University Of Houston Reveals Matthew McConaughey's Speaking Fee

HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas university that booked Matthew McConaughey as its May commencement speaker has broken the silence on the Texas-born actor’s speaking fee.

The University of Houston said in a statement Tuesday that it was paying McConaughey speaking fees totaling $135,000 plus travel expenses, as well as a $20,250 commission to the Celebrity Talent International booking agency engaged by the university.

Meanwhile, the statement says McConaughey is donating his fees to a foundation he started to provide tools to help high school students lead active lives and make healthy choices for the future.

The university initially balked at revealing McConaughey’s fee, citing a confidentiality agreement with the booking agency. However, the university says its business with the agency is finished and the confidentiality agreement is no longer binding

How Age, Gender, and Marital Status Affect Your Car Insurance

It’s a well-accepted fact that car insurance premiums vary between certain demographics.

For instance, a 20-year-old male driver will most likely pay more for insurance than a man who’s 10 years older.

What may be shocking, however, is just how significant these premium swings can be — with age being just one of several factors.

For the second year in a row, a study commissioned by insuranceQuotes found that car insurance premiums, on average, can vary by more than 50 percent based on age, gender and marital status.

This article was originally published on insuranceQuotes.com.

According to Mike Barry, spokesman for the nonprofit Insurance Information Institute, insurers have long been interested in the way marriage, gender and age may affect insurance rates — and the general consensus has been resounding.

“Younger people cause more accidents than older people — unless they’re married — and men cause more accidents than women,” Barry says.

The Impact of Marriage on Car Insurance Rates

According to the study, marital status is almost as significant in car insurance pricing as age and gender. On average, a married 20-year-old pays 21 percent less than a single 20-year-old for the same policy.

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The difference gets more pronounced when you divide it by gender. A single 20-year-old male will pay 25 percent more for auto insurance than his married counterpart.

And a single 20-year-old woman will pay 28 percent more than her married counterpart.

Premium differences between married and unmarried drivers drop off significantly as they get older. For instance, a single 25-year-old just pays 7 percent more for auto insurance than a married 25-year-old.

So why do insurers consider married people a lower risk when it comes to pricing auto insurance?

Eli Lehrer, president of the nonprofit research group The R Street Institute, says, “Marriage really does make people more careful and responsible… it isn’t at all surprising that this translates into better driving behavior.”

For example, a recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that married men are more focused on taking care of their health than single men.

What’s more, Lehrer says married people are also a better business opportunity for an insurer, since they are more likely to own homes and “far, far, far more likely” to buy life insurance.

The Impact of Age on Car Insurance Rates

Without exception, young drivers pay more for car insurance than any other demographic — and there’s a very good reason why.

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According to the CDC, crash rates per mile driven for 16- to 20-year-olds are four times higher than those of older drivers.

Bob Hunter, director of insurance at the Washington, D.C.-based Consumer Federation of America, a consumer advocacy organization, says younger drivers also file more car insurance claims than those with more experience behind the wheel, which is what accounts for significant differences in premium cost.

For example, according to the study, a 20-year-old driver pays 41 percent more than a 20-year-old driver for car insurance.

Also, premium costs don’t stop dropping at 25. According to the study, premiums begin to stabilize around 25 years old, but they fall by another 18 percent until they bottom out around age 60.

For instance, a 60-year-old single male driver is paying, on average, 59 percent less for auto insurance than his 20-year-old counterpart. The difference for women is 51 percent.

“This all comes back to (driver) experience,” Barry says.

However, don’t expect your insurance rates to drop at midnight on your 25th birthday.

Barry suggests paying close attention to your rates at renewal.

“Your rates are going to slowly go down every year you get older each time the policy is renewed,” Barry says. “When it’s renewal time and you’re 25, that’s when you’ll see the biggest drop.”

Age and Car Insurance Rates by State

When it comes to how age impacts insurance premiums, not all states follow the national average.

For instance, in Massachusetts, a 25-year-old married woman will pay a whopping 51 percent less than a 20-year-old married woman in that state.

Meanwhile, in Hawaii, a 25-year-old married woman will pay just 2 percent less than her 20-year-old counterpart.

The reason for this is how individual states regulate insurance.

“In some states, insurers are allowed to weigh age more heavily than in others,” Lehrer says.

For instance, according to the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs’ Insurance Division, Hawaii is the only state that doesn’t allow insurance providers to consider age, gender or length of driving experience when determining premiums, which accounts for the negligible difference in premium costs.

Also see: Making one auto insurance claim can drive your rate up by 76 percent

The Impact of Gender on Car Insurance Rates

Here’s the bottom line: Women are statistically safer drivers, which means they’re also less likely to file a claim than men. Therefore, they generally pay less for car insurance.

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According to the study, a single 20-year-old male driver will pay 21 percent more than his female counterpart. The good news for men is this difference begins to drastically level off as male drivers get older.

For instance, a single 25-year-old male driver will only pay an average of 4 percent more for auto insurance than his female counterpart.

What’s more, between the ages of 30 and 50, men actually pay slightly less for auto insurance than women. Experts aren’t entirely sure why this is the case, although Lehrer thinks it’s most likely an insignificant difference.

“The differences you find beyond about age 30 will amount to less than a dollar a month for most people based on gender,” Lehrer says.

Nonetheless, Hunter says, “At the end of the day, young men are less cautious, riskier, more distracted drivers.”

The study also accentuated the fact that three states — Hawaii, Massachusetts and North Carolina — prohibit gender from being used to set auto insurance rates.

Three other states — Michigan, Montana and Pennsylvania — apply the same rating factors to men and women, which is why there is no difference between their rates due to gender.

Also see: Big factors that affect car insurance rates–do men really pay more?

4 Ways to Reduce Your Car Insurance Rates

Whether you’re a man or woman, married or single, here are four tips for reducing your auto insurance premium.

1. Get a good-student discount.

Most insurers will offer a discount of up to 20 percent for young drivers who maintain at least a B average (a 3.0 GPA or better) in high school or college and take a recognized advanced driver training course in addition to driver’s ed.

2. Enroll in a pay-as-you-drive program.

Many major insurers — including Allstate, Progressive, State Farm and Liberty Mutual — offer discounts based on how well, how far and how often you drive. It’s a voluntary incentive and can save you as much as 25 percent on insurance.

3. Avoid making small claims.

Auto insurance is not meant for everyday repairs. Also, making just one claim worth $2,000 or more can kick up your rate by a national average of 41 percent, according to a January insuranceQuotes study.

If you file many small claims over the course of three or five years, your insurance company may not only raise your premium but could cancel your policy.

4. Shop and compare rates at least once a year.

According to Barry, car insurance is a buyer’s market, and shopping for new coverage could save you up to $500 per year.

Laura Adams is a personal finance expert, award-winning author, host of the top-rated Money Girl Podcast, and senior insurance analyst for insuranceQuotes, a Bankrate company. For more on auto, home, health, life, and business insurance, click here.

Oakland Joins Boycott Of Indiana Over Religious Freedom Law

Oakland, California, on Tuesday joined a growing list of governments and businesses to boycott Indiana over its new Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which critics say allows businesses to shun LGBT people.

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf said in a statement that the city will not spend taxpayer money on travel to Indiana and condemned the state’s law, which allows businesses to cite religious beliefs as a legal defense to discrimination, according to the East Bay Express.

“As Mayor of Oakland, I join with jurisdictions, private citizens, businesses and other entities around the world in denouncing the State of Indiana’s action and will continue to direct the City Administrator to deny the use of City dollars for travel to Indiana as long as this discriminatory law remains in effect,” Schaaf said.

Oakland joins San Francisco, Denver, Seattle, Washington D.C., and Portland, Oregon, in announcing travel bans after Indiana Gov. Mike Pence signed the bill on Thursday. Connecticut, Washington state and New York also have banned publicly funded travel by government workers to Indiana.

Several powerful tech companies near Oakland also spoken out against the Indiana law, with San Francisco-based Salesforce canceling the companies’ events in the state.

HUFFPOST READERS: If you live in Indiana, we want to hear about how this law is affecting you. Email your story or any tips to openreporting@huffingtonpost.com. Include your name, the city you live in, and a phone number if you’re willing to be contacted by a reporter.

Top 10 Places Spring is in Bloom

Spring is in the air, finally! Some may wonder if we’ll see a spring this year, as they battle through the last bit of a winter that refuses to leave. Rest assured, though. Spring is here. And, if you need a little extra dose of it this month (or next), we’ve got just the list for you. Cheapflights.com has rounded up the top 10 places spring is in bloom. So take a deep breath and stop to smell the roses, tulips and more.

Silicon Valley: Where Men are Wrong and Women are Wronged

In the early ’90s, as one of the first women editors of a technology magazine, my female employees would plop themselves down in my office to recount the humiliations, the come-ons, and the frustrations over the lack of a clear promotion path relative to their male office mates. With a young family at home waiting for me to get dinner on the stove, I probably lacked the patience and diplomacy to tackle the war for equal rights.

I did the best I could. For each roadblock they posed, my MO was to fire back a humorous salvo on the perks of being a woman in a male-dominated field. Look at the bright side, I’d say. Bill Gates remembers you in the crowd. The lines at the bathroom are really short. You don’t have to wear that silly khaki pants uniform. It’s a lot easier for you to talk your way into the “no-press” area.

Today, I find my comments cringe-worthy and slightly tone deaf. The only comfort I take is that I made these women smile in the face of very real obstacles. Though ineloquent, I was telling them to get out there and mark their turf in their own way.

Watching the Ellen Pao case brought the old struggle into a new focus. Only, in the world of Silicon Valley ventures, there is less humor, and more self-aggrandizement. By the end of the court case that pit her against Kleiner Perkins, Pao took on a larger than life role as the voice of all women who’ve ever been wronged on the job. Though she lost the case, the discussions continue.

I have no doubt that Pao worked with single focus to get where she did. Not many get a JD, an MBA and an EE degree from Ivy League schools without having the right stuff. I have no doubt that the cowboy culture of a VC company is tough on a woman.

What I do doubt is that, with a few exceptions, women will beat men at their own game. They should be hell bent on changing the playground, not worried about competing on the same over trodden ground. The best woman VCs and entrepreneurs are listeners, collaborators and puzzle solvers. They bring an aesthetic and authenticity to their work. And now that the digital world is inextricably intertwined with the worlds of art, fashion, medicine, athletics, retail and more, they’ll bring a holistic sensibility and a new discourse.

I’m sighing as I watch history repeating itself. Despite me joining leaning-in circles, writing for publications about women in technology, being a member of Women in CE, and taking on the personae of the woman’s voice in a high tech world, not much has changed since I ran a male-dominated magazine in a male-dominated world. Men still swagger to the top; women fill the ranks of marketing and PR. It’s the 2015 version of Mad Men. As digital projects become more collaborative and interdisciplinary with less of the “guy in the garage” mentality, women will bring their own stamp to technology.

I had a smart boss (also a man) early in my career. He told me I should join women’s networking groups because it would be good for my career. I grumbled and asked: what about you? Why don’t you have join networking groups? “I do,” he answered. “I play golf.”

Sexist? Separate but equal? Definitely. But the guy saw a chance for me to be a leader on my own terms, not by playing with the boys.

Robin Raskin was the editor of PC Magazine and went on to found FamilyPC, a magazine for families entering the digital world. Today she runs a conferences and events company, Living in Digital Times.

Short film: R2-D2 adorably falls in love with a blue mailbox

Say it with me: awwwww. In a story that’s a little like the first hour of Wall-E, this short film, Artoo In Love by Evan Atherton, tells a cute love story of R2-D2 and a blue mailbox. R2 starts holding picnics with it, zaps away people who want to mail things and holds an umbrella over its head when it rains.

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You'd Never Leave This Folding Bike Helmet Behind

I’m normally a safety first, second and third kinda cyclist. But even with my lifelong fear of cars, I’ll sometimes leave the helmet at home if I don’t want to lug it around an office all day. Wouldn’t it be amazing if I could have the best of both worlds? You probably see where this is going.

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You can finally opt out and remove Verizon’s “supercookie”

2015-04-01 1 VerizonVerizon Wireless is finally letting users completely opt out of its tracking program which uses undeletable tracking codes called “supercookies”. Prior to this, customers no longer received targeted advertizing after opting out from Verizon’s data collection program. Still, customers’ browsing history and metadata was being stored by Verizon. Under its data collection program, Verizon tracks personal data by tagging customers … Continue reading

Samsung delays its next-gen home automation devices

It’ll take a while longer to see how Samsung’s acquisition has improved SmartThings’ Hub and sensors. The company was supposed to release its next-gen home automation devices this April, but now it’s pushing back the launch date. SmartThings isn’t ev…

Watch TED Talks, MTV and Pac-12 sports on your Chromecast

Interested in watching thought-provoking discussions, music videos and college sports on your TV through a Chromecast stick? You’re covered as of today. Google has announced that the mobile apps for MTV, Pac-12 sports, TED Talks and Qello Concerts no…