Apple Poaches Executives Behind Breaking Bad For Original Programming


Apple’s original video content ambitions are no secret. The company’s first original series, Planet of the Apps, aired its first episode last week. Apple has also bought the Carpool Karaoke segment that initially appeared on James Corden’s show. The company has now announced that two Sony Pictures executives have joined the company to lead its original programming efforts.

Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, described by Apple as “two of television’s most creative and successful executives,” have joined the Cupertino company in newly created positions that have not been named. They will be tasked with leading video programming worldwide and will report directly to Eddy Cue.

Both have served as presidents at Sony Pictures Television since 2005 and have been responsible for some of the most popular series of the past decade, including but not limited to Breaking Bad and its Better Call Saul spinoff.

Apple’s senior vice president of internet software and services Eddy Cue said about the new executives that “We have exciting plans in store for customers and can’t wait for them to bring their expertise to Apple — there is much more to come.”

Apple is certainly going to be ramping up its original content productions in the months to come. The company has already shown its interest in this field and given that it has been acquiring talent for precisely this purpose, it goes to show that Apple is serious about competing in this space.

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Don’t hold your breath for Nintendo Switch game cloud-saves

Nintendo’s Switch may be plenty of fun in your hands, but owners are rightly concerned that should they break or lose the console, all their achievements will be lost. Though Switch games-in-progress can be saved, as you’d expect, so far Nintendo hasn’t provided a way to back those up off-system. That means, if you’re unlucky with your handheld, everything you’ve … Continue reading

Trump Lawyer Sows Confusion About Whether The President Is Under Investigation

WASHINGTON ― Jay Sekulow, a member of President Donald Trump’s legal team, has had a tough news day.  

During an appearance on Fox News Sunday, Sekulow said the president has not been directly notified that he is under investigation before seeming to indicate that Trump is a target of a probe stemming from Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election.

“Here’s the constitutional threshold question,” Sekulow said to host Chris Wallace, referring to Trump’s firing of then-FBI Director James Comey in early May. “The president takes action based on numerous events, including recommendations from his attorney general and the deputy attorney general’s office. He takes the action that they also recommended and now he’s being investigated by the Department of Justice.”

“He’s being investigated for taking the action that the attorney general and deputy attorney general recommended him to take by the agency who recommended the termination,” Sekulow said. “So that’s the constitutional threshold question here.”

When Wallace noted that he had said the president is being investigated by the Justice Department, Sekulow quickly backtracked.

“He’s not being investigated!” he exclaimed. “Let me be crystal clear so you completely understand. We have not received nor are we aware of any investigation into the president of the United States.

“You just said it two times he’s being investigated,” Wallace responded.

“No. I just gave you the legal theory of how the Constitution works.”

When Wallace said it seemed Sekulow didn’t know whether Trump is under investigation, the lawyer responded:  “You’re right, Chris, I can’t read the mind” of Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

“Okay, well good, we’re in agreement,” Wallace said. “You don’t know whether he’s under investigation or not.”

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During an appearance on NBC “Meet the Press,” Sekulow said plainly that Trump was not under investigation, directly contradicting a tweet from the president last week.  

“The president is not under investigation” by Mueller, Sekulow told moderator Chuck Todd. “The tweet from the president was in response to the five anonymous sources that were purportedly leaking information to The Washington Post about a potential investigation of the president. But the president, as James Comey said in his testimony [to a Senate committee earlier this month] and as we know as of today, the president has not been and is not under investigation.”

When Todd pressed, asking if people are “not to take [Trump] at his word,” Sekulow maintained that the president was responding to the Washington Post story reporting that he was being investigated for obstruction of justice by Mueller as part of the Russia probe.

“The Washington Post issued a story that had five anonymous sources, which they never identified what agencies those sources originated out of. The response from the president, using social media, was about that story,” he said. “But let me be very clear here, as it has been since the beginning, the president is not and has not been under investigation for obstruction.”

Todd also pressed Sekulow on what seemed to be a reference to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein in Trump’s tweet.

“The president himself said he was going to fire the FBI director regardless of whatever the deputy attorney general or the attorney general said. So I’m confused there,” Todd said. “Who made the recommendation to fire James Comey? Was it the president’s decision or was it the recommendation of the deputy attorney general?”

Sekulow responded that the president made the final decision on Comey’s firing, but it was “a collaborative and … a very thorough process” with Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Rosenstein.

“When he met with his attorney general, when he met with his deputy attorney general, and reviewed their recommendations of what they thought the appropriate course of action should be, both were convinced, with as I said, a long and very persuasive document, that James Comey should be removed,” Sekulow said.

In an interview with MSNBC host Lester Holt last month, Trump said he had already decided he would fire Comey before hearing any recommendations from Justice Department officials.

Sekulow also appeared on CNN’s State of the Union, where he also said Trump wasn’t under investigation. Host Jake Tapper pressed him on contradicting Trump’s tweet, noting that people consider those to be official statements.

“But you’re his attorney, and you’re saying the president, when he said that, was not accurate?” Tapper asked.

“It was 141 characters. There’s a limitation on Twitter ― as we all know,” Sekulow said, appearing flustered. “And the president  [has] a very effective utilization of social media.”

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Another Noose Found Near D.C. Museums, Police Say

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A noose was discovered hanging from a lamp post outside the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., marking the third such incident on the National Mall in recent weeks.

The noose was found Saturday around 3 p.m., U.S. Park Police Sgt. Anna Rose told HuffPost. Authorities are continuing to investigate how the object got there.

Two other nooses were discovered near museums on the National Mall last month. On May 31, tourists visiting the National Museum of African American History and Culture found one lying on the floor while walking through an exhibit on segregation. Less than a week earlier, a security guard found a noose hanging from a tree at Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.

The noose is widely regarded as a hate symbol, stemming from the Jim Crow era of mob lynching. According to the Anti-Defamation League, “the hangman’s noose has come to be one of the most powerful visual symbols directed against African-Americans, comparable in the emotions that it evokes to that of the swastika for Jews.”

A spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Police Department said there have been several reports of nooses around the nation’s capital in the last couple months.

Another noose was discovered at a construction site in southeast D.C. earlier this month. Students found bananas hanging in nooses on American University’s campus in early May and a noose was discovered in a fraternity house at the University of Maryland in April.

“[The MPD] has reached out to offer support to the various establishments where these offenses have occurred,” according to a statement released by the MPD. “The department will not tolerate illegal behaviors in our city. We encourage anyone with information to contact us at 202-727-9099.”

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After Math: Reach out and touch someone

It’s been a telling week for communications. Chinese scientists bounced quantum entangled photons into space and back, McDonald’s recruited new hires through Snapchat, and it would appear that North Korea has had its fingers in everybody’s cyber-pies…

Samsung’s exquisite The Frame TV is available today: Here’s the price

Of all the TVs in Samsung’s flagship QLED line-up for 2017, one model stands out head and shoulders above the rest. The Frame might have a strange name, but its combination of wafer-thin QLED display technology and picture-frame styling make for a TV that most of the time doesn’t look like a TV. Indeed, the idea is that you can … Continue reading

Dell’s new laser projector offers a 100-inch 4K HDR display

If you dream of owning an 80-inch-plus 4K television but cry out at the idea of spending $10,000 and up, Dell has a new laser projector that might be the perfect solution. Dubbed the Dell Advanced 4K Laser Projector, the device offers a whopping 100-inch 4K display with support for HDR. Add in the fact that it can be placed … Continue reading

Jenner On GOP Baseball Shooting: 'Liberals Can't Even Shoot Straight'

A crowd at the convention of the College Republican National Committee erupted in laughter and applause when featured speaker Caitlyn Jenner joked Friday about the attack on a group of GOP lawmakers, saying: “Liberals can’t even shoot straight.”

The comment was captured on videotape posted by a College Republican group in Virginia on its Facebook page.  Jenner made the disturbing joke when she was asked by a moderator at the Washington dinner about the shooting Wednesday in Virginia at a baseball practice that critically wounded House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) and injured several others.

Scalise’s condition has since been upgraded to serious. Suspect James Hodgkinson was fatally shot by police. Hodgkinson had a violent history, railed about Republicans and was a supporter of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ bid for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination.

“First of all, nobody deserves what happened out there,” Jenner, a supporter of President Donald Trump, said when asked about the shooting. “There’s no justification’’ for such an attack,’’ she added. There are crazy people in the world. … We have to minimize that type of stuff.”

“As far as the people that were injured, it’s an absolute shame,’’ she continued. “You just want them to recover. Fortunately, the guy was a really bad shot. Liberals can’t even shoot straight.”

Jenner was asked the question by a moderator who identified himself as a “gay conservative” who said he was “embarrassed” by coverage of the shooting that in some cases noted that Scalise has an “anti-gay” legislative record. The moderator said it was “not the time or place” for such characterizations.

There were only a few posted comments to the video on the Virginia group’s Facebook page. One praised the party for being more “inclusive” by inviting Jenner to speak. Another said Jenner’s comments “seem counterproductive.” One called them disgusting.

Jenner is an unusual champion for Trump and his supporters, given the president’s history of supporting North Carolina’s anti-trans HB2 and his rescinding of President Obama’s trans student directive earlier this year. The party also passed an anti-gay and trans platform at its convention last year.

Jenner’s comments spurred criticism on Twitter.

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Gay Rapper Cazwell Wants To 'Make America Femme Again'

Cazwell is back with a new summer anthem to get you loose ― or at least get your wrists loose. 

“Loose Wrists,” the first single to be released from the gay rapper’s new Snow Cone label, makes a number of powerful statements tied to America’s current political climate under President Trump. It also showcases a movement to embrace and empower gay men who identify as femme, which is gaining traction and visibility in the LGBTQ community.

Oh, and Cazwell and his backup dancers are all decked out in the lace shorts that recently went viral

“We have a president that wants to take us off of the census and a Vice President that believes shock therapy will cure gayness,” Cazwell said in a press release sent to HuffPost. “At the end of last year, I vowed to be as gay as possible with my music and videos. We have to be more visible than ever and I hope I inspire that.”

In the past, Cazwell has made viral waves on the internet with hits like “Ice Cream Truck” and “No Selfie Control.” Check out the video for “Loose Wrists” above.

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Former Pro Tennis Player And Gay Dad Sounds Off On Margaret Court's Homophobia

This article originally appeared on Outsports

Brian Vahaly has two main points to get across to Margaret Court: When it comes to same-sex parents, she doesn’t know what she is talking about and her words hurt. 

“I think if she met little Parker and Bennett and actually came into our home, she would understand why her words were so hurtful to so many people,” Vahaly, a former men’s tennis Top 100 player, told Outsports about the twin boys he and his husband, Bill Jones, are raising. Parker and Bennett Jones Vahaly turn 1 on Wednesday.

Vahaly, 37, who retired from the sport 10 years ago and was ranked as high as No. 64 on the tour, was reacting to the anti-LGBT comments made numerous times by the Australian Court, 74, a tennis legend who won 24 titles.

In addition to opposing same-sex marriage, Court is also critical of same-sex parents, saying a child raised without a male and female parent would be “deprived.”

In addressing the birth of a child to tennis player Casey Dellacqua and her female partner, Court wrote in a letter to a newspaper:

“If we continue to dismantle the traditional family unit as old fashioned, archaic and no longer even necessary, we will create a fatherless generation.

“Indeed, the lines are becoming increasingly blurred as the march towards such partnerships, even gay marriage, is fueled by minority voices rising in opposition to respected Christian beliefs which many cultures believe.

“I simply want to champion the rights of the family over the rights of the individual to engineer social norms into their relationships.

“I really want to see a society where traditional family values are still celebrated and every child has the best possible start in life.”

Court’s comments about same-sex marriage — along with ones that had her equating LGBT people to practicing mind control tricks used by Hitler, communism and the devil — have stirred controversy among current and retired players, with many urging Tennis Australia to rename Margaret Court Arena, site of the Australian Open.

Vahaly first publicly discussed being gay a month ago on a podcast with Sports Illustrated senior writer and tennis expert Jon Wertheim. After he saw my write-up of Court’s comments, Vahaly agreed to discuss her remarks in the context of being a dad. “It is my background as a father that makes the Court article so troubling,” he said.

Vahaly is a venture capitalist, while Jones is a real estate agent. They live with Parker and Bennett in Annapolis, Maryland.

Q: Margaret Court is against same-sex marriage, and says, “I have nothing against gay people but a child needs a mother and a father and the first two chapters of the Bible are all about family.” What would you like to say to Court about her views both as a dad and a gay man?

Vahaly: I would encourage Margaret to actually spend time with gay people who have families. Gay people do not just wake up with children. It’s a serious, intense, and exhausting experience that takes years and a lot money.

If there is one thing you must know — is that every child in the family of a gay couple is so incredibly loved and wanted. These kids have two parents who love them and are crazy about them.

Her insinuation about my little boys not being OK because they do not have a mother — well, I would ask her to share the data to support that claim.

In my experience, I have often found that most people who discriminate and stereotype people or families tend to lack first-hand knowledge. I think if she met little Parker and Bennett and actually came into our home, she would understand why her words were so hurtful to so many people.

Q: Do you think Margaret Court Arena needs to be renamed and if so, why?

Vahaly: I would be incredibly moved to see Tennis Australia take a stance on behalf of the gay and lesbian tennis players and remove Margaret’s name from the arena.

I would encourage them to think through the message they are sending if they allow this discrimination to stand. I will say that I have tremendous respect for what Margaret Court accomplished on the tennis court. But it’s a slap in the face to countless tennis players and tennis greats — Billie Jean King, Martina Navratilova, to name a few — who are expected to play on a court and be told their lives are equated to what Hitler did to children in Germany. It simply cannot be tolerated.

Q: Assume for the moment you were able to still be playing pro tennis — would you have an issue playing in an arena named for Margaret Court?

Vahaly: I played against Andre Agassi in the 2003 Australian Open in Margaret Court Arena. If I were still competing, I would have a difficult time playing on that court.

Q: Are you encouraged by current players speaking out about Court?

Vahaly: Seeing that the current No. 1 player in the world, Andy Murray, is speaking on behalf of gay and lesbian players is incredibly inspiring to watch. He has no reason to step into this discussion, but he is doing it because he knows it’s the right thing to do. Having the support of the No. 1 player speaks volumes.

Q: Had you always wanted children and was there a moment after realizing you were gay that you felt that being a dad was not possible and how did you cope with that?

Vahaly: Once I had come to terms with my sexuality in my late 20s, I did take the time to mourn that my life would likely be one without marriage or kids. Similar to sports, things do not always go your way and while its OK to be upset about it, at some point, you just have to move forward. I believe there is tremendous meaning to be had in a life, with or without children.

Q: How did you and your husband, Bill, come to the decision to have children?

Vahaly: Bill and I talked about having kids very early in our relationship. For Bill, it was non-negotiable and so it was always on the table. We tended to talk more about kids than we did about marriage, and began the long two-year surrogacy process earlier in our relationship. When we got married in Georgia in 2015, we found out on our wedding night that our surrogate was pregnant.

Q: How has your life changed since having children?

Vahaly: I believe the best way to say it is — our life exploded after having children. We relied on so much help from our family and friends, and we feel so fortunate to have so many wonderful people who love these little boys.

We certainly do not travel as much as we once did and certainly never get as much sleep, but it’s been so much fun. I will tell you having twins for the first four months can about drive you insane. But we got through it — and now it has been an absolute blast.

Q: What has been the most unexpected thing you discovered about being dad from the mundane to the meaningful?

Vahaly: These boys just bring a different meaning and sense of purpose to our lives. I finally feel I have a sense of purpose that I have not felt since my tennis playing days. You live for the moments where they rest their heads on your shoulder. You quickly learn that you don’t know as much as you think you do.

You realize someday that you will actually die — and these boys and this family will be the legacy that matters most.

I will say that having little boys provides a new sense of perspective for me, which even changed the way I even experienced my marriage. He was no longer a chosen partner and husband — he is now my family.

Brian Vahaly can be reached via email: Brianv22@gmail.com

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Transgender Muay Thai fighter makes history

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Did Christian soccer player Jaelene Hinkle skip U.S. women’s team trip because they wore pride jerseys?

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