We’re looking for outstanding social media pros working in Hollywood. Here’s how to nominate a star candidate.

Business Insider 

Insider is putting together a list of Hollywood’s standout social media professionals.
We want your nominations for the social media pros helping to shape the entertainment industry. 
Please submit your noms through this Google Form by Tuesday, January 10.

Film and TV audiences are more fragmented than ever, which makes reaching them more difficult than ever. Where billboards and TV commercials were once the key tools for spreading the word about a new show or movie, Hollywood studios and networks now have to cut through the noise and find viewers where they are — which increasingly is on TikTok, Instagram, Twitter, Snap, Facebook, and other social media platforms.

Major entertainment conglomerates have their own in-house teams of social media experts and audience engagement pros who work to boost awareness of upcoming projects and shape a studio’s, network’s, or brand’s voice online. Even titans like Marvel and Lucasfilm, which boast legions of devotees, work to continually engage with younger generations of viewers to create new Avengers and Star Wars fans. 

Independent production shops and other smaller companies in Hollywood also work to amplify their missions, storytelling, and projects via social media — regardless of the organization’s size, we want to hear about the innovative pros in filmed entertainment who are making the most of social platforms by crafting smart campaigns, effectively jumping on the latest trends, and creating attention-grabbing memes.

Insider is compiling a list of standout social media professionals working at companies that create, develop, distribute, and promote filmed entertainment. Please submit your nominations through this Google Form (also embedded below) by Tuesday, January 10. 

Loading…

 

Read the original article on Business Insider

Read More 

Nevada parents sue school district over daughter’s ‘pornographic’ assignment

Just In | The Hill 

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — Two Las Vegas-area parents are suing the Clark County School District over an assignment they say their high school-aged daughter was required to read: an expletive-laced monologue later deemed too obscene to read publicly at a school board meeting, the lawsuit alleges.

Candra Evans and Terrell Evans filed the lawsuit against the district, Superintendent Dr. Jesus Jara, the teacher and others over allegations of “unlawful grooming and abuse of a minor” involving the “pornographic material.”


Is cardiac arrest the same as a heart attack?

The 15 year-old Las Vegas Academy of the Arts student’s name is not included in the lawsuit. Candra Evans, however, publicly identified herself as the mother of the student during a May school board meeting when she brought her concerns during public comment.

In March, the teacher assigned the 15-year-old’s class an assignment where each student would write a monologue and then perform another student’s writing, the lawsuit said. The monologue assigned to the teenager contained “contained explicit, obscene and sexually violent material,” the lawsuit said. “[The teacher] helped the other student edit their obscenely violent pornographic monologue knowing that it would then be provided to another student to read, memorize and perform in front of the class,” the lawsuit claims.

The final version of the monologue described a woman telling her ex-boyfriend that she was a lesbian, the lawsuit said. According to the suit, the monologue read as follows:

“I don’t love you. It’s not you, it’s just [looks down] your [expletive]. I don’t like your [expletive] or any [expletive], in that case. I cheated Joe. We were long distance and I’m in college and me and this girl, my roommate, started having some drinks and you know, I thought it was a one-time thing but then we started going out for coffee, and started sleeping in the same bed. I never thought it would get this far but God, it was like fireworks, and made me realize that with you it was always like a pencil sharpener that keeps getting jammed. I’ve tried to look at it from all different perspectives, but the truth is, I’m a [expletive] lesbian. I’ll never love you or any man, or any [expletive] [expletive]. I hope you find a nice straight girl because that’s not me, and I’m tired of pretending that it is.”

Candra Evans became aware of the assignment in April 2022, the lawsuit said. She then went to the school and spoke with an administrator about her concerns. The administrator met with both Candra Evans and Terrell Evans about the assignment.


VIDEO: 4 rescued after Telsa plunges off California cliff

“[The administrator] empathized with them that he would be very upset if he found out that assignment had been given to his daughter,” the lawsuit said. “He told them that plaintiffs were handling the issue better than he would and that it would not be swept under the rug. He promised he would make sure that it never happened again. Further, he agreed that [the teacher] should have stopped [the teenager] as soon as she heard the first line of the monologue.”

The parents agreed to allow the administrator to speak to their daughter about the assignment only if a female administrator were present, the lawsuit said. The administrator, however, met with the student alone, the lawsuit claims.

After not hearing about what happened in the meeting between her daughter and the administrator, Candara Evans requested another meeting with additional staff, including the school counselor, the lawsuit said.

During the meeting, several staff “defended the obscene monologue and then blamed [the student] for reading it, stating that she could have said ‘no,’ but she didn’t,” the lawsuit said. Some staff then “backtracked and admitted that the assignment was not appropriate for the classroom,” the lawsuit said.

In May 2022, the parents contacted the regional superintendent about the assignment. A school associate later agreed to investigate it, the lawsuit said. Candra Evans also asked that “no one at [the school] speak with [her daughter] about the matter unless she was present and [the school associate] said he would honor the request.”

A few days later, the parents inquired with someone at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department. That person said a report would need to be filed with Clark County School District Police. The parents allege a report was taken, but later falsified, according to the lawsuit.


Fans raise millions for Damar Hamlin’s toy drive fundraiser after collapse

Candra Evans then spoke at the CCSD Board of Trustees meeting on May 12.

“I am going to read you an assignment given to my 15-year-old daughter at a local high school,” Candra Evans said to the board. “This will be horrifying for me to read to you but that will give you perspective on how she must have felt when her teacher required her to memorize this and to act it out in front of her entire class.”

While reading the monologue, the microphone went silent, and she was asked to stop speaking.

“That you for your comment,” Trustee Evelyn Garcia Morales, who was leading the meeting, said. “Forgive me, we are not using profanity. This is a public meeting; I ask for decorum.”

“If you don’t want me to read it to you — what was it like for my 15-year-old daughter to have to memorize pornographic material?” Candra Evans said.

Jara then interjected, saying his administration was already addressing the assignment. A video of the meeting bleeps out several words in Candra Evans’ statement and blurs her mouth.

An unnamed CCSD trustee is alleged to have called the public comments a “publicity stunt,” claiming a parent group coached Candra Evans through the public comment. Candra Evans denies the claim in the lawsuit, documents said.


Mega Millions prize climbs to $785 million, is 6th largest in US history

The next day, Candra Evans learned her daughter had met alone with a school administrator about the assignment, the lawsuit said. The lawsuit claims the student “was falsely imprisoned because “she was not able to leave” the meeting.

The lawsuit, filed in state district court, alleges several violations, including of the student’s First Amendment rights, negligence and the infliction of emotional distress, the lawsuit claims. It asks for damages exceeding $50,000.

CCSD officials tweeted in May that they were investigating the circumstances surrounding the class assignment. CCSD officials do not comment on ongoing litigation. Lawyers for the district have asked a judge to remove the lawyer from state court and move it to the federal docket.

“While we are not allowed to engage in back-and-forth dialogue, we would like to get your concerns addressed,” a board member said in the meeting.

Nexstar’s KLAS asked the attorney for Candra Evans and Terrell Evans for comment.

​News Read More 

[World] Vietnamese boy trapped in pillar has ‘limited’ hope for survival

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Rescuers are using a 19-metre-long metal pipe to loosen and remove mud around the pillar

There is “limited” hope over rescuing a 10-year-old Vietnamese boy who has been trapped in a concrete pillar for three days, rescuers say.

Thai Ly Hao Nam fell into the 25cm (12-inch) wide shaft of the pillar while looking for scrap metal in southern Vietnam on New Year’s Eve.

Soldiers and engineering experts have been removing mud and water in an attempt to bring the pillar up.

The boy is likely to be badly injured if he does survive, one official said.

“Hope for him to be alive is limited,” said Doan Tan Buu, a local official in Dong Thap province where the accident happened.

Oxygen has been pumped into the 35m-deep support pillar to help the boy breathe.

The 10-year-old was heard crying for help after he fell into the pillar, but rescuers said they received no response from him on Monday as they lowered a camera down to try to locate where he was.

Around 100 soldiers and professional equipment have been deployed at the site since Saturday.

The area has also been sealed off from the public while the rescue effort takes place.

Image source, AFP

Image caption,

Rescuers have been trying to free the boy at the bridge construction site for three days

Vietnamese media outlet VnExpress shared a graphic to show how rescuers were using a 19-metre-long metal pipe to try to remove mud from around the pillar and lift it out.

It comes after two days of rescue efforts using cranes and excavators were unsuccessful.

Mr Buu said: “We had tried our best to rescue the boy using on-the-spot measures and equipment.

“We later had to ask for help from national levels and people with [more] expertise.”

Officials added they did not know how the boy had managed to get trapped.

 

Read More 

5 ways the book ‘Never Split the Difference’ made me go from a shy, passive-aggressive entrepreneur to a confident negotiator

Business Insider 

When you buy through our links, Insider may earn an affiliate commission. Learn more.

As a solopreneur for the past 7 years, I realized one of my biggest weaknesses is negotiating. 
I read the book “Never Split the Difference” which felt like a detailed negotiation course.
My biggest takeaways were to ask calibrated questions and let the other party speak first.

For the past seven years, I’ve worked for myself as a solopreneur. A big thing I found missing from my previous full-time job was having annual reviews where my boss would share the strengths and weaknesses of my performance. 

To make up for that, I used the month of December to take inventory of different areas that I could improve on in the new year. One of the most glaring skills I needed to work on was negotiation, since so many deals I closed with clients this year paid me less than I initially proposed. 

To help me become less of a passive-aggressive entrepreneur and more of a confident negotiator, I read the bestselling book “Never Split the Difference” by Chris Voss, a former FBI hostage negotiator (who also has a MasterClass on this topic) and Tahl Raz, an author and journalist.

Chris Voss, the author of “Never Split the Difference,” demonstrating a negotiation technique in his MasterClass.

It empowered me with surprising tools and techniques that I plan to use in all my negotiations going forward. Here are the five that stuck out the most.

“No” is how negotiations start, not end.

Oftentimes, I’m negotiating the price and terms of a service, whether it’s a fee for a speaking engagement or six weeks’ worth of consulting work for a company. I enter those conversations with a pitch of how much money I’d like to receive and hope for an automatic “yes” — which rarely happens.

It was eye-opening to read that the word “no” is the start of a negotiation, not the end of it. So often, when someone declines my first pitch, my heart starts to race, I get defensive, or I just assume the deal is over.

Instead, Voss encouraged negotiators to seek out a “no,” so that they can get more clarity on what parts of the deal the other side isn’t comfortable with, wants to change, or simply doesn’t understand.

When you get a “no,” he suggests following up with questions that help both parties come to a solution. For example, asking “What about this doesn’t work for you?” or “What would you need to make this work?”

That can help you figure out what part of the deal might need to be edited, rearranged, or changed to get to that “yes.”

Pay attention to your tone of voice.

Smiling, especially when you feel like you can get defensive or angry, can help keep negotiations collaborative.

When I’m negotiating the cost of my services with potential clients, my tone of voice can show hints of frustration and even gets louder if the point I’m trying to get across is rejected.

Managing your tone of voice is one of the first things mentioned in the book. It not only sets the stage for how your negotiation can go but can also disarm the other person — especially if they come to the table with a more aggressive approach. 

Voss recommended a simple yet powerful technique for engaging in a conversation where you know your tone might get intense or defensive: Smile. 

Smiling can not only change how your voice sounds but also shows the other person that you’re in a positive frame of mind. When they see that, Voss says they are more likely to collaborate and change how they approach the negotiation terms. 

While he recommends using this easygoing voice as your default one in tough conversations, you can also occasionally use what he calls a “late-night DJ voice” when you want to make a strong point. The use of a calm and slow tone can give you an air of trust.

Try letting the other person start first.

When I hop on a call to negotiate a price for one of my services, I often start off the conversation by sharing a proposal that details all of my requests.

Voss said it’s okay to try an approach called anchoring, where you let the other party share their offer first, in case it’s higher than what you had planned to ask.

This is especially helpful to me in situations where I’m working with a corporate client who might have a big budget — I might not be able to guess how much they are willing to pay for my service.

Voss did warn that when you let the other party share their expectations and pricing first, you could hear a number way lower than what you planned for. In those cases, the negotiation might require additional techniques, like finding a middle ground or even getting the other party to agree to other perks or accommodations. 

Ask carefully calibrated questions.

When I enter negotiations, I find myself so nervous that I end up just rambling and hardly ever pause to ask anything.

Voss recommended asking carefully assessed questions that can make your counterpart feel more in charge, even though you’re the one guiding the conversation. Some examples include:

What about this is important to you?How can I help to make this better for us?How can we solve this problem?How am I supposed to do that?

All of these ask your counterpart for help and get them to start solving a problem to push the negotiation forward — and closer to a solution.

Remember the 7-38-55 rule, which prioritizes body language.

Your body language accounts for about 55% of your message.

While it can often feel like negations are mainly based on words, they surprisingly hold far less weight than I realized. Voss referenced a method created by Albert Mehrabian, a professor of psychology, called the 7-38-55 rule, which states that 7% of a message is verbal communication, 38% comes from the tone of voice, and 55% is delivered through the speaker’s body language and facial expressions. 

Understanding this helped me realize the importance of paying attention to my body language (keeping a good posture and maintaining eye contact) and tone of voice (swapping an aggressive tone for the “radio DJ” one). 

The bottom line

As someone who works for myself, personal development is something I have to seek out to advance in my career. The tools I got from reading “Never Split the Difference” not only felt like I took a detailed online course about negotiation, but helped me visualize and strategize how to approach these skills in 2023.  

Read the original article on Business Insider

Read More 

Sam Bankman-Fried-backed Solana soars after ecosystem sees shiba inu-themed token airdrop

Business Insider 

solana

Solana soared as much as 20% in the past day on news of a Bonk token airdrop. 
After losing nearly all its value in 2022 as Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire collapsed, solana ended a streak of nine consecutive losses. 
The Bonk airdrop is likely being used for Solana-based non-fungible tokens.  

Solana soared on Tuesday after a token airdrop from shiba inu-themed Bonk sparked interest in the cryptocurrency. 

After losing nearly all its value in 2022 as Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire collapsed, solana finally ended a streak of nine consecutive days of losses. 

SOL tokens climbed past $13 on Tuesday and were up 20% in the past 24 hours. By contrast, top cryptocurrencies bitcoin and ethereum were down 0.5% and 0.6%, respectively.

Bonk is airdropping roughly 50% of its tokens currently in circulation. Airdrops are unscheduled distributions of tokens, often for free, to wallets in order to garner interest in a specific crypto. 

Of the Bonk tokens being airdropped, roughly 20% could be used for an ecosystem of 297,000 Solana-based non-fungible tokens and 10% could go to Solana-based artists, according to CoinDesk.

Meanwhile, Bonk has seen roughly $19 million in inflows in the past 24-hours. Bonk debuted on December 25 and currently has a market capitalization nearly $93 million.  

Bankman-Fried once touted Solana as the most underrated cryptocurrency, and his companies held large positions on their books.

But FTX’s bankruptcy filing amid reports that the crypto exchange transferred billions of dollars in client funds to Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund Alameda soured sentiment on Solana in the crypto community.

Last month, CoinDesk reported that two of the Solana blockchain’s top NFT collections, DeGods and Y00ts, will migrate to Ethereum and Polygon, respectively.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Read More 

Germany records highest annual inflation rate in over 70 years

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Germany has recorded its highest annual inflation in more than 70 years, according to preliminary data released Tuesday by the country’s Federal Statistical Office.

Surging energy and food prices due to Russia’s attack on Ukraine saw full-year inflation reach 7.9% in 2022. The last time annual inflation was near that level was in 1951, when it stood at 7.6% as the post-war economic boom began. Annual inflation in 2021 stood at 3.1%.

The preliminary data showed that inflation slowed somewhat in December, to 8.6% compared to the same month in the previous year, as one-off government payments to help consumers pay their heating and gas bills took effect. In October monthly inflation had reached a record 10.4% before dipping to 10% in November.

INFLATION IN GERMANY HITS NEAR 50-YEAR HIGH AMID ENERGY CRISIS

Rising prices reduce consumers’ spending power. Many German unions have successfully campaigned for higher-than-average pay rises in recent months to offset the impact of inflation.

Meanwhile, unemployment figures in Europe’s biggest economy rose slightly in December to 2.45 million, or 5.4%. This was about 0.1 percentage point higher than in November, though such an increase is not unusual at the end of the year as temporary contracts expire.

The full-year average jobless figure for 2022 stood at 2.42 million, almost 200,000 fewer than in 2021.

 

Read More 

 

Chicago boy, 9, fatally shot in own home

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

A nine-year-old boy has been fatally shot inside his home on Chicago’s South Side, police said.

The boy died at Comer Children’s Hospital after being shot multiple times Sunday night, police said.

The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the boy as Jarvis Watts.

CHICAGO BLOODY WEEKEND LEAVES 20 SHOT, INCLUDING 14-YEAR-OLD BOY STRUCK MULTIPLE TIMES

“It appears that he suffered from the gunshot wound while inside the residence,” Chicago Police Commander Sean Joyce said. “There are multiple children and adults in the house. All of the people who were present at the time are currently being interviewed by our detectives.”

An extended family lives inside the home, Joyce said.

VICTIMS OF MICHIGAN NEW YEAR’S PARTY SHOOTING IDENTIFIED BY POLICE

It wasn’t clear how many gunshot wounds the boy suffered or who fired the shots, Joyce said.

It also wasn’t clear whether the shooting was intentional or accidental, but police said it wasn’t self-inflicted.

“It’s too early to tell about negligence involved,” Joyce said.

 

Read More 

 

Mexico prison break: Shootout leaves 7 dead as authorities hunt inmates who escaped near Texas border

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

At least seven people have reportedly been killed in a shootout in Mexico, as authorities are trying to track down dozens of escaped inmates following a violent and deadly uprising at a prison near the Texas border. 

Mexican officials say 17 have been confirmed dead so far in the prison break Sunday in Ciudad Juarez, including 10 guards. They added that the attack appeared to be staged in order to free Ernesto Piñón de la Cruz, the leader of the Mexicles gang, which is linked to the Caborca Cartel. 

As of Tuesday, the escapees have not been captured. 

Unidentified gunman opened fire on Mexico state investigators pursuing the inmates – killing two of them in a shootout that ultimately left seven dead – but remains unclear if any of the inmates were among the fatalities, the BBC reports. 

MEXICO PRISON ATTACK DEATH TOLL RISES TO 17 

Security Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez said the prison was attacked by gunmen who arrived early Sunday in armored vehicles and fired on the entrance and inside dormitories. 

Suspected members of the Mexicles gang were taking advantage of busier-than-normal visiting hours as locals were going to the prison to wish loved ones a happy new year, according to the BBC, which added that inmates inside set mattresses on fire to raise the level of confusion and chaos. 

The 33-year-old “El Neto” has been incarcerated for 14 years on a kidnapping and murder conviction, while a previous attempt by his gang to free him during a prison transfer in 2010 failed, the BBC also reported. 

FBI ‘MOST WANTED’ MURDERER FOUND IN MEXICO POSING AS YOGA INSTRUCTOR FOR 12 YEARS: REPORTS 

When authorities went inside the prison Sunday, they found 10 “VIP” cells outfitted with televisions and other comforts. One even had a safe filled with cash. Also found in the prison was cocaine methamphetamine, heroin, fentanyl and marijuana. 

Two other gunmen killed after attacking local police a short time before the prison break were likely a diversion, Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio Sandoval said. They were not included in the 17 dead, which were made up of 10 guards and seven inmates. 

The state prison also was the scene of a riot in August that spread to the streets of Ciudad Juarez, resulting in nearly a dozen people dead.

In that case, two inmates were killed inside the prison and then alleged gang members started shooting up the town, including killing four employees of a radio station who were doing a promotion at a restaurant. 

Fox News’ Louis Casiano, Bradford Betz and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

 

Read More 

 

West Virginia sheriff’s deputy fatally strikes child with patrol car

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

An off-duty sheriff’s deputy in West Virginia fatally struck a child with his patrol car, police said.

The girl was struck Friday night by a Cabell County sheriff’s deputy who was driving near an intersection in the east end of Huntington, city Police Chief Karl Colder said in a statement.

Colder said West Virginia State Police are investigating the incident.

WEST VIRGINIA POLICE DEPARTMENT THREATENED TO BE SWALLOWED UP BY LARGE SINKHOLE

Sheriff Chuck Zerkle said the deputy, who has been placed on administrative leave, was traveling to refuel the vehicle.

Police have not released the 13-year-old’s identity. A crowd gathered at a corner of the intersection for a candlelight vigil Sunday, holding signs that read “Justice for Laney.”

State Police Sgt. B.K. Wellman asked for patience during the investigation, telling news outlets that investigators will reconstruct the accident scene and retrieve data from the vehicle to determine its speed at the time.

 

Read More