1 March 2018

The Maker of Brawny Launches "Who's Your 'Shero?'" Campaign and Asks People to Post Stories of Strong and Courageous Women

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#StrengthHasNoGender - Who's Your 'Shero?
#StrengthHasNoGender - Who's Your 'Shero?
Sheroes are everywhere among us, they just don't always get the attention they deserve. In recognition of Women's History Month, Georgia-Pacific's Brawny paper towels brand is asking "Who's your Shero?," encouraging people to share an inspiring story on social media about a female hero who exhibits strength and resilience with the courage to help others—because there isn't a shortage of sheroes, only a shortage of their stories.
As part of the third year of its #StrengthHasNoGender campaign, Brawny will support the initiative with original content and a partnership with the nonprofit organization, Girls Inc. Brawny will also commemorate the campaign by releasing limited-edition product featuring a replacement of the Brawny Man with three different women on Brawny packages at retailers nationwide during Women's History Month.
Throughout March, Brawny will curate shero stories shared on social media using the hashtag #StrengthHasNoGender in celebration of females who inspire, who demonstrate courage and selflessness, and who have broken barriers and shattered stereotypes. The brand is also asking people to tag friends to do the same. Additionally, with the help of more than a dozen female comic artists and animators, shero stories will be brought to life through illustrations on Brawny digital channels.
Reinforcing the sheroic theme of this year's campaign, the Brawny brand has created a series of short, original films featuring the stories of three inspiring sheroes, available at Brawny.com/StrengthHasNoGender.

The three women featured in the films include:
  • Vanessa Casillas – a bricklayer, a Chicago Women in the Trades (CWIT) graduate in the top of her class and a CWIT Board of Directors member who overcame harassment and sexism in a male-dominated field
  • Sarah Herron – Business owner that empowers girls with physical differences to build confidence and self-acceptance through outdoor adventure sports. She was also the first contestant from ABC's The Bachelor with a physical disability.
  • Rachael Wilson – a Marine Corps veteran discharged after a knee injury, with a background in equine assisted therapy, who helps her fellow veterans heal from trauma and overcome internal struggles post-service
"The goal of the Brawny #StrengthHasNoGender campaign is to promote female empowerment in ways that will surprise, inspire, and move you," said Nicole Cook, Brand Building Leader at Georgia-Pacific. "There are countless numbers of shero stories that need to be told, and we want to provide the platforms to recognize these women who deserve the spotlight."
The Brawny brand continues to partner with Girls Inc. and will contribute $100,000 in support of its many different programs which inspire young girls to carry out the organization's mission of being strong, smart, and bold.
"We are proud to work with Girls Inc. again this year to provide support for their programs and extend the reach of the organization's positive impact on young girls' potential," added Cook.
The #StrengthHasNoGender initiative is an extension of the Brawny Stay Giant campaign, which encourages and honors Americans who face adversity with strength and resilience. 

SOURCE: Georgia-Pacific

The Videos:







The Economist: Autonomous Vehicles Will Change The World The Future Will Be About Selling Rides, Not Cars

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Autonomous vehicle
AV success depends on whether policymakers can learn the lessons of the horseless carriage and apply them to the driverless car
Autonomous vehicles are expected to develop and spread quickly in the coming years. Some are already on the road. This report considers the implications of fully self-driving cars for personal mobility, car ownership and the future of transport, on the assumption that the remaining technological hurdles will be overcome. It also looks more broadly at the wider economic, social and cultural effects of AVs.
The author of "Reinventing wheels," a special report published in today's edition of The Economist, is Tom Standage, the newspaper's deputy editor and head of digital strategy. He notes that AVs are not yet ready to operate entirely without human supervision, but have made rapid progress in recent years. Tech giants (notably Google's sister company Waymo), startups, carmakers and academic researchers are all working on AVs or developing related technology, including laser scanning, computer vision and machine learning. Waymo expects to launch a driverless "robotaxi" service this year, serving a limited part of the city of Phoenix, Arizona; GM, America's biggest carmaker, hopes to follow suit next year.
Because AVs sit at the intersection of the technology and automotive industries, a furious battle is under way to dominate this emerging industry. The result has been a flurry of deals and alliances between carmakers, software and hardware companies and ride-hailing firms. The report predicts that at least initially, and possibly even in the long term, a large proportion of self-driving cars will be taxis of some sort. The future will be about selling rides, not cars.

"Reinventing wheels" examines four main themes:
  • Technology: AV technology is making rapid progress but still needs further work for a wide rollout. A fully autonomous car needs to master three tasks: perceiving its environment, predicting the actions of those around it and responding accordingly. The first two of these tasks pose the greatest technical challenges.
  • Impact on industry: carmakers, tech companies and ride-hailing firms are all competing and often co-operating in this new field. AVs could undermine the case for car ownership, but there is a big opportunity for carmakers to reinvent themselves as mobility providers, selling miles rather than metal boxes.
  • Urban planning: AVs present an opportunity to rethink cities. They could reduce traffic and reduce transport costs. But whether they increase urban density or encourage sprawl will depend on planners' and policymakers' choices.
  • Society: AVs could greatly reduce crashes, emissions and congestion, but could also have unintended consequences. By recording riders' every move, they raise privacy concerns. And uneven provision could cause new forms of segregation.
A century ago the advent of the car brought more personal autonomy, freedom of choice and mobility, but at the cost of pollution, congestion and road deaths. Autonomous vehicles will prove similarly revolutionary. AVs offer policymakers an extraordinarily flexible tool with which to shape urban and transport environments—but that also means that they offer authoritarian governments a powerful means of social control. Whether they are a success will depend on whether policymakers can learn the lessons of the horseless carriage and apply them to the driverless car.

SOURCE: The Economist

26 February 2018

Investigating The Unsolved Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G. in True Crimes TV Series

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Actor Josh Duhamel stars in "Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G."
Actor Josh Duhamel stars in "Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G." premiering on Feb. 27, 2018 at 10 p.m. (EST) on the USA Network. (CNW Group/Core Magazines
Who shot Biggie and Tupac? 

This question has been asked again and again over the years since the world lost two of its most legendary yet controversial musicians. Despite many conspiracy theories and high-profile investigations into their deaths their murders remain unsolved after decades. Will we finally get some answers?
Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G. is a scripted, true-crime series which chronicles the investigation of real-life detectives Greg Kading (played by Josh Duhamel) and Russell Poole (Jimmi Simpson) into the murders of two of the rap industry's most legendary players. 

The role of Tupac Shakur is played by newcomer Marcc Rose and The Notorious B.I.G. (Christopher Wallace, a.k.a. Biggie Smalls) by Wavyy Jonez.
The 10-episode TV series explores the complicated friendship between Biggie and Tupac in the 1990s, the era that the East Coast v. West Coast rivalry in the rap music industry was said to be at its greatest divide. The series delves into the culture that defined the two artists, was defined by them, and was forever changed in the wake of their untimely deaths.
Emmy-award winning producer Anthony Hemingway (The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story, Red Tails, Underground) is the director and executive producer of the Unsolved series about Tupac and Biggie with Mark Taylor through their Hemingway | Taylor production company. Kyle Long (Suits) wrote the pilot and is an executive producer on the show. Former LAPD detective Kading, from the 2006 case and author of the book Murder Rap: The Untold Story of Biggie Smalls & Tupac Shakur Murder Investigations also serves as co-executive producer on this limited series from Universal Cable Productions. Lyah Beth LeFlore is a co-producer and music supervisor.
There have been many investigations over the years, to figure out what happened in those two cases and as to how and if they're connected. Another question that people always seem to ask is, How can a case this famous, with personalities so prominent still be unsolved? Hopefully this series will give us some clear answers.
⏩ Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G. - part one of 10 starts on Feb. 27, 2018 at 10 p.m. (EST) on the USA Network

The Trailer:

The actors who play Biggie, Tupac and the detectives who try to solve their murders:
Marcc Rose and  Wavyy Jonez as Tupac Shakur and The Notorious  B.I.G.  in  the   TV crime-drama series "Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G.,"
"Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G." premiers Feb. 27, 2018 at 10 p.m. (EST) on the USA Network (CNW Group/Core Magazines)
⏩ Marcc Rose will star in his second role in Unsolved. His other role was also as Shakur, in Straight Outta Compton, his debut acting role. I suppose they chose him for the part not only for his acting ability but also because of the uncanny resemblance to Shakur. It will certainly add to Rose's believability in the role.
Here is something about him you may not know. Before Rose got into the industry he was in the fashion business as creator and designer of the urban clothing line called Controversial Treatment.
⏩ Wavyy Jonez is the mirror image of Wallace (Biggie), a Brooklyn honour student who became a small-time drug dealer before becoming known as the face of East Coast rap. He was shot and killed in Los Angeles six months after Shakur.
This is Jonez's very first acting role. He was discovered among thousands of hopefuls who auditioned in a nationwide open casting call for the role of Notorious B.I.G. in Unsolved. His video audition captured the attention of casting directors and the show's director, Anthony Hemingway. Jonez is a rapper with a metaphorical style reminiscent of New York artists of the 1990s. His first mixtape was called R.E.D. D.O.P.E. (Real Everyday Drama Doing Over People's Expectation).
⏩ Josh Duhamel plays Det. Greg Kading, who headed a multi-agency task-force to find out who was responsible for Wallace's murder.
Duhamel has had numerous roles in film and television, appearing in Transformers: Dark of the MoonLasse Hallstrom's Safe HavenGeorge C. Wolfe's You're Not You and Garry Marshall's New Year's Eve opposite Hilary Swank and Emmy Rossum; as well as Life as We Know It with Katherine Heigl, When in RomeLost in the SunBravetown, and The Romantics. Known for playing Danny McCoy on the NBC crime drama Las Vegashe recently appeared in 11.22.63, Misconduct, and Spaceman. Duhamel is a three-time Emmy-nominated actor for his role on the soap opera All My Children.
⏩ Officer Daryn Dupree was a key member of Kading's task force and someone who had extensive knowledge of both Los Angeles gangs and the rap industry. Dupree is played by Harlem-native Bokeem Woodbine (RayLifeDevilThe Host, and Riddick).
Woodbine's first role was a lead in Forrest Whitaker's directorial debut, Strapped. Since then he has appeared in films of all genres. He recently appeared in Underground, directed by Hemingway, and in Spider-Man: Homecoming. His credits on television include Saving Grace and The Billionaire Boys Club. Most recently, he starred in the Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning series Fargo, in which he was nominated for an Emmy for his role as Mike Milligan.
⏩ Russell Poole investigated Notorious B.I.G.'s murder in 1997. He became convinced that the LAPD was covering up something. His findings eventually led Biggie's mother Voletta Wallace to file a massive lawsuit against the city. She used the $400 million she received from the claim to help open a second investigation into her son's death.
Poole is played by Jimmi Simpson (Westworld, House of Cards), a SAG Award-nominated actor. Simpson (Herbie: Fully LoadedWhite House Down) who made his feature film debut in the teen comedy Loser, directed by Amy Heckerling, has acted in Under the Silver Lake and an upcoming Errol Morris miniseries. 

He has also appeared in multiple series such as Hap and LeonardThe NewsroomIt's Always Sunny in PhiladelphiaUSA Network's Psych and NBC's This Is Us.
⏩ These actors have joined the cast; Jamie McShane (Bloodline) as Det. Fred MillerBrent Sexton (The Killing) as Det. Brian TyndallLuke James (Black Nativity) as Sean "Puffy" Combs, Aisha Hinds(Underground) as Biggie's mother Voletta Wallace, and Letoya Luckett (Rosewood) as Suge Knight'sestranged wife Sharitha Golden.

by Cherryl Bird – Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Twitter @ladycbird | Instagram @cherrylbird

24 February 2018

'Best F(r)iends' Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero Reunite On Screen This Spring for the First Time Since 'The Room'

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"Best F(r)iends" - starring cult-movie heroes Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero ("The Room")
“When we unveiled the ‘Best F(r)iends’ trailer at our cinema screenings of ‘Tommy Wiseau’s The Room’ in January, fan response was overwhelming,” said Fathom Events VP of Programming 
"Best F(r)iends," starring cult-movie heroes Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero ("The Room"), debuts in movie theaters nationwide this spring. The new Wiseau-Sestero dark comedy thriller is written by Sestero, the New York Times best-selling author of "The Disaster Artist," which was adapted into an Oscar nominated Hollywood film. 

Inspired by a road trip made by Sestero and Wiseau after the production of "The Room" in April 2003, "Best F(r)iends" will be released in two volumes, for two nights each. "Best F(r)iends" comes to cinemas nationwide on Friday, March 30 and Monday, April 2, with "Best F(r)iends: Volume Two" following on Friday, June 1 and Monday, June 4, all at 8:00 p.m. local time. 

In addition to viewing the feature content, attendees will also see exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and outtakes.
"Best F(r)iends" - starring cult-movie heroes Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero ("The Room")
Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero (via FathomEvents.com)
⏩ Tickets for "Best F(r)iends" can be purchased online by visiting FathomEvents.com or at participating theater box offices. Fans throughout the U.S. will be able to enjoy the event in nearly 600 select movie theaters. 

A complete list of theater locations is available on the Fathom Events website (theaters and participants are subject to change).
"Best F(r)iends" - starring cult-movie heroes Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero ("The Room")
Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero (via FathomEvents.com)
When a drifter (Sestero) is taken in by a peculiar mortician (Wiseau), the two hatch an underground enterprise off the back of the mortician's old habits. But greed, hatred and jealousy soon come in turn, and their efforts unravel, causing the drifter to run off with the spoils and leaving the mortician adrift. An expedition across the Southwest introduces wild and crazy characters through a series of twisted and dark foibles as both men learn a valuable lesson about friendship and loyalty.
"When we unveiled the 'Best F(r)iends' trailer at our cinema screenings of 'Tommy Wiseau's The Room' in January, fan response was overwhelming," said Fathom Events VP of Programming Kymberli Frueh. "This spring, we are excited to bring this reunion of friends to fans of Wiseau and 'The Room' everywhere."
"Best F(r)iends" - starring cult-movie heroes Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero ("The Room")
Tommy Wiseau and Greg Sestero (via FathomEvents.com)
"Best F(r)iends" also stars Paul Scheer ("the League," "Human Giant," "Veep") and features a musical score created by Daniel Platzman of Imagine Dragons.

SOURCE: Fathom Events
The Trailer:

23 February 2018

"It's the Guns," Says Mental Health Partnerships

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Donald Trump got at least $21 million from the gun lobby.
Donald Trump got at least $21 million from the gun lobby. (via Metro
"Mental Health Partnerships (MHP), a multi-faceted mental health advocacy and service agency, joins with all Americans in mourning the 17 lives lost at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida—and we demand that our legislators take immediate action to prevent such tragedies," says MHP President and CEO Michael Brody.
"We are talking about gun safety. After a mass shooting in Australia in 1996, the country enacted strict gun laws—and it has not had a mass shooting since. 'In the developed world, these levels of gun violence are a uniquely American problem.'

Even within the U.S., the research is clear: According to an American Public Health Association study, 'states with higher rates of gun ownership had disproportionately large numbers of deaths from firearm-related homicides.' As economist Richard Florida wrote, 'fatal gun violence is less likely to occur in richer states with more post-industrial knowledge economies, higher levels of college graduates, and tighter gun laws. Factors like drug use, stress levels, and mental illness are much less significant than might be assumed (emphasis added).'

Many of us at Mental Health Partnerships have been diagnosed with serious mental health conditions, and we are concerned about the linking of such conditions with a propensity for violence, because it increases prejudice and discrimination. As a writer on the Behavioral Scientist website noted in October: 'Perpetuating the myth that mental illness is the cause of mass shootings only serves to stigmatize the mentally ill even further. In addition, it distracts from the more difficult conversation that must be had over gun-control in America.'

Unfortunately, many of our legislators are in thrall to the National Rifle Association. Republicans received nearly $6 million in the 2016 election cycle; Democrats received $106,000. (How much does your legislator receive? Here's the list. And President Trump? He got at least $21 million from the gun lobby.) But who are they representing? Ninety percent of Americans support background checks for all gun sales.

As to the Second Amendment (which, in fact, covers militias, not personal gun ownership), common sense begs the question 'Guns have changed. Shouldn't our gun laws?'"



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