Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Nature Is Just Like the Internet Because It Makes You Feel Small

VICE's most online writer is currently disconnected from the internet in a small town outside of New York City. She will be logged off for five days, during which time she will chronicle her adventures in nature through daily dispatches. Her first correspondence is below, and you can read more about the project here.

I began my third day of technological isolation by eating the perfect breakfast at a charming old school diner—bacon, eggs, buttery toast and home fries, cooked to perfection—and started chatting with the owner about my Polaroid camera. He pulled out his phone to show me pictures of his second house further up the Hudson, which he rents out to vacationers, and I lamented the fact that I wasn’t staying there, because it would’ve been a more perfect spot for my week in the woods. A common theme of my week away from the web is how often I end up scolding myself for not doing things better. It’s almost like I’ve taken on the burden of all my online haters for my week without them, to ensure that no matter what, I feel like I’ve fucked up.

“Does everybody hate me?” I asked my boyfriend after my dispatch was published yesterday. “Does everybody hate me?” I asked again.

After breakfast, I journeyed up Main Street to a woodsy enclosure next to the local McDonald’s and made my way up a big hill. The bottom was littered with hamburger wrappers and empty forties, but at the top, I was finally freed of the human trash, alone with nature’s garbage—dead leaves and moss. I sat on a rock overlooking the Hudson, comforted by the familiar sounds of the Metro North below, gazing at the light sparkling atop the water, enjoying the warmth of the sun, noticing how beautiful moss can be, and wondering if I was supposed to be having profound thoughts.

My editor asked me to write about nature in this post, which is hard for me. As beautiful as I find all the gifts Mother Earth has blessed us with, the whole thing is kinda boring to me.

When I was a kid, I liked to make it known that I despised nature shit, probably as a reaction to my mother, who grew up in Australia and enjoys the great outdoors. When I was forced to go outside for recess in preschool, in the not-so-naturey Tompkins Square Park, I would wrap myself in my coat and sleep under a park bench until I was finally allowed to go inside again. To this day, sleeping under a park bench in lieu of socializing or playing is probably the best portrait of myself.

When I found myself in nature, I remember enjoying pulling the moss off rocks, obsessed with its texture—it was satisfying like pulling out an ingrown hair. I remember feeling immense guilt when I learned that moss takes hundreds of years to grow (is that even true?) like I’d messed with something bigger than me that I shouldn’t have. I worried about the moss, and how long it would take to grow back. I’ve spent a lot of my life worrying about dumb shit, even before I had a smartphone.

Peering out at the river today, I was periodically interrupted by text messages from my mother, sending me paragraphs as she tried to plan a hike for us tomorrow, and I, again, got to thinking that maybe throwing my phone in the Hudson is the only real way to liberate myself from this techno-world. But I didn’t. Because my mother would worry. Because I love my phone, even though it’s been conspicuously silent as of late. Because I ultimately love that my phone lets me connect with other people.

“The mass of men lead quiet lives of desperation,” Henry David Thoreau wrote in Walden. “What is called resignation is a form of desperation. From the desperate city you go into the desperate country, and have to console yourself with the bravery of minks and muskrats. A stereotyped but unconscious despair is concealed even under what are called the games and amusements of mankind.”

I feel that. The desperate anxiety of having nothing to do without my precious screens is real. The fear that without constant distraction, I’ll be stuck alone with my wretched thoughts. That “the games and amusements of mankind” only exist to shield me from the torture of simply existing in our late capitalist hellscape.

Feeling small is good—if you can do so without aspiring to be big, you have a lot less to worry about.

Last night, I was consumed by a typical feeling of melancholy derived from insecurity— What if I actually suck? What if I’ve tricked everyone into thinking I’m smart or a talented writer? What if I get found out for the fraud I am? Are these fears good? Do they help me become a better writer, or is it just narcissistic self-loathing that holds me back from doing my best work? If I had the internet, I could have quieted this vexing internal monologue by looking at someone’s shitty tweets, celebrity Instagrams, or catching up on the latest Trump news, which I presume is not good.

Both nature and the internet are good at making you feel insignificant. The mere vastness of nature reminds you that you’re small. The internet is similarly boundless, a place where anyone can post infinitely, where you’re just a songbird, tweeting swear words and dark thoughts into the abyss of the jungle—even if you feel big for a moment, someone else is always bigger, more viral than you. Feeling small is good—if you can do so without aspiring to be big, you have a lot less to worry about.

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The Black Media Mogul Giving a Voice to African American Stories

On The VICE Guide to Right Now, VICE's daily podcast, we delve into the biggest news of the day and give you a rundown of the stories we're reading, working on, and fascinated with.

Today, we run through the headlines before bringing you the final installment of our Black History Month special series, highlighting black entrepreneurs across diverse fields throughout the month of February. In this episode, we'll hear from Cathy Hughes, founder and chairperson of Radio One, the largest African American owned and operated broadcast company in the nation.

You can catch The VICE Guide to Right Now Podcast on Acast, Google Play, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. And sign up for our newsletter to get the best of VICE delivered to your inbox daily.



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What It Takes to Be a Professional Cam Girl

On a new episode of VICELAND's SLUTEVER, Karley Sciortino explores camming, an interactive alternative to porn that's growing increasingly popular in the world of adult entertainment. She meets up with a handful of cam girls to hear how they got started, what viewers are into, and what it takes to turn the hobby into a full-time job.

SLUTEVER airs Wednesdays at 10 PM on VICELAND.

Then it's time for a new episode of THE TRIXIE & KATYA SHOW, featuring two former RuPaul's Drag Race queens digging into life's most pressing issues—from love and sex to fear and death, one topic at a time. Today they're tackling the internet, trying out a handful of viral challenges, reading real-life sexts, and giving a few tips on surfing the web for all the olds out there.

THE TRIXIE & KATYA SHOW airs Wednesdays at 10:30 PM on VICELAND.

Want to know if you get VICELAND? Find out how to tune in here.

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Expert Advice on What to Do About a Low Sex Drive

One common complaint some couples face is a disparity in desire: One person wants to get it on while the other can’t conjure any interest. For many, a lackluster libido could be biological, as our sex drives decline naturally as we age. Studies show that testosterone production in men decreases by about 2 percent a year. While in women, menopause severely limits estrogen production, which lowers a woman's interest in sex. In both cases, hormone therapy can help stabilize levels.

Lifestyle choices and our environment also affect our libido. Everything from what we ingest (alcohol, drugs, and food) to where we live and how much stress we have in our lives can impact our levels of lust. It doesn’t help that our entire modern lifestyle can aid in making our sex drive plummet lower than the ratings for a Jeremy Piven–led procedural on CBS. For others, there may be no discernible reason for the indifference toward sex. Just as we have happy and sad days, you can expect your sexual appetite to have both surges and retreats, too.

According to a new study published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior, Americans are having less sex overall: “Those born in the 1930s (the Silent generation) had sex the most often, whereas those born in the 1990s (Millennials and iGen) had sex the least often.” Married couples took the biggest hit, having sex an average of 56 times a year in 2014, down from 67 in 1989.

However, just because it’s normal to feel “meh" about getting it on doesn’t mean you won’t feel concerned if it’s your first time experiencing a change in your (or your partner's) sex drive. We approached sex coaches, relationship therapists and psychologists and asked for their best advice about how to handle experiencing a dip in desire. Here’s what they said.

Be choosy about when and where you bring the issue up

Don’t talk about it in the midst of a sexual moment, whether it’s a moment of good sex or a moment of low libido; it’s not the time. Instead, talk about it when you are both calm, sitting or lying together, without any other major stresses on your mind, and you are in a place where you both can be open and vulnerable. Don’t be aggressive, blaming, or belittling. Instead, talk from a place of confident vulnerability. Don’t be offensive, defensive, or offended. Talk in a way that shows you care, and want to help improve your sex drive and find a solution together. Say what you love so much about your relationship, and that there are areas you think would help improve your connection even more. Don’t say that you are unsatisfied. Instead, say you would love to improve what you already have. - Laurel House, celebrity dating coach known as "The Man Whisperer"

Don’t take it personally

The most important part of communicating about libido is that each partner doesn't personalize the other's libido (i.e. your libido is low, that means I'm not attractive enough). I've spoken to hundreds, probably thousands, of people about libido, and it is almost never that reason. Once partners can see that libido itself is a journey, both personal and relational, they can be supportive and curious, ready to find each other's edges and challenge each other to feel and try new things. - Brandy Engler, an LA-based psychologist and author of The Men on my Couch and The Women on my Couch

Engage in kinder, gentler self-talk

Stress is a sex killer. When we are stressed, we may be preoccupied with deadlines, worries about getting through our commitments, and fears about letting people down. We may be hard on ourselves or have thoughts such as, I am not competent to complete these tasks, or, Why can't I just manage my time better? Will I ever learn? Negative judgments about ourselves can directly extinguish sexual desire, and can extend into the bedroom where we might be especially prone to thoughts like, I'm worried I won't have sexual arousal, or, Will my partner leave me if we lack sexual chemistry? Try incorporating mindfulness meditation into your life on a daily basis. Mindfulness reduces anxiety, and can make you more in tune with the sensations arising in the body moment by moment. - Dr. Lori Brotto, professor, psychologist, and author of Better Sex Through Mindfulness: How Women Can Cultivate Desire

Chill (and maybe light up a spliff)

Low libido is not a significant problem in and of itself. It only becomes a problem when your low libido differs from your partner's libido. If your partner doesn't understand that factors outside your control, like menopause and the natural aging process, are responsible for your low libido, then it's going to cause friction. They may mistakenly believe that your libido hasn't dropped but that you are “keeping” sex from them. In these cases, you need to sit them down and explain what's happening and explain why it's normal.

That said, an interesting finding from a large-scale study in 2017 on marijuana use found that using weed is independently associated with increased sexual frequency. Perhaps adding a little 420 to your life is the key to boosting your sex drive! - Sean Jameson, sex coach and the founder of Bad Girls Bible

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Greta Gerwig's Catholic High School Is Throwing a 'Lady Bird' Oscars Party

St. Francis High School, Greta Gerwig's Sacramento alma mater that helped inspire Lady Bird, is throwing a massive Oscars party to celebrate the film—and it sounds way better than just hanging out at the Deuce.

According to the Sacramento Bee, the party will air the Oscars ceremony in the school gym along with a screening of some rare VHS tapes of Gerwig's old high school theater productions she starred in while attending St. Francis, because nothing celebrates Gerwig's accomplishments like unearthing some embarrassing footage of her as a teen!

"We’ve never had an Oscar party," St. Francis High School's MaryAnne Kelly told the Bee, “but we’ve never had an alumnus nominated for five Oscars before."

There will also be a Lady Bird-style award for the best thrift-store prom dress—hopefully purchased from Thrift Town, the Sacramento thrift shop where Lady Bird bought her own dress—and even a life-sized cutout of Gerwig herself, seeing as how the writer-director will hopefully be too busy winning some actual Oscars to pop by the party.

Partygoers will also be able to take their picture in front of backdrops of Sacramento landmarks featured in Lady Bird, since the movie has inspired a whole new wave of city pride from its residents. "All of a sudden, you have permission to say, 'I’m from Sacramento,'" Gerwig's high school theater teacher Cheryl Watson explained to Vanity Fair this week. "She wanted Sacramento to have the spotlight. She really wanted it."

And it won't be the last time Gerwig will be pointing a spotlight on Sacramento, either—the director is apparently planning another trio of films set in the city Lady Bird calls "the Midwest of California."

"[Lady Bird] is one part of Sacramento, but there’s a lot of different parts I’d like to explore,” Gerwig said on the premiere episode of A24's new podcast. "I have the inner privilege of being from a place and I’m really from that place. My family didn’t move. My family is still there. My friends are still there. I can actually speak to it with some feeling."

St. Francis High School is expecting around 350 people to show up for the party, which kicks off with its own red carpet walk at 4:30 PM on Sunday. Unfortunately, tickets are almost sold out, so act fast if you want to catch some of those clips of a teenage Gerwig in The Wizard of Oz or whatever.

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Ta-Nehisi Coates Is Writing a Different Kind of 'Captain America'

Roughly two years after he got into the comics game with Black Panther, Ta-Nehisi Coates is teaming back up with Marvel to helm a Captain America comic, a decision that—in an announcement he penned in the Atlantic—one of America's sharpest critics admits might not seem like a natural fit.

He's taking on a character most people think of, as he writes, as "an unblinking mascot for American nationalism"—whereas Coates himself is outspoken on the country's flaws, systemic racial inequality, and current administration. But as he tells it, that dichotomy is exactly why he wants to take over the series.

"What is exciting here is not some didactic act of putting my words in Captain America’s head, but attempting to put Captain America’s words in my head," Coates writes. "What is exciting is the possibility of exploration, of avoiding the repetition of a voice I’ve tired of."

And he's quick to point out that Captain America isn't as much of a blind patriot as he's cracked up to be. Since its inception just after World War II, the character—a supersoldier who was given his powers by the military—has constantly pushed back against the American government, once getting so pissed off at the White House that he ditched the name "Captain America" altogether. It'll be interesting to see how Coates plays with Cap's resistance to the country he was literally engineered to defend, and how taking on a story set in the US differs from his work for Black Panther—set in Wakanda, an Afrofuturist paradise.

Coates will keep on writing Black Panther comics—a series he supercharged long before the movie took the box office by storm—and continue his work at the Atlantic, where he's a columnist. Meanwhile, ahead of the first comic's Fourth of July release, he'll be chipping away at the difficult task of chronicling an American hero as someone who, it's safe to say, isn't exactly psyched about where the country is at right now.

"I’m not convinced I can tell a great Captain America story," Coates writes, "which is precisely why I want so bad to try."

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Related: Black Panther Is Basically Afrofuturism 101



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The 'Jersey Shore' Reunion Got a Second Season Before the First One Even Aired

New Jersey is not known for its endings. At 68, Bruce Springsteen still performs four-hour shows and stars in his own Broadway productions. Artie Lange continues to have a career. David Chase didn't even write a conclusion for The Sopranos. And now, as we all know, Jersey Shore is coming back—and, by the looks of it, not going anywhere either. According to Deadline, MTV has already booked a second season of Jersey Shore Family Vacation before the first—the upcoming reunion in Miami—hits TV.

It's unclear if the gang's next trip will be back in Florida, the beloved Jersey Shore house, or Italy, but everyone must have gotten along well enough this time that MTV felt confident enough to book another get-together before seeing this seasons's ratings. It seems that Mike "the Situation" and Ronnie, thankfully, have made amends, considering they were spotted test-driving Lambos and not drunk in their South Beach apartment throwing furniture at each other recently. The duck phone, always a high point for drama, has apparently reappeared without causing a permanent severing of relationships. Did Mike spare Snooki and Deena a hilarious prank and restrain from calling a cab company to take them to Little Rock? (Maybe he's already got enough drama in his life.)

This is the first—and now second—season in what will hopefully be a long resurgence. Just imagine Mike, fresh out of a New Jersey correctional facility at 60, joining DJ Pauly D as he calls out bingo numbers. Or Vinny, in 2058, advising the SoundCloud rapper who's become our president about why we should have been worried about biotic processes decades ago. Or Sammi, just showing her face at all. Try to convince me you're not pumping your fist.

What more is there to say? Just grab a chair and plop down in the sand because Governor Christie was wrong: We're staying the hell on the beach.

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Alex Norcia is from New Jersey. Follow him on Twitter.



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These Surreal Optical Illusions Will Change the Way You See Everyday Life

Nazis Explain Why They Became Nazis

This article originally appeared on VICE Germany.

In a 1934 letter to American sociologist Theodore Abel, Helen Radtke explained why she joined the German Nazi Party. She wrote that she was a politically active person who had sat in the public gallery of her local state parliament to listen to the debates held there, and attended as many political rallies as possible in search of a party that was "nationalist, but also cared for the poor." Eventually, she wrote, she found just what she was looking for in Hitler and his movement.

Radtke's letter was just one of 683 personal accounts sent to Abel in the years after Hitler was elected in 1933. Last January, the Hoover Institution—a public policy think tank based at Stanford University in California—published 584 of those letters online. These personal testimonies are not only useful in understanding why so many people were attracted to the Nazis in the 1930s, but also provide insight into the minds of the millions of Germans today who are still turning to far-right political parties, like the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD).

Around a year after Hitler became Chancellor, Theodore Abel wanted to know what had motivated so many people to support him. After Abel failed to get any of the estimated 850,000 Nazi party members to agree to an interview, he came up with the idea for a fake competition, where he offered a cash prize to whoever could write the most beautiful, detailed description of why they had joined the Nazi Party.


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At the time, the prize money was worth more than half the monthly average salary in Germany, and even Joseph Goebbels—the Nazi Minister of Propaganda—publicly supported the contest. The submissions ranged from handwritten love letters to Nazism, to 12-page testimonies, while participants represented a cross section of German society, from soldiers and SS officers to office workers, housewives, children, and miners.

Many of the letter writers were happy to see the end of the Weimar Republic, which was founded in 1919 after the German defeat in the First World War, and which they blamed for the economic state the country was left in after the war and for the Great Depression. The writers were excited by Hitler's promise to introduce strict political order; Bernard Horstmann, a miner from Bottrop in western Germany, wrote that he thought the previous government had promoted "the betrayal of the people and our fatherland."

Horstmann went on to call a professor who thought the First World War was unjustified a "poisoner of people's minds." Before joining the Nazis, Horstmann was a member of the antisemitic nationalist group the German Völkisch Freedom Party, but soon, he wrote, the group's ideologies became too tame for him.

A letter from Ernst Seyffardt from Duisburg, another city in western Germany, was titled: "The Curriculum Vitae of a Hitler-German." Seyffardt wrote that he joined the Nazi Party because he wanted to contribute to "bringing back peace and order in our homeland."


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At the time, left-wing groups tried to counter the surge in nationalist support. Fights would often break out between Communist Party members and thugs from the Nazi paramilitary wing, the Sturmabteilung (SA), while some more liberal groups called for the boycott of shops owned by Nazi Party members. But that only seemed to make Hitler and the Nazis more appealing to many. "It was because Adolf Hitler and his party faced so much criticism and resistance among the press that I became particularly interested in joining their movement," wrote a party member named Friedrich Jörns.

The letters Abel received reveal that the right-wing information bubble prior to 1933 largely stemmed from the weekly newspaper Der Stürmer, Hitler's Mein Kampf, and Nazi Party rallies.

One member, named Schwarz, explained how reading Mein Kampf had caused him to not only distrust most mainstream newspapers but also Jewish and Polish people for the way their "catastrophic, mole-like activities have ruined the world." Even though Schwarz went on to admit that he had never had personal contact with anyone Jewish, and that he couldn't prove that Polish people were "unreliable," he wrote that he "trusts his instincts on the matter." Nurse Lisi Paupié clearly agreed: "The Jews are our misfortune, that much is clear," she wrote in her letter to Abel.

Recently, the German television show Panorama had three actors read out some of the letters, partly to show how the rhetoric used—"old parties," "dreadful press," "poisoner of minds," and "betrayal of the people and fatherland"—is similar to that used by the AfD. And the segment proved its point: Those terms are still worryingly relevant almost 85 years after Theodore Abel decided to trick some Nazis into writing their letters.

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From the Inside, the White Nationalist Movement Looks Like a Total Mess

Vegas Tenold is a tall, bald Norwegian who blends in just fine with neo-Nazis. He found his calling as a journalist in 2010, when he emailed every address on the National Socialist Movement's (NSM) website looking for an interview. A paranoid dude who called himself Lieutenant Duke Schneider of the SS invited him for pastries near Ground Zero in New York City, and, eventually, to a rally in Trenton, New Jersey.



The march—now known as the Battle of Trenton in far-right circles—descended into chaos when Antifa-style activists showed up, a preview of the violent clashes that would come to define the resurgence of the white nationalist movement in America. It also had a pretty big influence on Tenold's life—he spent the next seven years embedded with fringe groups like the NSM, the Hammerskins, and the Ku Klux Klan. He also watched Matthew Heimbach, who became infamous for starting a White Student Union at Towson University, try to make his toxic ideology palatable to average, disaffected Americans in Appalachia and beyond in the lead-up to Donald Trump's election.

Tenold's book about the experience, Everything You Love Will Burn: Inside the Rebirth of White Nationalism in America, came out this month. I called Tenold up to ask what changed in between the Battle of Trenton and the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville last August, why young men in America are attracted to right-wing extremism, and the best way to get under a neo-Nazi's skin.

Here's that conversation, lightly edited and condensed for clarity.

VICE: What did you learn about what attracts foot-soldiers to this movement?
Vegas Tenold: I think a lot of it is that old chestnut: that people want to belong to something. People want to feel that they're part of something bigger. The world is a confusing place these days. There are a lot of reasons for unemployment, for the lack of social mobility. There are a lot of big, big issues we are dealing with that are many-faceted. And so if someone comes in and says, "Well no, it's because of the Jews and the Mexicans," that's a very alluring, tempting solution to buy into. It's also a higher purpose. If you believe that your race and you are persecuted, then all of the sudden you're not just some hapless guy without a job, you're a warrior.

Do you think white nationalism would lose its appeal if politicians addressed some of the problems of working-class people who've become increasingly desperate in the past decade?
It will exist regardless, because selfishness is such a profound force in driving people. I'm from Norway, which is arguably the richest country in the world, and we still have our fair share of nationalists and other assorted assholes. But I do think that the devastation of the middle class [in America], the lack of social mobility that's possible now, the lack of the social safety net, it makes it easier to say people: "You don't have much now, but here come the Mexicans to take what little you have." That makes it easier for nationalism, for hatred, for bigotry to spread. I think in an ideal world where education and healthcare were taken care of, it would be easier to [contain].

So you argued a couple of times in the book that Antifa was more of a unifier for the right than Matthew Heimbach himself. Should we be having a serious conversation about whether or not they should stop kind of martyring these guys by attacking them?
I think so. First of all, I don't think Anitfa is a homogenous group. But I think that a major moment in the last couple of years for the far-right in America wasn't the election that Donald Trump, or the inauguration. It was Richard Spencer getting punched. And you know, sure, I get the temptation to punch Richard Spencer. Who doesn't want to punch a Nazi? But it really made them all feel that they all got punched. It allowed Richard Spencer to rebrand himself as a kind- of warrior priest of the far-right. It really did rally the troops.

Right—people thought he was a dandy, and now he had street cred. So what gets under these guys' skin, then? If the move is not physically threatening them, is it just not showing up to their protests at all?
Now, when he does a talk, he'll roll up the sleeves of his shirt. It let him rebrand himself into this performer, this leader of men. When he used to be a glorified blogger.

I think there are much better way to deal with these guys than violence. If you listen to what Richard Spencer and Matthew Heimbach say, their arguments aren't that good. We can defeat them with words and with rhetoric. We don't we don't have to elevate them by presenting them as an existential threat to civilized society, which is kind of what we do when we attack them. We need to show them that we are stronger than them that our ideas are better, that we can do that through peaceful protest. We don't need to stoop to their level of violence.

If no counter-protestors showed up at Charlottesville, would all the neo-Nazis really just have gone home?
That's hard to say, because I do think we should make it abundantly clear that we don't accept that kind of rhetoric. I don't claim to have the answer to that, but one episode I'm very fond of is, I was have having coffee with Richard Spencer in DC at a coffee shop at one of the college-y parts of town. And we're in this little room, and Richard speaks fairly loudly, and he was talking about something awful, something like, if it were up to him, that women shouldn't be allowed in university. And as I'm sitting there, I see there's a table of young students, a few of them women, and they're kind of listening in. And as he goes on, one of them, a young woman probably about 20, just comes up and says, "Excuse me but who the hell do you think you are? You can't say things like that." And she just tore into him with arguments and with words and the guy shrank to nothing in front of my eyes. And then, after like, three or four minutes, she said, "I'm done with you. I don't want to talk to you anymore." And we were just sitting there, and we were going to leave anyway to go put money in the meter, and I said to Richard, "Do you want to go?" He said, "Well, no, we can't go now. She'll think she won."

And I saw that the second a person just stands up to these people and just calls them on their bullshit—I think it's particularly powerful that a woman did it because they such have outdated views of women and gender. It was like the thing in The Wizard of Oz when someone pours water on the witch and she melts. He melted, and no one got hurt other than his ego.

A lot of the of the book is Heimbach kind of drifting slowly to the right over the course of your reporting. Why do you think that happened? Do you think he grew more extreme in his beliefs because he's kind of spending more and more time with people like the Hammerskins, or because he just wanted to form a coalition with whoever would be willing to join him, no matter how extreme?
There are two reasons. I think [your] last point hits pretty close to home. When you're on on the far right you have no other way to go than further right. I think it's naive to think that you can form a coalition of like, in America at least, the ultra nationalist far-right people and then try to grow the pie outside the traditional far-right movement. I think Matthew tried for a long time to do both. He believed that he could [get] people to see that the neo-Nazis weren't so bad. I think he misjudged that yes, people did elect Donald Trump, but out-and-out Nazis is still a bridge too far for most people. And there's a lot of ego in this scene. So if you want to be a leader of a large group, then the easiest way is to take the low-hanging fruit on the right. It takes a lot of skill to persuade people who aren't nationalists or far-right activists to join a group that is.

I almost wonder if there's another world in which Heimbach didn't become disillusioned with Trump over, like, the Syrian airstrike and some other things. Like, he could have become more of an almost credible politician. Right? I can see the reverse being the case.
He totally could of. And I don't think he's planned on this, but his life has been been a steady right-wing trajectory. So it's not as it started when I met him. He started out as a socialist. So he's kind of been heading in that direction all the time. So I know that's just the way he went. And you know he has some opinions that I would say that were incompatible to mainstream politics, but one [politician] in Wisconsin, Paul Nehlen, I mean he's pretty much the same guy ideologically. I think he had an idea of what he wanted to do and I still think that he feels he succeeded. You know if you ask him, he'll tell you, "I did what I set out to do." And in a way he did. He did build a far-right coalition, which not many people have done that before him. But you've got to say: A coalition of what? Like, what's the point? Yes, you managed to gather the most extreme elements of the far-right, but to what end?

Obviously, you spent seven years hearing these guys out, and I enjoyed reading your book. But yes—these people have no actionable plan. Are we giving them too much attention?
Yes and no. I do think that there are more insidious forms of racism in this country, which is founded on the notion of white supremacy. But I think it's important that we understand [all] racism, that we understand bigotry, and fear. To do that, I chose to seek out its most extreme incarnations. You know, Jeff Schoep, the leader of the NSM, told me 11 years ago that he believes that their ideas expressed by the right person could could get elected into office. And I thought he was huffing glue, I thought he was fucking nuts, but he basically described Trump back then, and I didn't see it coming.

Learn more about Tenold's book here.

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Legal Weed Might Be Getting Pedestrians Killed, Study Finds

With recreational weed just a dispensary away in nine US states, Americans today are more concerned about the harmful effects of sugar than they are of marijuana. But while many people may think that the worst thing that can happen to you stoned is literally being unable to walk down a mountain, a new study has suggested that legal weed may actually be linked to deaths on US roadways.

Pedestrian deaths have shot up in states where recreational weed is legal, according to a report released Wednesday by the Governor's Highway Safety Association. During the first half of 2017, fatalities spiked 16.4 percent in the seven states that legalized weed between 2012 and 2016, plus Washington, DC. Meanwhile, fatalities dropped 5.8 percent across the rest of the country.

It is important to note that we're not looking at huge increases in pedestrian deaths in the states where weed is legal. In Oregon, for example, fatalities jumped 20 percent from 2016 to 2017—but the total number of people killed only rose from 29 to 35. Still, the study's author thinks the link between the deaths and legal weed—whether it could involve stoned drivers or stoned pedestrians—is "a marker for concern."

"We are not making a definitive, cause-and-effect link to marijuana," the study's author, Richard Retting, told the New York Times. "It may be a canary in a coal mine, an early indicator to address."

Aside from any role weed might play in the spike, Retting suggested smartphones could also be to blame: It's hard to look out for cars barreling toward us with our faces glued to a tiny, highly addictive supercomputer at all hours of the day. It's a problem that's recently led some cities to outlaw using smartphones while crossing the street.

Whatever the cause, the number of pedestrians killed by cars nationwide has skyrocketed recently, shooting up by 27 percent from 2007 to 2016, the study found. And with the number of deaths in 2017 on par with those recorded the year before—roughly 6,000—it doesn't look like the trend is going away.

"It’s downright disturbing," Retting told USA Today. "People outside cars are dying at levels we haven't seen in 25 years."

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How Anonymous Sex with Strangers Helped Me Find My Way in a New City

My Los Angeles cruising experience began when I moved to the city in 1999.

I'd gotten a place in Los Feliz with my boyfriend. Three weeks after moving in, we broke up and I relocated to the guest room. We remained friends, but I found myself suddenly single and alone in a city where I knew no one.

The first time it happened, I was in Griffith Park walking my dog, Maggie. In those first few months in LA, I was lonely. I felt like I didn’t belong and I missed New York City. I decided to go exploring. It was one of those endlessly blue skied sunny LA days, gloriously warm. I walked into the park, and then up one of the many hiking trails.

Below me, LA sprawled from the San Gabriel Valley to the beach. From those heights I could see all the way to the Pacific Ocean and Catalina Island. I watched as two men walked up from a ravine to the trail where I was standing. They were shirtless. They kissed and then went their separate ways. One of them kept turning back to look at me. I smiled. He smiled. He grabbed his crotch and nodded toward a trail that disappeared up the hill and into some bushes.

I followed him and, tying Maggie to a tree, approached him. He smiled at me. His smile was stunning, and I felt something shift inside of me: all the loneliness and sadness at trying to find my way in LA. I dropped to my knees and took him in my mouth. I loved listening to him gasp and moan, I loved the knowledge that I was responsible for his pleasure. I wanted to make him feel good.


Watch:

After, he told me his name was Elias. He said he was visiting from Sedona, Arizona. He invited me to a party later that night with some friends.

That day would be the start of both a strange relationship with a magician from Sedona and with the trails of Griffith Park. Each offered up an endless supply of sex and companionship.

The next day I went back to the park to meet Elias. Some friends of his were BBQing. We all stood around eating ribs and chicken and telling stories. Sometimes one or two would disappear down the trails, returning later with smiles and tales of conquest.

“Come with me,” Elias said, taking my hand.

He led me deep into a small valley with steep hills on both sides of the trail. Men wandered about, eyes searching.

Elias introduced me to freedom in that valley, he introduced me to a world of men, to a community of friends and lovers and hook ups.

I was no longer alone. I had found guys who weren’t afraid of their sexuality, guys who weren’t afraid to fuck and hang out and eat BBQ.

LA was a hard town for me in those early years. I struggled to understand the vast and endless urban network. I would find myself wandering those trails alone, fucking and sucking and making out, having strange conversations, making friends.

I eventually moved out of the apartment my boyfriend and I had bought, into my own place in the Silver Lake hills. In those days there was a gay Latin bar called Le Barcito. Wednesdays through Sundays at 11 PM they had something called El Show de Maritza y Sus Divas, where drag performers would dress in outrageous beauty pageant costumes stood and sing Spanish pop songs. They were like gorgeous and colorful birds flying in from some fairytale world to perform for those of us brave enough to suffer the small, hot, crowded bar, drunk on Tecate and tequila. We would cheer and sing along, even those of us who couldn't understand the Spanish lyrics.

After the show, guys would slowly make their way outside and head to Hyperion Boulevard. The night would become alive with men cruising up and down the street, disappearing in pairs up the stairways that intersected the hills, fucking on people’s lawns, or meeting in dark corners, bending over cars to take dick, small orgies forming, only to be broken up by passing headlights.

Late at night I would wander down the hill, and walk those streets, watching and joining in. There was one garage that opened on to the street. A man had set up a sling in there. Guys would step into the dark and fuck him. Others would congregate quietly in backyards, careful not to wake the occupants up, hiding from the lights of police helicopters.

One night, after a pretty bad fight with an ex-boyfriend of mine, I found myself on Hyperion. It was late at night. I didn’t want to go home alone. I parked and walked the streets, stopping in at Circus of Books. I saw a handsome dark haired man standing against a car. I looked back. He grabbed his crotch. I followed him up a set of stairs that cut their way into the hills.

His name was Armen. He held me and kissed me and let me suck his dick. He was gentle with me. Later we went for a ride along the 101 Freeway, cutting through Malibu Canyon, and to the Pacific. He told me about his partner who had died exactly one year earlier. He said he felt guilty spending the anniversary of his boyfriend’s death getting his dick sucked in the hills of Silver Lake.

I told him about the fight I'd had with my ex-boyfriend, who was a drug addict and abusive.

For some reason, it made us both laugh: the two of us looking for comfort from strangers.

“But it is comfort,” he said. “A kind that even your closest friend can’t give you. Just being here with you, for now, it is a comfort.”

We sat on that rocky Malibu beach until the sun came up, then he drove me home. I kissed him goodbye. I never saw Armen again. But that night, for those hours, I was as close to him as I could have been to anyone. For that night two strangers met while cruising and came together to take care of each other.

Cruising, for me, was about more than just getting laid. The parks and streets and hang out areas were where you’d go when you felt most alone, late at night, with no one to talk to. A place where you could make a connection, no matter how fleeting, a place where you found humanity, a place where you could connect with another person.

Because that is what it all comes down to. In the face of every fucking thing they throw at us, they can’t stop us from holding each other and taking care of each other, of staying up all night long, until we feel safe enough to go home.

I can tell you endless stories of the heyday of gay cruising, much of which has faded away into the past. Many people say we've lost something to the gay dating apps, and maybe in some ways we have—but I think we have also gained something amazing and new. Because of the apps and this new way of cruising our world has suddenly expanded, creating a global community.

I met my husband, Alex, on Scruff. We met our boyfriend, Jon on Scruff. I met Noah, my current boyfriend, on Growlr, while he was living in London. I have made some amazing connections on these apps, and fucked a lot of amazing guys. Instead of isolating me, I have found that the apps have opened wider doors. And for me, that is the point.

From my first experiences cruising Central Park as a teenager in New York City, to wandering the hills and trails of Los Angeles, to the phone apps, I have met an amazing community of men who I can call friends. Some of whom I’ve fucked, some of whom we’ve just met for beers or coffee, some I ended up marrying, and some I fell in love with and travelled over continents and oceans to be with.

We live in strange and perilous times right now. The world can seem hostile, our own governments turning against us, but for me, the connections I’ve made cruising and flirting and chatting have made me feel part of something larger, something essential, something that has never failed me: a community of men who love each other.

I don’t think we have lost anything. I think we are just growing, allowing our community to become more than just the local spots we go to suck dick and drink beers. But I also think we need those local places, where a lonely guy in a new city can go to make new friends and fuck and eat BBQ. I would hate to see us totally lose that.

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Alt-Right Jabroni Chuck Johnson Made a 'Survivor' Audition Tape

It's possible you might have forgotten who Chuck Johnson is. He's the bearded alt-right troll who's propagated several fake news stories that have either been disproven or determined to be completely baseless. He's smeared campus sexual assault victim Emma Sulkowicz and Ferguson police shooting victim Michael Brown. These days he's in a public position as an advisor to Donald Trump, though he's been banned from Twitter—a platform that's welcoming of literal Nazis and white nationalists, including the likes of Richard Spencer.

But now Johnson can add failed Survivor contestant to his resumé, after his audition video for the 36th season of the reality show (and latest grab for attention) surfaced online. In it, he says that people describe him, conversely, as a "people person" and a "troll." He also claims that he's recently been in Hungary trying to report on a corrupt organization of journalists, by which he means to say that he's been obsessed with accusing the defunct site Gawker of tax fraud ever since a writer there implied that he pooped on the floor in college.

Check out the bizarre clip above and catch the new season of Survivor premiering Wednesday on CBS. It will not feature Chuck Johnson.

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These God-Awful Travel Stories Will Make You Cancel Your Next Vacation

Even people who love to travel have to admit: Sometimes it sucks. Badly. Unless your husband can wrangle up free flights to exotic locations on private government jets, flying can be a nightmare. Driving is often no better, and not just because America's roads are getting more and more unsafe.

But taking to the sky or roadways is something we all find ourselves doing at some point or another. As such, we asked friends and co-workers about their worst ever travel experiences, and the results make even our most hellish trip seem like a walk in the park.

Piss Take Mistake

About 15 years ago, I took an 11 hour bus from NYC to Toronto.

As you know, bathrooms on buses are, generally, pretty grim. But from the glimpses I’d gotten of the one on this particular bus, it seemed especially bad. Dark and stainless steel and filthy. Real Silent Hill kind of ambience.

Wanting to avoid it, I tried to hold my pee for as long as possible, but, eventually, it became too much to bear.

I went into the bathroom and shut the door, only to discover the light was broken. There was no window, and this was in the days before iPhone flashlights, so it was completely pitch black inside. I decided it would be better to pee in the sink than the toilet, as it was crotch-height and I didn’t want to get piss everywhere and make the toilet even Silent Hillier for the next user.

As I’d been holding it in for so long, the piss was very, very, very long. After what felt like 90 minutes of solid urination, I finished things up and started to head back to my seat.

When I opened the bathroom door, the majority of the people on the bus were staring at me.

Looking back into the bathroom, I saw that the sink was not connected to anything. Where there should’ve been a drainage pipe was actually just a hole that went straight through to the floor. The entirity of the contents of my bladder had run out under the bathroom door and down the length of the bus, dampening feet and bags in its wake.

I quickly darted back to my seat, and spent the rest of the journey pretending to be asleep. I’m not sure if people realized it was piss or not. But if you took a bus from New York to Toronto in, like, 2003 and your bag was damp when you arrived: Sorry. - Jamie, 32

O'Hare Scare

A few years ago, I took a trip to LA. It was a good time. The rental car company fucked up, and I got to drive around in a GTI like a semi-rich asshole. I got drunk alone on the boardwalk in Santa Monica and rode the carousel. I stayed with my friends in the Valley, which is the area in Los Angeles where they shoot porn, and believe me, if you're staying there with your friends in the Valley, they will bring this up as often as possible.

I was there for a week, and then I had to get on a redeye back to New York. I had an orientation for work at eight in the morning in the city, and couldn't be late. I had to return the rental car hours before my flight took off, so that's what I did. To kill time, I started drinking in the airport bar. I befriended a drummer in a punk band, who drank with me. We got incapacitated.

I boarded the flight hours later, after five or six drinks, and the drummer happened to be sitting next to me. He suggested we continue drinking, and I've never been one to argue. I figured I'd sober up by the time we got back to the East Coast. I passed out, and so did he. When I woke up, I had no idea what time it was, but it was dark, and the plane was descending fast. It was the only moment in my life where I really thought I was going to die. The drummer was still sleeping, and I nudged him awake, hoping his being as alarmed as I was would calm me down. We touched down.

"Are we in New York?" he asked me.

"I have no fucking idea," I said.

We were not in New York. We were in Chicago. The plane had started losing oxygen and had to make an emergency landing. I spent eight hours in O'Hare throwing up. - Alex, 27

Deplane! Deplane!

So last year I was trying to fly from Heathrow to New York City, and they were having some kind of mechanical problems, so we couldn't take off. That meant we had to "deplane," a word I got very familiar with, and wait in the airport for a while. This was fine, it was OK, we got on the plane again. A long time passed. I watched the entirety of the original Total Recall because our in-seat TVs were working—but it turned out that the mechanical problem was still with us. So off the plane again, back to the airport. Then back on the plane. Where we were told that sorry, actually the flight crew had worked too many hours and couldn't actually travel on this flight, we needed to wait for a new crew. People were angry. I think one person had to be restrained by airport security on our third deplaning, though I didn't see that. We had been on the plane or in the airport for about ten hours at this point. They gave us these vouchers for the airport shop, and I bought all this disgusting food, like the most expensive things I could get—like $10 juice and giant candy bars I never ate. It didn't seem like real life. By this time the passengers were talking to one another a lot, and there were rumors about what was happening, like whether we needed to change gates. We were just sort of walking around the terminal like Tom Hanks in that movie I didn't see. The story ends the way all these stories end: We eventually just got on a plane and left. I think it took 18 hours? Something like that. The moral of the story, though, is that we ended up getting a few hundred bucks in compensation because airlines in the EU are required by law to do that in cases of long delays. The US should have that sort of thing! -

Harry, 31

Cable Cutters

In 2013, I was traveling from Boston to Baltimore with my kids, after my 18-month old daughter had surgery at Boston Children's Hospital. When we got on the plane, I noticed what seemed like an entire team of cable company employees were also on the plane with us, all dressed similarly.

Toward the end of the flight, my 18-month-old daughter got very, very sick. Like I said, she'd just had surgery, and the altitude on the plane made her oxygen levels drop. She was turning a purplish blue color, and I was panicking. Luckily there was a nurse sitting by me, so she jumped into action and began assessing her vital signs. We were debating how we should alert the crew when, suddenly, one of the members of the cable company team walked up to the front of the plane, with a film crew following. He started making announcements over the plane's com system as the other guys with him began handing out free iPads to everyone on board. The whole thing was a marketing stunt to advertise a new product. They were filming the whole thing as they handed out the iPads to everyone on board, and I ended up getting three—one for me and both of my kids. Talk about being panicked on film! There was one shot of me holding up an iPad with a stricken look on my face.

After all the commotion died down, we were able to alert the crew, and an ambulance met us at the gate when we landed a few minutes later. The Dish people felt horrible and were very sweet; they brought my daughter a stuffed animal while she was on the stretcher with the paramedics at the airport. Talk about up one minute, down the next—I've never been both so unlucky and lucky in one moment. -

Hilary, 41

Bus Boy

When I was in college, my family lived about a eight-to-ten-hour long Greyhound trip away. It sucked, but it was cheap and the only way I could get home to see them. One year, I was coming home for Thanksgiving, and every seat was taken but the one by the bathroom in the back. Sitting next to me were an exhausted father and his equally exhausted and cranky four-year-old son. The father told me they'd been traveling via bus for three days, and his son was miserable. When he wasn't sleeping (across both his father's and my lap), he was screaming. The entire bus hated them, but I felt bad; it seemed like they were in some kind of financial trouble, and it was obvious this guy really loved and wanted the best for his kid.

Halfway though my trip, we stopped to pick up more passengers. I ran out to take a piss and grab a roast beef from Arby's. I was gone maybe 15 minutes, and I came out of Arby's to see my seatmate being dragged off the bus in handcuffs, sobbing, while another cop carried his sleeping little boy. Turns out this guy had kidnapped his kid after losing custody in a messy divorce. I don't know how they found them—I assume one of the passengers must have seen his photo on the news or something and tipped off the driver. But man I felt pretty weird about the fact that I'd spent hours sitting next to and shooting the shit with a kidnapper! - Jacob, 24

What Not to Say to the TSA

I was flying back to California from Minnesota, after my bachelorette party, and one of my bags was flagged for search. They called me over to watch them go through it, and, for some reason, I thought it would be funny to say, "Careful when you open that, it might explode!" [Editor’s note: This is illegal. Do not do this.] This woman working for the TSA was naturally not amused, and gave me a stare so intense I immediately started to cry and apologize profusely. After she pulled me into a private pat-down room, she read me some speech about how I am at an airport and need to watch what I say. During the course of the search, the TSA agents found a plastic dick squirt gun, a 20-pack of penis straws, Mardi Gras beads, and a penis-shaped headband—all gag gifts from my bachelorette party. - Lauren, 28

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My Time Reporting on Murder, Corruption, and Drugs in Honduras

The Incredible, 180-Year History of Brooklyn's First Black Enclave

Nikolas Cruz Carved Swastikas on His Ammo Magazines, Cops Say

Suspected Parkland mass-murderer Nikolas Cruz may have tried to break a third-floor window at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School to create what law enforcement sources described to CBS News this week as a "sniper's nest." However, the teenager eventually abandoned his gun and ammunition—both of which included magazines engraved with swastikas, cops told CBS and also CNN.



More details have emerged about the school shooting that left 17 people dead and more injured on February 14 as officials and witnesses familiar with the investigation leak information to news outlets. For instance, an Uber driver who said she picked up Cruz at about 2 PM the day of the shooting told CBS Miami the teen was carrying a large object and mentioned he was headed to music class. Once he was dropped off, the 19-year-old apparently headed to the freshman building, where officials now say it seems like he tried to shoot through the window but might not have been able to do so because it was hurricane-proof.

Law enforcement also suggested the shooter's gun may have jammed before he abandoned it and a vest he was wearing to blend in with the crowd and flee. He had an additional 180 rounds that might have been fired.

Although a neo-Nazi group called the Republic of Florida previously tried to claim Cruz as a member, its leader has since walked back his statements. Police in Tallahassee, Florida, where the group is based, suggested the shooter was not overtly involved with the group.

The 19-year-old is currently being held without bail in the Broward County Jail, where he's awaiting trial on 17 premeditated counts of murder. His next court appearance is scheduled for Wednesday.

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Desus and Mero Talk About That Guy Who Stole an ATV for a Naked Joy Ride

On Sunday afternoon, a Missouri man decided to steal a bright yellow ATV, strip down, and go on a ride, leading to one bizarre police chase and a video of his commute that soon went viral. Johnathon A. Menth—who was, you guessed it, under the influence at the time—was charged with sexual misconduct, property damage, tampering with a vehicle, and burglary.

On Tuesday's episode of Desus & Mero, the hosts discussed Menth's wild ride, the soiled ATV, and how the suspect's name sounds suspiciously like what they think his drug of choice might be.

You can watch last night’s Desus & Mero for free online now, and be sure to catch new episodes weeknights at 11 PM on VICELAND.



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The VICE Morning Bulletin

Everything you need to know about the world this morning, curated by VICE.

US News

Foreign Powers Discussed How to Manipulate Jared Kushner, Report Says
Officials from Israel, China, Mexico, and the United Arab Emirates all talked about trying to influence the president’s senior adviser and son-in-law by way of his sprawling business ties, according to anonymous officials. Kushner was told Friday he would have his security clearance downgraded, a decision reportedly reached in part because of unease about his contacts with foreign officials.—The Washington Post

Hope Hicks Admits Lying for Trump, Refuses to Talk White House
The White House communications director reportedly refused to tell the House Intelligence Committee anything related to Trump's time in office or the transition period, only answering questions about his campaign. According to anonymous officials, Hicks admitted she had told “white lies” on behalf of Trump, but insisted she had not lied about anything related to the Russia probe.—The New York Times

ICE Sweeps Up 150 People in Bay Area
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials made the arrests as part of a regional crackdown this week. Thomas D. Homan, deputy director for ICE, said “sanctuary jurisdictions” like San Francisco and Oakland had been harboring “dangerous criminal aliens." ICE said around 50 percent of those detained had non-immigration-related criminal convictions.—CBS News

Suspicious Letter Leaves 11 People Sick at Military Base
Three of the 11 people who fell ill after a letter containing unknown material was sent to a base in Arlington, Virginia, were hospitalized. All were said to be in stable condition, having reported a burning feeling in their hands and face. Initial analysis did not reveal any harmful substances, but the letter was sent for further tests.—CNN

International News

North Korea Sent Syria Equipment for Chemical Weapons, UN Says
Pyongyang provided valves, pipes, and other materials that could have been used to manufacture chemical weapons in Syria, according to a new report by the UN Panel of Experts. UN investigators believe North Korea made roughly 40 deliveries between 2012 and 2017. They also said North Korean missile experts were spotted at weapon sites in Syria.—BBC News

Afghan President Willing to Recognize the Taliban
President Ashraf Ghani said his government would accept the legitimacy of the Taliban as part of an effort to form a lasting political structure in the country. Speaking at an international conference designed to “draw” the Taliban into peace talks, Ghani said a ceasefire, new elections, and a prisoner release program were all on the table.—Reuters

Jerusalem Church Claims ‘Victory’ in Tax Row
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre opened its doors on Wednesday after closing for three days in protest of an Israeli government plan to introduce a church property tax. Parliament dropped the proposal Tuesday. “This is a victory,” said Adeeb Joudeh, custodian of the site in Jerusalem. “We’re celebrating.”—Al Jazeera

At Least 15 Killed in Egyptian Train Crash
Two passenger train carriages collided with a cargo train in Egypt’s northern Beheira province Wednesday. At least 15 people were killed and another 40 injured in the crash, according to a state news outlet.—Reuters

Everything Else

Parkland Shooting Survivors Join Demi Lovato Onstage
The star welcomed up six students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School during the first performance of her world tour in San Diego Tuesday night. “It was such an honor to meet them and hear their courageous stories,” Lovato said.—Billboard

Soundtrack for New Wes Anderson Movie Revealed
ABKCO shared a full tracklist for the Isle of Dogs soundtrack Tuesday, including the score by Alexandre Desplat. Released March 30, it also features music by the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band and Kaoru Watanabe.—Pitchfork

Looks Like Spice Girls Will Perform at the Royal Wedding
Mel B said all five members of the British girl group have been invited to Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's wedding. When asked about it on The Real, she implied the Spice Girls would be singing at the reception. “I’m gonna be fired,” she said.—TIME

Trailer for JAY-Z’s Trayvon Martin Documentary Drops
Paramount Network shared a first look at Rest in Power: The Enduring Life of Trayvon Martin, a new series about the unarmed 17-year-old fatally shot in 2012. JAY-Z is producing the six-part project.—i-D

YouTube Bans Neo-Nazi Channel
The move came after the Anti-Defamation League urged the company to “immediately” remove material posted by Atomwaffen Division. CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said the Neo-Nazi group’s videos feature “disgusting racist content” and “incite hatred.”—Motherboard

Make sure to check out the latest episode of VICE's daily podcast. Today we’ll hear from Cathy Hughes, founder and chairperson of Radio One, the largest African-American owned and operated broadcast company in the nation.

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The Best Oscar-Nominated Movies New to Netflix in March

With the 90th Academy Awards kicking off this Sunday on ABC at 8:00 PM EST, it’s a good time to be binge-watching movies. New movies on Netflix in March include late-night staples Wet Hot American Summer, 300, and Jackass: Number Two. Alongside the best Netflix movies and shows to watch when you're stoned, and movies on Netflix that pass the Bechdel test, we’ve combed through the new Netflix additions and found the films that didn’t quite win the golden statuettes, but are still more than worthy of your attention.

Casino (1995)

But one humble entry in the cabinet of Academy snubs against Martin Scorsese, Casino didn’t even score a nomination for De Niro or a never-better Joe Pesci. Sharon Stone, however, got the Best Actress nod in 1996 for her ice-cold portrayal of casino queen Ginger McKenna. Want a masterclass in how to hustle? Watch Stone’s performance carefully.

Ghostbusters (1984)

As someone who does not care about Ghostbusters (don’t worry, I also don’t care about Star Wars or Harry Potter in equal measure), the only things I remember are the ectoplasm and the theme song. Well, apparently that puts me in the same league as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1985, because that’s all they cared about when it came to Ghostbusters’ nominations for Best Visual Effects and Best Original Song.

Revolutionary Road (2008)

Sam Mendes’s achingly tender period piece reunited Titanic megastars Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio, and neither one of them got much recognition for it. Michael Shannon, however, scored his first nomination for Best Supporting Actor in 2009, while art director Kristi Zea, set decorator Debra Schutt, and costume designer Albert Wolsky all scored nominations for creating an air of 1950s suburbia so authentic, it’s practically carcinogenic.

Up in the Air (2009)

A talky film that you might file in the “adult-contemporary” section of a video store (if video stores were organized like record stores, and either still existed), this Sideways-on-air was predestined to be the biggest “almost” of the 82nd Academy Awards in 2010. From Best Picture to two Best Supporting Actress nominees (Vera Farmiga and a pre- Pitch Perfect Anna Kendrick), Up in the Air is a movie that’s genuinely just glad to be here. Sometimes that’s all you need.

Little Women (1994)

I’ll admit I’ve never seen Little Women, but I did watch the trailer and it was all I needed to know why Winona got a Best Actress nomination in 1995. People also really cared about the costumes, and the septuagenarian voting members of the Academy dug the music. And there you have it.

Here are a few other movies coming to Netflix in March that didn't win the coveted golden statue (but should have!):
Adventureland: Arguably Kristen Stewart’s magnum opus.
Les Affames: French-Canadian zombies—oui.
Layla M.: The Netherlands’ entry in the Foreign-Language Oscar category.
Cruel Intentions 1, 2, and 3: Return to a time when teens certainly weren’t woke, but they did make being popular look sexy AND cool.
Moon: Watch it, and then watch Mute.

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Repealing Net Neutrality Could Kill Indie Porn

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