Taylor Swift Opens Up About Her Sexual Assault Case And Being Labeled A Snake



(Gregg DeGuire/WireImage)

Months ahead of her 30th birthday in December — and a week after exploring the “Power of Pop” in an essay for Elle UKTaylor Swift has penned a new piece called “30 Things I Learned Before Turning 30” for Elle. This lifestyle op-ed details lessons that have been instilled in the singer over the course of her lengthy career and is reminiscent of Robert Greene’s 48 Laws of Power, except it’s infinitely nicer. Of the 30 personal anecdotes and life lessons, one of the most telling is that she believes victims of sexual assault no matter what.

In the entry, Swift talks about her own 2017 sexual assault trial, where she countersued a radio DJ who claimed that the singer had him improperly fired after an allegation that he’d groped her. (His case was dismissed; Swift was awarded $1, the symbolic amount she asked for.) Here, she uses the situation to explain her own view. “I believe victims because I know firsthand about the shame and stigma that comes with raising your hand and saying ‘This happened to me,’” she writes. “It’s something no one would choose for themselves. We speak up because we have to, and out of fear that it could happen to someone else if we don’t.”

Elsewhere in the list, Swift also discusses the fallout from indirectly being labeled a “snake” in 2016 by Kim Kardashian and how she incorporated the serpent into the rollout for her 2017 album, Reputation. “A few years ago, someone started an online hate campaign by calling me a snake on the internet,” she writes. “The fact that so many people jumped on board with it led me to feeling lower than I’ve ever felt in my life, but I can’t tell you how hard I had to keep from laughing every time my 63-foot inflatable cobra named Karyn appeared onstage in front of 60,000 screaming fans.”

“It would be nice if we could get an apology from people who bully us,” Swift continued, “but maybe all I’ll ever get is the satisfaction of knowing I could survive it, and thrive in spite of it.”

Swift’s full list of learned wisdom — including 28 other entries that span love, self-image, social media, and more — is found right here. And if you want to relive her serpentine string of live shows, Swift’s Reputation Stadium Tour is on Netflix.

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Amazon may provide Mexico with a government-backed mobile payment system

Amazon is in talks with Mexico's central bank to provide a government-backed mobile payment system.
Amazon is in talks with Mexico’s central bank to provide a government-backed mobile payment system.

Image: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

2018%252f06%252f26%252fc2%252f20182f062f252f5a2fphoto.d9abc.b1c04.jpg%252f90x90By Matt Binder

Mobile payments may soon be coming to Mexico, courtesy of Amazon.

Mexico’s central bank, Banxico, is currently in talks with Amazon to developer a mobile payment system backed by the country’s government. The payment system, known as CoDi, would allow customers to pay for purchases, both online and in-person, using QR codes on their smartphones.

As Reuters points out in its report, more than half of Mexico’s population does not have a bank account. Banxico is looking to change this with CoDi.

SEE ALSO: Amazon will open new grocery stores separate from Whole Foods, report says

According to market research firm Euromonitor International, less than 4 percent of total retail sales in Mexico came from ecommerce last year. The QR code-powered mobile payment service would be free of charge to use, which should help spur growth in the country’s online shopping sector.

Smartphone-powered payment systems have surged in popularity in countries like China and India. In China, for example, nearly half of the country’s population used mobile payments in 2018. Last year, India’s mobile payment usage saw close to a 40 percent increase from 2017.

The mobile payment system, a first for Mexico, would open up a whole new customer base in the country to a new avenue that would allow them to take part in the country’s economy. Mexico’s central bank has clearly seen the success mobile payments have had in other countries and a partnership with an ecommerce giant like Amazon to implement the technology would be a serious bet to place.

Banxico will launch a trial of the mobile payment service later this month.

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Watch these hardcore ducks binge on peas like there’s no tomorrow

Get it, ducks
Get it, ducks

Image: Washington Post/Getty Images

2016%252f09%252f16%252fe5%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzew.e9fc9.jpg%252f90x90By Heather Dockray

The next time you’re thinking of feeding ducks your shitty leftover stale bread, don’t. Feed them peas.

Bread offers very little nutritional content and, if littered on the ground, can aid in the spread of disease. Meanwhile, peas offer plenty of vitamins and minerals and ducks love them just as much.

Just take a look at this recent video of Redditor coliverse‘s ducks. When it comes to legumes, these ducks are insatiable beasts.

SEE ALSO: Dude autotunes his cat miaowing and the results will make you shake with laughter

According to coliverse, that video is par for the course for his Pepe and Arnold, the ducks in the video:

“That video represents the ducks’ normal reaction to peas. They scream at us if we don’t give them peas by noon, so they get a small bowl of peas every day,” coliverse told Mashable in a direct message.

Pepe and Arnold have more personality than the average duck:

On Twitter, people spoke out on behalf of peas, even if they questioned the duck’s feeding methods:

just a little animal welfare message:

Peas are way better to give to ducks than bread. Peas, corn, oats, and seeds as well as other random greens (torn into shreds – lettuce, etc), are good for ducks.

Please don’t give them bread. https://t.co/7kauFwW3wy

— Dianna E. Anderson 🏳️‍🌈 (@diannaeanderson) March 3, 2019

Things we know about ducks so far:

– they love peas

– their dicks are super fucked up

– they don’t wear pants

— jon “only ducks now” rosenberg🍗 (@jonrosenberg) March 3, 2019

WHY DOES THE WATER TURN BLACK. WHAT IS COMING OUT OF THE DUCKS

— matt lubchansky (@Lubchansky) March 3, 2019

Pea-king duck: The duck that gets the most peas

— Matt Leddy (@eveningclasses) March 3, 2019

This video was quite a hit here—I watched it three times, then the cat came up on the desk and had to watch it five or six more times. Quality entertainment for multiple species. Thank you.

— Heliotropist (@stillSTH) March 3, 2019

There’s gotta be a more efficient way to eat

— Ken Klippenstein (@kenklippenstein) March 4, 2019

Now excuse me while I legume-load my lunch.

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US trade deficit surges to 10-year high; record gap with China

US trade deficit surges to 10-year high; record gap with China
The trade deficit has deteriorated despite the White House’s protectionist trade policy [File: Evan Vucci/AP Photo]

The US trade deficit surged to a 10-year high in 2018, with the politically sensitive shortfall with China hitting a record peak, despite the Trump administration slapping tariffs on a range of imported goods in an effort to shrink the gap.

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday that an 18.8 percent jump in the trade deficit in December had contributed to the $621bn shortfall last year. The 2018 deficit was the largest since 2008 and followed a $552.3bn gap in 2017.

The trade deficit has deteriorated despite the White House’s protectionist trade policy, which President Donald Trump said is needed to shield manufacturers in the United States from what he says is unfair foreign competition.

The United States last year imposed tariffs on $250bn worth of goods imported from China, with Beijing hitting back with duties on $11bn worth of American products, including soybeans and other commodities.

Trump has delayed tariffs on $200bn worth of Chinese imports as negotiations to resolve the eight-month trade war continue. 

The United States has also slapped duties on imported steel, aluminum, solar panels and washing machines. The goods trade deficit with China increased 11.6 percent to an all-time high of $419.2bn in 2018. The United States had record imports from 60 countries in 2018, led by China, Mexico and Germany. Imports of good hit a record $2.6tn last year.

An acceleration in economic growth last year from Trump’s debt-funded tax cuts helped to boost the appetite for foreign goods.

The December trade deficit of $59.8bn was the largest since October 2008 and overshot economists’ expectations for a $57.9bn shortfall, as exports fell for a third straight month and imports rebounded. The release of the December report was delayed by a 35-day partial shutdown of the government that ended on January 25.

When adjusted for inflation, the goods trade deficit surged $10.0bn to a record $91.6bn in December. The jump in the so-called real goods trade deficit suggests that trade was probably a bigger drag on fourth-quarter gross domestic product than initially estimated by the government. 

The government reported last week that trade subtracted 0.22 percentage point from GDP growth in the fourth quarter. The economy grew at a 2.6 percent annualised rate in the October-December quarter, slowing from the third quarter’s brisk 3.4 percent pace.

The downbeat trade data joined weak December retail sales, construction spending, housing starts and business spending on equipment reports in setting the economy on a low growth trajectory in the first quarter.

SOURCE:
News agencies

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Queen’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ gets a perfect ‘Line Rider’ music video

By Adam Rosenberg

Line Rider may be a relic of the old internet, but there’s still a popular scene of content-makers crowding around it. That’s mainly because of its powerful built-in level creation tool, and the ease of setting one of these creations to music.

There’s a whole scene of Line Rider music video creators and this one, from Arglin, is particularly timely: it’s set to the entirety of Queen’s eternally catchy hit, “Bohemian Rhapsody.” 

Just hit play and enjoy.

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This adorable experiment created a real-life Dug the Dog from ‘Up’

By Marcus Gilmer

We all remember Dug the Dog, the adorably goofy pup from Pixar’s Up who was able to communicate his thoughts and feelings thanks to some nifty technology. 

Well, now we’re one step closer to such technology being real, thanks to some students at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The team explains in the above video how they built the interface, which reads the neural responses of Alma, an adorable golden retriever. They’re then translated and deliver a pre-recorded vocal response. 

How accurate is the device? That’s debatable, to say the least. There’s a mountain of research and debate about how dogs “think” that’s yet to be settled. Still, it’s a neat — and extremely cute — experiment.

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Biden nabs big-name Latino operative in latest sign he’s running


Joe Biden

Joe Biden has been publicly weighing another White House run, saying last week that he was in the “final stages” of his decision-making. | Win McNamee/Getty Images

In the latest sign that Joe Biden will run for president, his team has brought on Cristóbal Alex, the head of the influential Latino Victory Fund, according to a source familiar with the move.

It’s not clear what role Alex would fill in a Biden presidential campaign. He served as Hillary Clinton’s National Deputy Director of Voter Outreach and Mobilization in 2016.

Story Continued Below

Alex declined to comment but publicly disclosed on Tuesday that he was departing from Latino Victory Fund. He tweeted that he believes “Donald Trump is a clear and present danger to our nation. I am committed to doing everything in my power to defeat him, and my next steps will reflect that.”

The tweet sparked praise of Alex from many corners of the progressive world, including from Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez and newly elected Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas).

@CristobalJAlex created an incredible legacy with @latinovictoryus, and it is because of his work and leadership that we now have more Latinx people in office all across this country,” Perez tweeted.

A representative for Biden did not respond to requests for comment.

The 76-year-old former vice president has been publicly weighing another White House run, saying last week that he was in the “final stages” of his decision-making and that he wants to be sure it would not be a “fool’s errand.”

He is currently leading or nearly leading in most polls of the Democratic primary, and has quietly been assembling a potential campaign team. His entry into the race would likely affect the decision-making of some other potential presidential candidates such as former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, who see their appeal as ideologically or stylistically similar.

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Champions League Hype Wednesday 6 March

  • Will Mbappe Knock Out Man Utd?

  • Arrival Time in UCL 🚂

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Arrival time 🔜 #UCL https://t.co/Hjbz5mVPMp

  • PSG vs. Man Utd: How the 1st Leg Went Down

    Utd face a huge task in Paris

  • Who’s Joining Ajax and Spurs in the QF?

    via UEFA.com

  • Fear the Walking Dead 🤕

    The players you won’t see in Paris

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Good luck in Paris 🤕 https://t.co/g8X1JBmqKo

  • The Unstoppable Rise of Marquinhos

    via Bleacher Report

  • No Filter UCL: PSG vs. Man Utd

    Man Utd need to overcome the odds in Paris, but Ole’s at the Wheel

    Zaniolo Ran the First Leg Against Porto

    Scored both goals in 2-1 win

  • What’s Next for Roma’s ‘New Totti’ Zaniolo?

    via Bleacher Report

  • Brahimi: Porto’s Danger Man

    Will keep Roma defenders on their toes

  • Time for Another Epic Comeback?

    UEFA Champions League @ChampionsLeague

    😍 Great #UCL comebacks…

    ⚽ Manchester United 1-1 Juventus
    😮 @juventusfc 2-3 @ManUtd (Agg 3-4)

    ⚽ Paris 4-0 Barcelona
    😮 @FCBarcelona 6-1 @PSG_English (Agg: 6-5) https://t.co/C8mpkTJjIB

  • PSG vs. Man Utd: Solskjaer ‘Confident’ of Overturning 2-0 Scoreline

    via Bleacher Report

  • PSG Will Make Late Call on Cavani vs. Man Utd

    via Bleacher Report

  • Talking Tactics: PSG vs. Man Utd

    Can United turn it around?

  • Champions League Key Info for Wednesday’s Games

    via Bleacher Report

  • Ney Gets the Hook-Up from Russ 🙌

    Seahawks QB shows PSG superstar some love in Brazil

    B/R Football @brfootball

    Football game recognise football game 🏈⚽ @dangerusswilson @neymarjr @PSG_english @nflbrasil https://t.co/ENXAPgY4be

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    Why Are Western Audiences Falling Head Over Heels For K-Dramas?

    By Jae-Ha Kim

    In 2009, a rich South Korean high schooler became fixated on a poor scholarship student. Annoyed by her disinterest in him, he had her kidnapped, knocked out with chloroform, and taken to his house, where the unconscious girl was given a makeover to become more physically attractive to him.

    The wealthy teen sounds like a serial killer in the making, right? But he’s actually the lead character in the hit Korean series Boys Over Flowers, a gateway drama that was popular with international viewers as well as Koreans. As the story unfolded, the young man (played by A-list actor Lee Min-Ho) became a sympathetic character, whose abusive behavior was excused as the writers concocted a teary backstory to explain away some of his sociopathic behavior.

    Welcome to the world of K-dramas, where over-the-top story lines mesh with chaste romance to create some of the most deliciously addictive viewing on TV.

    KBS via Giphy

    Boys Over Flowers (2009)

    In her academic paper “The Korean Wave and Korean Dramas,” Claflin University associate professor Dr. Hyejung Ju writes, “For the past two decades, the Korean Wave has been recognized in many parts of the world. More recently, the outbound scope of K-drama and K-pop has further reached dispersed global audiences, most of whom are not Korean media consumers or fans.”

    Some 18 million viewers in the United States stream Korean dramas. The U.S. accounts for five- to six-percent of the international viewership, according to the Korea Creative Content Agency (KOCCA) — a government agency that monitors Korean entertainment.

    The U.S. market for Korean dramas is small compared to some Asian countries — Japan and China each account for about 30 percent of Korea’s international market — but Western television executives have caught on that Korea’s brand of entertainment has something that resonates here. Korean-American actor Daniel Dae Kim (Lost, Hawaii Five-0) took the 2013 Korean medical procedural Good Doctor (굿 닥터) and adapted it into a hit for ABC called — surprise! — The Good Doctor. Likewise for Fox’s incredibly meme-able singing competition series The Masked Singer, which is the American version of Korea’s The King of Mask Singer. Adaptations of Strong Woman Do Bong-soon (with pro wrestler Ronda Rousey attached to the project) and Korean coming-of-age film Sunny, which producer Kevin Hart has renamed Bye Bye Bye, are also in the works.

    JTBC via Giphy

    Strong Woman Do Bong-soon (2017)

    But unlike U.S. television dramas, which tend to go on for seasons on end (Grey’s Anatomy, for example, is in its 15th season), one of the unique aspects of K-dramas is that there’s a finite beginning and end to every series — one story arc that usually spans 16 to 20 episodes, each about an hour long. Because the programming airs for a relatively short period, there is little time for viewers to get bored with the characters, and viewers don’t have to watch a once-thriving series jump the shark by overstaying its welcome.

    And when showrunners do decide on more than one season, the story lines tend to revolve around a different set of characters all together. The best example of this is the popular Reply anthology, which culminated with the superb Reply 1988.

    That aside, what is it about K-dramas that keeps Westerners — most of whom have to rely on subtitles to understand what’s going on — coming back for more?

    Many K-dramas offer something that Western shows aren’t providing these days: chaste storytelling that feels like a throwback to an earlier time. Some of the parents in SKY Castle — South Korea’s hottest drama at the moment — slept in separate beds, à la I Love Lucy. The lead characters on shows like What’s Wrong With Secretary Kim? and My Love From Another Star are sexually inexperienced men and women who’ve barely dated. In the latter, the male character literally faints when he is kissed. (Yes, he’s an alien whose body can’t handle human bodily fluids, but that’s a whole different story.)

    “The story lines are relationship-oriented, stakes are very high, and they’re gorgeous to watch cinematically,” says A Small Revolution author Jimin Han, who also teaches at The Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence College. “In Mr. Sunshine, love is split into different steps — introduction, handshake, hug, and longing. That longing is at the heart of what makes K-dramas addictive. Also, these story arcs employ the old writing device to make coincidences obstacles that keep everyone from getting what we hope they’ll get.”

    Korean drama fan Lisa Degnen adds, “I will almost always choose a good K-drama over anything else these days.”

    Degnen says she began watching K-dramas after the sudden death of her husband two years ago. Suffering from grief and insomnia, she took the advice of her Korean friends and watched Goblin: The Lonely and Great God.

    “I was hooked almost immediately,” say the New Jersey resident. “The underlying story line about the meaning of life hit me at a time when I was questioning all of that. The best part was that while I was reading the translations and focusing on the story and actors, I couldn’t think about anything else.”

    tvN via Giphy

    Goblin: The Lonely and Great God (2016)

    Viewers like Degnen are helping drive the demand for Korean content in the U.S. market. Once relegated to grainy VHS tapes that were bootlegged and rented out in Korean grocery stores for a dollar or two, the dramas are streaming 24/7 on slick services such as Kocowa and Viki. Even mainstream outlets like Netflix, Amazon, YouTube, and Hulu have gotten in on the K-drama action, offering Korean television shows to their global viewers in addition to producing their own binge-worthy South Korean originals.

    For high school student Katie Landahl, that difference between American and Korean cultures was the motivating factor to watch more K-dramas. After seeing the series K-POP Extreme Survival, she wanted to learn more about Korean culture, even if it was fictionalized. And Landahl isn’t alone; last year, streaming service Kocowa reported that non-Korean women under the age of 20 make up the majority of their viewers.

    “It seems as though nobody [in America] cares about holding onto family traditions or having respect for elders anymore,” says Landahl, who lives in a western suburb of Chicago. “The way people act towards each other in Korean dramas is so different from the United States. Americans [can be] close-minded, and they don’t often look outside to the world around us. So when I found K-dramas, I was very intrigued.”

    Hearing dialogue in a different language is one thing. And seeing depictions of cultural differences can be oddly charming (for example, Korean 30-somethings who still live with their parents). But the routine depiction of acceptable daily violence can be jarring to viewers. Despite all its economic wealth, South Korea ranks just 115th out of 149 countries in equality between the sexes, according to a report by the World Economic Forum, and some K-dramas reflect this disparity. (The U.S. comes in at No. 51.)

    This inequality is reflected in some of the programming, where men roughly yank women by their arms to get their attention, even in what’s supposed to be a romantic scenario. In 2017, Amnesty International Korea chastised K-dramas for romanticizing dating violence, and some efforts have been made to address these depictions. In last year’s My ID Is Gangnam Beauty, a male classmate snatched his female friend’s arm and tried to drag her home, thinking he was doing her a favor. But an older male teaching assistant intervenes by warning him about his violent behavior. Fed up with being grabbed like a rag doll, the girl then tells the boy to never touch her without her permission.

    “[These type of actions] made me reluctant to initially watch K-dramas,” author Jimin Han says. “I noticed so much physical violence. Mothers beating their children, men hitting women. I wasn’t able to tell if some of it was supposed to be satirical. That said, I’m also impressed by how men in K-dramas are given their full humanity in a way men in the United States are not. Korean men are allowed to cry, outright weep in public, especially in grief.

    I was surprised by my reaction to watching them — this display of loss of control, completely uninhibited grief made me realize how ‘American’ I am.”

    Recognizing these cultural differences and relating to even the most unrelatable stories are all part of what makes watching Korean dramas so satisfying. Where else can you experience second lead syndrome (where you’re actually rooting for the other guy to get the girl and not the main guy), eat instant ramen along with the characters, and learn a few foreign words in the process? Daebak!

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    Lady Gaga posts inspiring Instagram after ‘Shallow’ rises to number 1 in the charts

    I'm off the deep end, watch as I dive in!
    I’m off the deep end, watch as I dive in!

    Image: Randy Holmes via Getty Images/ ABC via Getty Images

    2016%252f09%252f16%252fe7%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzex.0212f.jpg%252f90x90By Rachel Thompson

    As Lady Gaga’s famous quote goes, there can be a hundred records in the charts, and 99 don’t reach the top. But one does.

    And that one record happens to be hers. “Shallow” is number one on the Hot 100 along with the soundtrack to A Star Is Born

    SEE ALSO: Ariana Grande just made history snagging a record last held by The Beatles

    This is a major milestone for Gaga, who wrote on Instagram that it’s her first number 1 in eight years. “It feels like ‘Just Dance’ going number one all over again,” she wrote.  

    Gaga also posted some advice in light of reaching her milestone. 

    “Rule #1: Never give up. Rule #2: Always listen to rule #1,” she wrote.  

    “Thank you so much to all our beautiful fans. You make my dreams come true,” Gaga added.

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