Monday 9 May 2016

ELLE Singapore Magazine Article: Meet the Coolest Girl In K-Pop

Latest Magazine Articles:

South Korean pop star CL is the baddest female in K-pop and she won’t have it any other way.

ELLE Singapore Magazine Article: Meet the Coolest Girl In K-Pop


In the K-pop world of cookie-cutter music artistes, 25-year-old South Korean Lee Chae-lin — better known as CL — stands out by a mile. Projecting badass instead of cutesy, she wears black leather like a uniform, rapid-fire raps in Korean and has hits like Hello Bitches, Dirty Vibe and The Baddest Female.

Who’s this yeppeun yeoja (“pretty girl” in Korean) with the tough-chick stance and larger-than-life personality? Here’s the lowdown: A rapper, singer and songwriter known for her unique vocal tone and incredible energy on stage (have you seen her dance?), CL is the front woman of Korean girl group 2NE1 who’s also launched a solo album. She wields major influence in Asia (check out her fan site www. clthebaddestfemale.com). And did we mention she has nearly 4 million Instagram followers? CL is also the muse of Moschino’s Jeremy Scott (he calls her the Nicki Minaj of K-pop) and was his date to the 2015 Video Music Awards. Plus, when she coolly sat front-row at Alexander Wang’s Fall/Winter 2016 show at New York Fashion Week (traditionally a stylish launch pad for “It” girls), she caused quite a stir.

Click to Read more : Elle Singapore Magazine Articles

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Playboy Magazine US Article: Keegan-Michael Key on Obama, Religion and Life After 'Key & Peele'

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With Key & Peele behind him and his first marquee movie role (alongside a do-rag-sporting kitten) out this month, the comedian pauses to talk race, religion and Hamlet’s anger translator.

Playboy Magazine US Article: Keegan-Michael Key on Obama, Religion and Life After 'Key & Peele'

The plot of your new movie, Keanu, involves two guys trying to find a stolen cat. Forgive us for saying so, but that doesn’t exactly sound like the smart social satire you and Jordan Peele are known for. Are you slumming it?

KEEGAN-MICHAEL KEY:
It started out as a sort of exercise. Our platform has mostly been exploring African American masculinity and what it means to be a person of color in America. That’s a recurring theme in Key & Peele. So how do you do that as a movie? Jordan tried putting it into a feature-length script, and we realized there was something missing. These guys, the two main characters, weren’t pursuing anything. I thought the cat was Jordan’s way of being sly. I thought it was a reference to Blake Snyder’s Save the Cat!, which is a screenwriting book. But he told me, “No, I just think cats are cute. Everybody likes cats, right? Especially women.” That was seriously his justification for the cat. It’s really quite brilliant.

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Thursday 25 February 2016

FAST COMPANY: How BuzzFeed's Jonah Peretti Is Building A 100-Year Media Company

Magzter Articles:

FAST COMPANY: How BuzzFeed's Jonah Peretti Is Building A 100-Year Media Company

Ask BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti about his influences, and his answer sounds like, well, a BuzzFeed post—one titled “The Three Historical References That Explain BuzzFeed Will Make You Say WTF.” Peretti first points to a company that started more than 100 years ago, Paramount Pictures, which owned a film production studio, its own cast of talent, and its own distribution channel in the form of theaters. “That allowed them to adapt and change as the market changed,” says Peretti.

Peretti’s second fascination is with CNN—how founder Ted Turner ran a 24-hour news operation at a fraction of the cost of what the networks spent, due in part to prescient use of satellite and cable technology

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Money Magazine - Meet your financial goals


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Wednesday 24 February 2016

Yoga Journal: The Doctor Will OM With You Now...

With a growing body of research proving yoga’s healing benefits, it’s no wonder more doctors - including those with traditional Western training - are prescribing this ancient practice to their patients. What’s behind the trend, and will it help you feel better? Yoga Journal investigates.

Yoga Journal: The Doctor Will OM With You Now...


IN A SMALL workout room with a handful of other Navy veterans, David Rachford looked out the window to watch the fringed leaves of a tall royal palm tree wave softly in the warm Southern California breeze. The soothing view eased the challenging exercise routine he was trying for the first time. It was just a simple twist, Supta Matsyendrasana (Supine Spinal Twist)—nothing like the rigorous daily training he’d done as a damage control man on aircraft carriers—but his legs refused to cooperate, due to the painful nerve damage and severe sciatica he’d suffered as a result of a career-ending back injury. As an outpatient receiving pain management treatment at the Veterans Administration West Los Angeles Medical Center, Rachford was now required to attend this weekly yoga physical-therapy class. It was the last place he’d ever expected to find himself.

“I thought yoga was for thin, bendy, liberal, hippie vegetarians and affluent housewives, not tough, macho ‘warrior’ types,” says the 44-year old, now a Web developer in Santa Barbara, California. “But at that time, I felt pretty broken. I was in a lot of pain and open to anything that might help. I was depressed and scared at the prospect of surgery, and mourning the loss of my health and my self-image of being a physically fit ‘tough guy.’”

Click to Read more : Yoga Journal Magazine Articles