.”

But with women like Rhimes and Jessica Jones creator Melissa Rosenberg in charge of high-profile shows, perhaps that’s about to change. In a 2011 interview, Rosenberg called herself “extremely pro-choice [and] very outspoken about it, very much a feminist.”

It shouldn’t take a pro-choice showrunner to acknowledge the existence of abortion and depict it fairly. But as the reaction to last week’s Scandal episode proved, portraying abortion on television is still a heroic effort. Jessica Jones’ days as a uniform-wearing superhero might be behind her but, fortunately, she’ll take that job.