8 TED Talks to Make You Think Differently in 2019

From Career Contessa authored by Ally Freed:

“The holidays inevitably come with downtime, whether it’s spent curling up near the fireplace, or in the airport because of that flight delay. Here are six TED talks to inspire you while you wait.
Known as “ideas worth spreading,” TED talks are great for busy career women. They’re entertaining, concise, and loaded with valuable information that can be applied to your own life.
Another bonus of watching TED talks? You’ll have something to do while making Grandma’s “secret recipe” hot chocolate—and you’ll be loaded with information for those New Year’s Eve parties. Let’s get started before the hot chocolate gets cold!”
Share this:

How to Be Happy

From The New York Times authored by Tara Parker-Pope:

“Behavioral scientists have spent a lot of time studying what makes us happy (and what doesn’t). We know happiness can predict health and longevity, and happiness scales can be used to measure social progress and the success of public policies. But happiness isn’t something that just happens to you. Everyone has the power to make small changes in our behavior, our surroundings and our relationships that can help set us on course for a happier life.”

Share this:

Stories about women shaped 2018. Here are the ones to remember.

From The Lily authored by Lena Felton:

“In 2018, women’s stories demanded to be told.

One woman alleged that a now-powerful man had sexually assaulted her while they were in high school. Another ran for a U.S. House seat, even as she told voters that “women like me aren’t supposed to run for office.” A third escaped genocide and sexual slavery, then wrote about it.

And the world listened.

Christine Blasey Ford testified in front of the Senate during the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh; Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez became one of the record number of women elected to Congress; and Nadia Murad was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for bringing attention to sexual violence perpetrated by the Islamic State.

Throughout the year, stories like these shaped history and spurred change — and, in some cases, revealed the limits of progress.

Below, we’ve highlighted big moments in news about women across eight categories. These stories were told in 2018; now, they’re worth remembering.”

Share this:

The ACLU Raises Concerns Over Taylor Swift’s Facial Recognition Concert Surveillance

From Refinery 29 authored by Anna Millard:

“When you go to a Taylor Swift concert, you might expect your face to show up in the background of a crowd selfie (or a thousand). You might not expect to have pictures of your face analyzed in real time by Swift’s security team.
Rolling Stone reported that concertgoers at Swift’s May 18 Rose Bowl concert had their identities scanned by sophisticated facial recognition technology embedded in a large screen playing concert clips. Faces were compared to a database of Swift’s known stalkers, as a security measure for the singer.
Now, the American Civil Liberties Union has responded. In a blog post published the the nonprofit’s website, an an analyst from the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project outlined some concerns Swift’s use of the technology raises. While they appreciate the serious threat of stalkers, the ACLU warns against the tech: ‘We shouldn’t rush into embracing without checks and balances to make sure it’s not abused.’”
Share this:

Time’s Up’s New CEO on What We Can’t Tolerate

From The Cut authored by Jessica Boddy:

“Activists and celebrities gathered Tuesday evening in New York to honor Lisa Borders, the new president and CEO of Time’s Up, the initiative and legal defense fund fighting sexual harassment and inequality. Cindi Leive, Padma Lakshmi, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Inez van Lamsweerde and more were the evening’s hosts.

Borders started the job on November 1 after serving as president of the Women’s National Basketball Association. She was inspired to join Time’s Up while listening to Oprah Winfrey’s Golden Globes speech about gender inequality earlier this year.

Since Time’s Up was started on January 1, more than 3,500 women and men across the U.S. have accessed legal resources through its legal defense fund. Borders’s hiring came shortly after Time’s Up’s recent success helping McDonald’s and Walmart workers file sexual-harassment claims against their employers. In the coming months, she plans to amplify the organization’s message outside the entertainment industry.

At the dinner on Tuesday, an event hosted by The Glenlivet in honor of Time’s Up called “Conversations for Change” hosted at Indochine, Borders gave a moving speech that touched on her childhood growing up in the South during the civil-rights movement, and what she now refuses to tolerate: the mistreatment of women. Below, read an excerpt of her speech followed by photos from the event.”

Share this:

Law Firms Aren’t Protecting Women From Clients’ Sexual Harassment

From The American Lawyer authored by Caroline Spiezio:

“Risk-averse by trade, most attorneys easily recognize the line between appropriate and inappropriate professional conduct. But when dealing with clients, law firms are sometimes willing to blur that line.

Numerous women told The American Lawyer affiliate Corporate Counsel that sexual harassment by clients is not uncommon in the legal industry, with stories ranging from uncomfortable comments to repeated unwanted propositions to assault.

Women often don’t report these incidents, fearing retaliation or lack of support from their firms, many of which do not have policies against client harassment.

Women who did tell someone at their firm about business development-related harassment often had their concerns dismissed. That’s what happened to one female lawyer, who preferred to remain anonymous, when she reported an experience of inappropriate conduct to a firm colleague.”

Share this:

What the New Ruth Bader Ginsburg Film Gets Wrong, According to R.B.G.: “I Never Stumbled”

From Vanity Fair authored by Kenzie Bryant:

“Not long into On the Basis of Sex, future Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (played by Felicity Jones) undresses and falls into bed with her husband, Martin (Armie Hammer). The love scene is brief and tasteful—but it felt much longer Sunday night, watching it in an audience that also held Hillary Clinton, and Gloria Steinem,and Ruth Bader Ginsburg herself. It was like watching a sex scene with your parents, multiplied by a hundred uncomfortable throat clearings.

“Well, my children are in the audience,” Ginsburg said during a panel discussion after the screening at Lincoln Center Sunday night, when asked about her simulated display of affection. “And I think they would probably agree their daddy would have loved it.” Clinton, whose husband appointed Ginsburg to the Supreme Court in 1993 and was given a standing ovation at the outset of the film, was not afforded the chance to comment on what that experience was like for her.

The film follows the Ginsburgs’ supportive partnership in all things, from their shared time at Harvard to the first case they argued in court together, a gender-discrimination dispute brought before the U.S. Court of Appeals in 1971. Director Mimi Leder had the benefit of securing not only Ginsburg’s blessing but also her critical eye: the justice helped to revise the movie’s script, which was written by her nephew, Daniel Stiepleman. She “gave up the job of editor” around the third round, Ginsburg said; her daughter, Jane, took it from there, helping with the next seven or so revisions.

Ultimately, R.B.G. was happy with the result: “This film is part fact, part imaginative. . . . But the imaginative parts fit in with the story so well,” she said Sunday—adding that one such creative flare was the climactic scene in which on-screen Ruth falters at first under the weight of a judge’s questioning. “I didn’t stumble at the outset,” Ginsburg said.”

Share this:

AN ATTORNEY’S ‘TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS’

From Hopkins, Headlee, Caststeel, PLLC:

“WHEREAS, on an occasion immediately preceding the Nativity festival, throughout a certain dwelling unit, quiet descended, in which could be heard no disturbance, not even the sound emitted by a diminutive rodent related to, and in form resembling, a rat; and

WHEREAS, the offspring of the occupants had affixed their tubular, closely knit coverings for the nether limbs to the flue of the fireplace in expectation that a personage known as St. Nicholas would immediately and/or promptly thereafter arrive; and

WHEREAS, said offspring had become somnolent, and were occupied in nocturnal hallucinations involving visions of confectionery treats engaged in dancing or other general cavorting; and

WHEREAS, the adult male of the family, et ux, attired in proper headgear, also had become quiescent in anticipation of nocturnal and seasonal inertia of an extended period; and

WHEREAS, a distraction of unknown nature, cause and/or circumstance occurring on the snowy acreage outside the dwelling unit did result in the immediate and sudden journey of the owner to a fenestration of the dwelling unit for the purpose of observation and investigation, which observation and investigation was accomplished by the actions of the tearing open of the shutters and the throwing up of the sash; and

WHEREAS, after initially observing that the moon, in full phase, on the topmost part of the new-fallen snow gave the lustre of mid-day to objects outside, the said owner of the dwelling unit then did perceive in a most unbelieving manner an extremely small vehicle generally designed for travel in snowy regions being propelled by eight domesticated quadrupeds of a species found in arctic regions ; and

WHEREAS, a most odd rotund gentleman of quick movement and vivacious personality was entreating the aforesaid animals by their appellations, as follows:

“Your immediate action and co-operation is requested, Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, and Vixen; and collective action by you will be much appreciated, Comet, Cupid, Donner, and Blitzen;” and


Upon information and belief, it is further asserted that an additional quadruped named “Rudolph” may have accompanied and assisted the other eight quadrupeds, but verification of such assertion currently is still pending.


WHEREAS, in response to the solicitations of the gentleman, the vehicle and its undetermined number of quadruped propellants flew away and brought themselves, the vehicle, the gentlemen, and a cargo of bundled items to a rest on the exterior roof surface of the dwelling unit; and

WHEREAS, subsequent to the above, there occurred a swift descent to the hearth by the aforementioned gentleman, and upon exit from the dwelling’s chimney, the owner observed the aforementioned gentleman attired in full length fur garments showing remnants of ash and soot, and accompanied by an unstructured soft-sided cloth container similar to that carried and used by an itinerant purveyor of merchandise; and

WHEREAS, the aforementioned gentleman, portly and of good cheer and with an instrument for the consumption of tobacco in his mouth, thereupon promptly proceeded to deposit gratuities in the aforementioned tubular coverings; and

WHEREAS, that upon completion of these acts, and upon his return to his original point of departure, he gave an audible signal to the quadrupeds causing them to rapidly remove the gentleman, the vehicle, its cargo, and themselves from the locale, and

NOW, THEREFORE, BE YE ADVISED:

“that upon the aforementioned gentleman’s disappearance from view, he proclaimed a felicitation of the type prevalent and suitable to these occasions, i.e.:

‘Happy Christmas to All and to All a Good Night!””

Share this:

‘Clearly the Tide Has Not Turned’: A Q&A With Anita Hill

From The New York Times authored by Susan Chira:

“There may be more women heading to Congress this year, but Anita Hill isn’t cheering yet. The woman who faced down the all-male Senate Judiciary Committee in 1991 does not see transformative change on sexual harassment emerging from any branch of government in Washington for the time being.

During a lengthy conversation at Brandeis University, where she is a professor, Ms. Hill reflected on the aftermath of her own testimony, and of Christine Blasey Ford’s before the committee this year, and the unglamorous slog of what it would really take to confront and redress sexual harassment.

She was alternately tart and deliberative, contained but occasionally allowing a flash of anger to break through her carefully composed sentences.”

Share this:

California inferno gives rise to family-reuniting ‘Angels’

From AP News authored by Jocelyn Gecker:

“They have become known as the Angels of Paradise. But there is nothing ethereal about them.

They are online sleuths who know how to find people, and they have been putting their skills to use in the aftermath of California’s catastrophic wildfire.

In the dark days that followed the Nov. 8 inferno, the deadliest in California history, social media filled with posts from people trying to contact loved ones from the Paradise area.

Share this:

Are you a Girl Attorney?


Join the Directory!
SIGN UP