Watch Hillary Clinton answer a cute FaceTime call from her grandchildren during an event

2017%252f10%252f20%252fa0%252fchloebryan11.0b114.jpg%252f90x90By Chloe Bryan

Hillary Clinton did something this week that I cannot fathom doing: She answered an unexpected FaceTime call in public.

On Tuesday night, Clinton spoke at a launch event for the political action committee Vote Mama, which fundraises for progressive female candidates with children under the age of 18. Mid-speech, her phone started to ring. But instead of silencing it and turning beet-red, as I would, she picked it up.

“It’s my grandchildren on FaceTime,” she said.

SEE ALSO: Hillary Clinton subtweeted Trump with a ‘Mean Girls’ reference and we are screaming

It ended up being a cute moment — Clinton’s grandchildren, Charlotte and Aiden, ended up saying hi to everyone in the room. 

It was so cute, in fact, that I will forgive Clinton for initially putting the phone to her ear instead of looking into the camera.

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Wax seal letter videos will bring you back to a simpler time

This age-old practice gets our stamp of approval.
This age-old practice gets our stamp of approval.

Image:  Creativ Studio Heinemann / getty images 

2019%252f02%252f04%252fdf%252fimg 58811.67a74.jpg%252f90x90By Harry Hill

This post is part of Hard Refresh, a soothing weekly column where we try to cleanse your brain of whatever terrible thing you just witnessed on Twitter.


If Hermione Granger had had YouTube access at Hogwarts, she’d definitely watch wax seal videos. 

Even with the advent of the World Wide Web, it’s still nice to communicate with people the old-fashioned way sometimes. Sure, tapping a text takes just seconds, but writing a letter on paper is a chance to flex our creative muscles and put some real meaning into the message. 

With all the chaos of the modern world, it may be nice to take a step back in time and revisit the art of the wax seal. And just like everything else that exists, YouTube has a designated corner for it. 

SEE ALSO: You could win a $1.7 million mansion by writing a standout letter

A brief history on wax seals should come in handy while watching these videos. Though letter writing has been around since there were people to write them, wax seals only became popular in the middle ages. They were used as an authenticator for important documents before they became widely used to actually seal letters from prying eyes, according to the brand Kings Wax. 

Since the stamps can be personalized to include initials or a crest, there is a very official and personal air about the whole process. Mostly, though, it’s just nice to watch slow hands going through the steps of actually making a seal. 

First, the wax is chosen, whether it be from a bead, stick, or glue gun. If multiple colors are used, they sometimes they’re arrange them in a certain way to achieve a specific look. From there, the wax is heated over a flame in a spoon or directly on the stick. Once it’s hot enough, the most satisfying part of the process happens: the wax is poured. 

It doesn’t take much to make a standard seal, but  the size of stamps varies. After about 10-15 seconds, the stamp is pressed into the hot wax for another 10 seconds and voila! A wax seal is born. 

If you’re just looking to relax and watch someone do something creative by candlelight, these videos are perfect for you. Just be cautious, you may find yourself writing a postcard to a long lost friend and using an old Crayon (melted in a spoon) to jazz it up. 

The most famous seals might be those seen in Harry Potter, dropping from the claws of an owl into Harry’s hands. Here is 11 minutes of pure Hogwarts-inspired wax sealing for your viewing pleasure:

While sealing a letter with wax requires dexterity and practice, folding letters may also requires some expertise. Now, it’s not necessary to fold your letters like they’re going to be delivered in lamplight by a courier, but it will add to the mise-en-scène of it all. 

Sometimes, wax seals are just a chance to make colorful things in a simple and soothing way. 

So take a step back, and remember a time when correspondence required more than a finger on glass and a digital litter of eggplant-shaped hieroglyphics. 

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Verizon’s 5G network launches in Chicago and Minneapolis on April 14

5G is coming.
5G is coming.

Image: BOB AL-GREENE / MASHABLE

2017%252f10%252f24%252f21%252fraymondwong3profile.34d72.jpg%252f90x90By Raymond Wong

Mark your calendars for April 11, because that’s when Verizon switches on its “real” 5G network in two U.S. cities.

Verizon’s “5G Ultra Wideband Network” is the real deal — it works with phones and other mobile devices just like 4G LTE — and isn’t to be confused with the company’s “home” 5G network, which launched last year in select cities.

SEE ALSO: 5G will be crazy fast, but it’ll be worthless without unlimited data

This is great news because it means there will actually be a working 5G network to use the handful of new 5G smartphones launching this year on.

But there is some fine print to be aware of. Because, of course, there is!

First, the 5G network’s only launching in Chicago and Minneapolis on April 11. Live in a different city? Tough luck! You won’t be getting 5G yet.

Verizon says its new 5G network will launch in “more than 30 markets” in 2019, but stopped short at  announcing rollout dates for any other U.S. cities.

There is some fine print to be aware of. 

Second, bumping up to 5G speeds will cost you an extra $10 per month, though Verizon will give you the first three months for free. This extra monthly cost applies to “any Verizon unlimited plan, including  Verizon Go Unlimited, Beyond Unlimited or Above Unlimited plans.”

And lastly, the only phone that will work with Verizon’s 5G network at launch will be the Moto Z3, which must be paired with the 5G Moto Mod. If you already own a Moto Z3, then great! All you need is to buy the bulky module, which will be available for pre-order on March 14 for a heavily discounted $50 for a limited time. After the pre-order period, it’ll return back to its regular $350 sticker price, which is a bit pricey if you ask us.

Early adopters who live in Chicago or Minneapolis will no doubt pounce at the opportunity to hop onto a 5G network that promises to bring significantly faster data speeds and more bandwidth for devices, but we recommend waiting for proper phones with built-in 5G modems to come out first.

Samsung’s Galaxy S10 5G, which is a larger, beefier version of the Galaxy S10+ and comes with a fourth rear camera, looks like it could be the first 5G phone for Verizon that won’t be a brick in your pants the way the Moto Z3 with 5G Moto Mod is. Samsung’s said the S10 5G will launch in Q2 of this year, which means it could launch as early as April.

As we’ve said many times: Carriers and device makers will be slinging 5G around hard this year. Though 5G will be a hot topic this year, there’s a lot we don’t know yet. 

It’s in everyone’s best interest to wait until all 5G networks are live from the major U.S. carriers so that we can get a better picture of which cities will get it this year and how much it’ll cost. For example, while Verizon’s charging $10 extra per month for “unlimited” 5G, T-Mobile’s committed to not raising prices for 5G plans for the next three years. That’s an important factor to consider.

5G will start rolling out this year, but it isn’t something anyone should seriously consider until 2020.

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Mike Freeman’s 10-Point Stance: Le’Veon Bell Gambled and Lost, but the Jets Win

Pittsburgh Steelers Le'Veon Bell arrives at the EA Sports Bowl at The Armory on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2018, in Minneapolis. (Photo by Omar Vega/Invision/AP)

Omar Vega/Associated Press

It’s shopping season in the NFL, and players are cashing in, but Le’Veon Bell lost. There were also big losses in Baltimore and the different standards players and owners are held to by fans and the media. All this and more in the latest 10-Point Stance.

1. The Bell tolled, and he lost

Le’Veon Bell was the best running back in football. No one was smarter, more complete, more slippery, more devastating and more relied upon. Some people may have forgotten all that since he’s been gone for a year. Let former player and current NFL analyst Brian Baldinger remind you how much of a weapon Bell is.

Brian Baldinger @BaldyNFL

.@LeVeonBell was the best football player on the field the last time he put “the pads “ on v @Jaguars in a 45-42 loss. Sometimes our memories have to be stimulated as to how good this player is. And in so many ways; he can be the team’s best friend. PRODUCER! #BaldysBreakdowns https://t.co/NbOLX0JAjH

That talent is what Bell was counting on when he held out last season. He figured there would be a bevy of teams trying to sign him. He was wrong.

Bell’s new contract with the Jets is a good one. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported the four-year, $52.5 million deal included a $35 million signing bonus. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported the Steelers weren’t offering “substantial guarantees.”

But from everything I heard from teams Tuesday and in the early hours Wednesday, Bell was expecting more. He was also expecting more teams to be interested. In reality, there were only a handful of legitimate suitors, according to several teams.

What happened to Bell was a case of revenge on a leaguewide scale.

“He’s a pain in the ass,” one NFC West team executive said.

That’s the view more than a handful of teams shared of Bell. That’s why the interest in him was tepid. Teams despise when players have lengthy holdouts, and as a league, teams tend to back off players who do. It’s pseudo-collusion-y.

There are other reasons why the interest was low: the declining value of the running back, his two suspensions, and the belief a team can find a cheaper back in the draft with much less mileage.

But above all, teams hated Bell’s decision to hold out, and because of it, they didn’t trust him.

While Bell may have lost the financial battle he waged, the Jets definitely won. They got him at a reasonable price, didn’t give up draft picks and now have one of the greatest game-changing players of the past 10 to 20 years.

He’s that good, and the Jets should be that happy.

And while Bell may be happy he can get back on the field again, it cost him a lot more than many expected.

2. Secure that bag

ATLANTA, GA - DECEMBER 02:  C.J. Mosley #57 of the Baltimore Ravens reacts after a defensive stop against the Atlanta Falcons at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on December 2, 2018 in Atlanta, Georgia.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Every year, when free agency hits, we say the same thing…

The money free agents are getting is insane.

This is another one of those years, and it may be the wildest yet. The cash players are getting is almost inexplicable. So many bags are being secured.

Take, for example, the deal Washington gave safety Landon Collins. Multiple reports say he received a six-year, $84 million deal. Now, there’s no way he’ll see all of that money, but an astounding $45 million of it is guaranteed.

Forty-five million guaranteed.

For a safety.

While the position is important, it’s become extremely devalued. As the NFL has emphasized the passing game, it has severely hampered the ability of defensive players to slow their offensive counterparts. And with so much of a safety’s value tied up in a team’s scheme, the going rate for the position has been declining in recent years.

Collins was far from the only player to get Mark Zuckerberg-esque money during the start of free agency. (Technically, the legal tampering period began Monday and Tuesday before free agency officially begins Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET.) 

Defensive end Trey Flowers, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, will be getting $18 million a season in a five-year deal.

Flowers is a talented and versatile player, but is he that good?

Another safety, Tyrann Mathieu, got $42 million over three years, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. The Bills gave a center, Mitch Morse, $11 million a season. It’s the richest contract a center has ever received. Even receiver Devin Funchess, who’s never registered more than 840 yards receiving in a season, got a one-year deal that could pay him up to $13 million. The problem with Funchess is he’s one of the few guys that when trying to secure the bag, he’d drop it.

Alex Brandon/Associated Press

Just Tuesday morning, C.J. Mosley set a new contractual standard for inside linebackers by committing to the Jets on a five-year, $85 million deal with $51 million guaranteed.

And then there is quarterback Nick Foles, who will get $50 million guaranteed from the Jaguars as part of a four-year, $88 million deal. Was that necessary? Maybe not, as several NFC and AFC team sources told me the Jaguars weren’t bidding against other teams. In fact, I’ve heard that no one was bidding for Foles except the Jaguars.

The players deserve all this cash (and more). Secure the bag. Secure the vault. Secure the Porsche. Secure the private jet. Secure the new pool, too.

But it doesn’t make all of these deals wise investments.

So why are so many teams doing it? There are a few reasons:

The increased salary cap space. The cap has increased about $10 million a season every year since 2013. It now stands at around $188 million. According to OvertheCap.com, every team had at least $6 million to spend when free agency began, and 12 teams had at least $30 million waiting to be handed out. That is a lot of room and money. If managed properly, that kind of space could allow teams to sign one or two star free agents a year.

The lack of fear. Overall, teams aren’t afraid to spend big money in free agency the way they were just five or 10 years ago. They know the salary cap will go up, and most of the team’s mistakes can be corrected with cap maneuverings or releasing players.

There’s also not as much apprehension over signing older players. Teams figure that veterans can retain their skills far longer than in the past because of advanced training methods now in use. Just look at the active leaders in career rushing touchdowns: Adrian Peterson (fifth with 106), Marshawn Lynch (16th with 84) and Frank Gore (22nd with 77).

All of them are over 30, and each is still productive; Gore will be 36 years old next season (his 15th), and he just signed a one-year deal with Buffalo for $2 million

Aggression is key. There’s a feeling now—and this is also something that’s changed recently—that you cannot win unless you invest heavily in free agency. Draft picks take time to develop. Trades are not easy to execute. Fans expect shiny new toys in the offseason. Free agency is often the answer to many of those issues.

Look at Green Bay. The Packers have traditionally despised free agency. This year, they jumped into the free-agent volcano with both feet, coming to terms with defensive end Preston Smith on a four-year, $52 million deal and linebacker Za’Darius Smith on a four-year, $66 million contract, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport.

No deal is more emblematic of the changing free-agent times than the Mosley signing. In 2002, as ESPN’s Jamison Hensley remembered:

Jamison Hensley @jamisonhensley

How the NFL world has changed:

In 2002, Ray Lewis signed a seven-year, $50M contract ($7.1M per year) that included a then-NFL record signing bonus of $19M.

Now, 17 years later, C.J. Mosley agrees to a five-year, $85M deal ($17M per year) that includes $51M guaranteed.

The money is pouring in and will keep doing so. Bags are being secured left, right and center

We have never seen anything like this.

(Until next year.)

3. An enlightened pairing

Mary Schwalm/Associated Press

One of the most interesting stories from free agency thus far is what Michael Bennett says he told the Patriots about his plans regarding the national anthem.

In a remarkably candid interview with ESPN.com’s William C. Rhoden, the outspoken veteran defensive end, who is joining the Patriots, said he was surprised the team signed him. Owner Robert Kraft, coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady all have backed Donald Trump over the past few years. Bennett has been open about his frustration with Trump and was one of the first players to support the protests of Colin Kaepernick.

Bennett told ESPN he let the Patriots know he would continue to protest during the national anthem by staying in the locker room. They were fine with it.

“I explained to them that my integrity means everything. I think they respect that about me, they respect who I am as an individual.”

Bennett’s words offer a rare peek behind the free-agent curtain, and it’s all the more remarkable given it sheds light on the notoriously secret Patriots. But yet again, here’s an example of what sets New England apart in the league. People can have differences, and so long as they respect each other, they can still work together. The Pats, unlike many, get it.

4. Flying away

Nick Wass/Associated Press

Baltimore is undergoing the type of wholesale remaking often unseen on a voluntary basis.

As ESPN’s Field Yates noted, in addition to losing Ozzie Newsome, one of the best general managers of all time, the team has lost a bevy of players, many of them talented ones from a fierce defense. Mosley, Za’Darius Smith, safety Eric Weddle, linebacker Terrell Suggs, quarterback Joe Flacco and wide receiver Michael Crabtree all are moving on.

That’s a lot of lost firepower (especially on defense). Losing Newsome, however, could be the biggest loss. He was that good at his job.

These next few years in Baltimore will be interesting to watch.

5. Still waiting on Gronk

SYRACUSE, NY - FEBRUARY 23:  Rob Gronkowski of the New England Patriots looks on prior to the game between the Duke Blue Devils and the Syracuse Orange at the Carrier Dome on February 23, 2019 in Syracuse, New York. Duke defeated Syracuse 75-65. (Photo by

Rich Barnes/Getty Images

Drew Rosenhaus, Rob Gronkowski‘s agent, said on ESPN’s NFL Live this week that the longtime Patriots tight end still hasn’t made a decision about his future.

Just as important, Rosenhaus also mentioned Gronkowski was healthy and fully recovered from a quadriceps injury he played through in the Super Bowl.

I could be wrong, but those declarations of good health felt a lot like a sales pitch to other teams: I’m not sure what Gronk is going to do, but if any teams are considering trading for him, well, he’s healthy.

The guess remains that Gronkowski will return to New England, but a year after he was almost traded to the Lions, his future as a Patriot has never been more tenuous.

6. The Patriot way

Steven Senne/Associated Press

The Patriots suffered some big losses in free agency.

That is a sentence that has been written dozens of times during the Bill Belichick era.

This time, it was offensive tackle Trent Brown, who reportedly will sign with Oakland, and defensive lineman Trey Flowers, who’s headed to the Lions. Brown is one of the best offensive linemen in football, and Flowers was one of the top defensive players in free agency. There’s no question losing these two will hurt the Patriots.

Well, at least in theory. The most impressive part of the Patriots dynasty has been its resilience and how it has withstood significant free-agent losses and still dominated. That’s the Belichick/Brady effect. Belichick can coach anyone, and Brady can turn any offense into a great one.

There’s no reason to think this will change as long as both men are still there. 

7. Don’t hate the players; hate the game

CHARLOTTE, NC - FEBRUARY 17: NFL player, Antonio Brown smiles and laughs during the 2019 NBA All-Star Game on February 17, 2019 at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and

Tom O’Connor/Getty Images

When I tweeted this about the hypocrisy of those calling Antonio Brown disloyal for wanting a richer contract in light of the Chiefs’ decision to cut Justin Houston and avoid a $15 million payout, well, my goodness gracious, did some people get upset. Plenty agreed, but there also were plenty of folks who wanted to punch me in the face (get in line).

Brown’s Pittsburgh departure has become more than a football story. It’s a referendum on the expectations surrounding how teams are supposed to treat players versus the responsibility of players to teams.

Brown’s fiercest critics claim he quit on the team. My response to that is teams quit on players all the time. They cut them. If players get hurt, often they’re released. The Chiefs cut Houston with two years left on his contract because they didn’t want to pay him the money he was due.

Both teams and players make business decisions, but it seems the players often face a lot more vitriol when they make their choices as opposed to the criticism owners get when, say, they move a team and abandon a city.

This debate won’t go away anytime soon, especially with the rising tide of money in the league and the rising willingness of players to flex their contractual muscles. Given how Brown has been treated this offseason, it’s unlikely the fans’ reactions will change, either.

8. For the want of a QB

OAKLAND, CA - SEPTEMBER 10:  Derek Carr #4 of the Oakland Raiders speaks with head coach Jon Gruden in the first quarter during their NFL game against the Los Angeles Rams at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum on September 10, 2018 in Oakland, California.  (

Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images

Adding Brown may be just the beginning of a Raiders run on acquiring talent as they attempt to rebuild the franchise Jon Gruden tore down last season.

But there is one thing that could cause massive problems in Gruden’s plans: quarterback Derek Carr.

Carr has steadily declined since 2016, as Pro Football Focus notes.

Can Carr get better? Of course he could. Will he? He hasn’t demonstrated that he can.

Beyond the cap hold Carr’s contract represents, his inconsistency leaves the Raiders in search of a franchise QB, and as the majority of 32 fanbases can attest, those are not easy to find.

So the Raiders should feel free to add all the talent they want, but until they determine who’s throwing the ball, it’s all window dressing.

9. “I’ve still got a chip on my shoulder”

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - MARCH 03: Linebacker Josh Allen of Kentucky works out during day four of the NFL Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium on March 3, 2019 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)

Joe Robbins/Getty Images

Kentucky linebacker Josh Allen was named the recipient of the Chuck Bednarik Award from the Maxwell Football Club as the nation’s top defensive player. Allen is likely a top-five draft pick, according to B/R’s Matt Miller. I asked a spokesperson from the Maxwell Football Club to ask Allen a few questions on my behalf. Pay particular attention to his second answer, which says a lot of good things about Allen’s attitude.

B/R: Any questions at the combine make you squirm?

Josh Allen: No, no, I’m pretty good in those situations.

B/R: How does it feel to go from being under-recruited in high school, which meant you had to play with a chip on your shoulder, to now being hyped up, one of the top guys? How does that change your mentality?

JA: I mean, it probably will fuel me even more that now I’m here, now I’ve got to solidify myself as the best guy in this draft, and as deserving of a No. 1 spot, or a top-five pick, anyway. I’ve still got a chip on my shoulder. Nothing is ever going to…I could be a Hall of Famer; I’ll still have a chip on my shoulder, you know what I mean? So I’m always going to live with that and use that.

B/R: You’re from Montclair, New Jersey. Would it be important to you to play for the Jets or Giants so your family could see you play?

JA: I’ll play anywhere. Family, they’ll come see me anywhere I go. It would be cool to be back in Jersey, but I don’t care.

10. Lamar Jackson has a Ravens legend in his corner

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - JANUARY 06: Quarterback Lamar Jackson #8 of the Baltimore Ravens looks on after losing to the Los Angeles Chargers during the AFC Wild Card Playoff game at M&T Bank Stadium on January 06, 2019 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patric

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

One more note from the Maxwell Football Club: Hall of Famer Ray Lewis, who received the Tropicana Legends Award from the organization, was asked by the club’s spokesperson on my behalf to give his thoughts on Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson.

“The kid is dynamic,” Lewis said. “He has what I call an ‘it’ factor. That means when he steps on the field, he makes everybody better just by his presence alone. I think it was kind of a good move for them to make a transition out, and I think they had well over a decade with Joe [Flacco], and Joe brought us a Super Bowl, and so those are good times.

“But I think to draft that kid in the first round, they were looking for a bright future with him. And I think what they’re doing with him now, you’re going to have to get him a No. 1 receiver, you’re going to have to get him a consistent running back to really help him out, as well, but I think he will be one of the special ones.”

BONUS (thanks to the free agency frenzy)

11. Strange days, indeed

Elise Amendola/Associated Press

So it appears the president once joked that his daughter should have married Tom Brady.

Yes, correct, that is right, you read that right.

The New York Times obtained a copy of a book on Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner. And while there is a lot in it about the political machinations of the president’s daughter and son-in-law, there is one passage in the book that had me, like, What the hell?

The Times recounts a story in the book about how Trump joked that his daughter could have married Brady. Which, by the way, is a question many parents have asked their kids.

My mom asks me every day: Why didn’t you marry Tom Brady?

The anecdote is another illustration of how close Trump has been to the Patriots hierarchy. I’ve heard for years how much Brady and Trump like each other. Not saying that’s good or bad. But it is a thing.

Sometimes, it’s a weird thing, but there are a lot of weird things going on nowadays. 

Mike Freeman covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @mikefreemanNFL

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False Confessions: How Innocent People Confess to Crime in the US

Editor’s note: This film will be removed on April 10, 2019.

Would you confess to a crime you didn’t commit?

It’s a question to which most people would respond with a confident and resounding “no”.

That is because few people are aware of the techniques police in the United States are permitted to use during interrogations; techniques that presume guilt and are designed to break people down into a sense of complete despair before offering them one route out: a confession.

It’s not just one kind of person who gives a false confession. We are all vulnerable under the circumstances of interrogation.

Saul Kassin, psychologist

In fact, in the US, more than 25 percent of overturned wrongful convictions involve a false confession.

“Any time you do an exoneration case where there’s been a false confession, it’s like trying to ride a tricycle uphill,” explains defence attorney Jane Fisher-Byrialsen. “Everybody’s already against you, the person’s been convicted by a jury, the judge thinks he’s guilty, the jury thinks he’s guilty. Now you have to convince everybody that they’re wrong.”

And, according to psychologist and false confessions expert, Saul Kassin, “It’s not just one kind of person who gives a false confession. We are all vulnerable under the circumstances of interrogation.”

Through case studies, a dissection of police interrogation techniques and the testimonies of people who have falsely confessed to crimes they didn’t commit, the defence attorney and psychologist reveal just how an innocent person can be coerced into confessing and, in some instances, even into believing in their own guilt.

With video footage of the interrogations of then 16-year-old Korey Wise, who was convicted in the infamous Central Park Jogger case, and 14-year-old Lorenzo Montoya, sentenced to life for a murder he didn’t commit, False Confessions exposes a justice system that routinely uses brutal psychological manipulation, including lying about evidence, to secure a confession.

Both have since been released and exonerated, after serving 13 and 14 years respectively. But how many other innocent people remain imprisoned on the basis of false confessions? And can Fisher-Byrialsen succeed in getting the conviction of Renay Lynch, who has spent more than 20 years in prison for a crime she says she didn’t commit, overturned?

Renay Lynch has spent more than 20 years in prison for a crime she says she didn’t commit [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

_________________________________________________________________________________

FILMMAKER’S VIEW

By Katrine Philp

When I first heard of false confessions, my initial thought was that I would never confess to a crime I had not committed.

I simply couldn’t imagine a situation in which that would happen – unless torture was used against me, but it was still inconceivable to me in US interrogation situations. So it came as quite a surprise that the phenomenon was such common knowledge in the US, among professionals and the general public alike.

When I met Jane Fisher-Byrialsen, she had just wrapped up an action for damages for Korey Wise in the infamous Central Park Jogger Case. Korey had been acquitted due to DNA evidence after 13 years in prison after he – at the age of 14 – had been pressured to confess to sexual assault of a woman in Central Park.

This became an historic case for New York City and an important launch pad for Jane in her struggle to help innocent people, who had given false confessions, get out of prison. At this point in time, Jane had four active cases involving false confessions, and I started investigating the subject more thoroughly.

Korey Wise was convicted as a 16-year-old and spent 13 years in prison before being exonerated [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

I was overwhelmed with contempt when I heard Jane’s clients sharing their experiences of the police tricking them, lying to them and threatening them into confessing to a crime they hadn’t committed. So much pressure had been exerted on them that they, in the end, felt that they had only one way out of it – giving in and “cooperating”.

The desire to get out of the situation, out of the stuffy interrogation room and away from the constant pressure from the police – as well as the hope that the police would eventually find the right perpetrator – made them yield and give the police what they wanted.

None of them ever imagined that they would end up in jail, because they were innocent, of course.

But what none of them realised was that a confession can be the sole piece of evidence in the US. In many cases, the investigation ends once a confession has been secured. Supplemental evidence isn’t necessarily needed, and once a sentence has been passed, it’s almost impossible to have it overturned.

Miscarriage of justice

That the police are allowed to lie about evidence and manipulate the suspect to confess is the ultimate violation and results in a high number of convicted innocent people.

It is such an intense execution of power, a miscarriage of justice, and the people affected have their lives destroyed – many of them ending up with extended prison sentences.

As I gradually discovered how well-orchestrated the employed interrogation techniques are, my indignation and anger grew. That something like this is taking place – and is completely legal – is frightening.

These techniques are designed to make a guilty suspect confess, but they are so effective that they also take quite a few innocent suspects with them. No one can escape this technique once a “skilled” interrogator has become convinced that he is facing a guilty party.

A false confession can be incriminating in a trial despite other evidence that may support the suspect’s innocence [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

The psychological aspect, in particular, occupied me quite a deal from the very beginning.

I was curious about finding out what exactly it was that could make someone confess to a crime they hadn’t committed. What psychological methods are employed and why these techniques are so effective?

What I discovered was that the proper combination of misleading questions, faulty conclusions about the suspect’s posture and answers, traps, lies and debatable psychological explanations made it easy to force and manipulate someone into a false confession.

I now have no doubt that the same could happen to me.

It could happen to anyone

Going through this filmmaking process has only deepened my frustration. The average individual may very well be aware of the phenomenon of false confessions – most people in the US have heard about it – but only a few know why they happen and what’s behind them.

What techniques are employed and how particularly designed they are to force a confession out of you.

Everybody thinks: “Sure, but it won’t happen to me.” But it just might one day. It could happen to anyone. And it is of utmost importance that light is shed on this subject as it is quite simply unacceptable that it is perfectly legal that this violation is conducted by society.

With a few simple measures – such as forbidding police to lie, videotaping all interrogations, and requiring that there should always be additional evidence in order to convict someone – a lot of false confessions would be stamped out.

I sincerely hope that this film will help in igniting a debate so that we in the future can have more trust in our society ruled by law and that those exerting power in our society are acting justly.

Source: Al Jazeera

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Democrats put GOP in bind over national emergency vote


Chuck Schumer

Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer implored the Senate GOP on Wednesday morning to vote with Senate Democrats to disapprove of the president’s national emergency declaration. | AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Democratic leaders are trying to box in Senate Republicans who are eager to head off a confrontation with President Donald Trump over his national emergency declaration on the southern border.

Senate Republicans are attempting to get Trump to agree to change the National Emergencies Act to give Congress more power in exchange for some Republicans backing the president on the national emergency vote expected on Thursday. But Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called it a “fig leaf” deal, because Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) won’t take it up.

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“Do you hear me, my colleagues, my Republican colleagues. This won’t pass,” Schumer said on Wednesday morning as he implored the Senate GOP to vote with all 47 Senate Democrats to disapprove of the president. “This fig leaf is so easily seen through, so easily blown aside that it leaves the constitutional pretensions of my Republican colleagues naked.”

With roughly a dozen Senate Republicans either committed to voting to disapprove of the president or weighing their options, some in the GOP are trying to cut a deal with the president to scale back his national emergency power so that Congress must approve future emergencies. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) introduced legislation Tuesday that would end national emergencies after 30 days unless Congress votes in favor of it.

Republicans want Trump to endorse it and then would consider standing with him on the disapproval vote. It’s unclear whether that compromise would cause the disapproval vote to fail, but it could significantly scale back defections.

Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) said even if Trump signs off on the changes he’d be “surprised” if enough Republicans change position to defeat disapproval resolution. But he added it might limit the number of defections.

Yet Pelosi sought to render any commitment from Trump meaningless on Wednesday morning when she vowed that the House will not consider legislation scaling back national emergency powers for the president.

“Republican senators are proposing new legislation to allow the President to violate the Constitution just this once in order to give themselves cover. The House will not take up this legislation to give President Trump a pass,” Pelosi said in a statement.

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Flipp Dinero’s Voice Is Raspy, But He Doesn’t Need Auto-Tune — Unless He’s With T-Pain



Randy Holmes via Getty Images

Flipp Dinero’s breakout hit “Leave Me Alone” was one of the biggest rap songs of 2018, but by talking to him, you’d assume that it was just another step en route to reaching the genre’s upper echelon. The Brooklyn rapper’s sound is unmistakable. His vocal chords sound like they’re being singed by a twisted dominatrix. Yet as harsh as it sounds, it’s all by design — and authentic too. It’s why “Leave Me Alone” peaked at No. 20 on the Billboard Hot 100 and still continues to get prominent playlist placement.

These are bragging words for any artist, but in conversation, Dinero is happy yet humble. This success – the lights, the glamour, the opportunities – isn’t the product of overnight work. “I put out three projects prior to that song,” he says over the phone. “It wasn’t the first to get millions of views either. I’m just glad to be at this point in my career.”

Just two months after “Leave Me Alone”’s September release, it went gold. A month after that, it went platinum. It made Apple Music’s The A List: Hip Hop playlist and Spotify’s famous RapCaviar playlist. Urban rap radio stations played the song over and over. All of this introduced the world to Dinero, a rapper whose low eyes and wide, mischievous grin could give off the appearance of arrogance. In conversation, however, he doesn’t just tell the world how grounded he is — he shows it. “I thank my mother and father, my family and the people that surround me – God, also,” he says about how he remains this relaxed. “I read a lot, I read my Bible faithfully. This helps me stay grounded and keeps me from getting ahead of myself, contributing to my personality as an individual.”

His latest song, “Feelin Like,” released in December, is a little less vibrant than “Leave Me Alone,” choosing to embrace the sanctity of a moment instead of pushing away a lover’s embrace. He practically moans on the chorus with an everlasting cry of “ooh” that extends through harsh 808s and thunderous claps, before adding, “Feelin’ like I fucked up.” You can tell that his eyes are closed while singing it, his head to the sky, arms outstretched with a half-glazed smile on his face. “I was just in the studio having a good time, just freestyling,” he says of the song’s creation. “The only people in the studio were me and my brother Los, my engineer. We were just catching a vibe and I felt that if I put this onto wax, the world would be able to relate to it.”

Both “Feelin Like” and “Leave Me Alone” are the kind of raspy, melodic gems that make Dinero such an interesting character. His voice sounds like he needs to cough, or like he might need a glass of milk and a lozenge, but it isn’t grating, like someone who would be dismissed from an American Idol audition. In rap, that kind of imprecision normally doesn’t fly. It’s been Auto-Tune season for the last 14 years, since T-Pain’s mega R&B hit “I’m Sprung” reintroduced the sound to mainstream music.

“I’ve been offered it a couple of times but I always turn it down,” he says when asked about using it, after a brief pause. “The only time I allowed it was when I was working with my big brother, T-Pain.” He’s referring to “All I Want,” the collaboration from T-Pain’s recently released album, 1UP. “He put Auto-Tune on my voice and that was just because I was working with the legend. That’s the one we kept after cutting three or four tracks. Once we put the beat on, we just went instantly and made it in 20 minutes. We were laughing the whole time.”

Once you get past the rasp, especially when actually listening to how smooth and buttery his voice is on “All I Want” with the additional technical coloring, it’s clear to see that Dinero has the capability to really belt out moving melodies. “I love singing – it’s actually my first passion,” he admits with a slight chuckle. “In this new project that I have coming up, you’ll hear a lot of singing,” though he’s hesitant to reveal new details beyond “a lot of bangers, a lot of melodies.” There’s also going to be more than just singing. “You’re definitely going to hear the versatility because I want to emphasize the differences in my flows,” he says. “I don’t want to be grounded or stagnant; this project is going to be a mixture and melting pot.”

In that mixture should be DJ Khaled, someone who the rapper calls his “brother” and has been in the studio with on more than one occasion. “I learned to grind and stay focused through him,” he says of their relationship.” “I’m an individual who is really focused, but to see someone like that, to stay up and have the energy not to sleep, it’s crazy. He was up until, I kid you not, four or five in the morning. Watching him say ‘Another one!’ made me laugh and I was ready to get back to work.”

DJ Khaled and T-Pain aren’t the only legends he’s been in the studio soaking up game from, as he puts it. And there are a lot of lessons to take away. But when asked if he would give his old self advice based on what he’s learned maneuvering through the industry, he hesitates. “I don’t have a lesson, I have a voice,” he says. It’s wise to not think in the past because while reveling in what should have been done, rap moves on. “Feelin Like” is the latest Dinero cut that will replace “Leave Me Alone.” It’s time to focus on the present. “I just finished bumping 10 songs that I cut in the last two weeks,” he says. “My sound is my face and I have to show my face.”

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Everyone’s joking about the ‘old-fashioned’ ways they got into college

2016%252f09%252f16%252f56%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde2lzax.6d630.jpg%252f90x90By Nicole Gallucci

Everyone has a different experience applying to colleges.

Some take the traditional route by working hard in high school, studying for standardized tests, and writing a thoughtful essay, while others leave their educational fate in the hands of their parents. 

After news of a college admissions scandal broke on Tuesday, many people were compelled to reminisce about the “old-fashioned ways” they got into college.

The scandal involved dozens of parents — including actresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Louglin, who reportedly shelled out a lot of money to ensure their students were accepted to colleges. But that’s not how people got into college in the good old days.

SEE ALSO: You could win a $1.7 million mansion by writing a standout letter

In response to the scandal, delightful “I got into college the old-fashioned way” memes were born.

Now, Twitter users are revealing the many ways in which they got accepted to universities — from embracing a whole lot of financial debt and writing a kick-ass essay, to settling for not-so-great schools and having sex with the SAT test itself.

I got into college the old-fashioned way (covering myself in sugar, bitters, and whiskey with a little ol’ orange peel hat)

— Jamison Webb (@jamisonwebb) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old fashioned way: by letting my father’s celebrity speak for itself.

— Ben Dreyfuss (@bendreyfuss) March 12, 2019

Really proud today that I got into college the old-fashioned way: by having sex with the SAT

— Kat Rosenfield (@katrosenfield) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old fashioned way. Begging the financial aide office for more money and getting into debt.

— Maxwell Blaze (@jakery1627) March 13, 2019

i got into college the old fashioned way: by accidentally attaching a link to stevie wonder’s isn’t she lovely on my common app to six schools

— Adrienne (@adrienneunderwd) March 13, 2019

i mean, i got into my university the old-fashioned way: centuries of white privilege making it way easier for me to do everything i needed to get into college

— Michael Gold (@migold) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old fashioned way – reliving past trauma in a 500 word essay.

— Jill J Biden (@JillBidenVeep) March 12, 2019

my parents got me into college the old-fashioned way, by putting me into severe lifelong debt

— Dan Kapr (@danhasjokes) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old fashioned way: by going to art school who will pretty much take anyone willing to pay the tuition

— Josh Hara (@yoyoha) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old fashioned way, smoking a bunch of pot in highschool and just applying to medium okay places.

— Noah Garfinkel (@NoahGarfinkel) March 12, 2019

I got into an elite college the old-fashioned way: I worked a summer job and pinched pennies to get my own bribe money. Kids today are so spoiled.

— Dan McQuade (@dhm) March 12, 2019

I got into community college the old-fashioned way. I drove down there, smoked a cigarette outside the admissions office along with every single other student there, then went in and cut a check.

— Chris C. Davis (@ChrisDavisCW) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old-fashioned way: By ruining my teenage years with a nervous breakdown.

— Julius Sharpe (@juliussharpe) March 12, 2019

I got into college the old-fashioned way: by submitting my Galaxy Quest fanfic as supplemental material.

— Helen Shang (@helenshang) March 12, 2019

Shoutout to my mom who got me into a college I probably didn’t deserve acceptance to the old-fashioned way: by subjecting me to nightly vocab flash cards for years on end

— Matt Gallagher (@MattGallagher0) March 12, 2019

can’t believe these students got to bribe their way into college meanwhile i had to do it the old-fashioned way: by working hard and sucking dick

— jen merritt!!! (@jennifermerr) March 12, 2019

I got my boys into college the old fashioned way: I nagged them about their grades.

— Randi Mayem Singer (@rmayemsinger) March 13, 2019

Okay well some of us got into college the old fashioned way, by not going

— debbyryan (@DebbyRyan) March 13, 2019

Oh how the times have changed.

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Twitter is redesigning its camera to feel more like Snapchat

Twitter's new in-app camera.
Twitter’s new in-app camera.

Image: karissa bell / mashable

2016%252f09%252f16%252f8f%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.c1888.jpg%252f90x90By Karissa Bell

When you think of social media companies and cameras, Twitter is probably not the first app to come to mind. 

Sure, there are tons of photos, videos, and GIFs throughout your feed, but many of those images don’t necessarily originate in the Twitter app’s camera. Now, the company is hoping to change that. Twitter is redesigning its in-app camera as part of its effort to make it easier for people to follow events. 

Beginning today, Twitter users will see a new camera interface in the app, which lets you post photos and videos with tweet text overlaid on top. The overall effect makes images shared on Twitter look a bit more like what you’d see on Snapchat or Instagram Stories, and you can pull up the new camera by swiping left from your feed much like you can in other apps.

SEE ALSO: At long last, Welding Twitter gets its moment in the sun

These images can also be tagged to specific events, like SXSW. Twitter has been working to make it easier to follow breaking news events and other culturally significant happenings for some time. The app can now direct people to dedicated “rooms” if they’re interested in following an event like SXSW, and can also alert users to breaking news. 

The new in-app camera aims to enhance this by using your location to tag nearby events. So, if you were at SXSW or another big conference, for instance, the camera could automatically suggest a relevant tag to help surface your photo to someone trying to follow that event.

Twitter's new in-app camera in action.

Twitter’s new in-app camera in action.

Image: karissa bell / mashable

What tweets from Twitters new camera look like.

What tweets from Twitters new camera look like.

Image: karissa bell / mashable

“We’re trying to make it really simple to go from capturing what’s happening, to getting it to the audience that really matters and getting it to the people who want to talk about it,” says Twitter’s VP of Product, Keith Coleman. 

Importantly, this only applies to photos and videos you shoot directly in the Twitter app. If you attach a photo or video from your camera roll, it will still look like a normal tweet with an image attached.

That’s very intentional, according to Coleman, who says Twitter’s new camera is meant to encourage in-the-moment sharing.

“If Twitter has always been sort of the microphone or megaphone in your pocket, we want it to feel like this was almost the TV camera in your pocket,” Coleman says.

That Twitter is revamping its camera to emphasize images over text also raises questions about whether it’s trying to compete more directly with apps like Instagram and Snapchat. The update is clearly aimed at getting more people to create content inside Twitter, rather than simply sharing photos they’ve already taken. And it’s the first significant update to Twitter’s in-app camera in some time (Bloomberg reported last January a Snapchat-like camera redesign was in the works.)

But Coleman says Twitter’s approach is different from others in that it’s not oriented towards selfies or disappearing content. He notes that the first photo to ever go really viral on Twitter was a breaking news event: when a plane landed in the Hudson river.

“The first moment that pictures mattered on Twitter was when a plane landed in the Hudson. If it was an ephemeral picture of the plane landing in the Hudson, it would have had a very different effect than if it was a picture that was live for the world to see that could go viral,” he said.

The irony of that example, though, is that the iconic “Miracle on the Hudson” photo did eventually disappear from Twitter because the company didn’t have its own photo-sharing capabilities at the time. (It’s a long and complicated saga.)

But, a decade later, that scenario would go much differently. Not only could you snap the photo directly in Twitter, it might go viral a little faster.

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NBA Rumors: Kemba Walker to Be Mavericks’ Top Target in 2019 Free Agency

Charlotte Hornets guard Kemba Walker stands on the court during a break in the action against the Washington Wizards in the first half of an NBA basketball game in Charlotte, N.C., Friday, March 8, 2019. Charlotte won 112-111. (AP Photo/Nell Redmond)

Nell Redmond/Associated Press

Charlotte Hornets point guard Kemba Walker will reportedly be the Dallas Mavericks‘ main target during the NBA‘s 2019 free-agent period as they seek another star to pair with Luka Doncic and Kristaps Porzingis.

On Monday, Rick Bonnell of the Charlotte Observer reported the Mavs and Hornets, who will attempt to keep the three-time All-Star, are expected to face competition from the Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks.

Dallas finds itself in a promising long-term position despite its 27-40 record.

Along with Doncic, who appears poised to take over as the Mavericks’ face of the franchise from Dirk Nowitzki, they acquired Porzingis in a January trade with the Knicks to replace the frontcourt production Nowitzki provided for two decades.

ClutchPoints @ClutchPointsApp

Could Kemba Walker join Luka Doncic and Kristaps Porzingis on the Mavs? https://t.co/L2TuFmNHdg

The Mavs could also secure a top-five pick in the 2019 draft. If the selection lands outside the top five, it will be transferred to the Atlanta Hawks as part of the deal that allowed them to acquire Doncic’s rights for Trae Young’s rights during last year’s draft.

But if the lottery goes their way, they could have Doncic, Porzingis and a prospect like the Duke Blue Devils’ Cameron Reddish or Gonzaga Bulldogs’ Rui Hachimura while still maintaining the financial flexibility to make a serious run at Walker in free agency.

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The 28-year-old point guard is averaging a career-high 25.1 points for Charlotte this season to go along with 5.8 assists, 4.3 rebounds and 1.3 steals. He’s shooting 43.2 percent from the floor and 35.9 percent from three, though he topped 37 percent from beyond the arc each of the previous three years.

Walker, who’s in the final season of a four-year, $48 million contract with the Hornets, ranks sixth among point guards in player efficiency rating for the 2018-19 campaign, per ESPN.com.

Reese Konkle @RKonkle_Mavs

Fwiw, I think Luka and Kemba are a good theoretical fit. And I guess I wouldn’t hate that move, but I’m thinking signing multiple effective role players to good deals is the more practical plan.

He’ll likely command a max contract on the open market with at least the aforementioned five teams interested, including squads like the Lakers and Knicks looking to make a major splash this summer.

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