A Shocking Look At How Much Fat, Sugar And Salt 605-Pound Man Consumes (VIDEO)

Watch as Dr. Phil attempts to show Charles, who weighs 605 pounds, what he’s putting into his body each year: approximately 120 pounds of fat, 100 pounds of sugar and 20 pounds of salt. “We’re not even talking about the actual foods,” Dr. Phil explains. “We’re just talking about sodium, sugar and fat. What you would lose in weight just by changing these things right here is staggering.”

Dr. Phil vows to help both Charles and his twin brother, Adam, in using the tools in his new book, The 20/20 Diet: Turn Your Weight Loss Vision into Reality, 20 Key Foods to Help You Succeed Where Other Diets Fail. It’s a three-phase approach based on “20/20 Foods” — 20 foods for 20 days. Find out more here.

Like Dr. Phil | Follow Dr. Phil | Be on the Show

Deaths in Paris: Separating Fact from Fiction

By James M. Dorsey

The jihadist assaults in Paris on Charlie Hebdo Paris on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a Jewish supermarket as well as two French police officers have sparked allegations of a failure by French intelligence and security agencies. Jihadists beyond the Middle East are also portrayed as coordinated by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). A closer look suggests those assertions are at best speculation.

There is little doubt that Cherif and Said Kouachi, the two brothers suspected of killing 12 people in the attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo, had long been on the radar of French police and intelligence. So was Amedy Coulibaly, the gunman, who is believed to have shot two French police officers a day after the Charlie Hebdo assault and then took hostages in a Jewish supermarket a day later. Similarly Hayat Boumedienne, Coulibaly’s wife, who is reported to have escaped to Syria, was long known for her association with radical groups.

Cherif Kouachi spent 18 months in French prison for helping foreign fighters join jihadist groups in Iraq.
Like his brother Said, Cherif was on a US no-fly list. Cherif moreover was known to have spent time in a training camp in Yemen of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Coulibaly was with the Kouachi brothers a member of Buttes-Chaumont, a network that recruited radicalised French youths to fight in Iraq in the early 2000s. Pictures of Hayat Boumedienne, Coulibaly’s wife, dressed in the full black dress worn by some religious Muslim women firing a weapon have emerged in recent days.

The three men and Boumedienne were in contact with Djamel Bhegal, a disciple in London of Abu Hamza al Masri, an Egyptian cleric who was sentenced to seven years in prison in the United Kingdom and last year extradited to the United States on terrorism charges. Bhegal was released from French prison in 2011 after serving time for planning an attack on the US embassy in Paris.

The obvious question is how known Islamist militants who were on the radar of French and other security services could have prepared for three lethal attacks within a matter of days in Paris without having attracted attention. The obvious conclusion is that the attacks constitute a massive intelligence failure. Indeed, it was. But then every successful politically motivated violent attack on civilian or government targets constitutes an intelligence failure.

That is a relatively useless conclusion without knowing whether the failure was the result of negligence, faulty intelligence, laxness, culpable faulty judgement or overstretched resources. To establish that, one would have to evaluate the various threats intelligence and security services were dealing with at a given point in time and pass judgement on the evaluation of their seriousness and prioritisation of those threats. One would also have to know the results of initial surveillance of someone like Cherif after his return from Yemen. Finally, insight into the degree of intelligence sharing between the US and France given the US targeting of AQAP is a key factor.

To be sure, the services’ resources are stretched with up to 1,000 Frenchmen having joined jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq. Many of them have become disillusioned and an unknown number may have returned to France. With no intelligence or security service being legally or physically able to monitor suspected radicals 24/7 around the clock, intelligence failures are par for the course. As a result, to establish the nature of the failure, a classified inquiry would have to be launched which could establish to what degree intelligence and security forces are to blame.

Perhaps, the most solid indictment of the French services is the fact that the Kouachi brothers were able to collect a cache of arms in their apartment in a country in which assault rifles and rocket launchers are not easily available. That failure is however as much an intelligence one as it is of a government policy that has failed to ensure that North African immigrants are made to feel that they are an integral and welcome part of France.

Similarly, the role in and degree of responsibility of AQAP in the Paris attacks is perceived as absolute by analysts and the media following the revelation that Cherif had trained in Yemen and AQAP’s claiming credit for the attacks. AQAP’s responsibility given its relationship with Cherif is beyond doubt.

Analysis of past Al Qaeda-inspired attacks on Western targets suggests, however, that the group is often not operationally and logistically involved in the preparation of an operation despite its insistence that it signs off on any operation outside an affiliate’s immediate area of activity.

Militants who were trained by an Al Qaeda affiliate like AQAP often act on a general directive issued by the group rather than in close cooperation with it. These militants act at a time and place of their own choosing. The fact that attacks are often locally conceived and planned complicates detection by intelligence and security services. That appears to have been the case in Paris.

On the assumption that the Paris perpetrators operated on their own rather than under the immediate command and control of AQAP, they are in some ways more motivated and better trained and better equipped lone wolves, local nationals operating on their own whether as individuals or members of a local group.

For policymakers and intelligence and security services that means timely information and law enforcement is not sufficient. Confronting threats will have to involve building relationships of trust that are solidified by minorities believing that they are an integral part of society. Those relationships are tenuous in France.

The sense of unity displayed in mass demonstrations in Paris and other French cities in recent days in which immigrants and their descendants participated offers French authorities an opportunity to start a process that could further and truly isolate people like the Kouachis in their own communities and ensure that the threat they pose is brought to the attention of authorities in a timely fashion.

James M. Dorsey is Senior Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, co-director of the Institute of Fan Culture of University of Würzburg and author of the blog The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.

Kiss Cam Takes Crazy Turn At Knicks Game As Girl Smooches Total Stranger

Who says there’s nothing worth watching at a Knicks game?

On Thursday night, the best thing at the game — possibly the best thing at any Knicks game, all season — happened during the Kiss Cam, when a woman’s apparent date refused to smooch.

So she turned to a man sitting nearby, seemingly a total stranger, and kissed him instead.

Check it out in the clip above.

Some recent viral kiss cam moments were later revealed to have been staged. If this turns out to be one of them, it’s still a better performance than anything the team has managed to put together this year. The Knicks have won just 5 of their 40 games, the 7th-worst record at this point in the season since the league shifted to an 82-game calendar in 1967-68.

True to form, the Knicks lost Thursday night’s “Kiss Cam game” to the Houston Rockets by a score of 120-96.

(h/t Mediaite)

Watch the House of Cards Season 3 Trailer


The third season of House of Cards will be out on February 27th, and Netflix has just released the first trailer. Things look to be getting… tense.

Read more…



Disney's Beachbot is an artistic robot turtle that can draw in the sand

The robotic turtle above can’t wield katanas, eat pizza or shout cowabunga, but it can still do something awesome: draw big sand sketches on the beach. It’s named “Beachbot” and was developed by a team from ETH Zurich and the Zurich division of Disne…

Blackburn 'Ghost' Caught On Video As Angry Apparition Chases Car

Is this a ghost? Probably not… but the creepy footage of a supposed encounter with “The Blackburn Ghost” in Blackburn, England, went viral over the weekend, racking up nearly half a million views by Sunday evening.

The video, posted without explanation on Thursday, is taken from a car and shows a hunched figure in white in the distance. As the car tries to back away, the figure keeps approaching.

Someone in the car can be heard screaming in a foreign language. The Daily Record reports that the person is shouting “Move the car backwards!” and “Faster! faster!” in Arabic.

Local historian and author Simon Entwistle told The Citizen newspaper that the “ghost” in the video may be the spirit of a monk who was executed in Turton Tower.

“It’s the actual timing that I find quite unusual, this person was executed in early January 1643, and the ghost will only make an appearance in the early January period,” Entwistle was quoted as saying.

But Entwistle may not be the most objective expert. As commenters on that page pointed out, he hosts ghost tours of the area.

While most viewers of the YouTube video say they believe the footage is fake, others admitted they enjoyed it.

As for the origins of the clip, one user on reddit claims the footage is part of a student’s film. Another, in the comments section of the Citizen, said the same footage was posted before and claimed to be from a different location.

John Kerry To Travel To Paris For Terrorism Talks

AHMEDABAD, India (AP) — Secretary of State John Kerry said Monday he will travel to Paris this week for talks on countering extremist violence, following sharp criticism of the Obama administration for not sending a senior official to Sunday’s rally for unity in Paris that was attended by some 40 world leaders and more than a million people.

Kerry said at a news conference that U.S. officials, including himself and President Barack Obama, had been “deeply engaged” with French authorities almost immediately after the first attack occurred and had offered intelligence assistance. As to criticism about the lack of a senior official at Sunday’s March, Kerry said, “I really think that this is sort of quibbling a little bit in the sense that our Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland was there and marched, our ambassador was there and marched, many people from the embassy were there and marched.”

“As everybody knows, I have been here in India for a prior planned event,” he added. “I would have personally very much wanted to have been there but couldn’t do so because of the commitment that I had here and it is important to keep these kinds of commitments.”

Kerry said he is going to France to reaffirm U.S. solidarity with America’s oldest ally. He said as soon as he heard about the march, he asked his team what the earliest time was that he could go.

“That is why I am going there on the way home and to make it crystal clear how passionately we feel about the events that have taken place there,” he said. “I don’t think he people of France have any doubt about America’s understanding about what happened, about our personal sense of loss and our deep commitment to the people of France in this moment of trial.”

While in Paris, Kerry will be meeting with French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius and pay tribute to the victims of last week’s attacks, which killed 17 people.

Kerry will arrive in Paris on Thursday after stops in Sofia, Bulgaria and Geneva, Switzerland. In Geneva, on Wednesday Kerry will he meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif to discuss the status of nuclear negotiations that are to resume the next day.

Kerry will be the highest-ranking U.S. official to visit France since the terrorist attacks on a French newspaper and a kosher supermarket. Authorities say one of those involved in the attacks pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group in a video. He and two other suspected extremists were killed during police raids.

“I want to emphasize that the relationship with France is not about one day or one particular moment,” Kerry said. “It is an ongoing longtime relationship that is deeply, deeply based in the shared values, and particularly the commitment that we share to freedom of expression.”

“No single act of terror, no two people with a AK-47s, no hostage-taking at a grocery store is ever going to prevent those who are committed to the march for freedom to continue to march and to ultimately see all people enjoy their rights, to be able to enjoy the protections that come with that freedom,” he said.

The U.S. ambassador to France, Jane Hartley, was the top American official at Sunday’s unity march against barbarity.

Millions demonstrated across France, and rallies supporting the French were reported in major cities around the world.

Obama offered condolences last week at the French Embassy in Washington. “We stand united with our French brothers to ensure that justice is done and our way of life is defended,” he said.

Kerry was in the Indian city of Ahmedabad on Sunday for a long-scheduled appearance at an international investment conference, and to prepare for President Barack Obama’s trip to India later this month.

Mobile Payment Firm LoopPay Plans To Enter India In 2015

Las Vegas: US based tech firm LoopPay is planning to enter the Indian market this year with its patented technology that facilitates payment by just placing mobile phones beside a normal card reader at retail stores.

The company, founded in 2012 by payment industry experts, has developed a magnetic transmission based technology in form of a mobile cover and card. Credit or debit card details can be loaded in LoopPay’s mobile phone applications.

“We are looking at expanding our presence in late 2015 including India. We believe India, China and Japan would be have appetite for this technology,” LoopPay CMO Gregory Mann told at Consumer Electronics Show.

“An user can select the card on mobile phone application from which he wants to pay and touch the cover on any normal card swipe machine to pay and transaction will happen. There is no need for retailers to install any additional device like card readers or anything else to accept payment from mobile phone,” Mann said.

The Magnetic Secure Transmission (MST) technology of LoopPay generates changing magnetic fields over a very short period of time. This is accomplished by putting alternating current through an inductive loop, which can then be received by the magnetic read head of the credit card reader.

The signal received from Loop emulates the same magnetic field change as a mag stripe card when swiped across the same read head. Loop works within a 3-inch distance from the read head. The field dissipates rapidly beyond that point, and only exists during a transmission initiated by the user.

Mann said the app is password protected so that in eventuality of the phone being stolen, Loop app can’t be used.

Prevalent mobile payment systems use technology like Near Field Communication (NFC) and others require installation at the vendor side as well to sense payment data.

LoopPay currently offers the device charge case for USD 59.95 and for iPhones only. The LoopPay Card costs USD 49.95.

With increasing number of mobile phone subscribers in India, LoopPay hopes that there would be takers for secure solutions to replace their physical wallets.

“Our technology will enable existing point of sale infrastructure to accept contactless payments through mobile devices aat majority of retail merchants,” Mann said.

Kansas City High School Students Complain Over Retouched School ID Photos

While we’re used to seeing celebrities on magazine covers retouched to glossy perfection, photo retouching generally doesn’t make an appearance in our everyday lives.

New Technology Targets Drivers Who Pass Stopped School Buses

Michael Burgess, an 11-year-old student at West Lake Middle School in Apex, North Carolina, was getting onto his school bus early on the foggy morning of Sept. 30 when a car slammed into him.