রবিবার, ৩০ জুন, ২০১৩

New understanding of tiny RNA molecules could have far-ranging medical applications

New understanding of tiny RNA molecules could have far-ranging medical applications [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jun-2013
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Contact: Mika Ono
mikaono@scripps.edu
858-784-2052
Scripps Research Institute

LA JOLLA, CA June 30, 2013 A team led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) has identified a family of tiny RNA molecules that work as powerful regulators of the immune response in mammals. Mice who lack these RNA molecules lose their normal infection-fighting ability, whereas mice that overproduce them develop a fatal autoimmune syndrome.

"This finding gives us insights into immune regulation that could be very helpful in a range of medical applications, from viral vaccines to treatments for autoimmune diseases," said Changchun Xiao, assistant professor in TSRI's Department of Immunology and Microbial Science and senior investigator for the study, which appears in the June 30, 2013 issue of Nature Immunology.

Unraveling a Crucial Process

The finding concerns a key interaction between T cells and B cells, the allied lymphocyte armies that make up most of the adaptive immune system of mammals. B cells, which produce antibodies, usually lie in wait for pathogens in special zones called follicles within lymph nodes and the spleen. But to start proliferating normally and pumping out antibodies to fight an infection, these B cells have to be assisted, in effect, by T cells known as "follicular helper" T cells (TFH cells). "The TFH cells have to migrate into the B cell follicles and physically contact the B cells in order to provide help to them," said Xiao. "However, the molecular pathways that control TFH cell differentiation and migration have not been well understood."

In 2009, other researchers proposed that this crucial process requires the suppression of the miR-17~92 family of RNA molecules. These are among the thousands of short RNA molecules (often known as micro-RNAs, miRs, or miRNAs) that are made by mammalian cells and are meant to do their jobs while in RNA form. Typically an miRNA works inside the cell as a basic regulator or "dimmer switch" for the activity of tens to hundreds of genesit binds to transcripts of those genes and slows down their translation into proteins.

Xiao, who had been studying the miR-17~92 family since 2005, decided to examine their role in TFH differentiation. His team began by measuring the levels of these miRNAs in young, "nave" T cells and in the TFH cells to which these T cells gave birth after exposure to foreign antigens.

Surprising Finding

To the researchers' surprise, the miR-17~92s showed the opposite pattern of expression than expected: their levels jumped as the nave T cells began differentiating into TFH cells, but fell back by the time the process was finished. The finding suggested that, far from acting as a brake on TFH differentiation, miR-17~92s work as enablers of the process.

To confirm their suspicion, team members developed mutant mouse lines in which some or all of the miR-17~92 miRNAs were knocked out of T cells. These miR-17~92-deficient T cells turned out to be much less able to differentiate into TFH cells. As a result, the follicle-dwelling B cells that depend on TFH assistance also lost much of their ability to respond to an immune challenge. "These mutant mice showed a deficient antibody response to a standard immune-provoking protein," said Seung Goo Kang, a postdoctoral research associate in the Xiao laboratory who was the leading author of the study.

Collaborating TSRI scientists led by John Teijaro, a senior research associate in the laboratory of Michael B. A. Oldstone, professor in the Department of Immunology and Microbial Science, showed further that these transgenic miceunlike ordinary lab micecould not clear a chronic virus infection that is used as a standard challenge in immunological experiments.

By contrast, when the team raised transgenic mice whose T cells produced four to six times the normal amount of miR-17~92s, these T cells differentiated into TFH cells spontaneouslythat is, without an immune-stimulating inoculation.

These mice developed antibody responses to their own tissues, and died young, with swollen spleen and lymph nodes. "The accumulation of autoantibodies is also seen in lupus and other autoimmune diseases in humans," said Wen-Hsien Liu, another postdoctoral research associate in the Xiao laboratory and a co-first author of the paper.

Important Targets

Liu and Kang were able to track down a key target gene of miR-17~92s, which the miRNAs suppress to enable TFH cell differentiation. The targeted gene codes for Phlpp2, a recently discovered signaling inhibitor. "Lowering Phlpp2 protein levels in our miR-17~92-knockout T cells restored much of their ability to become TFH cells," Kang said.

"Phlpp2 is one important target, but we believe there are others too, and we are now looking for those," Xiao said. He and his colleagues also plan to investigate methods for manipulating miR-17~92s and their TFH cell-related pathways, in order to boost antibody responses to vaccines for exampleor alternatively to lower autoantibody productions in people with autoimmune diseases.

###

The study, "miR-17~92 family microRNAs are critical regulators of T follicular helper cell differentiation," was a collaboration that also involved the laboratory of Hai Qi at Tsinghua University in Beijing and the laboratory of Eric Verdin at the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology at the University of California, San Francisco. A co-first author of the study was Peiwen Lu of the Qi laboratory; other co-authors were Hyung W. Lim of the Verdin laboratory, Daniel Fremgen of the Oldstone laboratory and Hyun Yong Jin and Jovan Shepherd of the Xiao laboratory.

The study was funded by the PEW Charitable Trusts, the Cancer Research Institute, the Lupus Research Institute, the American Heart Association (grant 11POST7430106 ), the National Institutes of Health (R01AI019484 and R01AI087634) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81161120405).


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


New understanding of tiny RNA molecules could have far-ranging medical applications [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Mika Ono
mikaono@scripps.edu
858-784-2052
Scripps Research Institute

LA JOLLA, CA June 30, 2013 A team led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) has identified a family of tiny RNA molecules that work as powerful regulators of the immune response in mammals. Mice who lack these RNA molecules lose their normal infection-fighting ability, whereas mice that overproduce them develop a fatal autoimmune syndrome.

"This finding gives us insights into immune regulation that could be very helpful in a range of medical applications, from viral vaccines to treatments for autoimmune diseases," said Changchun Xiao, assistant professor in TSRI's Department of Immunology and Microbial Science and senior investigator for the study, which appears in the June 30, 2013 issue of Nature Immunology.

Unraveling a Crucial Process

The finding concerns a key interaction between T cells and B cells, the allied lymphocyte armies that make up most of the adaptive immune system of mammals. B cells, which produce antibodies, usually lie in wait for pathogens in special zones called follicles within lymph nodes and the spleen. But to start proliferating normally and pumping out antibodies to fight an infection, these B cells have to be assisted, in effect, by T cells known as "follicular helper" T cells (TFH cells). "The TFH cells have to migrate into the B cell follicles and physically contact the B cells in order to provide help to them," said Xiao. "However, the molecular pathways that control TFH cell differentiation and migration have not been well understood."

In 2009, other researchers proposed that this crucial process requires the suppression of the miR-17~92 family of RNA molecules. These are among the thousands of short RNA molecules (often known as micro-RNAs, miRs, or miRNAs) that are made by mammalian cells and are meant to do their jobs while in RNA form. Typically an miRNA works inside the cell as a basic regulator or "dimmer switch" for the activity of tens to hundreds of genesit binds to transcripts of those genes and slows down their translation into proteins.

Xiao, who had been studying the miR-17~92 family since 2005, decided to examine their role in TFH differentiation. His team began by measuring the levels of these miRNAs in young, "nave" T cells and in the TFH cells to which these T cells gave birth after exposure to foreign antigens.

Surprising Finding

To the researchers' surprise, the miR-17~92s showed the opposite pattern of expression than expected: their levels jumped as the nave T cells began differentiating into TFH cells, but fell back by the time the process was finished. The finding suggested that, far from acting as a brake on TFH differentiation, miR-17~92s work as enablers of the process.

To confirm their suspicion, team members developed mutant mouse lines in which some or all of the miR-17~92 miRNAs were knocked out of T cells. These miR-17~92-deficient T cells turned out to be much less able to differentiate into TFH cells. As a result, the follicle-dwelling B cells that depend on TFH assistance also lost much of their ability to respond to an immune challenge. "These mutant mice showed a deficient antibody response to a standard immune-provoking protein," said Seung Goo Kang, a postdoctoral research associate in the Xiao laboratory who was the leading author of the study.

Collaborating TSRI scientists led by John Teijaro, a senior research associate in the laboratory of Michael B. A. Oldstone, professor in the Department of Immunology and Microbial Science, showed further that these transgenic miceunlike ordinary lab micecould not clear a chronic virus infection that is used as a standard challenge in immunological experiments.

By contrast, when the team raised transgenic mice whose T cells produced four to six times the normal amount of miR-17~92s, these T cells differentiated into TFH cells spontaneouslythat is, without an immune-stimulating inoculation.

These mice developed antibody responses to their own tissues, and died young, with swollen spleen and lymph nodes. "The accumulation of autoantibodies is also seen in lupus and other autoimmune diseases in humans," said Wen-Hsien Liu, another postdoctoral research associate in the Xiao laboratory and a co-first author of the paper.

Important Targets

Liu and Kang were able to track down a key target gene of miR-17~92s, which the miRNAs suppress to enable TFH cell differentiation. The targeted gene codes for Phlpp2, a recently discovered signaling inhibitor. "Lowering Phlpp2 protein levels in our miR-17~92-knockout T cells restored much of their ability to become TFH cells," Kang said.

"Phlpp2 is one important target, but we believe there are others too, and we are now looking for those," Xiao said. He and his colleagues also plan to investigate methods for manipulating miR-17~92s and their TFH cell-related pathways, in order to boost antibody responses to vaccines for exampleor alternatively to lower autoantibody productions in people with autoimmune diseases.

###

The study, "miR-17~92 family microRNAs are critical regulators of T follicular helper cell differentiation," was a collaboration that also involved the laboratory of Hai Qi at Tsinghua University in Beijing and the laboratory of Eric Verdin at the Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology at the University of California, San Francisco. A co-first author of the study was Peiwen Lu of the Qi laboratory; other co-authors were Hyung W. Lim of the Verdin laboratory, Daniel Fremgen of the Oldstone laboratory and Hyun Yong Jin and Jovan Shepherd of the Xiao laboratory.

The study was funded by the PEW Charitable Trusts, the Cancer Research Institute, the Lupus Research Institute, the American Heart Association (grant 11POST7430106 ), the National Institutes of Health (R01AI019484 and R01AI087634) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81161120405).


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-06/sri-nuo062613.php

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Ruining a movie date in Japan

Advertisement

goo Ranking asked their panellers what behaviours by their date at the movies would ruin the mood.

Demographics

Between the 2nd and 5th of May 2013 1,088 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 50.2% of the sample were male, 23.3% in their teens, 24.4% in their twenties, 25.5% in their thirties, and 26.8% in their forties; there was no-one older than 49 in this sample. Note that the score in the results refers to the relative number of votes for each option, not a percentage of the total sample.

what will you watch?

Looking at number 9=, it would seem to be relatively acceptable to fall asleep for a little bit? Funnily enough, even though I go to the cinema about once every two months and am often rather tired, I?ve never actually fallen asleep, even at times when I wanted to. I can however manage to fall asleep at live musical theatre where I?ve paid much more money for a seat that is usually less comfortable than the average cinema one.

Ranking result

Q: What behaviours by their date at the movies would ruin the mood? (Sample size=1,088)

Rank ? Score
1 Noisily chewing gum during the movie 100
2 Fiddling with their mobile phone during the movie 97.9
3 Forgetting to set their mobile to manner mode and having it ring during the movie 94.8
4 Loudly snoring during the movie 94.5
5 Repeatedly engaging me in conversation during the movie 85.5
6 Putting their feet up on the seat before, during the movie 82.4
7 Telling me their predictions of the plot twists at expository scenes 76.8
8 Crunching popcorn during emotional scenes 67.8
9= Sleeping all the way through the movie 66.1
9= Slurping their drinks during the movie 66.1
11 Slagging off the movie afterwards 60.2
12 Though I want to watch the movie, they whisper sweet nothings all through the movie 54.3
13 Going to the toilet just at the climactic scene 49.1
14 Bursting out laughing and otherwise over-reacting during the movie 45.0
15 Fidgeting and adjusting their pose all the way through the movie 43.3
16 Concentrating on the movie only during the love scenes 35.3
17 Giving a cliched impression of the movie afterwards 33.6
18 Bawling out loud during the movie 30.8
19= Suddenly grabbing my hand during the movie 13.1
19= Not booking a seat ahead of time for a popular movie 13.1
Read more on: cinema,goo ranking

Permalink

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/3q96oMg-se8/

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Cammy's Covers - Hawkeye To Elephantmen - Bleeding Cool ...

hawkeye11Cameron Hatheway writes;

Hawkeye #11 by David Aja

Now either this dog is a stone-blooded killer, or he just accidentally walked through some raspberry jam. Having a Labrador myself, I would not be surprised whatsoever if it was explanation number two. Again with Aja, it?s the simple things that really speak volumes when illustrating a cover with little detail as possible. Bottom line, this cover is doggone good!

amalasblade3Amala?s Blade #3 by Michael Dialynas

And that?s why you always make sure the back gate is locked. Heaven forbid if your beloved cybernetic serpent hound gets out and runs away. I initially thought this was a Paul Pope cover, but alas it?s not. Michael Dialynas does a superb job here with the grittiness and the coloring, for there?s tons of energy in this cover. I can hear the snarls of hell from just staring at it.

prophet36Prophet #36 by Aaron Conley

This illustration must be a postcard from planet Australia, because it appears that everything on this cover is trying to kill you. The yellow and green starfish (or in this case, murderfish) combined with the gem throne and see-through goldfish at the bottom balance perfectly, for it feels good to allow the eyes to wander. Lots of great stuff happening here, or as the Prophets call it, ?Just another day.?

bprdvampire4B.P.R.D.: Vampire #4 by F?bio Moon

The thing I love the most about this cover is you don?t see the head or body of the spider, but merely the legs emerging from the dark. It could look like a thousand different things, but because we?re relying on our own references, it?s going to end up being a manifestation of our worst nightmares. It?s big, it?s creepy as hell, and while you?re reading this article, it?s slowly dangling down from overhead.

theunwritten50The Unwritten #50 by Yuko Shimizu

A Fables/The Unwritten crossover? Shut up and take my money! It will be interesting (and by that I mean fascinating) to see what Shimizu has in store for us as she illustrates characters from both universes. Already I?m loving her take on Bigby, and the flowers, birds, and big cloud of smoke are a nice touch as well. Can?t wait to see what the next cover holds!

elephantment49Elephantmen #49 by Boo Cook

This is my favorite cover of the week, hands down. It doesn?t get any more science-fictiony than this! Troops on the planet?s surface fending off from crystal serpents with nasty big pointy teeth; Can this please be a movie?? Boo Cook goes above and beyond with this cover, for it?s a painted masterpiece depicting some of the coolest alien action I?ve seen in a long time. I can only imagine what the interior art looks like!

Cameron Hatheway is the host of Cammy?s Comic Corner and Arts & Entertainment Editor of the Sonoma State STAR. You can watch him devour pulled pork sliders on Twitter @CamComicCorner.

Source: http://www.bleedingcool.com/2013/06/29/cammys-covers-hawkeye-to-elephantmen/

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শনিবার, ২৯ জুন, ২০১৩

Kotaku The Best Games of 2013's Amazing First Six Months | io9 A quick way to make people feel bad a

Kotaku The Best Games of 2013's Amazing First Six Months | io9 A quick way to make people feel bad about their whole lives | Jezebel Nigella Lawson Walks Out On Alleged Domestic Abuser Charles Saatchi | Gawker Here's What Your Newspaper Looks Like When You Fire Your Photographers

Source: http://lauren.kinja.com/kotaku-the-best-games-of-2013s-amazing-first-six-months-609512231

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Winter Park coach accused of molestation released from jail

12:50 p.m. EDT, June 29, 2013

The Winter Park High School coach arrested on several sex charges, including lewd and lascivious molestation of a girl under the age of 16, was released from jail Friday.

Ashley Sinclair Brown ? who took the girls basketball team from losing nearly every game to an 18-win season last year ? was arrested Thursday.

He posted the $5,600 bail Friday.

Brown, 29, the head coach for the girls team since May 2011, worked for the school district since March 2010. He makes about $18,000 annually as a program assistant.

Brown's job was to work in Winter Park's in-school suspension program. He was also an assistant coach for the football team, said Kathy Marsh, a district spokesman. He is accused of forcing a young girl to send him videos of herself "twerking," a sexually suggestive dance, police said.

The former University of Central Florida football player also asked the young girl to send him videos and photos of herself performing sexual acts.

He threatened to post information about her online if she refused to send the videos and photos.

The girl told her mother about Brown's inappropriate behavior and the mother informed police June 14.

The girl told her mother that she had been getting the messages since June 10.

She also said Brown had touched her inappropriately on school grounds at least twice.

Brown is also facing charges of contributing to the delinquency of a child and transmission harmful material to a child.

Brown was not working over the summer, Marsh said, but has been told that "at this point he is not welcome on the campus."

Further employment action likely will get underway when school district offices reopen Monday.

dstennett@tribune.com or 407-420-5447 or @desi_stennett on Twitter

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/orlandosentinel/news/~3/0U_dRvfUphk/os-coach-sinclair-brown-sex-arrest-20130628,0,4466855.story

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Don't Waste Money On Name-Brand Medications - Business Insider

Even doctors know it's pointless to spend money on name-brand medications.?

A new study?from the University of Chicago business school finds that pharmacists are much more likely to buy generic over-the-counter pain relievers than spend more money on name brands.

Store brand, generic OTC pain relievers almost always have the exact same dosages and active ingredients of their name-brand counterparts (the FDA makes sure of that). Even so, consumers have proven they still have a hard time passing up recognizable brands like Tylenol and Advil in favor of cheaper generics.

The study finds:

In a case study of headache remedies, we ?nd that?college education, working in a healthcare occupation, and other proxies for product knowledge predict?more purchases of private labels relative to brands. Pharmacists devote almost 90% of headache?remedy purchases to private labels, against 71% for the average consumer. ...?We conclude that a signi?cant share of the willingness?to pay for brands in these categories would disappear in a world where consumers were fully informed.

The implication is that there's no reason for Tylenol and Advil to cost more money than off-brand equivalents except for the fact that they're brands and they spend a lot of money to advertise. It's the same deal as paying double for a box of name brand cereal when a generic storebrand box costs less and tastes about the same. You're paying more for advertising than quality.

Even though generic ("private label," or store brand) pain relievers account for 71% of the quantity of purchases, they only represent 49% of the dollars spent on OTC pain relievers, according to the study. They're significantly cheaper than the name-brand stuff.

Matt Yglesias at Slate writes: "One moral of the story is that advertising works. Nobody I know thinks advertising works on them or on anyone else. But it?s clear that even when marketers?don?t?have any meaningful information to convey about why you should buy their product, investments in branding nonetheless move purchasing decisions."

It's important to note that this same logic might not always apply to prescription pharmaceuticals?and other types of medicine (this study primarily addresses headache remedies). But considering that so many pharmacists shun brand-name OTC pain relievers in favor of generics, this could be an obvious place for people to save money on a common household item.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/dont-waste-money-on-name-brand-medications-2013-6

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শুক্রবার, ২৮ জুন, ২০১৩

Video: GOP Grills Acting IRS Chief

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52335852/

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Death toll from west China's violence rises to 35

BEIJING (AP) ? The official death toll rose to 35 Friday from an outburst of violence that included knife attacks on police in a far-western region that has seen frequent clashes between China's Muslim minority Uighurs and the ethnic Han majority.

Initial reports said 27 people were killed Wednesday in a remote town in the Xinjiang region, with state-run media saying that knife-wielding assailants targeted police stations, a government building and a construction site ? all symbols of Han authority and influx in the region.

The updated death toll included some of the severely injured dying in the hospital. It also included 11 assailants shot dead in Lukqun township in Turpan prefecture, the state-run Xinhua News agency said. Two police officers were among the 24 people they killed, Xinhua said.

"This is a terrorist attack, there's no question about that," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Friday at a regular news briefing. "As to who masterminded it, local people are still investigating."

State news reports did not identify the ethnicity of the attackers, nor explain what may have caused the conflict in the Turkic-speaking region, where Uighurs have complained of suppression and discrimination by Han people. The report also said police captured four injured assailants.

The Wednesday violence ? described as a terrorist act by China's state media ? was one of the bloodiest incidents since unrest in the region's capital city of Urumqi killed nearly 200 in 2009.

Photos released in state media show scorched police cars and government buildings and victims lying on the ground ? presumably dead.

It was impossible to independently confirm the state-run media accounts. The Global Times said police set up many checkpoints along the 30-kilometer (19-mile) road to Lukqun and dissuaded reporters from traveling there due to safety concerns. It said heavy security has been necessary because some suspects remained on the run.

An official who only gave his family name of Bao and works at the news office for the Xinjiang Public Security Bureau said Friday he had no more information than in state media. Calls to the region's party propaganda office and the regional government's news office were not answered Friday.

Xinjiang (shihn-jeeahng) is home to a large population of minority Muslim Uighurs (WEE'-gurs) in a region that borders Central Asia, Afghanistan and Pakistan and has been the scene of numerous violent acts in recent years, including the riots in the capital four years ago.

Critics have attributed the violence, including Wednesday's deadly clashes, to Beijing's oppressive and discriminatory ethnicity policies. Many Uighurs complain that Beijing imposes tight restrictions on their religious and cultural life, barring children and women from attending mosques and discouraging fasting during the Muslim month of Ramadan, which starts this year in early July.

The Chinese government says all ethnic groups are treated equally and that the violence is terrorism with no connection to religion or ethnicity. It points to billions of dollars it has invested in modernizing Xinjiang, a strategically vital region with significant oil and gas deposits.

Beijing often accuses overseas Uighur activists of orchestrating violence and obscure militant groups sometimes take responsibility, with little or no evidence to prove claims on either side.

Information is tightly controlled in the region, which the Chinese government regards as highly sensitive and where it has imposed a heavy security presence to quell unrest. However, forces are spread thin across the vast territory and the response from authorities is often slow.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/death-toll-west-chinas-violence-rises-35-025105257.html

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Pre-caffeine tech: Geek graph, 3-D duck foot

Technology

1 hour ago

Mike Garey

Mike Garey

Our pre-caffeine roundup is a collection of the hottest, strangest, and most amusing stories of the morning.

So the Army is reportedly blocking military access to the Guardian's coverage of NSA leaks.

Here's a really smart thing John Cusack wrote about Edward Snowden.

Oh! And here's the NSA's early years: Exposed!

Set status to "fabulous": Millions of Facebook users "like" gay marriage.

Also, Facebook is fixing to strengthen security with an old-school crypto technique.

(BTW: Even if you don't use Facebook, you may have a shadow profile.)

Alec Baldwin had a homophobic Twitter rant before mysteriously disappearing (again) from the social network.

But all Sean Parker wants is for you to say something nice about his wedding.

Science says there's a difference between geeks and nerds.

Speaking of which, time to rank the 50 hottest guys of "Harry Potter."

And good news everybody! Buttercup the duck got a 3-D-printed replacement for his foul foot.

Compiled by Helen A.S. Popkin, who invites you to join her on Twitter and/or Facebook.

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2dee4cc6/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cpre0Ecaffeine0Etech0Egeek0Egraph0E30Ed0Educk0Efoot0E6C10A480A483/story01.htm

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ জুন, ২০১৩

How Aspect Ratios Have Changed Over Time Because of Movies

If you haven't learned anything interesting today, watch this fascinating history lesson on how the aspect ratios we know (16:9, 4:3) became the standard of what we see. For any film geek or ratio nerd, it's a lovely trip back into time where things can become standard by just doing it for a long time.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/kNwp5of_yR0/how-aspect-ratios-have-changed-over-time-because-of-mov-592442723

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My Gay Dad Dreamed of This Day

130627_DX_dad2 The author and her father

Courtesy of Alysia Abbott

I?m not trying to get her to grow up gay. I?m not hiding my gayness to get her to grow up straight. But she can see that there are many orientations and many ways to be. Hopefully, by the time she grows up we will have a society where those dichotomies of whether you?re gay or straight, a man or a woman aren?t so important. Where people can just be as they feel most natural and comfortable in being.

In 1975, my father concluded an essay on gay fatherhood with these lines. I was 4 years old, and he was raising me alone in San Francisco. He?d described himself as bisexual when he first met my mother in 1968. They married a year later, as self-styled revolutionaries, believing they could redefine family and gender relations. Then in 1973, my mother was killed in a car accident, and the next year my father moved us to San Francisco, where he could live openly as a gay man and raise me as a single father.

It was difficult to be a gay dad in the 1970s, even in San Francisco. The city was full of young men exploring the concept of sexual liberation, but few of these men were raising kids. And the culture at large was hostile to the idea of gays even mixing with children: In 1977, Anita Bryant successfully rolled back gay rights bills in several states with a campaign to ?Save Our Children?; in 1978, California state Sen. John Briggs tried to pass Proposition 6, an initiative that, if passed, would have removed all?gay?and?lesbian?school employees, and their supporters, from their jobs.?I?m told my extended family wanted to take over raising me after my mother died, but my father told them that if they even tried to take me away, they?d never see me again. He lived in fear then. And he even coached me to hide news of his boyfriends whenever I visited my grandparents in the Midwest.

But despite my father?s fears, he carried hope, believing that by the time I reached adulthood, gay men and women wouldn?t have to hide their romantic preferences for equal access to jobs and services, that people could one day ?just be as they feel most natural and comfortable in being.? Now I?m 42, an adult for more than 20 years, and finally a version of that dream has come true. I can?t help but wonder what he would think. He fought his whole life to raise the profile of gay writers and thinkers, marginalized in his time, through his work as an activist and editor. The experience of gay men and women was so beneath the scope of national concern back then that by the time AIDS began to spread across urban centers of the country in the early ?80s, the Reagan administration turned its back. Conservatives such as Jesse Helms, Jerry Falwell, and Pat Buchanan believed that gay men were solely responsible for their illness and not deserving of government help. In 1983, Buchanan famously quipped, ?The poor homosexuals?they have declared war upon nature, and now nature is extracting an awful retribution.?

130627_DX_dad3 The author and her father

Courtesy of Alysia Abbott

Gays were so closely aligned with the terrifying disease of AIDS that they were regularly targeted in random acts of violence and vandalism throughout San Francisco in the ?80s. I remember riding the bus home from school and seeing ?Kill Fags!? spray-painted on a billboard. Another day I saw graffiti scrawled on the back of a bus seat: ?Gays?get help NOT AIDS.? I didn?t want my social identity, so tentative and fragile as a teenager, associated with stigma, so I pushed myself deep into the closet. I was scared. By the time the HIV test was introduced in 1985, close to half of the gay men in San Francisco were already infected. My father was one of them, but neither he nor I were talking about it.

In 1991, my father told me he was diagnosed with full-blown AIDS and asked me to graduate college early and move home. I didn?t feel ready. I was 20 years old, finally making good friends and good grades. I?d secured myself a coveted internship at a record label in New York and an apartment share in the East Village. I then worried that taking on the task of caring for my dad indefinitely would swallow up my burgeoning future. But my father had no long-term lover, no close family member who could step forward. That responsibility was mine alone. And, as he later reminded me, he didn?t feel ready to care for me alone after the death of my mother, but he did it. This is how family works.

I spent the last year of my father?s life nursing him in that same Haight-Ashbury apartment where he raised me before finally moving him into hospice. It was a difficult time, but one I feel fortunate to have known. I enjoyed bringing my father special meals he couldn?t get at the hospice?chocolate ice cream cones from a shop around the corner, miso soup and safe sushi (no raw fish) from our favorite Japanese restaurant. We ate these meals in his too-warm room, often sitting together in silence, with only the sound of his supping or the spoon scraping the bottom of our Styrofoam bowls. My father used to tell me he liked visiting with me above anyone else because other people needed to be entertained. ?I don?t always have energy to be cheered up,? he?d explain. I held his hand when he died in December 1992.

There were times in my life when I longed for the ?normal? family that I saw on TV and in the parking lots of my private school. I blamed the awkwardness and loneliness I sometimes felt as a child on my mother?s accident, foolishly believing my father?s overwhelming grief had ?turned? him gay. When I was little, I even told him that he should date women so I could get back that mother who was lost to me. But had my father done this, he?d not have been happy. And his success as a father, I now realize, was due to his ability to be happy, to love openly, and to parent in concert with, instead of in opposition to, his values and ideals.

I see this same spirit in the gay couples who want to start families today. Unlike the majority of gay parents in my father?s generation, who produced children from straight marriages before coming out themselves, gay men and women who want to become parents in 2013 go to tremendous lengths to do so. They foster children, wait years for expensive adoptions, or navigate complicated surrogate relationships in order to know the pleasure of being someone?s mom or dad. I envy their kids. They get to have their gay families, now recognized as legitimate before the law, and keep them, too.

Read more from Slate?s coverage of?gay marriage.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2013/06/the_supreme_court_and_gay_marriage_i_wish_my_gay_father_had_lived_to_see.html

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Imagination can change what we hear and see

June 27, 2013 ? A study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows, that our imagination may affect how we experience the world more than we perhaps think. What we imagine hearing or seeing "in our head" can change our actual perception. The study, which is published in the scientific journal Current Biology, sheds new light on a classic question in psychology and neuroscience -- about how our brains combine information from the different senses.

"We often think about the things we imagine and the things we perceive as being clearly dissociable," says Christopher Berger, doctoral student at the Department of Neuroscience and lead author of the study. "However, what this study shows is that our imagination of a sound or a shape changes how we perceive the world around us in the same way actually hearing that sound or seeing that shape does. Specifically, we found that what we imagine hearing can change what we actually see, and what we imagine seeing can change what we actually hear."

The study consists of a series of experiments that make use of illusions in which sensory information from one sense changes or distorts one's perception of another sense. Ninety-six healthy volunteers participated in total.

In the first experiment, participants experienced the illusion that two passing objects collided rather than passed by one-another when they imagined a sound at the moment the two objects met. In a second experiment, the participants' spatial perception of a sound was biased towards a location where they imagined seeing the brief appearance of a white circle. In the third experiment, the participants' perception of what a person was saying was changed by their imagination of a particular sound.

According to the scientists, the results of the current study may be useful in understanding the mechanisms by which the brain fails to distinguish between thought and reality in certain psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia. Another area of use could be research on brain computer interfaces, where paralyzed individuals' imagination is used to control virtual and artificial devices.

"This is the first set of experiments to definitively establish that the sensory signals generated by one's imagination are strong enough to change one's real-world perception of a different sensory modality" says Professor Henrik Ehrsson, the principle investigator behind the study.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Karolinska Institutet.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Christopher?C. Berger, H.?Henrik Ehrsson. Mental Imagery Changes Multisensory Perception. Current Biology, 2013; DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.06.012

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/SDPHCPJBUGM/130627125156.htm

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Weight loss's effect on heart disease risks

June 25, 2013 ? A landmark study investigating the long-term effects of weight loss on the risks of cardiovascular disease among patients with Type 2 diabetes has now concluded, with significant results to be published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Conducted at the University of Pittsburgh and at clinical facilities throughout the United States, the multicenter clinical trial investigated the effects of an intensive lifestyle intervention program, intended to achieve and maintain weight loss in overweight or obese people with Type 2 diabetes, on rates of cardiovascular disease. Begun in 2001, the trial enrolled more than 5,000 people at 16 clinical centers across the United States and is the longest intervention study of its type ever undertaken for patients with diabetes.

John Jakicic, chair and professor in the Department of Health and Physical Activity in Pitt's School of Education and Director of the Physical Activity and Weight Management Research Center, served as principal investigator for the University of Pittsburgh's role in the study. He, along with colleagues throughout the University, is among the researchers comprising the national Look AHEAD (Action for Health in Diabetes) Research Group, which carried out the study and authored the New England Journal of Medicine paper.

Among the study's main findings is that weight loss among members of the study's Intensive Lifestyle Intervention group, provided with a program of weight management and increased physical activity, resulted in no difference in heart attacks and strokes when compared with the study's control group, the Diabetes Support and Education group, which was provided with only general health information and social support.

The effect of the intervention program on weight loss, however, was significant: Participants in the intervention group lost 8.7 percent of their initial body weight after one year of the study versus 0.7 percent among the control group's members; the intervention group also maintained a greater weight loss, 6 percent of their initial weight, versus 3.5 percent for the control group, at the study's conclusion.

The Look AHEAD study is the first to achieve such sustained weight loss. A weight loss of 5 percent or more in short-term studies is considered to be clinically significant and has been shown to improve control of blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol, and other risk factors. Comparable weight loss can also help prevent the development of Type 2 diabetes in overweight and obese adults.

"While the findings from the Look AHEAD study did not support that engagement in a weight- loss intervention was effective for reducing the onset of cardiovascular disease incidence or mortality, this does not mean that overweight adults with diabetes should not lose weight and become more physically active," said Jakicic. "Rather, there is an overwhelming amount of evidence from this study to date that has shown that weight loss and physical activity were associated with numerous other health benefits.

"These include improving physical function and quality of life, reduction in risk factors such as lipids and blood pressure with less reliance on medication, better diabetes control with less reliance on medication, improved sleep, psychological and emotional health benefits, and many others," Jakicic said. "Thus, adults with diabetes can begin to realize many of these health benefits with even modest reductions in body weight and modest increases in physical activity."

The study sought to determine whether weight loss achieved with a lifestyle program would help individuals with diabetes live longer and develop less cardiovascular disease. While short-term studies had shown that weight loss improved control of blood sugar and mitigated risk factors for heart disease and stroke in overweight and obese individuals with Type 2 diabetes, the longer-term effects of weight loss were not well studied. In particular, it was unknown whether weight loss achieved with a lifestyle intervention alone could reduce the risk of heart disease in people with Type 2 diabetes.

Type 2 is the most common form of diabetes, affecting approximately 25 million Americans over the age of 20. Complications of Type 2 diabetes include heart disease and stroke, high blood pressure, blindness, kidney disease, the nervous system disease known as neuropathy, and amputations. The total cost of Type 2 diabetes in 2012 was estimated to be $245 billion. This disease, for which there is no cure but which involves ongoing treatment, can be managed with diet, physical activity including regular exercise equal to at least 30 minutes of brisk walking each day, modest weight loss, and a variety of medications. The Look AHEAD study has shown that these lifestyle factors are effective for improving the management of Type 2 diabetes.

Study participants were individuals between 45 and 75 years of age with Type 2 diabetes and a body-mass index of 25 or greater. Sixty percent of the study participants were women, while 37 percent were from ethnic and racial minority groups.

The University of Pittsburgh's General Clinical Research Center and Clinical Translational Research Center served as participating clinical sites, with researchers here recruiting more than 330 participants over a three-year span. Jakicic credited the Division of Endocrinology within the Department of Medicine and the Department of Psychiatry in Pitt's School of Medicine, and the Department of Epidemiology in Pitt's Graduate School of Public Health, with the success of the local clinical trials.

Participants were assigned randomly to the Intensive Lifestyle Intervention group or the Diabetes Support and Education group. Members of the Intensive Lifestyle Intervention group were enrolled in a weight management program that provided individual and group support for making changes in eating behaviors and engaging in physical activity. The intervention program focused on home-based, functional activities including helping participants balance, climb stairs, and get out of a chair, among other examples. Diabetes Support and Education group members received what Jakicic called "usual care, with some very infrequent support on general health topics that were not related to diet, physical activity, or weight loss."

Participants were required to have their own health care providers manage their diabetes and other conditions. Look AHEAD did not provide medical care, but it did assist participants in finding a health care provider if they did not have one.

The Look AHEAD study was intended to run for 13.5 years, the maximum length of time researchers had determined might be required to see a difference in heart disease between two groups. After 11 years, however, the Look AHEAD Data and Safety Monitoring Board, an independent monitoring board that provides recommendations to the National Institutes of Health, reviewed the data the study had collected and determined that Look AHEAD could reach the definite conclusion that there were no differences in cardiovascular disease rates between the study's two groups.

Speculating on the failure of weight loss to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, researchers suggested that even greater weight loss may be necessary to reduce cardiovascular risk in diabetes patients who are overweight or obese. They also suggested that by providing participants in both groups, and their health care providers, with annual feedback on the participants' blood pressure, lipids, and blood sugar control, the cardiovascular disease risks for all experiment participants may have been reduced at a comparable rate.

The paper is titled "Cardiovascular Effects of Intensive Lifestyle Intervention in Type 2 Diabetes." It appeared online in the New England Journal of Medicine today, June 24, 2013. Research conducted at the University of Pittsburgh's General Clinical Research Center and Clinical Translational Research Center was funded by a Clinical and Translational Science Award and a National Institutes of Health grant.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/glhgqGmNABs/130625074205.htm

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Roland Emmerich, 'White House Down' Director, Explains Who And What We'll See In 'Independence Day 2' (Not Boomer)

Last week it was announced that Roland Emmerich's long-awaited sequel to "Independence Day" will finally become a reality: the film is set for release on July 3, 2015. So when Emmerich -- who is promoting his new action movie, "White House Down" -- dropped by The Huffington Post's New York City offices on Tuesday, well, yes, we had a lot of questions about the film, including who's coming back for the sequel.

First, though, Emmerich's got "White House Down" on his mind. The new film stars Channing Tatum as a police officer who inexplicably finds himself protecting the President of the United States (played by Jamie Foxx) after terrorists take over the White House. Emmerich is aware that this isn't the first "overthrow the White House" movie of the year ("Olympus Has Fallen" came out in March), and the director doesn't mince words about how he feels about this situation.

In our long conversation, the straight-shooting Emmerich explains in detail why Will Smith won't return for his "Independence Day" sequel (after he fought Fox for the right to cast him in the first movie, a detail not lost on Emmerich), reveals how the idea came about, and what other familiar faces we'll see in the new film. Emmerich also discusses Jim Carrey's recent decision to back out of of promoting "Kick-Ass 2" and reflects on one of his most critically panned films, "Godzilla," and how that movie has everything to do with "Deep Impact" and Armageddon."

I enjoyed the White House tour guide in this movie. He references "Independence Day."
Yeah, the White House tour guide, Nick Wright -- who actually got the job because he is a really good improviser. And he improvised in his first reading the line, "the famous building in the middle, which got blown up in 'Independence Day.'"

So that wasn't your line?
That was him.

Did you have any reservations about being self-referential?
No. When we shot it, he didn't do it. And then I said, "Do what you did in the audition." And he said, "Really?" And I said, "We always can cut it out since we have the other takes." And, naturally, it stayed in the movie because it's a laugh. Also, it shows you that the movie doesn't take itself too seriously.

Is that you poking fun at yourself?
Yes. Because I know I'm famous for blowing up the White House.

It doesn't blow up this time.
No. Everybody says, "Oh, you blew up the White House again."

You didn't. It's on fire.
It didn't even burn down.

I do like that these characters live in a universe where they can watch "Independence Day."
[Laughs] It's a parallel universe.

In the next "Independence Day," those characters should reference "White House Down."
I can't, because that's a true parallel universe.

Did you see "Olympus Has Fallen"?
No.

Why does that happen? Two "White House is captured" movies?
I always said that. When we had two volcano movies and two meteor movies, I thought, "Are they stupid?" But now I'm in the same situation. I had committed to this film, I had cast Channing Tatum ... all of a sudden, someone says to me, "Oh, this other movie just got a director finally." I said, "What other movie?" Everybody knew, besides me. I said, "Oh, this is a problem." And it was a problem. It seriously hurt our movie because a lot of people will say, "Why should I see two of those movies?" Even though I think they're probably very different from each other. On the other hand, then they watch the sixth and seventh part of "Fast and Furious" -- it's not so different, six from seven or five from four.

To be fair, seven isn't out yet.
Oh, I don't even know how many there are.

Seven is next summer.
See, that's how connected I am. I live in a parallel universe.

A lot of directors don't admit publicly when they think this kind of thing hurts their movie.
That's stupid. Sure it hurts us ... there's no doubt about it.

Before the "Independence Day 2" announcement, I thought you'd do "Singularity" next.
We are actually writing as we speak on that.

What about the Stonewall project?
While I'm here, I'm going to use my time in New York to meet with the writer tomorrow. We have a first script, it's very good but it's not good enough.

But the sequel to "Independence Day" comes next?
It's probably next, yeah. They set a date, which is always a good sign.

You make a lot of action movies. I am curious about your thoughts on Jim Carrey renouncing his involvement with "Kick-Ass 2," citing gun violence.
It's odd. That's just odd. I mean, as an actor, he has to know what kind of movie this is -- there's a script there. And then all of a sudden say, "No, I'm not doing this because it glorifies violence." I mean, that's a little bit weird. On the other hand, maybe it's a very clever marketing ploy to put this movie on the map. I believe if something is wrong with our society, we should all together figure out a way how -- first of all -- to have less guns out there. Then the video game industry should move away from these shoot 'em ups -- I mean, there's a lot of "boom, boom, boom" and people fall. All of these games -- and you score higher the more you shot. And, like, 8-year-old kids play that. That is desensitizing. In a movie, there's good, there's bad ... you know, there's a certain morality to it. There are emotions involved, there are characters involved, people mourn for people who are dead.

Where did this "Independence Day" sequel come from all of a sudden last week?
Nothing comes out of nowhere in a director's life. I've been talking about an "Independence Day" sequel since we made this movie. And I always said, "Nah, there's no sequel possible." At one point I wrote -- with Dean Devlin -- a script, which we got money for. And then when we read it ourselves, we said, "Let's give the money back." Then, when I did "2012," I realized all of a sudden, "Oh my God, what can you do now with computers?" You can create water and fire -- breaking apart buildings -- it's just a new world out there. All of a sudden, it popped in my mind.

Aside from the effects, was there a story that you liked?
That, too. Because of that, a great idea of expanding "Independence Day" to more like -- if you want to do a sequel, the studio doesn't only want to have another film. They want to have a franchise. If you want to create a franchise, which "Independence Day" could be, then you have to expand the mythology behind it. Why did the aliens come? What does their culture look like? What does that mean? And I had a couple of really, really good ideas with Dean together ... then, like it was in the first movie when we talked about that idea, after three days, the whole script was roughly together -- and the same thing happened again. And I realized now it's time to do it.

Will it start 19 years later?
Yes. It's totally a parallel universe. That's all that I'm saying.

You've already said that Will Smith won't be back. I'm assuming there was some contact with him?
It's a very simple thing. We gave him our very first script and he liked it very much. He said, "Look, I don't want to go there anymore because I was a different person than I am now. And I have so many other projects that I want to do." At that time he wanted to make two movies at the same time. Then, naturally, his demands were-- I would say, I have to go down with my demands, too, because I don't own this. The studio owns this. And he was just saying "No, I don't care, this is what I want," and that's it. Then I kind of thought, This will never happen. A lot of my friends said, "You don't need Will. I would go watch it without Will."

It wasn't his movie before. It was an ensemble.
It was an ensemble piece.

He wasn't a big star before "Independence Day."
No. We had to fight for him. Fox was not so happy that we took him in this part.

They didn't want him?
No, no. They would have cast other actors. But it always happens like that. It's interesting, because it became a much bigger movie since we know Will is not in there.

Is that why it's supposed to be two more movies?
No. We are just going to do the next one and see what happens. We could theoretically go on and on and on -- because there's a bigger mythology to it. There's a bigger theme to it and that for me is more exciting than one character. And I will cast a couple of actors who I really like, you know what I mean? I'm always a fan of certain people.

Who are you a fan of?
No, I cannot.

You like someone like Channing Tatum.
Well, yeah, Channing. I always like people who are not usually doing these kind of movies. Like a Maggie Gyllenhaal in "White House Down."

Like Jeff Goldblum in "Independence Day."
Exactly.

Or Judd Hirsch.
Yes.

Is Judd Hirsch coming back?
Yes. I think so.

And I saw that Goldblum and Bill Pullman are coming back.
Yes.

I assume it's too late for Boomer.
The dog would be dead. [Laughs] Yeah, that would be interesting.

It's frustrating that Will Smith turned you down and turned down a movie like "Django Unchained."
He turned "Django Unchained" down. I couldn't believe it.

Did that surprise you?
Totally. Who doesn't want to work with Tarantino?

Of your movies, the one I'm not a huge fan of is "Godzilla." And I'm not alone. Why did that movie not work?
I'm always testing movies a lot -- and we had no time to test. It was also, probably, a situation that I was a little bit talked into it. At that time I had an idea about a movie about a meteor striking Earth. And I had a whole idea how to do it. One of my all-time favorite movies is -- oh, what is it called? I had a little too much to drink yesterday. The one about the astronauts ...

"The Right Stuff"?
"The Right Stuff"! I wanted to do something like "The Right Stuff," combined with a meteor strikes Earth. So, you have to go up there on a mission. I had this whole thing planned out and a lot of people said, "You can do this after 'Godzilla.'" And that was a really big lesson for me because there were two movies after that.

"Deep Impact" and "Armageddon."
And I would have beaten them both.

Is it fair to say that your heart wasn't in "Godzilla" as much as your other movies?
I don't know. Also, I'm not really a fanboy. So, I was changing Godzilla. The original, how Godzilla looked, didn't make sense to me.

And now they're rebooting that.
It will be very interesting to see how they make him look. It was inspired by some Ray Harryhausen movies -- stop-motion animation movies. They were a big hit in Japan and the Japanese just wanted to do their own version. They couldn't do stop-motion animation, so they just built a big suit and put a stuntman in -- and that's why it's so bottom heavy. That's why it looks a little bit silly. [Laughs] The most embarrassing moment of my life, I was in Japan to show Toho -- who owns the copyright for Godzilla -- my new Godzilla. Before I did the presentation, they brought me to the Toho studios and there was Godzilla standing there with a sign around his neck that said, "Mr. Emmerich, I'm ready for your shooting call."

Wow.
That's what I said. Wow.

He never got his shooting call.
No, he didn't.

Mike Ryan is senior writer for Huffington Post Entertainment. You can contact him directly on Twitter.

  • Channing Tatum Jamie Foxx

    FILE - In this undated publicity photo provided by Sony Pictures Entertainment, Channing Tatum, left, and Jamie Foxx, center, star in Columbia Pictures' "White House Down," directed by Roland Emmerich. (AP Photo/Sony Pictures Entertainment, Reiner Bajo)

  • Jamie Foxx

    FILE - In this undated publicity photo provided by Sony Pictures Entertainment, Jamie Foxx stars in Columbia Pictures' "White House Down," directed by Roland Emmerich. (AP Photo/Sony Pictures Entertainment, Reiner Bajo)

  • This film publicity image released by Columbia Pictures shows, from left, Nic Wright, Joey King and Channing Tatum in a scene from "White House Down." (AP Photo/Sony Columbia Pictures, Reiner Bajo)

  • This film publicity image released by Columbia Pictures shows Maggie Gyllenhaal in a scene from "White House Down." (AP Photo/Sony Columbia Pictures, Reiner Bajo)

  • This film publicity image released by Columbia Pictures shows Channing Tatum in a scene from "White House Down." (AP Photo/Sony Columbia Pictures, Reiner Bajo)

  • This film publicity image released by Columbia Pictures shows Jamie Foxx, left, and Channing Tatum in a scene from "White House Down." (AP Photo/Sony Columbia Pictures, Reiner Bajo)

  • This film publicity image released by Columbia Pictures shows Channing Tatum in a scene from "White House Down." (AP Photo/Sony Columbia Pictures, Reiner Bajo)

  • This film publicity image released by Columbia Pictures shows Jamie Foxx and Channing Tatum, left, in a scene from "White House Down." (AP Photo/Sony Columbia Pictures, Reiner Bajo)

  • Roland Emmerich To Go W/ Derrik Lang Story

    In this Tuesday, June 18, 2013 photo, Roland Emmerich. director of the film "White House Down," poses for a portrait in Beverly Hills, Calif. The action-packed film starring Jamie Foxx as the President of the United States of America and Channing Tatum as his impromptu bodyguard releases Friday, June 28, 2013. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

  • Roland Emmerich

    In this Tuesday, June 18, 2013 photo, Roland Emmerich. director of the film "White House Down," poses for a portrait in Beverly Hills, Calif. The action-packed film starring Jamie Foxx as the President of the United States of America and Channing Tatum as his impromptu bodyguard releases Friday, June 28, 2013. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

  • Roland Emmerich

    In this Tuesday, June 18, 2013 photo, Roland Emmerich. director of the film "White House Down," poses for a portrait in Beverly Hills, Calif. The action-packed film starring Jamie Foxx as the President of the United States of America and Channing Tatum as his impromptu bodyguard releases Friday, June 28, 2013. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Channing Tatum attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Channing Tatum attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Channing Tatum attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Maggie Gyllenhaal attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: The cast and producers of 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Maggie Gyllenhaal attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Brad Fischer, (L), Jamie Vanderbilt and Harald Kloser (R) attend 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Jamie Foxx attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Channing Tatum attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Channing Tatum, (L), Jamie Foxx, (C) and Roland Emmerich, (R) attend 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Maggie Gyllenhaal attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

  • "White House Down" Washington DC Premiere

    WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 21: Maggie Gyllenhaal attends 'White House Down' Washington DC Premiere at AMC Georgetown on June 21, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Larry French/Getty Images)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/26/roland-emmerich-white-house-down_n_3500037.html

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