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Arnold Schwarzenegger Recited Fans' Favorite Lines From His Movies On Reddit

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Arnold Schwarzenegger has a new film out this weekend called "Escape Plan" with Sylvester Stallone.

It's basically "Prison Break" but for an older generation. The movie has pretty awful reviews from critics and is expected to earn about $9 million come Monday morning.

To promote the film, Schwarzenegger took to Reddit to ask fans to send him their favorite lines from his movies.

In return, he offered to upload videos of himself reciting those lines.

The result did not disappoint.

  

This one's from the new film:

Here's the final one:

SEE ALSO: If You're A 'Star Wars' Fan, You'll Love The Original 'Empire Strikes Back' Trailer

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The Real-Life Captain Phillips Conducted A Surprisingly Candid Reddit AMA

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Captain Richard Phillips is portrayed by Tom Hanks in new film

Richard Phillips, Merchant Marine and ship captain whose story inspired the Tom Hanks' film "Captain Phillips" about his abduction by Somali pirates, conducted a surprisingly candid Reddit Ask-Me-Anything (AmA) on Wednesday.

Phillips, who has been sailing for 34 years, offered answers to "almost anything" on his career, which he described as "many different things, including Somali Pirates (which you may have heard of, thanks to the recent movie)."

He received some praise from redditors for answering some of the more unpleasant questions — including ones dealing with accusations from his crew that he put them in danger. You can read the full AmA here.

Some answers have been edited for clarity.

On criticism he has received that he ignored warnings of a minimum safe distance off the Somali coast and put the crew in danger:

Again this has to do with the suit that started shortly after the incident. The 600 miles were advisories and warnings put out by various organizations. But if you look at a chart of our route, we were never outside of 600 miles. And this ship had been in that area for 4 years. So the warnings and advisories were basically if you can avoid the area, to avoid it by 600 miles and we were always in 600 miles. And ships had been taken out 1200 miles before, so the 600 miles was not that accurate.

A follow-up question asked him to "convince me the accusations your former crew is levying against you are false."

I don't think there's enough time here to convince you. It's a suit that is ongoing that started 2 weeks after they got back. It's not all my crew and unfortunately we live in a litigious society. Some of the crew had been on for a while and had never complained until after this incident, so the court will decide and hopefully that will convince you.

On how he coped with the stress after the ordeal of being held by pirates:

I have really had no nightmares or dreams from the incident. 2 days after in the movie it shows me crying in the hospital, and the incident actually occurred the 2nd and 3rd night, I would wake up in the night and I had a digital clock so I knew exactly what time it was, and I would be crying, racking and sobbing. And I would mentally slap myself in the head and say "What's your problem? You made it, you're lucky."

And there was this one SEAL who somehow sensed something in me and basically was harassing me, and he explained "Rich, it doesn't always turn out like this." They are not always successful. After some missions, they have to talk to psychologists. So I said "if you leave me alone, I will call him" so I called the SEAL psychologist. And he got a sense of me on the phone talking to him and he asked me if I was sad the pirates died, and I said no doc, no Stockholm Syndrome here, and then I said put us all back in the boat and we'll see who walks out.

And then he asked me if I was sleeping and I said I slept like a baby. And then he asked me if I was eating and I said I was not eating much but because it was hot that was normal for me. And then he asked me if I cried a lot, and I said no but I was waking up at 5 in the morning crying like a little baby. And he said basically it was the hormones and chemicals put out by your body during a fight or flight situation. And he asked me what I did when I woke up crying, and I told him what I am telling all of you, and he said well that is one mechanism to release these chemicals and hormones, crying and talking about it, so he told me the next time it happened to let it run its natural course. For the fourth morning, I woke up at 5 in the morning crying and sobbing like a little baby and I just let it flow for 45 minutes and it ended on its own. And it never happened again after that. And so I truly believe now that it is important to talk to someone who can help you, and to cry.

On who would win in a fight — him or Tom Hanks:

Ha! That's easy, Tom Hanks would lose. I probably have 25-30 pounds on him, although he is taller. Besides he's a big crybaby.

On the accuracy of the film Captain Phillips:

The story was fairly accurate in the film. We all have to remember it is a movie, and it is compressing 5 days into 2 hours, so some of the scheduling is different, but it follows the true story fairly well. For example, in the real incident it was into the rescue boat and then the life boat, and in the movie, I was directly sent into the life boat to save time.

On his first thoughts and the first sign he realized a pirate problem was imminent:

Well it was really a sinking in your stomach, an uneasy quease. And then we just went to our procedures and did what we could to try to keep them off. The biggest facet in dealing with piracy is the weather and indeed that morning, the chief mate and I had both said that we could not wait for the monsoon to change because this was indeed a pirate weather day, very little swell, near glass seas and very little wind.

The first sign was a sailor had noticed an intermittent blip on our radar, and at a little over 3 miles we saw the boat. It was hazy as it usually was in that part of the world.

---------

Phillips closed out his AmA by thanking redditors for their questions and reminding people of the Merchant Marines and what they have done in the past — in addition to thanking the U.S. military, especially Navy SEALs.

"WWII Merchant Marine Vets that still get no recognition but what they did during WWII that not a lot of people realize is that the rate of death was second only to the frontline U.S. Marines division," he wrote. "Many lost their lives supplying the Military in WWII. MacArthur had said that U.S. Merchant Marines were the lifeblood during World War II, and this is a group that needs recognition that is sorely due them as they get older and older and up in age."

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'Goosebumps' Author RL Stine Did A Hilarious 'Ask Me Anything' On Reddit — Here Are His Best Answers

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r.l stine goosebumps book series

More than a few children were kept awake at night after reading horror legend R.L. Stine's "Goosebumps" series.

His spooky stories about werewolves, mummies, and all things that go bump in the night were the perfect combination of fright and humor.

The iconic writer decided to answer questions in a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" on /r/IAmA yesterday — here are his best responses, just in time for Halloween:

Why did most of the "Choose Your Own Adventure" stories end with my characters' death? - Reddit user super_slayer

"You were TERRIBLE at making decisions."

Did it make you happy knowing you deprived me and countless others sleep for weeks? - Reddit user OctopusSlacks

"Yes, it did."

How do you feel about popular electronic music artist RL GRIME's name/pseudonym? - Reddit user zgoldenone

"R.L. Grime and I keep in touch. I do a voice-over every year for his Halloween mix tape."

What is your favorite horror novel? - Reddit user HempHouse

"'Something Wicked This Way Comes' by Ray Bradbury."

R.L. Stine reddit ask me anythingHow the heck did you think of names for all those characters? - Reddit user way_fairer

"A lot of the character names came from my son's school directory."

Have you ever had any personal supernatural experiences? - Reddit user Klass

"Once when I was an editor at Scholastic, I was sitting at my desk when I felt myself rising up from my body. I floated up to the ceiling and looked down on myself sitting at my desk below. It lasted only a few seconds and never happened again. No drugs were involved."

If you could meet any other author, living or dead, who would you like to meet? - Reddit user tabbyh

"I'm so lucky. I've met almost all of the writers I'd like to meet, including Kurt Vonnegut and Ray Bradbury. How lucky is that!"

What's the best advice on writing you've ever received? - Reddit user justinw_

"You won't believe this, but here in its entirety is the best writing advice I ever got (written by an editor at the top of my manuscript): MORE LORE."

What's the funniest fan mail you've ever received? -Reddit user TheyCallMe-JT

"One of the funniest letters I received, from a girl: Dear, R.L. Stine, I'm having trouble keeping up with all your books. Do you think you could stop writing for a while?"

Did you set out to write a children’s series or did it just happen? - Reddit user WifeAggro

"I set out to write for kids. I love scaring kids!"

See the rest of his AMA over at Reddit.

SEE ALSO: 35 Books Everyone Should Read At Least Once In Their Lifetime

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Self-Proclaimed 'Gold Digger' Is Dating Her Way Through Toronto's Best Restaurants

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Erin penniless girl tumblr toronto restaurants

Erin, a 23-year-old "penniless" wannabe actress in Toronto, has incensed the Reddit community with her new quest to eat at every fancy Toronto restaurant on someone else's dime.

On a Tumblr called "A Penniless Girl, Bad Dates, and Plenty of Oysters," which she started back in August, Erin wrote: "The plan? Join a slew of dating sites to find a man, any man, even a woman to finance this delectable venture into the maze of Toronto’s hottest resto nabes."

The self-professed foodie made a list of the roughly 50 restaurants she wants to try in the area, and has since been documenting her first dates with men she describes as, "mostly 2 & 3's [sic]."

So far, she's eaten blowtorched sashimi at Jabistro, steak tartare at King & Trinity, oysters at Canoe, and tapas at Hacienda.

Reddit soon enough discovered her Tumblr and outed her on /r/OkCupid, with comments ranging from "Reddit should destroy this girl's scheme," to comments bemoaning her spelling and grammar.

A few Canadian news websites picked up the story, too. One of her dates even figured out who she was and planned to dine and ditch her — though they ended up splitting the bill.

As for Erin, she doesn't seem to be taking the attention too seriously: "Men of Toronto be warned there is a menace on the loose, she’s bleach blonde, about 5’6, slim build and has an appetite for oysters. Reality check? Toronto gold diggers exist. Be afraid, be very afraid," she writes on her Tumblr.

According to her Tumblr, her JDate account has been suspended, but there's still her OkCupid account under a fake name, Christian Mingle account, and Tindr profile for all those interested.

SEE ALSO: What It's Like To Dine At Le Bernardin, The Best Restaurant In New York City

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Aziz Ansari Wants To Join 'House Of Cards,' And Other Goodies From His Reddit AMA

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Aziz 3Aziz Ansari's first Netflix exclusive comedy special, "Buried Alive," is available to stream as of 12 a.m. today.

The "Parks and Recreation" star turned 30 since his last two specials, which you could stream for $5 on his website before Netflix picked them up.

Everybody from Time to Rolling Stone asked Ansari if hitting the big 3-0 has made him any more mature (he did recently buy a house and now worries that if he doesn't get married soon he's going to die alone), but the good people of Reddit got a little more out of the comic. 

Here are some of Ansari's best responses to his "Ask Me Anything" this afternoon on Reddit's /r/IAmA thread.  

What is one of the most hilarious scenes of "Parks and Recreation" you can think of? - Reddit user HenryFulton

Very easy. Ben and Tom are having lunch with a drunk Joan Calamezzo who is creepily hitting on Tom and we have this exchange:

Joan: I'm going to go to the bathroom and powder my nose...amongst other things.

Ben: Dude, is she gonna go powder her vagina?

Probably the hardest scene I ever had to get through without breaking. Adam (Scott) and I just had to skip doing it for the first few takes.

What's [your cousin] Harris been up to? We've been waiting for his AMAATSSOUSA (Ask Me Anything About the Show Suits on USA) for ages. - Reddit user TomRalphio

He's been prepping answers for AMAATSWCOUSA (Ask Me Anything About the Show White Collar on USA).

If you could guest star in any TV show, which would it be and what kind of character would you want to play? - Reddit user crazyarab101

I'm gonna start lobbying to play a corrupt Indian senator on "House of Cards." Really want to film a scene at Freddy's Ribs. 

What were you for Halloween? - Reddit user dlatz89

I was Idris Elba dressed as Thomas the Tank Engine. I dropped in as Thomas at the Comedy Cellar and did standup too. It was super fun.

Who is your least favorite president and why? - Reddit user BrosephKennedy 

Charles Logan. Betrayed his country.

Fellow small man here. Just wanted to say thanks for making it less weird to shop in the boys' section for myself. - Reddit user boxofwyn

Yo bro, that was a joke on a TV show, have some respect for yourself.

I am standing in the frozen food section. Should I get the Hungry Man Backyard BBQ or the Mexican Style Fiesta? - Reddit user scabetti

Those are gross flavors of Toaster Strudels, go with strawberry.

How did you overcome the race barrier since they usually cast white people? Also have you ever met Danny Pudi or Kunnal Nayyar? - Reddit user meteordes

Just only go after white dude roles. I have met those guys and some people have met me and thought they met them!

What is the best way you used humor to diffuse a potentially dangerous situation? - Reddit user TheGreatPastaWars

Haha, not sure what you mean here bud? Do you imagine a scenario where I'm in a dangerous situation with friends getting mugged and I'm like "Guys, I got this" and start doing bits and the robbers start laughing and let us go? That would be kinda cool, but hasn't happened so far. 

When are you going to do your next feature stand up? - Reddit user Chakra_Scientist

I just released one today, you already need the NEXT one? Damn bro!

Aziz Ansari NetflixSee the rest of Ansari's AMA on Reddit. 

SEE ALSO: Aziz Ansari Scores $3.5 Million Book Deal To Write About Modern Courtship 

SEE ALSO: Late Night Hosts Have A Field Day With Matt Lauer's 'Baywatch' Costume

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Yelp CEO Shares His Single Most Important Management Tip

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New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman

Yesterday, Yelp co-founder and CEO Jeremy Stoppelman did a Reddit Ask Me Anything (AMA). It was a little unusual for a few reasons. One, you don't see too many CEOs of large public companies take questions on Reddit from the public. And two, things got pretty contentious pretty quickly, with a barrage of questions about review manipulation and alleged shady sales tactics.

Stoppelman responded pretty forcefully, combating accusations that the company will delete negative reviews if businesses advertise them, or highlight them if they won't, and pointing out that multiple lawsuits alleging just that have been thrown out. 

It wasn't all contentious though. Stoppelman talked about his experience as CEO, and building a company from a tiny startup to an Internet staple. He also provided some essential management advice, answering the question – What's your single most important management tip, and who/where did you learn it?

Here's his answer:

This one I got from PayPal, but I'm a strong believer in doing 1 on 1 meetings with each of my reports every week. Sometimes I feel like the company's psychiatrist, but I do feel like listening to people and hearing about their problems (personal and professional) cleans out the cobwebs and keeps the organization humming.

Stoppelman, along with other huge successes like Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, Reid Hoffman, and Chad Hurley, was an early employee at PayPal. The whole group's done so well that they're identified en masse as the "Pay Pal Mafia." 

He ascribes their collective success to the fact that PayPal rode out the internet bubble's burst, along with eBay, so there was a group of very bright, product oriented people with some money on their hands in 2002-2005 when very few people were willing to fund anything. 

Stoppelman also responded to a question asking what computer science students could do if they wanted to make it big. Here's his response:

For me joining a fast growing startup (X.com which merged with Confinity/PayPal) gave me invaluable experience both in coding and later engineering management. I also built an incredible network of colleagues and saw the entire company lifecycle from young promising startup to public co. I think if you can spend a few years at a fast grower with a great "promote from within" culture that's a good risk-reward balance. The Zuck and Gates undergrad dropout approach is certainly a risky one. I dropped out of business school, don't think that really counts ;)

Find the full AMA here

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Where To Find The Weirdest Stuff On The Internet

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Reddit is an extensive repository Internet gold and detritus alike. Then there's the entire spectrum of content in between, and man, is some of it ever weird.

1. r/DragonsF***ingCars

This is the place to go if you'd like to view or post drawings and Photoshopped images of dragons having sex with automobiles.

2. r/FifthWorldProblems

This one's abstract as can be. A user explains:

The first world is as you would think it is, where we worry about our petty troubles. The second world is the Soviet side of the cold war, so they worry about their dictatorships and their non-existent freedom of thought and have no time for petty firstworldproblems. The third world are developing countries, they worry about survival and have no time for petty second world problems. The fourth world are tribes and settlements that are not currently part of modern society, so they have no computers. In the fifth world, the inhabitants have torn down the walls of physics, and are messing with the fabrics of space-time.

3. r/Ooer

This subreddit appears to be beyond context and explanation.

4. r/AvocadosGoneWild

A place for avocado fans to show off their avocado photos and their avocado-themed creations!

5. r/Tulpas

This is a real thing, a practice in some Buddhist sects of manifesting "a being or object which is created through sheer spiritual or mental discipline alone. It is defined in Indian Buddhist texts as any unreal, illusory or mind created apparition." As the explanation on the subreddit goes, "a tulpa could be described as an imaginary friend that has its own thoughts and emotions, and that you can interact with. You could think of them as hallucinations that can think and act on their own."

The subreddit is for discussion, mentorship, and help creating tulpas.

6. r/BirdsWithArms

Weird as can be but totally innocuous, this subreddit is a collection of pictures of birds that have been Photoshopped to have human arms.

7. r/huehuehuehuehuehuehue

Another especially abstract entry. The only word found here is "hue."

8. r/GreenDawn

Set up your army men in cool and unlikely places, take a picture, and post it here!

9. r/OneTrueGod

A subreddit devoted to Nicolas Cage, the one true god apparent.

nicolas cage vampire's kiss

10. r/NoFap

This is a place dedicated to the proposition that refraining from masturbation and pornography is an exercise in self-control. Here's part of an example post called "One major reason why we keep relapsing and what to do about it":

Two words:

We forget.

Once I realized this fact: that no matter how many "motivational moments" or "hitting rock bottom moments" I have had, I would still end up relapsing after a couple of days. The number of times I have said "I will never do it again!" is frankly just sickening.

11. r/PocketSand

An in-joke from the TV show King of the Hill taken seriously: "This subreddit is for pocket compatible, feather weight, low-medium range self defense. This applies to materials like sand, salt, sugar, and chili powder. Glamour pocket sand materials such as glitter, dust, and flour are discouraged."

12. r/WhereDidTheSodaGo

Users take GIFs created from TV commercials and reappropriate them for completely new contexts. Take this one, for example. called "The Thermostat Shoots Money."

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Reddit And Twitter Are More Effective Than Facebook At Getting Users To Consume News

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One of the primary use cases for social media is to consume news. More than half of Americans get their news online. News can be an effective driver of engagement and time-spend on social media sites.

However, some social networks are more likely to be used as a news platform than others.

Together, the Pew Research Center and the Knight Foundation surveyed U.S. users on different social networks to gauge their news consumption habits on different sites. 

  • Reddit has the highest percentage of users who use the site for news (62%). This isn't so surprising, given its character as a discussion forum and how users can 'up-vote' interesting content. 
  • More than half (52%) of Twitter users consume news on the site. Although Twitter is relatively small compared to Facebook, we've theorized that its most active users are those who work in professions where the speed at which information is relayed is critical (e.g. media and finance). 
  • Slightly less than half (47%) of Facebook users consume news on the site

Twitter and Facebook account for approximately 75% of all content sharing on the Web, according to ShareThis, so it's easy to see why so many people stumble across news on these sites.

However, Pew's findings reveal that there are laggards. For example, only 13% of LinkedIn users get news on the site. That's a bit surprising. LinkedIn has put a lot of effort into content, and it seemed to be paying off: LinkedIn members viewed 63% more pages on the mobile and desktop versions of the site in the first quarter of 2013 than they did during the same quarter in 2012. Perhaps, much of the content consumed on LinkedIn is in the way of explainers, career information, and how-tos, which users don't consider news per se. 

Download the chart and data in Excel. 

BII social media news

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Why Nissan Bought Someone 4,500 Ladybugs

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Ladybug on leaf

Of all the places you'd expect a large corporation to go trying to make friends, Reddit would be one of the most risky locales you could imagine. Its famously clever users don't suffer fools gladly, and they're absolutely merciless when it comes to people or companies they find patronizing (just ask Woody Harrelson).

And yet, when Nissan decided to test its luck to promote the new Versa Note two weeks ago, it actually won over more Redditors than it upset.

The brand did it with perhaps the most tried and true method of winning people's affection the world has ever known: Gifts. Lots and lots of gifts.

To highlight the fact that the Versa Note is the first automobile ever to be sold on Amazon, two Nissan community managers asked the Reddit community what they'd like from the site, and then fulfilled an impressive number of the sometimes outlandish requests that were made. While a number of Reddit users (like the one who asked for gold-plated toilet paper) had to settle for Reddit's premium Gold subscription, the Reddit community took in a pretty impressive haul that included a tablet, a diamond necklace, and a package of 4,500 live ladybugs (you can find them here, if you're interested).

The stunt was a success, at least as far as winning the hearts and minds of the people who interacted with Nissan in the thread. Most of the responses to Nissan's community managers, Ashley and Natalie, were positive, and one Redditor even started a separate "Thanks, NissanUSA" thread in return.

What Nissan's Reddit experience shows is that brands can succeed in even the most hostile of public forums so long as they have an idea of what kind of users they're going to encounter and go in with a clear plan of how they are going to provide those users with value.

In addition to the obvious value of giving away free stuff, Ashley and Natalie charmed the mostly male Reddit community (it's unlikely that the selection of two women for this mission was coincidental) by handling criticism with humility, trading witty responses with commenters, and laughing it off when they were inevitably hit on.

Here's the complete list of everything Ashley and Natalie bought Redditors from Amazon, as cataloged by NissanUSA's Reddit handle:

A grow-a-boyfriend kit, roller skates, new boots, "How to Avoid Huge Ships" (book), "The Complete Calvin and Hobbes" book set, the ultimate bacon sampler, a horse mask, a three-wolf moon shirt, a 17'' catfish pillow, "LOVE" (Beatles soundtrack), "Cookin' with Coolio" (book), 4,500 ladybugs, a banana slicer, a bookmark, a skull cap, "How to Sharpen Pencils" (book), a pizza cutter, a headset stand, a puzzle, diapers, a French press, "Battlefield 4" (video game), a chair, a camera microphone, a necklace, a bean-bag bed, a scooter suitcase, a KitchenAid, and a Nexus 10 tablet.

SEE ALSO: Reddit Founder Alexis Ohanian Describes The Plan To Make Reddit Profitable

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6 Nerve-Wracking GIFs Of Planes And Helicopters Experiencing Incredibly Close Calls

The 10 Biggest Social Media Marketing Fails Of 2013

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There are some good corporate social media accounts out there. Oreo churns out cute ads based on current events, and the British cell provider Tesco Mobile caught the Internet's attention with charmingly sarcastic tweets that even trolls can't resist.

But there are at least as many fails going on in the marketing social sphere as wins, and the fails are often epic. 

A common element to all of these mishaps is that the social media team was not listening. And listening does not just mean talking to customers. It means being aware of the company's place in the Internet's culture and knowing that customers do not appreciate mass-produced responses.

The following list compiles the year's best of the worst, in which a brand's social missteps became magnified for the world to see through nonstop sharing on Facebook, Twitter, Reddit — and sites like us, Business Insider.

10. Strip club chain Spearmint Rhino's Melbourne team thought they'd be naughty and have Facebook users guess whose baby picture they uploaded. It didn't take long for users to look at the VHS sceenshot's time stamp and realize that the future stripper was now only 14 years old. Spearmint Rhino "liked" its own post.



9. Kmart was excited to reveal they would be open earlier than ever this Thanksgiving and would stay open through all of Black Friday. So when customers complained about the ethics of the decision, a stumbling Kmart social team responded with over 100 caveman-like statements.



8. Few things hurt a brand more than an accusation of racism. So even though it's impossible to tell if this tweet from Home Depot was indeed racist or simply stupid, the fact that the Twittersphere was up in arms over it made corporate delete the tweet, apologize for two days, and fire the social media agency responsible.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Inside NoFap, The Reddit Community For People Who Want To Be 'Masters Of Their Domain'

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nofap

Every day, a group of men and women around the world digitally congregate at a Reddit board called NoFap to specifically discuss not masturbating. Yes, just like the famous Seinfeld episode, "The Contest"– Jerry and the gang bet $100 to see who can remain "master of their domain" the longest. It's a community called NoFap, and it has its own theories, ideology, and mutual support.

"Fap" is a bit of Internet vernacular for the act of self-love. It first appeared in a 1999 web comic called Sexy Losers to denote the sound of a character pleasuring himself. On UrbanDictionary, it's the "onomatopoeic representation of masturbation." So "NoFap" is exactly what it sounds like.

There are currently more than 81,000 members of this community. They call themselves "fapstronauts," and attribute a number of major life changes to the practice, such as increased confidence, concentration, motivation, libido, and even penis sizeFor some it's a means of addressing concerns with their porn consumption, while others see it as a means to healthier relationships.

Still others engage in it as nothing more than a heavy-duty test in self-control.

How it started

"I've been able to do things I never thought I would be able to do. Asking a girl to prom, starting and holding conversations with strangers, being able to achieve when most people just throw in the towel at the first sign of adversity." -cjclear789

A June 2011 poston Reddit linked to a studyfrom the National Institute of Health. The takeaway from that study is a simple one: when men don’t masturbate for seven days, their testosterone levels increase by 45.7%. This inspired a weeklong challenge among Redditors, one of whom eventually posited that "fapstinence" could be a powerful motivational tool.

Things snowballed from there. The official NoFap subreddit was established and a standalone site appeared a year later at NoFap.org. Users now had a place to gather and discuss their various approaches to systematically not masturbating, as well as document any changes that they credit to NoFap.

nofap age breakdown

Who is NoFap for?

There are as many stories about becoming a fapstronaut as there are community members themselves. It's quite literally for anyone who wants to give it a try.

"For porn addicts, it is about recovery," NoFap founder Alexander Rhodes told us. He's a 24-year-old web developer in Pittsburgh, Penn. "Some fapstronauts are here to improve their interpersonal relationships, whether it be for a marriage, a relationship, or single life. For others, it is simply a challenge of willpower – to seize control of your sexuality and turn it into superpowers. There are many, many different reasons to join but we’re all on NoFap with one goal – to help each other abstain from PMO (porn/masturbation/orgasm)."

It's not a gender-specific idea, either. NoFap women are called "femstronauts."

Here's Rhodes again:

"Women are absolutely welcome, although the vast majority of us are guys, mostly in our 20s. I’d estimate that the NoFap community consists of 5% females, and although NoFap hosts hundreds of femstronauts, there is still a lot to learn about their experiences with the NoFap challenge. Pornography clearly is not a male-only problem [...] It seems like many of them are experiencing nearly identical problems that the men on NoFap report."

Although NoFap crosses gender lines, it may not be the difference-maker you need. As with any attempt at life improvement – working out, learning a new skill, whatever else – this isn't some magic bullet for changing your mood or outlook. Rhodes explained that "for some people, abstaining from porn and masturbation is absolutely life-changing. For others, it results in absolutely nothing. 'Your mileage may vary' is a term which we use constantly."

shutterstock_93841888The theory of NoFap

"I feel completely different. I just like myself better. I feel happier, more confident. I know that [it] doesn't magically make one happy and confident; it's the changing of one's mindset that does that." -indy175

A NoFap challenge consists of setting an intention to abstain for a certain amount of time, then riding it out. Participants report diverse and overwhelmingly positive results from their efforts, like increased confidence, reduced anxiety, improved focus, and even seemingly being more attractive to females (you're inherently confident at having conquered something big and women like confidence).

Rhodes chalks these radical changes up to a concept in biology called inclusive fitness. It deals with the number of offspring an organism has and their ability to take care of new offspring as they arrive.

"While [regularly having sex] in a mated pair, a males' testosterone levels decrease, which causes morphological changes that adapts them to be better fathers," Rhodes suggests. "When they are not regularly partaking in sexual activity, the testosterone levels rise, causing them to be more aggressive and better adapted for 'single life.'"

The hypothesis is that masturbation tricks your body into thinking it's reproducing. And if your body thinks it's "reproducing" a lot, it's not going to feel terribly compelled to stay sexually competitive.

How not to do it

A lot of NoFap advice is about how to reconquer your domain when you feel the borders slipping, so to speak. Here's what Rhodes says to do if you get "the urge" and want to fight it:

Get away from the computer and do something else that isn't what you shouldn't be doing. Is it your ultimate life goal to abstain from pornography or masturbation? Of course not! Pursue what you’re actually passionate about. If you fill up your schedule with cool things that matter to you, abstaining from PMO will be a lot easier.

Raise your awareness. Giving in to urges is always a conscious rationalization. Learn to recognize whenever this process is occurring. Whenever you are craving to dive back into porn, your mind is simply trying to justify a non-logical emotional decision that it has already made. Simply recognizing this may be enough to beat the urge.

If you're contemplating taking the plunge, Rhodes advises patience. He says participants should completely buy into the process ahead of time. NoFap challenges are "a marathon, not a sprint":

If you do not have a good reason for why you are doing this, you are probably not going to last ... You have to ask yourself before you start: Why do you want to do this? What are your goals? What type of person do you want to be? Usually the answers to these types of questions revolve around a central concept – something I like to call your "higher purpose." This higher purpose varies for all fapstronauts. Maybe you want to do this for someone you love, to combat loneliness, and a multitude of other reasons - but most importantly for self-improvement.

What Internet porn does to your brain

shutterstock_156216791Fapstronauts will frequently cite YourBrainOnPorn, an Internet resource that catalogs research on the relationship between porn and the human brain. It puts forth the idea that porn is a long-term problem that can rewire your brain, and that porn is far more harmful than one would think.

Perhaps the most tangible effect of overconsumption of porn (for men) is porn-induced erectile dysfunction, PIED. It's not an officially established medical condition but early research suggests there's some evidence for the idea that it is possible to overstimulate yourself with porn to the point that your plumbing starts working (or not working) differently.

That's a more extreme example and certainly doesn't affect everyone, yet Rhodes acknowledges that porn may serve a concrete purpose for some. In our conversation, he likened it to cigarettes – "generally harmful to health and society," but "not the worst thing in the world for some people."

"I do have trouble thinking of positive things about pornography [but] I am not calling for porn to be banned or regulated," said Rhodes. "I think people should be educated about the negative effects it can have on some people. The only thing I am currently actively advocating is education."

shutterstock_160754705Brothers who understand the struggle

"[It's] more than just a fad, challenge or community to me. [It's] a lifestyle. It's like being reborn after years of death." -effancy

Instead of swimming through a sea of jokes, an outsider browsing the NoFap subreddit will notice that fapstronauts are pretty much entirely positive and constructive in their attitudes toward each other. New initiates are welcomed warmly. Men are "brothers" who "understand the struggle."The minority community of women seek each other out and offer male members points of view from the other half of humanity.

Fapstronauts are there to congratulate each other when they get phone numbers from three girls in a day just as they're there to talk through their frustrations.

Rounding it up

People struggle with all kinds of demons – drugs, alcohol, family, emotions. For some, masturbation could be a problem on the same level. While some may not understand it as a "problem," looking at it like that misses the point anyway. There is no specific downside to fapstinence, and those who sincerely commit to NoFap frequently go on to describe interpersonal improvement on some level.

One user, "borninthenorthwest,"described how it altered his life and attitudes:

My relationship with porn began at the age of 13 with nude Playboy photos of Pamela Anderson and Jenny McCarthy. This was in the days of dial-up Internet, and I was initiated by my childhood best friend at the time. Although this did not seem pornographic, relative to what my peers were beginning to look at, I now see that this was the beginning. It began a cycle where every woman I met was judged by these photogenic standards, and felt no real attraction towards most girls in high school, despite being popular and well-liked for my prowess on the guitar. Enter college...

Going to a music school where I once again was a star, it became easy to retreat into the thing that brought me recognition (the guitar). But as I began to retreat, I continued to fill a sexual void with airbrushed photos of playmates and celebrities, which had now become a major weakness. Not so much pornography, but the cultural objectification of beauty ...

The man found himself unable to relate — or even be interested in — real-life women. "None of the girls I met in college could compare to the standards in my own mind. What few girls I was attracted to, I felt incapable of asking out for a date, and often would simply fantasize about them instead. In my imagination, there were no problems."

He was probably addicted to porn, he admits: "After college things took a turn for the worse when I graduated to more graphic forms of entertainment. By 31 I found NoFap."

It helped him get back to reality, he says:

Since then my relationship with both pornography and far more innocent triggers is vastly different. I no longer use porn at all, and no longer place the celebrity notion of beauty on the pedestal either, and am interested in real life and real people, slowly but surely engaging in reality.

It might be that NoFap represents such a dramatic lifestyle change for its participants that it forces them to develop new and better habits that would otherwise be lost to the time required for that other hobby. But let's not forget that all-impotant NoFap soundbite: Your mileage may vary.

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This Sweet Interactive Graphic Shows The Top 200 Reddit Posts Of All Time

This 90-Year-Old Grandmother Charmed The Reddit Community With Her Post-Thanksgiving AMA

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Grandma Reddit AMA

Holidays are all about tradition, and this year a 90-year-old woman from Connecticut created a new one with her grandson: the two signed onto Reddit after Thanksgiving dinner and held an AMA.

Tons of Redditors logged on to listen to her stories and ask questions, and it became so popular that it ended up making it to the front page of the site.

This was how she introduced herself:

I was born in May 1, 1923. I was born in Stamford, CT. I lived through the Great Depression, 14 presidents, a moon landing and much more. I served time in Army Air Force as a nurse. 2nd Lieutenant. I served for a year in the army. I then worked as a nurse in a doctor's office. I've traveled all over. I was in Pasadena, CA on VJ Day. I've been married, had three wonderful children I've lived a long time and have a lot to share, so please ask anything!

The AMA - short for "Ask Me Anything" - was a delightful read this morning, considering most of today's news focused on Black Friday showdowns and throw downs in Walmarts across the country. 

These were some of the highlights (her grandson typed her answers and put them in quotes):

Reddit AMA GrandmaReddit AMA Grandma 2Reddit AMA Grandma 3Reddit AMA Grandma 4Grandma Reddit AMA 5

Perhaps this will inspire others to hold their own offline AMA's with their family members around the dinner table this holiday season.

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10 Of The Biggest Lies Students Hear Before They Get To College

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Students Taking Test Teacher

For many students, your college years are supposed to be some of the best in your life; the peak of intellectual inquiry and social opportunities.

However, many students find that once they get on campus, the reality does not match their expectations. A recent Reddit thread — titled "What was the biggest lie told to you about college before actually going?"— gave some people the chance to voice what they saw as the biggest falsehoods about college.

We've collected some of the best answers below, with a few edits for clarity:

That professors don't care about students.

"That professors won't care about you. Even in graduate school, some of my professors are quite accommodating and caring."— lisadisa

That there are no multiple choice tests in college.

"My AP English teacher said that the multiple choice questions we had on a test towards the end of the year was the last time we would have multiple choice questions on a test. Couldn't have been farther from the truth."— kfuller515

Law School Students in the Classroom 2011That your major doesn't matter.

"'Your major doesn't matter.' THIS. Everyone told me to major in something I loved, now I'm saving up to go back to school to do something that will earn a living."— amkamins

That you'll gain the "Freshman 15."

"'You would gain 15 pounds from drinking.' False. You would gain 30 pounds from eating a buffet every day in the dorms."— ivegotagoldenticket

That you have to buy all your textbooks.

"Biggest lie in college: This book is required."— HappyMusicc

That you're special.

"That I was smart. I've come to realize in university that I am exceedingly average, possibly less than average in some areas."— Readys

That the workload is heavier than it is in high school.

"I had an AP [teacher] in high school [who] would give us hours of homework a night and she said it was nothing compared to college classes. It was a government class for god's sake. I minored in History and Government in college and I never had that much work from any class."— AfghanHokie

That you can wait to declare a major.

Students Neon Posing Rave"That you don't need to declare your major until a couple years in. While you can technically wait to declare a major the longer you wait the less likely it is that you'll be able to finish it within 4 years."— Rtgfvbnmjhyu

That you'll meet your best friends.

"That I'd meet my best friends for the rest of my life. I graduated two years ago and have only seen my two roommates/best friends from college once each. Don't get me wrong, I met a lot of great people, but no one that I would consider a life long best friend. I hang out with my best friends from high school way more frequently and they both live at least two states away."— BrokenPug

That you'll be busy all the time.

"'You're going to be busy and won't have a lot of free time.' I should have been told, 'You're going to have a sh*t load of free time. Time management is the most important skill you will need to learn.'"— TrollinForDownvotes

SEE ALSO: 12 Reasons Why Ithaca, New York Is The Best College Town In America

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Imgur, The Huge Image-Sharing Site Beating Reddit In Traffic, Was Started In An Ohio Dorm Room in 2009

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The Atlantic has a great origin story on Imgur, the photo-sharing site created by Alan Schaaf for his fellow picture-, GIF-, and meme-swapping Redditors.

Schaaf built Imgur ("im-uh-jer") while studying at Ohio University in 2009. He presented it to the Reddit community as "an image hosting service that doesn't suck," and it snowballed from there. Now Imgur drives more traffic than Reddit itself.

If you doubt the power of such a huge site, consider this recent romance to blossom out of it. A girl took this picture of a comically tall man watching television over a door. She posted it to Imgur, where the comically tall man recognized himself. The Atlantic goes into all the good detail, but they end up dating. Awww.

HZhbdDX

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Two Programmers Claim Reddit's Voting Algorithm Is Flawed

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Bryan Cranston Breaking Bad Reddit AMA Twitter

Two programmers have separately concluded that the algorithm Reddit uses to sort its posts is flawed in a way that discriminates against new posts that briefly trigger a negative reaction from Reddit readers.

That seems trivial at first, especially if you don't understand code. Reddit appears to be working just fine — so who cares about a typo among thousands of lines of code?

But Reddit is a massive distributor of traffic around the web. It had 90 million unique users visit its pages last month. Publishers (Business Insider included) benefit hugely when a post becomes popular on Reddit. A single hot link from Reddit can pour hundreds of thousands of readers into your site within hours. And those pageviews are easily monetized with ads.

So there is a lot at stake. People trust Reddit to get it right.

Ian Greenleaf, a San Diego-based programmer, claims in a blog post that the sorting mechanism Reddit uses to rank new posts can bury those posts if they initially receive a few negative votes. It's complicated, but basically Reddit's code — which has been published publicly so developers can examine it — has two ranking mechanisms: Time, so that new posts are favored over old posts; and net positive or negative votes, so that posts people like are favored over those that people don't like.

The problem, Greenleaf says, occurs when a new post gets a few negative votes before it gets any positive votes, rendering its vote score less than zero:

... imagine one submission made a year ago, and another submission made just now. The year-old submission received 2 upvotes, and today’s submission received two downvotes. This is a small difference – perhaps today’s submission got off to a bad start and will rebound shortly with several upvotes. But under this implementation, today’s submission now has a negative hotness score and will rate lower than the submission from last year.

Greenleaf says that the formula condemns some posts to a "purgatory" in Reddit, where they never get seen by other redditors. "These posts are sad, alone, and afraid. And notably, they are sorted oldest first, just as I predicted."

Systems librarian Jonathan Rochkind has made the same claim:

So it turns out there’s a significant typo, that keeps the algorithm from working right, in the several previously blogged descriptions of reddit’s story-ranking algorithm.

... More oddly, this same significant typo is in the public version of reddit’s code released on github.

On Hacker News, the claim has been rebutted by a user named "ketrainis" who appears to be a Reddit administrator. Ketrainis says that making sure that disliked posts don't show up is kinda the point:

This comes up every 6 months or so, always with some sensational title like this.

... The thing is, the two most important pages are the front page (or a subreddit's own hot page) and the new page. The new page is sorted by date ignoring hotness, and if something has a negative score it's not going to show up on the front/hot page anyway. The two other main opportunities to get popular (rising and the organic box) don't really use hotness either.

So when it comes down to it, what happens below 0 is pretty moot. Smoothness around the real life dates and scores on the site is more important than smoothness around 0, where we don't really have listings that will display it anyway.

In summary, there don't exist listings in which the discontinuities at 0 really matter.

That comment has sparked a big debate here and here.

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Professor 'Totally Destroys' Student In This Email After He Asks For A Grade Bump

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College student and Reddit user TheLostCaterpillar emailed his chemistry professor on the advice of another Redditor after he noticed that he was only 0.78% away from an A.

It didn't go well.

The student posted a screenshot of his professor's response along with this explanation: "He wrote back and totally destroyed me. I feel embarrassed and stupid. Think twice before asking your prof about grades!"

The original email:

Professor grade email

The professor's response:

Professor grade email

The Reddit user who gave the student the advice said he went about his email the wrong way: "1) You e-mailed the professor rather than talking to him - that's a big difference. 2) You worded your e-mail in the worst possible way and made it sound like you were practically offering to bribe him or something ('maybe you could find some points that were lost during the semester?') rather than asking for a round up."

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You Know What's Cool According To Cameron Winklevoss? One Bitcoin ... Which Is Currently Worth $805

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Cameron Winklevoss, famed digital currency enthusiast and 50% of the Winklevoss twins, "loves him some Bitcoin," according to his Reddit "Ask Me Anything."

Winklevoss is one of the most high-profile Bitcoin bulls, and he and his brother once claimed to own 1% of the cryptocurrency. Now he says he has "yet to sell a single Bitcoin."

Of course, redditors prodded Winklevoss over his infamous legal battle with Facebook (as depicted in Aaron Sorkin's The Social Network). Eventually, Winklevoss took the bait after one question pulled directly from a line in the film (via Seth Fiegerman).

winklevoss bitcoin

Bitcoin is currently trading at around $800.

SEE ALSO: Watch The Winklevoss Twins Show How Difficult It Is To Explain What Bitcoin Actually Is

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Chemistry Student's Rap About The Periodic Table Of Elements Is Surprisingly Informative

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A chemistry student at Carleton University in Canada is earning rave reviews on reddit for his entertaining and educational rap covering the entire period table of elements.

Apparently, at the end of every semester Carleton chemistry professor Bob Burk gives first-year students the opportunity to earn some extra credit in his course by singing all the elements in the periodic table. This year, one student took this challenge further, constructing a surprisingly informative 4-minute rap. 

Sample line: "Earth metals next/that's what we class them/because with water/they all be reacting"

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