Here's What 'Game Of Thrones' Star Maisie Williams' 'Most Difficult' Scene Could Be

HBO just debuted the “Game of Thrones” Season 5 trailer, but now there’s even more news causing excitement in the realm.

On Friday during a Reddit AMA, “Game of Thrones” star Maisie Williams, who plays Arya Stark, was asked if any scene in the show was “particularly difficult” for her. As a response, Williams teased that her most intense sequence is coming:

There’s actually a scene in the coming season … which was my most difficult scene to film. And I think fans are going to be really excited about it. More emotional than we’ve seen Arya in previous seasons.

As to what the scene could be, some distinct possibilities are evident:

(Serious spoilers ahead)

Possibility 1: Becoming no one

A potentially emotional scene happens in author George R. R. Martin’s book A Feast for Crows. After arriving at the House of Black and White, Arya is told to give up her previous life, including discarding all her possessions. The trailer shows Arya looking questioningly at her sword, Needle, giving evidence that this moment could be on the way.

Possibility 2: Arya as a conflicted assassin

In reply to Williams’ statement about the scene, a Redditor’s comment of, “Oh, Mercy me,” may be pretty telling. In an excerpt from Martin’s upcoming novel The Winds of Winter, Arya, taking the moniker Mercy, is performing in a play at Braavos in which her character is supposed to get raped. As if that wouldn’t be difficult enough, before her big scene she recognizes the man who killed her friend Lommy, seduces him, kills him and then goes back to the play.

Working against this theory is that Lommy was killed by Polliver in the HBO show, and Arya already checked him off her death list. The show obviously varies from the books, so it can’t necessarily be ruled out either.

What’s for sure is that the Stark girls are in for a crazy season. Sophie Turner, aka Sansa, has also said that she has a “super traumatic” scene on the way. On the bright side, at least they’re not men. We all know the “GoT” stance on dudes …


Image: Imgur

“Game of Thrones” Season 5 premieres Sunday, April 12, on HBO.

President's Call for Action on Inequality Rings Urgently for Latinos

Of the various domestic policy prescriptions of President Obama’s 2015 State of the Union address, one message stood out clearly: though the economy has improved significantly since the darkest days of the Recession, the nation still has much work to do when it comes to reducing economic inequality.

It’s true that this theme was never stated explicitly by President Obama. Indeed, the President adopted a rather triumphant tone in his description of the state of our economy, arguing that “[T]he shadow of crisis has passed,” and characterizing 2014 as “a breakthrough year for America,” a year in which “our economy is growing and creating jobs at the fastest pace since 1999.” He described an economy that, in the past four years, has “has put more people back to work than Europe, Japan, and all advanced economies combined,” and pointed to the recovery of the auto industry and the explosive growth of the tech industry as signs of the economy’s vitality.

Yet, despite the bright tone of his rhetoric on the economy, nearly the entirety of the President’s domestic agenda centered on proposals that would reduce inequality and provide education, labor protections, and fair pay to those who have been left out of the recovery. In substance, if not in style, the 2015 State of the Union served as a forceful reminder that most American families have been left out of the recent gains in GDP and corporate profits, and that the government has a prime role to play in ensuring that all of the citizens of the wealthiest nation on Earth are able to provide for their families.

President Obama proposed a number of smart policies to address working Americans’ stagnating incomes. He called on Congress to address the gender pay gap by ensuring that women are paid as much as men for doing the same work, rather than two-thirds of what their male counterparts make in the same occupations. He briefly addressed wage theft, urging Congress to make sure that employees are paid for the overtime that they actually work. He called for laws that strengthen rather than undermine unions, and for legislative support of pro-worker policies such as child care and paid sick leave. And the President challenged those who resist increasing the minimum wage to go and try and support a family on less than $15,000 a year themselves.

These proposed policies would benefit Latino families. A minimum wage increase would benefit 6.8 million Hispanic workers, nearly one-quarter of the Hispanic workforce. And we’ve discussed previously how too many Latino families still lack the means to access a good education, escape poverty, or to enjoy a secure retirement. For Latinos, policy that invests in our families, our students, and our workers simply cannot wait.

Thankfully, these income-reducing initiatives are highly feasible. The nation can pay for a more broadly shared prosperity, for example, through tax policy changes that reward companies that invest in American jobs and infrastructure rather than those that stow profits overseas and ship good-paying jobs abroad. When the rich pay their fair share and are no longer able to game the system, the country will have more funds to pay for education, healthcare, job training, and other initiatives that will benefit struggling working families.

For too long, government policy has been captured by corporate interests and Wall Street. These power players and their lobbyists have fashioned laws that benefit the rich and powerful while leaving workers and families to fend for themselves. Latino voters know that things need to change, and polling shows that they favor an active government that supports its striving citizens rather than one that subsidizes the risk-taking ventures of those with the deepest pockets. It is a welcome development to see the President devote a significant portion of his domestic policy suggestions to initiatives aimed at lifting up those women, people of color, and youth who continue to struggle to find a secure place in our economy. Now, it is up to Congress to decide whether 2015 will be a year of increasing prosperity for all Americans, or a return to the disastrous financial deregulation and anti-worker policies of the recent past.

2016 Presidential Candidates Use Pre-Announcement Phase To Push Fundraising Limits

WASHINGTON — The 2016 presidential campaign is already in its beta launch stage, as candidates are beginning to roll themselves out so audiences of party insiders and wealthy donors can test them for bugs. This process also requires a platform to allow access to the candidate during this important, formative stage.

Technically, presidential candidates are required to launch an official presidential exploratory committee, subject to source and contribution limits. But ever since this system was established, people have been finding ways around it. So far, only one candidate, Democratic Sen. Jim Webb (Va.), has created a formal presidential exploratory committee for 2016.

Other “non-candidates” are using different platforms in the form of specialized political committees, allowing these people to raise money and connect with the all-important wealthy donors who could bankroll their future campaigns. These pre-candidates need the money to pay for travel, advertising and even contributions to other congressional and state-level candidates — who are often important party insiders themselves.

In each new election, candidates tend to find new, innovative ways to approach this pre-announcement phase. These innovations usually follow changes in campaign finance law enacted by Congress or pronounced by the courts. The 2016 election is already shaping up to be the first where candidates who are in the secret primary period are truly pushing the boundaries of the unlimited spending opened up by the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision.

Potential 2016 Presidential Candidates and Their Political Committees

The clearest example of this so far has been former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush’s announcement that he would “actively explore the possibility” of running for president. As The Huffington Post previously reported, Bush’s announcement that he is thinking about running — but is not yet an official candidate — allows him to launch the Right to Rise super PAC to raise unlimited contributions, without worrying about those pesky rules banning coordination between candidates and supposedly independent groups.

Other candidates also are connected to committees that can raise and spend unlimited sums, including money that comes from corporations and unions.

Gov. Scott Walker (R-Wisc.) announced the creation of a 527 political committee called Our American Revival as part of his official pre-announcement that he, too, is maybe running for president.

The 527 committee form — named after the section of the tax code that actually covers all political committees — was a popular unlimited money vehicle following the enactment of the 2002 McCain-Feingold reform law, but has largely gone out of style as Citizens United and the subsequent lower court SpeechNow.org decision enabled the same kind of unlimited fundraising available for committees registered with the Federal Election Commission.

Bush is not the only potential candidate directly connected to a super PAC. Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina is seen as a possible GOP contender, and currently runs a super PAC called Unlocking Potential. Her group raised $1.8 million in the 2014 elections, with $1.2 million coming from four donors who wrote six-figure checks: designer Sydney Murphy and her oil executive husband Mike Murphy, investor Charles Snowden Jones and hedge fund executive and massive Republican Party donor Paul Singer.

Supporters of Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) recently launched a super PAC called Believe Again, though the group does not appear as directly linked to Jindal as the Bush and Fiorina super PACs are to their respective candidates.

Some potential candidates are attached to committees that can not only raise unlimited sums, but also do not have to disclose their donors. National Journal’s Shane Goldmacher reported this month on the rise of single-candidate 501(c)(4) nonprofits that can raise undisclosed “dark” money, noting that Jindal, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum all are connected to these types of groups.

Santorum’s political enterprise includes not just a dark money nonprofit, but another type of vehicle that no other candidate maintains. His Patriot Voices PAC is a hybrid PAC, which means it operates as both a traditional PAC that can raise contributions capped at $5,000 per year and give money to other candidates, and a super PAC that can raise unlimited contributions but must spend money independently of candidates.

The diversity of committees launched by potential presidential candidates is not entirely a new phenomenon. Ever since the passage of campaign finance reform in the 1970s, candidates for the presidency have launched their own political committees and sought to press the boundaries of what the law required.

After losing a closely fought primary battle for the Republican nomination with President Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan converted his Reagan for the Republic presidential campaign committee into what was then a relatively new innovation, a political action committee. Alongside his new Citizens for the Republic PAC, Reagan launched a nonprofit group called Citizens for the Republic Education and Research Foundation to raise unlimited corporate funds. Reagan eventually ran into legal trouble with the FEC when the nonprofit’s operations and corporate funds intermingled with the PAC, which was bound by more restrictive rules.

During the 2012 election campaign, prospective candidates like Mitt Romney and then-Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour launched PACs at the state-level, where campaign limits were looser than at the federal level. This allowed them to collect large contributions — including from corporations — and then spend that money to aid their pre-campaigns by buying fundraising and contact lists and contributing to candidates in crucial states like Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

What is different now is that these unlimited vehicles currently connected to potential candidates will be able to spend money to support those candidates once they move beyond the beta stage. This means that all of the unlimited funds raised by Bush, Walker, Fiorina, Jindal and the rest will likely be turned towards helping their nomination and election to the White House — once they decide they are actually candidates. All the candidates will have to do is announce that they are no longer connected to these super PACs, nonprofits and 527s run by their allies.

A common thread among the candidates pushing the limits of the new fundraising landscape is that they either do not currently hold elected office or, if they do, are elected at the state level. This provides them with more leeway than the potential candidates expected to run while serving in the Senate.

Potential Republican candidates Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and possible Democratic candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) are not allowed to explicitly run or raise unlimited funds for a super PAC, nonprofit or 527. Instead, they have to rely on the leadership PACs that they all already control, and let their allies launch unlimited vehicles. Of course, the rules limiting coordination for these so-called independent groups are still notoriously loose, but they are much looser if you don’t already hold federal office and your candidacy exists in the nebulous “actively exploring the possibility” phase.

Campaign finance reformers have vigorously opposed the PAC-focused pre-announcement phase of the presidential campaign as a way for candidates to circumvent contribution limits by raising money while pretending to not be a candidate. A 2011 report from the Campaign Legal Center questioned the non-candidacy of potential candidates by stating, “If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, you can be reasonably sure it is a duck.”

If You Want a 100% Sunny Wedding Day You Can Pay $150k to Explode Clouds

If You Want a 100% Sunny Wedding Day You Can Pay $150k to Explode Clouds

This sounds fake as hell but it does have some scientific backup: A luxury travel company is offering a $150,000 cloud-killing package to guarantee sunny wedding days in the south of France. Pilots will consult with meteorologists to fly planes near the ceremony space three weeks leading up to the wedding. The planes spray silver iodide at clouds, which is supposed to cause them to condense and get all the rain out of the way. Boom! Sunny pictures.

Read more…



The Pirate Bay Is Back 

The Pirate Bay Is Back 

Popular torrenting site The Pirate Bay is back after it was shut down by Swedish police late last year. While tons of copies popped up after the original disappeared, the swift resurrection of thepiratebay.se makes it clear that it’s damn near impossible to stop determined pirates.

Read more…



Home Improvisation: the game that has you build IKEA-style furniture

Home Improvisation: the game that has you build IKEA-style furnitureEveryone loves putting together IKEA furniture, right? You just grab your toolbox and follow the steps in those cute, cartoonish instructions, and eventually you end up with something that at least resembles what you saw in the store. But what if you didn’t have those instructions? Then you’re entering a depth of hell that few escape from without having smashed … Continue reading

WATCH: Beauty Pageant Runner-Up Grabs Tiara From Queen's Head

A beauty pageant contestant should be graceful and compassionate. But oh how they can be such sore losers.

Just take a look at this Brazilian pageant runner-up, who nearly took the queen’s head off when she lunged to the front of the stage to snag the Miss Amazon 2015 winning tiara for herself.

The drama unfolded just moments after judges announced the winner, Carolina Toledo, according to The Mirror. The runner-up, Sheislane Hayalla, at first forced herself to congratulate Toledo, but that was about as long as the sportsmanship lasted.

Footage shows Hayalla yank the tiara, spike it at the ground, point her finger at Toledo (rude) and insult her before storming off stage.

In a way, it was beautiful.

WATCH:

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Binge-Watching Netflix Is Making You Feel Lonely And Depressed

Settling in on the couch with a bottle of wine and an entire season of Friends may seem like a perfectly enjoyable way to spend the weekend, but regular binge-watching sessions may be a sign of mental health problems.

A new study from the University of Texas at Austin found that the more lonely and depressed people are, the more likely they are to binge-watch television.

The researchers conducted a survey on over 300 millennials, asking how often and how much they watched TV, how often they felt lonely, and examining various measures of depression and self-regulation. Those who lacked self-regulatory skills reported being unable to stop clicking “next” even though they knew there were other things they needed to do, indicating a lack of self-control. The data also showed that feelings of loneliness and depression were directly correlated with binge-watching.

Loneliness, depression and lack of self-control have also been implicated in other types of binge behavior, such as heavy drinking and excessive social media use.

“Even though some people argue that binge-watching is a harmless addiction, findings from our study suggest that binge-watching should no longer be viewed this way,” study author Yoon Hi Sung said in a statement. “Physical fatigue and problems such as obesity and other health problems are related to binge-watching and they are a cause for concern. When binge-watching becomes rampant, viewers may start to neglect their work and their relationships with others. Even though people know they should not, they have difficulty resisting the desire to watch episodes continuously.”

Previous research has shown this to be the case. A 2013 marketing study found that 71 percent ofge-watchers had intended to watch just one or two episodes, and then ended up getting sucked in. The research also found that more than half of binge watchers prefer to watch at home alone.

The research will be presented at the International Communication Association Conference in Puerto Rico this May.

Mysterious Space Globule Looks Undeniably Beautiful

Some astronomers call it “God’s Hand.” Others say it looks like the gaping mouth of a gigantic celestial creature.

Featured in a new image taken by the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope, a small cloud of gas and dust dubbed CG4 is nothing short of stunning. Just check it out below.

The image of the so-called “cometary globule” — which lies some 1,300 light years from Earth — shows a close-up of the space cloud’s head, and was released by ESO on Jan. 28. Although the globule shines bright in the image, it’s a faint object in reality and, therefore, difficult to detect.

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A Very Large Telescope image of the cometary globule CG4, which has a comet-like shape with a head and tail.

The head of CG4 is around 1.5 light-years in diameter, while its tail is about eight light-years long — that’s so big that it basically dwarfs our entire solar system, according to Discovery News. Astronomers hope to study more cometary globules — like CG4 — to solve the mystery of why they have their distinct comet-like shapes.

Creepy Medical Supplies Found Amid Wreckage Of Pirate Blackbeard's Ship

Ahoy! Archaeologists excavating pirate Blackbeard’s sunken ship, named Queen Anne’s Revenge, recently unearthed from the wreckage various medical devices–and some of them look pretty darn terrifying.

Among the grisly finds were a urethral syringe that would have been used to treat syphilis, two pumps, and a porringer that would have been used in bloodletting, Live Science reported.

“We just have to understand that these people were suffering,” Dr. Linda Carnes-McNaughton, an archaeologist with the U.S. Department of Defense who volunteered on the excavation, told CNN. “They were seeking relief for any kind of ailment, and certainly if there was warfare on the water, there were wounds among other ailments that needed treatment. It wasn’t always a formally trained person in desperate times. That’s probably more common than we know.”

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blackbeard
A mortar and pestle that was likely used to grind ingredients to make medicine.

blackbeard
Supplies used to measure medicine.

Blackbeard lost his flagship when it ran aground off the coast of North Carolina in 1718. The ship was hidden by water and sand for more than 270 years until it was rediscovered in 1996. Now, the shipwreck is being closely studied as part of the Queen Anne’s Revenge project of the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources.

Thanks to the medical artifacts found aboard the flagship, archaeologists are learning more about how Blackbeard’s crew treated not only small wounds and ailments, but also chronic illnesses.

“Because his passion for piracy [sic], I think he cared very much about keeping it going, and to keep it going, he had to have a healthy, functioning crew,” Carnes-McNaughton told The Washington Post.

She described the new findings at the Society for Historical Archaeology’s annual meeting on Jan. 8, 2015.