Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Alfonso Cuarón (@CuaronAlfonso)


Master of the Universe

There is much to admire in Alfonso Cuarón. His talent, his humor, his “What? I just woke up looking this handsome!” demeanor. We can certainly admire his tenacity, which has allowed him to make some of the most arresting, visually stunning work in recent cinema. Or, perhaps mostly, we can admire the fact that in addition to bringing authenticity and emotion to pre-existing universes (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban), Alfonso is making original films, creating new worlds and introducing us to characters not based on a corporation’s fave existing IP (intellectual property). Like a certain character you may have seen floating alone in space, Alfonso doesn’t have much company in the rarefied air in which he, lucky for us all, lives and creates. Here’s to his staying in orbit.

Richard Sherman (@RSherman_25)


The NFL cornerback who smack-talks athlete stereotypes

Richard Sherman introduced himself to much of America on Jan. 19, shortly after his game-clinching tipped pass sent his Seattle Seahawks to Super Bowl XLVIII. In a postgame interview, millions watched as Sherman looked into the camera and hurled a mass of smack talk, proclaiming, “I’m the best corner in the game!” and calling one foe “sorry.”
Sherman’s rant solidified his reputation as one of the brashest and most candid players in the buttoned-up NFL. More important, it sparked a national conversation about race, stereotyping and sportsmanship. When critics labeled the dreadlocked defensive star a “thug,” Sherman, a Compton, Calif.–raised Stanford graduate, engaged the debate, asking if the term was today’s way of calling him the N word? In a heartbeat, Sherman altered the discourse and emerged as the smartest voice in the room.
At a time when most pro athletes flee social questions, Sherman tackles them head on. And he backs it up on the field too, leading the Seahawks to their first Super Bowl win. So keep talking, Sherm. We have much more to learn.

Jack Ma #JackMa


The king of Chinese e-commerce

Jack Ma is an icon of China’s entry into the digital age. In 1999, the former English teacher and his co-founders launched Alibaba in an apartment in Hangzhou. Today, that startup has changed the way the Chinese shop. Alibaba is China’s e-commerce behemoth, controlling roughly four-fifths of the expanding online retail business. Its main shopping sites, Taobao and Tmall, handle more merchandise than Amazon. Taobao has become, like Google, a verb: Looking for a new dress or mobile phone? Go to Taobao!
Now Ma, Alibaba’s executive chairman, is seeking to change China in a different way. Last year he devoted himself to cleaning up the nation’s infamous pollution as chairman of the Nature Conservancy’s China program. “The environmental situation is not something that can wait,” he has said. Hopefully he’ll tackle it as quickly as he has won customers.

Tom Steyer (@TomSteyer )


The investor is a green game-changer

The most important solution to the climate crisis has long been obvious: put a price on global-warming pollution in markets. But the “hacking” of American democracy by the biggest polluters has convinced many that we will first have to put a price on global-warming denial in politics. And it is to this crucial challenge that Tom Steyer has brought his extraordinary intellect, focused enthusiasm and the considerable wealth he earned in a wildly successful business career. By rewarding candidates who favor action and opposing those who do not, he has already changed the political dynamic.
Through his new organization, NextGen Climate, Tom is also helping to mobilize young voters and ensure that facts, not antiscience climate denial, have a better chance to prevail in races around the country.
There comes a time in every fight when the stakes are too high to back down and political hardball becomes necessary. Now is such a time, and it is heartening that Tom Steyer has joined the battle with passionate intensity, commitment and political skill.

Mary Jo White #MaryJoWhite


Wall Street's top watchdog

I first met Mary Jo when I was a young man interviewing to be a federal prosecutor, an idealistic attorney’s dream job. She was as down-to-earth as I was nervous, but I shouldn’t have been surprised. After all, this Bud-drinking Yankees fan was equally at home rooting for her Bronx Bombers as cheering on her team of prosecutors at trial against al-Qaeda.
Her sports allegiance is fitting, since Mary Jo is the Babe Ruth of lawyers. As the first female U.S. attorney in Manhattan, she battled fraud, bludgeoned the Mob and was onto Osama bin Laden well before everyone else recognized him as the face of evil. Now, as chair of the SEC, she has brought that same furious focus to policing the Street and rationalizing the markets.
Mary Jo White is without a doubt one of the most influential lawyer-leaders of modern times. But hers is the kind of influence measured not only in cases won and clients defended but also in people inspired and characters formed. After her decades at the pinnacle of law practice, her progeny fill the country’s legal firmament. She is a role model for all of them and everyone else who wants to make a difference.

Natalie Massenet (@NatalieMassenet)


Fashion's online emissary

The word visionary is lofty, overused. Somewhat abused. There are few people who can really see something that doesn’t exist. Create it. Explain it. And get others to follow.

Natalie Massenet is, in fact, that visionary. She saw a world where people would pay $2,000 for a pair of jeans, a world where you can buy what you covet, where the magazine pages meet the FedEx man. You want it? You can have it. Click here. She launched Net-a-porter.com, a luxury-goods website, in 2000. Her vision was so clear and sparkling, she managed to persuade labels such as Marc Jacobs, Chloe and Jimmy Choo to sell their lines through an unproven business model. Sound obvious? It does now. Only because she did it first. The worlds of fashion and commerce have changed dramatically in the past 10 years, in part because of a woman who likens herself to a lazy rock.

Monday, 21 July 2014

On Opposite Sides Of Israeli-Gaza Border, Feeling The Same Fears


More than 50 Palestinians have been killed and 450 wounded inIsraeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, rockets continue to fly toward Israel from Gaza, but so far, no Israelis have been reported killed.

For people living in and around the Gaza Strip, this conflict has turned daily routines upside down. Life is punctuated by sirens and explosions.

NPR correspondent Ari Shapiro and producer Ahmed Abu Hamda recorded the stories of two families taking shelter from the escalating conflict.


Several families share this one-room underground shelter in Ashkelon, Israel, not far from the border with Gaza. The children say they're afraid to go outside.Ashkelon, Israel
The sound of a siren mei
Several families share this one-room underground shelter in Ashkelon, Israel, not far from the border with Gaza. The children say they're afraid to go outside.
Ari Shapiro/NPR
ans rockets are coming, and it's time to take cover — in an interior room of the house, maybe, or just lying on the ground with your hands covering your head.
For the Abulbul family, shelter is an underground concrete bunker. They share this single room with all the neighborhood families, 30 or 40 people in total.
There's no plumbing or air conditioning, and the shelter is sweltering.
Ofra Abulbul says her children refuse to go outside.
"My kids are very anxious," she says. "They won't go home to sleep, or shower, or eat. The toilet doesn't work here, so every time we have to go home to use the bathroom they're terrified."
Her 10-year-old son is named Nehorai. "Things are not OK," he says. "I'm scared."
A little dog named Bony is running around his feet.
"He also has anxieties," the boy says.
The children have nothing to do here. They lie on the concrete floor and stare at the ceiling, or when they feel hyper, they jump on a mattress until they're exhausted.
When he's scared, does he ever think that kids in Gaza might also feel scared? Nehorai says yes.
"My mother told me there were sirens there, too," he says. "And those kids also have to run away."

Abdel Kareem Shamali, shown with his children and nieces, tries to reassure the kids by acting like the bombs don't bother him.i
Abdel Kareem Shamali, shown with his children and nieces, tries to reassure the kids by acting like the bombs don't bother him.
Ahmed Abu Hamda for NPR
Gaza City, Gaza Strip
In Gaza City, there are no shelters. When rockets fall, the Shamali family takes cover in their house — which is home to 22 people, 16 of them children.
Abdel Kareem Shamali says his oldest son, who's 12, asked a difficult question the other day.
The boy asked his mother how it feels to be killed by a rocket. Is it painful, or painless?
"I never wanted him to ask such a question in all his life," Shamali says.
His children don't sleep. They throw up for no reason.
An Israeli airstrike destroyed a house about 70 yards away this morning, and the kids started screaming.
"Sometimes I lie," says Shamali. "I tell my kids, 'Those aren't bombs; they're fireworks.' When it's huge, I try to act carefree so they'll see me and feel reassured."
This is the holy month of Ramadan, a time for visiting family and enjoying evening feasts. But Gaza City is a ghost town. Shops are empty, and people are afraid to go outside.
It's quiet except for the boom of rockets, and a thin layer of black smoke hangs in the air.
"We feel so scared," says 10-year-old Karmen. "It's Ramadan now, and we want to enjoy the holiday. But they spoiled it. They terrify us."
She's angry that Israelis can hide in shelters, while her family has nowhere to go, and people are killed.
Asked if she wants Israeli kids to die too, Karmen says no.
"They are like me. They have rights. They shouldn't die," she says. "They should be protected, just like we should be protected."