Minecraft Password Leak A Result Of Phishing, Systems Not Compromised

minecraft-xboxoneeditionJust last week, roughly 1,800 Minecraft usernames and passwords were leaked in what was suspected to be a hacking incident. For those who are now a little paranoid over the security of Minecraft, you can rest assured because Mojang has come forward to clarify that the incident was not so much a hack, but rather a case of phishing.

For those unfamiliar, phishing is when an attacker tries to disguise themselves as a trustworthy entity in order to glean sensitive information off you. For example phishing could come in the form of emails where the sender could pretend to be from your bank and are asking you for your login details in an attempt to “verify” who you say you are.

Sometimes these emails even have links to fake websites where the details you enter are sent to the attacker, which is pretty much what happened in the case of the Minecraft username and password leak. According to Mojang’s Owen Hill, “No-one has gained access to the Mojang mainframe. Even if they did, we store your passwords in a super encrypted format. Honestly, you don’t need to panic.”

If you saw your username and password in the list, then you should probably go ahead and reset your password. For those who did not receive any of the suspicious phishing emails, you guys should be safe, although constantly updating your password is not a bad thing either.

Minecraft Password Leak A Result Of Phishing, Systems Not Compromised , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Guild Wars 2’s First Expansion Heart Of Thorns Announced

ArenaNet’s MMORPG Guild Wars 2 was launched back in 2012, and if the constant updates wasn’t enough to feed your need for more content, you will be pleased to learn that the developers have recently announced the game’s first expansion pack – Heart of Thorns. The expansion’s release has yet to be determined and appears to have been in the works for the past few years now.

Heart of Thorns will allow gamers to explore the Heart of Maguuma, a brand new jungle area that is split up into three distinct biomes, which according to ArenaNet is one of the largest areas they have ever built. The expansion will also introduce the Mastery system which is an endgame, account-based PVP progression system.

Basically as players explore the map, complete missions and other activities, they will be able to earn themselves mastery points which they can then use to spend on abilities that will apply to characters in your PVP account. There will also be a Specialization system introduced that will give existing classes access to new skills and weapons.

A new Revenant profession has also been introduced along with new maps and PVP modes. Last but not least there was also mention of a Guild Hall in which guild members are able to meet up in game to discuss missions or to socialize. In the meantime if you’re curious about the expansion, you can head on over to its website for more details, or check out the announcement trailer in the video above.

Guild Wars 2’s First Expansion Heart Of Thorns Announced , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Best Buy Cancelling Some Limited Edition Majora’s Mask 3DS XL Orders

best_buy_emailLast year Nintendo announced that they would be releasing a remake of Zelda’s Majora’s Mask for the Nintendo 3DS. We later learnt that there would be a limited edition bundle of the game where a special Skull Kid figurine would be included. For the most part, most of us would just order one unit for ourselves.

However there are some who are enterprising and might order more than one in hopes of reselling it for a higher price down the road. Well it looks like Best Buy has caught on and has reportedly started to cancel some pre-orders for the Limited Edition Majora’s Mask New 3DS XL units. Given that retailers sometimes limit limited edition purchases to one per customer, we guess this hardly comes as a surprise.

However we reckon this can be frustrating especially if the multiple units were ordered for multiple people in the same household, but to make up for the cancelled orders, Best Buy is reportedly offering $50 in credit which customers can use towards their next purchase, but even here things are a bit messed up.

There are some customers who claim that they have not received their $50 in credit so we’re not sure if that was done on purpose or if there was a system error of sorts. In the meantime have any of our readers received any cancellation notice from Best Buy in their emails?

Best Buy Cancelling Some Limited Edition Majora’s Mask 3DS XL Orders , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

From Rock Bottom to Successful Entrepreneur: One Woman's Journey

In her early 20s, Ruth Soukup spent 2.5 years battling debilitating depression. Today, she is a happy mom, wife, author and proud owner of a thriving Internet business. How did she overcome depression to build a happy, healthy, successful life? According to Soukup, whom I recently interviewed as part of my upcoming 10-day free Art of Mindful Wealth Summit, it was through a combination of exercise, therapy, and faith.

Hitting Rock Bottom
As a senior in college, Ruth was unhappily married, struggling to emotionally overcome systematic abuse she’d suffered as a child, and clinically depressed. This incredibly difficult time led Ruth to attempt suicide several times, with her final attempt ending in a 2.5-year hospitalization during which her doctors tried countless treatments. “During that time I was in such a dark place that I thought it was never going to get better,” she says. “I was 22 and thought I was never going to make anything of my life. I couldn’t even get out of bed and I didn’t know what to do with myself.”

Today, Ruth’s successes — both personal and professional — prove that it is possible to move from life’s most harrowing moments to its most remarkable.

Rebuilding a Life
Two events happened around the same time and the combination was what gave Ruth the strength to start rebuilding her life. First, she started seeing a new therapist, who listened to her request to focus not on what had gone wrong in her life, but instead on ways to develop strategies for coping. “The focus was on trying to figure out how to have a normal life, make friends, and pick up the pieces after hitting rock bottom,” says Soukup.

The second event was her father’s insistence that she start exercising. “He bribed me,” Ruth laughed. “At the time, cell phones were new. He told me he’d buy me a cell phone if I went to the gym three times a week for 30 minutes. I think the exercise really helped me start to come out of those clouds.”

About two years after her depression abated, Ruth met her second and current husband, and they eventually started a family. “We started a new adventure together,” Soukup says.

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Building a Business (From Unlikely Circumstances)
After several years of marriage, Ruth’s mother-in-law fell ill and, so they could help care for her, the couple moved across the country from their home state of Washington to her hometown in Florida. “We had left all our friends behind, I was feeling lonely, and I just didn’t know what to do with myself,” says Ruth. “I coped by going to Target and buying things for the house. That was how I spent my time.” Soukup’s spending was beyond their budget and soon the couple started to fight.

“I needed something else to fill my time so I started a blog about how to live well on a budget. That was how I started to fill my time — with writing,” says Soukup. “I realized quickly that it was something I really enjoyed. I loved to write. I couldn’t figure out why I hadn’t started earlier,” she laughs. Ruth’s blog, Living Well, Spending Less, quickly became popular with women around the world who appreciate her unique talent for developing creative, engaging and useful ideas for managing a home without breaking the bank.

Writing Books
Over the past few years, Ruth has written three books with her most recent, Living Well, Spending Less: 12 Secrets to a Good Life that came out on Dec. 30, 2013 and refreshingly chronicles Ruth’s life story. The book is candid and heartfelt as it weaves in many personal stories about faith, over-spending, what it means to live a life of true wealth and prosperity.

Today, in addition to being a best-selling author, Ruth runs a successful Internet start-up consulting firm, and is a happy and healthy wife and mother.

To learn more about Ruth Soukup or one of the other 30 successful entrepreneurs I spoke with, check out my free 10-day Art of Mindful Wealth Summit, available exclusively online, beginning Jan. 26. I hope to see you there.

Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

Viola Davis' Natural Hair At The 2015 SAG Awards Is Her Crowning Glory

The 2015 SAG Awards red carpet was filled with stunning looks, but Viola Davis is a contender for best beauty of the night.

Dressed in a custom white Max Mara gown, Davis looked like a goddess with her fabulous Afro and smoldering eye makeup. We rarely see the “How to Get Away With Murder” star not wearing perfectly coiffed wigs. So when she showed up sporting a crown of curls, we couldn’t help but let out a squeal of excitement.

The 49-year-old actress made a “powerful statement” at the 2012 Oscars when she debuted her teeny weeny ‘fro on the red carpet. Hair maintenance is clearly a priority for Davis because her locks look amazing!

What do you think of Viola Davis’ natural hairdo at the SAG Awards?

PHOTOS:

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viola davis natural hair

viola davis

Politician Wants Arrests After Gays Marry

There’s a big fight underway right now in Alabama, with a Judge overturning a marriage ban and state officials refusing to obey his order to issue licenses. Anti-gay politicians are threatening to ban all marriage licenses if the Supreme Court rules in favor of equality. And one lawmaker even wants to send clerks to jail if they issue licenses to anyone — gay or straight.

Late on Friday, a Federal judge in Alabama ruled that the state’s marriage ban is unconstitutional, and that the state must begin issuing licenses right away. Attorney General Luther Strange didn’t care for that, and has asked for an indefinite stay. Meanwhile, a state association of judges has advised their members that they can just disregard the ruling. This is almost certainly dead wrong, and I’ll talk about why in a minute. But as of this week, gay and lesbian couples are attempting to obtain marriage licenses in Alabama, so expect a tense standoff to play out over the next few days.

It’s worth pointing out that last week President Obama made history by endorsing marriage equality in the State of the Union, saying that gay and lesbian couples getting married represents “America at its best.” The last time anyone talked about marriage in a State of the Union was George W. Bush, calling for a federal constitutional ban, so this is a little better.

It makes good political sense to endorse marriage equality right now, because a new survey from Zogby shows that by 5 percentage points, voters are now less likely to vote for a candidate who opposes the freedom to marry. This puts some anti-equality Republicans in a tough spot. They can either admit they were wrong, and come out for marriage. Or they can double-down and get even more anti-gay.

That’s what Mike Huckabee did last week. He said that if the Supreme Court rules in favor of equality, states don’t have to obey the decision, and could still refuse to provide licenses. Obviously, that’s not true at all, thanks to a litte-known document called the U.S. Constitution. Maybe Huckabee has just never read it as far as Article 6, which says “The Laws of the United States … shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby.” In fact, Huckabee’s argument is identical to the one used in 1957 by another Arkansas Governor, Orval Faubus. He said the state didn’t have to abide by the school desegregation ordered in Brown v. Board of Education, and President Eisenhauer had to send the National Guard to force him to comply. So Huckabee’s great company here.

In fact, in 1958, Governor Faubus closed all Little Rock high schools for a year, for white and black students, so they wouldn’t have to be integrated. And now, that’s exactly the same strategy that anti-gay officials are pursuing with marriage. In Florida, several counties have canceled all courthouse weddings, for straight and gay couples. A South Carolina bill would revoke the salary government employees who allow a gay or lesbian couple to marry. And a crazy proposal by Representative Todd Russ in Oklahoma would prohibit state officials from issuing marriage licenses altogether. Under his proposal, state officials who issue a marriage license to any couple, gay or straight, would go to jail for up to a year.

Obviously, judges refusing to obey federal rulings, and ludicrous bills Oklahoma’s have no chance of passing constitutional muster. But they don’t have to — they’re not supposed to pass, their only purpose is to intimidate. To let us know we’re not welcome. Huckabee and Ross and officials like them are on the same page as segregationists like Orval Faubus. And that’s how history will remember them. By the way Faubus ran for governor again, 30 years later, but he was defeated by a kid named Bill Clinton.

Obama's Proposal for Free Community College: Reconnecting Education with Aspiration

Will we accept an economy where only a few of us do spectacularly well? Or will we commit ourselves to an economy that generates rising incomes and chances for everyone who makes the effort?

— President Obama’s State of the Union address, 1-20-15

President Obama’s call for free community college across our country is a step toward awakening hope in our young people that hard work, education and persistence will pay off in a fair shot at the American dream. If his K-20 proposal actually becomes law, thousands of young people whose hopes for college seemed as remote as landing a corner office job will have an entry into a world of possibility. They will have access to both a college and career pathway for the array of jobs requiring Associates degrees or certification.

This could be a game-changer in poor communities where the youth are used to a concrete ceiling, not a glass one. Here, even if young people have the wherewithal to stay in school and earn a high school diploma, they rarely make the step into a college classroom. But if the price barrier is no longer a factor, these communities could find that just a handful of college students could grow into several enrolling in college, until suddenly earning a college degree becomes the norm.

But will free tuition be enough to lure students through the doors of their local community college? A degree in higher education is essential in today’s environment, particularly if you come from a disadvantaged background, but educational experiences must connect with a young person’s dreams or you will lose them straight away.

In America today, an astonishing 30 percent of students, including those from the middle and upper class, drop out of high school. Understand this, please: a 30-percent-plus high school dropout rate is mission failure. Any business with a 10-to-15 percent product rejection rate would be in very serious trouble. The customer is just walking away from the product.

Even more alarming, an estimated 70 percent — yes, 70 percent — of Black young men leave high school before earning their diploma. These young men can’t envision a connection between their education and future prosperity. When they feel all is for naught, why try in the first place? They lose hope — and the most dangerous person in the world is a person without hope. We have failed to connect education with aspiration for significant numbers of young people.

We have 30 million students in grades 5-12 in our public schools. Jim Clifton, chairman and CEO of Gallup, refers to them as “the bench strength for the playoff games of the rest of our lives.” They literally are our future — our employees, customers, owners, entrepreneurs and, yes, our leaders. If we don’t solve this crisis of hopelessness with our youth, then in 10 years’ time, we will be the nation that used to lead the world.

Young people want a legitimate shot at economic opportunity in their lives. They don’t want a lecture about grades or even graduation — just like you don’t dream about a car loan, but about a car. I believe we can attract young people back into our education system and create a system that helps America win again.

Operation HOPE is working to place “HOPE Business In A Box Academies” in our public schools. In these academies, every high school student would start by taking the Gallup Strength Finders survey to not only make them aware of their individual strengths, but point them toward a path that builds strength on strength.

Our HOPE Business In A Box Academies will connect their formal education to real life confidence, skill, and aptitude building. We then need to connect all of this to real-world role models, an empowering environment, economic energy, aspiration (a code word for hope), and, finally, opportunity. Then, like plugging a socket in the wall, the American dream is back in business.

President Obama’s proposal to throw open the doors of our community colleges is a bold step. Let’s capitalize on his plan by connecting our young people to the bold aspirations locked away in their souls.

John Hope Bryant is author of the new book called How the Poor Can Save Capitalism: Rebuilding the Path to the Middle Class (Berrett-Koehler, 2014). He serves on President Obama’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans, and is also founder, chairman and CEO of Operation HOPE, a nonprofit banker for the working poor, which provides financial literacy for youth, financial capability for communities, and financial dignity for all.

First Nighter: John Tiffany's "Let the Right One In," Parallel Exit's "Everybody Gets Cake!" Poe in "Nevermore"

If you ask me, the prolific John Tiffany and the prolific Steven Hoggett–whether prolific together or apart–are responsible for the best play ever presented about the Iraq War. It’s Black Watch, produced for the National Theatre of Scotland and twice a gotta-see-it-again attraction at St. Ann’s Warehouse.

So when I learned they were bringing their National Theatre of Scotland Let the Right One In to the always adventurous St. Ann’s, I figured it would be another must. I suppose it is, but not, in my estimation, as urgent a come-on.

Let the Right One In is Jack Thorne’s adaptation of the John Ajvide Lindqvist novel and movie. This calls for a full disclosure here: I haven’t seen the movie. Fuller disclosure: I don’t warm to the subject matter, which is vampires. Is it too much to say that anything having to do with vampires makes my blood run so cold that the most desperate vampires would pass me by? And I don’t care what the current vampires ubiquity in our culture reflects metaphorically.

What I have to say in favor of the work is its undeniable theatricality. This is no surprise from either Tiffany, who’s a master of the theatrical (his Alan Cumming Hamlet was superb and sadly underrated), or from Hoggett, whose recent contribution to the sadly underrated and just-shuttered The Last Ship was immense.

You might say Let the Right One In could have been named Let the Right One Into the Woods, since Christine Jones’s basic set consists of 30 or so tall trunks and features, just stage right of center, a jungle-gym-like structure that eventually turns into an unexpected sort of torture chamber. Underpinning the script is a pervasively ominous Olafur Arnalds score–the kind that gets under your skin and then ceaselessly wriggles around there until you’re thoroughly unsettled. Then there’s Gareth Fry’s sound design, which also has jolt-you-from-your-seat impact.

It may be that Tiffany’s and Hoggett’s visions of what they could do with the Lindqvist material obscured its potential familiarity for them. During a time when the town in which the characters live are experiencing a series of inexplicable murders, teenager Oscar (Cristian Ortega) befriends free spirit Eli (Rebecca Benson), whose father Hakan (Cliff Burnett) is the one with vein-slashing inclinations.

Though Eli, whose DNA is also compromised, takes a shine to Oscar, a couple of boys at school (Andrew Fraser, Angus Miller) have a different attitude. They harass the lad mercilessly. When Oscar finally fights back, the harassment takes a turn that seems as if it’ll be even bleaker. That’s when the advice contained in the title comes into play and perhaps suggests a twist not pointed out anywhere else in the expanding vampire canon.

So let’s leave it at: Viewers who can’t get enough of a vampire diet, so to speak, may go bonkers for this spin, whereas those who can take vampires or leave them may want to wait for the next Tiffany-Hoggett collaboration.
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Before I get to particulars–some particulars, anyway–about Everybody Gets Cake!, which Parallel Exit is letting out at 59E59 Theatres as if from a jack-in-the-box, I want to reiterate what many theater-goers already know: Comedy is a more individual taste than drama.

I say this because while Joel Jeske, Danny Gardner (Ryan Kasprzak now taking over) and Brent McBeth gallivant through the 75-minute show they wrote for themselves to perform–and Mark Lonergan to direct at what must be ultra-highest Metronome speed–people around me in the relatively small room (often used for cabaret) were laughing just about non-stop.

As for me, I didn’t laugh once. Not once. As a consequence, I’m not certain that what I have to say would necessarily be of help to anyone whose response to comic impulses is more in line with the belly-laughers in my group of patrons than with those–and there were some–who, like me, sat silently.

I can report about what happened on Maruti Evans’s bright set decorated with tall arrows and, if I counted correctly, seven doors and two window-like openings. But before I report further, it may be of some use to ask first if you remember Laugh-In. It may also be of use to ask if you remember Monty Python’s Flying Circus.

If that’s a yes and a yes, so do Jeske, Gardner and McBeth. They’re carrying on in the same buckshot vignette manner. Changing Oana Botez’s smart and colorful costumes in the blink of an eye as they hustle through those doors and fling open and pull shut those above-ground cupboard doors, they play an old man attended by an aide, a newly arrived rube expecting to be a Broadway star, The Theater Cow, two tourists taking selfies, two fellows wielding cell phones to deliver a symphony of mechanical sounds, First World War soldiers, a drag artist lip-synching to Edith Piaf’s “La Vie En Rose,” men acting out gestures from an awkward-human-contact manual, men pushing around red panels for no apparent purpose, a man stuffing balloons into his jacket, men holding boards with cut-outs through which they mug.

Plus plenty more, though no need to go on about it–except to mention that two of the quick-time skits did come close to making me laugh. One involved an invisible rake and one involved Mother Teresa encountering a bank teller. If I had laughed outright at the rake routine, however, I would have stopped fast, because the conceit is milked beyond its sell-by minute.

No matter how I felt or how the rest of the audience reacted, it’s true that Jeske, Gardner and McBeth exhibit bottomless stamina. I suppose they actually breathe at some point as the 75 minutes ticked by, but if so, I missed it. At curtain call, they brought out a young woman without identifying her (nor did the program), whom I took to be their sole dresser. She may have worked harder than any of the men and deserves the applause she got and then some.

At the piano throughout, playing familiar melodies–including Eric Satie’s “Gymnopedie” whenever that shuffling old man entered–was composer Ben Model. I wouldn’t say he was the most agile key-tickler I’ve ever encountered, but he was definitely game for the shenanigans.

As for the Everybody Gets Cake! title, the team makes good. Atop a center-stage cart audience members see when they enter is a one-tier, rectangular, vanilla-iced cake. It’s wheeled off early but brought back for a before-closing sketch. Although that seems to be the end of it, it isn’t. As patrons exit, they do receive cake. So no one connected with the production can be accused of not fulfilling the promise made on the front of the program.
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Edgar Allan Poe had so many ignominies heaped on him during his brief, though productive life that you’d think he deserved none after his death. Unfortunately, it now turns out that the conjoined word “nevermore” can’t be applied to him. Forget about his including it so quotably in “The Raven.”

Indeed, what happens in Nevermore, at New World Stages, to the poor man, who died penniless in Baltimore at 40, shouldn’t happen to a dog. Maybe I should say it shouldn’t happen to a doggerel, because that’s exactly what happens to him in this doggerel retelling of his story. It’s a stage biography, as written, directed and set to music by Jonathan Christenson, that just doesn’t make the grade.

Seven actors–one of whom, Scott Shpeley, portrays Edgar–act out the incidents from Poe’s birth to his demise. They go about their business on an elegant Bretta Gerecke set and wearing imaginative Bretta Gerecke costumes that might have served another property extremely well. No matter that a couple of instances in these cartoonized period outfits, the women look as if they’re wearing lampshades–not on their heads, mind you, but dangling from their waists.

Nothing about the production’s intriguing appearance, though, is able to overcome the tedium as Poe’s experiences are unfolded year by slow moving year. At the end of the first act, only 14 of those years have been recalled in clanging verse and Christenson’s tiresomely stylized, constantly shifting movements.

I can’t have been the only one at the intermission who was guiltily grateful that Poe had a short life, but the real Nevermore shocker is that someone who wrote as memorably as Poe did about the preeminence of anxiety should be dishonored in 2015 by such bad writing. As for the entire enterprise, quoth this reviewer, “Neveragain.”

With a Conscience — 'Our Mother's Daughters'

“The relationship between parents and children, but especially between mothers and daughters, is tremendously powerful, scarcely to be comprehended in any rational way.” — Joyce Carol Oates

I was 4. My mother, “Ma,” was fighting a cold and was lying down in her bedroom, nearly asleep. I felt so badly that she wasn’t feeling well that I decided, at 4 years of age, that I would heat up some chicken that was in the fridge. We had one of those gas stoves, which needed matches to light the oven. So I turned the oven on like I had watched Ma do so many times. The gas came on and then I lit the stove. “Boooooooom!” Explosion. An explosion so loud it woke Ma up and well… she ran into the kitchen, frantic, yelling. “Claudia! What happened?” My eyebrows and eyelashes were singed. I cried inconsolably. I really wasn’t clear as to what happened. I was most likely in shock. This was the first time I had ever heard my mother yell, and yell she did. I had frightened her beyond any fear she had felt in a very long time. At 4 years old, I didn’t understand why she was so frantic. Now I do. Mothers, good mothers, spend most of their lives trying to protect their children and when we, as daughters, do things that are out of our mother’s control, they get scared.

Then decades later, the tables turn. Our mothers, our parents age. Some age better than others, like Ma, but age they do, and then it is our turn to be scared. We watch these incredibly tough, strong, sometimes difficult personalities fight the aging process. They want their independence and they still have their free will, but at what point do their children, their daughters step in and tell them, “You can’t do this by yourself anymore. We need help to keep you safe.” This is a discussion that becomes the very definition of who we become. We are “our mother’s daughter.”

Everything I can appreciate about myself and everything I can NOT appreciate about myself as a woman comes from my mother, my “Ma.” She taught me so many things. Most of all, she taught me the following: how to cook, to knit, to crochet, and even more importantly, how to read and write. She taught me how to lose too. Every time we played cards, she would win and never felt badly about it. There was the most valuable lesson. Sometimes you will lose. Losing is part of living. She knew that.

Ma was a Great Depression baby. The fifth child of eight, but from the stories she would tell along with her sisters, they knew they had each other and learned how to be resourceful. They were tough, all of them. It could be argued that they were too tough, too strict and just plain difficult. But what we learned is that we need to take care of our own. Hard as that can be when we want so much to develop our own identity and personality; we need to take care of our own. My mother taught me that.

It’s hard for mothers like mine to let go. They don’t like admitting that their daughters are adults and very, very capable of thinking and acting on their own behalf. Ironically this is the same mother who insisted that each of her daughters get a college degree or more and develop careers and stand on their own two feet even when she couldn’t or wouldn’t admit they could. These are the same daughters who fulfilled her dream and are hard-working professionals. These are the same daughters who are struggling to take care of her now that she’s alone.

We look to our parents for guidance and want to admire them for their knowledge. Parents hold the key to our future relationships and influence who we are and what we want to be. They’re not perfect. None of what they did was exactly perfect but they tried. They had their ideas of what kind of lives they wanted us to live. We had our own ideas and somewhere in between we were left to find the balance.

In the end, there is only love of all the memories we were given. We are our mother’s daughters. We have traditions, talents and our dreams just like them. We have our individuality, in spite of the occasional dissensions. We are our mother’s daughters and for that, there is nothing but gratitude and perhaps some sadness. The gratitude comes with maturity that we are what we are and that has to be good enough. We need to maintain dignity for our elderly. We need to fight for that dignity. The sadness comes from the truth that we can’t keep those we love around forever.

Jennifer Aniston Wows In Plunging Dress At The SAG Awards

Jennifer Aniston looked divine as she hit the red carpet at the 2015 SAG Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on Sunday.

The 45-year-old actress, who’s nominated in the lead actress category for her role in “Cake,” rocked a plunging gold dress as she posed for photos with her fiancé, Justin Theroux.

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jennifer aniston

jennifer aniston

jennifer aniston

Aniston was one in the handful of stars to introduce themselves at the start of the show, smiling while proudly announcing, “I’m Jennifer Aniston, and I’m an actor.”