Move over, Instagram. Snapchat was the app of the season this fashion month, with editors “snapping” from runways around the world. WSJ’s Elizabeth Holmes reports.
Why Snapchat Is Fashion’s New Darling
Did “Blurred Lines” cross the line?
Jan Gaye, the former wife of Marvin Gaye, joins Don Lemon with her reaction to a jury awarding her family $7.4m for copyright infringement. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpdQhK86Jek
Are tourists more trouble than they’re worth?
They may bring in cash, but from Italy to Thailand some are asking, “Could tourists be more trouble than they’re worth?”
Using The Power Of Pee To Generate Electicity
A prototype urinal is the result of a partnership between researchers at UWE Bristol and Oxfam. It is hoped the pee-power technology will light cubicles in refugee camps, which are often dark […]
Google Opens Branded Store in London
Google opens a Google-branded store inside a London shop. WSJ’s Lisa Fleischer reports.
Jewels worth millions stolen in French motorway heist
It was a daring robbery – and for thieves the reward was considerable. Two high-security lorries transporting jewels worth millions of euros were relieved of their precious cargo by a gang of […]
Japan remembers Fukushima, with one father still looking for his son
Memorial were held across the country as Japan mourns the 4 year anniversary of the Fukushima earthquake and tsunami which sparked a nuclear crisis. One father, Takayuki Ueno, lost his entire family […]
Japan remembers victims of Fukushima disaster exactly four years on
Four years to the day since Fukushima, a minute of silence has been observed across Japan to remember the more than 18,000 people dead or missing in an earthquake, tsunami and nuclear […]
Fukushima – Four Years On
Since 2011, Greenpeace been monitoring radiation levels in the Fukushima Prefecture. Four years later, with the government planning to restart the reactors, radioactive contamination is still widespread throughout the region. The catastrophe […]
“Making Space” by Petra Collins
A New Orleans high-school dance recital is the first stop on next-gen filmmaker Petra Collins’s portrait of journey of self-acceptance.