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Picking out a perfectly ripe avocado is a complete gamble at worst, and an educated guess at best. Too soft, and you’re left with a mushy brown mess. Too firm, and you’re stuck with a yellow-ish, stuck-to-the-skin substance that’s unfit for toast and definitely not suitable for homemade guacamole.

RELATED: The Best Guacamole Recipes for Every Personality Type

Because you can’t cut into the fruit in the middle of the produce aisle, your best bet is to feel it in your hand. But there might be an even easier method. Earlier this week, a Reddit user posted a photo of an avocado with a three-tiered color chart on the sticker, which depicted the exact color and texture of a not ripe, firm ripe, and soft ripe avocado. The avocado in the photo matched perfectly with the “soft ripe” portion of the sticker, indicating that the fruit was ready to be eaten.

Not only does this sticker help you make a more educated decision, but it also keeps other shoppers from squeezing the life out of all the avocados. The caveat? Not all avocados have this handy sticker—plus, color alone is not always the best indicator of ripeness. In fact, some varieties of avocados don’t change color much as they ripen. Your best bet is to buy slightly underripe avocados, and let them ripen at home. Look for pebbly-skinned Mexican Hass avocados, which are more flavorful than smooth-skinned Fuertes and have a buttery, creamy texture when ripe. It should feel firm in your palm, but give slightly when pressed.

RELATED: Avocado Gazpacho is the Summer Soup of Our Dreams

If you want your avocado to ripen quickly, place it in a brown paper bag with a banana (which releases ethylene gas, quickening ripening) and place it on a sunny windowsill for 18 to 24 hours. This trick works even if your avocado is rock hard when you begin the process. Ready to start cooking? Follow these steps to slicing and dicing.

This article originally appeared on Realsimple.com.

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Nicole Kidman’s role as the mother of an adopted child in her Oscar-nominated film Lion hit especially close to home, as she also happens to be the real-life mom to two adopted children. She and then-husband Tom Cruise adopted their son Connor and daughter Isabella during their marriage, and the actress spoke out this week about how her kids affected her Lion performance. If you haven’t seen the film—and you should—it’s about an adoptive mother whose Indian-born son leaves her and travels the world in search of his biological parents. In an interview with The Mirror, Kidman said that the movie is actually an homage to her two eldest children.

“The movie is a love letter to my children who are adopted. I wanted to make the film for them”, she revealed. “It’s not about anything other than saying, ‘I wanted you and whatever your journey is, I’m here to love and support you’. That’s what I connected to.”

Matthew Simmons/Getty

RELATED: Nicole Kidman Reveals She Was Once Engaged to Lenny Kravitz

Kidman and Cruise adopted their children in the early nineties and even though the couple later divorced, they maintained shared custody of their kids.

VIDEO: At the Cover Shoot With Nicole Kidman

 

Kidman’s film Lion has been oft-nominated, including for the BAFTAs and again for this Sunday’s Academy Awards. Her Lion co-star Dev Patel won a BAFTA for Best Supporting Actor as her son, “Saroo.” And with this dedication to her family, Kidman’s already a winner in our book. 

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Selena Gomez has held the title of the most-followed person on the photo sharing app for nearly a year, but she recently pulled so far ahead of the competition that she’s now in a league of her own.

The “Hands to Myself” singer broke impressive new ground on Thursday when her follower count hit a whopping 110 million. The 24-year-old is now head and shoulders above Taylor Swift, who holds the title of the second-most followed account, with nearly 98 million. And Gomez managed it all despite a self-imposed 14-week break from the popular platform.

Reaching the milestone had the pop star feeling humbled and grateful yesterday. “Thank you fam for 110,” she wrote on Instagram alongside a photo of her singing to a sea of fans. “I promise I will continue to cherish my platform and speaking truth but more importantly, each and every one of you have changed my life. I’m very grateful.”

To celebrate her most recent accomplishment (and in case you forgot why she’s the queen), here are a few of our favorite photos from her account:

RELATED: Bow Down: Selena Gomez Is the Official Queen of Instagram

Keep it up, Selena!

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Prince Harry is honoring Princess Diana in the most meaningful way.

On Tuesday evening, more than 20 years after his mother Diana was photographed walking through minefields being cleared by the HALO Trust in Angola and Bosnia, Harry spoke at the Landmines Free 2025 event at Kensington Palace. The red-headed royal was there to voice his support for Mines Advisory Group and the HALO Trust, who have come together in an effort to rid the world of landmines by 2025—an effort dear to his mother’s heart.

Harry said Diana was “shocked and appalled by the impact that landmines were having on incredibly vulnerable people and on children in particular. She did not understand why more people were not willing to address the cause of so much suffering,” he added.

At the event, Harry met two Bosnian men, Zarko and Malic, who lost their legs to landmines as children. Diana met the pair during her final overseas tour in the summer of 1997.

John Phillips/Getty

“When my mother said goodbye to Zarko that August before her untimely death, she told him that he would not be forgotten,” the prince said in his address. “Please help me keep her word to Zarko and Malic and other people like them throughout the world who still need us to finish the job and rid this planet of landmines.”

He also spoke of Diana’s unparalleled compassion and dedication to humanitarian causes around the world—a legacy he aims to continue.

RELATED: Prince Harry Recreated This Photo Princess Diana Took in 1995

“She was an advocate for all those who she felt needed her voice most; whether it be marginalized men dying of AIDS in East London, ostracized sufferers of leprosy in India, or the teenage girl who had lost her leg to a landmine in Angola,” Harry said. “She knew she had a big spotlight to shine, and she used it to bring attention on the people that others had forgotten, ignored, or were too afraid to support.”

Watch his speech above.

At the upcoming United Nations climate conference in Morocco, negotiations for how to fulfill COP21’s agreement to limit global warming to 1.5º Celsius must emphasize methods that will also alleviate poverty and climate injustice, rather than leaning on “questionable technologies” such as geoengineering and carbon offset, says Friends of the Earth (FOE) Germany.

“We cannot count on unproven, costly, and ecologically risky negative emission technologies to save us from climate chaos.”
—Hubert Weiger,
Click Here: Tienda TolucaFriends of the Earth Germany

That’s the argument put forth in the group’s new report, “A change of course: How to build a fair future in a 1.5 degree world” (pdf, in German), published Friday alongside the German Catholic Bishops’ Organisation for Development Cooperation (MISEREOR) and the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

The climate conference will take place in Marrakech, Morocco, from November 7-18.

The report takes aim at popular so-called “negative emissions” technologies, such as geoengineering, carbon offset regimes, and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), arguing that leaders must pursue true sustainability instead.

“The fatal flaw of all negative emissions technology proposals is this: The hope for an atmospheric line of credit allows today’s urgent need for radical reductions in CO2 emissions to fall by the wayside,” the report argues. “What’s currently Plan B is in fact the best way to force Plan A into the background—a fundamentally different economy, one that preserves the planet for all forms of life.”

Instead of such “questionable technologies,” the report argues for policies that have poverty reduction and climate justice as their central focus.

“In reaction to the Paris Agreement, we need to phase out coal, speed up the transition to renewables, phase out combustion engines, and protect and restore forests and soils,” explained Hubert Weiger, chairman of Friends of the Earth Germany, in a statement.

“It is crystal clear that effective climate protection and equitable, sustainable development can only be considered together,” added Heinrich Böll Foundation president Barbara Unmüßig:

A future without climate chaos for all human beings on our planet is only possible if we don’t pin our hopes on large-scale technologies. Instead, we have to make sure that the energy and agricultural transitions are being pushed forward as fast as possible. Technological fixes such as geoengineering are betting on future possibilities such as sucking CO2 from the atmosphere or keeping sunlight away from the Earth. This is a dangerous distraction from the necessary steps that we can already implement today. The coming-into-force of the Paris Agreement asks for exactly this change in course.

“As northern countries that have caused the climate catastrophe, we need to lead by example,” Weiger continued. “We cannot count on unproven, costly, and ecologically risky negative emission technologies to save us from climate chaos. If we postpone implementing the traditional climate mitigation solutions, we will miss the rapidly closing window of opportunity to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees.”

Indeed, new research has shown that the goal to limit warming to 1.5º is already a long-shot.

“The vague hope that we could all survive in a world that is 3 degrees warmer than before industrialization is deceptive,” said Pirmin Spiegel, director general of MISEREOR. “It is our responsibility to safeguard the lives of millions of people by limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees. This is not only a technological challenge; instead, it has widespread societal and cultural implications that we all have to face.”

Janelle Monáe is about to give you one serious case of wanderlust.

Following a whirlwind awards season, the Hidden Figures star jetted off to a luxurious vacation with friends in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic where she stayed in dreamy Villa Serena—a $20,000 per week retreat that also comes with a butler and a chef—thanks to Booking.com.

The thatched-roof, beachfront property, which is a quick 6-minute walk away from the shore, sleeps 14 and is surrounded by palm trees. It also features an elegant dining area, spacious bedrooms, and a zen outdoor patio, which overlooks an L-shaped pool and jacuzzi.

Monáe shared a snap from her trip there Monday, looking chic as she struck a pose outside in a woven straw sunhat paired with a black-and-white striped bathing suit under a red coverup topped with colorful bursts. “First mini break of the year. Thank you @bookingcom for the inspiring trip. #puntacana #dominicanrepublic#bookingyeah,” she captioned the shot.

 

The songstress turned actress also took advantage of the hammock on the grounds, palming a pineapple in another shot as she lounged on it in a black-and-yellow striped skirt and red bikini top.

RELATED: Janelle Monáe Debuted a Major Hair Change After the 2017 Oscars

WATCH: 10 of the Best Celebrity Vacation Instagram

 

Take a peek inside Monae’s luxe vacation grounds!

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Courtesy Booking.com

Courtesy Booking.com

Courtesy Booking.com

Courtesy Booking.com

Courtesy Booking.com

“Fade” is one of those Kanye West songs that can get even his biggest naysayers to drop what they’re doing and dance. The latest person to fall victim to its spell? Bella Hadid.

On Monday in New York, the model celebrated her Chrome Hearts x Bella collection the way we would if we were a 20-year-old model with more than 13 million Instagram followers: with a rager. Hadid took to Instagram to share videos of her friends on the dance floor. And lucky for us, a friend close by captured some of Hadid’s moves.

Now Hadid has managed to always keep her composure both on the runway and red carpet, but as we learned from her night out, the girl can dance. In the clips below, she sways from side to side, quietly mouthing the words to West’s “Fade” and smiling for the camera. Later, she takes the mic as if she were performing and basically nails it on the dance floor.

Who would win in a late-night Kanye West karaoke battle? Our bets are on Bella.

Gotham/GC Images

RELATED: Bella Hadid Channels The Craft in N.Y.C.

After all, she’s got that alluring smirk down better than anyone.

Radicalized Nation: Fear and Hypocrisy in New York

November 14, 2019 | News | No Comments

Following the recent explosions in New York City and New Jersey – one of which injured 29 people and the other of which injured none – President Barack Obama offered a typical presidential message to the American people.

The CNN website quotes his analysis that “terrorists and violent extremists… want to inspire fear in all of us, and disrupt the way we live”. The upshot, according to Obama: “We all have a role to play as citizens in making sure that we don’t succumb to that fear.”

Easier said than done, perhaps – particularly when the New York City Police Department (NYPD) had just decided to bombard mobile phone users with a mass alert from the Office of Emergency Management. The subject: the explosion suspect.

An article in The Atlantic describes the unprecedented use of the emergency system, which is usually reserved for things like apocalyptic weather patterns and abducted children:

“Just before 8 in the morning on Monday [19 September], cellphones chimed in unison across New York City. It wasn’t the sound of text messages: it was a dissonant siren, repeated six times, accompanied by a short note. ‘WANTED: Ahmad Khan Rahami, 28-yr-old male. See media for pic. Call 9-1-1 if seen’.”

In the business of “inspir[ing] fear in all of us”, then, state security forces seem to be giving “terrorists and violent extremists” a run for their money.

Damned if you do or don’t 

Of course, if you appear to be a Muslim these days in New York and the greater US, chances are you’ve got plenty of valid fears – such as rampant racial profiling, surveillance, and violent aggression.

The NYPD itself has a notorious history of interaction with local Muslim communities, and has in recent years specialised in practices such as obsessive and unlawful spying. Back in 2007, the NYPD issued a pseudoscientific study titled “Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat”, which attempted to play up the terrorism risk allegedly emanating from Western domestic Muslim populations.

The report essentially justifies keeping an eye – or all eyes, as the case may be – on Muslims anywhere and everywhere, lest they begin to exhibit potential signs of radicalization. As you can imagine, the list of signs is rather comprehensive, and includes things like “becoming involved in social activism and community issues”.

“It doesn’t take a psychoanalyst to surmise that members of populations subject to continuous punitive scrutiny and discrimination might at some point reach their limit and react against the punitive system.”

Another indicator that an individual might be “progress[ing] along the radicalization continuum” toward eventual “jihadization” is the renunciation of “cigarettes, drinking, gambling and urban hip-hop gangster clothes”. As I remarked some years ago in a blog post for the London Review of Books, since “urban hip-hop gangster clothes” greatly increased your chances of becoming a victim of the NYPD’s stop-and-frisk policy, it seemed you were damned if you wore them, damned if you didn’t.

Unsurprisingly, Rahami’s arrest in New Jersey on Monday prompted immediate speculation as to at the point at which his own radicalization began. Born in Afghanistan, Rahami moved to the US with his family, became a citizen, and worked at a New Jersey restaurant owned by his father, incidentally called “First American Fried Chicken.”

The Telegraph reported that Rahami had “travelled several times to both Afghanistan and Pakistan, people who knew him said… and on his return appeared to have been radicalized”. The Guardian quoted NYPD commissioner James O’Neill as follows: “I do not have information yet to show what the path of radicalization was yet.”

Of course, it doesn’t take a psychoanalyst to surmise that members of populations subject to continuous punitive scrutiny and discrimination might at some point reach their limit and react against the punitive system. This is not, obviously, to presume any knowledge of Rahami’s particular situation, although numerous media outlets have reported that Rahami’s family previously sued the city of Elizabeth, New Jersey, as well as the local police department for perceived anti-Muslim discrimination targeting their restaurant.

In the end, however, the question of what Rahami’s exact motives were matters relatively little. A better question is why diagnoses of radicalization and violent extremism are so diligently wielded against Muslims and not against the people that regularly do things like wipe out Afghan wedding parties with drones.

Selective diagnosis

The US has spent the bulk of its war-on-terror existence raining terror on various parts of the globe – a factoid that should have by now become tiresome to repeat, save for the fact that it has not yet managed to cross the threshold of mainstream discourse.

“No one will ever undertake to pinpoint the onset of radicalization in Madeleine Albright, whose lack of human sentiment is representative of the political class as a whole.”

Even before the attacks of 11 September 2001, the US had already carved out a name for itself in the realm of extremely violent behavior, ranging from more blatantly violent campaigns of indiscriminate bombing to the less overt starvation of an estimated half a million Iraqi children via sanctions.

Confronted with this estimate in 1996, then-US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright proclaimed that “we think the price is worth it”. But no one will ever undertake to pinpoint the onset of radicalization in Albright, whose lack of human sentiment is representative of the political class as a whole.

Instead, we’ll be fed the inverse logic of the establishment parroted by the servile media, according to which terrorism is only terrorism if committed by certain parties.

Talk about scary.

Belén Fernández is the author of The Imperial Messenger: Thomas Friedman at Work, released by Verso in 2011. She is a member of the Jacobin Magazine editorial board, and her articles have appeared in the London Review of Books blog, Al Akhbar English and many other publications.

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Brazil’s Senate on Wednesday voted to hold an impeachment trial for suspended President Dilma Rousseff, an effort that could mark the end of 13 years of rule by her leftist Workers’ Party.

“Today is not a good day for our democracy,” said Senator Paulo Rocha, an ally of the nation’s first female president. He added that “there is a political alliance that smells of a coup” working against her.

Rouseff is accused of breaking budget laws, though the federal prosecutor last month found that she did not commit a crime.

The 59-21 vote marks “the final step before a trial and vote on whether to remove her from office,” the Associated Press reports.

“A verdict is expected at the end of the month and will need the votes of two-thirds of the Senate to convict Rousseff, five votes less than her opponents mustered on Wednesday,” Reuters reports.

Rousseff has been suspended since May when the senate voted to start an impeachment trial against her. That meant then-Vice President Michel Temer became interim president. If Rousseff is removed, the unelected, right-of-center Temer would serve until 2018, the rest of Rousseff’s term.

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Rousseff has called the effort a coup, and Brazil’s largest newspaper in May published evidence of “explicit plotting” between a top government official and oil executive who said her ouster was the only way to halt a wide corruption probe.

A vote to remove her from office is “a fait accompli—the verdict will be both entirely deserved and profoundly unjust,” Franklin Foer, a Slate contributing editor, wrote this week. “On the one hand, there’s no denying she has failed miserably as president—so badly that it’s hard to imagine her governing effectively in the coming months and years. On the other hand, incompetence isn’t the grounds for her removal. The case against her is largely a concoction, drummed up by sinister figures.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) entered the fray on Monday, issuing a statement saying he was “deeply concerned” by the move, which represented “not a legal trial but rather a political one.” He added, “To many Brazilians and observers the controversial impeachment process more closely resembles a coup d’état.”

“After suspending Brazil’s first female president on dubious grounds, without a mandate to govern, the new interim government abolished the ministry of women, racial equality, and human rights. They immediately replaced a diverse and representative administration with a cabinet made up entirely of white men. The new, unelected administration quickly announced plans to impose austerity, increase privatization, and install a far right-wing social agenda,” Sanders’ statement continued.

The Vermont senator’s “denunciation of the attack on Brazilian democracy is part of a growing international recognition of the illegitimacy of Temer’s rule,” Glenn Greenwald wrote at The Intercept. He continued:

Just two weeks ago, “40 Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives published a letter … expressing ‘deep concern’ about threats to democracy in Brazil.” Similar denunciations of Dilma’s impeachment have been issued by British Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, British MPs and labor leaders, the Organization of American States, dozens of members of the EU Parliament, and Brazil’s first Pulitzer Prize winner. So dubious is Temer’s standing that, as AP reported last month, many world leaders are avoiding the Rio Olympics so as to avoid the quandary of whether to shake his hand.

Temer—who chose a Cabinet of “all rich, white males”—is embroiled in corruption scandals and is very unpopular but is “business-friendly,” according to Reuters.

He was greeted with “boos” at the opening of the Olympic games in Rio.  And, as NPR reported, that was “only the first of several protests inside Olympic venues. Posts on social media went viral, showing people with tickets being forcibly removed by security—some simply for wearing shirts calling for Temer’s ouster.”

Author Jules Boykoff adds at Jacobin: “‘Fora Temer’ [Temer Out] was the rallying cry of an enormous mobilization along Copacabana Beach on August 5, the morning of the opening ceremony. Brazil’s president is extremely unpopular in Brazil, with one recent poll putting his approval rating at 11 percent. […]”

“Many activists connected the Olympic dots between the wider political crisis and the Olympic Games,” he continued. “Some wore t-shirts bearing the Olympic rings filled in by the letters G-O-L-P-E (C-O-U-P). Numerous flags read ‘Fora Temer’ with the Olympic rings standing in for the ‘o’ on ‘Fora.'”

Serena Williams can’t wait to meet her little bundle of joy.

The tennis champion took to Instagram on Monday morning, posting a moving love note to her unborn baby—just days after news broke that she and her fiancé Alexis Ohanian are expecting their first child.

“My Dearest Baby, You gave me the strength I didn’t know I had. You taught me the true meaning of serenity and peace. I can’t wait to meet you. I can’t wait for you to join the players box next year,” Williams, 35, wrote alongside a photo of herself lounging in a swimsuit.

“But most importantly, I am so happy to share being number one in the world with you …. once again today. On @alexisohanian bday. from the world’s oldest number one to the world’s youngest number one. —Your Mommy.”

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The sweet post comes as Williams appeared to be on a babymoon. Her Instagram page has been riddled with shots of the athlete on a beach.

The star broke the pregnancy news last week with a simple mirror selfie on Snapchat, writing, “20 weeks”—with her baby bump clearly visible.

serenawilliams/snapchat

A rep for the tennis star later told People, “I’m happy to confirm Serena is expecting a baby this fall.”

The headline-making baby news comes just a few months after the tennis great announced that she is engaged to the Reddit co-founder. Williams, who likes to keep her personal life private, made the announcement in a poem on Reddit.

“I came home. A little late. Someone had a bag packed for me. And a carriage waited. Destination: Rome,” she wrote. “To escort me to my very own ‘charming.’ Back to where our stars first collided. And now it was full circle. At the same table we first met by chance.”

Williams added, “But by choice. Down on knee. He said 4 words. And I said yes.” Ohanian posted his fiancée’s Reddit announcement on Facebook, captioning it simply, “She said yes.”

RELATED: Serena Williams Blows Kiss to Fiancé at Australian Open

Williams holds the record for the most Grand Slam titles of any player in the Open Era, clinching her 23rd at January’s Australian Open.

This will be the first child for both.