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Colin Powell’s Facebook hacker also breached Bush Family e-mail accounts

It turns out that Colin Powell’s Facebook hack wasn’t just an isolated incident performed by a 13-year old with good password-guessing skills. The hacker, who is known as Guccifer, is also the same hacker who breached e-mail accounts belonging to over a dozen of George W. Bush’s friends and family members. He obtained “interesting e-mails”, photos, list of home addresses, cell phone numbers, and more. The hacker even obtained the gate code to Bush’s home.

Colin Powell's Facebook hacker also hacked Bush Family e-mail accounts 1

Guccifer took over Colin Powell’s Facebook and made posts that were vulgar, juvenile, and in all caps. Guccifer had also uploaded various private photos to Colin Powell’s Facebook as well. One of the photos showed George H. W. Bush lying in a hospital bed, another showed George W. Bush “wearing” a Ku Klux Klan hat, and there were a few self-portraits of Bush in a bath, taking a shower, and attending church.

Colin Powell's Facebook hacker also hacked Bush Family e-mail accounts

There were many references made on Powell’s Facebook page that claimed George W. Bush was affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan, and that the entire Bush family were “puppets of the Illuminati.” Guccifer posted on Powell’s wall, “Kill the Illuminati! Tomorrow’s world will be a world free of Illuminati or will be no more.” The hacker has stated that he has no intentions of stopping his attacks on the Bush administration.

There has been a federal criminal investigation on Guccifer ever since he breached Bush’s e-mail accounts back in early February. Along with those e-mail accounts, Guccifer had also accessed the accounts of U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski, a senior UN official, security contractors in Iraq, and several former FBI agents. Colin Powell’s hack is the latest attack in this case, and judging from the timing of the attacks, there may be another hit within the next 2-3 weeks.

[via The Smoking Gun]

Astronomer discovers closest star system to Sun since 1916

An astronomer from Pennsylvania State University has discovered the closest star system to the sun since 1916. The stars discovered are currently the third-closest star system to the sun, falling right behind the second-closest star system, Barnard’s star (which is 6 light years away from the sun), and the closest star system, composed of Alpha Centauri (4.4 light years away from the sun) and
Proxima Centauri (4.2 light-years away from the sun).

Astronomer discovers closest star system to Sun since 1916

The closest star system is called WISE J104915.57-531906, or WISE J1049-5319 for short. It is 6.5 light years away from the sun and is composed of two stars. The two stars are called “Brown Dwarfs” because they’re stars that are “too small in mass to ever become hot enough to ignite hydrogen fusion.” They bear more resemblance to the planet Jupiter than they do to a star like the sun.

NASA discovers closest star system to Sun since 1916

The discovery was made by Kevin Luhman, who is an associate professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at Penn State. He says that the Brown Dwarf stars are “so close that Earth’s television transmissions from 2006 are now arriving there.” Scientists are hoping to get a better look at these new stars by using the Gemini South telescope and the future James Webb Space Telescope.

The closest star system was named after the satellite that discovered it. The NASA Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) satellite created a map of the entire sky. Luhman studied the images provided by WISE in its 13-month expedition that ended in 2011. Through a lot of “detective work” and research, Luhman was able to find the distance of the stars, its orbiting patterns, and its temperature, confirming the stars were Brown Dwarfs, and that they were very close to our solar system.

Luhman has also stated that since this is the third-closest star system, and because it’s so close to Earth, it will be an “excellent hunting ground for planets”. He says that these Brown Dwarfs may be one of the “first destinations for manned expeditions outside of our solar system.” Of course those expeditions being far, far away into the future. We still have to take our first steps on Mars first, and we’re hoping that SpaceX’s reusable rockets will take us there.

[via NASA]

'Bachelor' Finale: Sean Lowe Makes His Choice

Bachelor Finale Waiting - H 2013

Sean Lowe’s long road to love came to an end on the season finale of The Bachelor on Monday. The Texas businessman made his final choice between Lindsay and Catherine.

[Warning: Spoilers from the March 11 finale.]

After spending time with both women, Sean chose Catherine. He proposed to her at the end of the episode.

PHOTOS: From Emma Stone to Jennifer Hudson, 12 Reality Stars Turned Actors

"Catherine, I want to spend the rest of my life telling you, 'I love you' and making you feel like the most special, beautiful woman in the world," he said before getting down on one knee.

She accepted his proposal. "I'm so addicted to you," she said to him in her post-proposal awe.

Catherine caught Sean’s eye from the beginning, and he’s often talked about their spark. She has written him awkward, yet sweet, love notes throughout their journey on the show. During the hometown visits, she took him Seattle, where she forced him to catch fish thrown at him at a market before taking him home to meet her family.

VIDEO: 'Bachelor' Sean Lowe on What He Learned From Watching Himself on TV

Sean spent most of the episode debating about which women was the one for him. Earlier in the episode, Sean had a heart-to-heart with his mom about his touch choice. She seemed concerned that he shouldn’t propose if he was having such a hard time making a choice.

STORY: 'The Bachelor: The Women Tell All': 10 Things You Didn't See on TV

Sean also went on his final dates with the women.

During their date, Catherine explained how worried she gets making herself vulnerable to Sean.

"I do get nervous because it is so hard and it is very scary to be emotional and do it to somebody that means so much to me," she says.

It turns out that the mysterious letter that had been teased as part of the finale episode was just another love letter from Catherine. It was fittingly the last thing he read before she walked up to meet him.

The two-hour Bachelor finale on Monday, March 11, was followed by a live “After the Final Rose” special on ABC.

Email: Rebecca.Ford@thr.com; Twitter: @Beccamford

These Soviet anti-alcohol posters offer a lurid view of communist history

In the USSR, alcoholism was an enormous problem, which the government tried to tackle with these incredible PSA posters. The messages in them will be familiar to anyone who has seen anti-drug posters in the United States -- but the style is distinctively Soviet.

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A detail of the picture above.

(via Photocronograph)

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(1958, N. Velezhneva, N. Kuzovkin)

(via 60-e)

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(via whyarmadillo)

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Scrap from left, vodka from right.

(via ya.ru)

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(via sssr-online)

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(via webpark.ru)

(via funlog.ru)

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(via nnm.ru)

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(via Yandex)

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(via Raznesi)

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(via Liberal Vision)

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(via adme.ru)

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(via Pyanstvu-net)

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(via redavantgarde)

Skeet Ulrich to Star in Howard Gordon's CBS Drama 'Anatomy of Violence'

Skeet Ulrich Headshot - P 2013

Anatomy of Violence has found its lead in Skeet Ulrich.

The former Jericho actor has been tapped to star in the CBS pilot from Homeland's Howard Gordon, Alex Gansa and Alex Cary, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

PHOTOS: The Faces of Pilot Season 2013

The hourlong drama effort, inspired by Adrian Raine’s nonfiction book The Anatomy of Violence: The Biological Roots of Crime, is familiar territory for the trio as it centers on Dr. Raines, a criminal psychologist who partners with a young female detective with whom he shares a conflicted past.

Ulrich will play Raines, who is being billed as the unshaven, disheveled maverick FBI criminal psychiatrist who specializes in the reasons people commit acts of extreme violence. He joins previously cast Homeland vet David Harewood, who is set to play Alejo, a celebrated profiler and Raines' boss and friend in the 20th Century Fox TV project. 

Ulrich, whose credits include Robot Chicken and Law & Order: Los Angeles, is repped by UTA and Brillstein.

Netflix introduces ISP Speed Index, shows the fastest and slowest ISPs

Have you ever wondered how your Netflix experience stacks up compared to that of other users? Netflix mas made it easy to satisfy that curiosity by introducing its ISP Speed Index, which lists the fastest and slowest ISP for different countries based on information gleaned from its users, as well as the overall average speed for each country.

Screenshot from 2013-03-12 05:31:14

Of course, this isn’t the first time Netflix has revealed such information, having released a graph on the performance of top networks back in 2011. That information was harder to sort through, however, and far less appealing to the eye. With the ISP Speed Index, the information has been aggregated in a single location, with easily digestible information and the ability to pull up data for eight countries.

According to Netflix, 33 million customers stream in excess of a billion hours of video every month, providing ample data. Streaming data has been provided for the US, UK, Ireland, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway, and Mexico. The US rounds out the list with both the fastest and slowest ISP speeds, while Mexico comes in at the bottom of the list for highest speed, and second from bottom (after the US) in the lowest speed category.

Mexico has the lowest overall speed at 1.65Mbps, however, while Finland has the top overall speed at 2.57Mbps. For the United States, Google Fiber comes in as #1 with 3.35Mbps, while Clearwire comes in last at 1.25Mbps; the average speed is 2.3Mbps. The UK’s speeds are a tad less polarized, with Virgin beating out the rest of its competition at 2.37Mbps, and EVERYTHINGEVERYWHERE coming in last with 1.77Mbps; the average speed is 2.07Mbps.

[via Netflix]

Fashion Blogger Aimee Song's 5 Fave Spring Trends

by Jennifer Chan Mon., Mar. 11, 2013 6:05 PM PDT

Aimee Song Courtesy of Sylvain Gaboury/PatrickMcmullan.com

Joining the ranks of Rachel Zoe and Olivia Palermo  top blogger Aimee Song of Song of Style was recently named guest editor of Piperlime this spring, where she'll be contributing style advice and weekly blog posts for the massive retail site.

Looks like celebs aren't the only ones with fashion influence these days!

And since we simply adore Song's feminine-yet-eccentric style, we knew she'd be the perfect person to discuss the hottest spring trends with us. 

Here are her faves:

See the spring trends we're excited about

Aimee Song Courtesy of Sylvain Gaboury/PatrickMcmullan.com

1. Spring Leather: "Definitely invest in a great leather top in a neutral shade," she said. "You can mix and match it with many items and it's easier to pull off than you'd think."

2. Metallics: Song suggests splurging on a pair of flashy heels (she's entirely obsessed with Giuseppe Zanotti) in any combination of gold, silver or rose gold. 

3. Black and White: Spotted on countless celebs this season, this bold color combination is here to stay.

4. Bold Florals: Feminine and fresh, this pretty print will instantly enliven your wardrobe. 

5. Edgy Jewelry: "Get a statement necklace you can wear numerous times," she advised. The beautiful blogger (and interior designer!) recommends one of her fave lines based in New York: Lionette. 

What are your favorite spring trends? 

Check out the top fall 2013 trends from New York, London and Paris Fashion Weeks

Samsung finally tops the smartphone market in China

Samsung has finally taken the top spot in China’s smartphone market. It has been gunning for the position since 2009, and has not only taken the top spot, but has taken it by a landslide. The company has reported that it has sold a whopping 30.06 million smartphones in China in the last year alone, a figure that is 3 times the 10.9 million smartphones it had sold back in 2011. The huge boost in sales is attributed to Samsung’s renown branding in the smartphone market.

Samsung tops the smartphone market in China

Yonhap News states that Samsung currently has a 17.7% market share in China, a 5.3% boost from 2011. This also supports China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s belief that Android is too dominant in its country. Samsung has beaten out China’s mobile manufacturers Lenovo, and Huawei for the top spot. Lenovo came in 2nd place with a market share of 13.2%, Apple came in 3rd with 11%, and Huawei came in 4th with 9.9%. Nokia, who held the top position in China’s smartphone market in 2011 fell all the way down to 3.7% from the 29.9% it used to be at.

It’s very interesting to see Huawei in 4th place, especially since the company has high hopes of one day taking the top spot in the global smartphone market place someday. The company believes that it can take on the likes of Samsung and Apple by releasing a variety of mid-tier smartphones that vary from region to region, and also by releasing a universal flagship smartphone each year. It is dedicating a lot of resources to its mobile sector, and believes that since its experienced in both the hardware side and network side of mobile technology, it has the upper hand against the two current mobile juggernauts.

Samsung’s dominance in the Chinese smartphone market is very impressive, seeing how it has yet to release it’s next flagship smartphone, the Samsung Galaxy S IV. The company is set to announce the device on Thursday, March 14th, and there’s no doubt that it will be a major success like its predecessors. It’ll be very interesting to see how much Samsung’s smartphone sales and market share increase by next year.

[via Android Community]

'The Great Gatsby' to Open Cannes Film Festival

Leonardo DiCaprio Great Gatsby - H 2012Leonardo DiCaprio in "The Great Gatsby"

The Great Gatsby will open the 66th Festival de Cannes, organizers said early Tuesday local time.

The movie will screen May 15 at the Grand Theatre Lumiere of the Palais des Festivals, out of competition as part of the Official Selection.

STORY: Steven Spielberg to Head Cannes Film Festival Jury

Leonardo DiCaprio stars in the Baz Luhrmann-directed film, adapted from the novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The movie, set on the East Coast during the Roaring Twenties, depicts the romantic and tragic figure of Jay Gatsby (DiCaprio) as narrated by his friend Nick Carraway (Tobey Maguire). Carey Mulligan is Daisy Buchanan, whose husband is played by Joel Edgerton. The book was adapted by Luhrmann and Craig Pearce, based on Fitzgerald's 1925 novel.

Rapper Jay-Z, who scored the movie, and Bollywood legend Amitabh Bachchan also will attend the premiere, organizers said.

"It is a great honor for all those who have worked on The Great Gatsby to open the Cannes Film Festival," Luhrmann said in a statement. "We are thrilled to return to a country, place and festival that has always been so close to our hearts, not only because my first film, Strictly Ballroom, was screened there 21 years ago, but also because F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote some of the most poignant and beautiful passages of his extraordinary novel just a short distance away at a villa outside St. Raphael."

This will mark the second time in festival history that the opening film will be screened in 3D, following Up in 2009.

STORY: Baz Lurhmann Sneaks Into a Test Screening of 'The Great Gatsby'

Gatsby opens domestically May 10 and in France on the same day it screens at the festival. The film will be distributed in 2D and 3D by Warner Bros. Pictures and in certain regions by Village Roadshow Pictures.

Luhrmann has twice been honored by the Festival de Cannes, for Strictly Ballroom (Un Certain Regard in 1992) and for Moulin Rouge! at the opening of the festival in 2001.

DiCaprio returns to the Croisette for the first time since the 2007 presentation of The 11th Hour, an ecological documentary he produced.

The Artist Who Helped Invent Space Travel

Although largely unknown today, astronomer-artist Lucien Rudaux was the grandfather of all modern... Read…

If Lucian Rudaux was the Grandfather of space art, Chesley Bonestell was the father. He was born on January 1, 1888, 15 years before the Wright brothers first flew and 38 years before the launch of the first liquid-fuel rocket. When he died 98 years later, men had walked on the moon and spacecraft had visited most of the planets and many of the moons of the solar system.

Bonestell's paintings not only anticipated 20th century space exploration, they helped to bring it about. So realistic were his depictions of other worlds that visiting them no longer seemed fantasy. His artwork looked like picture postcards taken by some future astronaut.

Bonestell started drawing at age five and be­gan formal art instruction by the time he was 12. When he was 17, he visited Lick Observatory where he was in­spired by seeing Saturn through the observatory's giant refractors. As soon as he returned home, Bonestell sketched a picture of the planet as he had observed it—probably his first attempt at space art.

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Bonestell eventually became an architectural designer and renderer. One of his first professional jobs was working with the legendary Willis Polk on the reconstruction of San Francisco after the great earthquake and fire. Polk quickly made Bonestell his chief designer. In New York, Bonestell assisted Wil­liam van Alen in the design of the Chrysler Building (its famous gargoyles are Bonestell's work). Later, Bonestell worked on the Golden Gate Bridge.

During this time, he kept up his interest in astronomy, filling sketchbooks with extraterrestrial scenes, like this one:

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In 1938, Bonestell began a new career in Hollywood as a spe­cial effects matte painter. The first film he worked on was Orson Welles's Citizen Kane. All the views of turn-of-the-century New York and of Charles Foster Kane's mansion, Xan­adu, are Bonestell's artwork. In The Fountainhead, Bonestell in a sense was Howard Roark: all of the buildings created by Ayn Rand's superheroic architect are by Bonestell. He eventually became Hollywood's highest-paid matte artist.

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After his success as an astronomical artist, Bonestell returned to Hollywood to provide spe­cial effects art for George Pal’s Destination Moon, War of the Worlds and When Worlds Collide. The complete panoramic matte painting for the latter is here, and an unused alternate version below:

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And Bonestell's 14-foot-wide lunar landscape created for Destination Moon:

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It occurred to him that he could employ what he’d learned as a special effects artist to create astronomical art with a level of realism never seen before. "As my knowledge of the technical side of the motion picture industry broadened,” he wrote, “I realized I could ap­ply camera angles as used in the motion picture studio to il­lustrate 'travel' from satellite to satellite, showing Saturn ex­actly as it would look, and at the same time I could add inter­est by showing the inner satellites or outer ones on the far side of Saturn, as well as the planet itself in different phas­es."

For instance, he often employed a laborious technique of constructing detailed model landscapes, which he then photographed, painting over the final print. This resulted in a level of realism that was utterly convincing. It was a laborious technique, however, that he seldom used after the 1950s. Here is a detail from one these models:

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This project resulted in his first published space art, a series of paintings depicting scenes on Saturn’s moons, that appeared in the May 29,1944, issue of Life. The public—to say nothing of science fiction fans—were astonished and delighted. Among the paintings was a ethereally beautiful view of Saturn seen from Titan. Inspiring an entire generation of scientists and space enthusiasts—countless scientists, engineers and astronauts have been inspired in their choice of careers by Bonestell's images, including a young Carl Sagan—it has been called “the painting that launched a thousand careers.”

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Around this time, Bonestell began a long-term collabora­tion with Willy Ley, an expatriate German historian and sci­ence popularizer who had been a member of the German Spaceflight Society (Verein fur Raumschiffahrt). Taking advantage of Ley's advice, Bonestell began adding spacecraft to his paintings. In 1946 Life published another set of his il­lustrations, this time depicting a manned flight to the moon.

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Bonestell's art began appearing regularly in magazines, from Look, Coronet, Pic and Mechanix Illustrated to Air Trails, Scientific American and Astounding Science Fiction. So popular had his art become that Bonestell once mistakenly sent the cover painting for a science-fiction magazine to the wrong publication. The editor of that magazine promptly ran it! Bonestell's first book, The Conquest of Space, created in collaboration with Ley, featured 48 of his paintings. It became an immediate best-seller. The cover painting has become one of the iconic images of the 1950s:

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In addition to the artwork he was creating for books, magazines and movies, Bonestell created a magnificent mural for the Boston Museum of Science. Forty feet wide, it depicted a lunar landscape with breathtaking realism. The mural was removed after the Apollo 11 landing in 1969 because “it was no longer accurate.” The mural is now in the collection of the National Air & Space Museum, where plans are being made to restore and display it.

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Sir Arthur C. Clarke tried to explain Bonestell’s popularity at this time by saying that his “...remarkable technique produces an effect of realism so strik­ing that his paintings have sometimes been mistaken for ac­tual colour photographs by those slightly unacquainted with the present status of interplanetary flight.... In the years to come it is probably destined to fire many imaginations, and thereby to change many lives."

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Clarke was only too right. In 1951 Cornelius Ryan, the asso­ciate editor of Collier's magazine, invited Bonestell to illus­trate a series of five articles on the future of spaceflight. The prime author was Wernher von Braun.

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Just as Clarke had been, von Braun found himself awed by Bonestell's sharp eye for scientific and engineering accuracy. He once wrote that "Chesley Bonestell's pictures... are far more than reproductions of beautiful ethereal paintings of Worlds Beyond. They present the most accurate portrayal of those faraway heavenly bodies that modern science can offer. I do not say this lightly. In my many years of association with Chesley I have learned to respect, nay fear, this wonderful artist's obsession with perfection. My file cabinet is filled with sketches of rocket ships I had prepared to help him in his art work—only to have them returned to me with pene­trating detailed questions or blistering criticism of some in­consistency or oversight."

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The Collier's series—published between 1952 and 1954—took America by storm. The country turned space-happy; reproductions and knockoffs of Bonestell's paintings appeared in settings ranging from commercial advertise­ments to television programs to school lunch boxes. The series was eventually collected in three books: Across the Space Frontier, Conquest of the Moon and Exploration of Mars, now all collector’s items. Bonestell's artwork strongly influenced the American pub­lic and, in turn, the government to support an investment in space exploration. An influence that has been repeatedly acknowledged.

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Over the following decade Bonestell watched manned space explo­ration become a reality. He grumpily noticed that the softly rolling lu­nar hills seen by the Apollo astronauts bore little resemblance to the craggy, romanticized, Doresque landscapes he had painted. But such inaccuracies do little to diminish the primary importance of Bonestell's work. His illustrations gave immediacy and veri­similitude to dry astronomical data. What had once been columns of numbers and blurry telescopic images took on a new, compelling reality.

Bonestell continued to work until he died in 1986, an un­finished painting still on his easel. Asteroid number 3129 and a crater on Mars have been given the name "Bonestell"—a fitting honor for the man whose art contributed to the birth of the space age.

All art copyright by and reproduced courtesy of Bonestell LLC

Tina Fey Tells Photographer to 'Go F--- Yourself' When Asked About Taylor Swift

Tina Fey

Tina Fey is done talking about Taylor Swift.

PHOTOS: Golden Globes 2013: Best and Worst Moments

The actress didn't mince words when a paparazzi photographer asked if she thought Swift had "overreacted" to a Golden Globes joke, in which Fey lightly poked fun at the singer's dating life. In a now infamous response, Swift told Vanity Fair that there was a "special place in hell for women who don't help other women."

With three little words, Fey laid the nonexistent feud to rest.

"Go f--- yourself," she told the photog with a smile on her face. Pressed again to say something incriminating, Fey repeated, "You can go f--- yourself."

PHOTOS: Taylor Swift's Best Red-Carpet Looks

Before the interaction concluded, when the photographer informed Fey that she was "not being nice," the star suggested that he "get a job, dude."

Video of the incident was first posted on the E! website, but has since been removed. Buzzfeed, however, documented the entire exchange through a series of .gifs.

Fey previously addressed Swift's remarks, telling Entertainment Tonight that it was "just a joke" and that she "did not see that one coming." Meanwhile, Fey's Globes co-host Amy Poehler told The Hollywood Reporter, "I am going to hell. But for other reasons. Mostly boring tax stuff."

Mozilla will not bring Firefox to iOS

Mozilla stated at SXSW that it is not currently developing a version of its Firefox browser for iOS and it does not intend to do so in the future. Mozilla feels that it can better focus its time and development elsewhere because it won’t be able to build the browser it wants on the iOS platform. As CNET says, it won’t be able to “carry over its sophisticated rendering and javascript engines to iOS.”

Mozilla will not bring Firefox back to iOS

The iOS platform isn’t exactly friendly with 3rd party browsers. Users are forced to stick with Safari as their main browser. Other browser companies are still releasing their product to iOS, despite their product not being able to be used as a default choice, because they just want to be part of iOS’s ecosystem. Right now, Safari dominates 55% of the mobile browser market, while Firefox only holds a measly 1%.

Jay Sullivan, Senior VP of products for Mozilla, and Mike Taylor, a Web Opener for Opera, believe that the consumers’ choice in what browser they use is an important part of what makes “browsers, and the Web in general, great.” Many companies see the importance of giving consumers a choice in what web browser they can use. Microsoft especially took notice when the EU demanded them to give consumers more web browsers to choose from instead of its Internet Explorer.

Firefox will continue to work to improve its browser on the Android OS, because it allows them to create the browser it wants. However, despite offering its browser on Android OS, many users will still opt for better alternatives like Chrome. If it hopes to grab more of the mobile browser market, it’s probably going to have to place all of its bets on its upcoming Firefox OS.

[via CNET]

SXSW: Maker Studios Execs on Turning Down TLC, How Mobile Views Threaten Revenue

Shaycarl Headshot - P 2013

On the third day of South by Southwest Interactive, execs and talent behind Maker Studios -- the Culver City-based YouTube-stars studio which boasts more than 2.5 billion page views a month -- spoke before an overflow crowd addressed the unique business challenges facing makers of original content for YouTube. The all-Maker panel, moderated by company COO Courtney Holt, featured co-founders and comedic talent KassemG and Shaycarl and co-founder/CEO Danny Zappin.

The talk veered between humor and serious business as the panel members discussed the maturing YouTube space, expressing some frustration that many advertisers, according to Shaycarl, still "see the size of the screen as more valuable as you go up" from the small screens of laptops, tablets and phones to the bigger screens of TV and film. "But hopefully they realize the size of the eyeballs is all the same" -- and that when ad rates between the mediums are compared -- "the return on investment is way more valuable," he continued.

Founded by YouTube talent in 2009, the digital production company works on a system of profit-sharing revenue from YouTube with its own stable of stars, offering the services of a studio, including development, promotion, distribution, sets, wardrobe, marketing, merchandise, potential brand deals, animators and now even live sets. ("It's a whole other medium to screw around with," said KassemG, though bandwidth capacity continues to be an issue.) Maker has 165 million subscribers to its 10,000-plus channels, and its series Epic Rap Battles of History is the most viewed format on YouTube on a per episode basis, averaging 30 million views an episode (Many broadcast shows average 2 million viewers an episode.) Maker recently signed deals with Snoop Dogg and Kevin Smith, and moved to new studios in Culver City, Calif., to accommodate its growing staff now at 350.

But two key challenges face the makers of content for the web.

PHOTOS: Top Grads of YouTube U

Mobile advertising rates need to come up: "The role of mobile is obviously exploding. It's growing faster than even we expected. For a lot of our channels, over 50 percent of views are coming from mobile,” said Zappin. “But the monetization of mobile hasn't caught up. So the revenue of the content creators is actually going down. More of the views are happening on places that aren't generating the revenue."

And studios like Maker, even with their enormous number of page views, are realizing that they need to become even bigger in order to compete with television. The reason? Advertisers believe they need to hit all those eyeballs in a short time frame for maximum impact. "The challenges we see on YouTube specifically is that it is a global platform and that KassemG may get ten million views on one video but that may be only three million in the United States and of that three million maybe only one million of them came in the first week. We recognize that advertisers want that impact and to hit a large audience in a region all at once. This is the reason we need to grow our audience much larger than we originally thought to hit two or three million people all at once," said Zappin.

Maker Studios success means that not only do advertisers like Clorox, Electronic Arts and Warner Bros. come calling, but Hollywood content creators increasingly do too. YouTube star-turned-Maker Studios co-founder Lisa Donovan did a stint on Fox’s MADtv in 2007, video sensation Justine Ezarik (aka iJustine) has guested on Law & Order: SVU and Criminal Minds and Shaycarl appeared on ABC’s No Ordinary Family.

But they’ve also turned things down, including reality-show proposals from the likes of TLC. "We've been approached by TLC and other television studios who've said we can create a reality TV show at the cost of taking down all your related YouTube stuff. So we've said no to things that might have seemed like a good opportunity but at the detriment of what we've already created on YouTube," said Shaycarl. "Getting on TV … that's always been kind of like not the goal."

They professed they still love the immediacy that YouTube provides. "I've woken up in the morning with a song in my head. I can just go down to Maker and I can make whatever I want," said Shaycarl, who cherishes the connection to the audience the medium provides. He recently lost 100 pounds and did a weigh-in every Tuesday on his weight-loss channel. (He has five of them.) "Every Tuesday I knew there would be 150,000 people there and they'd be disappointed if I didn't lose weight," he said. Added KassemG, "They'll call you out on your bullshit." He added jokingly, "That's why you lost so much weight. All those negative comments gave him anorexia."

One irony though of Maker’s success is that the YouTube system has in many ways become as impossible to break into as Hollywood’s. Zappin said that he first came to Hollywood to try to get into filmmaking and acting the traditional way, as did KassemG, who sardonically recalled an audition doing "a piece of material you hate to get a job you don't want."

When YouTube came out, said Zappin, "we were just really excited about, here’s a global audience we can reach and we don''t have to get anyone to let us do something."

But Shaycarl said he doesn't think he could break into the sphere if he were to start out today. "It would be maybe next to impossible just because of the supply and demand. It's such a bigger ocean now. There's a lot more money being put into it, with all of Hollywood and these brands starting YouTube channels."

Mark-Paul Gosselaar Expecting His Third Child—and First With Catriona McGinn!

by Natalie Finn Mon., Mar. 11, 2013 8:08 PM PDT

Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Catriona McGinn Michael Bezjian/WireImage.com

Mark-Paul Gosselaar's family tree is starting to sprawl.

A baby is on the way for the Franklin & Bash star and wife Catriona McGinn in September, People reports. The wee one will be the couple's first child together—and Gosselaar's third overall.

"We are all really excited for the arrival of our new addition," the actor told the magazine. "We've always wanted a big family. The kids are looking forward to a little sibling, and are asking a lot of funny questions right now."

Fellow Saved by the Bell alum Elizabeth Berkley welcomed her first child last July 

The former Saved by the Bell preppy has two kids, 6 1/2-year-old daughter Ava Lorenn and 9-year-old son Michael Charles, with ex-wife Lisa Ann Russell—aka the current Mrs. Jeff Probst.

The Survivor host dished to Larry King in December about sharing custody of his wife's little ones with Gosselaar and McGinn—and it sounds like tribal rivalries are nothing he has to worry about on the homefront.

"They raised them with the kind of love that the kids they see me, and he's now remarried, his wife, [the kids] just see us as two more parents," Probst said.

Gosselaar and McGinn tied the knot last July.

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Theater Owners Celebrate Victory Over Bloomberg's NYC Soda Ban

john fithian and michael bloomberg Split - h 2013NATO's John Fithian, left; Michael Bloomberg, right

Theaters owners are "elated" over a court ruling blocking Mayor Michael Bloomberg's ban on the sale of sugary drinks 16 oz. and larger in New York City.

In his decision, handed down one day before the proposed ban was take effect, Supreme Court Judge Milton Tingling said the city's health department had overstepped its authority. Bloomberg had championed the law in an effort toward controlling obesity.

The prohibition would have been a major blow for theater owners, who can see a profit of as much as 85 percent on concession sales. The New York branch of the National Association of Theatre Owners was a party to the lawsuit opposing the ban.

"We are elated with today’s decision," NATO said in a statement. "This issue was never about obesity, nor about soda. This was all about power. The court rejected the mayor’s attempt to unilaterally tell New Yorkers what to drink and where to drink it.

"We are pleased that the court’s decision shows that serious problems like obesity cannot be addressed by the imposition of an arbitrary and porous mayoral fiat," the statement continued. "Greater education, awareness and collaboration with all stakeholders will make a far greater impact than any unpopular and unfair executive decree."

Tingling added that the way the soda ban was pushed into law "eviscerate(s)" the separation of powers and found that "to be more troubling than sugar sweetened beverages."