Thursday, October 3, 2024
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Marvel Shares Avengers Featurette

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Good news for fans, Marvel shares Avergers Feature early! Avengers: Infinity War isn’t out in theaters until May 4, 2018, but Marvel has just released a behind-the-scenes featurette showing the its stars, directors, and producers discussing the film on-set in Atlanta. There’s a lot of talk about how the Avengers series has worked to intertwine so many different storylines and characters leading to a major battle in Infinity War.

The real surprise, for us at least, was the revelation that Chris Pratt’s Star-Lord and the rest of the Guardians of the Galaxy crew is joining the franchise, as is Spider-Man. Watch Pratt, Robert Downey Jr., Tom Holland (who plays the new Spider-Man), and directors Anthony and Joe Russo talk about the flick below, then check out a Facebook Live from Downey Jr.

The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is an American media franchise and shared universe centered on a series of superhero films produced by Marvel Studios. The films are based on characters that appear in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The franchise also includes television series, short films, digital series, and literature. The shared universe, much like the original Marvel Universe in comic books, was established by crossing over common plot elements, settings, cast, and characters.

WATCH: Pot Sasquatch Photo Bombs Local Newscast During Snowstorm

During Wednesday’s snowstorm along the East Coast, 22 News’s Jennifer Pagliei was filming an update from Springfield, Mass. when POT SASQUATCH!

At first, it appears to be some sort of green monster, maybe a big lizard or something similar. But when it gets closer you can see it for what it really is: a Sasquatch made of weed leaves.

“You can see that the visibility has been reduced,” Pagliei says as she turns to let the camera pan around the snow-filled streets. “I’ve seen countless spinoffs…,” she tries to add as she finally sees the cannabis-adorned creature stumbling her her way. To her credit she continues mostly unfazed, only letting a slight laugh slip. “…And uh, multiple people have gotten stuck here.”

We salute Pagliei for her professionalism, and we salute the cannabis-covered Sasquatch for braving the cold to bring us all so much joy. Watch the full video below.

5 Stories Of Love And Heartbreak With A Side Of Marijuana

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Love is in the air—or not—this time of year. It’s a time to celebrate your relationships, cut old ties, or just treat yourself right—and for many of us, that involves marijuana.

Reddit’s /r/trees community knows best that sharing a story of your love or loss can bring people together. Check out a few of the greatest dating hits. No matter your relationship status, there’s something here for everyone.

For An Example Of How Not To Date:

This guy hid his habit for six years before breaking up with his anti-weed girlfriend. This story begins bleak, but ends with a silver lining:

“It was the only lie I ever told her. She had no idea I smoked or consumed THC in any way. She hated it. So misled, so judgemental[sic] of it. It really sucked honestly. I had to be so careful to hid my use. Because of this, I was never able to buy my own vape, which is my fave way of getting high. Today I finally ordered my own vape, and I will finally be able to get high when I want, in my own god damn home like a fucking adult. Can’t wait for it to come in to help me with the whole moving on with my life process.”

For Hope That It Gets Better:

Without much backstory, we go on a trip with this redditor who writes, “Haven’t smoked for two years but finally broke up with my anti-weed girlfriend and moved to Spain. €20 pick up from some gypsy stoner I met.”

Paging Seth Rogan and James Franco, your next buddy comedy is right here.

For Supportive Advice:

“This sesh goes out to all my fellow heartbroken ents,” this star-crossed lover writes. Commenters crowd in for advice and consolation, from “sesh on man” to recommendations for hitting the gym.

For The Happy Dog Parents:

This father-to-be was writing a love letter to his wife while stoned, when his dogs decided to get in on the sappy action:

“So, then my dogs pile up on the couch with me, well except for poor Roscoe, he’s too big, but he still puts his paws on the seat to stand at my eye level. So in this weird sappy mood I’m in, I put my hands on his ears and held his big head. His cold wet nose bumped mine and looked into my eyes with so much love I could feel it deeply. Normally I take this as ‘I love you’ and reply, I love you too buddy. But I really felt the intensity of his emotion being transferred inside of me, like taking a sip of a fragrant red wine and that warm feeling as the tail end of it runs down your throat. ‘I know your love.’ I said. I don’t recall ever hearing those words stitched together so beautifully. I turned to my other two dogs laying beside me and as they looked into my eyes I said ‘I know your love’ to each of them as my eyes began to water. ‘I know her love’ and a tear rolled down my cheek. And in two months I will be a father… I can’t wait to know her love.”

For Relationship Goals:

The girlfriend of the year award goes to this redditor who introduced her boyfriend to weed for the first time in a wake and bake session. Read the whole story: It involves naming his penis several times, eating way too many Nutella covered hot dog buns, and questionable shaving. Love is real.

 

Why This Year’s Hottest Fitness Accessory Is A Friend

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There are two types of people in this world. Those who workout alone, and those who need a buddy to make it to the gym. While you may think a solo gym session is more productive than the latter, there is evidence to the contrary. It’s like that quote, “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” You might have a quicker workout when you’re going it alone, but you also could accomplish more when you take on a gym buddy.


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That’s right folks. The new fitness accessory of the year is in fact a friend. Not only can exercise with a partner give you a more dynamic workout, it also has social and mental health benefits to back it up. Let’s start with the notion of simply getting yourself to the gym. It’s easy to bail on a workout when the only person you have to answer to is yourself. In an article on SHAPE, exercise partner expert Thomas Plante, PhD, professor of psychology at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California says, “If you know a friend is waiting for you at the gym or won’t pound the pavement without you, it’s tough to bail.”

Besides getting you to actually show up, a buddy might make the actual workout more enjoyable. A study of 117 adults by the University of Southern California found that those who worked out with a specific partner said they enjoyed the exercise more than those who chose to go solo. Not only can it make you feel like you’re not even working out, but the exercises you can accomplish are more versatile.


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With a bud by your side, you can get into training for two and attempt some classic partner moves like crunches with a medicine ball, partner pushups and leg tosses. Having a trusted friend at the gym can also mean having a spotter for tougher moves. With a partner by your side, adding that extra weight at the bench press becomes that much more attainable.

If you still think you can do it better solo, perhaps the idea of competition could entice you to take someone along. Finding a partner who you think might be a little fitter, faster or stronger than you are can give you that extra push that you needed. There is nothing like a little friendly competition to challenge yourself in ways that you simply can’t on your own.

If there’s no one in your circle that’s quite up to your speed, try the Bvddy app.This platform for sports aficionados connects you to people in your area who have similar athletic inclinations. If all else fails, try it out with the trainer at your local gym!


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Watch Ricky Gervais Eat Insanely Spicy Hot Wings

The Office creator and UK comedy legend Ricky Gervais stopped by First We Feast’s Hot Ones to eat absurdly hot hot wings (vegan this time) and talk about his new project, Netflix’s David Brent: Life on the Road. “This is like a cross between Charlie Rose and fucking Jackass,” Gervais says at the video’s start.

Gervais handles the spice pretty well at first, managing to talk about life on the road and his most iconic character without showing signs of obvious pain. But about 14 minutes in, he has a vegan wing that does him in. “That’s really hot, that’s really hot man,” he says. “I can’t do the last two sauches….[screams while rubbing his tongue with a napkin]…that’s really hot.”

Luckily, the interview goes on and Gervais weighs in on his favorite cheeses (“The Stilton is the greatest of all the cheeses I think”) and talks about the times he met Jay Z.

Later he accuses host Sean Evans of being addicted to hot wings. “You’re basically a heroin addict,” he says. “That’s why you’re dressed like you’re in Trainspotting.”

Watch the full video below.


Peanut Butter On Eggs? The Peculiar Eating Habits of 7 Celebrities

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Peanut butter. It was the cause of a major social media freakout earlier this week when actor Scott Foley (known mainly for his roles in Scandal, and being Jennifer Garner’s ex) Instagrammed a video of himself putting Skippy peanut butter on his scrambled eggs.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BQI0GH2FKqU

Hey, it was creamy! Chunky would’ve been downright weird.

But that’s a pretty mild food quirk compared to most celebrities. Here are 6 that come to mind as having known food issues.

Channing Tatum

https://www.instagram.com/p/-r2kQBgCKu/

In a Reddit AMA last year, he was asked a simple question that had a curiously weird answer.

Chrissy Teigan

https://www.instagram.com/p/BONSZVdglPn/?taken-by=chrissyteigen

The actress/model/cookbook author told Delish that in addition to eating zero carbs in the morning, “I lick off the nacho cheese seasoning and put the chips back in the bag. You still get all the flavor, not all the carbs!”

What’s wrong with carbs???

Nic Cage

https://www.instagram.com/p/BQGGLnigl0a/

The actor is very picky about his food. And by picky, I mean effed up. “I actually choose the way I eat according to the way animals have sex,” he told The Sun back in 2010. “I think fish are very dignified with sex.  So are birds.” But the guy who ate a cockroach in Vampire’s Kiss won’t eat pork, because pigs are sloppy sex animals. “So I don’t eat pig meat or things like that. I eat fish and fowl.”

Mariah Carey

https://www.instagram.com/p/BQHA8pUjwXO/

To shed her baby weight, she told Star Magazine that three days a week, she eats purple foods like plums, grapes and eggplants.

The healthy, but not very satiating sounding diet apparently helped her lose 90 pounds.

Hugh Hefner

https://www.instagram.com/p/BIErnRnDHhs/

The Playboy mogul prefers to eat the food at his famous mansion, but when he dares to dine out, he reportedly brings his own food to restaurants. Nothing to see here.

Mark Zuckerberg

https://www.instagram.com/p/BEMtMcfQeel/

In 2011, the Facebook founder ate only meat he killed with his own two hands. No word if he’s still doing this. Every year, the guy challenges himself to a “year of” something, whether it’s learning Mandarin or wearing a tie everyday for 12 months. Ties > slitting animal throats, yes?

Op Ed: Why Asset Forfeiture Laws Need To Change Now

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During a brief meeting with sheriffs where President Trump was apparently introduced to the complex subject of civil asset forfeiture, he offered to destroy the career of the Texas State Senator seeking to reform the system. Whether this was an actual threat or a poor and misguided attempt at humor, its aim was unmistakably to chill reform efforts. It appeared Trump did not know anything about civil asset forfeiture prior to the meeting, and after he got a one-sided lesson from the law enforcement community, he predictably gave it his full-throated endorsement.

We at the Drug Policy Alliance, an organization that has spent decades critiquing this practice and crafting common sense reforms, would encourage the President to spend some more time learning about the civil asset forfeiture system and the compelling reasons why that system needs reform.  He would quickly learn that this is one of the diminishingly few policy areas where both sides of the political aisle can find common ground.  Instead, he appears to have doubled down and even promised to fight Congress on the issue.

The practice of civil asset forfeiture allows law enforcement agencies to seize property – anything from cash in a wallet to a car or a home – from a person suspected of violating the law without actually charging or convicting the person of a crime. It is a perversion of the most basic principle criminal justice, where people are presumed guilty and face significant financial and legal hurdles to prove the “innocence” of their own property.

In 2014, for the first time ever, law enforcement officers took more property from Americans – $4.5 billion – than burglars did. Law enforcement agencies have grown dependent on this easy, no-strings-attached source of revenue, especially regional “anti-narcotics” task forces, SWAT teams, and other paramilitary groups. In many cases, agencies get to keep forfeiture proceeds for their own budgets and spend them as they see fit.  Factoring profit into public safety decisions creates an atmosphere ripe for abuse within law enforcement agencies.

Defenders of the current system often claim that the status quo is necessary to combat major cartels and criminal organizations, as the Texas Sheriff did.  However, this claim is belied by the fact that most forfeitures are for relatively small sums of cash.  In fact, a 2014 Drug Policy Alliance report found that the average value of state seizures in California was $5,145 in 2013 and another report by the Institute for Justice found that the median value of property forfeited in 2012 in 10 states ranged from $451 (in Minnesota) to $2,048 (in Utah).

These values do not come anywhere close to the level of “kingpin.” Most often the police simply shake down people they find suspicious, most of whom do not have the resources or the will to fight back, especially when the potential legal fees are greater than the money seized. As with everything else that is wrong with the criminal justice system, civil asset forfeiture disproportionately affects those with low income and people of color.

Civil asset forfeiture expanded rapidly in the 1980s as a way to incentivize local law enforcement agents to become foot soldiers in the federal government’s escalating war on drugs. Prior to the 1980s, civil forfeiture was rarely used. That all changed when Congress amended the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act in 1984 and allowed federal law enforcement to retain the proceeds from forfeitures and share them with state and local agencies.

The result is that federal forfeiture revenues have grown from $97million in 1986 to close to $4.5 billion in 2014.  These forfeiture proceeds are instrumental in sustaining the failed drug war – and the need for reform has never been more urgent.

Despite statements from President Trump’s nominee for Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, and many in law enforcement who oppose efforts to fix the system, there is strong momentum for reform.

Legislative campaigns to fix forfeiture laws have been successful in over a dozen states from California to Florida and many in between. Policymakers of all political stripes are calling out this injustice, and editorials from national and state-level news outlets across the country support reforming the system.  The Left-Right coalition pushing for reforms continues to grow and includes advocates for civil rights, property rights, criminal justice and drug policy reform.

Snap judgments and threats of political destruction can never become acceptable substitutes for serious policy debate. Civil asset forfeiture and its perverse incentives corrode the public’s trust in the very institutions that we rely on for our safety. We must be ever vigilant against the temptation to pursue profit in the guise of acting for the public good.

Anyone who seeks to preserve the integrity of law enforcement institutions through civil asset forfeiture reform should be commended, not threatened, or used as a bad punch-line.

Theshia Naidoo is the Legal Director of Criminal Justice for the Drug Policy Alliance’s Office of Legal Affairs.

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6 Subscription Boxes That We Love More Than Anything

Is there a better feeling than the one you get when a package you’ve been waiting for gets delivered to your front door? Why would you ever go shopping and wait in line if you can have all your favorite stuff delivered straight to you? This question has been raised a lot lately, considering that the internet gives you access to everything, even stuff you didn’t know existed, and delivers them promptly to your door.

Subscription boxes are the answer to internet shopping aficionados, gifting you with a box filled with stuff that caters exactly to your interests. There are all types of subscription boxes out there, so we leave you with 6 that peaked our attention and that will probably peak yours.

AuBox


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If you enjoy partaking with the herb, AuBox is the subscription box you’ve been waiting for, offering marijuana related products that can come in the shape of snacks or even pet accessories. This newly assembled company will provide you with different types of luxury items that include Marijuana in different forms, exploring all the amazing properties that the herb offers.

The items in the boxes vary each month, even if you keep reordering a box with the same theme. AuBox has different boxes that range from edibles (cookies, popcorn, chocolates), to intimates (lotions, bath bombs, candles), to so much more. The product is currently only available in California, which we’re sure we’ll change soon. 

Umba

Umba provides you with a monthly subscription box of handcrafted items, shining a spotlight on talented international and american artists that have found trouble distributing their work.

Each monthly box includes two to three handmade objects, that could range from jewelry to bath products, including a story about the artist behind the product. If you’re not ready to commit to a month to month subscription, you can buy their grab bags which are a one time purchase.

Craft Coffee


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Each box contains three brews of coffee, which are chosen by the experts behind Craft Coffee according to their properties and general deliciousness.

When you’re creating your profile on the website, you’ll have the option of selecting the type of coffee you prefer, so you’ll receive no unpleasant surprises when your Craft Coffee box arrives at your doorstep. Each box comes with brewing tips and tasting notes, so you have the best experience coffee can offer.

BarkBox

As its name suggests, this box includes dog stuff for you and your pet. By picking your dog’s size on the website, you can treat him to all types of clothing items, snacks and toys that will make all the other members of the dog park jealous.

Each month, BarkBox comes up with a new theme that will be included in their boxes, which will always have 2 toys, 2 bags of all natural treats and a chew. The proceeds from your purchase go to animal shelters and clinics. What’s not to love?

Unbound

Bows just make everything better. ESPECIALLY DILDOS.

A photo posted by Unbound (@unboundbox) on

This subscription box is delivered every 3 months, with different items, all looking to provide the very best sexual experience for women and couples. Unbound is discreet and tries to help you and your partner out when you’re looking for sexual toys on the internet or in real life, guiding you through this intimate and sometimes overwhelming field.

When there’s so much variety of stuff, with varying degrees of quality, Unbound becomes a bridge, trying to provide items of quality that are a good fit for you. The company also donates their proceeds to nonprofit organizations that support female sexual health and wellness. What are you waiting for? It’s for a good cause.

Loot Crate

This subscription box is a nerd’s wet dream, including all types of superhero/alien/sci-fi/gaming related stuff. Loot Crate offers different types of boxes that tend to your specific nerdy needs, ranging from gaming themed items to nerdy clothing artifacts. Each month has a new theme, where you can sign up for a subscription that lasts several months, or do a one time purchase. Choose wisely.


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Panty Party: The Video Game Where You Are The Underwear

We live in an era where video games are bigger and better than ever, gathering devoted followers and creating valuable and complex content that make people respect them and consider them an art form. Panty Party is not one of these games. In it, you embody a living and breathing underwear that tries to save the world by fighting a powerful force that’s turning people into, well, underwear. In true RPG fashion, you’ll get to choose which underwear you’ll play as and the weapon of your choice, swords or guns.

Each pair of underwear comes with a different set of skills and abilities that you’ll have to use to your advantage to succeed in the game. The mechanics of Panty Party are very similar to other fighting games, where the character you choose alters the way in which you play. The big difference is the fact that you’ll be playing as underwear. Say underwear one more time.

You can download the game on Steam. Which panty will you choose?

Op-Ed: Marijuana Legalization Must Include Justice Reform

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Across our country, we routinely take a pledge that ends in “with liberty and justice for all.”

Yet that fundamental promise has been broken in six of the eight states that have legalized recreational marijuana use, as tens of thousands of people remain in state prison for nonviolent marijuana crimes.

The majority of America is now cannabis friendly; nearly 60 percent of our nation’s population resides in states with some form of legalized marijuana. Twenty-nine states plus Washington, D.C. have legalized medical marijuana and eight of those states have also legalized marijuana for recreational use: Alaska, California, Colorado, Nevada, Maine, Massachusetts, Oregon, Washington and Washington DC.

Related Story: More Busted For Marijuana Than All Violent Crimes Combined

Now, it’s the responsibility of these eight state governments, concerned citizens and the leaders of the marijuana industry to also demand justice reform for those who have been the past victims of the war on marijuana, those that will not enjoy the privileges and freedoms that come with this new legislation.

To date, only Oregon and California have taken the lead in addressing marijuana criminal justice reform.

According to a Drug Policy Alliance report, in 2015, more than 6,000 Californians were in state prison or jail for the non-violent offenses of growing or distributing marijuana. The day after Proposition 64 passed in California, these inmates were allowed to apply for early release or parole and have their records expunged. It’s only reasonable that the six other recreational states pass similar legislation for  those prisoners who remain incarcerated for acts that are now legal in their own state.

In addition, people who were previously convicted of marijuana offenses and have since been released from prison or jail should also have their records expunged. There is a very real impact on those who have been arrested on marijuana crimes, even if they are no longer incarcerated.

They have been saddled with a criminal conviction that can make it difficult or impossible to vote, obtain a student loan, get a job, maintain a professional license, secure housing, or even adopt a child.

It is cruelly ironic that there now are farms in America legally growing thousands and thousands of plants worth tens of millions of dollars, while someone who has served their time for that same action is sitting at home with a felony conviction still on their record.

And while it is legal in recreational states to possess and smoke marijuana, federal laws outlawing its use make it a firing offense for government workers remain in place.

There is another serious social impact of the government’s war on marijuana. According to the ACLU, marijuana arrests now account for over half of all drug arrests in the United States and the arrest data revealed one consistent trend: significant racial bias.

The prison population in the United States is 2.4 million and Blacks and Hispanics make up two-thirds of that total, while Blacks only consist of 12 percent of the general population and Hispanics around 17 percent.

Despite roughly equal usage rates, blacks are four times more likely than whites to be arrested for marijuana and Hispanics more than three times. Going strictly by the numbers, it’s clear that Black and Brown Lives Matter less when it comes to marijuana enforcement and incarceration.

As part of this discussion, there is also a fiscal argument to free non-violent marijuana prisoners. I work in the financial sector of the cannabis industry, providing sales software and financial technology that enables producers to transact safely, securely and in regulatory compliance.

Marijuana is now a mainstream business in eight states and our company was recently selected by Microsoft to participate in its newly created Health and Human Services Pod for Managed Service Providers. That means I’m a by the rules and numbers guy.

States spend more than $3.6 billion dollars enforcing marijuana laws every year. In 2015, law enforcement agencies made 574,641 arrests for small quantities of the drug intended for personal use, 13.6 percent more than the 505,681 arrests made for all violent crimes, including murder, rape and serious assaults. The costs of housing prisoners in states that have legalized recreational marijuana are staggering; ranging from $30,000 to $71,000 per inmate per year.

While these same state governments are salivating over the tax revenues from marijuana sales (Colorado alone collected $135 million in taxes in 2015), lessening the burden on our police, courts and prison systems will also save them millions of dollars.

While humanitarianism is at the heart of this movement for criminal justice reform, money talks, too.

The fact is that medical cannabis legislation was passed because of a social movement that demanded conscience and compassion. Yes, there is concern about whether the Trump Administration will uphold states’ rights in regard to legalizing and decriminalizing marijuana, especially with the confirmation of Senator Jeff Sessions as Attorney General.

While we hope that the President will recognize that our Constitution empowered states to deal what they thought was the best interest of their citizens, we must recognize that right now, changing federal marijuana law is impractical. That’s a long-term campaign we will wage, but in the meantime, let’s use our political capital and financial resources to make a more immediate impact. We must rely on the same moral compass that enabled medical cannabis to become law to push for fair-mindedness in states that have legalized recreational marijuana.

I’m proud to be a member of the cannabis industry, both as a businessman and an activist. When discussing criminal justice reform, it’s critical that we remember we’re talking about real people, not members of a cartel or organized crime. This is about a mother or father, son or daughter, grandmother or grandfather who went into the marijuana business at the wrong time.

These eight recreational marijuana states have now declared that it’s the right time. With their battles for legalization over, it’s time to release the nonviolent prisoners-of-war.

David Dinenberg is the founder and CEO of KIND Financial, which provides financial technical support for the cannabis industry. 

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