Daily 30: Sun 01.04.2015

Ashanti on Joining YMCMB
Songstress Ashanti sat down with VladTV and briefly spoke on past rumors that she's been in talks to join YMCMB, saying she definitely has had conversations with Baby about joining the label, and is currently talking to Lil Wayne as well, though nothing has been written in stone as of yet. She also addressed Chief Keef's crush on her, as the Chicago rapper tweeted that he needs Ashanti in his life. The "Braveheart" singer simply took it as a compliment, but doubts she and Keef will ever have a future together.
The War Next Door
In August, al Nusra Front jihadists took control of Syria’s side of the border crossing with Israel and kidnapped over 40 United Nations peacekeepers — who have since been released. But al Nusra Front, an al Qaeda-affiliate, isn’t Israel’s only threat from Syria. President Bashar al-Assad’s military, in a possible effort to bait Israel into its civil war to shore up Arab sympathies, has been lobbing mortars across the border. Just a few weeks ago, the Israeli military shot down a Syrian plane flying over the Golan Heights — the first time it has done so since the 1980s.
Blah Blah Blah RMX
Rich Homie Quan teams up with Fabolous, Dej Loaf, & Ty Dolla $ign on the remix of his banger "Blah Blah Blah". soundcloud.com/irichhomiequan/blah-blah-blah-remix-featuring-dej-loaf-fabolous-ty-dolla-ign
I Don't Mind
Usher is back with help from Juicy J on his latest single "I Don't Mind". soundcloud.com/usher-raymond-music/usher-i-dont-mind-feat-juicy-j
Stuart Scott, Dies At 49
Stuart Scott, one of the most recognizable anchors in Sportscenter history, died of cancer at the age of 49, according to an ESPN press release.  “ESPN and everyone in the sports world have lost a true friend and a uniquely inspirational figure in Stuart Scott,” said ESPN president John Skipper in the statement. Scott, who had two daughters, was known for his boisterous, high-energy delivery and catchphrases like "cool as the other side of the pillow." He had been public about his long fight with the disease which he was diagnosed with in 2007. He remained highly active throughout his treatment, using mixed martial arts training to counteract the effects of chemotherapy.
Obama Aims To Start 2015 On His Own Terms
HONOLULU (AP) — President Barack Obama plans new steps to help more Americans buy a home and attend college, part of a 2015 agenda he hopes can build on the postelection momentum from high-profile moves on immigration and Cuba.   His approach for the new year appears to look straight past newly emboldened Republicans who take full control of Congress on Tuesday.
  Fresh from a two-week Hawaiian vacation, the president was readying executive actions and legislative proposals to start promoting right away while advisers and speechwriters flesh out the broad themes that Obama wants to emphasize in his State of the Union address on Jan. 20. It will be his sixth since taking office, but his first before a Congress entirely in GOP hands.   In a sign of their divergent paths, Obama was heading out of Washington on Wednesday just as the new Congress was settling in. He plans stops in Michigan, Arizona and Tennessee aimed at highlighting how his own economic policies were contributing to the country's recovery.   Obama, expected back in Washington on Sunday, has appeared energized by the end-of-the-year action on immigration policy and Cuban relations, suggesting continued presidential relevance despite a political landscape dramatically altered by deep Democratic losses on Election Day.   Since the November midterms, the key question has been whether Obama will lean in or away from compromise with Republicans in his final two years. Of the issues the White House said Obama will emphasize in the coming weeks, none was among the few areas that both Democrats and Republicans have cited as ripe for dealmaking — trade, taxes, public works.   An Obama spokesman, Eric Schultz, said Obama would announce proposals this coming week that focus on helping the middle class benefit from the economic recovery.   "There are a number of issues we could make progress on, but the president is clear that he will not let this Congress undo important protections gained — particularly in areas of health care, Wall Street reform and the environment," Schultz said. Obama has threatened to use his veto power to block GOP attacks this year.   In Detroit on Wednesday, Obama plans to cite the return of manufacturing jobs and his decision to bail out the auto industry. In Phoenix the next day, Obama intends to showcase gains in the housing sector since the real estate crash and come out with new steps to help Americans buy a home, the White House said.   On Friday, Vice President Joe Biden will join Obama in Tennessee to discuss new ways to help more people attend college or job-training.   With Obama's prime-time address to the nation less than three weeks away, the White House has reached out to Democratic groups such as the Center for American Progress to solicit input, without making commitments.   Lacking a Democratic majority in the Senate to stop them, GOP lawmakers convening Tuesday intend to start chipping away on health care, immigration and the environment, flashing their power as Obama enters the last years of his presidency and the 2016 race starts to unfold.   Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill., said the House would start right away with jobs bills that have won the support of both parties before but never advanced in the Senate.   "If the president is willing to work with us, we'll have a real chance to address our nation's most pressing challenges," he said in the weekly Republican address. During his vacation with his wife and daughters, Obama spent long afternoons on the beach with his girls and golfed nearly every day with friends. The visit to his birthplace is a yearly tradition for the Obamas.
12 O'Clock Boyz
Pug, a young boy growing up on a combative West Baltimore block, finds solace in a group of illegal dirt bike riders known as The 12 O'Clock Boys.
777
Gives viewers a behind-the-scenes look at Rihanna's unprecedented globetrotting concert tour that hit seven countries in seven days with seven shows to promote her seventh album.
Laugh At My Pain
Experience the show that quickly became a national phenomenon. Get an up-close and personal look at Kevin Hart back in Philly where he began his journey to become one of the funniest comedians of all time. You will laugh 'til it hurts!
A Day of Cricket Fighting In Beijing
So, how does cricket fighting work exactly? VICE Sports went to the Annual Cricket Fighting Championship in Beijing, China to find out. Prepare to learn all about one of China's most curious cultural traditions and the people who keep it alive.
Revlon CEO Sued For Alleged Racist Comments
NEW YORK, Dec 31 (Reuters) - A former Revlon Inc chief scientific officer has sued the cosmetics company, claiming he was fired after raising safety concerns that its chief executive did not want to hear and was discriminated against for being Jewish. In a lawsuit filed on Tuesday in Manhattan federal court, Alan Meyers claimed that CEO Lorenzo Delpani accused him of raising "ghost" safety problems at recently acquired laboratories, resulting in slower production. Meyers, who said he joined Revlon in 2010 and was fired this month, also claimed the Italian-born Delpani was hostile to him, frequently yelling at him in front of other executives and making anti-Semitic and anti-American comments.
The lawsuit accuses Revlon of retaliation and discrimination, and seeks unspecified damages. Revlon in a statement called the lawsuit "completely meritless," and said Meyers "repeatedly demonstrated critical lapses in judgment and failed to perform at the high standard we demand of our employees." "We will aggressively fight these baseless claims and this frivolous action," Revlon said. Meyers said many of the safety issues he complained about stemmed from Revlon's $660 million acquisition of Spanish beauty care company Colomer Group in 2013. He said he was concerned that raw materials used by Colomer did not satisfy regulatory and safety requirements, and that its laboratories did not meet Revlon's standards. But he said that after repeatedly raising such concerns, Delpani urged him to keep quiet so that the CEO could retain "plausible deniability" about the problems. Delpani also sought to remove from company records a May 2014 email in which Meyers raised quality concerns about a plant in North Carolina, the lawsuit said. Meyers also claimed that Delpani treated him differently from other members of his team, nearly all of whom were Spanish or Italian, because he was Jewish and American-born. He claimed that Delpani referred to Americans as "small-minded" and "dirty," and at one meeting said he was surprised at the lack of Jewish executives at Revlon because "Jews stick together." In making the comments, Delpani mentioned Ronald Perelman, Revlon's billionaire controlling shareholder who is also Jewish, the lawsuit said.
Perelman is not a defendant. A spokeswoman for Perelman's MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings Inc had no comment. The case is Meyers v. Revlon Inc, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York. No. 14-10213. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York; Editing by Richard Chang)  
 
Get Hard
When millionaire hedge fund manager James (Will Ferrell) is nailed for fraud and bound for a stretch in San Quentin, the judge gives him 30 days to get his affairs in order. Desperate, he turns to Darnell (Kevin Hart) to prep him for a life behind bars. But despite James’ one-percenter assumptions, Darnell is a hard-working small business owner who has never received a parking ticket, let alone been to prison. Together, the two men do whatever it takes for James to “get hard” and, in the process, discover how wrong they were about a lot of things – including each other.
Martin Luther King, Lyndon Baines Johnson and the civil rights marches that changed America.
Black or White
BLACK OR WHITE is the story of a grandfather (Academy Award® winner Kevin Costner) who is suddenly left to care for his beloved granddaughter. When the little girl’s paternal grandmother (Academy Award® nominee Octavia Spencer) seeks custody, a legal battle ensues that forces the families to confront their true feelings on race, forgiveness and understanding. Anchored by an all-star cast and based on real events, the movie is a look at two seemingly different worlds, in which nothing is as simple as black or white.
The Gambler
Jim Bennett (Academy Award®-nominee Mark Wahlberg) is a risk taker. Both an English professor and a high-stakes gambler, Bennett bets it all when he borrows from a gangster (Michael Kenneth Williams) and offers his own life as collateral. Always one step ahead, Bennett pits his creditor against the operator of a gambling ring (Alvin Ing) and leaves his dysfunctional relationship with his wealthy mother (Academy Award®-winner Jessica Lange) in his wake. He plays both sides, immersing himself in an illicit, underground world while garnering the attention of Frank (John Goodman), a loan shark with a paternal interest in Bennett’s future. As his relationship with a student (Brie Larson) deepens, Bennett must take the ultimate risk for a second chance…