Saturday, April 4, 2015

Chrissy Teigen, January Jones, Amy Adams Make Flared Denim Happen Again ...



Blast from the past!

Typically paired with oversized sunglasses and towering heels, the flared denim trend is back in a major way thanks to the same leg-lengthening effect it granted women everywhere first in the '70s and again in the '90s.

PHOTOS: Celebs love wearing double denim

In recent weeks, a slew of Hollywood's finest have been spotted wearing the alternative to boyfriend jeans. Sporting new shoulder-length locks on Wednesday, April 1, in New York City, Chrissy Teigen was spotted in the Citizens of Humanity "Fleetwood High Rise Flare in Ritual," ($228, Citizensofhumanity.com). John Legend's wife, 29, teamed the look with a honeycomb sweater and an oversized handbag.

January Jones stepped into the trend on Friday, March 20, in Los Angeles with a pair by J Brand. The Mad Men star, 37, rocked the high-waisted look with a cheetah print coat and Blumarine sunglasses. Just a few days later on March 25, Amy Adams wore her flattering flares in Beverly Hills, with a plaid top and dark sunglasses.

PHOTOS: Hottest fashion trends of 2014

Not sure of how to pull off the silhouette without looking like you're stuck in the past? Celebrity stylist and Us Weekly Fashion Police contributor Eric Himel shows Us how with a few dos and don'ts.

"Flared denim should always be worn just a quarter of an inch off the floor, otherwise, they become the definition of 'floods,'" Himel told Us.

That's not to say the look is ideal for all body types. "Classic hourglass shapes don't do great with the silhouette, Himel said. "If you have a straight up-and-down bottom portion, whether tall or short, you can definitely rock the look."

Those that are petite a la Lea Michele may require a boost. "If you're short, definitely add a heel with a flared jean, the stylist instructed.

PHOTOS: Stars' outrageously expensive street style

And though Jones nailed it with an eye-catching jacket, Himel suggests paring back just a little for the rest of us. "Try a simple hoop earring, a stacked heel, or modern geometrical jewelry," he advised.

To keep the look from being overly trendy, Himel offers one final caveat: "Avoid anything that looks like you're dressing for Coachella unless you're going to Coachella. So stay away from crochet tops, beaded jewelry, headbands, and Birkenstocks."

Ready to shop? Follow Himel's advice and add these pieces into your spring wardrobe.

Flared denim is a huge fashion trend for Spring 2015. Check out the look worn by Chrissy Teigen, January Jones, and Amy Adams.

Take an office-appropriate daytime approach with the H&M "Long Vest" (69.95, Hm.com) and the Mother "The Cruiser Distressed Flared Jeans" ($228, Saksfifthavenue.com). For a fun night out, grab the Topshop "Ombre Faux Fur Jacket" ($140, Topshop.com) and the Express "Mid Rise Slim Flare Jean" ($88.00, Express.com).

Be a trendsetter!Sign up now for the Us Weekly Style & Beauty newsletterto get celeb fashion, beauty tips, and more delivered directly to your inbox.

Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-style/news/chrissy-teigen-january-jones-amy-adams-flared-denim-trend-201524



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Friday, April 3, 2015

The Centuries-Old Good Friday Tradition You've Probably Never Heard About



TIME History Sports The Centuries-Old Good Friday Tradition Youve Probably Never Heard About Popperfoto/Getty Images Busmen from the Crawley, Sussex depot at the Tinsley Green, Surrey marbles match, April 19, 1935 This annual Good Friday event isn't exactly a religious rite

This year, on Good Friday, observers may mark the day with prayer and preparation for Easter.

But in Tinsley Green, a small town near London, a very different sort of Good Friday tradition will take place, just as it has for decades. The British and World Marbles Championship is held on that day every year and, as TIME described it in 1969, the annual event has been going for far longer than one might expect:

As legend has it, the British marbling tourney traces its heritage to the days of Elizabethan chivalry. For the hand of a maiden, two 16th century swains clashed in an all known sports tournament in which marbles, for reasons now obscure, became the dominant contest. By the 1700s the marble tournament had become an annual Good Friday ritual in Tinsley Green. The tourney began in the morning; at high noon (the hour Sussex taverns open), the referee cried Smug! and the tournament ended. The rules are wondrously simple: 49 marbles are placed in the pitch (ring) and each member of the competing teams takes his turn at trying to knock one out. Shooting is a thumbs-only propositiona flick of the wrist constitutes a fudge (foul) and disqualifies the contestant for that round. As in pool, each successful shot merits another, and the team that picks up the most marbles wins.

According to the tournaments website, the ritual fell away sometime around the year 1900 and was brought back in 1932. Though the first years of that era saw the matches as mostly local competitions, the tournament began to attract foreign teams as well. That 1969 story focused on a team from Chicago that threatened to take the title except that they never showed up.

And even if they had, TIME ventured, they were unlikely to win. After all, the defending champions had a secret weapon: marbles hand-carved from the finest porcelain commodes because only porcelain gives the tolley (shooter) the proper heft and feel.

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Source: http://time.com/3757999/good-friday-marbles-tournament/



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Cynthia Lennon Dead at 75



It has been announced that Cynthia Lennon, John Lennon's first wife and mother to their son Julian, has died at the age of 75 after a battle with cancer.

AsUltimate Classic Rock reports, the following press release has been issued regarding her passing:

"Cynthia Lennon passed away today at her home in Mallorca, Spain, following a short but brave battle with cancer. Her son Julian Lennon was at her bedside throughout. The family are thankful for your prayers. Please respect their privacy at this difficult time."

Julian Lennon has posted a musical tribute to his mother on the front page of his website. The song, titled "In Loving Memory," is set to a photo montage of Cynthia.

Cynthia and John met at Liverpool College of Art in 1957. They married in 1962, although the marriage was kept secret from the public in an effort to avoid alienating the Beatles' female fan base. They divorced in 1968. Cynthia published two memoirs about life with John. The first, titled "A Twist of Lennon," was released in 1978. Another volume, simply titled "John," came out in 2005.

Source: http://www.ultimate-guitar.com/news/general_music_news/cynthia_lennon_dead_at_75.html



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'Furious 7' will probably be the next $1 billion movie



There's no question the seventh installment to the "Fast and the Furious" franchise, "Furious 7," is going to have a massive opening weekend.

It is poised to make about $120 million over the Easter holiday.

That would easily give "Furious 7" the highest-grossing opening weekend for April, surpassing 2014's $95 million opening of "Captain America: The Winter Soldier."

According to Fandango, the film's ticket sales are outpacing those of the "Captain America" sequel.

Ahead of "Avengers: Age of Ultron," which arrives to theaters in May, "Furious 7" has a good shot at being the year's first billion-dollar movie.

"This is definitely shaping up to be massive," Phil Contrino, the vice president and chief analyst of BoxOffice.com, told Business Insider. "With a movie like this, it's important not to get too carried away with expectations because ... in the lead-up to a big movie, that's all people are talking about, and it's easy to keep saying, 'It's going to be bigger, and bigger, and bigger.' That said, I think it has a legitimate shot at becoming the next member of the $1 billion global club."

Contrino noted that would be a huge accomplishment.

Look at the box-office numbers for "Fast and Furious 6," and it's not difficult to make that case. The 2013 film made $788 million worldwide ($238 million domestic versus $550 million overseas).

Boxoffice.com is tracking "Furious 7" to make somewhere between $275 million and $280 million stateside during its run in theaters.

"That's a $42 million increase right there," Contrino said. "The last one did about $550 million overseas. I think that number's going to go up exponentially. If there's a $40 million increase in North America alone, even if there's a $10 or $15 million increase in a bunch of key markets like UK, China, Brazil ... that's going to add up really fast. That $550 million number is going to increase quite a bit. [If] you look at it that way and we're not too far from being in the ballpark of $1 billion globally."

"Furious 7" has already opened as No. 1 in 12 markets overseas.

The film will also be Universal Studios' largest film release ever and the widest Imax release ever, showing on 810 Imax screens worldwide. It will open in more than 4,000 theaters Friday in the US and more than 10,500 theaters around the world.

In addition to the high-adrenaline, action-packed storyline, which has received great reviews, the seventh installment serves as a bittersweet send-off to franchise lead Paul Walker, who died in 2013.

Walker's death will be one reason audiences will head out to see "Furious 7."

"This isn't just another entry into a franchise," Contrino said. "It's got more significance to it. Its success at the box office, many people are going to see that as a tribute to Paul Walker and what he brought to the franchise."

"They're going to show up for that reason," he added. "Even if they maybe have skipped some of the other movies, they'll show up for this one."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/fast-and-furious-7-will-likely-make-1-billion-2015-4



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How students with top test scores actually hurt a teacher's evaluation



Imagine that you are a doctor and your evaluation is based on patients you didnt have. Or a car dealer, and you are assessed by how many cars your colleagues not you sell. It sounds preposterous, right? Well, thats just what is happening to public school teachers.

In this school reform era in which high-stakes standardized testing is the chief assessment metric, some teachers are being evaluated in some part on how well their students do on new exams. Other teachers are being assessed on how well students they dont teach do on exams, as well as on test scores from subjects they dont teach.

For example, an art teacher in New York City explained in this post how he was evaluated on math standardized test scores, and saw his evaluation rating drop from effective to developing. High-stakes tests are only given in math and English language arts, so reformers have decided that all teachers (and sometimes principals) in a school should be evaluated by reading and math scores.

Sometimes, school test averages are factored into all teachers evaluations. Sometimes, a certain group of teachers are attached to either reading or math scores; social studies teachers, for example are more often attached to English Language Arts scores while science teachers are attached to math scores. (A love of test scores led Washington, D.C., school reformers under former chancellor Michelle Rhee to evaluate every adult in every public school building custodians and lunchroom workers included in part on the schools average test scores, a practice stopped a few years ago.)

In some cases, teachers are being set up to fail with goals that are literally impossible to achieve. How? In Indian River County, Fla., an English Language Arts middle school teacher named Luke Flynt told the school board a tale about his own evaluation that is preposterous yet true. Flynts highest-scoring students wound up hurting his evaluation. How did this happen?

School reformers, including Obama administration education officials, have gotten it into their heads despite warnings from assessment experts that linking student test scores to teacher evaluation is a bad practice. They say this because the method by which the determinations are made are not reliable enough and not valid as a measure of achievement. Some economists came up with something called value-added models that purport to be able to tease out, by way of a mathematical formula using the test scores, how much value a teacher adds to a students academic progress. These formulas are said by their supporters to be able to factor out things such as a students intelligence, whether the student is hungry, sick or is subject to violence at home. But critics say they cant.

According to a report by the American Statistical Association warning against the high-stakes use of VAMs:

The measure of student achievement is typically a score on a standardized test, and VAMs are only as good as the data fed into them. Ideally, tests should fully measure student achievement with respect to the curriculum objectives and content standards adopted by the state, in both breadth and depth. In practice, no test meets this stringent standard, and it needs to be recognized that, at best, most VAMs predict only performance on the test and not necessarily long-range learning outcomes. Other student outcomes are predicted only to the extent that they are correlated with test scores. A teachers efforts to encourage students creativity or help colleagues improve their instruction, for example, are not explicitly recognized in VAMs.

Still, reformers insist on using various value-added models, of which there are many. In Florida, Flynt told the school boardMarch 18 about the absurdities around his own evaluation and urged members to pause all high-stakes consequences associated with this years test scores.

Flynt explained that through VAM formulas, each student is assigned a predicted score based on past performance by that student and other students on the state-mandated test. If the student exceeds the predicted score, the teacher is credited with adding value. If the student does not do as well as the predicted score, the teacher is held responsible and that score counts negatively towards his/her evaluation.

Flynt said that he had four students whose predicted scores were literally impossible because their predicted scores were higher than the maximum number of points that can be earned on the exam. He said:

One of my sixth-grade students had a predicted score of 286.34. However, the highest a sixth-grade student can earn earn is 283. The student did earn a 283, incidentally. Despite the fact that she earned a perfect score, she counted negatively toward my valuation because she was 3 points below predicted.

But theres more. He continued:

In total, almost half of the students who counted toward my VAM 50 of 102 fell short of their predicted score. That sounds bad. Really, really bad. But a closer look at the numbers is necessary to tell the complete story.

Of the 50 students who did not meet their predicted score, 10 percent missed zero or one question, 18 percent missed two or fewer questions, 36 percent missed three or fewer questions, 58 percent missed four or fewer questions.

Let me stop to explain the magnitude of missing four or fewer questions. Since the reading FCAT [the test that was given] contained 45 questions, a student who missed four or fewer would have answered at least 90 percent of the questions correctly. That means that 58 percent of the students whose performance negatively affected my evaluation earned at least 90 percent of the possible points on the FCAT.

Where is the value in the value-added model? How does all of this data and the enormous mount of time spent testing add value to me as a teacher, to students, to parents or to the community at large. It leads me to wonder what more can I possibly do, when the state issues predictions for my students that are impossible for them to meet, when I suffer financially because of my students test scores, what more can I do?

You may also be interested in:Is this fair? Art teacher is evaluated by students math test scores

Teacher evaluation: What it should look like

Getting teacher evaluation right

Valerie Strauss covers education and runs The Answer Sheet blog.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2015/04/01/teacher-how-my-highest-scoring-students-actually-hurt-my-evaluation/



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Thursday, April 2, 2015

'Hacks': Did BuzzFeed really think they'd get away with this #MemoriesPizza lie?



  • Share on Facebook

A week of witch hunting turned up ONE Christian business who said they'd never deny service to #LGBT - let's destroy them anyway. #tolerance

Lyndsey Fifield (@lyndseyfifield) April 02, 2015

And the good folks at BuzzFeed are happy to light the tolerance mobs torches.

Heres how they covered the story yesterday of Memories Pizza closing its doorsin the face of harassment and threats:

Indiana pizzeria owners say they'd deny LGBT people service, internet unleashes its wrath http://t.co/UbxraLbxDC pic.twitter.com/NGY4LUwWRx

BuzzFeed News (@BuzzFeedNews) April 1, 2015

Thats great, BuzzFeed. Except thats not what the owners said. Like, at all.

Guess someone thereeventually realized that and changed the post:

Evidently they didnt think anyone would notice the change. They were wrong:

Awkward, @marygeorgant even your URL is inaccurate. They NEVER said they would deny LGBT people service. pic.twitter.com/sn4lik5m8X

Lyndsey Fifield (@lyndseyfifield) April 2, 2015

Oh Buzzfeed. pic.twitter.com/V3UXnCyXaf

Lyndsey Fifield (@lyndseyfifield) April 2, 2015

They cant help themselves.

Pathetic. RT @lyndseyfifield Oh Buzzfeed. pic.twitter.com/FdtwKFOnpO

Brodigan (@brodigan) April 2, 2015

Hacks. RT @lyndseyfifield Oh Buzzfeed. pic.twitter.com/TbFlbZRnBi

Michelle Ray (@GaltsGirl) April 2, 2015

@KatMcKinley The headline has since been changed entirely (no editors note). pic.twitter.com/OtpG3qwJPg

T. Becket Adams (@BecketAdams) April 2, 2015

Journalistic integrity is, like, so overrated.

@GaltsGirl @lyndseyfifield Typical drive-by media strategy. Lead with a lie or massive distortion, then quietly correct it later.

Angus E. Parvo (@angusparvo) April 2, 2015

Its the BuzzFeed way.

@KatMcKinley BUT THAT'S NOT WHAT THEY EVEN SAID.

Jeff B@AoSHQDD (@EsotericCD) April 2, 2015

@EsotericCD I know. The whole outrage is based on a lie.

Kathleen McKinley (@KatMcKinley) April 2, 2015

***

Related:

Not April Fools Day: Indiana RFRA fight ratchets up after Christian pizza maker refuses to cater gayweddings

Are you for real? Look how this Indiana journo described violent threat against #MemoriesPizza; Update: Tweetdeleted!

#MemoriesPizza closes due to threats from Tolerance Brigade; GoFundMe campaign takesoff

Mobs arent markets: You wont believe this journos take on why #MemoriesPizza closeddown

Yall are idiots': Salon spits out truly twisted take on #MemoriesPizza closing; Update: Hey, whered itgo?

Take that fascist freaks: GoFundMe for Memories Pizza surpasses $100,000 indonations

Source: http://twitchy.com/2015/04/02/hacks-did-buzzfeed-really-think-theyd-get-away-with-this-memoriespizza-lie/



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Arrow and The Flash Stars: It's Time for a Gay Superhero on TV (Video)



The casts and creators of The Flash and Arrow speak with The Advocate about the ways these shows are changing the face of television in this episode of Advocate Spotlight.

The cast and creators from The Flash and Arrow weigh in on their shows' inclusion of people of color, out actors, and LGBT characters.

Posted by Advocate Spotlight on Monday, March 30, 2015

By including LGBT characters and filling roles with people of color and out gay actors, the CW networksArrowandThe Flashhave set a new standard for the way superheroes are depicted on TV.

The casts and creators from each series spoke with The Advocate earlier this month at Paleyfest, the annual festival that salutes creative excellence in television, and shared why they're proud to be a part of shows that are models for greater diversity in the genre.

Its great, says Grant Gustin,the actor who brings DCs Scarlet Speedster to life on the small screen, adding, Thats just kind of how TV should be now in 2015, to be honest.

The Flashmade history earlier this year when it introduced views to Pied Piper, the first gay supervillain to ever appear in a TV series based on a mainstream comic book. I love when they brought Pied Piper along, says Danielle Panabacker, who plays Dr. Caitlin Snow onThe Flash. Its sad to me that it has to be a brave thing to bring a character like that on television, but I love that were doing it.

Panabackers sentiments are echoed byArrowactor Paul Blackthorne (Quentin Lance) when he is asked about an historic moment on his show just one year earlier, when Sara Lance/Black Canary was introduced as TVs first bisexual superhero. Its nice that they put that stuff in the show and if thats helping to sort of ground break in any way then thats great, he says. G*d bless the bisexuals of this world, I say, and everyone in between and beyond.

In addition to enriching each series with a diverse range of characters, these shows are also changing the genre from the inside by expanding the pool of actors who play them. Hearing from fans, especially blerds black nerds and fans of color, its really important for them to see themselves represented in comic books, says Candice Patton, who play Iris West on The Flash a character previously depicted onlyas a white female. Comic books are beloved by so many, and so I think were finally seeing more and more ethnicity in these shows, and for me to be a part of that, its not lost on me.

Its blind casting, and weve been waiting for it for a long, long time. And thank G*d its here, adds out actor John Barrowman, the man who has been making bad look oh-so-good as Oliver Queens nemesis Malcolm Merlyn/The Dark Archer since the first season ofArrow.

But while these strides are changing the way audiences see the never-ending battle between good and evil depicted on TV, Barrowman says hed like to see LGBT representation in a superhero series leap even taller obstacles in a single bound.

When asked if he thought American audiences were ready to see a gay superhero like Flash or Arrow in a series of their own, he replies, Personally, I dont care if they are, or not. Its time we had one.

Read More: Arrow and The Flash Creator Greg Berlanti Aims to Make TV Superheroes "Look Like America"

Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/television/2015/03/31/arrow-and-flash-stars-its-time-gay-superhero-tv-video



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