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Wednesday, January 9, 2019

The new Bachelor is a virgin. But this season will be more sex-obsessed than ever before.




Colton Underwood, at right, greets his prospective suitors during the Mond

This story has been updated.

This past summer, Ashley Iaconetti and her mother were watching “The Bachelorette” when one of the contestants, 26-year-old Colton Underwood, announced he was a virgin. The Bachelorette was surprised — and so was Ashley’s mom.

“There’s no way he’s a virgin,” Ashley recalls her mother saying of the former professional football player. Many people think of male virgins as dorky and bumbling with women, while Colton resembles a confident Ken doll come to life. Ashley had also been open about her virginity while competing on “The Bachelor” and “Bachelor in Paradise” in her late 20s, so she was disappointed her own mother did not believe Colton. She remembers saying, “How could you say that when you birthed me?”

Now, Colton’s lack of sexual experience is returning to prime time. He is this season’s lead on ABC’s “The Bachelor,” which premiered Monday night. And a lot of viewers at home will probably also be saying: There’s no way he’s a virgin.

Well, there is a way — and ABC will not let us forget it for a moment. The premiere referenced Colton’s abstinence dozens of times, with host Chris Harrison asking the audience to ponder: “Will he lose his virginity?” One woman introduced herself while dressed in a sloth costume, saying: “I … heard … you … like … to … take … things … slowly.” Groan. Another popped a red balloon and called it his “cherry.” Another flat-out asked him why he was waiting. (He’s not waiting for marriage, he says, just for “the right person.”)

Conversations with past Bachelor Nation virgins reveal the reality show and its spin offs often use wholesome things — such as virginity and the search for a husband and wife — as ways to talk about the more titillating aspects of dating, in ways that can feel exploitative. “The Bachelor,” in its first season with a virgin in the main role, seems poised to focus on sex in every episode and could end up feeling sleazier than ever. Or will it redefine virginity in a way that is constructive?

“It’s so bizarre that they focus on it,” Ashley says in a phone interview. “There’s a virgin every other season. Is that really so rare that it’s fascinating?”

Among young millennials like Ashley, who is now 30 and engaged, abstaining from sex is not that rare. A recent study shows that, among 20- to 24-year-olds, 15 percent say they have not had sex since turning 18 — more than twice the share that it was in the 1990s.

Suzannah Showler, author of the book “Most Dramatic Ever: The Bachelor,” sees something crass in “The Bachelor’s” obsession with Colton’s virginity. Viewers “might not notice the offering up of someone’s virginity as a prize in a game show, but that is what is happening,” she said in a phone interview.

Former Bachelor Nation contestants who were openly virgins say that immediately became their story line. Ryan Hoag, who competed on DeAnna Pappas’s 2008 season of “The Bachelorette,” wrote in an email every interview he did on the show “dealt with my virginity” and that he was constantly prodded to talk about it with other cast members and DeAnna, in ways that often felt forced. “The reason I didn’t last on the show was because I refused to say what they asked me to say or do what they wanted me to do,” Hoag writes. “They typecast you and if you fulfill your character, you stay around.”

Christen Whitney, a 2017 contestant, recalls being prodded by producers to discuss her virginity with Bachelor Nick Viall sooner than she was ready to reveal it. “They were always encouraging me to bring it up with Nick, but at the end of the day I was able to say: No, this is absurd,” Whitney says in a phone interview. “I would never bring this up on a first date, and he’s not bringing up with me his sexual past.” After that, Whitney says, the subject was “more or less dropped.” She lasted just three weeks on the show and later went on “Bachelor in Paradise,” where her virginity was part of her intro but was not discussed much, she says.

Sadie Murray, the runner-up on the 2007 season, was not too bothered by producers telling her to discuss her faith and her virginity with Bachelor Lorenzo Borghese. Sometimes she declined, but eventually she told Lorenzo, noting “it didn’t matter to him at all. I think it mattered more to the show,” she says. “You don’t realize that will be your only story line when you’re giving the one-on-one interviews” with producers, Murray says.

“It was clearly part of my story, and why wouldn’t it be?” Murray adds. “It’s a show, and there has to be different characters: She’s the crazy cowgirl. She’s the loudmouth. She’s the slutty girl. I just happened to be the virgin.” (Warner Bros., the show’s production company, did not respond to a request for comment on how the show treats virginity.)

The moment of reveal can be teased out for several episodes. When Colton finally told Becca last season, another contestant referred to it as a “skeleton in the closet,” which rubbed Ashley the wrong way. “I don’t like the way that they always have to make the virgin revealing their virginity as, like, this dark thing that is a turnoff for people,” Ashley said on an episode of her podcast this summer.

“The Bachelor” has a tradition of talking about sex by not talking about it. The lead dates multiple women — and meets several women’s families — while trying to determine who is “here for the right reasons” (read: love and marriage) versus “the wrong” ones (a quick romp or fame). Then the final two or three advance to the Fantasy Suite, for some “off-camera time.”

In the Fantasy Suite a Bachelor or Bachelorette can sleep with none or all of his or her finalists. But unless someone (ahem, Nick Viall) explicitly brings up sex when the cameras are rolling again, viewers at home do not necessarily find out what happens off-camera.

Unless a contestant is a virgin. Then that choice is vaunted into the category of: Information the Bachelor Must Know. And viewers wait to see if this makes a person too inexperienced to get engaged. In the same way contestants who lead with their sexuality are questioned as to their sincerity and readiness for marriage, virginity is cast as a red flag or an “obstacle to overcome.”

So what happens when that reveal has already been made before the show’s even begun?

Showler, the author, says the casting of Colton raises provocative questions, as anyone crowned as the Bachelor is supposed to be seen as the ultimate available person. “What does it mean that in 2019 that is somebody who hasn’t had sex?” she asks. “Is a virgin the new ultimate male?”

More than a year into the #MeToo era, it is a timely question. Are daters — and TV dating series — looking for a man who is inexperienced and therefore has less of a chance of being a liability?

Especially a TV series that has had its own controversies surrounding consent. In 2017, its “Bachelor in Paradise” spinoff briefly halted filming after an investigation into alleged misconduct between two contestants. Warner Bros. found no misconduct had occurred but set a limit for contestants of two alcoholic beverages per hour. On the 2018 season of “The Bachelorette,” one cast member was found to have been convicted of indecent assault and battery, after groping a woman on a harbor cruise in 2016.

Former contestants say there is another positive potential in the show harping on one man’s lack of sexual experience: It could challenge preconceived notions of what a virgin looks like. ABC and Judd Apatow recently shared revised versions of the movie poster for the 2005 comedy“The 40-Year-Old Virgin,” pasting an image of hunky Colton where a nerdy Steve Carrell used to be.

Christen, who on the show was abstaining from sex for religious reasons, notes that in pop culture, virgins are usually portrayed as “super-insecure” (and guys get judged even more harshly than women do). “But I think it’s the opposite,” she says. “It takes a lot of confidence and security to make a decision and stick with it.”

For Ashley and Colton, the decision to wait has not been linked to religion. It is more about wanting to be in a strong, committed relationship before taking that leap.

Though Colton now sounds confident in that decision to wait, he has not always. During last season’s “Men Tell All” episode, Colton described once feeling ashamed of his lack of experience. “I feel like people think I’m less of a man because of that, and that’s the hardest thing for me to hear,” Colton said, his voice breaking.

In the four years since she first discussed her virginity on the 2015 season of “The Bachelor,” Ashley has had to deal with her own accusations of: Virgins don’t look like that. Virgins do not kiss like that. But she’s also had heartwarming experiences of young women reaching out via social media and in real life to say: Hey, thanks for making me feel normal.

Now that a man is owning his decision to wait, Ashley thinks Colton could have a similar effect on men, who might think to themselves: “This really hot guy is also a virgin, so why would I feel behind or like I’m missing out?”

She adds, “He’s really making virgins cool.
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irginia 2nd grader named Doodle for Google 2018 Winner

 - The artwork of a Virginia second grader is being brought to life with Google's "Google Doodle" of the day. Sarah Gomez-Lane from Falls Church, was announced as the winner of the Doodle for Google competition for 2018.
Contestants were asked to make submissions based on the theme "What inspires me..."
Sarah, who says she wants to be a paleontologist when she grows up, delighted the Doodle staff with her illustration of dinosaurs. 
Sarah went on a trip with other finalists to visit the Google headquarters and chat with the Doodle team.
"When they called my name, I felt happy and surprised." She could not wait to tell her principal that she won.
In an even cooler twist, Sarah was able to collaborate with the Doodle team to transform her artwork into an animated, interactive experience.
This is first time a kid has had the opportunity to collaborate with the Doodle team in the competition's 10-year history.
She also received $30,000 toward a college scholarship, plus, her elementary school in Falls Church will receive $50,000 to spend on technology for students to pursue projects that inspire them.
Google is now accepting submissions for Doodle for Google 2019. Creative young artists are asked to head over to doodle4google.com to enter submissions. 
The contest closes on March 18.
Google says “The Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon, Kermit the Frog, and the 2018 National Teacher of the Year, Mandy Manning  are all guest judges for this year's contest.
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Elvis Fans Celebrate The King Of Rock 'n' Roll's 84th Birthday With Annual Proclamation & Cake

MEMPHIS, Tenn (localmemphis.com) - The King of Rock 'n' Roll is being remembered on his 84th Birthday.
The annual Elvis Birthday Proclamation was held Tuesday morning on Graceland's North Lawn.
The special ceremony featured Graceland and Elvis Presley Enterprises officials, a birthday cak cutting and proclamation of Elvis Presley Day by Memphis and Shelby County officials.
Following the event, complimentary birthday cake and coffee was offered to fans at Vernon's Smokehouse, Elvis Presley's Memphis.
Also happening Tuesday, at 12:30 p.m., The Auction at Graceland will take place in The Guest House Theater.  The auction will feature artifacts authenticated by Graceland Authenticated.
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Kevin Stefanski will stay with Vikings as offensive coordinator

A day after flying to Cleveland for a second interview with the Browns, Kevin Stefanski returned to Minnesota to accept the job he missed out on a year ago.
Stefanski will be the Vikings' permanent offensive coordinator in 2019, the team announced, after the Browns chose offensive coordinator Freddie Kitchens as their next head coach. The Vikings, sources said, had offered the permanent job to Stefanski last week, before his existing contract expired on Tuesday, and were waiting to see how things played out between him and the Browns before moving forward.
Stefanski, 36, was the interim offensive coordinator for the final three games of the season, after the team fired John DeFilippo. He has been with the Vikings since 2006, and is the longest-tenured assistant coach on the team's staff. He first interviewed for the Vikings' coordinator position last year, and was thought to be the favorite until the team hired DeFilippo.
After doing so, the Vikings blocked Stefanski from joining Pat Shurmur in New York and becoming the Giants' offensive coordinator, keeping him as their quarterbacks coach before promoting him in the wake of DeFilippo's dismissal Dec. 11.
The Vikings ran for 220 yards in a 41-17 victory over the Dolphins in Stefanski's first game as a play-caller, but got off to slow starts in a 27-9 Dec. 23 win in Detroit and a 24-10 Dec. 30 loss to the Bears that cost them a playoff spot. In his postseason news conference Jan. 3, Zimmer praised the job Stefanski had done in DeFilippo's stead.
"I thought he did a good job for the three weeks that we were in a tough situation that we had to do," Zimmer said. "It's fair to the organization, to myself, to the fans, that we look at everybody."

Vikings players also spoke highly of Stefanski and the work he'd done to simplify the team's offense in the final weeks of the season. Now that Stefanski has the job permanently, it bears watching how he shapes the offense, in light of the mandate from coach Mike Zimmer to run the ball more frequently that ultimately exposed the philosophical rift between him and DeFilippo.
He will also be tasked with overseeing the Vikings' ongoing efforts to rework an offensive line that made things difficult for them on offense once again in 2018. And Stefanski will return for a second year with quarterback Kirk Cousins, whose relationship with the former quarterbacks coach was thought to be one of the reasons Stefanski could stay on in 2019.
"I enjoyed working with Kevin," Cousins said after the Bears game on Dec. 30. "He's a great person, a great football mind. He's been here a long time. But he's going to have options, too. So hopefully he wants to work with me. It goes both ways. But he's been a joy to work with."
Stefanski, who first came to Minnesota as a student of Brad Childress, impressed the Browns enough in his first interview last week to return as one of their finalists for the head coaching job early this week. With Stefanski moving up to the offensive coordinator job, assistant QB coach Drew Petzing could be promoted to the permanent role, though tight ends coach Todd Downing also worked closely with Cousins in the final weeks of the season, after Stefanski took over play-calling duties.
The status of special teams coordinator Mike Priefer, whose contract expired Tuesday, remained unknown.
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Freddie Kitchens made most of chance, and Browns reward him for it

CLEVELAND -- Who really is ready to be a head coach?
The Cleveland Browns believe that Freddie Kitchens is ready.
After a lengthy and exhaustive search, the Browns confirmed Kitchens’ meteoric 12-month rise on Wednesday, hiring him as their head coach.
In January, Kitchens was hired by Hue Jackson as running backs coach and assistant head coach. In November, he was the surprising choice to succeed Todd Haley as offensive coordinator. Kitchens himself joked that nobody knew who he was when he was promoted.
When the notion of eventually becoming the head coach was mentioned to him, Kitchens even joked that he’d read he wasn’t ready, which led to his retort: "Who the hell’s ready to be a head coach?"
In eight games, Kitchens transformed the Browns' offense to the point that when the season ended, general manager John Dorsey conceded he would give Kitchens an interview, saying the organization needed to get to know him a little better.
They liked what they saw.
Which is common with Kitchens. He is liked and respected around the league. Folks from Bill Parcells to Bruce Arians respect and support him, and players from Carson Palmer to Baker Mayfield enjoyed being coached by and playing for him.
Kitchens’ role in Mayfield’s improvement can’t be underestimated. With plays that called for quicker throws and decisions, Mayfield’s completion percentage went from 58 percent over the first eight games to 68 percent in the second half of the season, and his yards per attempt went from 6.6 to 8.6. The Browns averaged 6.9 yards per play with Kitchens -- the 2000 Rams are the only team since the 1970 merger to average more over a full season.
The record also turned around, from 2-5-1 to 5-3.
That Kitchens jumped defensive coordinator Gregg Williams, who guided the Browns as interim coach during the turnaround, speaks to the way Kitchens was promoted, and to the league.
Williams did not make the decision to promote Kitchens; Dorsey and owner Jimmy Haslam informed Kitchens and Williams it would happen. That meant he had the backing of the organization all along.
The NFL also is becoming much more of a pass-first, offense-emphasis league. Kitchens fits that mold.
That being said, the step up is not insignificant. Kitchens, 44, now will have to deal with disciplinary and administrative matters he did not have to handle as a position coach or interim coordinator. How he handles the extra duties along with the duties he retains from his previous job will be important.
For Mayfield and the offense, the most important thing is that retaining Kitchens maintains continuity. Mayfield and the offense can learn and grow in the same system, a reality that can’t be underestimated. Had the Browns opted for a complete overhaul, the offense would have been set back. Now it can pick right up, refine, develop and improve.
That is hugely significant to Mayfield’s second-year growth, and to the Browns’ improvement.
The Browns have their guy, a guy who earned the spot with his work ethic.
It’s safe to assume Dorsey arrived in Cleveland with a list of potential coaches he’d like to hire. He no doubt interviewed some. Kitchens may or may not have been on the list, but he earned the job, and he probably passed some of the top guys Dorsey may have been considering.
The Browns have hired a football guy who worked his way up the ranks. A December statement by Kitchens about staying with the Browns seems more meaningful now.
"Cleveland and I get along well," he said. "I didn't have a dad as a coach, OK? I didn't have a starting point in this league. I grew up the son of a tire maker at Goodyear Tire and Rubber plant in Gadsden, Alabama. Benjamin E. Mays said: 'Those who start behind in the game of life must run faster to catch up,' and I feel like I've been running fast my whole life."
In the end, the Browns had their guy all along.
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Trump Storms Out of White House Meeting with Democrats on Shutdown



WASHINGTON — President Trump slammed his hand on a table and stormed out of a White House meeting with congressional leaders on Wednesday after Speake

r Nancy Pelosi of California said she would not fund a wall along the southern border, dramatically escalating the confrontation over the government shutdown.

Stunned Democrats emerged from the White House meeting declaring that Mr. Trump had thrown a “temper tantrum.” The president’s allies accused Democrats of refusing to negotiate. Then he tweeted that the meeting was “a total waste of time.”



Just left a meeting with Chuck and Nancy, a total waste of time. I asked what is going to happen in 30 days if I quickly open things up, are you going to approve Border Security which includes a Wall or Steel Barrier? Nancy said, NO. I said bye-bye, nothing else works!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 9, 2019




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Lindsay Lohan’s new reality show is deeply sad — but not for the reasons you might expect

When you hear “Lindsay Lohan” and “reality show” in the same sentence, another word that might come to mind is “disaster.” The troubled actress, known for her many legal entanglementsand controversies, attempted a docuseries with Oprah Winfrey in 2014 — it did not go well. She’s also infamous for causing problems on sets; one director once likened it to being held hostage.
However, we can inform you: “Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club,” which debuted on MTV Tuesday night, is actually not a disaster. Centered on the launch of Lohan’s new club in Mykonos, Greece, it’s a fairly standard — and unremarkable — entry into the “underlings work for a celebrity boss” genre of reality TV (see: “Vanderpump Rules”).
Still, the show is a deeply sad viewing experience. Just not for the reasons you might expect.
The messaging surrounding the series could not be more direct. Lohan, extremely aware of her reputation, wants you to know: Her troubles are behind her. She has reinvented herself as an entrepreneur with a brand to protect, and if you’re not as deadly serious as she is about her mission, well, you can see yourself out.
“Stop rehashing my past for no reason, because everything is different now,” Lohan recently told a Variety reporter, in response to a question about how Hollywood could help bring about equality for women. In an interview last month with Paper, her publicist asked the writer to mention that Lohan arrived “on time.”
Lohan’s new chapter is the theme of the first episode, which kicked off with the actress triumphantly perched on a boat in the sparkling blue sea: “I want to be my own boss,” she announced. So she and her business partner, Panos Spentzos, rounded up a group of American “VIP hosts” to work at Lohan Beach House, her third establishment in Greece. As these VIP hosts caused all sorts of unnecessary drama, the sadness seeped in when viewers learned what motivated Lohan to create the club; and also when it was made clear how damaged she is by her time in Hollywood.
In the opening segment, Lohan talked about why she loves Greece: “I've always loved the beauty and serenity I feel when I'm here,” she says. “Mykonos is the place to be . . . it's beautiful, it's open-minded, and most of all, it's safe.”
If “safe” didn’t quite fit in with those other descriptors, it made sense later in the episode, when Lohan reminded Spentzos that he had known her since “I was hit on that beach.”
Spentzos turned serious as he told the camera about the violent incident in Mykonos that made headlines in 2016: “Three years ago, Lindsay was there on that beach with her ex-boyfriend. She got hit by him.”
“I was in a very tumultuous relationship. I was in a different place in my life,” Lohan explained. “Instead of crying or getting angry, I said, ‘I’m gonna own this beach one day.' Because I always want everyone to feel safe.”
“She wanted to remember this beach as a very fun place. Not what happened to her,” Spentzos added.
Lohan started to cry as she described bringing her mother to the beach club for the first time. “I made it something that is meaningful to me,” she said. Lohan then segued into her disappointment in the club’s new “VIP hosts,” who got drunk the first night of filming. “I don’t want these kids to [mess] that up for my family and my future.”

The cast of "Lindsay Lohan's Beach Club." (MTV) (Sebastian Kim)
As the show went on, Lohan took on the role of the strict boss who didn’t have time for drunken antics and wouldn’t hesitate to fire anyone. (“I want to build an empire here, this is not ‘Girls Gone Wild.’ ”) Cast members repeatedly gushed about how lucky they were to be working for Lohan, and that they didn’t want to disappoint her.
“I grew up watching Lindsay, and when I was a little girl, I used to be like, ‘I want to be like her,’ ” said May Yassine, a waitress from New York. “Now I’m working for her. I still think this is a dream. “
“I’m so nervous to see how Lindsay is as a boss,” said Jonitta Wallace, a VIP host from Los Angeles, noting Lohan worked “so hard” for this club. “The paparazzi, they paint this picture of her as, like, this horrible person.”
This also came up again and again: Lohan has serious trust issues from years in the spotlight, particularly with people using her for their own gain. She moved to Dubai years ago, and during the episode’s after-show, she explained her reasoning: “I moved to Dubai because it’s illegal to take photos of people without their knowledge. That’s really important to me.”
In one scene, Lohan confronted the staff about their drunken pool party. Gabi Andrews, a bartender from Washington, admitted she was on the show for “selfish” reasons, and saw it as a steppingstone for her own career. Lohan wasn’t impressed.
“I don’t have time for people making their own intentions on working with me,” Lohan fumed, adding, “Being in the public eye, people all the time take from me. And it’s hard.”
Later, she fretted about cast members taking advantage of her. “Just like everyone watches me, I’m watching them. Camera’s flipped now,” she said defiantly.
Granted, it’s a reality series, so those sound bites could have easily been scripted — but it sounded like pretty real pain from someone who, as a child star, never had a shot at a normal life. As easy as it would be to write off “Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club” as yet another ridiculous show, when you consider everything that led the once-celebrated actress to this place, it actually just feels tragic.

(This post has been updated.)
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Jeff Bezos is the anonymous buyer of the biggest house in Washington



Amazon founder Jeffrey P. Bezos is the new owner of the former Textile Museum, which will be converted into Washington’s largest home. (Courtesy of George Washington University Museum and the Textile Museum)
Washington’s Kalorama neighborhood just keeps getting swankier: Amazon founder and Washington Post owner Jeffrey P. Bezos has bought the former Textile Museum, a 27,000 square-foot property, intending to convert it into a single-family home, according to a person with knowledge of the sale.
Bezos’s neighbors will include President Obama and his family, who are renting a property nearby for their post-White House home, as well as future first daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, incoming presidential adviser Jared Kushner.
The Washington Post's Kathy Orton held a Facebook Live walking tour of the Kalorama neighborhood, one of the most expensive, exclusive areas in D.C. (The Washington Post)
The home — the largest in Washington — sold Oct. 21 for $23 million in cash (a million over its list price) to a buyer described in public documents as the Cherry Revocable Trust. But word about the identity of the new billionaire next door has been circulating around the enclave that ambassadors and Cabinet secretaries have long called home.
Bezos, his wife, MacKenzie, and their four children live in the Seattle area. When he purchased The Post in 2013, Bezos said he didn’t plan to relocate to “the other Washington.” “I won’t be leading The Washington Post day-to-day,” he told Forbes. There are no indications he will move here permanently.
The home is expected to be an East Coast pied-à-terre for the family — allowing him to avoid hotel bills — but the ample square footage means there’s plenty of room for entertaining. (Take a tour of the property here.)
The property at 2320-2330 S St. NW spans two historic mansions, which housed the Textile Museum for nearly 90 years until it moved to George Washington University’s campus in 2013. The two mansions were sold together in May 2015 for $19 million, the largest residential sale in the District that year. They were put back on the market in 2016 at $22 million.
The property has drawn interest not just because of its sprawling size but also its architectural pedigree. In 1912, Textile Museum founder George Hewitt Myers hired John Russell Pope, architect of the Jefferson Memorial, to design his home at 2320 S St. A decade later, Myers bought the adjacent mansion, which was designed by noted Washington architect Waddy Butler Wood. Both properties are on the National Register of Historic Places.
Don’t look for moving vans just yet, though. Renovation plans drawn up by prominent local architecture firm Barnes Vanze are under review by the local Advisory Neighborhood Commission.

The Textile Museum was built in 1912. (Amanda Voisard for The Washington Post)
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