Argentina Edges Nigeria 3-2 But Both Teams Advance To World Cup Round Of 16 (VIDEOS)

Nigeria couldn’t contain Lionel Messi. Luckily for the Super Eagles, they didn’t need to stop him in order to advance at the 2014 World Cup.

With Messi scoring two first-half goals, Argentina topped Nigeria 3-2 at Estadio Beira-Rio in Porto Alegre on Wednesday. The win sealed the top spot in Group F for Argentina and Nigeria also advanced as the runner-up in the group.

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After waiting until second-half stoppage time before lifting Argentina past Iran in its previous group-stage outing, Messi didn’t waste any time against Nigeria. In the third minute, he pounced on a rebound in the Nigeria penalty area and scored his third goal in as many games.

Nigeria responded quickly with a well-taken goal from Ahmed Musa in the fourth minute. But Messi reinstated the Argentina advantage shortly before halftime with a superb free kick goal.

Both teams would add another goal in the second half but the stakes were lowered as Bosnia-Herzegovina had taken a lead over Iran in the other Group F finale being played simultaneously. A loss for Iran would mean that Argentina and Nigeria qualified for the Round of 16 regardless of the outcome in Porto Alegre.

8 Ways To Throw A Memorable Wedding For Less

With the busy June wedding season drawing to a close, it’s time for couples looking to marry next year to get going. To jump start your planning, check out these novel ideas from savvy insiders.

Couples spend nearly $30,000 on average to get married in the U.S., according to TheKnot.com. In this three-part series, we asked in-the-know wedding bloggers to share their best ideas for throwing a great party on a budget. Up first today: the place, which is your single biggest expense (typically about half of the budget). Coming tomorrow and Friday: Food and drink, and the all-important dress.

The Misguided Bullying Storyline on <em>Switched at Birth</em>

In the past few years, I became hooked on an ABC Family Channel show, Switched at Birth. I typically find their portrayal of teenage angst as refreshingly honest and greatly admire their integration of deaf youth into the storyline and their use of accurate American Sign Language. Unfortunately, as a bullying prevention researcher and advocate, the “cyberbullying” and LGBT storyline featured in the first two episodes of this summer season has me shaking my head in disbelief.

For those unfamiliar with this Switched at Birth storyline (and here’s your spoiler warning), the show set up a “catfish” scenario in which Emmett, ex-boyfriend of protagonist Bay, starts texting with who he thinks is a girl several states away. They grow close via text messages and agree to meet. In reality, the girl is really a boy named Matthew who Emmett had previously reported for vandalizing students’ cars. At the planned meeting, Matthew beats Emmett up, leaving him bruised and cut. Emmett’s mother notices these marks and asks Emmett for the whole story. Emmett’s mother, who happens to be the guidance counselor at the school, reports the “cyberbullying” to the school principal. The principal brings both Emmett and Matthew into her office only after Matthew reminds Emmett he still has a “sext” that Emmett once sent. Emmett denies the story and is determined to get his photo back so he can be honest about what has happened. With help from Bay, Emmett steals Matthew’s computer to erase the picture and discovers that in fact Matthew is gay and has a crush on Emmett. This discovery leads Bay to suggest to Emmett to not report the “bullying” as it would out Matthew. Meanwhile, after leaving the principal’s office, Emmett’s mother confronts Matthew, slamming him against the lockers. She is suspended from her job for a few days.

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I will now break this down piece by piece.

Positive: Emmett’s mother noticed warning signs and talked to Emmett about what happened.

I applaud the portrayal of a concerned mother noticing something wrong with her son and having an open enough relationship to find out what has happened. This is something that takes time to build and fans of the show will appreciate the effort Emmett’s mom has put into building that relationship so that when this incident happened, Emmett was willing to talk to her.

Misguided: Emmett’s mother took things into her own hands.

Unfortunately, parents confronting their children’s “bullies” is becoming a common occurrence. This almost never results in a positive outcome. Although Emmett’s mother was suspended from her job for a few days, this seems mild considering she is an educator who essentially assaulted a student. To me, this could be seen as even suggesting to parents that confronting the “bully” is the right approach, when truly, it will most likely result in more harm than good.

Misguided: The principal asked Emmett to confirm the story in front of Matthew and then dismissed the investigation once Emmett denied what had happened.

By definition, bullying involves a power imbalance. In this case, this was definitely true – not only had Matthew already successfully beat Emmett up, he had private texts to hold over Emmett. Of course Emmett was not going to admit the story in front of him – Matthew’s power over him was too strong. This is why accused bullies and targets should not be interviewed together. It is also troublesome that despite the abundance of evidence – from Emmett’s bruised face to the print-outs of their text conversations printed around the school – that the principal would simply dismiss the accusation at that point.

Misguided: Because Matthew is gay and is not out, Emmett isn’t going to report the incident.

This issue is certainly complex. We never want to out students who are not ready to be out. This is one of the reasons why mandatory parental notification laws are problematic – outing youth to potentially unaccepting parents can be harmful. But that doesn’t give Matthew an out for what he did. Matthew likely needs support and help for both feeling comfortable in coming out as well as dealing with his evident anger issues, which unfortunately is something most schools who rely on a zero-tolerance punishment model won’t provide. Perhaps the show should comment on that piece – helping Matthew find supportive adults, create a GSA, etc. — but suggesting there’s ever a reason not report bullying is incredibly misguided. Already only 1 in 3 youth tells an adult they’ve been bullied. This type of messaging may just decrease that amount.

Misguided: Calling this incident “cyberbullying.”

Although the scenario between Emmett and Matthew started off as something that could be called cyberbullying – impersonation via technology in order to cause harm, its escalation to physical violence should really be called assault. That type of violence moves beyond what most would consider bullying and enters into the sphere of truly criminal behavior. Labeling the entire incident as “cyberbullying” minimizes the harm caused by that assault and furthers a disturbing trend of overlooking more serious behavior under the guise of bullying.

Misguided: Emmett and Bay hack into Matthew’s phone and computer to retrieve the sext.

Two wrongs do not make a right. Of course this scenario was necessary for Bay and Emmett to find out that Matthew was gay, but in reality it suggests that stealing others property is justified in order to prevent further bullying.

I understand that in the end, Switched at Birth is a soap opera, constructing outlandish storylines to gain viewership. Yet, with ABC Family’s history of great edutainment programing and its campaign against cyberbullying, “Delete Digital Drama,” it is incredibly disappointing to see so many misguided messages about how to handle bullying. If more shows featured best practices and challenged the many misassumptions about bullying, perhaps we could actually change the behavior.

The Experimental Genius of Gerry Goffin

I didn’t know who Gerry Goffin was when I was in junior high school, and high school, in the ’60s. I listened to AM radio constantly on my new transistor radio, and I knew all the songs on KEWB’s weekly Top 20 – so well that sometimes I even called in and won Name It and Claim It. I knew who sang the songs, so of course I knew who Bob Dylan was, and the Beatles. But I didn’t know writers who didn’t sing, so I didn’t know who Gerry Goffin and Carole King were. Of course I knew their songs: “Will You Love Me Tomorrow,” “It Might as Well Rain Until September,” “Take Good Care of My Baby,” “Go Away Little Girl,” “One Fine Day,” “Oh No Not My Baby,” “Up On The Roof,” and “Pleasant Valley Sunday” were part of my life. And they still are. When these songs come on my car radio, I still sing along, and I still remember every word.

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Gerry Goffin (undated photo). Image courtesy of the Huffington Post.

That was a key element of Goffin and King’s music. Like Burt Bacharach, and unlike Dylan and the later Lennon-McCartney, they wrote songs that not only had beautiful, catchy melodies, but lyrics that made sense, and expressed an understandable point of view, clearly and simply. Their songs were universal: as Carole King said, Gerry Goffin’s words “expressed what so many people were feeling but didn’t know how to say.” Whether you were actually feeling them or not, you could imagine real people feeling them, and imagine feeling them yourself. No mysterious Miss Lonely, no Walrus, but real people, and familiar feelings. And in this, Goffin and King were true heirs of Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hart, and the other great songwriters of the Golden Era, experimental artists who wrote universal, memorable, beautiful songs skillfully and elegantly.

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The Shirelles (1962). Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Experimental innovators tend to keep their creativity much longer than their conceptual counterparts, and this was true of Gerry Goffin. I learned who Carole King was in the ’70s, when she became a superstar singer, but I think I still didn’t know who Gerry Goffin was. Yet it turns out that he was still writing songs I listened to, and learned by heart. Even after he and Carole King divorced, and stopped writing songs together, Goffin continued writing lyrics, notably with the composer Michael Masser. Their hits included “Do You Know Where You’re Going To,” “Someone That I Used to Love,” “Tonight, I Celebrate My Love,” and “Miss You Like Crazy.” They also wrote “Saving All My Love For You,” that Whitney Houston made into a monster hit in 1985.

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Whitney Houston at the Grammy Awards. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Goffin’s lyrics appealed not only to a broad audience, but to a large and remarkably diverse range of singers. The first Goffin-King song to reach No.1, in 1961, was recorded by the Shirelles; the second in 1962, by Little Eva; and the third, in 1963, by Steve Lawrence. Others who had hits with Goffin-King compositions in the ’60s included Bobby Vee, The Chiffons, The Drifters, Herman’s Hermits, The Animals, Maxine Brown, Dusty Springfield, Aretha Franklin, and the Monkees. Artists who recorded Goffin-Masser songs during the ’70s and ’80s included Diana Ross, Roberta Flack, Crystal Gayle, Teddy Pendergrass, Natalie Cole, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Billy Preston and Syreeta, Whitney Houston, and Barbra Streisand. Goffin’s lyrics were simple without being simplistic, and often displayed a subtle sophistication. In her memoir, Carole King marveled at the images he produced, succinctly and unobtrusively: a description of an earthly paradise as trouble-proof, to rhyme with roof; a soul in the lost-and-found, saved by a lover with a claim check; the vulnerability and helplessness of being deeply in love conveyed by just three words, “chains of love.”

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Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gormé (ca. 1970). Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Decades after he’d begun writing the biggest hits on the Top 20 hit parade, and long after Bob Dylan and Paul McCartney had become little more than performers, nostalgia acts for aging baby boomers, Gerry Goffin was still an innovator, writing songs that went to No. 1, and that became a part of your life. Popular music had changed, and unlike his conceptual peers Gerry Goffin had changed with it; if teen angst was no longer the primary concern, he didn’t just write silly love songs, but songs about adult relationships, including extramarital affairs. Conceptual innovators like Dylan, Lennon, and McCartney had been powerful voices of one moment, but experimental innovators like Goffin and Bacharach kept creating, and became memorable voices of more than one. In popular music, as in many other domains, conceptual and experimental innovators serve different but distinct roles. Conceptual young geniuses are shooting stars. We remember them for landmark dramatic works that remain frozen in time, so that hearing “Like a Rolling Stone” or “Penny Lane” instantly takes us back to a specific time and place. But after those flashes, these artists effectively disappear from our lives as sources of new music. In contrast, experimental old masters accompany us throughout our lives, providing a soundtrack that continues from one year to the next, and changes as we ourselves change. Gerry Goffin was one of the greatest experimental forces in the popular music of my generation. I still don’t know much about him, but I will always love his music, and I am sad that there will not be any more.

Final Fantasy-inspired Bookmark Saves Your Progress

Fans of the Final Fantasy series will recognize this blue box right away. I know that it is burned into my subconscious thanks to many hours of playing. It is that box that asks whether you’d like to save your progress or not. Naturally when reading a book, you can save your progress too. Or lose your page. Save it with this bookmark.

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Olly Moss made this familiar box into a bookmark for Urban Outfitters. What’s that? Final Fantasy isn’t your cup of nerd tea? Well, you can always design a bookmark based on the save game boxes of other games if you want. Go to Kotaku to download an image and print your own. How cool is that?

This one has to be the best bookmark ever though. It brings back so many gaming memories.

[via Nerd Approved]

Google Introduces Android One Program To Bring More Smartphones To Developing Markets

IMG_9985 Today at Google I/O, the company launched a new initiative designed to help make smartphones more affordable to develop and release. The initiative will target OEMs specifically making phones for developing markets, which could help increase Android’s market share even further. Read More

The First Android Wear Smartwatches Will Go On Sale Today

IMG_0128 Want a mini Android display on your wrist? Both LG and Samsung’s first Android Wear smartwatches will be available for purchase starting today, June 25 — and yes, Samsung is now making an Android Wear device. Called the Samsung Gear Live, it looks a lot like its Tizen counterparts. Read More

Google Launches Full Android Wear SDK, Lets Developers Create Custom UIs And Access Sensors

IMG_0116 At its annual developer conference, Google today announced the launch of a full SDK for Android Wear. After a short preview period that mostly allowed developers to push notifications to Android Wear smartwatches, the full SDK will now allow developers to create their own custom apps. Read More

Google Blurs The Line Between Web And Native Apps On Android

IMG_0039 Today at Google I/O, Chrome Director of Product Management Avni Shah introduced the new version of Chrome coming in the next Android update dubbed Android L. As expected, we got a couple of feature updates. But it isn’t just a better version of Chrome. There is a clear and more profound message coming from Google — the company wants to blend native apps with web tabs. And the end… Read More

Google's Project Tango Will Power Augmented Reality Shopping

Google just announced a pretty impressive-looking retail experience powered by its Project Tango 3D mapping service. With help from aisle411 and Walgreens, the new augmented reality shopping technology will help you find products more efficiently. It sort of turns shopping into a video game.

Read more…