Friday, January 6, 2012

How 4 Business Students Took on the Eyewear Industry [VIDEO]

When four friends met in business school and discovered they shared a common problem ? an aversion to paying hundreds of dollars for eyeglasses ? they realized there was a business opportunity in it. The group founded Warby Parker, an innovative startup that aims to revolutionize how people buy eyeglasses. Warby sells directly to the public, via their website, allowing them to bypass retailers and sell their frames and lenses for $95.

Check out our interview with Dave Gilboa, Warby Parker?s CEO and learn how the company is disrupting the eyewear industry, similar to the way Netflix crashed the video rental market. Dave also talks about some of the company?s early growing pains, including having to put 20,000 customers on a waiting list and why Google shut down his company?s email servers.

Disclosure: Host Dave Lerner is an investor in Warby Parker.

Thanks to Mike Brown, Jr. for hosting our shoot at AOL Ventures.

Follow Venture Studio, in association with Mashable, which is brought to you by Square1 Bank. The show is hosted by Dave Lerner, a 3x entrepreneur and angel investor. You can follow him on Twitter here.



Source: http://mashable.com/2012/01/05/warby-parker-video/

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Landmark Legal on Point in Obamacare Fight ? Mark America

Conservative Legal Advocacy

There really are not many conservative legal activists committed to standing up for Americans on such a consistent basis, by arguing against unconstitutional legislation or fighting to shine disinfecting daylight on government actions, but Landmark Legal Foundation is one of those rare organizations. Despite its small size, Landmark is currently involved in at least four major issues of interest, including efforts to stop the implementation of Obamacare, challenging the Obama-Holder Department of Justice interference with states on the issue of illegal immigration, stopping the EPA from usurping congressional authority in regulating ?greenhouse gases? like carbon dioxide, and defending the right of states like Wisconsin to limit collective bargaining for public sector employees and the unions that often drive the process to the detriment of tax-payers.

These are all obviously critical issues of significant importance to the American people, and if Landmark Legal seems familiar to you, it may because its president is none other than radio talk-show phenomenon Mark Levin.? More than being the conservative answer to groups like the ACLU, Landmark takes on cases from the standpoint of defeating the leftists? agenda in the courts where all too often, the left has been so successful in foisting its agenda on the American people.

If you?re not familiar with Levin, his radio show is certainly one great place to hear him speak, and you will learn a great deal about these and countless other critical issues from his show.? Levin served eight years in the Reagan Administration, including his service as the Attorney General?s chief of staff, and Deputy Solicitor of the Department of the Interior, along with many other roles.? He?s the author of several New York Times best-selling books including Liberty and Tyranny ? A Conservative Manifesto, Rescuing Sprite: A Dog Lover?s Story of Joy and Anguish, and Men in Black: How the Supreme Court is Destroying America.? He also has a new book about to hit the shelves:? Ameritopia: The Unmaking of America, which is due out within two weeks.? I have pre-ordered this latest book myself, since I own the other three, and they were each worth every penny.

Landmark Legal?s actions on Obamacare is perhaps the most critical to conservatives, because that legislation threatens to fundamentally reorder American society toward a European healthcare delivery model, or worse in some estimates, and in so doing will create a vast new entitlement program complete with the infamous mandate about which you have read.? You can read the complete Landmark Legal amicus curaie brief filed in the Obamacare case here.? One of the most important questions raised by the brief is whether the court will recognize any limits on federal power, when the commerce or the necessary and proper clauses are concerned.? This is a vital question, because if the federal government can compel you to purchase health insurance, there is no effective limit, and the constitution is utterly meaningless.

Other arguments against Obamacare include the question of the severability of the insurance mandate, ultimately suggesting that since the Congress made no provision in the law for separating any particular clause, the whole law must be affirmed or rejected as a single entity.

These are the sorts of cases we conservatives care most fervently to see taken up, and I make contributions to this noble enterprise that fights on behalf of our individual liberties, and in the name of responsible, ethical, limited government open to examination by citizens.? Reviewing the material they provide to the courts in this form leads me to believe that there are few legal advocacy organizations on our side of the philosophical and political divide that do anything like the work of Landmark Legal.? You can read more extensively about Landmark and the cases in which it is currently involved at its website. It?s one of the very few conservative legal advocacy groups in existence, and its performance on other issues demonstrates its effectiveness despite its small size.? In this time of expansive governmental aggression against individual liberties, we need all the advocates for limited government we can get, and Landmark is definitely among the best.

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Source: http://markamerica.com/2012/01/02/landmark-legal-on-point-in-obamacare-fight/

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Beyonce Spotted 'Enormously Pregnant' Over New Year's Weekend1676647

'She looked like she was about to give birth,' source tells People.com.
By Jocelyn Vena


Beyonce performs at the 2011 VMAs
Photo: MTV

While the impending birth of Beyoncé's baby kept everyone on the edge of their seats over the holidays, the singer and her hubby, Jay-Z, were spotted dining and celebrating the new year over the weekend. And for those wondering, Beyoncé was still very much pregnant, despite rumors she had given birth.

Jay and Bey were seen at Brooklyn restaurant du jour Buttermilk Channel on New Year's Eve, eating fried chicken and oysters, according to People.com. A source tells the website that despite being very pregnant, Beyoncé was also very glamorous. "She looked amazing. She wore sky-high heels. It was really impressive for an enormously pregnant woman," the source said. "She looked like she was about to give birth." The pair reportedly later went to hang out at Beyoncé's sister Solange's apartment for a New Year's Eve shindig. Before they hit up the bash, the couple shared what may be one of their last nights pre-parenthood. "She was definitely a pregnant lady that night," the source said. "They sat side by side and had a cozy and intimate dinner. They seemed to be having a lovely time." That same night, "Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve 2012" host Ryan Seacrest introduced a pre-taped performance by the star, saying, "Obviously, Beyoncé couldn't be here tonight because she's about to give birth to her first child." Several days into the new year, Beyoncé's baby is one of the many celebrity births to look forward to in 2012. Other big pop singer moms-to-be include Hilary Duff and Jessica Simpson.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676647/beyonce-pregnant-new-years.jhtml

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Santa Cruz's DIY Parade marches to beat of own sitar

SANTA CRUZ - In Santa Cruz, the party never really gets started until someone plugs in the electric sitar.

One of the most unique New Year's celebrations anywhere made its return to Pacific Avenue Saturday night, as several hundred revelers took part in the annual DIY Parade, a bizarre blend of hippies, clowns, mohawks, funky wigs, stilts, musical instruments, peace signs and even a beach ball emblazoned with a single word: "Spam."

"Santa Cruz is a unique place where people enjoy freedom of expression all the time," said Santa Cruz reveler Susan Brackenbury, wearing a cap with several colors of horns protruding from it. "We aren't afraid to express ourselves no matter what, and we will do what we want when we want to. Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead."

Officially called Last Night, the DIY started in 2005 to replace the city's First Night celebrations, which were ticketed and had the stamp of official approval but went belly up. The DIY is, perhaps, the only New Year's parade anywhere that carries its own manifesto, which is aimed at protecting the parade's aggressively unofficial status.

The motley fiesta returned Saturday, perhaps a bit smaller than some other years but joyful nonetheless. Marchers traversed Pacific Avenue from Laurel to Mission streets, carrying signs and waving as people watched. Mayor Don Lane enjoyed the scene from a sidewalk bench.

Whitney Wilde of Santa Cruz helped promote an early version of the parade, but insists the only organizing effort consists of Facebook reminders. She was dressed to resemble an opera singer gone bad, with a shimmering gold dress, Mardi Gras mask and red lipstick smeared far beyond the boundaries of where it is normally applied.

"This town likes to feel community," Wilde said, observing a drum circle surrounded by people wearing Christmas lights as fashion accessories. "They are all friendly with each other and they don't know each other."

Santa Cruz police had about 100 officers on duty New Year's Eve, and the city tripled the normal fines for offenses such as having an open container or urinating in public. Police Chief Kevin Vogel said a successful night would be one without violence.

"For the police department, the main objective is to keep this event safe," Vogel said. As of press time, there were no major incidents.

As the parade congregated at the end of Pacific Avenue, old and young mingled in various states of costume. A man on stilts danced, as well as a man on stilts can, as several kilt-wearing bagpipe players joined a drum circle. Then a man rolled an amplifier up, plugged in an electric sitar, and started jamming.

"There's babies here, my friend is here and

White-clad DIY Parade marchers set up their makeshift float outside of Saturn Cafe in Santa Cruz on Saturday evening. The float was a memorial to the 39 homeless people that died in the county in 2011. (KEVIN JOHNSON/SENTINEL)

she's 73," Wilde said. "So it's not like it's one age. It's not like it's young, running wild anarchists, you know? It's the whole community."

That was when a man dressed as the patron saint of anarchists, Guy Fawkes, ambled by wearing a mask that has become a symbol of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

As he passed, someone blew glitter into the night sky.

Source: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ci_19653032?source=rss_viewed

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Victims' group must reveal records in priest case (AP)

ST. LOUIS ? An advocacy group that has relentlessly pressured Roman Catholic leaders to reveal the scope of sex abuse in the church has been ordered to disclose records to a priest's defense lawyers that could include years of emails with victims, journalists and others.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests has so far failed to block the ruling by a judge, which requires the organization to produce the documents and also allows defense attorneys to depose the network's national director, David Clohessy, on Tuesday. The Missouri Press Association has filed a friend-of-the-court brief arguing the order is unconstitutional.

Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Ann Mesle said Clohessy must comply because he "almost certainly has knowledge concerning issues relevant to this litigation." Mesle argued that Clohessy is free not to respond to specific questions at the deposition and can request that individual documents remain confidential.

Mesle issued the order in one of five abuse lawsuits against the Rev. Michael Tierney and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. The plaintiff, identified only as John Doe, B.P., said he was 13 when Tierney attacked and molested him in the 1970s. All attorneys involved in Tierney's case are under a gag order.

Defense lawyers sought the documents as evidence that the accuser's attorney, Rebecca Randles, violated the gag order by giving details of the case to the Survivors Network. The defense claims the group then printed the information in a press release. Tierney has previously denied any wrongdoing. Last June, the diocese barred him from any public church work and from presenting himself as a priest.

Under the ruling, the network must produce all documents or correspondence relating to Tierney, the diocese, any priest currently or formerly associated with the diocese, the Survivors Network communication with the plaintiff and any documents related to repressed memory. The plaintiff in the lawsuit said he had repressed memories of the assault for years. The National Catholic Reporter, an independent publication that has spearheaded investigative coverage of clergy abuse, was first to report the order for the documents Friday.

In a statement, Clohessy called the defense request "a bullying effort" that invades victims' privacy. He said the order was so broad that it could require him to produce documents involving whistleblowers, victims, parishioners, parents and journalists in other cases with no direct connection to Tierney or the diocese.

"We are going to take every possible legal step to prevent the disclosure of information concerning SNAP members and supporters, including those who have been sexually abused," said Jeff Jensen, Clohessy's attorney.

The Missouri Press Association wrote in its brief that the disclosure would "irrevocably harm the news-gathering process, chill speech by both the news media and potential sources and significantly affect the quality of investigative reporting in the state." Missouri is one of the few states without a shield law that would protect journalists from being forced to reveal their sources and notes, said Jean Maneke, an attorney for the press association.

The Survivors Network has been at the center of the Catholic abuse scandal for more than two decades, as a support and guide for victims and a constant critic of church hierarchs who failed to warn police or parents about serial offenders in the priesthood. As the costs of the scandal have skyrocketed, many bishops and other Catholics have viewed the advocacy group as an enemy, accusing the network of funneling clients to plaintiffs' lawyers who want to enrich themselves and bankrupt the church. According to studies commissioned by the U.S. bishops, dioceses have paid about $3 billion in settlements and other costs related to more than 15,700 abuse claims since 1950.

The Survivors Network argues the overwhelming majority of victims who seek the group's help do not sue over their abuse.

Marci Hamilton, a law professor and advocate for victims, said defense lawyers in other abuse cases have tried to gain access to the Survivors Network records, but the Jackson County case was the first time the request has been granted. The group's attorneys have asked the Missouri Supreme Court to intervene.

"If you see that talking to any survivors' group means your story could show up in any state in front of any other lawyers, then people are just going to shut down again," said Hamilton, a specialist in church-state issues at Cardozo Law School at Yeshiva University in New York.

Some commentators, however, said the network was hypocritical for demanding public release of diocesan records, while being unwilling to be transparent itself.

"Haven't these very same people been decrying with righteous indignation attempts by church authorities to withhold certain records from the legal process?" wrote Jimmy Akin, a columnist with the independent National Catholic Register. "Matters seem different when the shoe is on the other foot, however, don't they?"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_re/us_rel_church_abuse_victims

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney tries to come across as 'man of the people'

KASIE HUNT, Associated Press

MASON CITY, Iowa ? Dressed in jeans, shirt sleeves rolled up, Mitt Romney reminisced before a noontime crowd about the long car trips his family took when he was a boy. "My dad made Ramblers, so we had one," the Republican presidential hopeful said.

In fact, Romney's father didn't just make cars. He was chairman and president of American Motors, the company that made Ramblers, and a highly successful businessman before he entered politics. It's a detail the son omitted as he sought to establish a bond with Iowans he hopes will support him in next week's presidential caucuses.

An oversight, perhaps ? he sometimes mentions George Romney's titles ? but Romney's effort to come across as a man of the people has been anything but a smooth transition.

One woman recently told him that she had to endure a five-hour commute to work because her company moved out of state. How could he help keep good jobs in Iowa, she asked.

"Sometimes it's counterintuitive," replied Romney, a former businessman, explaining that businesses often invent new, more efficient ways to compete.

"The term is called productivity. Output per person," he said. "Our productivity equals our income."

In the final stretch of the Iowa caucus campaign, Romney has stepped out from behind the curtain of private fundraising events that for months shielded him from unscripted encounters with voters.

During two bus tours through Iowa and New Hampshire, he has overhauled his campaign style. He has done interview after interview. He's knocked on doors and spent hours taking questions from voters in town hall meetings.

His wife, Ann, introduces him at almost every stop, as she did in Mason City on Thursday when she said, "It was Mitt who brought me through my darkest hour" ? an apparent reference to how her husband stood by her through a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.

She's sat next to him during TV interviews. In a rare display of public emotion, Romney's voice nearly caught as he talked about her struggle with MS on a Sunday news show.

"We're finding that as we run ads that talk about our personal background, our personal beliefs, that that increased support for my campaign," he told reporters who followed his New Hampshire bus tour the week before Christmas. He was explaining his latest TV ads in Iowa ? one highlighted his background as a man of "steadiness and constancy," the other featured his wife talking directly to the camera about his character.

Yet he can still struggle to connect with people on a personal level.

When one retired firefighter in New Hampshire said he was drawing a reduced Social Security check because he also had a state pension, the former Massachusetts governor was less than sympathetic. "If there's a competition for who will give you the most free stuff, go vote for that guy."

When the man said he wasn't asking for any handouts, Romney said, "You knew what you were getting into. ... I wish you well, but I'm not going to promise you more bucks."

He's not always distant. At an earlier stop in New Hampshire, Romney explained how he lived on a careful budget as a Mormon missionary, using crude toilets and living in modest apartments. He also talked about his time as a lay pastor in Boston's Mormon church, when he says he counseled struggling families.

"When people don't have a job and they don't feel like they're contributing to the betterment of their family and their future, they get pretty depressed," he told the crowd. "Being out of work for a long time is real tough and it's not the fault of the person's that out of work."

When a voter in Bethlehem, N.H., asked him how her elderly friends would get through the winter with the price of heating fuel so high, Romney didn't hesitate.

"You're finding throughout this country that it's harder and harder on middle-income families," he said. "The costs of oil, the costs of food, and health care have all gone up."

But when he's trying to connect one-on-one, he sometimes hits notes that sound jarring.

As he stood at the cash register at a Concord, N.H., toy store, picking up a few gifts for charity, a patron asked him what he gave his family for Christmas. Earlier in the day, he had bought his wife a $285 North Face jacket as a gift, he said.

For his sons?

"We sent them checks," said Romney, a multimillionaire. "Cash is always good."

Source: http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2011/12/gop_presidential_hopeful_mitt.html

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