Start Your Eneloop Collection With Four AAs and a Charger For $16

If you want to start collecting Eneloop batteries (and you should), the best place to start is the 4-pack of AAs with a charger, and you can get it for just $16 right now, the best price we’ve seen since January.

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Once You Hear David Hasselhoff Rap About Guardians of the Galaxy Your Life Will Never Be the Same

Yesterday, we got the song list for the Awesome Mix Vol. 2. Today, the Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 soundtrack has become available for purchase, but nothing you may have heard about it has prepared you for the original composition “Guardians Inferno,” which features David Hasselhoff. Rapping. About Star-Lord.

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This Picture of Earth From Within Saturn's Rings Will Make You Emotional

Sometimes, the majesty of the final frontier—a cold, unfeeling space—has the power to make our eyes misty. The images from NASA’s Cassini mission have often been able to do this, and since the spacecraft is dying soon, it makes the experience all the more emotional. Before it goes out in a blaze of glory, Cassini has…

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Prepare for Three Major Information Security Exams and Get Certified

Across all industries, information security professionals are in high demand. Get certified to join this lucrative field with the Information Security Certification Training Bundle, now on sale for only $41 (USD).

Businesses need information security professionals to help them audit their security and deliver feasible, effective solutions. With this boot camp, you’ll learn how to perform penetration tests, assess data security, and employ risk management techniques legally and ethically. When it’s time to take your certification exams, you’ll be ready. This bundle prepares you comprehensively for three globally recognized information security exams, CISA, CISM, and CISSP.

Start a lucrative career in an in-demand field right away. Get the Information Security Certification Training Bundle for just $41 in the Technabob Shop.

This Kraken Piescraper Is the Deadliest Catch

Whoa! Now this is a pie. Release the Kraken!.. into my mouth! When a pie is so awesome and towers over others, you call it a “piescraper.” Jessica Leigh Clark-Bojin of Pies Are Awesome created this awesome Kraken-themed piescraper.

It is an awesome and delicious dessert creation. According to Jessica, she built it up using a series of engineering and baking tricks to enhance structural integrity, making it stable. You can watch her build it in the video below:

It is a marvel of pie engineering in fact and a work of art. Architectural pies are the best. I have to try one soon.

Galaxy S8 update will hopefully fix red tinted displays

The Galaxy S8 goes into wide release around the world today, and while many reviews have been very positive, there’s still at least one early issue to look out for. Korea has had the phone since the beginning of the week, and some consumers in that region are reporting a reddish tint to their phone’s display. At first, Samsung tried … Continue reading

How Anne Hathaway Fell In Love With James Corden In Five Minutes: The Musical

James Corden is just a talk show host, standing in front of Anne Hathaway, asking her to perform a five-minute rom-com musical in one take. 

The “Late Late Show” played host to yet another musical extravaganza on Thursday night when the “Colossal” actress stopped by to sing famous songs from our favorite love stories like “She’s All That” and “Bridget Jones’ Diary.”

Hathaway and Corden put their talent and boatload of chemistry to good use and sang 10 songs together in nine different sets, never breaking character once nor flubbing any lines.

First comes an elevator meet-cute (and make out), then comes a romantic walk in a park, followed by a fight over a text message, a drunken rendition of “All By Myself” and finally an airport reconciliation. 

Watch the full clip above and pray these two star in a musical together soon. 

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Hillary Clinton Hits Trump Administration For Approach To LGBTQ Issues

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Former secretary of state and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton cast doubt on the willingness of President Donald Trump’s administration to help LGBTQ Americans.

While giving a speech Thursday evening at a dinner for an LGBTQ community organization in New York, Clinton argued any progress made on LGBTQ issues “may not be as secure as we once expected.” She called out Trump’s administration for appointing outspoken opponents of LGBTQ rights to positions of power.

“I think we have to face the fact that we may not ever be able to count on this administration to lead on LGBT issues,” Clinton said.

Clinton also spoke about the “terrifying accounts” of alleged abuse of gay men in Chechnya and called on the U.S. government to “demand an end to the persecution of innocent people across the world.”

The New York Times editorial board criticized Trump’s “record of empty talk” on LGBTQ rights earlier this week. During her presidential campaign, Clinton received the endorsements of several LGBTQ rights groups, including the Human Rights Campaign.

Watch a clip of Clinton’s remarks above.

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You Can Soon Buy Tickets To The 'Mean Girls' Musical, You Pathetic Loser

Good news, people who were in high school in 2004 and still feel like they are in high school in 2017.

“Mean Girls,” Tina Fey’s classic comedy exploring the many creative ways young women torture one another to rise up on the food chain of popularity, is headed to Broadway.

But first, it’s stopping in D.C.

What is the 411? Tickets to #MeanGirlsDC go on sale on FRIDAY, APRIL 28! Sign up and we’ll remind you. Link in bio.

A post shared by Mean Girls Broadway (@meangirlsbway) on Apr 18, 2017 at 9:37am PDT

On April 28, tickets go on sale for the world premiere of the highly anticipated musical adaptation, which follows fresh blood Cady Heron who, after starting at a new school in Illinois, is seemingly adopted by a trio of popular girls called The Plastics. Spoiler alert: they aren’t very nice. 

The Broadway plot description sounds pretty familiar:

After years of living with her zoologist parents in Africa, Cady Heron moves to Illinois and must find where she fits in the social hierarchy. A sweet, naive newbie, Cady quickly attracts the attention of The Plastics, a trio of popular frenemies led by the vicious and calculating Regina George. When Cady devises a plan to end Regina’s reign, she learns that you can’t cross a Queen Bee without getting stung.

Thankfully, Fey herself adapted the “Mean Girls” screenplay for the stage, so it’s probably sticking true to the original. Jeff Richmond, the Emmy-winning composer with TV credits like “30 Rock” and “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” under his belt (who’s also Fey’s husband), wrote the music, with lyrics by Tony Award nominee Nell Benjamin. 

Tony Award winner Casey Nicholaw is directing and choreographing the show. Lorne Michaels is co-producing, because of course he is.

“Mean Girls” will premiere at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 31, and travel to Broadway soon after. Our advice: Dress appropriately.

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Bernie Sanders, Al Franken and Sherrod Brown Quietly Owned Trump On High Drug Prices

WASHINGTON ― The pharmaceutical industry consistently ranks as the most hated sector of the economy. It is also the most profitable. This is not a coincidence: Sick people need medicine to live, and drug companies charge ludicrous prices to extract their margins. This puts Big Pharma in a class by itself, even among deeply unpopular companies. People can’t stand dealing with cable providers, but TV doesn’t keep anyone above ground. At least Walmart has low prices.

Drugs are ridiculously expensive for two reasons, both imposed by the federal government. First, the government grants pharmaceutical firms long-term monopolies on prescription medication. Second, the government bans itself from regulating the prices these monopolists choose to charge ― or even allowing Medicare or Medicaid to negotiate with them.

No other country in the world does business this way, because it is economically inefficient and bad for public health. President Donald Trump spent much of the 2016 campaign saying as much — vowing to stick it to the drug companies if he was elected.

“When it comes time to negotiate the cost of drugs, we are going to negotiate like crazy,” Trump said on the campaign trail. After winning the election, he ratcheted up the rhetoric, telling reporters at a press conference that pharmaceutical companies were “getting away with murder.”

Now Democrats are seizing on Trump’s bombast to burnish their own prescription drug credentials. In just a few months, a handful of progressive Senate Democrats have effectively reversed the friendliness with Big Pharma that former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama had fostered for decades. Two of the usual suspects are leading the charge ― longtime pharma critics Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) ― along with a relative newcomer to power politics, Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.).

In December, Franken and Brown rounded up 18 other Democratic Senators to sign a letter to Trump that vowed to help him pass measures to lower drug prices. They were ready to support legislation allowing Medicare to negotiate with Big Pharma, cap price increases and speed up the entrance of generic drugs to the market.

Franken and Brown went further last month, when they introduced legislation that combines just about every policy idea drug lobbyists hate. The bill includes old standbys like Medicare negotiations and permitting imports of safe prescription drugs from Canada (where prices are lower, because Canada regulates them). But it also features more radical moves, including expanded federal funding for clinical trials, which would prevent private companies from monopolizing taxpayer-funded research. Typically, the government pays for early drug research, with pharmaceutical firms supporting the final steps in the process.

As Democrats stand up to Big Pharma, Trump is backing down.

The top prescription drug lobbying organization, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, did not respond to a request to comment for this article.

Nobody on Capitol Hill expects the Franken-Brown bill to become law. Democrats are in the minority in both chambers of Congress, and even if they weren’t, legislation specifically targeting an entrenched special interest is usually impossible to pass on its own. But the legislation’s 14 cosponsors demonstrate a shift in party thinking. The list includes Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), a moderate with a checkered record on corporate accountability issues who is rumored to be considering a 2020 presidential bid. It also includes freshmen Sens. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) and Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and newbies rarely poke potential corporate donors in the eye just to make a statement.

Franken and Brown’s offices say they hope the bill serves as a “menu” of options for Trump should he decide to actually do something about high drug prices. If the president decides to go after Big Pharma, he could demand a provision or two from the Democratic legislation and truthfully claim to have bipartisan support for the move.

Leaders in both parties have been doing favors for Big Pharma for decades. The law prohibiting Medicare from negotiating drug prices was passed by a GOP-controlled Congress and signed by then-President George W. Bush. Bill Clinton tried to use trade policy to help drug companies gouge AIDS and HIV patients in South Africa. Obama pursued longer and stronger drug monopolies through the Trans-Pacific Partnership, backtracked on campaign promises to allow imports of safe prescription drugs from Canada and sicced the State Department on India’s generic drug industry in an effort to elevate prices abroad. In January, 13 Democrats including Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), the top Democrat on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, sided with Big Pharma and 39 Republicans to knock down a bill to allow Canadian prescription drug imports.

Progressive Democrats who were unhappy with Obama’s drug platform are using the party’s minority status to reshape its agenda. But as they stand up to Big Pharma, Trump is backing down.

After excoriating drug companies in early January, Trump held a meeting with top executives. He left parroting drug lobbyist talking points: tough negotiations with Big Pharma had transmuted into nefarious government “price-fixing.” He’s been quiet about drug prices in the weeks since, ignoring them during the GOP’s disastrous internal negotiations over an Obamacare replacement.

But a full flip-flop from Trump would be a political boon for progressive Democrats. Brown and other co-sponsors including Gillibrand and Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) are all up for re-election in 2018, with Brown and Baldwin representing states Trump carried in 2016. If Trump doesn’t deliver on drug prices, Democrats will have a simple message: Return us to power and we will.

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