Trump claims his loss of Twitter followers proves anti-conservative bias

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Just a day after taking to Twitter to complain that Google search results are biased against him, President Donald Trump is once again going after the search engine, as well as Twitter and Facebook.

This time, he’s citing his very personal experience of having lost followers on social media as evidence of a broad scale anti-conservative bias.

SEE ALSO: Trump’s anti-Google tweets show that he doesn’t know how the internet works

While talking to reporters at the White House today, President Trump was asked a question concerning his tweets from Monday. He’d accused Google of offering “RIGGED” search engine results to anyone looking up the phrase “Trump News.” The president complained that Google was deliberately censoring “Republican/Conservative media” and showing search results that were critical of him from what he called the “Fake News Media.”  Read more…

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To protect our virgin eyes, this female tennis player was penalized for removing her shirt

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The U.S. Open has a lot of thoughts about tennis — and women’s boobs.

On Wednesday, French tennis player Alizé Cornet walked onto the court of the U.S. Open and realized that her shirt was on backwards. Instead of running to the women’s locker room, Cornet took off her shirt in public and then put it on the right way.

Umpire Christian Rask then charged her with a code violation, prompting necessary amounts of outrage. 

SEE ALSO: Serena Williams’ badass black body suit is now banned from the French Open

At the time of the incident, temperatures at the U.S. Open in New York hovered in the mid-nineties. It’s possible that Cornet didn’t want to expend additional energy running off to the locker room. Read more…

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The first reviews for Ryan Gosling’s Neil Armstrong biopic ‘First Man’ are out of this world

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That’s one small step from Whiplash, and one giant leap away from La La Land

Academy Award-winning director Damien Chazelle is moving away from musicals at light speed with the premiere of his historical drama, First Man, at the opening night of Venice Film Festival. 

And critics are loving it. 

SEE ALSO: Yikes, the reviews for ‘The Happytime Murders’ are absolutely savage

The Neil Armstrong biopic stars Ryan Gosling as Armstrong, House of Cards‘ Corey Stoll as Buzz Aldrin, and The Crown‘s Claire Foy as Armstrong’s first wife, Janet Shearon. Based on early reviews, the star-studded cast is just one of the film’s many assets. Read more…

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‘Castle Rock’ went full Stephen King with one great ‘The Shining’ reference

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Stephen King has written an absolute eff-ton of books, novellas, and short stories in his time, but his most famous is likely The Shining. It’s a dark, sad tale of alcoholism, telepathy, and the danger of topiary sculptures best immortalized in the Stanley Kubrick film that cast Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance, the anger-challenged author who attempted to murder his wife and child while under the influence of the haunted Overlook Hotel. 

SEE ALSO: So ‘Castle Rock’ is apparently a sci-fi drama about a universe that loves to scream, or something

Since Castle Rock takes place in the same universe as many (and perhaps all) of King’s stories, it was a given that the show would connect somehow to The Shining, but until Episode 8 the only reference was the name and character of Diane “Jackie” Torrance — canonically Jack Torrance’s niece who renamed herself after her uncle to piss off her parent — the town’s resident crime enthusiast who longs for the weird old days when interesting (read: deadly) things happened in her hometown. Read more…

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Halle Berry has something to say about young Prince Harry’s dorm poster of her

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Prince Harry is officially off of the market these days, but an old crush has somehow resurfaced. 

Dorm room photos from his stint at Eton College in 2003 popped back up recently — only this time, some eagle eyes have noticed Halle Berry on the poster behind the grinning young prince. 

SEE ALSO: Prince Harry’s former car can be yours for a mere £71K

“Ok #PrinceHarry, I see you!” Berry wrote on Twitter after finding the image on W magazine. She tagged Missy Elliot because it’s practically blasphemous to discuss Halle Berry posters without referencing the iconic line “Don’t I look like a Halle Berry poster?” from “Work It.”  Read more…

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Some people thought this meteor in Australia was a UFO

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A meteor seared over Australia on Tuesday night, lighting up the sky over Perth. 

According to the ABC, the local Department of Fire and Emergency Services received calls from “more than one concerned caller” who thought the meteor could be a UFO.

SEE ALSO: NASA cameras spot extremely bright meteor streak through the sky over Alabama

The meteor’s fiery descent was captured on several dash cams. 

I’ve got dash cam footage just quickly of the phone. Taking going up greenmount hill pic.twitter.com/7lyLXilInt

— Richard Bailiff (@BailiffRichard) August 28, 2018

CCTV footage shows how bright the meteor was — in the clips in this broadcast, it illuminates the entire frame.  Read more…

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Riot Games is finally ready to explain how it’s going to stamp out a ‘culture of sexism’

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League of Legends developer Riot Games wants to share what it’s learned over the past month.

The studio came under fire after Kotaku’s Cecilia D’Anastasio delivered an investigative report on Aug. 7 that exposed what the story referred to as a “culture of sexism” at the company. Riot responded the next day with a statement that pledged to step back and take some time to listen and learn.

SEE ALSO: ‘League of Legends’ developers accused of fostering ‘culture of sexism’

“We recognize we still have work to do to achieve our goals, which starts with listening to feedback from Rioters and others, and providing Rioters with the guidance and resources they need to uphold our values,” the statement read (in part). Read more…

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The Louis C.K. apologists are missing the point

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Seemingly from the very first moments of #MeToo, survivors and women were made to answer the same questions, over and over and over again, always asked with an air of accusation.

How long must an accused abuser suffer? What does redemption look like for them? What is the correct punishment? How much time is enough? What does an accused abuser need to do to redeem themselves?

The answers to those questions, which many women gave in abundance, appear to have been irrelevant.

SEE ALSO: Please stop applauding Louis C.K. for doing the bare minimum

Though it is not our jobs to do the emotional labor of fixing the problems abusers created — though we would rather have focused on what redemption looks like for those who suffered the abuse — we did it anyway. Read more…

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Which DNA test kit should you get? This guide can help.

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DNA test kits like AncestryDNA and 23andMe have become increasingly popular over the past few years and were a surprisingly popular gift item during the holiday season. 

Though DNA tests are being added to more and more people’s bucket lists, the sheer number of kits you can choose from is overwhelming. The result? A lot of interested folks opt out simply because they’re not sure which kit to buy. (Even DNA tests for your dog exist. Yeah.)

SEE ALSO: Best free dating sites and apps for singles on a budget

And that sucks, because finding out the whos, whats, and wheres that made you into the person you are is way too awesome to pass up. Read more…

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Conservative Facebook employees create a group to complain about ‘political monoculture’

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At Facebook, some employees have joined an online group to complain about what they say are the company’s left-leaning politics, reports the New York Times

It’s named FB’ers for Political Diversity, and was created by Brian Amerige, a senior engineer at the social media giant.

SEE ALSO: Milo Yiannopoulos’ Facebook rant shows that de-platforming actually works

Amerige wrote a post called “We Have a Problem With Political Diversity” on Facebook’s internal message board, which was shared with the Times.

“We are a political monoculture that’s intolerant of different views,” reads the post. “We claim to welcome all perspectives, but are quick to attack — often in mobs — anyone who presents a view that appears to be in opposition to left-leaning ideology.” Read more…

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