These Two Millennials Are Taking on Big Urban Problems — and Winning

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As Scott Benner sneakily took a few sheets of blank paper from the public library’s copy machine, he kept an eye out for employees who could bust him for stealing. Walking between the public library’s bookshelves, he recognized several men from the local homeless shelter in Quincy, Mass., where he was living, waiting in line for the bathroom or surfing the web. Slumping in a chair, Benner used a ballpoint pen to doodle, distracting himself from the travails of his life. In the five years prior, Benner had lost everything: his 20-year foreman job at a steel plant, his two-bedroom house. Even his wife left. Kept awake at night in the shelter by men moaning from withdrawal and hacking with sickness, Benner doubted he would ever experience the life he once imagined for himself.

For weeks, Benner kept sketching, giving away his artwork until a shelter worker suggested he sell it. Some brief online research using the library’s wifi led Benner to ArtLifting, an online marketplace like Etsy for homeless and disabled artists. A couple of months later, in May 2014, he sold his first piece. Investing his earnings in a pad of high-quality paper and a set of pens led to even more sales. “It’s selling in ways that I’ve never imagined,” he says. But beyond the cash, “it was just that sense of hope that I was going to get out of the mess that I was in. There was a light at the end of the tunnel now because ArtLifting was there.” Recently, Benner moved into permanent housing.

Behind Benner’s success is a little-known group working to maximize ArtLifting’s reach. Tumml, a nonprofit San Francisco incubator, assists for-profit entrepreneurs scale their companies to solve urban problems. For ArtLifting and the 32 other young urban ventures it’s assisting, Tumml attempts to bridge the funding and mentorship gap business founders face by connecting them to investors, city officials, journalists and advisors from Silicon Valley giants like Airbnb and Yelp. On average, participating businesses raise $1.1 million and hire 10 new employees. Collectively, 2.2 million people have used the products and services offered by companies in Tumml’s portfolio.

Tumml co-founders Julie Lein, a one-time political consultant, and Clara Brenner, formerly in real estate development, caught the highly infectious “startup bug” while at MIT’s Sloan School of Management. (“When you are surrounded by talented technologists and entrepreneurs, it makes you want to push yourself to do more and to solve big, hairy challenges,” Brenner explains.) There, they collaborated on a white paper about the challenges entrepreneurs confront. Combining their findings with their love of cities led the business-savvy duo to launch Tumml. “We saw a lot of people talking about these issues, and we want to see more people actually going out there and tackling these challenges,” says Lein.

APPLY: Tumml is an NBCUniversal Foundation 21st Century Solutions grant winner. Apply to the 2016 program here.

During its four-month-long program, Tumml provides entrepreneurs with free office space, trainings and lectures and any other support they need to obtain seed funding. “Usually, we are the first outside person for these enterprises,” says Lein. “They are at a critical juncture, and they need help getting their business off the ground.” For ArtLifting specifically, the two women helped the nonprofit network with government personnel, investors and journalists.

Applicants undergo a rigorous vetting process (Tumml’s acceptance rate rivals Harvard), and at first glance, there’s little commonality among participants. A handful create software platforms that make government work more efficiently: Sprokit helps corrections departments transition former inmates back into society by allowing agencies to share real-time data on a single platform, and Valor Water Analytics assists utilities conserve through meter technology. Several are social enterprises that benefit vulnerable populations: HandUp replaces panhandling by allowing those in need to crowdfund donations on a mobile app; WorkHands is a LinkedIn for tradesmen looking for work. And many simply ease the stress of urban life for city-dwellers: Farmery sells high-quality fresh food grown indoors, and Hitch (recently acquired by Lyft) allows passengers to carpool on ride-sharing apps. What unites the enterprises, however, is the belief that the markets can offer a solution when government or charitable services aren’t enough.

“Maybe two generations ago, if you wanted to solve a problem, you ran for office; maybe a generation ago, you ran a nonprofit or set up a group to lobby on behalf of the issues you care about,” says Brenner, Tumml’s CEO. Today, “the success of the entrepreneur presents a path forward to see a difference in their communities,” she continues. Her colleague Lein explains, “People see the power in taking the bull by the horns in a startup that directly addresses challenges. It’s a really powerful motivator to make the change that you want to see.”

After losing his job in 2009, Scott Benner personally experienced how the business, government and nonprofit sectors weren’t enough. Short-term gigs and unemployment checks couldn’t keep him afloat, and he was forced to enter the shelter system — shocked and enraged — with just a backpack of clothing.

But ArtLifting’s social enterprise seemed to provide a new, self-sustaining way to offer services to the homeless. Thanks to assistance from Tumml, ArtLifting has networked with government personnel and investors and has received media coverage. Benner’s drawings — explosive black-and-white symbols that repeat across the page — now hang in homes across the country. With his bank account replenished, he says his whole world-view has been changed by his interaction with ArtLifting. He wants to see more social enterprises like the ones Tumml fosters: “I would never think of running a business and not giving back anything now. I wasn’t callous and uncaring before, but I just didn’t entertain the idea. Today, it’s why not?” he says.

Currently, four out of five Americans live in urban areas, a figure that only continues to grow. Tumml’s co-founders recognize their importance to improving 21st century living, but Brenner stresses that no one can solve urban problems (homelessness, crime, overstressed infrastructure) on their own. “We need startups dedicated to solving the challenges that come with this massive population shift,” she says. Across the country, ambitious, young entrepreneurs are leading the charge for urban innovation, and Tumml is fueling the groundswell behind them.

Tumml is a recipient of last year’s 21st Century Solutions grant powered by the NBCUniversal Foundation, in partnership with the NBCUniversal Owned Television Stations. The grant celebrates nonprofits that are embracing innovative solutions to advance community-based programs in the areas of civic engagement, education, environment, jobs and economic empowerment, media, and technology for good. Apply here for a chance to be one of the 2016 winners!

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The Olsens And Their Giant Coats DGAF About Weather Forecasts

‘Twas a balmy Tuesday evening in Los Angeles, where the local weather 86 degrees, when three Olsens delighted fans with a rare appearance in the wild. 

While the rest of us were sweating and chafing our you-know-whats off in shorts and T-shirts, the Olsen twins were seemingly quite comfortable wearing giant unseasonable coats.

Actress Elizabeth Olsen, who was wearing a slightly less enveloping but still puzzling jacket, joined her fashion designer sisters to celebrate the opening of their new flagship Elizabeth and James store. 

“But it can get cool at night in L.A.!” you cry. Fair enough. So let’s examine the outfits of a few other attendees, shall we? 

The proof is in the appropriately-dressed, sleeveless pudding. And yet we sitll find ourselves yearning for a long cream coat all of a sudden.

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Twin Brothers Battle Rare Condition That Causes Never-Ending Hunger

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Raising twin boys is a challenge for any single mom, but it’s especially difficult for one particular mom in New Haven, Connecticut.

Dianna Schatzlein-Ahern’s two youngest sons, Stevie and Eddie Ahern, are 11. They both suffer from Prader-Willi syndrome, a genetic condition that makes them insatiably hungry no matter how much they eat.

“I have to keep everything locked away so they don’t get up in the middle of the night and have a feast,” Schatzlein-Ahern told Barcroft TV. “They can never feel full, so could potentially eat themselves to death.”

For health reasons, she attempts to limit her sons to 1,200 calories a day each. To do this, she has to lock up all of the family’s food; she also locks all the medications in her bedroom, and then locks her bedroom door when it’s time for sleep.

“They’ll eat out of the garbage. We always have to take the garbage out and put it outside,” she said, noting the boys are normally sleepwalking when that happens. “I don’t think they’re aware of it. They’re just so hungry that they’ll just eat, wherever they see food. They’ll eat it off the floor and they’ll eat it off anybody’s floor.”

Prader-Willi syndrome affects between 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 30,000 people worldwide, according to the National Institutes of Health. 

The condition is a caused by genetic dysfunction on a specific area of chromosome 15. Most of the time, Prader-Willi syndrome occurs because a region of chromosome 15 from the father’s side is deleted. In rare instances, it can also happen when a child inherits two copies of chromosome 15 from the mother, instead of one from each parent.

Most diagnoses happen when the children are babies, but their mother says Eddie and Stevie only learned of their condition a couple of years ago.

“We knew there were issues when they were young, but no one could tell me what it was,” Schatzlein-Ahern told the New Haven Register. “We went from place to place, doctor to doctor, until finally one day I finally found a specialist in Long Island who was able to diagnose them.” 

The stress of watching after them eventually took a toll on their mom and dad’s marriage.

“I’ve been living just me and the boys for two years now,” Schatzlein-Ahern told Barcroft. 

There’s no cure for the hunger that comes with Prader-Willi syndrome, but growth hormone therapy and exercise can help reduce the risk of morbid obesity and build muscle.

People with Prader-Willi syndrome are prone to temper outbursts, stubbornness, and compulsive behavior such as picking at the skin, but, for Eddie and Stevie, those behavioral problems are exacerbated because they also have autism spectrum disorder.

“It’s so overwhelming,” Schatzlein-Ahern told Zip06.com.“They have so many health issues, they get obese, and they have severe mood swings, but they’re so lovable and like little mayors everywhere they go.” 

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Kim Kardashian And Kanye West Talk Taylor Swift And Nude Selfies In Harper's Bazaar

Power couple Kim Kardashian and Kanye West are as candid as ever as the September cover stars for Harper’s Bazaar’s Icons issue.   

In the interview, the two discussed everything from Taylor Swift and nude selfies to dick pics, debt and vanity. The rapper got a little too honest with his answers sometimes, forcing Kardashian to occasionally rein him in and repeat a question to keep him on track. 

And while you would think you know everything about the couple because of “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” and a handful of social media accounts, there were still a few answers we found surprising. 

1. Kanye West’s $53 million debt is gone.

Or so they say. When the couple was asked about their biggest insecurities, Kim said that hers was “looking fat sometimes” while Kanye said his involved money. 

“I used to have insecurity about my finances, then I announced that I had debt, and now I don’t have any insecurities,” West said, before Kim added, “Then you didn’t have any debt; it seemed to all figure it out.” 

We guess Kim wasn’t lying when she tweeted that she’d transferred $53 million to their joint account

 2. Kim used to be a big fan of Taylor Swift. 

When interviewer Laura Brown asked what the two’s favorite TSwift songs were (so passive-aggressive), West said he didn’t have one. In what we assume was a wistful tone, Kim simply said, “I was such a fan of hers.”

3. Kanye isn’t into “thinking.” 

Though this statement might not surprise some of West’s haters (we see you, Swifties), West said this gem of a quote after saying he didn’t “have an insecurity about his public perception.” 

“Here’s something that’s contrary to popular belief: I actually don’t like thinking,” the rapper said. I think people think I like to think a lot. And I don’t. I do not like to think at all.” 

4. Kim not doing nude photos would be like “Adele not singing.” 

And people say the Kardashians don’t have any talent! Before admitting that he’s done some nude selfies (”You’d get a good cock shot here and there”), Kanye waxed poetic about his love for Kim’s nude selfies. 

“Like, I love the ones from the side, the back ones, and the front. I just love seeing her naked; I love nudity,” West said. “And I love beautiful shapes. I feel like it’s almost a Renaissance thing, a painting, a modern version of a painting. I think it’s important for Kim to have her figure. To not show it would be like Adele not singing.” 

5. Kim is more vain than Kanye.

…Though we don’t actually believe it, Kardashian said that the title of “MVP” (Most Vain Person) in their household belonged to her. Kanye agreed, then said something that proved he might be deserving of the title.  

“Yeah, I think she has vanity,” West said. “And with me, I don’t give a fuck, bro; it is what it is. I’m the best—now what? I don’t know if that’s a vain statement. I don’t particularly like photos of myself, though.” 

Case dismissed. 

To read the rest of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s interview, head here, or check out newsstands Aug. 16. 

The Huffington Post receives a percentage from the purchase of tickets bought via a link on this page.

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Snooki Just Beyoncé-Dropped The Best/Worst Rap Video Of All Time

Tell your loved ones goodbye and prepare for Armageddon because Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi is releasing music under the pseudonym “Yung Mommy.” 

“Here it is. My first music video,” the “Jersey Shore” star wrote on Instagram. “I’ve decided to be an ass and record a song about my life and being a mom and shoot this fun and hysterical music video to go along with it. I hope I win a Grammy for this one. YOUNG MOMMY, OUT.”

Words fail to describe what exactly transpires in the two-minute clip dropped on Wednesday night, but we’ll try.  

It’s a little bit of this … 

…. a sprinkling of that 

… and a lot of “Avatar”-worthy green-screen work. 

Inspired by her life as a young mother to her two children, Lorenzo and Giovanna, Snooki spits about stretch marks, saggy nipples and breastfeeding. 

“I used to be so wild / I was the life of the party,” Polizzi raps (?), referring to her days of smushing on the shore. “Now I’m all grown up / So instead they call me Mommy.”

The rest of the “Jersey Shore” crew, of course, gets a shoutout, as well as Mr. Snooki, Jionni LaValle, whom she married in 2014

“Late nights getting reckless with J Woww Sammy and Ronnie/ All these dudes were hopeless but then I met Jionni,” she sings. “I’m a mommy with attitude / No time for a hater cause they too rude.”

OH MY GOD IT’S STUCK IN OUR HEADS. 

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U.S. Theory On Democratic Party Breach: Hackers Meant To Leave Russia's Mark

Some U.S. intelligence officials suspect that Russian hackers who broke into Democratic Party computers may have deliberately left digital fingerprints to show Moscow is a “cyberpower” that Washington should respect.

Three officials, all speaking on condition of anonymity, said the breaches of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) were less sophisticated than other cyber intrusions that have been traced to Russian intelligence agencies or criminals.

For example, said one official, the hackers used some Cyrillic characters, worked during Russian government business hours but not on Russian religious or political holidays.”Either these guys were incredibly sloppy, in which case it’s not clear that they could have gotten as far as they did without being detected, or they wanted us to know they were Russian,” said the official.

Private sector cyber security experts agreed that the evidence clearly points to Russian hackers but dismissed the idea that they intentionally left evidence of their identities.

These experts – who said they have examined the breach in detail – said the Cyrillic characters were buried in metadata and in an error message. Other giveaways, such as a tainted Internet protocol address, also were difficult to find.

Russian hacking campaigns have traditionally been harder to track than China’s but not impossible to decipher, private sector experts said. But the Russians have become more aggressive and easier to detect in the past two years, security experts said, especially when they are trying to move quickly.

False flags have grown more common, but the government and private experts do not believe that is involved in the DNC case.

The two groups of hackers involved are adept at concealing their intrusions, said Laura Galante, head of global threat intelligence at FireEye, whose Mandiant subsidiary conducted forensic analysis of the attack and corroborated the findings of another cyber company, CrowdStrike.

Russian officials have dismissed the allegations of Moscow’s involvement as absurd. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in his only response to reporters, said: “I don’t want to use four-letter words.”

EMBARRASSING EMAILS

While private cyber experts and the government were aware of the political party’s hacking months ago, embarrassing emails were leaked last weekend by the WikiLeaks anti-secrecy group just as the Democratic Party prepared to anoint Hillary Clinton as its presidential candidate for the Nov. 8 election.

DNC chairwoman, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, resigned after the leaked emails showed party leaders favoring Clinton over her rival in the campaign for the nomination, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont. The committee is supposed to be neutral.

The U.S. intelligence officials conceded that they had based their views on deductive reasoning and not conclusive evidence, but suggested Russia’s aim probably was much broader than simply undermining Clinton’s campaign.

They said the hack fit a pattern of Russian President Vladimir Putin pushing back on what he sees as the United States and its European allies trying to weaken Russia.

“Call it the cyber equivalent of buzzing NATO ships and planes using fighters with Russian flags on their tails,” said one official.

Two sources familiar with Democratic Party investigations into the hacking said the private email accounts of Democratic Party officials were targeted as well as servers.

They said that the FBI had advised the DNC that it was looking into the hacking of the individual officials’ private accounts. They also said the FBI also requested additional information identifying the personal email accounts of certain party officials.

The DNC hired CrowdStrike to investigate the hack. It spent about six weeks, from late April to about June 11 or 12, monitoring the systems and watching while the hackers – who they believed were Russian – operated inside the systems, one of the sources said.

What actions, if any, the Obama administration will take are unclear and could depend on what diplomatic considerations may ultimately be involved, a former White House cyber security official said.

In past cases, administration officials have decided to publicly blame North Korea and indict members of China’s military for hacking because the administration decided that the net benefit of public shaming – and increased awareness brought to cyber security – outweighed potential risks, the former official said.

But “the Russia calculation is far more difficult and precarious,” the former official said. “Russia is a much more aggressive, capable foreign actor both in the traditional military sense and in the cyber realm” and that made public attribution or covert retaliation much less likely.

The former official, and a source familiar with the Democratic Party investigations, said that they also were unaware of any U.S. intelligence clearly demonstrating that WikiLeaks had received the hacked materials directly from Russians or that WikiLeaks’ release of the materials was in any way directed by Russians.

(Reporting By John Walcott, Joseph Menn and Mark Hosenball; Additional reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by David Rohde and Grant McCool)

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Upgrade Your Home to LED Lighting All At Once With These Discounted 16-Packs

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This Is the Guy Who Sang the Original Pokémon Theme Song

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Major Rumors About Rogue One and Suicide Squad, Denied

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Apollo Astronauts Are More Likely to Die of Heart Problems

Jim Irwin, Apollo 15. Donn Eisele, Apollo 7. Ronald Evans, Apollo 17. Wally Schirra, Apollo 7. Neil Armstrong, Apollo 11. These are all Apollo astronauts who died of heart attacks or related complications. All told, 43 percent of deceased astronauts from the Apollo missions died from cardiovascular problems, according to a new study published today in Nature’s Scientific Reports.

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