Whenever you see two artists working together unexpectedly—like Cardi B and Maroon 5 or Skrillex and A$AP Rocky—and the song becomes a hit, you should know it’s not an accident. Instead it’s science, according to a recently published study titled “The ‘Featuring Phenomenon In Music.”
Over the past two decades, songs that songs featuring another artist have risen exponentially on the Billboard Hot 100, the study found. Songs featuring other artists also have a greater likelihood of breaking into top 10 than songs by a standalone artist. What’s more—the starker the contrast between two artists collaborating, the higher chance their song has in breaking into the top of the charts.
According to the researchers, this stands in opposition of expectations, as “artists who deviate from existing genres are expected to be penalized for violating collective expectations and norms.” But collaboration inherently has a different approach. Instead by combining the “expertise of specialists in each genre”—as well as targeting those specialists’ musical audiences—artists “are able to produce more successful songs.
“I expected ‘featuring’ represented a route for chart success, and indeed it was, [but] I was surprised by how fast such phenomenon spread outside the hip-hop genre where it originated,” the study’s lead author Andrea Ordanini told Rolling Stone.
Ordanini, who is also a marketing professor at Bocconi University in Milan, Italy, plans to continue her research with the study’s co-author Joseph Nunes, a marketing professor at USC’s Marshall School of Business. They plan on determining what role authorship of songs has in chart success, and whether if combining different genres could lead to similar success in movies and TV.
“While we do not have evidence in other contexts outside of music, if our explanation is correct, we should be able to see more appreciation by fans of genre-blending collaborations in other cultural industries such as movies or entertainment,” Ordanini said.
Why the U.S. can refocus its regulatory approach to pharmaceuticals, adapted from the one used in Europe, to better connect the value prescription drugs provide and their price.
Spending on pharmaceuticals is on the rise worldwide. And it well should be. Today, we are able to cure some diseases like hepatitis C that were virtual death sentences just a few years ago. This progress required significant investments by governments and private companies alike. Unquestionably, the world is better off for it.
At the same time, the United States also pays significantly higher prices than the rest of the developed world when it comes to prescription drugs, due primarily to limited competition among drug companies.
These two problems are well-known to policymakers, consumers and scholars alike. The Trump administration’s recent proposal seeks to lower costs by restructuring drug discounts that occur between pharmaceutical companies, health insurers and entities called pharmacy benefit managers.
But in my view as a health policy scholar, the plan does little to address the underlying problems of prescription drugs in the U.S. I believe the U.S. can refocus its regulatory approach to pharmaceuticals, adapted from the one used in Europe, to better connect the value prescription drugs provide and their price.
And it is not like Americans are overly reliant on prescriptions drugs as compared to their European counterparts. Americans use fewer prescription drugs, and when they use them, they are more likely to use cheaper generic versions. Instead the discrepancy can be traced back to the issue plaguing the entirety of the U.S. health care system: prices.
Lacking even rudimentary price controls, U.S. consumers bore the full brunt of the expensive development work that goes into new drugs. These costs were further augmented by marketing expenditures and profit seeking by all entities within the pharmaceutical supply chain. Consumers in Europe, where there are government-controlled checks on prices, were not as exposed to those high costs.
Additionally, the overall complexity of the U.S. health care system and the lack of transparency in the drug supply chain system create conditions favorable to limited competition and price maximization.
Finally, the U.S. has undergone a series of coverage expansions, including the prominent creation of the Children’s Health Insurance Program, Medicare Part D, and the Affordable Care Act. For many of the newly covered, this meant access to prescription drugs for the first time and pent-up demand was released. However, it also encouraged pharmaceutical companies to take advantage of the newfound payers for their drugs.
Trump’s proposed fixes
The consequences of pricey pharmaceuticals are significant in terms of costs and diminished health. Close to 20 percent of adults report skipping medications because they are concerned about costs. Nonetheless, the U.S. may be spending close to $500 billion annually.
The Trump administration’s discounting approach, however, is not uncommon. The Veterans Health Administration’s has done so quite successfully, obtaining discounts in the range of 40 percent. Likewise, Medicaid programs are also using their purchasing power to obtain discounts. And calls for Medicare to negotiate discounts with pharmaceutical companies are common.
The way I see it, there are three major issues inherent in negotiating discounts for drugs.
For one, true negotiations would only take place if Medicare or any other entity was willing to walk away from certain drugs if no discounts could be obtained. In a country that heavily values choice, and where such activities would become a political football, this is highly unlikely.
Moreover, it would only work for drugs where viable alternatives are available. After all, most Americans would likely be hesitant to exclude a drug, even at high costs, when no alternative cure exists.
Yet even if some version of a discount program were to be implemented more widely, such a program does not change the underlying pricing or market dynamics. Crucially, relying on discounts does nothing to reduce list prices set by manufacturers. Pharmaceutical companies and all other entities in the supply chain remain free to set prices, bring products to the market, and take advantage of loopholes to maximize corporate profits.
Ultimately, pharmaceutical companies and all other entities involved in the pharmaceutical supply chain are unlikely to be willing to simply give up profits. Quite likely, steeper discounts for Medicaid and Medicare may lead to higher costs for employer-sponsored plans.
Focusing on effectiveness and consumer information
The question then emerges: What could be done to truly improve the twin issues of high costs and limited cost-effectiveness when comes to pharmaceuticals in the U.S. health care system?
While Americans are often hesitant to learn from other countries, looking to Europe when it comes to pharmaceuticals holds much promise. Countries like Britain and Germany have taken extensive steps to introduce assessments of cost-effectiveness into their health care systems, refusing to pay higher prices for new drugs that do not improve effectiveness of treatment over existing options.
Since reforming its system in the early 2010s, Germany has allowed manufacturers to freely set prices for a limited period when bringing new drugs to the market. It then uses the data available from that period for a nongovernmental and nonprofit research body to evaluate the benefit provided by the new drug, as compared to existing alternatives. This added benefit, or lack thereof, then serves as the foundation for price negotiations between drug manufacturers and health plans.
Lacking the corporatist nature of the Germany economy, the U.S. should resort to a bottom-up approach focused on investing in assessing and subsequent publicizing of cost-effectiveness data as well as cost-benefit analyses for all drugs. In order to minimize politicization, these analyses would be best handled by one or multiple independent research institutes.
Ultimately, knowing what drugs provide what value would equally benefit consumers, providers, and payers, and serve as a meaningful first step towards connecting the prices we pay for prescriptions to the value we derive from them.
Simon F. Haeder is an Assistant Professor at West Virginia University. This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Businesses of all kinds are hoping to start a Valentine’s Day viral campaign that eclipses all others. The El Paso Zoo is leading the pack, attracting masses with their slightly dark take on the holiday.
Although Valentine’s Day is meant to celebrate love and friendship, for a lot of people the date is a reminder of exes and bad memories. Targeting those with a broken heart, the El Paso Zoo is encouraging people to share the name of their ex in order to name a cockroach after them. As if that wasn’t grim enough, on February 14 people will be able to tune in to a Facebook Live where they’ll get to see Meerkats eat these roaches.
The Facebook post has been extremely successful, with more than a million likes and 2.6 million shares to this writing. Users have responded positively to the post, calling the El Paso Zoo the right amount of petty and requesting if they can also submit the names of politicians.
If you’ve got an annoying ex pestering your life, you still have time to add their name onto list. It might not do anything in the grand scheme of things but who cares. A meerkat will eat them.
Pitchbook recently released its 2018 results for cannabis related investments, and the data is impressive: 139 deals scooped up a whopping $881 million. Those numbers are up over the prior year by 26 percent (number of transactions) and 120 percent (total amount invested), reflecting larger average deal sizes. Leading the way, Privateer Holdings closed a $100 million Series C financing.
Clearly, the success of Canadian public offerings in the space is creating a “chimney” effect where a few big exits result in early-stage capital being pulled into the ecosystem.
For example, Green Organic Dutchman Holdings, Ltd. (TSX: TGOD), IPO’d in May of 2018, is currently trading at $1.0 billion market cap. Meanwhile, Privateer’s Tilray (NASDAQ: TLRY) went out for $153 million in July and currently enjoys a $6.0 billion market cap. Canopy Growth Corp (NYSE CGC) is valued at $17.0 billion.
The Pitchbook report also lists the top dozen cannabis-related venture investors, led by Altitude Investment Manage, Casa Verde Capital and Salveo Capital, each with six or more investments in 2018.
The addition of sophisticated, institutional capital to the cannabis marketplace is a welcome game-changer. The net result is likely to be increased scrutiny on the quality of management teams, the scalability and defensibility of business models and heightened attention to corporate governance. All of which should lead to a more stable and ultimately more profitable industry for stakeholders.
Now that Democrats have gained control of the U.S. House of Representatives, it seems they are committed to bringing the cannabis issue to the center stage. Their first line of business—a bill aimed at giving the marijuana industry access to banks. Although more than half the nation has legalized the leaf in some form or fashion, marijuana businesses have been mostly left to operate on a cash-only basis.
Not only has this presented safety issues—armed robberies where criminals are seeking large amounts of cash being among the biggest—but it has also made it difficult for these companies to pay their bills and set up payroll in a manner of which is appreciated by other members of traditional commerce.
But next week, a subcommittee of the House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing intended to fix the banking problem. House members will examine a piece of legislation, which would allow banks to do business with the cannabis trade without the risk of prosecution for money laundering.
Even though marijuana businesses might be legal in their neck of the woods, any money filtered through financial institutions is technically illegal since the federal government still considers the substances a Schedule I drug. And while no bank has been hassled as a result of these types of transactions, the risk is enough to prevent many of the larger firms from opening accounts connected to weed.
The new bill would provide protections for those banks operating inside the scope of state law.
“The legislation would provide credit unions and other financial institutions accepting deposits from, extending credit or providing payment services to an individual or business engaged in marijuana-related commerce in states where such activity is legal with appropriate legal protections, so long as they are compliant with all other applicable laws and regulations,” said Jim Nussle President of the Credit Union National Association.
Although giving pot companies access to banking solutions seems like a no-brainer, lawmakers have struggled in the past to get any kind of marijuana banking protections pushed through on Capitol Hill. The hang-up has been mostly the fault of Republican control. For whatever reason, the majority of these Elephant-eared politicians are not quite ready to give banks permission to do business with the cannabis industry. In fact, Republican control in the Senate could jam up this issue even more.
Even if the bill gets through the House, it would still need to make it through Senate gatekeeper Mitch McConnell before it stands a fighting chance at going the distance. It remains to be seen, however, whether the upper chamber will present problems for this particular issue. We’ll have to wait and see.
One thing is sure, the banking measure will be the bill to watch, as its success or failure will dictate the course of marijuana reform in Congress for 2019. If it passes, other measures could find an easier passage. But if lawmakers cannot come to terms on a simple banking bill, there really isn’t much hope that anything more significant will land either in the coming months.
The subcommittee hearing is slated for February 13, with a full committee vote expected to take place before Spring.
Some people don’t understand the draw of hand making things that can be store bought, until they get their hands dirty. Making your own dumplings is one of those super satisfying and easier-than-you-think operations that is also sneaky meal prep— you can make a ton freeze them for super quick meals down the road.
Dumplings as a food term can mean a lot of things: gnocchi-like pastas, pierogi and filled pasta, and even just chunks of dough cooked in a soup or liquid. The most popular form of dumplings are the various Asian styles, many with minced aromatics, some vegetables, usually a source protein like pork, chicken, or tofu, with a little fat drizzle, wrapped in a very thin pasta.
These dumplings often come in soups, can be pan fried for a crisp exterior, or simply steamed and eaten in a few quick bites. Some even come deep fried, which is undeniably delicious too with the crunchy blessings that all that oil can provide.
Making your own involves sourcing a pasta shell, a pungent and flavorful filling, and a little bit of activated oil, because what cannabis lover wouldn’t want to also get high off a dumpling?
Photos by Maria Penaloza
DIY Dumplings
Danielle Guercio, 2019 Estimated 5mg per dumpling
Ingredients
Dumpling wrappers
1 cup of your choice of protein, parcooked
¼ cup minced scallion
1 tsp minced ginger
1 tsp minced garlic
1 tsp infused oil*
1 tsp soy sauce
Steps
Set up a little dumpling station with plenty of space, so you can really get down to making as many dumplings as possible with the time you spend. Lay out a cookie sheet or a few plates to accept your finished product. You’ll need a small dish or ramekin with water for sealing the edges.
To make your filling, simply mix all of the non-pasta ingredients in a small bowl. You can do this a day ahead of time or right before making, but it’s a good idea to give the filling a few minutes in the fridge to meld the flavors. Feel free to add any other green herbs you have on hand, cilantro is especially yummy with chicken or tofu dumplings.
Drape a pasta sheet over the palm of your cupped hand, making the perfect little indent to place your filling. Use a spoon to scoop roughly one tablespoon of filling into your waiting pasta.
Gently dampen two of the four sides of the sheet with a finger that you’ve dipped in water. Folding techniques vary, so try various styles until you get the look you want. You can simply fold over one of the ends and seal, or you can crimp and tuck the ends in with decorative flair, it will all still be delicious. Make sure that they’re well sealed especially if you plan to boil the dumplings. This way the filling doesn’t exit into whatever you’re cooking in.
Fry, boil, steam, or deep fry the finished dumplings until they’re heated through. If you’re using any raw proteins take this into account and cook for a bit longer. Serve hot with dipping sauces, soups, salads, or other parts of a meal if you’re not snacking, one needs quite a few to fill up, but they’re concentrated with delicious flavor that you’ll want to experiment more with once you’ve learned.
*Cannabis Infused Oil
Decarboxylate 2 grams of finely ground cannabis or .25 gram of concentrate. Put material in lidded mason jar or vacuum sealed bag with cannabis and 1/4 cup of oil. Heat in water bath just under boiling for at least 1 hour. Strain and cool to use in recipes.
When you’ve nailed the technique, you can fill up a dumpling with pretty much anything you want. Turn out cheeseburger wontons, breakfast dumplings, or try your hand at traditional dim sum pork pockets of joy. Use this basic process as a launchpad to make tortellini and ravioli too if you’re feeling extra fancy. Pierogi is another beautiful option for your new talent, and stuffing almost anything into pasta is such a pure way to experiment with cannabis cooking. All it takes is a drizzle of oil to make your dumpling stratospheric.
While discussing Hollywood crushes during the “Hot Topics” segment, the 38-year-old Wild ’n Out creator first named Carey, with whom he shares 7-year-old twins Moroccan and Monroe.
“My top three: No. 1, Mariah. The amazing mother, superstar singer,” he said. “No. 2: Halle Berry. I’m still working on it. … I still got some more tattoo space. No. 3: Yesterday, I heard she out there dating. Naomi Campbell. That’s what you want. Them is women!”
A producer then suggested Lopez and Cannon quipped, “I don’t know her.” After the audience erupted into laughter, the Masked Singer host added, “That was a joke for the lambs! Shoutout to the lambs!” (Carey refers to her fans as the Lambily.)
Carey first dissed the “On the Floor” singer during a 2000s interview-turned-meme after she was asked about Lopez. “I don’t know her,” the “All I Want for Christmas Is You” songstress said with a sly smile.
“Meg wants a natural birth if she can have one,” a source reportedly close to the couple told Vanity Fair. “Her mother is very into anything that is holistic and natural, and having been brought up with yoga and mindfulness, it’s all very much part of Meghan’s birth plan.”
The au naturel move is becoming more and more popular among pregnant women, who are opting for natural births involving midwives and doulas over drugs and doctors. Midwives are now present at over 13 percent of all births in the U.S., and the number of home births (and births in birthing centers) has jumped by 70 percent since 2004, according to data from the National Center for Health Statistics.
Harry and Meghan’s birth plan is right on trend. It reportedly involves a home birth and hypnobirthing—a meditative approach to giving birth that involves breathing and visualization techniques.
According to Vanity Fair, Megs has also been having regular acupuncture sessions to help her stay zen during her third trimester. “It’s brilliant for the blood circulation and boosting blood flow to the uterus,” a source close to celebrity acupuncturist Ross Barr (whom Meghan and Harry visited on the reg leading up to the royal wedding) told Vanity Fair. “She plans to use acupuncture right up to her due date.”
For Priyanka Chopra, adding husband Nick Jonas‘ last name to her own was never a question.
“I always wanted to add his name to mine because I feel like we’re becoming family, and I’m a little traditional and old school like that,” the Quantico actress, 36, said on Tuesday, during a visit to The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. “But I don’t take away my identity. He gets added to who I am.”
Chopra — who wed Jonas, 26, in an extravagant series of events in December — is wasting no time settling into married life, changing her name to “Priyanka Chopra Jonas” on Instagram days after saying her “I dos.”
“The gravity of it, it’s like a big deal!” she told Fallon, of the name switch. “I didn’t realize it was that much of a big deal until I did it.”
Valentine’s Day can sneak up on you, leaving you without a good plan or a present come February 14. Although most stores are packed with chocolate hearts and teddy bears, the following presents are a little more unique and will make it look like you are thoughtful and want to give your partner something special.
These presents are all accessible and fun, perfect for those couples who’d rather stay in on Valentine’s Day. Check them out:
Sex toys are a great present for Valentine’s Day. Duh. There’s a large variety of them online and, since it’s Valentine’s Day, you can probably find a good amount of discounts. You can buy a vibrating ring, a vibrator or some CBD or THC infused lube. The options are endless.
A robe
Robes are one of the most stolen items from hotels for a reason. They’re amazing and fluffy, giving you the chance to walk through your house while feeling like royalty. You can find all sorts of prices online, but the more money you spend the fluffier your robe will be.
Board games are great presents for everyone, because even people who hate board games have fun while playing Cards Against Humanity. If your boyfriend or girlfriend is a big fan of old school games, there’s also UnboxBoardom, a subscription box that delivers awesome board games every month.
CBD oils
There’s a large variety of CBD oils that can treat anxiety, insomnia or boost sexual performance. Depending on what you buy, your present can be thoughtful, sexy or a little bit of both.
Matching underwear is kind of sweet and romantic if you’re into that sort of thing. MeUndies has a lot of Valentine-themed options that are cute, even if they’re kind of expensive. Other brands on Amazon also provide similar offers at lower rates.
As with all intoxicating substances, cannabis can be tricky in a relationship, but marijuana can help with true love in a variety of ways.
As with all intoxicating substances, cannabis can be tricky in a committed relationship. If one of you is a consumer and the other one is not, having the conversation up front is crucial. It’s not essential that both of you enjoy the herb, but having a clear understanding about it is.
I know of quite a few marriages and long-term relationships in which only one tokes. But if it creates tension in the relationship, you have a choice to make. And if weed wins out over your lover, well, that may require a little introspection. We’re not here to judge. We’re here to explain how to enjoy cannabis as a couple.
A 2104 study indicated that frequent marijuana consumption by couples is associated with fewer incidents of partner violence.
According to the report published by the American Psychological Association, “more frequent marijuana use generally predicted less frequent IPV [intimate partner violence] for both men and women over the first 9 years of marriage.” The study suggested lower risk of partner violence when both spouses consumed regularly.
The World Health Organization reports that “alcohol consumption, especially at harmful and hazardous levels, is a major contributor to the occurrence of intimate partner violence.”
Get Rid Of That Stress And Anxiety
Often times, intimacy is destroyed by outside thoughts. Everyday stress and anxiety interfere with the enjoyment of simple pleasures. Like sex with your partner.
A Vanderbilt University study in 2014 discovered for the first time that cannabinoid receptors can be found in the central nucleus of the amygdala, a key emotional hub in the brain involved in regulating anxiety.
The discovery may help explain why cannabis consumers feel reduced anxiety, said Dr. Sachin Patel, the senior author the study.
So take a toke or two and let the stress leave your mind.
Talk Therapy
Now that the stress is gone, talk. Marijuana, for many users, allows for a more conducive environment to chat. Sure, the conversations may lead to silly banter. But laughter is good. Relaxation is good. With hope, it will lead to a more fulfilling love life.
Lotions And Lube
Yes, there are cannabis products out there — lubes, lotions, sprays, suppositories — that will definitely increase the pleasure of love making.
The vagina has cannabinoid receptors that receive THC as it is absorbed through the membranes. THC increases blood flow and makes the vagina more sensitive to the touch.
And, yes, most of the lubrication products work well anally.
Tune In And Turn Off Your Brain
Sometimes, sex is best when you just turn off your brain and enjoy the physical sensations. Cannabis can help.
Can CBD help patients with traumatic brain injury? Donald Cooper Ph.D. at Real Time Diagnostics Ventures Inc., in collaboration with the Flowering HOPE Foundation and Clover Leaf University, has just filed a new clinical trial called “Hemp-Derived Botanical Dietary Supplementation During Recovery From Brain Injury,” which aims to evaluate the effectiveness of cannabidiol-based supplements to aid in patient recovery from traumatic brain injury.
The study will be watching two groups of adult men and women between 18 and 55. One group will have had no prior history of traumatic brain injury and the other group will have a prior history of traumatic brain injury. Both will have had experience with taking hemp-derived botanicals. To clarify, the study refers to hemp-derived cannabidiol/CBD as “Hemp-derived botanical dietary supplement” and “HDS”.
“This study seeks to answer whether subjects taking HDS formulations experience relief from self-reported symptoms or improved subjective well-being, sleep quality, cognitive benefits, side effects and/or quantifiable changes in brain state neuronal activity or stress biomarkers.”
Essentially, the study will hopefully determine whether or not hemp-derived CBD helps traumatic brain injury patients with overall wellbeing, sleep, and more. The study will also aim to determine whether or not there are any negative side effects to using the CBD supplements on a daily versus weekly basis.
As an added bonus, the study may help researchers understand why some people respond better to CBD-based supplements over others.