The Hemingway House in Key West

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A few facts about The Hemingway House at 907 Whitehead Street: It’s one of the most popular tourist attractions in Key West. Originally built in the 1870s in the French Colonial Style by Asa Tift, a prominent Key West citizen, the house was given to Ernest Hemingway in 1931. His wife, Pauline, had a wealthy uncle who purchased the home for a mere $8000 and gave it to the couple as a wedding present. At the time, the house was in poor condition, in foreclosure and desperately needed restoration. Hemingway lived and worked in the house until the late 1940s when he and Pauline divorced. She continued to live there until her death in 1951. Hemingway owned the house until 1961, and after his death, his three sons auctioned it off for $80,000. In 1964, the new owner turned it into a museum. Photo: Susan Fogwell

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Hemingway’s writing studio is on the second floor of a former carriage house. It happens to be only one of two houses in Key West with a mansard roof; the other one is the J.Y. Porter House. Hemingway wrote many of his best-known works here including “Death in the Afternoon,” “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” “The Green Hills of Africa,” “The Fifth Column,” “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” and “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber.” After Hemingway’s death, the unpublished manuscript that was to become “Islands in the Stream” was found in a vault in the property’s garage. Interestingly, the studio overlooks Key West’s first swimming pool. Pauline had the pool built as a surprise for Hemingway while he was away covering the Spanish Civil War. The cost of the pool was $20,000, an astronomical sum at the time. On the tour, the guide will point out a penny imbedded in the cement. Apparently, Hemingway had taken the penny from his pocket, angrily tossed it to the ground, saying Pauline had spent his last cent. Photo: Susan Fogwell

2014-11-08-IMGP1893.JPG The stairs leading up to Hemingway’s writing studio. Photo: Susan Fogwell

2014-11-08-IMGP1895.JPG While exploring the grounds, you’ll come across many six-toed cats; some are descendants of Hemingway’s cat, Snow White. Photo: Susan Fogwell

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Hemingway frequented the original Sloppy Joe’s in Havana during prohibition. In the 1930s while living in Key West he was a regular at Sloppy Joe’s on Duval Street. It was at Hemingway’s suggestion that bar owner Joe Russell name the saloon after the one in Havana. (The Sloppy Joe’s in Havana closed more than 50 years ago and recently re-opened in 2013.) Plan a visit to Key West in July 2015 when Sloppy Joe’s will host its 35th Annual Hemingway Look-Alike contest (July 23-25). Photo: Susan Fogwell

2014-11-08-IMGP1909.JPG Walk along Duval Street lined with shops and restaurants. Photo: Susan Fogwell

2014-11-08-IMGP1918.JPG Escape to Key West for a tropical Christmas. Photo: Susan Fogwell

2014-11-08-IMGP1919.JPG A visit to Key West isn’t complete until you take a 90-minute narrated Conch Train Tour. The history and architecture of the Conch Republic is covered along with hearing all sorts of Key West tales. This is an absolute must-do activity as it gives you a solid overview of Key West packed with information. Between December 13-22, an evening Holiday Lights Tour is scheduled. Photo: Susan Fogwell

2014-11-08-IMGP1917.JPG For a Kodak moment, every Key West visitor heads to the concrete buoy marking the Southernmost Point in the continental United States (only 90 miles from Cuba). The famous monument was erected in 1983 and is one of the most visited attractions in Key West. Avoid crowds by going early in the morning. Photo: Susan Fogwell

Justice Department To Investigate Eric Garner's Death

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said during a Wednesday press conference that the Department of Justice will conduct a civil rights investigation into the death of Eric Garner, a black man who died after being placed in a chokehold by New York City Police Officer Daniel Pantaleo.

De Blasio, who called Garner’s death “a terrible tragedy that no family should have to endure,” said that he spoke to outgoing Attorney General Eric Holder and the nominee to replace him, Loretta Lynch.

“They made clear that the investigation initiated by the U.S. attorney would now move forward, move expeditiously, and be a thorough investigation,” he said.

CNN and NBC News also reported that an investigation would take place.

Earlier Wednesday, a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo in Garner’s death. Garner was arrested on July 17 for selling untaxed cigarettes, and was placed in a chokehold by Pantaleo. A video of the incident shows Garner screaming that he “can’t breathe” multiple times before going limp. A medical examiner later determined the chokehold to be the cause of death and ruled Garner’s death a homicide.

Immediately following the grand jury decision, New York lawmakers demanded a federal investigation into Garner’s death.

“The death of Eric Garner is a tragedy that demands accountability,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) said. “Nobody unarmed should die on a New York City street corner for suspected low-level offenses. I’m shocked by this grand jury decision, and will be calling on the Department of Justice to investigate.”

Gillibrand’s Senate colleague, fellow New York Democrat Chuck Schumer, offered a similar statement on Twitter:

“I’m struggling, because I’m also a father of two young African-American boys,” Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said. “And I don’t know what to say about what is happening in this country right now. We’re better than this as a country.”

The decision in Garner’s case came just one week after a grand jury in Ferguson, Missouri declined to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the death of unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown. That decision sparked days of protests across the country, and officials prepared for similar demonstrations in New York City on Wednesday.

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When Christmas Is Painful

Christmas cards are both the highlight of my year and the bane of my existence. I absolutely love receiving them and honestly look forward to the 11 months leading up to the arrival of certain cards, because I know that they will make me smile. I clear off doors’ worth of “art” work by my children so that we can display our cards, and I always feel sad when the second week of January hits, because we must finally take them down. There is something so heartwarming about seeing all the cards with photos of smiling children and knowing, from experience, all the creativity and hard work that people (often mothers) put into making sure the cards best represent their families.

Because once the advent of photo cards happened, simply getting the right Christmas card photo(s) is a chore, or has been in years past for me. The outtakes could probably be a card in and of themselves, but honestly, who wants that displayed, every year, on their mantle? I always imagine during the home photo session that if I were on a hidden camera reality show, the following clip would be the scene they would use right before they brought some sort of expert to coach me through how to really be a loving parent.

Nothing says holiday joy like:

“Stand over here kids.”

“Now, hug your sister. No, I said HUG your sister… don’t crush your sister!”

“Do you children even want presents this year?”

“I have Santa’s phone number, and I am not afraid to call him and cancel Christmas right now if you don’t do what I say!”

“Stop crying RIGHT. THIS. MINUTE. And smile, This is all Mommy asks of you once a year, and you can’t even help me here?”

“Mommy is sorry girls, mommy is really sorry… I am not calling Santa… can you both just smile and then you can have popsicles?”

And on and on we go until in the end I consider doing what I did last year, which was using a card of crying Santa pictures.

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But this year, I got really smart and turned the whole thing over to my amazing photographer friend. She perfectly captured exactly who my girls are at just this moment — and all I had to do was buy the dresses and show up. That, my friends, is the ticket to Christmas magic!

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But the accompanying stress of Christmas card season was not over, as I was then on to the next phase of the Christmas card process, which is always fraught with challenge for me… the annual cutting of the list.

Because I love Christmas cards, I never want to remove anyone from my list. Ever. If I had my way, I would exchange cards with every person we have ever known. However, time and money prevent this from being possible. Also, as life would have it, my list seems to grow each year as the girls get older, and we fortunately add some new friends to our lives, which makes the cutting even more necessary. So, I pulled out the list and began to make my way through it, finding that some names were easy to add to the delete columns, while others were a little harder, but still necessary.

But then the unexpected happened. Even though I should have been prepared. I came to my mother’s name. Ouch. You see, in the final couple of years before she died, my mother was in a nursing home, which meant that I had to send her card there. That alone had been a bit of a transition for me to make, but now I came to the point where I had to permanently remove her name from the list. It seemed pathetic to leave it on there because obviously, this reminder would probably be no less painful next year, but it also felt so strange to just backspace over it, as though it had not existed at all.

The same backspace action that I gave to the neighbor who moved or the classmate of Abby’s from last year who went to a different school. Except in this case, it was my mother. It was my mother who would not be receiving a Christmas card and my mother, in fact, who would not be seeing the professional photos of my children for the very first time. She would have LOVED these photos, would have wanted to talk about them for hours, definitely would have wanted to purchase every single one, despite not having a place to put them. In fact, honestly, it probably would have annoyed me, but she would have loved them. And it makes me so sad that she won’t see the card with the photos, and just as sad that she is off the list, just like that. There is no button for “regrettably delete.” It was all the same to my computer, but not all the same to me.

So, here we are, right? It is the season of hope, of love, of joy, of peace and of longing, I suppose. But I can’t help but think about how many people in creating their own cards, the ones that I have hanging on my door and the ones I will never see, went through the same process of cutting and culling their list; and might have had the sadness and pain that I did when I culled mine.

These cards, for me anyway, serve as a reminder that we are all in this together, that once a year we all remember each other and take the time to say so, even to those who can’t get a card anymore.

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Khamenei Opposes Iran's Hardliners on Nuclear Negotiations

The popular perception in the West is that Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, leads Tehran’s hardliners against the administration of President Hassan Rouhani, particularly when it comes to the negotiations between Iran and the P5+ 1 group over Iran’s nuclear program.

It is also claimed that Khamenei’s apparent endorsement of the negotiations is only to prove his claim that the United States is not really interested in reaching an agreement with Iran, and that the Islamic Republic has the sincere upper hand.

But is it this true that Khamenei supports the hardliners in their opposition to the proposed nuclear deal? Accumulated evidence and Khamenei’s own words and deeds suggest otherwise.

HARDLINERS ARGUE ACCORD IS A BAD DEAL

It is true that Iran’s hardliners consider the Geneva Accord between Iran and the P5+ 1 group as an “extraordinarily bad deal” because, they claim, Iran made many concessions, but received very little in return. After the negotiations were extended on Nov. 24 for another seven months, the hardliners intensified their attacks on the Rouhani administration.

Iran’s hardliners oppose the West ideologically, reject liberal democracy, and advocate Islamic fundamentalism. Opposing the West, and in particular the United States, is part of their identity. At the same time, the U.S. crippling economic sanctions against Iran has created many fundamentalist billionaires in Iran and, thus, lifting the sanctions will hurt them. A nuclear agreement with the West will also marginalize the fundamentalists in the political arena.

A good example of Iran’s fundamentalists is Hossein Shariatmadari, the managing editor of Kayhan, the mouthpiece of the hardliners. He is a Khamenei appointee, and many believe that he reflects Khamenei’s views. In his editorial of Nov. 23 Shariatmadari declared, “Achieving an agreement that would end the 14-year-old confrontation is not only unexpected, but also impossible.”

In another editorial on Nov. 25, Shariatmadari triumphantly declared that the extension showed that he was right all along. He attacked President Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, and declared that the only tangible result of the negotiations has been the proof that the United States, as a “racketeer government,” cannot be trusted, and that the Geneva Accord was a bad deal for Iran.

Like all Tehran fundamentalists, Shariatmadari enumerated the concessions that Iran has made: stopping the enrichment of uranium at 19.75 percent and converting its stockpile to uranium oxide (which would be very difficult to enrich further); slowing down its research on advanced centrifuges, and suspending the construction of IR-40, the heavy water nuclear reactor in Arak.

In return, Iran, according to Shariatmadari, received only $10.6 billion of its own money frozen in Western banks, and will receive $700 million per month over the next 7 months. At the same time though, Shariatmadari wrote, Iran’s total frozen hard currency in western banks has increased to $130 billion from $100 billion at the time of signing the Geneva Accord. He also claimed that the U.S. has conspired with Saudi Arabia to create an oil glut, causing the collapse of its price from $120 per barrel to $70, hence reducing Iran’s oil income further, and that “[John] Kerry and Obama cashed in all the concessions, but did not give Iran anything.”

At the same time, Saeed Jalili, the ultra-hardline chief nuclear negotiator under former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said, “Continuing the sanction regime is the evidence of the continuing enmity toward the Iranian nation, and needs a proper response.” The positions of the two hardliners could be interpreted as reflecting Khamenei’s views.

A SMART DICTATOR

But, Khamenei is a smart dictator. He is concerned about the survival of the Islamic Republic and the clerics’ power. Although U.S. economic sanctions cannot overthrow his regime, they have inflicted huge damage upon Iran’s economy, causing widespread dissatisfaction, anger and poverty among many strata of the society. This undermines Khamenei’s ambition and dream of making Iran a powerful world power. He is also keenly aware that military attacks by Israel and the U.S. on Iran will transform his nation into another Iraq or Syria.

Thus, Khamenei supports the resolution of the nuclear dispute and, thus, in his speech to a group of the Basij militia on Nov. 27, he put an end on the hardliners’ attacks on the Rouhani administration. He first attacked what he called the “aggressive” policy of the United States for having excessive demands, calling it “not trustworthy.” This was intended to mollify the hardliners before he endorsed continuation of the negotiations with the P5+1 group. He declared that the real goal of the U.S. is confronting “the powerful and advancing” Iranian nation through crippling sanctions but, according to him, even the American people do not trust their government.

Khamenei then explained why he thinks so: Obama’s approval rating is at its lowest level; the rate of voters’ participation in the U.S. midterm elections was very low; the government is confronting the protesting people in Ferguson and elsewhere, and the police are killing “400 innocent people” every year, which indicate “the gap between the American people and their administration.”

Khamenei then turned to the nuclear negotiations, and said, “I do not oppose extending the negotiations for the same reason that I did not oppose them in the first place.” He praised Iran’s diplomats for “being firm, not caving in” and for “seriously trying hard.” Khamenei said that the Western side, “particularly the United States,” says “one thing in private meetings, and speaks completely differently in public,” referring to the letter that President Obama sent him a while ago, and adding, “They change their positions all the time.” Saying that Iran’s diplomats “negotiate with solid reasoning,” Khamenei declared that, “If the negotiations do not yield results, it is the United States that will be loser,” because “they need these negotiations to solve their domestic problems [by distracting people’s attentions from them].”

KHAMENEI PREPARING NATION

Khamenei also said that “Iran neither trusts the United States, nor does it need America’s trust,” and that “if they present logical arguments, we will not oppose them; we accept logic, and fair and wise agreements.” In essence, Khamenei was preparing the nation for the eventual agreement that he believes will be coming.

Thus, not only does Khamenei approve the Geneva Accord, he also supports the resolution of the standoff over Iran’s nuclear program in an equitable and just framework, one in which Iran’s nuclear rights are respected and the economic sanctions are lifted, in return for Iran’s guarantee of not pursuing nuclear weapons. Unlike Obama in the United States, Khamenei has the final say on Iran’s foreign policy, and thus his support is critical to the success of the negotiations.

If the West, led by the United States, demonstrates flexibility in the nuclear negotiations and lifts the sanctions, a comprehensive agreement can be reached relatively easily, which will open up the way for resolving the crises in Iraq and Syria.

Improving the relations between Iran and the United States will lead to improvement in the state of human rights in Iran, just as the Helsinki Accords of 1975 between the West and East resulted in improved respect for human rights in the Eastern Bloc.

This article was translated by Ali N. Babaei.

After His Dad's Simple Request, Man With Down Syndrome Gets 42,000 Cards For His Birthday

A French man with Down syndrome has received more than 40,000 birthday cards from strangers all over the globe after his dad posted a simple message on Facebook asking if anyone might be willing to make his son’s special day a little bit brighter.

Last month, Lucien Parisseaux sent his 25 Facebook friends a plea. His son Manuel, who has Down syndrome, was going to celebrate his 30th birthday at the end of November, he wrote. He asked if they would consider sending him a birthday card.

Manuel “loves getting cards,” the doting dad wrote, according to a Huffington Post translation. “I’m contacting you to ask you to take a couple of minutes of your time and send him a little card and pass along this information to all of your friends so this chain message doesn’t stop. I thank all of you for your effort that will make my Manu incredibly happy.”

What happened next far surpassed any and all of Parisseaux’s expectations. His Facebook friends obliged, sharing his message on the social network, and then friends of friends did the same. The “chain message,” as Parisseaux put it, quickly took on a life of its own, and within weeks, it had been shared more than 100,000 times.

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Soon, the cards started pouring in. Thousands upon thousands of them were sent to Manuel’s home in Calais, France.

On the Friday morning before Manuel’s birthday, the letter carrier reportedly had to use a truck to deliver the 5,000 letters and cards that had arrived for the young man. “In the 20 years I’ve worked for the postal service, I’ve never seen this before,” the postal worker told France 3.

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Bags filled with Manuel’s cards and letters

In an update on Facebook posted Sunday, Parisseaux effusively thanked the thousands of people around the world who took the time to send something to his son. Parisseaux wrote that Manuel has received more than 42,000 cards and letters thus far. “Thank you with all our hearts,” he wrote.

“I don’t understand why it got so big. Manuel is like us, he is moved to tears,” his mother Jacqueline Parisseaux said, per the BBC.

The family reportedly received cards, letters and packages from places as far as the United States, Sri Lanka and Hong Kong. Among the gifts were boxes of chocolate and even cakes.

According to the BBC, the deluge of cards and gifts has been so overwhelming that the family has had to store some of it in a neighbor’s garage.

For more on this story, watch this video, which is in French, about Manuel’s special birthday surprise:

Venezuela's Pregnant Mannequins Are Nothing But a Shaming Tactic

Several news outlets have reported on pregnant teen mannequins in Venezuela used by charities to draw attention to the country’s high adolescent pregnancy rate. As researchers who have worked closely with young expectant and parenting women, we find this tactic misguided and shaming of young parents.

The adolescent pregnancy rate in Venezuela is one of the highest in the continent. Reuters reported that one Venezuelan girl under the age of 18 becomes pregnant every three minutes, and that this age category accounts for 23 percent of all births in the country. They also note that the United Nations is troubled by the alarming rates of adolescent pregnancy and subsequent maternal deaths.

But shame campaigns are not the way to approach teen pregnancy. The mannequins are merely a cheap trick that only serves to shock rather than educate or address underlying issues. These kinds of techniques completely ignore the socioeconomic realities of these young women.

We have a similar problem in the United States. We, too, ignore the context and conditions of young motherhood. Over the past few years, U.S.-based media treatment of teen pregnancy virtually ignored the subject of teen parenting. When teen parenting was discussed, teen parents were largely dehumanized and positioned as a cautionary tale. These young people experience an incredible amount of shame and stigma both in the media and in their lives. In 2013, for instance, the Candie’s Foundation launched the #NoTeenPreg celebrity campaign, which perpetuated stigmatizing messages. In that same year, New York City’s teen pregnancy campaign shamed teen parents with posters of babies with negative messages.

Our research and work through the Hear Our Stories project with Latinas in Holyoke, Massachusetts — where the teen birth rate is the highest in the state — reveals stark social and reproductive health disparities. Young parenting is connected to so many other issues, such as immigration status, education, family and community support, state support, and disinvestment of communities.

Almost two-thirds of the participants in our project have been pushed out of high school by their sophomore year, many before becoming pregnant. Studies show that young parenting Latinas also experience many obstacles that keep them from finishing school, including lack of access to affordable childcare and transportation, discrimination and stigma. According to a study published in The Journal School of Nursing, teen mothers begin with a wide variety of social and educational adversities, and many recommit to their education for the sake of their futures. Often the biggest obstacle that parenting teens face is a lack of support from their families and schools. A large majority of young parents express the need for emotional support and encouragement from people in their lives, especially adults.

The need to humanize teen parents — both globally and domestically — is urgent. The discourse surrounding teen pregnancy and parenting is too often shortsighted, lacking the broader context of the lived realities that are essential to helping young people reach their goals. Shame only serves to disempower these young women. Support gives them the resources they need to be successful and raise strong families.

Letters to Hadley: Boy Friends

“Happy. Just in my swimshorts, barefooted, wild-haired, in the red fire dark, singing, spitting, jumping, running. That’s the way to live.” -Jack Kerouac

Dear Hadley,

My first best friend was a boy. His name was Nicholas, and I met him in Kindergarten. He was very good at the monkey bars and so was I, and so we became friends. Nicholas and I rode bikes and built forts in the woods and went to the water park and had sleepovers. He taught me how to make a slingshot.

You’re still little right now, but when I watch you play, I already notice you jump right in with the boys. You’re tough and fearless and I wonder if your first best friend might be a boy, too.

One thing about boy friends that I’ve learned is that they’re necessary.

Another thing is that the older you get, the harder they are to have.

I’m glad I had a lot of them when I was young. Because boys never cared about how dirty they got or what their hair looked like. And they never worried about small and everyday things like scraped elbows or skinned knees. I think boy friends will be good for you because they’ll remind you to play hard and get grass stains on your jeans.

You should never worry about grass stains.

I love you, little one.

Aunt Liz

www.letterstohadley.com
For more from Liz Olson, click here.

Timothy Loehmann, Cop Who Shot Tamir Rice, Deemed Unfit For Policing 2 Years Ago

The Cleveland police officer who fatally shot a 12-year-old holding a replica gun in November was deemed unsuited for police service two years ago, newly released documents show.

Timothy Loehmann, now 26, was employed by the City of Independence Police Department in Independence, Ohio, for six months in 2012, the Guardian reports. In an internal memo from that November, Independence Deputy Chief Jim Polak criticized Loehmann’s behavior during a firearms training.

“He could not follow simple directions, could not communicate clear thoughts nor recollections, and his handgun performance was dismal,” the memo, available in full at Cleveland.com, states.

According to the report, Loehmann became “distracted and weepy,” in part because of an issue with a girlfriend and uncertainty about his future. Polak criticized Loehmann for being “not mature enough in his accepting of responsibility or his understanding in the severity of his loss of control on the range,” and concluded the report with recommending that Loehmann be “released” from his position.

The memo also cites several previous issues, including Loehmann removing a bulletproof vest at the wrong time because he felt too warm.

“I do not believe time, nor training, will be able to change or correct the deficiencies,” Polak wrote.

Loehmann quit the force days after Polak’s memo was sent out, citing “personal reasons.” His personnel file classified him as “eligible for rehire,” WOIO reports.

He was hired by the City of Cleveland in March 2014. It’s unclear whether or not Cleveland officials ever saw the memo before he was hired.

Surveillance video of Loehmann fatally shooting 12-year-old Tamir Rice was released last month. Loehmann was responding to a 911 call about someone pointing a gun at people at a Cleveland park. Rice was actually just carrying an airsoft gun, which shoots non-lethal plastic pellets.

The caller said the gun was “probably fake,” but police say the dispatcher did not relay that detail to them, according to the Washington Post.

In the video, Loehmann can be seen firing at Rice within two seconds of pulling up in his cruiser. The 12-year-old died of his injuries the next day.

Loehmann, as well as his patrol partner, 46-year-old Frank Garmback, are on paid administrative leave pending a decision on whether to pursue criminal charges.

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7 Best Buys for Artificial Christmas Trees

Having grown up with a potted pine for a Christmas tree that was dragged on and off the deck the start and end of each holiday season, when recently enlisted to do a Today Show segment about artificial Xmas trees, I went to task.

According to the American Christmas Tree Association, 75.2 million American households will be displaying an artificial tree this year. That’s a staggering number of fake trees. What I learned during my own research and social media survey is that folks are passionate about their artificial trees and that a myriad of decisions come into play before buying one.

The top reason for survey participants include allergies followed by the mess and maintenance of live trees and the cost value. At zulily, we love a great deal, so a Christmas tree that you can reuse each year is a huge plus that resonates with us. The below is a roundup of the best deals and latest innovations currently available in artificial trees.

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1. The Mood Tree
Increasingly artificial trees come pre-lit with advanced circuitry such that if one bulb burns out, the remaining circuit stays aglow. For people who have sought to find that one malfunctioning bulb, we know this is huge and can save you hours! People also love pre-lit trees for the fact that they can put them away and pop them back up with all of the lights on the tree. But this new tree from Lowe’s takes it one step further with color-changing LED lights – both warm white and multi-color, that you can change with the push of a foot pedal. Kathie Lee Gifford coined this “a mood tree!” Also trees in the past were cumbersome to construct and put away, but this tree has a two-hinged construction for easy storage. It retails for $159, but it’s $59* on sale. So this is our innovative budget buy.

A word of caution from survey participant Brigette Polmar: Note what type of replacement bulbs your tree requires and if they are widely available or brand specific (the latter may be hard/costly to obtain).

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2. For Reals
Now artificial Christmas trees have come a long, long way since their aluminum cousins in “A Charlie Brown Christmas.” In the past limitations included the quality of the green color, fake-looking needles, painstaking assembly (anyone still feeding each branch separately into the trunk?) and no add ons or options like an outlet at the treetop for light-up tree toppers. The reason we selected this tree from Balsam Hill was to show you just how realistic they’ve become. The trademarked True Needles are full and tapered at the end. Plus unlike real needles, you don’t need to water this tree, the needles don’t drop and are fire retardant. At zulily, we love products that make your life easier and artificial trees certainly reduce hassle and bring ease to your holiday. Normally this 7′ unlit tree is $399, but it’s on sale for $199. There are advantages to unlit trees too. Lots of people like to pile on the lights and string them themselves in certain ways to highlight certain ornaments.

Fun fact: Remember, if you forget to take off and store an ornament from your artificial tree, says survey respondent Brandy Yearous, you’ll still have it next year! It won’t be lost!

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3. Woodland Feel
Of those surveyed there were two things people missed most about live trees. The first was the scent, which can be easily remedied by buying handmade candles in a pine or fir fragrance. Second? The thrill of hunting for a tree with the family. But as one family wrote in: “We still go to the tree farm and have the experience of eating candy canes, drinking cocoa and walking through the trees,” says Karin Arnold Manning. Give your local farmers patronage by buying boughs or an indoor wreath that you can place decoratively in your home and enjoy the benefits of the fresh green fragrance this way. These burlap-wrapped, unlit trees provide a really natural feeling, and come in three different tree heights no taller than 4′ to accommodate smaller spaces. The Valencia family said that though they had many opportunities to upgrade their artificial tree they keep it humble, like a “Charlie Brown” tree, to remind them of the reason for the season.

Decorative Trees:
Decorative Christmas trees are all the rage, and as you look at these from Treetopia, you can see why: They immediately evoke a fun, playful emotion.

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4. Flocked
For anyone who remembers the flocked Christmas trees of the ’60s… they’re back! And we think they look better than ever. Everyone knows that typically flocked trees will cost you, but this one is an incredible value, normally $428, it’s on sale for $258! Its full and lush appearance will command a room.

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5. Go for Gold
Metallic trees really add pizzazz and sparkle to your home decor, giving you that old Hollywood glamour. This gold slim style, 6′ tinsel tree (normally $238, on sale for $138) is great for small spaces and does come in three heights: also 4′ and 7.5.’

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6. Starlight Mint
Whereas lots of people do white trees, this is a little twist — like a Christmas peppermint candy in white and red. It only comes in 7′ with a slim 30″ across silhouette, so again great for tighter spaces, and a brand new color combination that really makes a statement. Normally $248, on sale for $158.

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7. Wall Tree
Some trees come in very small packages. For folks with limited square footage to decorate like an apartment or condo who still want a tree, this is your ideal solution… this new pre-lit and pre-decorated hanging wall tree from Brookstone. It hangs on the wall, it’s cordless and powered by batteries. You set a timer and it stays lit for six hours and then it’s off for 18 hours. Even if you have plenty of space, you could put it in an entryway, above a buffet or over a table for a festive holiday look without compromising space. Normally it’s $129.99, but it’s on sale for $90.99.

A checklist of what you should look for:

  1. Shape and size: measure your wall height and space BEFORE you go in-person shopping or ordering online. People typically buy too big, and once you get a fake tree, you’re stuck with it. Generally fake trees come in the following sizes… pencil, slender/slim, medium and full.
  2. Style: just like with live trees, you’ll have choices of trees like fir, spruce, redwood, etc.
  3. Color: consider the hue you want. Think like Kermit: there are so many shades of green. And beyond that, you’ll be dazzled by pink, blue, metallics… and even black ombré!
  4. Density: how full or spaced out do you want your branches? Your needles?
  5. Take a small box of ornaments with you that are medium to heavy in weight. Check for drooping factor as different trees have different branch and tip strength.
  6. Extras: comes with lighting — and how that lighting turns on, on/off foot pedal, electrical connection for tree topper, if the stand has wheels so you can roll your tree around if you wish and move it from room to room, if storage bags are included or if the company expects you to put it back into the box it was manufactured in.
  7. A longer warranty like a 10-year versus a three-year or five-year, may be an indicator of a higher quality tree.

To see these Christmas trees lit up and live, watch our TODAY Show segment.

*Sale prices reflect press time.

Iran Extends Detention Of Washington Post Reporter Jason Rezaian

Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian will be held in Iran for two more months, the Human Rights Watch reported Wednesday.

Rezaian, who was arrested in July along with his wife and two photojournalists, has been held for some four months without charge. The others were released soon after, and his wife, Yeganeh Salehi, was freed on bail after 60 days.

Now, according to HRW, Iran’s judiciary has decided to extend Rezaian’s detention even longer.

The Iranian government has had almost no contact with Rezaian’s family and has given very little information about the reasoning for his detention, other than that he was being held for questioning as an Iranian citizen. Iranian president Hassan Rouhani has failed to offer new information on the journalist’s situation, nor has he made an effort to push for Rezaian’s release.

Concerned about his mental and physical health, Rezaian’s family continues to plead with Iran, demanding his release.

A statement from Rezaian’s family confirmed the extension of his detention, and decried the news:

My family confirms that on November 18th the judge responsible for Jason’s case has extended his possible detention by two months.

To date, Jason has never been given an opportunity to present his case before any judge. After 134 days, Jason has now languished longer than any previous accredited Western Journalist in Iran. No charges have been brought against him and the Iranian judiciary continues to prevent Jason from hiring legal counsel, as is his right under the Iranian constitution. Despite our family’s repeated pleas, the judge, and those who are responsible for Jason’s detention, continue to deny him access to counsel or a English translator to be present during his interrogations. We maintain his innocence and remain optimistic that one day soon, we can hold Jason again.

The family also created a website and social media campaign to gain support.