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google doodle 4 google | doodle 4 google national winner | doodle 4 google competition - Duration: 2:20.BREAKING NEWS : "Doodle 4 Google student winner's artwork imagines a world of peaceful acceptance"
GOOGLE ASKED young artists to consider the concept, "What I see for the future…" And for Connecticut high schooler Sarah Harrison, that horizon line includes peace.
This afternoon, Harrison's "A Peaceful Future" is being named as the winning art in the national Doodle 4 Google student contest — and appears on the Google home page. Harrison rendered eight young people as symbols of diverse experience — six of whom spell out "Google."
Reacting to her win, Harrison said in a statement: "When I started, I was thinking of how there's a lot of animosity toward diverse communities of people in the world right now.."
"..So I wanted to draw something that I hoped would show that we can all get along well, and that it's possible for us to be happy with each other."
The Bunnell High School student added: "You don't know what they've been through — and they don't know what you've been through — so we all deserve respect from each other."
The four national finalists included Lucien Bell, a third-grader at John Eaton Elementary in the District. His sculptural artwork, titled "E-Waste Google," was created from "a salvaged DVR."
The celebrity judges included Simone Biles, Jimmy Kimmel and Sia, as well as animation-industry talents Brenda Chapman and Floyd Norman and flights systems engineer Tracy Drain.
The annual Doodle4Google contest, launched in 2008, is open to students grades kindergarten through 12; last year's winner, Akilah Johnson of the District, won for "My Afrocentric Life."
Harrison's victory includes $30,000 toward a college scholarship, and a meeting with the Doodle team at Google's Bay Area headquarters. Her school will get $50,000 in technology funding.
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the boss baby (movie) | dreamworks animation the boss baby | The Boss Baby: fun for grown-ups - Duration: 3:48.REVIEW MOVIE : ""The Boss Baby": Grown-up life lessons in a family-friendly animated comedy"
Who needs a movie about a tyrannical infant — or an infantile tyrant — anyway?
You might be surprised to learn that you do. Although its advertising campaign seems to promise little more than an animated comedy about a bratty baby in a business suit,
"The Boss Baby" (adapted from the 2010 book by author and illustrator Marla Frazee) is a sweet adventure tale about sibling rivalry that ultimately becomes a moving tribute to family and brotherhood.
Seven-year-old Tim (voice of Miles Christopher Bakshi) is an only child, basking in the undivided attention of his parents.
He has a wild imagination, dreaming up elaborate imaginary rescue scenarios involving pirates and rocket ships.
But this perfect life is upset by the arrival of a new baby brother (Alec Baldwin), who appears not in the usual fashion, but has been sent to Earth via a heavenly sorting procedure that divides newborns into loving family types and "management" babies,
raised in cubicle farms and emerging into the world wearing three-piece suits and carrying briefcases.
From Tim's (admittedly unreliable) perspective, his unnamed middle-manager sibling uses play dates to conduct meetings, fielding business calls on a Fisher Price toy telephone.
(The film takes place in an indeterminate time period — perhaps the early 1990s — in which there are computers, but no cellphones.)
Boss Baby demands complete attention from his parents, leaving Tim feeling neglected.
This transforms "The Boss Baby" from a single-joke movie to a story with a deeper, more universal resonance. After all, who among us — even an only child — hasn't felt the pang of abandonment, if not sibling rivalry, at some point?
Tim and his little brother are bitter rivals until Boss Baby reveals an important secret mission to stop what poses the direst threat to what the film posits is babies' already tenuous hold on parental love: puppies.
Although the film's character design is, for the most part, undistinguished, its vivid backgrounds are informed by both pop-up books and quirky midcentury design,
and the script (by Michael McCullers of both "Austin Powers" sequels) drops pop-culture references that range from "Teletubbies" to "Apocalypse Now." The animation concept for the film's rival companies – Baby Corp. and Puppy Co. – is impressively futuristic.
Yet what really drives the film is the central relationship, a fraternal dynamic that, despite being based on a flight of fancy, is more convincing than many live-action family comedies manage to be.
While "The Boss Baby's" corporate adventures are clearly the product of a child's overactive imagination, the film's lessons — about how both Tim and Boss Baby must learn to come to terms with each other — are very valid.
Director Tom McGrath ("Madagascar") strikes a fine balance between humor and sentiment, never losing sight of the tender reality that fuels childhood fantasy. Inventive and heartwarming, "The Boss Baby" is a lot more grown up than it looks.
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Come See The LPTV News Crew At The Home, Sport, & Travel Show - Duration: 1:29.IS TO CHECK THE POLLEN AND MOLD
COUNT BEFORE YOU HEAD OUT THE
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Fast News| Facebook Messenger gets reactions| ( Turn on subtitles to watch ) - Duration: 1:18.Facebook is adding two new features to Messenger: reactions and mentions.
Reactions let you respond to any individual message in a chat with various emoji (just tap and hold to add a reaction, just like you would for a post on your Facebook feed)
; while mentions lets you @ someone in a group chat, which sends them a direct notification.
As with reactions on your News Feed, anyone can see who reacted to what message with what
and you can add a reaction to anything — even other emoji if you want to get meta. As for mentions
Facebook says the feature will let the person who is tagged "jump right back in to the conversation to answer someone's question or to provide a response."
So, you know, this is basically a feature for hassling friends who are nominally present in the group chat, but definitely not paying attention.
And while Messenger app is adding features to make it more like Facebook proper, the main Facebook app is experimenting with a new comment system that looks more like Messenger.
Who knows, perhaps after unbundling chat from Facebook, Facebook wants to bundle them back together? That makes no sense of course, but at least they're not putting Stories in another app.
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