Jennifer Weiner Says You Can Judge a Book by Its Author’s Photo. Is She Right?

6/20/2014 | Slate

In an interview with the Hairpin this week, best-selling author Jennifer Weiner discussed the pinkish-gray area between serious literature and chick lit. When it comes to marketing, she said, an author’s picture is worth a thousand literary judgments:

If you’re smiling in your (color) author photo, it’s chick lit. If you’re smirking, or giving a stern, thin-lipped stare in your black-and-white picture, and if you go out of your way in every interview to talk about how “unserious books do not deserve serious attention,” then it’s literature.

These comments exist within a larger crusade Weiner has waged to get the literary world to take fiction written by and for women more seriously. It’s a campaign founded in a very real under-representation of such literature in publications like the New York Review of Books and the New Republic. But many have found her campaign off-putting—either overly self-promotional,unfair to women writers who are counted among the literary elite, or a conflation of women’s fiction with commercial fiction. I’m not going to rehash that debate. But I am going to rather unscientifically examine Weiner’s claim about the all-telling author photo.

If she’s right, then female authors of chick lit should have smiling color photos, while female authors of “serious literature” should be dour and colorless on their book jackets. Since it’s hard to be completely objective about categorizing a book as one versus the other, I used the ultimate arbiter of literary classification: Amazon.

Amazon includes among its “Literature and Fiction” category a sub-category called “Women’s Fiction” (a euphemism for chick lit) and another called “Literary Fiction” (a.k.a. the real stuff). “Women’s Fiction” has a handful of sub-sub-categories, including “African American,” “Divorce,” “Domestic Life,” “Friendship,” “Single Women,” and “Sisters.” “Literary Fiction” is not broken down further.

To conduct this study, I compared the photos for the top 20 best-selling female authors in “Women’s Fiction” with the same group in “Literary Fiction.” If they didn’t have a photo, I skipped them and moved on to the next one. If they appeared twice within the top 20, I only counted them once.

On the first count, smiling versus unsmiling, Weiner was right. Sort of. Seventy-five percent of “Women’s Lit” authors were smiling, compared to 55 percent of “Literary Fiction” authors. But if you look at not just whether someone’s smiling, but with how much gusto, of the shiny, happy writers, 60 percent of chick lit authors bared their pearly whites, while more than 70 percent of the literary writers did. The chick lit writers smiled more often, but when the literary writers smiled, they did it with abandon.

Left to right: “Women’s lit” writers Jennifer Weiner (wide-mouthed grin), Alice Clayton (squinchy face), and Dorothea Benton Frank (face-palm).

On the second count, color versus black and white, she was wrong. Both groups had the exact same percentage of black and white photos. Only a small group of authors, 10 percent, forwent color for something a little more timeless. Fifty shades of gray have been supplanted by the advent of modern photography, and authors are taking advantage.

For comparison’s sake, I looked at the top 20 best-selling male authors of “Literary Fiction” (note that there is, as Weiner pointed out in the Hairpin interview, no separate category for “dick lit”). It turns out that these men, first of all, are a generally joyless bunch. Only a quarter of them chose to smile for their readers. A few of them, in fact, go all in for the scowl. They are also much more into the old school black and white approach, although that may be because so many of the best-sellers belong to dead white guys who weren’t around for Kodachrome.

Left to right: James Browning, Cormac McCarthy, and Greg Iles all scowl.

Perhaps the most unexpected result was the prominence of the smirk. Weiner claims that the smirk is a hallmark of literary marketing, but it is actually much more pervasive. Amazon allowed me to divest the responsibility of classifying chick lit versus serious lit, but it did not make the smile classification process more objective. The line between serious-face and smile is thin, and many authors—no matter the gravity of their subject— appear inclined to avoid the decision entirely by going for a full-on, indecipherable smirk.

Left to right: Gillian Flynn, Meg Wolitzer, and Courtney Maum. Smirking or smiling?

Weiner smiles toothily in her photo. It’s the kind of smile your mom might tell you to tone down because it will give you wrinkles. She grins not only from her mighty position as number one in “Women’s Fiction,” but also from her fourth place perch on the “Literary Fiction” list. In a world where chick lit and serious literature can be confounded, where a smirk can be so easily mistaken for a smile, maybe it’s time for a complete game-changer. Maybe it’s time to abandon the author photo entirely, and replace it with the author GIF.

 

http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2014/06/20/jennifer_weiner_s_claim_about_author_photos_examined.html

 

 

 

Maker Studios Taps Ben Stiller to Make ‘Next Time on Lonny’ a Hit

6/18/2014 | The Wall Street Journal

Maker Studios, looking for content for its planned new video site Maker.tv, is turning to Ben Stiller for help.

In particular, Maker, now part of Walt Disney Co., has enlisted Mr. Stiller’s Red Hour Digital, a division of his production company,  to help revive  ”Next Time on Lonny,” one of the odder cult video series on the Web.

The show hadn’t been produced since 2011, after Demand Media’s humor site Cracked.com elected not to pick it up for another season. But “Lonny,” which sends up everything from cheesy action movies to bad TV previews and has no real linear plot, had caught the attention of Mr. Stiller and several other influential names from comedy and Hollywood.

A few weeks ago, season 2 of “Lonny” premiered exclusively on Maker.tv. While it’s too early to call the show a hit, Maker content head Erin McPherson believes this is just the kind of show the new site, and the medium, needs.

“We think this is the perfect piece of short-form story telling,” said Ms. McPherson as she prepared to head to the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity this week for a speaking gig. “It really fits the Maker brand voice.”

That voice is, to put it kindly, off the wall. The backdrop for episodes of “Next Time on Lonny” is a fake reality TV show. But in each episode, when the ‘reality show’ cuts to its pseudo”next time” previews (which mimic those previews that close many TV dramas), the show take bizarre and fantastical turns. For example, in one episode, the main character Lonny engineers an extremely complicated heist. In another he runs for office and gets strung out on drugs.

“The main rule for the show is that there is no continuity once next time hits,” explained Alex Anfanger, who created “Lonny” along with  Dan Schimpf.

“Lonny” episodes are roughly six or seven minutes long, and actually work better that way,” argue the show’s creators, who think their abruptness makes them funnier. “We did think about TV. It’s obviously a much more lucrative proposition. But we think “Lonny” is a better concept in short form. The stories might lose momentum stretched out to 22 minutes or longer,” said Mr. Schimpf.

Maker has been experimenting with various strategies to drive audience to “Lonny”–and Maker.tv, including several  exclusive 24-hour premiere windows before show is distributed elsewhere on the Web.

Ms. McPherson contends that the show’s storytelling style has the potential to be just as groundbreaking as other hyped ‘Web video’ breakouts, like Netflix’s “House of Cards” which is at the complete other end of the spectrum compared to “Lonny” in terms of budget. “I actually think that in Web video there’s content that’s innovative and disruptive and distribution that’s innovative and disruptive. We aim to innovate and disrupt and we think “Lonny” is about a new content paradigm.”

Mr. Stiller certainly believes so. His production company, Red Hour, had worked with Mrs. McPherson on the buzzy Web show “Burning Love” when she ran video at Yahoo. That show, which spoofed reality TV like “The Bachelor” eventually found its way to Comcast’s E Network.

“I don’t pretend to understand how the Internet works, or what the models are, or how to make money. It’s still so unclear,” said Mr. Stiller. “But seeing what Alex and Dan did with first season of what they did with no money, it’s so impressive. They’ve got this undiluted voice.”

“For me it resonated tonally,” Mr. Stiller added. “So we worked with them to get the second season produced.”

That took a while. Mr. Stiller was shooting “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.”  Mr. Anfanger and Mr. Schimpf also had various other projects. Plus, Lonny episodes take a while to shoot, since they use a small crew and lots of locations, explained Mr. Schimpf.

Maker has landed Verizon as this year’s exclusive sponsor for “Lonny.” Ten episodes have been filmed. And while there’s no guarantee of a third season, the creators are hopeful.

Ms. McPherson said it’s early to judge the audience for season two. “Web shows tend to be a slow burn,” she said. “So much of the audience comes through social channels. The audience is not linear.”

Nor is “Next Time on Lonny.”

http://blogs.wsj.com/cmo/2014/06/18/maker-studios-taps-ben-stiller-to-make-next-time-on-lonny-a-hit/?mod=wsj_valettop_email

David Brock to launch journalism institute

6/19/2014 | Politico

David Brock, the founder of Media Matters for America and public defender for Hillary Clinton, is set to launch an institute to fund journalism that exposes “the nexus of conservative power in Washington,” according to an advance copy of his news release.

The American Independent Institute, a relaunch of the former state-based digital news-gathering network of the same name, will provide grants to journalists and work with other news organizations on investigative projects targeting conservatives. Sam Skolnik, an editor and reporter who has worked at The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Las Vegas Sun and The National Law Journal, will serve as director.

The institute’s first grants have gone to investigations into the Gun Owners of America and its “radical” leader Larry Pratt; the efforts of the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology to “undermine scientific inquiry”; and “the adverse impacts of the right-wing billionaire Koch Brothers’ business practices,” among others.

Several of the funded projects will appear in well-known progressive publications such as The Huffington Post, Harper’s and Washington Monthly. The investigation on Pratt and Gun Owners of America, by Alexander Zaitchik, will be featured on a panel discussion at the Open Society Foundations in July and co-sponsored by RollingStone.com.

“The American Independent has a proud history of journalism that spurred progressive change,” Brock, who will serve as president of the institute, said in a statement. “In our new role as a funder of deep-dig reporting projects, our mission — to foster strong journalism with lasting impact — hasn’t changed. With the on-going disintegration of the U.S. newspaper business, the need for alternative sources of information and independent reporting has never been greater.  We will continue to meet the new challenges of democracy in a new way.”

Brock founded Media Matters, the watchdog organizations dedicated to combatting conservative bias, in 2004. He is also the head of liberal American Bridge PAC and, in 2014, joined the board of Priorities USA Action, which has announced its support for Hillary Clinton’s likely presidential bid. Over the last year, Brock has been one of Clinton’s most vocal public defenders, pushing for NBC and CNN to abandon Hillary-related film projects and calling on CBS to retract its controversial “60 Minutes” report on Benghazi.

 

http://www.politico.com/blogs/media/2014/06/david-brock-to-launch-journalism-institute-190746.html#.U6NIqfP_FuM.twitter

WPP CEO Predicts More Consolidation in the Advertising Industry

Martin Sorrell Says Companies Will Continue to Keep Their Costs Down

6/18/2014 | The Wall Street Journal

CANNES, France— WPP PLC chief executive Martin Sorrell on Wednesday said consolidation in the advertising industry will continue as companies continue to keep their costs down.

Ad companies are facing intensifying cost pressures from their clients—including big marketers—some of whom have squeezed ad agencies by delaying payments, among other tactics, ad executives have said.

“Clients continue to put a pressure on costs to get to their numbers. It’s difficult,” said Mr. Sorrell in an interview during the Cannes Lions ad festival. “The result of that pressure is what is driving more consolidation.”

The recent collapse of the planned merger of WPP’s rivals Publicis Groupe SA and Omnicom Group Inc. has left many people in the ad industry wondering what sort of deals may be next as ad companies continue to seek scale and boost their presence in digital.

The tie-up between Publicis and Omnicom—announced with much fanfare in July but then called off last month—was designed to give the companies more heft in competing with deep-pocketed Silicon Valley firms such as Google Inc., GOOGL which have gotten a leg up on mining data about consumer habits.

Mr. Sorrell said scale is important, especially in media buying. But, for WPP, the quest for scale doesn’t necessarily mean doing a big deal, he said.

“We have done 50-60 deals last year and already 30 this year,” said Mr. Sorrell. “They are small, but they aggregate into around 2%-3% of revenues per year; that is substantial.” He said WPP will continue to pursue its strategy of making small to medium-size acquisitions with an annual budget of around £300 million to £400 million.

The founder of the world’s largest ad group, which houses firms ranging from Ogilvy & Mather to Grey Group, had been critical of the Omnicom-Publicis marriage and he took another opportunity to poke at the companies during Wednesday’s interview.

The collapse of the merger “was actually a bit humiliating for the industry,” he said. “It makes us look a bit ‘Don Draperish’ and amateurish.”

 

http://online.wsj.com/articles/wpp-ceo-martin-sorrell-predicts-more-consolidation-in-the-advertising-industry-1403113338

Jillian Michaels Poses Nude At 40 For Shape Magazine

6/18/2014 | The Huffington Post

“The Biggest Loser” trainer Jillian Michaels has spent her life whipping people into shape, and now she’s taking it all off for the pages of Shape magazine, revealing her own fantastically fit form.

Posing nude can be daunting — even for someone who spends as much time toning her body as Michaels — but the 40-year-old reveals that she finally feels like she’s come into her own.

“When I think back on my 20s and 30s, I look better now than I ever have. Yes, I’m older but I’m also wiser and that’s a more intrinsic type of beauty,” Michaels told the magazine.

Michaels, a mother of two children under the age of five, regularly works out, and tells the magazine that a fit body is about more than just looking a certain way.

“It’s important for women to have overall strength, because when you feel physically powerful, it transcends into every facet of your life,” she said. “My best reason for having strong arms is because I love to pick up my kids.”

For more with Michaels, pick up the July/August issue of Shape, available on newsstands and tablets nationwide on June 25.

 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/18/jillian-michaels-nude_n_5507164.html?utm_hp_ref=email_share

2 Million Tune In to See Hillary Rodham Clinton on Fox News

6/18/2014 | The New York Times

Apparently the Fox News audience was intensely interested in what Hillary Rodham Clinton had to say about her latest book.

The appearance of Mrs. Clinton on Tuesday on Fox News — where she was interviewed by Bret Baier and Greta Van Susteren — drew just over two million viewers during the half-hour it was broadcast (6:45 p.m. to 7:15 p.m.). That audience represented an increase of 23 percent over the previous day, when Fox had about 1.6 million viewers in that hour.

The interview also pulled in many more viewers in the group that brings in advertising dollars to news programs, people ages 25 to 54. In that category, Fox News increased 30 percent from the previous day with 303,000 viewers.

Mrs. Clinton is promoting “Hard Choices,” a memoir about her tenure as secretary of state, which ended in 2013. The Fox News interview concentrated heavily on the attacks on the United States mission in Benghazi, Libya, in 2012 that left four Americans dead, including J. Christopher Stevens, the ambassador to Libya.

Mrs. Clinton had appeared earlier that evening on CNN, where she added viewers to that network’s usual total, but nothing that approached the audience on Fox. For the 5 p.m. hour, when Mrs. Clinton was interviewed by Christiane Amanpour, CNN attracted 521,000 viewers, with 115,000 in the 25-54 group.

That was an increase of 33 percent in total viewers and 55 percent in the advertiser-preferred group. CNN’s audience is tiny at that hour, with only 393,000 total viewers the previous day and only 74,000 in the 25-54 group.

Even with the lift from the Clinton interview, CNN was still dwarfed in that hour by the Fox News program “The Five,” which had 1.8 million total viewers and 336,000 in the 25-54 category.

75 Tasty Instagram Accounts Every Foodie Should Follow

9/15/2013 | Mashable

Everyone knows the first course of a delicious meal is serving your followers on Instagram.

When it comes to sharing meals with social media followers, these food photographers, stylists and bloggers know exactly what they’re doing.

For mouth-watering images of colorful, fresh food, check out the 75 Instagram accounts every food lover should follow.

1. @sarkababicka

Sarka Babicka is the blogger behind Cook Your Dreams.

2. @alice_gao

Photographer Alice Gao uploads gorgeous images of food and lifestyle.

3. @cannellevanille

Aran Goyoaga of food blog Canelle et Vanille documents eating in Seattle and the Basque country.

4. @davidlebovitz

Chef and food writer David Lebovitz shares images of his life in Paris, complete with fresh baguettes and produce.

5. @jamieoliver

This celebrity chef’s Instagram feed is a mix of gorgeous food photography and personal snapshots.

6. @smoothdude

This Instagram account belongs to professional food photographer Daniel Krieger.

7. @pissinginthepunchbowl

Food photographer Marcus Nilsson can make even the last few slices in a greasy pizza box look incredible.

8. @carrieannpurcell

Carrie Ann Purcell is a successful food stylist who has done spreads for the likes of Williams-Sonoma and covers for food magazines like Martha Stewart Living.

9. @munns

David Munns is a professional food photographer who snaps images of his delectable meals and happy children.

10. @davidloftus

David Loftus has photographed for the likes of Jamie Oliver and April Bloomfield. Follow him for gorgeous food shots and stunning portraiture.

11. @andrewscrivani

The New York Times Dining photographer posts images of food and baseball.

12. @thekitchenista

Angela Davis, blogger at The Kitchen Diaries, shares pictures of all your comfort food favorites, including fried chicken, smoked pork chops and buttermilk biscuits.

13. @helenedujardin

Helene Dujardin is the senior photographer at cookbook publisher Oxmoor House.

14. @rick_poon

Rick Poon is a photographer from Los Angeles. Follow him for beautiful images of food and travel.

15. @timrobisonjr

Tim Robison is a photographer from North Carolina.

16. @vkrees

Photographer Vanessa Rees posts beautiful photos of large, colorful meals.

17. @sonyayu

Follow Sonya Yu for professional food photography and adorable snaps of a corgi named Waffles.

18. @spoonforkbacon

The official Instagram for food photographer Teri Lyn Fisher and food stylist Jenny Park’s blog, Spoon Fork Bacon.

19. @madcapcupcake

Marika Collins’ feed has an antique feel, complete with beautiful, old silverware and paint-chipped tables.

20. @minimalistbaker

Dana Shultz documents her quick and simple recipes at Minimalist Baker.

21. @alxgrossmn

Alex Grossman is the creative director of Bon Apetit. Follow him for photos of cold beer, grilled meat and vegetables and the elusive cronut.

22. @amandasuzannemarshall

Amanda SUzanne Marshall posts pictures of food, culture and her life in Okinawa, Japan.

23. @mrschhoun

Follow this feed for food and lifestyle snaps from the San Francisco area.

24. @marte_marie_forsberg

Marte Marie Forsberg is a food and lifestyle photographer who lives in London.

25. @aprilbloomfield

Follow Chef April Bloomfield for snaps from inside a professional kitchen.

26. @farmert

Tucker Taylor is a farmer who posts colorful images of raw produce.

27. @nicole_franzen

Nicole Franzen posts images of New York restaurants, bars, friends and food.

28. @kyledreier

Kyle Dreier is a commercial photographer who posts behind-the-scenes pictures of professional shoots.

29. @joythebaker

Joy Wilson of Joy the Baker posts behind-the-scenes food styling images.

30. @donalskehan

Donal Skehan is a cookbook author and food photographer from Dublin.

31. @bakersroyale_naomi

Naomi of Bakers Royale is a self-taught baker and blogger.

32. @taraobrady

This food writer hails from Ontario, Ca. She shares simple and irresistibly beautiful shots of high-quality everyday ingredients.

33. @kankana_saxena

Kankana Saxena blogs at Playful Cooking.

34. @theforestfeast

Erin Gleeson of The Forest Feast posts warm photos of friends and family sharing meals in her woodsy home.

35. @_sheenarae

Sheena blogs and photographs at The Little Red House.

36. @reemrizvi

Reem Rizvi is an LA-based food and lifestyle photographer who has a knack for artfully arranging otherwise messy ingredients in her stunning photos.

37. @citrusandcandy

Karen Low blogs at Citrus and Candy.

38. @jehancancook

Guyanese food blogger Jehan, from Jehan Can Cook, posts photos of homemade food inspired by Gyuanese and Carribean culture.

39. @sarah_kieffer

Sarah Kieffer is a self-taught baker who posts simple shots of her sweet confections.

40. @savorysimple

Jennifer Farley of Savory Simple posts pictures of giant peaches, miniature watermelons and cats. Lots of cats.

41. @littleupsidedowncake

Only a talented food photographer like Sanda Pagaimo could make used lemon rinds look so beautiful.

42. @ashrod

Ashley from Not Without Salt started her career plating desserts in a high-end restaurant. Now she shares her food styling skills through photographs on her Instagram feed.

43. @mikevfmk

Michael Lewicki is a food blogger for Verses From My Kitchen and The Boys Club.

44. @ohladycakes

Ashlae of Oh, Ladycakes develops simple, from-scratch vegan recipes, that are also often gluten free. Follow her for gorgeous food and breath-taking travel shots.

45. @goodbeerhunting

Follow writer, photographer and craft beer industry specialist Michael Kiser as he travels the world looking for the best beers available.

46. @meetakwolff

Meeta K. Wolff is a freelance photographer, food stylist and writer living in Germany.

47. @careynotcarrie

Carey of Reclaiming Provincial posts images of the food and farm culture in Vermont.

48. @local_milk

Beth Kirby of Local Milk hails from Tennessee, and posts photos with a wam, country feel to them.

49. @behindfoodcarts

Follow this unique blog’s Instagram feed for photos of the people behind some of the best west coast food trucks.

50. @gourmandeinthek

Sylvie Shirazi is a food photographer and blogger for Gourmande In The Kitchen.

51. @carolineoncrack

If you’re hanging out in Los Angeles, follow blogger Caroline Pardilla for tips on locating the best cocktails available.

52. @pastryaffair

Kristen Rosenau blogs about her baking adventures at Pastry Affair.

53. @heatheralanna

It’s all about meals and family on blogger Heather Hands’ Instagram feed.

54. @idafrosk

Food artist Ida Frosk has a knack for arranging simple ingredients into adorable, edible scenes. Her Instagram feed boasts delightful pictures of her work.

55. @drizzleanddip

Sam Linsell is a food stylist, photographer and cookbook author.

56. @jchongstudio

Photographer and designer Jennifer Chong posts colorful shots of fresh meals and California coastlines.

57. @farmgirlsdabble

Brenda of posts images of kid-friendly foods, like cookie bars filled with M&Ms.

58. @passportsandpancakes

Megan Fleiner photographs food and travel for her blog, Passports and Pancakes.

59. @rapo4

Follow Bon Apetit Editor-in-Chief Adam Rapoport for snaps from behind the scenes at a major food publication.

60. @heatherchristo

Heather Christothoulou is a cook book author and blogger.

61. @averiesunshine

Averie Sunshine creates recipes to satisfy your sweet tooth and snack cravings. Follow for recommended products, sugary desserts and savory snacks.

62. @kitchen_door

Kate from Katie at the Kitchen Door shares frosty drinks, heirloom tomatoes and photos of friends and family.

63. @yossyarefi

Yossy Arefi has photographed for Bon Apetit, Saveur, Paste and other food publications. She shares photos of baking and seasonal fruits on Instagram.

64. @sundaysuppers

Karen Mordechai is a photographer and the creator of Sunday Suppers, a cooking-class company in Brooklyn, N.Y.

65. @cooksmarts

Jess Dang’s feed is full of vegetable-heavy dishes from her blog, Cook Smarts.

66. @thefauxmartha

Shot against stark white backgrounds, designer Melissa Coleman brings out the beauty in simple foods.

67. @eeddbbmm

Dylan James Ho is a travel photographer who shares beautifully-shot images of his meals from around the globe.

68. @vegantreats

This popular vegan bakery’s Instagram feed will knock the doubt out of anyone who thinks you can’t make a great cupcake without dairy products.

69. @tracyshutterbean

Food blogger and photographer Tracy Benjamin posts shares rustic images of outdoor meals and breath-taking landscapes.

70. @lindaspeakeasy

Linda of The Tart Tart posts images of homemade macarons, fresh pasta and the sites around her Brooklyn neighborhood.

71. @loveandlemons

Food blogger Jeanine Donofrio shares photos of her own cooking, as well as cooking from restaurants around the world.

72. @letmeeatcake

Eat doughnuts, croissants and ice cream vicariously through blogger Nastassia Johnson’s Instagram feed.

73. @darindines

Darin of food diary Darin Dines documents fantastic meals from top restaurants, including the very trendy Ramen Burger.

74. @acozykitchen

Blogger Adrianna Adarme posts snapshots of exotic fruits and vegetables among other delicious foods.

75. @thedomesticman

Blogger Russ Crandall, of The Domestic Man shares his experiences eating under the Paleo diet, a diet heavy on meat, vegetables and fruits.

“Did All the Girls PT?”

6/19/2014 | Slate

Free pregnancy tests are a good way to fight fetal alcohol syndrome. Condoms are better.

Jody Allen Crowe, executive director of Healthy Brains for Children, installs a pregnancy test dispenser in the women’s restroom at Pub 500 in Mankato, Minnesota.

Fetal alcohol syndrome is a serious problem in Alaska. Babies born there, particularly Native American babies, suffer the syndrome at much higher rates than infants in the lower 48. Since the first epidemiological data emerged in the mid-1990s, Alaskan FAS rates have declined somewhat, but creative solutions are still needed.

Here’s one: In the next few months, researchers from the University of Alaska–Anchorage will install 20 pregnancy test dispensers in the women’s restrooms in bars and restaurants in remote communities in Alaska. The dispensers will carry warnings about the risks of drinking while pregnant and display a phone number that women can call for more information. Putting the tests where women drink is a sensible idea. Nearly one-half of pregnancies in the United States are unintended, and many women go weeks not knowing they are pregnant. During that time, some of them binge drink and put the fetus at risk for birth defects, learning disabilities, and many other serious problems associated with FAS.

The pregnancy tests will be free. The state of Alaska will pay $800 per dispenser and $1.50 for each test. Free condoms will be available alongside the pregnancy tests. But the state won’t pay for them. (The research team organizing the dispenser project wouldn’t say how the condoms are funded.) The reason for this hole in state funding is a state senator named Pete Kelly.

Kelly is a human billboard for why politicians should not be directly involved in the management of public health programs. He cares about babies and also about women (once they’re pregnant, at least). He pushed through the pregnancy test program, and the researchers involved commend him for his efforts. For all his concern about children and pregnant women, though, Kelly, a Republican from Fairbanks who calls abortion an “American Holocaust,” has an obvious discomfort with sex. Icky, unmentionable sex, and those bits of latex that allow women to do dirty things without God’s intended consequences. Because Kelly was the main advocate for the pregnancy dispenser program, funding for condoms was not part of the proposal: He has made it quite clear that he does not support increasing access to contraception. Kelly says that birth control is for people who “don’t necessarily want to act responsibly,” and he practically cringed when he told an interviewer he wasn’t interested in helping people “do it.”

Kelly is in no position to lecture others about acting responsibly. Condom distribution programs work. We have plenty of evidence for this, and ignoring the facts is no way to help women and children. These programs reduce the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases and limit unintended pregnancies. They are particularly effective among youth and at-risk populations—precisely the people Alaska should be trying to reach in the state’s battle against FAS. There is no evidence that condom distribution encourages young people to have sex earlier in life.

The Alaskan government, despite Kelly’s squeamishness, has behaved commendably in the fight against FAS. The state established an agency to coordinate the effort. It launched a comprehensive plan to reduce underage drinking. It has worked with the federal government to establish training centers that educate health care providers and young people about the problem. And it has given away condoms. Last year, the state announced the “Wrap it up, Alaska” program to distribute condoms, using cute, Alaska-specific sayings. (“Drill safely” is my personal favorite.)

Putting pregnancy tests in bathrooms is a wonderfully innovative idea, but no one knows if it will work. The Alaska program is designed to provide some evidence. Communities that receive the dispensers will be compared with communities that receive only posters warning against FAS. Researchers, led by anthropologist and epidemiologist David Driscoll, will survey women in both communities about their understanding and beliefs about the disease, and will follow up six months later with a subset of the women. Even with that data, though, it will be years before we have any sense of whether the pregnancy tests are putting a dent in the number of FAS cases.

Minnesota started a similar program in 2012. Jody Allen Crowe, an anti-FAS advocate who has so far overseen the installation of 20 pregnancy test dispensers in Minnesota bar bathrooms, sees a big future for the programs. “Everyone asks who the DD is before going out,” he says, referring to designated drivers. “My goal is for people to ask, ‘Did all the girls PT?’”

Perhaps there will be a day when pregnancy tests are an integral part of a preparty ritual, but we’re not there yet. Today, condoms are the best tool to prevent unintended pregnancy, and preventing unintended pregnancies is the most effective way to prevent pregnant women from binge drinking. The $400,000 Kelly has pushed through the state legislature to fund the pregnancy tests feels like a battle against reality—he’s desperately searching for a way to prevent FAS without having to pay for condoms.

It’s past time for politicians to stop acting like adolescents who giggle when someone says “condom.” Admittedly, their discomfort with birth control can be hilarious when it doesn’t matter. Rick Santorum said during the 2012 campaign that states should be free to ban contraception, and people laughed at how out of touch he was. Trying to cut funding for contraceptives as part of humanitarian aid in Africa, however, isn’t so funny. One of the most effective public health tools in human history shouldn’t be taboo in our politics.

 

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2014/06/free_pregnancy_tests_in_alaska_bar_bathrooms_condoms_also_prevent_fetal.html

 

Entrepreneurs Buzzing Over Medical Marijuana In Florida

6/16/2014 | NPR

One of three marijuana plants growing in the backyard of a 65-year-old retiree from Pompano Beach, Fla. He grows and smokes his own “happy grass” to alleviate pain.

Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia now have laws allowing for some form of medical marijuana.

Florida appears poised to join the club. Polls show that voters there are likely to approve a November ballot measure legalizing marijuana for medical use.

If it passes, regulations that would set up a market for medical marijuana in Florida are still at least a year away. But cannabis entrepreneurs from around the country are already setting up shop in the state.

In Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa and Orlando, there’s a business conference every few weeks devoted to a product that’s still illegal.

There are a lot of names for marijuana, but in the industry, they mostly call it cannabis. Tom Quigley runs a group called the . Don’t confuse that with the Florida Medical Cannabis Association or the Medical Marijuana Business Association of Florida, just three of the dozens of groups started in the months since it became clear that the marijuana measure was moving ahead.

While the vote is months away, there are many who see Florida’s impending embrace of medical marijuana as an opportunity that’s too good to miss. Quigley greeted about 150 of them at his conference in Orlando.

“We can’t teach you in one day how to run a cannabis industry business, but what we can do is bring the best information to you,” Quigley says.

There were seminars on cultivating the best strains, converting cannabis into oils and concentrates, and on marketing and legal issues.

Since California became the first state to approve medical marijuana in 1996, 21 other states have followed suit.

If Florida approves it, it will be the first state in the Southeast to do so. And with nearly 20 million residents, it will be the biggest market outside of California.

The National Cannabis Industry Association estimates medical marijuana will be a $785 million industry in Florida — one that Quigley says will have all kinds of economic opportunities.

“If you want to become a bud tender that works inside one of these dispensaries as an occupation, if you want to run your own business, there’s that opportunity as well,” Quigley says.

Right now in Florida, the cannabis industry is mostly talk. But money is lining up as well. Quigley is with ArcView, an investor’s group that funds cannabis industry startups.

Cannabis-RX, a real estate company based in Arizona, is also active here, investing in properties it plans to sell or lease to growers and operators of dispensaries.

“We look at light industrial commercial buildings that are in the right zoned areas of the cities,” says Llorn Kylo, CEO of . “And we usually seek between 10,000 and about 100,000 square feet.”

Along with real estate, Cannabis-RX also offers budding entrepreneurs financing and consulting services to help them get their businesses off the ground.

At the Orlando conference, Meg Sanders of , a grower with three dispensaries in Colorado, flew in from Denver. Sanders says she’s always looking for opportunities to expand — including in Florida.

“For us, we’ve worked very hard to create a fantastic template of what we do. And if there’s opportunity in other states, we’ll definitely be there at the table,” says Sanders.

It’s unclear exactly what opportunities will arise in Florida. If the medical marijuana amendment passes, the state won’t issue regulations for another six months to a year.

Florida’s governor recently signed into law a very limited version of medical marijuana — one that allows production and sale only of a special strain that’s low in THC. As part of that law, just five nurseries will be allowed to grow it. They have to be large operations that have been in business in Florida for at least 30 years.

Chris Rumph, a prospective entrepreneur at the conference, says that regulation has many wondering how welcoming Florida officials will be to the emerging cannabis industry.

“Opening up to nurseries that have been around 30 years, I think that’s kind of silly,” says Rumph. “We live in a state where we’ve got thousands of nurseries with people that are very educated and knowledgeable about plants and how to grow things effectively. So, there’s a little bit of suspicion there for me.”

How the medical marijuana regulations will be written, though, is for the future. For activists and entrepreneurs, the first task is mobilizing Florida voters to actually approve the medical marijuana amendment.

 

http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2014/06/16/322580314/entrepreneurs-buzzing-over-medical-marijuana-in-florida?sc=17&f=1128&utm_source=iosnewsapp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=app

 

World Cup: The Crazy Rules Some Teams Have About Pre-Game Sex

6/16/2014 | Time

Science says that sex can actually help, not hurt, athletic performance. But wary coaches disagree

When you’re competing in the world’s most-watched sporting event, you don’t take any chances with your body. So while experts may disagree about whether having sex before a game can affect a player’s performance, many teams at this year’s World Cup have implemented sex bans.

“There will be no sex in Brazil. They can find another solution, they can even masturbate if they want. I am not interested what the other coaches do, this is not a holiday trip, we are there to play football at the World Cup,” Safet Susic, the coach of Bosnia-Herzegovina’s national soccer team told reporters of his team’s ban in April.

On Tuesday, Quartz broke down the sex rules for the World Cup teams. To sum up:

Sex is permitted on these teams: Germany, Spain, the United States, Australia, Italy, Netherlands, Switzerland, Uruguay and England

Sex is banned on these teams: Russia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Chile and Mexico

And the rules are complicated on these teams: France (you can have sex but not all night), Brazil (you can have sex, but not “acrobatic” sex), Costa Rica (can’t have sex until the second round) and Nigeria (can sleep with wives but not girlfriends)

The rules for the remaining teams are unknown.

Are some sex rules excessive? Probably. The two most common concerns about pre-game sex are that intercourse might make a player tired and weak or it could affect him psychologically. Studies have shown that the former is a myth.

Many coaches and athletes believe that abstaining from sex builds up aggression, a belief that probably stems from ancient civilizations like the Greeks, who thought that men derived strength from their semen. This theory is so pervasive that even Muhammed Ali refused to have sex six weeks before a fight, fearing that ejaculation would release the testosterone (and therefore aggression) he needed for a boxing match.

But in fact, the opposite has been proven to be true. Studies show testosterone increases after sex. “After three months without sex, which is not so uncommon for some athletes, testosterone dramatically drops to levels close to children’s levels,” Emmanuele A. Jannini of the University of L’Aquila in Italy who has studied the affect of sex on athletic performance told National Geographic. “Do you think this may be useful for a boxer?”

Which means that sex may actually increase performance by releasing testosterone into the body.

And sex doesn’t exhaust athletes. Most bedroom sessions burn only 25 to 50 calories, the equivalent of walking up two flights of stairs. For an all-star athlete, that’s nothing. Studies show that having sex the night before a competition has no affect on strength or endurance.

Whether coitus would affect the soccer players psychologically is harder to test, but experts maintain that it can have a positive mental effect. “If athletes are too anxious and restless the night before an event, then sex may be a relaxing distraction,” Ian Shrier, a sports medicine specialist at McGill University, wrote in a 2000 review of 31 studies on sex and sports titled “Does Sex the Night Before Competition Decrease Performance?” published in the Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine.

Some experts even argue that previous World Cups wins prove sex can be beneficial.

“The Netherlands national soccer team, at the 1978 World Cup in Argentina, is an example of this,” Juan Carlos Medina, general coordinator of the sports department at Tecnologico de Monterrey in Mexico told CNN. “Some of those players were accompanied by their wives, and they won the second place. I don’t say this is a determinant factor, but it brings support.”

“Even Pele confessed that he never suspended sexual encounters with his wife before a game, I mean, that thing about sex helping to relax is a verified truth,” he added.

Ultimately whether sex will negatively impact a person’s emotions before a game depends on each individual. Some find it’s a relief, others a distraction (especially if it keeps them up all night). “In general, an athlete should never try something before an important competition that they have not already tried in lesser competitions or practice,” Shrier concludes.

 

http://time.com/2894263/world-cup-sex-soccer/