September 2019

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TL;DR: The Lenovo Mirage Solo VR headset is on sale for only $199.68 on Amazon. (It's normally $399.99, so you'll save just over $200.)


Between dire climate change reports and high-stakes impeachment inquiries, this world sure feels like A Lot sometimes.

Want to escape to another one? With a virtual reality (VR) headset, you can explore all sorts of breathtaking virtual environments without ever leaving your living room. 

We've seen VR headsets listed at a variety of price points to suit different budgets; many simple smartphone-powered models are available for less than $50. However, anyone who's serious about VR should think about upgrading to a standalone VR headset. It'll cost you a bit more — a couple hundred dollars, probably — but compared to the visuals most smartphone screens produce, a standalone display offers a far more immersive experience with vivid and realistic details. Read more...

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TL;DR: Calphalon's classy dark stainless steel slow cooker can sauté, brown, and sear, and it's only $99 at Amazon — $50.99 off the regular price.


Being an ~adult~ with your own place doesn't automatically eliminate homesickness from your range of emotions. Autumn is one of the hardest times, even if you're a fan of spooky season. You can't escape the recipes for cozy meals, and as surface-level as it sounds, home-cooked meals are laced with nostalgia. 

Your squished apartment may not be as snug as your childhood living room, but you can certainly feed yourself something more comforting than a Door Dash delivery. The Calphalon Digital Sauté Slow Cooker is your ticket to a range of new recipes, and it's on sale for $99 at Amazon. Read more...

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TL;DR: The iconic KitchenAid stand mixer will transform your kitchen for the better — pick one up for only $259.99 on Amazon today (that's over $150 off). 


We probably don’t have to tell you about how great KitchenAid’s line of stand mixers are. But, we’re going to gush about them anyway. Humor us for a minute, won’t you? The iconic and coveted machines are somewhat of a status symbol now — if you have one gracing your kitchen island, then congratulations; you’re chic as hell. One issue, though: They aren’t cheap. Like, not at all. 

Once in a while, though, these stand mixers go on sale with some pretty steep price cuts — right now, you can grab one on Amazon and save over $150. While it still isn’t cheap, this might be the best deal you find on one for a while — so get to it.  Read more...

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TL;DR: The spacious Farberware extra-large capacity deep fryer is on sale for $59, down from $79.


Sure air fryers let you enjoy fried food without the guilt, but what if you want to indulge in a deep fried guilty pleasure? Breaking out a skillet and a bunch of oil on top of the stove is messy, so if you regularly deep fry, take the plunge and invest in an actual deep fryer machine.

The Farberware extra large capacity deep fryer holds up to 14 pounds and is currently on sale for $59 at Walmart, saving you $20.

This appliance is great for cooking a whole turkey or just whipping up a serving of fries. The size makes it useful for all kinds of dishes. Plus, it doesn’t just fry — it steams and boils, too. It’s truly a versatile kitchen workhorse.  Read more...

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BEST DEALS ON TALKTALK BROADBAND THIS WEEK 


TalkTalk promises to get you going faster online, for less. 

TalkTalk can give you plenty of reasons to opt for one of its broadband packages. For starters, unlike many of its competitors, TalkTalk promises no price rises mid-contract. This means that over an 18 month period your monthly broadband costs will stay exactly the same. Read more...

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        Let's get screaming! Er, streaming.

        This October, Hulu is inviting tons of Halloween and horror picks to darken your doorway. You've got family-friendly movies like Casper or the Halloween Wars competition cooking series, running alongside scary options like Wounds, three of the Saw movies, and The Haunting in Connecticut.  

        Want to stay away from the terror? Try the premiere of Looking for Alaska (10/18) or rewatch Seasons 1-6 of RuPaul's Drag Race (9/29). 

        Check out everything coming to and going from Hulu in October 2019 below.

        Top Pick: Castle Rock Season 2

        The Stephen King universe returns to Hulu this October in all its award-winning misery. Read more...

        More about Hulu, October, Castle Rock, Listing, and Entertainment


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        The first thing I saw when I unzipped my tent on Friday morning at Alienstock was a woman sitting in the driver’s seat of her Subaru, door open, staring at our campsite as if she’d been waiting for me and my videographer, Liz, to wake up.

        “Hi neighbor,” she said, pushing up her Naruto headband.

        She introduced herself with one name, but told us to call her Ninja, and then forbade us from telling anyone her real name. Ninja had never camped before and was determined to spend the weekend surviving off a massive bag of trail mix. We ended up giving her a ride to the back gate of Area 51 that morning because she didn’t fuel up before arriving in Rachel, where one of three competing music festivals took place, and the nearest gas station was a 45-minute drive down the road known as Extraterrestrial Highway. Read more...

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        Adam Neumann’s fall from grace was astonishingly swift once his company, WeWork, filed to go public in August. Even while his spending was fairly well-documented across time (as were his apparent conflicts of interest), he was humiliated for enriching himself, then ultimately kicked out of the corner office before the company, in the least surprising turn of events in recent weeks, today yanked its S-1 registration.

        Neumann never exactly hid who he is or how he operates, so what suddenly sparked the ire of reporters — and investors — around the world? What, exactly, in an ultimately unsurprising IPO filing had people coughing up their morning coffee? Boiled down to the worst offense (including selling his own company the trademark “We” for $5.9 million in stock) was very likely the lock on control that Neumann had set up through a multi-class voting structure that aimed to cement his control. And by ‘cement,’ we mean he would enjoy overwhelming control for not just for 5 or 10 years after the company went public but, unless Neumann sold a bunch of of his shares, until his death or “permanent incapacity.”

        Given that Neumann is just 40 years old and (mostly) abstains from meat, that could have been an awfully long time. Yet this wasn’t some madcap idea of his. There are plenty of founders who have or who plan to go public with dual or multi-class shares designed to keep them in control until they kick the bucket. In some cases, it’s even more extreme that that.

        Consider at Lyft, for example, Logan Green and John Zimmer hold high-voting shares entitling them to twenty votes per share not until each is dead but both of them. If one of them dies or becomes incapacitated, Lyft’s so-called sunset clause enables the remaining cofounder to control the votes of the deceased cofounder. Even more, after the lone survivor bites the dust, those votes still aren’t up for grabs. Instead, a trustee will retain that person’s full voting powers for a transition period of 9 to 18 months.

        The same is true over at Snap, where cofounders Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy have designated the other as their respective proxies. Accordingly, when one dies, the other could individually control nearly all of the voting power of Snap’s outstanding capital stock.

        Unbelievably, that’s not the worst of it. Many dual class shares are written in such a way that founders can pass along control to their heirs. As SEC Commissioner Robert Jackson, a longtime legal scholar and law professor, told an audience last year, it’s no academic exercise.

        You see, nearly half of the companies who went public with dual-class over the last 15 years gave corporate insiders outsized voting rights in perpetuity. Those companies are asking shareholders to trust management’s business judgment—not just for five years, or 10 years, or even 50 years. Forever.

        So perpetual dual-class ownership—forever shares—don’t just ask investors to trust a visionary founder. It asks them to trust that founder’s kids. And their kids’ kids. And their grandkid’s kids. (Some of whom may, or may not, be visionaries.) It raises the prospect that control over our public companies, and ultimately of Main Street’s retirement savings, will be forever held by a small, elite group of corporate insiders—who will pass that power down to their heirs.

        Why public market investors haven’t pushed back on such extremes isn’t clear, though they’re far from an homogenous group, of course. Surely, some aren’t aware of what they’re agreeing to when they’re buying shares, given that dual-class structures are far more prevalent than they once were. Other investors may plan to churn out of the shares so quickly that they’re uninterested in a company’s potential governance issues later in time.

        A third possibility, suggests Jay Ritter, who is a professor of finance at the University of Florida and an I.P.O. expert, is that even with dual-class structures, shareholders have legal rights that limit that ability of an executive who has voting control to do anything he or she wants. Further, the board of directors, including the CEO, has a fiduciary duty to maximize shareholder value.

        Says Ritter, “I don’t think it’s accidental that with the We Company, the board of directors let [Neumann] get away with various things, and as it was transitioning to a public company, a lot of [outside participants] pushed and said, ‘This is a company where we’re worried about corporate governance and we’re willing to apply a big discount to people with inferior voting rights.'”

        Of course, some investors believe visionary founders should be left to control their companies as long as they wish because, in the case of Alphabet and Facebook specifically, their founders have produced asymmetric returns for many years. But we’re still fairly early into this experiment. Do we really want more situations like we saw with Sumner Redstone of Viacom, with trials over founders’ mental capacity playing out in the media?

        For his part, Alan Patricof — the renowned venture capitalist who founded the private equity firm Apax Partners before cofounding the venture firm Greycroft — say he isn’t looking forward to that future. Instead, he think it’s time the exchanges that list these companies’ shares do something about it. “I”m not holier than thou in this industry,” says Patricof, “but if you want to be a publicly traded company, you should act like a public company.” To Patricof, that means one vote for one share — period.

        There’s a precedent for intervention. Patricof notes that dual-class stock first emerged in 1895 and by that 1926, there were 183 companies with such stock. It became so widespread, that the New York Stock Exchange banned the use of non-voting stock until 1956, when it made changed its rules for the Ford Motor Company, which granted only partial voting rights to new shareholders. In the ensuing years, few companies took advantage of dual-class listings until Google bounded onto the scene and now, 15 years after its IPO, it’s like 1926 all again.

        Indeed, while Patricof is sympathetic to the argument that founders might need protection for a few years after an IPO, things have gone way too far, in his estimation, and he thinks the best solution would be for the NYSE and Nasdaq to meet for lunch and decide to ban multi-class shares again.

        There aren’t a lot of other options. VCs aren’t going to force the issue by turning away founders with whom they want to work. Neither are bankers or large institutional investors like mutual funds; they’ve also shown they’re more than happy to look the other way if it means money in their pockets. “I could be wrong,” says Patricof, “but I don’t think it would that tough for [the big exchanges] to impose a ban that keeps founders from wielding so much power at the expense of the company’s other shareholders.”

        Given how fiercely competitive the exchanges are, it’s certainly hard to imagine, this meeting of the minds. But the only other plausible path back to a saner system would seemingly be the Securities & Exchange Commission, and it seems disinclined to do anything about the issue.

        Indeed, while Commissioner Jackson has advocated for change, SEC Chairman Jay Clayton would clearly prefer to leave well enough alone. After the S&P Dow Jones Indices and another major index company, FTSE Russell, decided to ban all companies with multiple classes of stock a couple of years ago — they’re uncomfortable with forcing popular index funds to buy stakes in companies that give investors little say in corporate decisions — Clayton reportedly called the moves “governance by indexation” at a conference.

        He’s worried that the indexes are being heavy-handed. On the other hand, something has to give, and a lot of market participants might rather see companies being forced to do abandon dual-class shares — or, at least, forced to dismantle their multi-class structures after a fixed period — to watching those with with unchecked power get broken into pieces afterward.

        The reality is that neither WeWork, nor Neumann, are not the zany outliers they’ve been made to seem. They’re very much a product of their time, and if public market shareholders don’t want to see more of the same, something has to be done. It might be incumbent on the exchanges to do it.




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        Teenage climate change activist Greta Thunberg is already a force to be reckoned with. But pair her most recent speech up with some vocal distortion over Swedish death metal and she's downright terrifying.

        YouTuber John Mollusk took it upon himself to create this masterpiece, and honestly Greta should heavily consider incorporating more heavy metal into her speeches. It really makes the urgency of climate change action hit home.

        "How dare you," Greta screams with enough distortion to make the masses mosh. 

        This appears to Mollusk's first attempt at turning heartfelt speeches into metal growls, but we hope there'll be more to come. We're going to headbang our way to immediate and decisive policy change. Read more...

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        One decade down, one more to go. The 2019 Social Good Summit marked the tenth anniversary of the annual event, as well as start of the ten-year countdown to 2030 — the deadline for the world to implement the Sustainable Development Goals

        To honor the occasion, this year's Social Good Summit focused on the most crucial issue of our time, one that impacts not only each of the 17 SDGs, but every individual life on Earth: climate change. It made for a day full of inspiring speakers, fascinating conversations, and a palpable sense of camaraderie in the face of the enormous battle we have ahead of us. Read more...

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        Over five seasons, fans of Bojack Horseman have watched the depressed, self-sabotaging former sitcom star refuse to commit to positive change. But the first trailer for Bojack Season 6 reveals that the horsey antihero's stint in rehab may have been exactly what he needed to finally move forward in his life. 

        The trailer also reveals that Season 6 will be the last we see of Bojack, with a two-part season airing half in 2019 and half in early 2020Bojack Horseman Season 6 Part One arrives on Netflix Oct. 25; Part Two arrives Jan. 31, 2020. Read more...

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        "'Andy' like Toy Story!" they always say. 

        Always my response: "Hahaha... yep..."

        And then the followup: "You gootttt a frriiieeennnd in me!"

        "Yep. That's the song..."

        The Twitterverse is filled with people whose names have surely trapped them in interactions like the one above due to their pop culture presence. Writer Jesse McLaren tweeted in search of these poor souls, and the responses deserve our sympathy.

        What piece of pop culture has ruined your first name?

        — Jesse McLaren (@McJesse) September 25, 2019

        McLaren kicked things off, and it's got us thinking song names may be the most punished of all. Read more...

        More about Culture, Pop Culture, Names, Culture, and Web Culture


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        TL;DR: Stay active at the office with the Cubii Pro, an under-desk elliptical that's not as extra as it sounds. It's on sale for $249 at Amazon — a savings of $100.


        Who has the energy to go to the gym after a long, hard day of sitting in an office chair?

        As backwards as it sounds, the sedentary lifestyle can get exhausting. It's not exactly riveting, and finding the motivation to get up and burn some calories outside of the 9-5.

        Cubii wants to change that. It's a Bluetooth-enabled elliptical that sits under your desk and provides a way to stay active at the office without taking a walk every hour (or whatever that weird suggestion is). If it sounds like a life saver, just know that it's $100 off its regular price on Amazon. Read more...

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        Radiation.

        The word inspires fear and images of mushroom clouds and meltdowns. And when people hear that their WiFi routers and cellphones emit radiation, they get scared. 

        In response, maybe they read the recent FDA and FCC reports saying the electromagnetic radiation produced by cellphones and wireless devices is safe for humans. Or maybe they get sucked into an Instagram hole, where people sell crystal pyramids that promise to convert radiation "into positive energy." 

        “Because radiation is such a scary term, I think it's incredibly easy to mislead people,” said David Robert Grimes, a cancer researcher who studies public understanding of science. “I would argue there's an awful lot of profiteering off of people's fears and misunderstanding implicit in this weird Instagram world.” Read more...

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        TL;DR: The sleek KitchenAid cold brew XL coffee maker is on sale for $79.99, down from $129.99.


        In case you haven’t heard, National Coffee Day is this Sunday — and while it is technically fall, it’s still cold brew season, baby. You probably have a normal coffee maker in your home, but do you have access to cold brew without having to run to the nearest coffee shop?

        Well, now you do. The KitchenAid 38-ounce cold brew coffee maker is one of Amazon’s deals of the day, shaving $50 off the price. That means you can have cold brew waiting for you every morning for $79.99.

        This coffee maker holds up to 38 ounces of coffee concentrate that can be stored in the fridge for up to two weeks. To enjoy the cold brew, mix two ounces of coffee concentrate for every six ounces of milk, water, or ice.  Read more...

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        TL;DR: The Echo Wall Clock pairs with your existing Echo device, and is one of the coolest timers you'll ever encounter — pick one up on Amazon and save $5. 


        We bet you didn’t know that Amazon even has an Echo device that doubles as a wall clock. They think of everything, don’t they? If you did already know, then congrats. If not, allow us to explain why having an Echo Wall Clock in your home may be a great idea. 

        First of all, the Echo Wall Clock is currently $5 off on Amazon’s site— it’s not the world’s biggest price cut, but come one, $24.99 for a smart device is a pretty sweet deal. 

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        Readers, it is time to discuss the most compelling scandal gripping our nation this week: Donald Trump being bad at spelling and grammar.

        Trump attacked the media once again on Friday morning with a strange tweet, which focused particularly on what he felt was a bad chyron on CNN. That chyron quoted another one of his tweets (this one from Thursday), where the president referred to Rep. Adam Schiff as "Liddle' Adam Schiff." (In a later tweet, he called for Schiff's resignation.)

        To show you how dishonest the LameStream Media is, I used the word Liddle’, not Liddle, in discribing Corrupt Congressman Liddle’ Adam Schiff. Low ratings @CNN purposely took the hyphen out and said I spelled the word little wrong. A small but never ending situation with CNN!

        — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 27, 2019 Read more...

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