king I Left Norway’s Lockdown for the US. The Difference Is Shocking. By www.thenation.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 09:00:05 +0000 Ann Jones Compared to Norway’s strict, early measures and rigorous testing, the US response to the pandemic has been catastrophic. The post I Left Norway’s Lockdown for the US. The Difference Is Shocking. appeared first on The Nation. Full Article
king Indian firms slip in global ranking; four move out of Top-500 By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2008-06-29T11:38:01+05:30 14 firms present in a new list of world's 500 most valued firms together seeing an erosion of about $150 billion in their market value in the first three months of this year. Full Article
king WHO readies coronavirus app for checking symptoms, possibly contact tracing By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T08:13:32+05:30 The app will ask people about their symptoms and offer guidance on whether they may have COVID-19, the potentially lethal illness caused by the coronavirus, said Bernardo Mariano, chief information officer for the WHO. Full Article
king Donald Trump is looking for doctors & nurses By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T10:27:41+05:30 Donald Trump is looking for doctors & nursesThe legislation would send green cards to 25,000 nurses and 15,000 doctors. Full Article
king TD expects U.S. retail banking business to take $1.1B charge for bad loans By www.ctvnews.ca Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 07:42:09 -0400 Toronto-Dominion Bank says it expects to take a provision for credit losses related to its U.S. retail banking business of roughly $1.1 billion (US$800 million) in its second quarter due to the pandemic. Full Article
king Adele's birthday Instagram post has fans, celebrities talking By rssfeeds.usatoday.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 20:29:27 +0000 Adele used an Instagram post to mark her 32nd birthday while sharing her latest look including thanking essential workers, calling them "our angels." Full Article
king Looking for toilet paper, disinfecting wipes or hand sanitizer? Try bartering on Facebook and Nextdoor By rssfeeds.usatoday.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 20:45:00 +0000 Welcome to the real sharing economy. Friends and neighbors set up trades on Facebook and Nextdoor for household essentials like toilet paper, eggs and bread. Full Article
king Electoral reform: Hashtag fresh thinking By backofthebook.ca Published On :: Fri, 24 Jun 2016 23:19:54 +0000 The most interesting and innovative idea to come out of the first meeting of the all-party Special Committee on Electoral Reform, or ERRE, was Nathan Cullen's suggestion, seconded by Elizabeth May, to allow members of the public access to question the expert witnesses before the committee in real time via email or twitter [...] Full Article Politics Canada Canadian Parliament electoral reform Elizabeth May Jason Kenney Matt DeCourcey Mixed Member Proportional Nathan Cullen proportional representation Special Committee on Electoral Reform
king 23 classic RKO films coming to BBC iPlayer including 'Citizen Kane', 'King Kong' and 'Top Hat' By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 10:41:59 GMT Time to catch up on some of the greatest movies ever made. Full Article
king Pete Davidson needs to sort his life out in first trailer for 'The King of Staten Island' By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:51:55 GMT From 'Saturday Night Live' to the big screen, Pete Davidson could become Judd Apatow's next comedy megastar. Full Article
king Coronavirus: Do I need to start taking vitamin D during lockdown? By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-23T15:20:00Z Public Health England has updated its advice on vitamin D Full Article
king Is it worth hiking? Exercise review By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2016-06-04T04:59:01Z The hit of fresh air in your nostrils? The beauty of the countryside? Hiking is amazingWhat is it? Just a nice long walk.How much does it cost? Probably an initial outlay of about £50 for some decent gear, and then free for ever. Continue reading... Full Article Health & wellbeing Life and style Fitness
king What I’m really thinking: the secret smoker By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2018-01-13T09:00:01Z If I was ever going to ‘come out’, I should have done it when I was youngerIf anyone ever offers me a cigarette, I always reply: “No thanks, I don’t smoke.” But I’m lying.I started smoking at 16. I thought it made me look grown-up, but I was shy so I’d do it on my own. I would go into the woods near my home, or occasionally “bravely” have one in the house if nobody was else in. Continue reading... Full Article Health & wellbeing Smoking Life and style
king Why Normal People has the makings of a fashion classic By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-06T17:00:11Z If Sally Rooney is the first great millennial novelist, then Marianne Sheridan is the first great millennial TV style iconWould it make a person really shallow if their favourite thing about the TV adaptation of Normal People was Marianne’s wardrobe? Asking for a friend. Continue reading... Full Article Fashion Sally Rooney Television & radio Television Audrey Hepburn Givenchy Film Culture Books Life and style
king Tyler Cameron Reveals the Heartbreaking Reason He's Not Ready to Date Yet By www.eonline.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:09:00 GMT Family comes first for Tyler Cameron. On the latest episode of E!'s The Rundown, host Erin Lim spoke exclusively to The Bachelorette star about the very personal reason he's not... Full Article
king Author Alison Roman Shades Chrissy Teigen's Cooking Empire: ''That Horrifies Me'' By www.eonline.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:21:00 GMT Move over, Martha Stewart and Gwyneth Paltrow. There's a new feud brewing between two leaders in the lifestyle industry. Best-selling cookbook author Alison Roman has caught the... Full Article
king Government website for key workers to book coronavirus tests stops taking applications just hours after launch By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T08:41:00Z "You can select a regional test site drive-through appointment or home test kit. Full Article
king Michel Barnier laments 'disappointing' post-Brexit talks and says 'the clock is ticking' on securing deal By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T13:40:00Z The EU's chief negotiator has branded progress in post-Brexit talks disappointing and warned the "clock was ticking". Full Article
king Furloughed workers should take up fruit picking this summer, Government says By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-26T15:53:00Z Full Article
king 5 Things We Learned from the Tiger King Special By dose.ca Published On :: Sun, 12 Apr 2020 15:10:13 +0000 Netflix has capitalized on the huge success of their docuseries Tiger King by releasing an “aftershow” special. Here are 5 things we learned. Full Article Non classé Carole Baskin Joe Exotic netflix Tiger King
king The Case Against Thinking Outside of the Box - Facts So Romantic By nautil.us Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 08:45:00 +0000 Social, cultural, economic, spiritual, psychological, emotional, intellectual: Everything is outside the box. And this new sheltered-in-place experience won’t fit into old containers.Photo Illustration by Africa Studio / ShutterstockMany of us are stuck now, sheltered in our messy dwellings. A daily walk lets me appreciate the urban landscaping; but I can’t stop to smell anything because a blue cotton bandana shields my nostrils. Indoors, constant digital dispatches chirp to earn my attention. I click on memes, status updates, and headlines, but everything is more of the same. How many ways can we repackage fear and reframe optimism? I mop the wood-laminate floor of my apartment because I hope “ocean paradise” scented Fabuloso will make my home smell a little less confining. My thoughts waft toward the old cliché: Think outside the box. I’ve always hated when people say that.To begin with, the directions are ineffectual. You can’t tell someone to think outside the box and expect them to do it. Creativity doesn’t happen on demand. Want proof? Just try to make yourself think a brilliant thought, something original, innovative, or unique. Go ahead. Do it. Right now. You can’t, no matter how hard you try. This is why ancient people believed that inspiration comes from outside. It’s external, bestowed on each of us like a revelation or prophecy—a gift from the Muses. Which means your genius does not belong to you. The word “genius” is the Latin equivalent of the ancient Greek “daemon” (δαίμονες)—like a totem animal, or a spirit companion. A genius walks beside us. It mediates between gods and mortals. It crosses over from one realm to the next. It whispers divine truth.We are paralyzed by the prospect of chaos, uncertainty, and entropy. In modern times, our mythology moves the daemons away from the heavens and into the human soul. We say, “Meditate and let your spirit guide you.” Now we think genius comes from someplace deep within. The mind? The brain? The heart? Nobody knows for sure. Yet, it seems clear to us that inspiration belongs to us; it’s tangibly contained within our corporeal boundaries. That’s why we celebrate famous artists, poets, physicists, economists, entrepreneurs, and inventors. We call them visionaries. We read their biographies. We do our best to emulate their behaviors. We study the five habits of highly successful people. We practice yoga. We exercise. We brainstorm, doodle, sign up for online personal development workshops. We do whatever we can to cultivate the fertile cognitive soil in which the springtime seeds of inspiration might sprout. But still, even though we believe that a genius is one’s own, we know that we cannot direct it. Therefore, no matter how many people tell me to think outside the box, I won’t do it. I can’t. Even if I could, I’m not sure thinking outside the box would be worthwhile. Consider the origins of the phrase. It started with an old brain teaser. Nine dots are presented in a perfect square, lined up three by three. Connect them all, using only four straight lines, without lifting your pencil from the paper. It’s the kind of puzzle you’d find on the back of a box of Lucky Charms breakfast cereal, frivolous but tricky. The solution involves letting the lines expand out onto the empty page, into the negative space. Don’t confine your markings to the dots themselves. You need to recognize, instead, that the field is wider than you’d assume. In other words, don’t interpret the dots as a square, don’t imagine that the space is constricted. Think outside the box! For years, pop-psychologists, productivity coaches, and business gurus have all used the nine-dot problem to illustrate the difference between “fixation” and “insight.” They say that we look at markings on a page and immediately try to find a pattern. We fixate on whatever meaning we can ascribe to the image. In this case, we assume that nine dots make a box. And we imagine we’re supposed to stay within its boundaries—contained and confined. We bring habitual assumptions with us even though we’re confronting a unique problem. Why? Because we are paralyzed by the prospect of chaos, uncertainty, and entropy. We cling to the most familiar ways of organizing things in order to mitigate the risk that new patterns might not emerge at all, the possibility that meaning itself could cease to exist. But this knee-jerk reaction limits our capacity for problem-solving. Our customary ways of knowing become like a strip of packing tape that’s accidentally affixed to itself—you can struggle to undo it, but it just tangles up even more. In other words, your loyalty to the easiest, most common interpretations is the sticky confirmation bias that prevents you from arriving at a truly insightful solution. At least that’s what the experts used to say. And we all liked to believe it. But our minds don’t really work that way. The box parable appeals because it reinforces our existing fantasies about an individual’s proclivity to innovate and disrupt by thinking in unexpected ways. It’s not true. Studies have found that solving the nine-dot problem has nothing to do with the box. Even when test subjects were told that the solution requires going outside the square’s boundaries, most of them still couldn’t solve it. There was an increase in successful attempts so tiny that it was considered statistically insignificant, proving that the ability to arrive at a solution to the nine-dot problem has nothing to do with fixation or insight. The puzzle is just difficult, no matter which side of the box you’re standing on.Still, I bet my twelve-year-old son could solve it. Yesterday, we unpacked a set of oil paints, delivered by Amazon. He was admiring the brushes and canvases. He was thinking about his project, trying to be creative, searching for insight. “Think inside the outside of the box,” he said. “What does that mean?” I pushed the branded, smiling A-to-Z packaging aside and I looked at him like he was crazy. “Like with cardboard, you know, with all the little holes inside.” He was talking about the corrugations, those ridges that are pasted between layers of fiberboard. They were originally formed on the same fluted irons used to make the ruffled collars of Elizabethan-era fashion. At first, single faced corrugated paper—smooth on one side, ridged on the other—was used to wrap fragile glass bottles. Then, around 1890, the double-faced corrugated fiberboard with which we’re familiar was developed. And it transformed the packing and shipping industries. The new paperboard boxes were sturdy enough to replace wooden crates. It doesn’t take an engineering degree to understand how it works: The flutes provide support; the empty space in between makes it lightweight. My son is right; it’s all about what’s inside the outside of the box.Now I can’t stop saying it to myself, “Think inside the outside of the box.” It’s a perfect little metaphor. In a way, it even sums up the primary cognitive skill I acquired in graduate school. One could argue that a PhD just means you’ve been trained to think inside the outside of boxes. What do I mean by that? Consider how corrugation gives cardboard it’s structural integrity. The empty space—what’s not there—makes it strong and light enough that it’s a useful and efficient way to carry objects. Similarly, it’s the intellectual frameworks that make our interpretations and analyses of the world hold up. An idea can’t stand on its own; it needs a structure and a foundation. It needs a box. It requires a frame. And by looking at how those frames are assembled, by seeing how they carry a concept through to communication, we’re able to do our best thinking. We look at the empty spaces—the invisible, or tacit assumptions—which lurk within the fluted folds of every intellectual construction. We recognize that our conscious understanding of lived experience is corrugated just like cardboard. The famous sociologist Erving Goffman said as much in 1974 when he published his essay on “Frame Analysis.” He encouraged his readers to identify the principles of organization which govern our perceptions. This work went on to inspire countless political consultants, pundits, publicists, advertisers, researchers, and marketers. It’s why we now talk often about the ways in which folks “frame the conversation.” But I doubt my son has read Goffman. He just stumbled on a beautifully succinct way to frame the concept of critical thinking. Maybe he was inspired by Dr. Seuss. When my kids were little, they asked for the same story every night, “Read Sneetches Daddy!” I could practically recite the whole thing from memory: “Now, the Star-belly Sneetches had bellies with stars. The Plain-belly Sneetches had none upon thars.” It’s an us-versus-them story, a fable about the way a consumption economy encourages people to compete for status, and to alienate the “other.” If you think inside the outside of the box, it’s also a scathing criticism of a culture that’s obsessed with personal and professional transformation—always reinventing and rebranding. One day, Sylvester McMonkey McBean shows up on the Sneetches’ beaches with a peculiar box-shaped fix-it-up machine. Sneetches go in with plain-bellies and they come out with stars. Now, anyone can be anything, for a fee. McBean charges them a fortune; he exploits the Sneetches’ insecurities. He builds an urgent market demand for transformational products. He preys on their most familiar—and therefore, cozy and comforting—norms of character assessment. He disrupts their identity politics, makes it so that there’s no clear way to tell who rightfully belongs with which group. And as a result, chaos ensues. Why? Because the Sneetches discover that longstanding divisive labels and pejorative categories no longer provide a meaningful way to organize their immediate experiences. They’ve lost their frames, the structural integrity of their worldview. They feel unhinged, destabilized, unboxed, and confused.Social, cultural, economic, spiritual, psychological, emotional, intellectual: Everything is outside the box. It should sound familiar. After all, we’ve been living through an era in history that’s just like the Sneetches’. The patterns and categories we heretofore used to define self and other are being challenged every day—sometimes for good, sometimes for bad. How can we know who belongs where in a digital diaspora, a virtual panacea, where anyone can find “my tribe”? What do identity, allegiance, heredity, and loyalty even mean now that these ideas can be detached from biology and birthplace? Nobody knows for sure. And that’s just the beginning: We’ve got Sylvester-McMonkey-McBean-style disruption everywhere we look. Connected technologies have transformed the ways in which we make sense of our relationships, how we communicate with one another, our definitions of intimacy. Even before the novel coronavirus, a new global paradigm forced us to live and work in a world that’s organized according to a geopolitical model we can barely comprehend. Sure, the familiar boundaries of statehood sometimes prohibited migrant foot traffic—but information, microbes, and financial assets still moved swiftly across borders, unimpeded. Similarly, cross-national supply-chains rearranged the rules of the marketplace. High-speed transportation disrupted how we perceive the limits of time and space. Automation upset the criteria through which we understand meritocracy and self-worth. Algorithms and artificial intelligence changed the way we think about labor, employment, and productivity. Data and privacy issues blurred the boundaries of personal sovereignty. And advances in bioengineering shook up the very notion of human nature.Our boxes were already bursting. And now, cloistered at home in the midst of a pandemic, our most mundane work-a-day routines are dissolved, making it feel like our core values and deeply-held beliefs are about to tumble out all over the place. We can already envision the mess that is to come—in fact, we’re watching it unfurl in slow motion. Soon, the world will look like the intellectual, emotional, and economic equivalent of my 14-year-old’s bedroom. Dirty laundry is strewn across the floor, empty candy wrappers linger on dresser-tops, mud-caked sneakers are tossed in the corner, and the faint yet unmistakable stench of prepubescent body odor is ubiquitous. Nothing is copasetic. Nothing is in its place. Instead, everything is outside the box. It’s not creative, inspiring, or insightful. No, it’s disorienting and anxiety-provoking. I want to tidy it up as quickly as possible. I want to put things back in their familiar places. I want to restore order and eliminate chaos. But no matter how hard I try, I can’t do it, because the old boxes are ripped and torn. Their bottoms have fallen out. Now, they’re useless. Social, cultural, economic, spiritual, psychological, emotional, intellectual: Everything is outside the box. And this new sheltered-in-place experience won’t fit into old containers.Jordan Shapiro, Ph.D., is a senior fellow for the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop and Nonresident Fellow in the Center for Universal Education at the Brookings Institution. He teaches at Temple University, and wrote a column for Forbes on global education and digital play from 2012 to 2017. His book, The New Childhood, was released by Little, Brown Spark in December 2018.Read More… Full Article
king In 'Dirt,' Bill Buford Is Able To Offer An Authentic Adventure In French Cooking By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 12:35:00 -0400 As a longtime Paris resident, at first I feared Dirt might be yet another expat tale of moving to France en famille, with all its tedious clichés. I should have known better. Full Article
king Coronavirus World Map: Tracking The Spread Of The Outbreak By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 08:22:13 -0400 A map of confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths around the world. The respiratory disease has spread rapidly across six continents and has killed thousands of people. Full Article
king Is it worth risking lives to speed up a coronavirus vaccine? By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 15:59:46 -0400 Thousands of people have volunteered to be exposed to coronavirus if it means a vaccine can be developed more quickly. Should we let them? Full Article
king New coronavirus threat appears in children, risking heart damage By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 14:22:16 -0400 Five top pediatric heart, infectious disease or critical care specialists told Yahoo News they are tracking a serious new syndrome they believe is related to Kawasaki disease, affecting children infected with the coronavirus. Full Article
king The Psychological Benefits of Picking Up a Hobby By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 20:13:00 GMT Even if you’re brand new to a hobby, it doesn’t have to take long before the activity can soothe you. Full Article
king Meet the TikTok Creators Taking the Mini-Horror Movie to New Levels By time.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 14:25:05 +0000 Here's why turning to horror in in times of trouble or uncertainty is perfectly normal Full Article Uncategorized clickmonsters COVID-19 feature News Desk viral
king Tiger King: Producer accuses Joe Exotic of 'shooting animals just because he was pissed off' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-10T07:12:00Z TV star's also claimed to have fed a peacock he killed to his pets Full Article
king Tiger King: Joe Exotic's husband Dillon Passage vows to stand by his spouse – 'I'm not going anywhere' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-10T13:42:00Z 'I'm not going to just abandon him when he needs support' Full Article
king Gogglebox viewers in hysterics as Channel 4 stars watch Tiger King: 'I'm in absolute stitches' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-11T09:37:00Z 'Watching everyone's reaction to Joe Exotic was far better than the series itself,' one viewer wrote Full Article
king Tiger King: What stars of 'bonkers' Netflix show say about notorious Joe Exotic in new aftershow episode By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T13:02:00Z No one held back when asked about the controversial figure Full Article
king Tiger King new episode released by Netflix after show becomes Stranger Things-sized hit By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T05:15:00Z It features many faces from the hit documentary Full Article
king Tiger King: Jeff Lowe reveals whether he thinks Carole Baskin 'killed her ex-husband' in new episode By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T06:54:00Z Zoo owner also accuses Netflix of sensationalising' story to make him 'villain' in new aftershow Full Article
king Tiger King: Rick Kirkham comes forward with disturbing Joe Exotic story that didn't make it into documentary By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T14:04:00Z He called Exotic 'unbelievably cruel' Full Article
king Tiger King: Carole Baskin says she's receiving death threats because of Netflix show By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-11T07:17:00Z She accused hit Netflix show of 'betrayal' in first interview since it began Full Article
king Tiger King's head zookeeper Erik Cowie says Joe Exotic should not be a free man: 'He's gonna die in prison – good riddance' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T06:18:00Z Cowie doesn't hold back in aftershow that's just been released on Netflix Full Article
king Tiger King: Former zoo manager John Reinke accuses Joe Exotic of 'blowing up' his cabin in new episode By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T07:32:00Z 'The man's done a lot of stupid s***' Full Article
king Tiger King: Rick Kirkham says Joe Exotic asked him to kill Carole Baskin in Netflix aftershow episode By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-12T08:49:00Z 'I'll make you a rich man if you kill Carole' Full Article
king Killing Eve writer explains shocking death in season 3 premiere: 'Beloved characters inevitably die' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-13T08:29:28Z This article contains major spoilers for the first episode of 'Killing Eve' series three Full Article
king Oprah Winfrey warns of 'staggering' coronavirus impact on black Americans: 'It's taking us out' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T14:17:07Z TV host dedicated an episode of her show to virus's deadly toll on black America Full Article
king Tiger King: Jeff Lowe denies conspiracy that he is Carole Baskin's ex husband in disastrous Reddit AMA By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-16T06:22:00Z Fans had speculated that Lowe could be Baskin's first husband Michael Murdock in disguise Full Article
king Charles Ingram says cat was shot after shocking Quiz scene shows animal dying By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-16T07:33:53Z 'She was shot by an airgun' Full Article
king The Walking Dead: AMC reportedly developing film spinoff for Norman Reedus's character By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-16T14:52:35Z In the apocalyptic drama series, Reedus plays the popular character Daryl Dixon Full Article
king Tiger King becomes one of Netflix's biggest ever shows as viewing figures surge during lockdown By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-18T09:12:00Z Show about the extraordinary incidents at Joe Exotic's zoo has proved hugely popular Full Article
king Tiger King: Doc Antle claims he sleeps with gun due to death threats By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-21T08:50:14Z Antle believes that animal rights activists are behind the threats Full Article
king Dr Hilary warns protestors breaking coronavirus lockdown rules that 'America is heading for catastrophe' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-21T12:43:00Z 'Do you want your freedom or Covid-19? Because you're going to end up with both' Full Article
king Alexis Martin: Governor commutes sentence of sex trafficking survivor supported by Kim Kardashian West By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-21T14:52:40Z Alexis Martin was serving 21 years to life behind bars Full Article
king Louis Theroux points out glaring issue with Tiger King By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-22T10:11:00Z After praising the show, the documentary filmmaker pointed out one concern he had over the Netflix hit Full Article
king Disney+ reportedly working on new 'female-centric' Star Wars series from Russian Doll's Leslye Headland By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-22T20:14:00Z Report suggests the series takes place in a whole new part of the Star Wars timeline Full Article
king Better Call Saul: Vince Gilligan admits he initially didn't want to bring Breaking Bad's Lalo back By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-23T14:47:00Z 'Man, I was wrong' Full Article