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Bravos Unscripted Slate Includes Female CEOs, NY Trainers, And North Dakota

Bravo Media today unveiled five new unscripted series in development. Fempire follows female CEOs dominating their field, The Fit Club, tackles New York Citys hottest trainers, Why Not Minot? looks at the wealthy area of Minot, ND, Last Chance gives couples one last opportunity to salvage their relationship by putting them on television, and Crowd Control, in which social media decides participants life decisions, from what job they take to the food they eat.Bravo is constantly developing projects to find the next big hit that resonates with our pop culture enthusiasts, said Lara Spotts, SVP Development for Bravo Media.

In February, Bravo Media greenlit its first original scripted series, the hourlong Girlfriends Guide To Divorce starring House alumna Lisa Edelstein. The project, from writer-producer Marti Noxon and Universal Cable Prods, has received a 13-episode order for a 2015 premiere. Based on the best-selling Girlfriends Guide books by Vicki Iovine, the series follows Abby (Edelstein), a self-help book author who hides the fact that shes separated from her husband, as she starts to navigate her life as a single woman in her early 40s in Los Angeles. She finds herself seeking advice from her divorced friends instead of her married ones, which leads to some unexpected and life-changing experiences.From todays announcement:

Crowd Control (working title)

Produced by LOUD TV with Nick Rigg and Brent Montgomery serving as Executive Producers.

The ultimate choose-your-own-adventure that puts one persons fate into the hands of opinionated viewers. Having to rely on social media interactions alone, the day-to-day living of our host will be completely dictated by the audience. Every real life decision put before our host, from what they eat to who they date to the job they take will be decided entirely by Bravos highly engaged audience.

Fempire (working title)

Casting by Water Cooler Casting

These female CEOs know that making time for a cocktail and a date is sometimes their only salvation from the pressures and responsibility of growing a Fempire and commanding respect from the men who work beneath them. Business is personal for these women as they do whatever it takes to dominate their field and smash through the glass ceiling. Will they find happiness on the other side or have they compromised too much to get there?

The Fit Club (working title)

Produced by All3Media America and Lime Pictures with Stephen Lambert, Eli Holzman, Kate Little, Claire Poyser, Derek Mclean, Omid Kahangi and Jacob Cohen-Holmes serving as Executive Producers.

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Bravos Unscripted Slate Includes Female CEOs, NY Trainers, And North Dakota

Advanced MVC Social Network: Making the posting system 17 – Video


Advanced MVC Social Network: Making the posting system 17
SOURCE CODE: http://adf.ly/kvA1R Hey guys in this video i will show you how to make the posting system! Make sure to share, like and comment. Also follow me on twitter for updates! Twitter:...

By: codeetastic

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Advanced MVC Social Network: Making the posting system 17 - Video

The war hawks squawk; Cliven Bundy, cognitive dissonance, stupid dupes – Video


The war hawks squawk; Cliven Bundy, cognitive dissonance, stupid dupes
Please visit my website: http://www.thestenchoftruth.com Get linked to my blogs, social networking sites and also to my radio show. The radio show airs live Fridays from 7 to 9 PM Eastern time...

By: Ted Torbich

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The war hawks squawk; Cliven Bundy, cognitive dissonance, stupid dupes - Video

Is This Social Networking Beatdown Proof of a Tech Bubble?: StockTwits

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Maybe China was the canary in the coal mine.

Social networking high fliers Facebook (FB), Twitter (TWTR), LinkedIn (LNKD) and Yelp (YELP) each tumbled 4% or more by 2 p.m. after rising early Monday morning. The moves followed a sharp drop in shares of Chinese Internet companies such as Baidu (BIDU), Sohu.com (SOHU) and Youku (YOKU).

$DIA $SPY $QQQ $IWM from green to red. #Marketintrouble -- Le$ (@lcc007) Apr. 28 at 01:25 PM

At first, the selloff in the Chinese Internet sector seemed a contained reaction to disappointing earnings from Sohu.com and the Chinese government's decision to halt online streaming of popular American television shows. But as the selling spread, it became clear that investor concerns about Internet company valuations extend beyond firms based in Beijing.

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Is This Social Networking Beatdown Proof of a Tech Bubble?: StockTwits

Supreme Court to hear case on police searches of cellphones

WASHINGTON, April 28 (UPI) -- The U.S. Supreme Court will hear two cases regarding whether police searches of cellphones should require a warrant to avoid violating the Fourth Amendment.

The Fourth Amendment prohibits law enforcement and the government from engaging in "unreasonable searches and seizures" but the Justice Department is trying to exploit an old loophole that allows a warrantless search to prevent the destruction of evidence.

The cases are among several that have tested the Constitution in the digital age. The first case, which is being heard on Tuesday, is Riley v. California. When David L. Riley was pulled over for expired registration in San Diego in 2009, police found guns in his vehicle and searched his smartphone, which contained evidence linking him to a street gang. He was arrested and convicted for attempted murder and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

In its Supreme Court brief, California claims information on cellphones "is not different in kind from wallets, address books, personal papers and other items that have long been subject to examination."

However, many argue now that smartphones carry troves of personal data including communications, banking information, health information and access to a person's social media, it needs to be protected as that information would under the Fourth Amendment.

The original judge in the second case the court will hear, United States v. Wurie, agreed with that sentiment when he threw out the evidence collected from Brima Wurie's cellphone after his call logs led to an arrest on drug and gun charges.

"Today, many Americans store their most personal papers and effects in electronic format on a cellphone, carried on the person," Judge Norman H. Stahl wrote for a divided three-judge panel.

Riley's lawyers say the solution to the police's problem is as simple as requiring them to put the phone in airplane mode while they wait for a warrant or to disrupt the signal with Faraday bags to prevent wiping.

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Supreme Court to hear case on police searches of cellphones