Media Search:



Sephora Announces Third Class Of Its #SephoraSquad Beauty Influencer Program – Tubefilter

Sephora has unveiled the 73 creators it has selected to serve as part of the third annual #SephoraSquad.

The beauty giants yearlong, paid influencer program provides resources and mentorship to emerging creators, who in turn participate in the companys social marketing campaigns.

The digital application process for creators in the U.S. and Canada saw 30,000 influencers apply in 2021. And this years class is particularly diverse, Sephora says, with 79% identifying as people of color 30% of whom are Black, and 24% being Hispanic or Latino. Sephora notes it also sought diversity in terms of tapping LGBTQ+ creators, vloggers of different ages, and male beauty influencers.

Once selected, Squad members not only participate in marketing initiatives but also receive early access to free products and the chance to be featured on Sephoras flagship channels. The #SephoraSquad is also invited to attend industry events for peer and professional coaching, as well as the opportunity to interface with both leading Sephora executives and beauty brand founders.

All told, Sephora says previous Squad members increased their own Instagram followings by 18.5% and YouTube subscribers by 15.11% from May 2020 to Feb. 2021. Squad members have participated in a total of 150 campaigns that comprise over 5,000 social posts to date from Instagram to TikTok to YouTube. This years class placed a particular emphasis on TikTok, Sephora notes, increasing its reach on the platform over last year by 93%, to the tune of 5.7 million total followers among the 2021 class.

You can check out the full 2021 roster including makeup artists Stephanie Glamzilla Valentine, Ndeye Peinda, Sonia Valencia, and skincare guru Mykel Neri on the programs official website.

Read this article:
Sephora Announces Third Class Of Its #SephoraSquad Beauty Influencer Program - Tubefilter

How Bendigo became ‘the spearhead of communism’ | This week in history – Bendigo Advertiser

news, local-news,

BENDIGO had become "the spearhead of communism" and its trades hall needed to be purged, an RSL sub-branch president declared as hundreds of veterans prepared to march on the View Street building. The year was 1949 and returned servicemen were part of what today appears the unlikely vanguard of the fight against the Red Menace. It's a reminder of a forgotten era for RSLs, which this month marks 105 years since the first sub-branch was established in Australia. But for much of its history Australia's RSL network often found itself on the front line of a threat lurking in domestic politics, not foreign battlefields. That includes in Bendigo, where sometimes violent trades hall meetings spurred an anti-communist fervor that soon spread into a string of country towns. So, how did our city become a hotbed for forces awaiting the downfall of capitalism? And why on earth were RSLs leading the charge? This is a story about the fight for control of Bendigo Trades Hall, which by the late 1940s had been taken over by unions aligned with groups like the Communist Party of Australia. Communist aligned trade union officials barred the doors to the View Street hall multiple times, angry crowds heckled speakers and punches were thrown and multiple groups claimed control of the city's industrial agenda. Bendigo's RSL sub-branch was one of the most vocal members of an alliance that appears to have shaped and reflected deeply held views about the threat of communism at all levels of Australian life. It helped workers elect anti-communist union members to positions of power and organised rallies, then Bendigo RSL president J Skehan told his sub-branch's Anti-Communist Committee at a meeting attended by RSLs and multiple unions. "It is up to us to rid Bendigo generally of the menace," he said in a Bendigo Advertiser story from 1949. The RSL even had a weekly column in the newspaper which, among other things, occasionally plugged upcoming ant-communist rallies. "Diggers assemble," one column from October 1949 implored readers. "Bendigo sub-branch secretary urgently requests all diggers to assemble at the Memorial Hall to-night at 6.45pm," the cryptic article continued. "They will be informed of what is required of them on their arrival. The matter is extremely urgent." What followed that night were clashes between militant and moderate unionists at the town hall, with the latter taking over proceedings. For many World War Two veterans, the fear of losing liberties they had fought for to totalitarian regimes like those in Russia and China was powerful. More showdowns would take place in the year that followed, including later that month when police "chased" militant unionists from the hall, according to a Bendigo Advertiser report. Crowds of as many as 500 people regularly turned up to force communists out of the hall over that two-year period, multiple media reports from Victorian news outlets show. Numbers alone were not enough to stop communist-aligned groups. Scuffles often broke out as speakers were howled down and eggs were thrown. Some workers turned hoses on union officials trying to speak at one worksite. Anti-communist trade union officials began warning workers that their rivals were recruiting "bashers" to protect themselves at meetings, and to stay safe at Bendigo rallies. Pro-communist groups alleged they were the victims of the same sorts of tactics. La Trobe University's Ian Tulloch said Bendigo's industrial unrest was not as significant as others elsewhere in the country, but was a sign of the times. "We are talking about this historical period just at the really early stages of the Cold War," the expert on Australian politics said. "Mao had just taken over in China, Russia had risen." More from this history series: Did a dodgy cop's incompetence blow up an open and shut case? RSL leaders had been concerned about communism for decades and were finding common cause with conservative politicians, parts of the Labor party, right-wing unions and other "fellow travellers", Mr Tulloch said. Communists were a force to be reckoned with and had come close to taking control of the Australian Council of Trade Unions in 1945. It would have been a glittering prize. Unions represented as much as 60 per cent of the workforce, so they had a lot of influence. What's more, many Australian workers were happy to give communist union officials the keys to union buildings. "These leaders were all elected by members, of course. So it wasn't just that they took nefarious means to take over," Mr Tulloch said. Many workers - including in Bendigo - believed communist union leaders were among the few militant enough to deliver them better pay. They had a point. Then prime minister and Labor party leader Ben Chifley had taken over the country as World War Two ended. He had inherited an economy that had been pummeled by the war and was trying to rebuild it. Chifley feared what might happen if unions allowed inflation to rise by pushing for wages his government deemed to be too high. "I can imagine, quite easily, that this enabled a lot of Australian Communist Party officials to become elected," Mr Tulloch said. And why wouldn't you be prepared to strike for better pay and conditions? More from this history series: Should councils tax you? Why Bendigo's once wanted a slice of your income That is exactly what had happened earlier in 1949, when communist union leaders helped lead a coal worker strike with the support of people across the country. Chifley was so alarmed he deployed the army to fill labour shortages. It was the first time outside of war that soldiers had been used to break a strike. The Reds were not just under the bed. They were on the picket lines. Still, the Australian Communist Party largely failed to turn that workplace support into ideological change. People wanted better pay, not revolution. That communists controlled Bendigo's Trades Hall must have seemed an ominous sign to many when war with Russia seemed possible, if not likely. The fights over trade unions could not have come at a worse time for the Labor government, which was fighting a losing battle to keep control in a looming election. The Coalition was telling voters there was no difference between a moderate and militant in the Labor movement. When you vote LABOR you vote SOCIALIST! And socialism is the road downhill to communism," one typical 1949 Liberal party election advertisement declared in the Bendigo Advertiser. Labor lost power and unions lost their inside link to the corridors of power. Things turned out much better for the Bendigo RSL anti-communist campaign. It was so successful that towns like Echuca and Ballarat reenergised their own anti-communist movements. The new Coalition government tried unsuccessfully to ban the Australian Communist Party in the 1950s. Even without a ban, communist leaders in Bendigo had already lost power. Moderate unionists smashed their way into the hall in August 1950 after communists barricaded the doors, bringing that battle for Bendigo to a close. This story is the latest in the Bendigo Weekly's regular history series WHAT HAPPENED? Our journalists work hard to provide local, up-to-date news to the community. This is how you can access our trusted content:

/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/Tom.OCallaghan/be131e6e-bbbc-48ec-81f2-60fe3a37cf79_rotated_90.jpg/r0_44_1384_826_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

BENDIGO had become "the spearhead of communism" and its trades hall needed to be purged, an RSL sub-branch president declared as hundreds of veterans prepared to march on the View Street building.

The year was 1949 and returned servicemen were part of what today appears the unlikely vanguard of the fight against the Red Menace.

It's a reminder of a forgotten era for RSLs, which this month marks 105 years since the first sub-branch was established in Australia.

But for much of its history Australia's RSL network often found itself on the front line of a threat lurking in domestic politics, not foreign battlefields.

That includes in Bendigo, where sometimes violent trades hall meetings spurred an anti-communist fervor that soon spread into a string of country towns.

So, how did our city become a hotbed for forces awaiting the downfall of capitalism?

And why on earth were RSLs leading the charge?

A story in Melbourne paper The Argus from Wednesday August 10, 1949. Image courtesy of TROVE

Bitter feud a sign of the times

This is a story about the fight for control of Bendigo Trades Hall, which by the late 1940s had been taken over by unions aligned with groups like the Communist Party of Australia.

Communist aligned trade union officials barred the doors to the View Street hall multiple times, angry crowds heckled speakers and punches were thrown and multiple groups claimed control of the city's industrial agenda.

Bendigo's RSL sub-branch was one of the most vocal members of an alliance that appears to have shaped and reflected deeply held views about the threat of communism at all levels of Australian life.

It helped workers elect anti-communist union members to positions of power and organised rallies, then Bendigo RSL president J Skehan told his sub-branch's Anti-Communist Committee at a meeting attended by RSLs and multiple unions.

"It is up to us to rid Bendigo generally of the menace," he said in a Bendigo Advertiser story from 1949.

The RSL even had a weekly column in the newspaper which, among other things, occasionally plugged upcoming ant-communist rallies.

"Diggers assemble," one column from October 1949 implored readers.

A meeting outside trades hall shortly before moderate union and RSL groups stormed the building. Picture: BENDIGO ADVERTISER, courtesy of the Bendigo Library

"Bendigo sub-branch secretary urgently requests all diggers to assemble at the Memorial Hall to-night at 6.45pm," the cryptic article continued.

"They will be informed of what is required of them on their arrival. The matter is extremely urgent."

What followed that night were clashes between militant and moderate unionists at the town hall, with the latter taking over proceedings.

For many World War Two veterans, the fear of losing liberties they had fought for to totalitarian regimes like those in Russia and China was powerful.

More showdowns would take place in the year that followed, including later that month when police "chased" militant unionists from the hall, according to a Bendigo Advertiser report.

Crowds of as many as 500 people regularly turned up to force communists out of the hall over that two-year period, multiple media reports from Victorian news outlets show.

Numbers alone were not enough to stop communist-aligned groups.

Scuffles often broke out as speakers were howled down and eggs were thrown. Some workers turned hoses on union officials trying to speak at one worksite.

A front page story from the Bendigo Advertiser at the height of the conflict. Image courtesy of the Bendigo Library

Anti-communist trade union officials began warning workers that their rivals were recruiting "bashers" to protect themselves at meetings, and to stay safe at Bendigo rallies.

Pro-communist groups alleged they were the victims of the same sorts of tactics.

La Trobe University's Ian Tulloch said Bendigo's industrial unrest was not as significant as others elsewhere in the country, but was a sign of the times.

"We are talking about this historical period just at the really early stages of the Cold War," the expert on Australian politics said.

"Mao had just taken over in China, Russia had risen."

RSL leaders had been concerned about communism for decades and were finding common cause with conservative politicians, parts of the Labor party, right-wing unions and other "fellow travellers", Mr Tulloch said.

Communists were a force to be reckoned with and had come close to taking control of the Australian Council of Trade Unions in 1945.

It would have been a glittering prize. Unions represented as much as 60 per cent of the workforce, so they had a lot of influence.

What's more, many Australian workers were happy to give communist union officials the keys to union buildings.

"These leaders were all elected by members, of course. So it wasn't just that they took nefarious means to take over," Mr Tulloch said.

Many workers - including in Bendigo - believed communist union leaders were among the few militant enough to deliver them better pay.

Ben Chifley. Image courtesy of the National Museum of Australia

Wages stagnate in post-war rebuild

Then prime minister and Labor party leader Ben Chifley had taken over the country as World War Two ended.

He had inherited an economy that had been pummeled by the war and was trying to rebuild it.

Chifley feared what might happen if unions allowed inflation to rise by pushing for wages his government deemed to be too high.

"I can imagine, quite easily, that this enabled a lot of Australian Communist Party officials to become elected," Mr Tulloch said.

And why wouldn't you be prepared to strike for better pay and conditions?

That is exactly what had happened earlier in 1949, when communist union leaders helped lead a coal worker strike with the support of people across the country.

Chifley was so alarmed he deployed the army to fill labour shortages. It was the first time outside of war that soldiers had been used to break a strike.

The Reds were not just under the bed. They were on the picket lines.

Still, the Australian Communist Party largely failed to turn that workplace support into ideological change.

People wanted better pay, not revolution.

That communists controlled Bendigo's Trades Hall must have seemed an ominous sign to many when war with Russia seemed possible, if not likely.

The fights over trade unions could not have come at a worse time for the Labor government, which was fighting a losing battle to keep control in a looming election.

The Coalition was telling voters there was no difference between a moderate and militant in the Labor movement.

When you vote LABOR you vote SOCIALIST! And socialism is the road downhill to communism," one typical 1949 Liberal party election advertisement declared in the Bendigo Advertiser.

Labor lost power and unions lost their inside link to the corridors of power.

Things turned out much better for the Bendigo RSL anti-communist campaign.

A front page story from the Riverine Herald on Saturday October 22, 1949

It was so successful that towns like Echuca and Ballarat reenergised their own anti-communist movements.

The new Coalition government tried unsuccessfully to ban the Australian Communist Party in the 1950s.

Even without a ban, communist leaders in Bendigo had already lost power.

Moderate unionists smashed their way into the hall in August 1950 after communists barricaded the doors, bringing that battle for Bendigo to a close.

This story is the latest in the Bendigo Weekly's regular history series WHAT HAPPENED?

Our journalists work hard to provide local, up-to-date news to the community. This is how you can access our trusted content:

Visit link:
How Bendigo became 'the spearhead of communism' | This week in history - Bendigo Advertiser

How YouTube and Facebook video consumption exploded during the pandemic: Datacenter Weekly – AdAge.com

Welcome to Ad Age Datacenter Weekly, our data-obsessed newsletter for marketing and media professionals. Reading this online? Sign up to get it delivered to your inbox here.

U.S. media ad revenue is poised to make a 22% jump in 2021, a far rosier picture than predicted even just a few months ago, according to GroupMs mid-year forecast, Ad Ages I-Hsien Sherwood reports. After a devastating year due to pandemic losses, the March forecast from the WPP agency projected a robust 15% comeback, but strong results from big tech companies have boosted the outlook substantially.

Essential context: U.S. agency revenue tumbled 6.8% in 2020 as fallout from the pandemic pushed the economy and agencies into a deep downturn, according to Ad Age Datacenters annual Agency Report. That was the second-sharpest drop since we began producing Agency Report in 1945. But the agency business is coming back amid a resurgent economy. Read Bradley Johnsons Ad Age Agency Report 2021 executive summary here.

InfoSum wants to improve ad targeting by making the consumer data its clients store easier to share through InfoSum Bridge, Ad Ages Mike Juang reports.

Essential context: The company currently sells infrastructure that can process consumer data stored on a clients system into identity graphs, Juang adds. The graphs, which InfoSum calls bunkers, are then analyzed or passed along, ensuring the consumer data used to build the graphs never leaves storage and protecting user privacy. InfoSum says Bridge now makes it easier to share this information.

Keep reading here.

The Global Video Measurement Alliancewhich includes Tubular Labs (the social video measurement platform that serves as the data supplier for the GVMA), Group Nine, Discovery, Digitas, ViacomCBS, BuzzFeed and other major playersis out with a new report titled Discovering Audiences on Social Video. Among the most striking revelations are the ones that have to do with the explosion of social video during the pandemic. Specifically:

Social video reach across YouTube and Facebook in the U.S. grew by 55% from February 2020 to February 2021.

During that same period, social video consumptionas measured by total watch timeacross YouTube and Facebook grew dramatically across all age groups in the U.S.: 62% for 13-to-17-year-olds,42% for 18-34, 49% for 35-54, and 52% for 55+.

Learn more: You can download a copy of the report here.

Taking on Adobe and Salesforce: Why Zeta Globals co-founder sees opportunity in the shift to digital, from Ad Age.

A (massive) new trove of data for AI: U.S. Launches Task Force to Open Government Data for AI Research, The Wall Street Journal reports.

ICYMI: U.S. advertising employment barely moved in May as ad staffing plateaus, per Ad Age.

Amazon Web Services under threat: Alleged Capitol rioter pleads guilty to plotting to blow up Amazon data center, per Fox News.

Hacked: EA got hit by a data breach, and hackers are selling source code, per the Verge. See also: Ten years of breaches in one image, also from The Verge.

Privacy watch: As ad tech firms test ways to connect Googles FLoC to other data, privacy watchers see fears coming true, per Digiday.

The newsletter is brought to you by Ad Age Datacenter, the industrys most authoritative source of competitive intel and home to the Ad Age Leading National Advertisers, the Ad Age Agency Report: Worlds Biggest Agency Companies and other exclusive data-driven reports. Access or subscribe to Ad Age Datacenter at AdAge.com/Datacenter.

Ad Age Datacenter is Kevin Brown, Bradley Johnson and Catherine Wolf.

This weeks newsletter was compiled and written by Simon Dumenco.

Read more here:
How YouTube and Facebook video consumption exploded during the pandemic: Datacenter Weekly - AdAge.com

Sen. Rand Paul talks dispute with Dr. Fauci over COVID-19 with LEX 18 – LEX18 Lexington KY News

LEXINGTON, Ky. (LEX 18) Sen. Rand Paul versus Dr. Anthony Fauci is a now-familiar scene on the national stage. Speaking one-on-one with LEX 18's Claire Crouch, the Republican from Kentucky minced no words on what he thinks of the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

"If nobody pushes back and lets Dr. Fauci rule the day, I think that's a mistake not to have a live debate over these issues," Paul said.

According to his interpretation of the science, Paul believes vaccines should be used for those who have not been sick with COVID-19, going so far as to call those vaccines used on people who have had the disease a waste. He claims if someone has had COVID-19, they have immunity.

"Fauci is ignoring the science on this," Paul said. "He'll begrudgingly admit that you have immunity, but he's sort of an elitist because he wants one size fits all. Don't think about it, just go get a vaccine."

These opinions certainly have thrust the Kentucky Republican into the spotlight and at times to the detriment of his own safety. In recent weeks, Paul's family received multiple threats including five different phone calls, some of which he says are still under investigation by the FBI.

"People need to understand that in Washington, I talk to Democrats every day, to independents, we do not have cross words, we have dialogue," Paul said. "We've got to get to a point where we can disagree on things without being so angry at each other."

On the topic of Gov. Andy Beshear and the pandemic, Paul believes the governor has acted on pseudo-science and, through his orders, has done a lot to cripple businesses in the state.

"I think Governor Beshear has acted illegally and in an unconstitutional way," Paul said. "The state legislature has come forward and said if he has an emergency edict it expires in 30 days and would have to be approved by the state legislature. This is what the founders of both our state and the country wanted. They wanted checks and balances. They wanted a variety of opinions, not one person's opinion."

Paul said only time will tell if things like booster shots will be necessary to continue fighting the pandemic, but he said he looks forward to a country that is once again making and selling products in a mask-free society.

"I'm optimistic and hopeful for both Kentucky and our country," Paul said. "If you look at the daily numbers of COVID, they're going down dramatically so we are in a really great place right now."

Original post:
Sen. Rand Paul talks dispute with Dr. Fauci over COVID-19 with LEX 18 - LEX18 Lexington KY News

One-on-one interview with Sen. Rand Paul – Yahoo News

Reuters Videos

The wife of Mexican drug lord El Chapo on Thursday pleaded guilty in federal court for her role in helping her husband run the Sinaloa cartel of smugglers. Clad in a green jumpsuit and wearing a white face mask, Emma Coronel Aispuro, appeared for a court hearing in Washington, D.C., where she pleaded guilty to three counts of conspiring to distribute illegal drugs, conspiring to launder money and conspiring to assist the Sinaloa drug cartel. As part of her plea agreement, the 31-year-old former beauty queen also admitted to conspiring to helping her husband escape from a Mexican prison in 2015 when he dug a mile-long tunnel from his cell. In early 2019, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who is 64, was convicted in a high-profile Brooklyn trial of masterminding a multibillion-dollar drug enterprise. He was sentenced to life in prison plus 30 years, and locked up in the federal Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado.Coronel, a dual U.S.-Mexico citizen, married Guzman in 2007 at the age of 18. The couple has twin daughters. Coronel could face up to life in prison for the drug distribution charge alone.The other two counts against her carry maximum prison terms of 20 years and 10 years, respectively.A tentative sentencing date was set by the judge for mid-September.

Follow this link:
One-on-one interview with Sen. Rand Paul - Yahoo News