7 Decorating Ideas To Steal From The 2015 HGTV Dream Home

“Dream” homes come in all shapes and sizes. For some of us, it’s a sprawling McMansion bursting at the seams with square footage. For others, the appeal lies in paring it all down. For the rest of us, well, we’d be perfectly content with something more middle of the road… Cape-Cod style, on Martha’s Vineyard, with three bedrooms, three-and-a-half baths and a seemingly endless stream of natural light. And as fate would have it, someone’s read our minds. Behold, the 2015 HGTV Dream Home. The fully-furnished home, located one mile from the beach, requires a little more than a dream to actually own, but the design inspiration inside is entirely for the taking. Here are seven decorating ideas we’re …

“Dream” homes come in all shapes and sizes. For some of us, it’s a sprawling McMansion bursting at the seams with square footage. For others, the appeal lies in paring it all down. For the rest of us, well, we’d be perfectly content with something more middle of the road… Cape-Cod style, on Martha’s Vineyard, with three bedrooms, three-and-a-half baths and a seemingly endless stream of natural light. And as fate would have it, someone’s read our minds.

Behold, the 2015 HGTV Dream Home.

hgtv dream home

The fully-furnished home, located one mile from the beach, requires a little more than a dream to actually own, but the design inspiration inside is entirely for the taking. Here are seven decorating ideas we’re stealing…

Check out more of the home’s design details and show-stopping features during the HGTV Dream Home 2015 Giveaway Special, premiering January 1, 2015, at 9 p.m. ET on HGTV.

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7 Decorating Ideas To Steal From The 2015 HGTV Dream Home

Akai Gurley Protest Draws Hundreds In Brooklyn

About 200 people gathered Saturday at the Pink Houses in East New York, Brooklyn, for a march to protest the death of Akai Gurley, who was shot and killed inside the housing project by an NYPD officer in November. The march was organized by AnswerCoalition.org and other groups.

protests

Christine Yvette-Lewis, 46, is an organizer for Domestic Workers United who said she came to the protest to remind people of Gurley’s untimely death. “The struggle for human rights and justice brought me here,” Yvette-Lewis said. “I’m here to represent the masses of women who take care of children, and the children who were lost.”

She said the rally was not meant to offend police officers who attended today’s funeral of murdered NYPD officer Rafael Ramos, but to express that all lives matter. Ramos and his partner were ambushed and killed Dec. 20 in Brooklyn.

“Who mourned for Eric Garner when his life was snuffed out of his body?” she said. “Who mourned for Michael Brown? Who mourns for Akai? The city was business as usual. All lives matter. The policemen’s lives matter, but so does Akai’s.”

NYPD rookie Peter Liang was conducting a “vertical patrol” — a sweep of often-dark staircases — inside the Pink Houses on Nov. 21, when he accidentally discharged his weapon, he said, after being startled by Gurley, who happened to be entering the stairwell below with his girlfriend. The gunfire killed Gurley, who was 28.

protests
Christine Yvette-Lewis protests the killing of Akai Gurley in Brooklyn on Saturday.

Karen Blondel, an engineer technician participating in the march, said she was there to represent Gurley.

“I feel terrible that he was killed for no reason in a stairwell,” Blondel said.

During the march, Blondel approached a group police officers and asked that the “good cops” set an example for the “bad cops.”

“Show them how they should be responding,” Blondel said while holding a sign that read, “Racism Is A Deadly Force.” “I know there are good cops out there. I’m asking [good police officers] to step forward.”

gurley
Akai Gurley’s 2-year-old daughter, Akaila.

New York Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said the shooting was “an unfortunate accident,” and called Gurley “a total innocent.”

The New York Daily News reported that in the minutes after the shooting, Liang texted his union representative before contacting his partner or calling for medical assistance.

Kenneth P. Thompson, Brooklyn’s district attorney, announced in early December that he would impanel a grand jury to investigate the case.

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Akai Gurley Protest Draws Hundreds In Brooklyn

I Was Taught to Be Racist for My Own Protection

My parents taught me to hate the police.
My parents taught me to only date within my race.
My parents taught me to never trust white people because they smile in your face and call you “the N-word” behind your back.

My parents were terrified that the same racism that they had endured would cause me the same tremendous pain and frustrating limitations as it had caused them. They wanted to protect me from the experiences of hate that they had lived.

That heavy shield of armor that they gently placed on my shoulders out of love was meant to protect me, but it also hurt me. Along with the protection came the story of a limited world, full of fear and glass ceilings.

The armor was a heavy load for me to carry. Even though they taught me to blame white people for racism, I began to think that there was something wrong with me. They showed me example after example of how white people had all the opportunities and controlled the world. They showed me how hate made me a victim in school, relationships, and in the workplace.

I understood what they were saying, but I didn’t understand why it was happening. I went through a phase of questioning myself. Maybe I was scary, ugly, stupid, threatening, and not worth the success others were withholding from me. There had to be some reason why white people wanted to hurt me and hold me down.

That phase of questioning my inherent right to love, abundance, and peace was very painful and it led me to begin searching for a new truth about myself, the world, and human relationships. I wanted to create my own vision of the world that was light and full of love no matter what my circumstances looked like on the surface.

After some soul searching, I came to a sad conclusion. The ideas of race that my parents had taught me did in fact protect me from some potential moments of hurt through racism. However, the armor and barriers I learned to put up were so strong that they not only protected me from potential moments of racism, they also protected me from potential moments of love and genuine connection with others who happened to be outside of my race.

In addition, I realized that the stories of race that were passed down to protect me, in my mind, also were preserving my status as a victim to racism. I believed I had to be careful to survive or fight to become equal. This caused me to lay low in many situations where I could’ve shined because I was afraid of calling the wrong attention to myself. It also led me to emphasize my German heritage over my black heritage for fear of not being accepted or having to assume the victim identity of a black man.

I have also learned that what I believe and expect of the world is my truth and will be validated for me. My learned story of racism is so ingrained in my existence that I perpetuate it every day.

When I’m in the checkout line in the grocery store, I take a step back and make an over-exaggerated look in a different direction when a white person is entering their PIN in the debit card machine. I don’t want to give them any inkling to start trouble because I know in my mind who the police will side with.

When I’m walking on the street and there is a white woman in front of me, I cross to the other side because I don’t want to startle her and have her call the police. Once again, I know who the police will side with.

After investigating these behaviors, which were fueled by the stories I had learned from my parents, I came to this conclusion:

Who knows if the person in the checkout line or the white woman on the street is scared of me or if a cop would believe me or choose to harm me. Their reactions don’t matter. What matters is that in my mind, I’ve already decided that they’re scared of me and that I wouldn’t stand a chance if the police got involved.

I live that racism in my mind before it even has a chance to be externalized in my reality.

Racism starts in my mind.

This is not an indictment of myself because I choose not to judge racism as a terrible thing that happens TO me. Instead, I see it as a gift that happens FOR me.

Therefore, I choose not to react to racism, but to investigate my story and accept the gift of growth, expansion, and the evolution of my soul that lies within every event that happens in my reality.

I had been fighting for years and that fight never seemed to end. I didn’t want to fight anymore, I wanted peace and I now know that peace has nothing to do with getting police officers to act “right” or fighting racism.

It has everything to do with me and my truth.

It’s all about the story I choose to believe. If I want to believe people are out to hurt me and the world is a cruel place, the war is taking place in my mind first and then being projected out into the world.

In the wake of the events of Ferguson and New York, I allow my anger and sadness to flow, but I give myself permission to dig deeper than my surface feelings. I know that my feelings are a call to investigate a story that no longer serves me. I continue to release my story of being a victim and having limitations and I choose love over fear, and I will continue to allow the world to reflect that back to me no matter how painful or uncomfortable the circumstances seem to be on the surface.

If you believe that you have the power to choose love, abundance, and peace, support the I Choose Project.

The I Choose Project invites youth to empower themselves by creating their own reality, starting with their thoughts and beliefs.

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I Was Taught to Be Racist for My Own Protection

Neil deGrasse Tyson’s Provocative Tweets About Christmas Started An Internet Flame War

Neil deGrasse Tyson undoubtedly hopes you and your family are having a wonderful holiday season. Nevertheless, a series of tweets sent by the astrophysicist on Christmas have incensed some, as he provocatively questioned both the significance of the holiday — and the reason we celebrate it. Tyson kicked off the tweets by posing this cheeky question to his nearly 2.9 million followers: QUESTION: ThIs year, what do all the world’s Muslims and Jews call December 25th? ANSWER: Thursday December 25, 2014 Tyson followed up the rhetorical question by wishing a happy birthday to a significant figure who was born on Christmas: On this day long ago, a child was born who, by age 30, would transform the world. Happy Birthday Isaac Newton b. Dec 25, 1642 December…

Neil deGrasse Tyson undoubtedly hopes you and your family are having a wonderful holiday season. Nevertheless, a series of tweets sent by the astrophysicist on Christmas have incensed some, as he provocatively questioned both the significance of the holiday — and the reason we celebrate it.

Tyson kicked off the tweets by posing this cheeky question to his nearly 2.9 million followers:

Tyson followed up the rhetorical question by wishing a happy birthday to a significant figure who was born on Christmas:

Before pausing to reflect on the history of the day:

Finally, Tyson ended with a Rudolf-themed physics lesson:

The messages drew a strong response across the Internet, with incensed commenters referring to the physicist as “a bigoted hack” and a “satanic shrill,” among other names.

On Friday, apparently in response to the strong reactions his statements drew a day earlier, Tyson again took to Twitter, this time to ponder, “Imagine a world in which we are all enlightened by objective truths rather than offended by them.”

Tyson has since posted a lengthier response on his Facebook page, in which he explains the calendar calculations behind his birthday wish for Isaac Newton, and distances himself from calls he’s anti-Christian. “If a person actually wanted to express anti-Christian sentiment,” he writes, “my guess is that alerting people of Isaac Newton’s birthday would appear nowhere on the list.”

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Neil deGrasse Tyson’s Provocative Tweets About Christmas Started An Internet Flame War

Rihanna Celebrates The Holidays In A Christmas Red Bikini

So you thought the holiday season was all about bundling up in cozy sweaters? Well, Rihanna would beg to differ. The star took to Instagram on Friday to share a snap of herself lounging in a red bikini. The activity definitely screams summer, but the color of her suit reminds us of a certain Christmas icon. (Ehem, Santa.) @mdollas11 rihpost Une photo publiée par badgalriri (@badgalriri) le Déc. 12, 2014 at 4:41 PST According to Instagram, the singer is celebrating the holiday in her native Barbados. We’re pretty jealous we’re not there with her soaking up the sun. Christmas in Barbados Uma foto publicada por

So you thought the holiday season was all about bundling up in cozy sweaters? Well, Rihanna would beg to differ.

The star took to Instagram on Friday to share a snap of herself lounging in a red bikini. The activity definitely screams summer, but the color of her suit reminds us of a certain Christmas icon. (Ehem, Santa.)

@mdollas11 rihpost

Une photo publiée par badgalriri (@badgalriri) le

According to Instagram, the singer is celebrating the holiday in her native Barbados. We’re pretty jealous we’re not there with her soaking up the sun.

Christmas in Barbados

Uma foto publicada por badgalriri (@badgalriri) a

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Rihanna Celebrates The Holidays In A Christmas Red Bikini

Is Watching Football A Sin? ALL TOGETHER Podcast On Conscience And Concussions

Welcome to this week’s ALL TOGETHER, the podcast dedicated to exploring how, ethics, religion and spiritual practice is informing our personal lives, our communities and our world. ALL TOGETHER is hosted by Rev. Paul Raushenbush, the executive editor of HuffPost Religion. You can download ALL TOGETHER on iTunes and Stitcher. The menorah has been stored, the Christmas tree dragged to the curb, and now America is ready for the other reason for the season – Football. Over the next weeks, both college and professional football go into high gear with bowl games, playoffs and championships and, of course, the Super Bowl. However, a growing concern about the wellbeing of players is …

Welcome to this week’s ALL TOGETHER, the podcast dedicated to exploring how, ethics, religion and spiritual practice is informing our personal lives, our communities and our world. ALL TOGETHER is hosted by Rev. Paul Raushenbush, the executive editor of HuffPost Religion. You can download ALL TOGETHER on iTunes and Stitcher.

The menorah has been stored, the Christmas tree dragged to the curb, and now America is ready for the other reason for the season – Football. Over the next weeks, both college and professional football go into high gear with bowl games, playoffs and championships and, of course, the Super Bowl.

However, a growing concern about the wellbeing of players is forming a cloud over this sport that captivates much of nation (and makes some people a lot of money). On Sunday, November 30th an Ohio State Football player named Kosta Karageorge was found dead in a dumpster apparently due to suicide. Earlier that week Kosta, had texted to his mother: “Sorry if I am an embarrassment, but these concussions have my head all fucked up.” — after he was found his mother confirmed that he had: “has a history of sports-related concussions” and “had a few spells of being extremely confused.” Kosta Karageorge was only 22.

It is still unclear that football related concussions were the determining factor in Karageorge’s death. However, over the past years, the damage that football inflicts on a high percentage of the players has begun to come to light, a truth that was highlighted in the 2013 PBS Frontline documentary League of Denial: The NFL’s Concussion Crisis.

The fact of concussions on football players, past, present and future poses a moral dilemma for those of us who enjoy watching the game. Malcolm Gladwel, in the New Yorker went so far as to compare football to dog-fighting and called it a “moral abomination”.

In this episode of ALL TOGETHER, we should ask the question: Are we contributing to the harm of these young men by tuning in on the television or showing up at these sporting events that bring in billions of dollars for colleges and the National Football League? By our presence, are we aiding and abetting the harm of other human beings? Is watching football a sin?

Wrestling with the question Raushenbush talks to New York Giants legendary linebacker, Superbowl Champion and football Hall of Famer Harry Carson; Dr. Annegret Dettwiler who is a researcher at Princeton University’s Neuroscience Institute and works with the Princeton Athletic department to do imaging of athletes brains to see how concussions physically affect the brain and how long it might take for the brain to recover; and finally with Professor Eric Gregory who is an ethicist in the Religion Department at Princeton University, and who played football himself as a high school student.

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Is Watching Football A Sin? ALL TOGETHER Podcast On Conscience And Concussions

Harnessing The Power Of Dance With Alvin Ailey’s Robert Battle

In the world of dance, Robert Battle has achieved his dream of all dreams — at the age of just 42. As the artistic director of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the native Floridian presides over the world-renowned dance company, which has been thrilling audiences since 1958. A former member of the Parsons Dance Company and alumni of the Juilliard school, Battle honed his own skills as a formidable dancer and then a sought-after choreographer before founding his very own Battleworks Dance Company, which officially debuted in 2002. Through the years, several of his works won acclaim as part of Ailey’s esteemed

In the world of dance, Robert Battle has achieved his dream of all dreams — at the age of just 42. As the artistic director of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the native Floridian presides over the world-renowned dance company, which has been thrilling audiences since 1958. A former member of the Parsons Dance Company and alumni of the Juilliard school, Battle honed his own skills as a formidable dancer and then a sought-after choreographer before founding his very own Battleworks Dance Company, which officially debuted in 2002. Through the years, several of his works won acclaim as part of Ailey’s esteemed repertoire.

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Harnessing The Power Of Dance With Alvin Ailey’s Robert Battle

Gay, Bi, Transgender: The 85 Most Powerful Comings Out Of 2014

In 2014 thousands, perhaps millions of people came out all over the world. They all made a difference. The folks featured here are just a few who happened to make a big difference and caught our eye on Towleroad this year. Some are well-known, some are little-known: the CEO of the largest corporation in the world, an NFL player, a Kenyan literary figure, fashion models, the foreign minister of a Baltic state, country singers, Mormon pop stars, a few of the stars of your favorite television shows, and unknowns from the world of YouTube.

In 2014 thousands, perhaps millions of people came out all over the world. They all made a difference. The folks featured here are just a few who happened to make a big difference and caught our eye on Towleroad this year. Some are well-known, some are little-known: the CEO of the largest corporation in the world, an NFL player, a Kenyan literary figure, fashion models, the foreign minister of a Baltic state, country singers, Mormon pop stars, a few of the stars of your favorite television shows, and unknowns from the world of YouTube.

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Gay, Bi, Transgender: The 85 Most Powerful Comings Out Of 2014

Hundreds Of Police Outside Slain New York Officer’s Funeral Turn Backs On Bill de Blasio

NEW YORK (AP) — Hundreds of officers outside the church where a funeral was held for a policeman killed along with his partner in an ambush shooting turned their backs on the mayor as he spoke during Saturday’s service. The reaction from officers watching Officer Rafael Ramos’ funeral on giant TV screens followed comments from police union officials who had said Mayor Bill de Blasio contributed to a climate of mistrust that contributed to the killings of the two New York Police Department officers. Inside Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens, however, mourners gave de Blasio polite applause before and after his speech. The mayor said hearts citywide were aching after the Dec. 20 shootings that left Ramos and his partner, Wenjian Liu, dead. “All of this city …

NEW YORK (AP) — Hundreds of officers outside the church where a funeral was held for a policeman killed along with his partner in an ambush shooting turned their backs on the mayor as he spoke during Saturday’s service.

The reaction from officers watching Officer Rafael Ramos’ funeral on giant TV screens followed comments from police union officials who had said Mayor Bill de Blasio contributed to a climate of mistrust that contributed to the killings of the two New York Police Department officers.

Inside Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens, however, mourners gave de Blasio polite applause before and after his speech.

The mayor said hearts citywide were aching after the Dec. 20 shootings that left Ramos and his partner, Wenjian Liu, dead.

“All of this city is grieving and grieving for so many reasons,” de Blasio said. “But the most personal is that we’ve lost such a good man, and the family is in such pain.”

Police union officials have blamed de Blasio for fostering anti-police sentiment for his support of protesters angry that no charges will be filed in the police deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner on Staten Island. At a hospital after the officers’ slayings, the police union’s president, Patrick Lynch, and others turned their backs on de Blasio in a sign of disrespect. Lynch said the mayor had “blood on his hands.”

Weeks before the shooting, Lynch had suggested that officers sign a petition requesting that the mayor not attend their funerals were they to die in the line of duty.

De Blasio has stood firmly by the police since the shooting, calling on the demonstrators to temporarily halt their protests and praising officers after the police department announced the arrest of a seventh person since the shooting for making threats against police.

De Blasio and Lynch nodded at each other as they exited the church Saturday and lined up to wait for the casket.

The mayor followed Vice President Joe Biden and Gov. Andrew Cuomo on the roster of speakers eulogizing Ramos on Saturday.

Officers inside and outside the church applauded when Biden called the NYPD the finest in the world.

“When an assassin’s bullet targeted two officers, it targeted this city and it touched the soul of an entire nation,” the vice president said.

Cuomo called the daylight shootings of the officers as they sat in their cruiser on a street in Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant section “an attack on all of us.”

The attack shook the city and put an end to large-scale local protests criticizing police over a series of high-profile, in-custody deaths.

Funeral plans for Ramos’ partner, Officer Wenjian Liu, have yet to be announced.

When the Ramos family arrived at the church Saturday, the elder son — wearing his father’s NYPD jacket — was hugged by a police officer.

Ramos, a 40-year-old married father of two, was studying to become a pastor and kept Bible study books in his locker, his commanding officer said.

Officer Dustin Lindaman of the Waterloo Police Department flew from Iowa to attend Ramos’ funeral.

“He’s one of our brothers, and when this happens, it affects everyone in law enforcement — it absolutely affects everyone,” he said. “We wanted to show our support.”

A block from the church, retired NYPD Officer John Mangan held a sign that read: “God Bless the NYPD. Dump de Blasio.”

“If the mayor really wanted to do the right thing, he would have gotten into an NYPD car and rode around Bed Stuy and see the difficult jobs these cops do every day,” Mangan said. “The bottom line is there should be more signs out here in support of these cops.”

After the officers’ deaths, the gunman, Ismaaiyl Brinsley killed himself. Police said he was troubled and had shot and wounded an ex-girlfriend in Baltimore earlier that day.

In online posts shortly before the attack, Brinsley referenced the killings of Brown and Garner, both of whom were black, by white police officers.

Ramos and Liu were the first officers to die in the line of duty in New York since 2011.

They have both been posthumously promoted to first-grade detective, police said.

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Hundreds Of Police Outside Slain New York Officer’s Funeral Turn Backs On Bill de Blasio

North Korea Blames U.S. For Shutting Down Its Internet, Says Obama Was Behind ‘The Interview’ Release

HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea called President Barack Obama “a monkey” and blamed the U.S. on Saturday for shutting down its Internet amid the hacking row over the comedy “The Interview.” North Korea has denied involvement in a crippling cyberattack on Sony Pictures but has expressed fury over the comedy depicting an assassination of its leader Kim Jong Un. After Sony Pictures initially called off the release in a decision criticized by Obama, the movie has opened this week. On Saturday, the North’s powerful National Defense Commission, the country’s top governing body led by Kim, said that Obama was…

HYUNG-JIN KIM, Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea called President Barack Obama “a monkey” and blamed the U.S. on Saturday for shutting down its Internet amid the hacking row over the comedy “The Interview.”

North Korea has denied involvement in a crippling cyberattack on Sony Pictures but has expressed fury over the comedy depicting an assassination of its leader Kim Jong Un. After Sony Pictures initially called off the release in a decision criticized by Obama, the movie has opened this week.

On Saturday, the North’s powerful National Defense Commission, the country’s top governing body led by Kim, said that Obama was behind the release of “The Interview.” It described the movie as illegal, dishonest and reactionary.

“Obama always goes reckless in words and deeds like a monkey in a tropical forest,” an unidentified spokesman at the commission’s Policy Department said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

He also accused Washington for intermittent outages of North Korea websites this week, after the U.S. had promised to respond to the Sony hack.

There was no immediate reaction from the White House on Saturday.

According to the North Korea commission’s spokesman, “the U.S., a big country, started disturbing the Internet operation of major media of the DPRK, not knowing shame like children playing a tag.”

The commission said the movie was the results of a hostile U.S. policy toward North Korea, and threatened the U.S. with unspecified consequences.

North Korea and the U.S. remain technically in a state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. The rivals also are locked in an international standoff over the North’s nuclear and missile programs and its alleged human rights abuses. The U.S. stations about 28,500 troops in South Korea as deterrence against North Korean aggression.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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North Korea Blames U.S. For Shutting Down Its Internet, Says Obama Was Behind ‘The Interview’ Release