понедельник, 23 марта 2015 г.

jikMLB’s Official Bat And Official Glove Now From Same Company With Sale Of Louisville Sluggerde

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Things are getting a bit more close-knit in the baseball equipment world, as the makers of Louisville Slugger bats have sold the business to Wilson Sporting Goods. That means that both Major League Baseball’s official bat as well as its official glove will be made by the same company.

Louisville Slugger’s parent company Hillerich & Bradsby sold the 131-year-old batmakers to Amer Sports, which owns Wilson, reports Bloomberg Business. Wilson makes the MLB’s official glove, while Rawlings is the producer of the league’s baseballs.


Though it’s unknown how much the deal is worth, a person familiar with the matter told Bloomberg that it was likely going to happen for under $100 million.


Hillerich & Bradsby will continue to manufacture the wood bats for Wilson, with an exclusive deal to produce them at its Louisville factory.


“Louisville Slugger will enrich our company significantly, enhance our baseball and softball product offering at all levels of the game, and ensure we are delivering only the best performance products to athletes of every age,” Mike Dowse, president of Wilson, said in a statement.


According to Hillerich & Bradsby, 60% of MLB players use the Louisville Slugger, with more than 100 million bats sold.


In 2009, a Montana jury found that Hillerich & Bradsby should put warning labels on its aluminum bats after an 18-year-old player was killed by a line drive in a 2003 game.


Louisville Slugger Is Sold to Amer Sports Oyj’s Wilson Brand [Bloomberg Business]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikUN Women Clarifies: It’s Not Partnering With Uber On Hiring 1 Million Female Driversde

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uberwomen Earlier this month, ridesharing service Uber announced what appeared to be a partnership with the United Nations’ UN Women organization aimed at hiring 1 million female drivers by 2020. The news raised concerns because of the number of Uber drivers accused of assaulting female passengers, as well as the company’s loose policy for what constitutes a “hire,” and last week UN Women confirmed that it was not partnering with Uber on this initiative.


Uber drivers can work as few as a couple hours a week, and many skeptics pointed out that the company could easily “hire” a million female drivers but that these women would still need to work elsewhere to make a living.


Following criticism from groups like the International Transport Workers’ Federation, which claims that Uber drivers’ “independent contractor” status means they are exempt from things like minimum wage and health care benefits, UN Women executive director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka announced last week that the organization would not be working with Uber.


“I want to assure you that UN Women will not accept an offer to collaborate in job creation with Uber,” she said at the end of a recent speech. “So you can rest assured about that.”


A rep for UN Women later clarified that there was no official partnership with Uber other than a single event.


“UN Women is grateful for Uber’s generous support to this event, and encourage Uber to continue its efforts to promote gender equality,” a spokeswoman for UN Women explained in a statement to Bloomberg. “At this point, we do not plan to expand the collaboration.”


In a separate statement to Buzzfeed, a rep for Uber says the company still intends to make good on its plan to hire 1 million women over the next five years.


“Uber was proud to sponsor the UN Women event last week, and we share their vision of accelerating economic opportunity for women globally,” said the Uber spokesperson. “As part of our commitment to this vision, Uber set an ambitious goal to create 1,000,000 jobs for women as drivers on the Uber platform by 2020.”




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikBrace Yourselves For A Frozen Organic Spinach Recallapaloozade

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lasagnaWhen food items with ingredients in common that were sold at multiple retailers are recalled because of the same food-borne pathogen, that’s a sign that the source may be that ingredient that they have in common. hree recent recalls from Amy’s, Wegmans, and Costco show that it may be wise for people who are young, old, sick, or pregnant to stay away from organic spinach.


It takes a long time and a lot of work to definitively trace the path of illness-causing bugs through the food system, but it’s possible that these three recalls may be linked.


The first spinach recall comes from Costco stores in the Bay Area of California. They recalled 24-ounce tubs of La Terra Fina Organic spinach dip and spread. Recalled products have “best by” dates of March 24, April 1, April 14, and April 20, 2015. Customers are instructed to throw away any unused dip and contact Costco for a refund. If you have any questions about the recall, call La Terra Fina at 510-999-0050.


Northeastern grocery chain Wegmans has recalled 12-ounce bags of frozen organic spinach with “best used by” dates of January 26, 2017 and February 2, 2017. You can return the product to the service desk at the store where you purchased it, or call their consumer affairs line at 1-855-934-3663. Wegmans identified the supplier as Twin City Foods in Washington state.


Amy’s, a company that markets organic vegetarian or vegan packaged foods, also received word about potentially contaminated spinach from an unnamed supplier. They’ve recalled 73,897 cases of frozen meals, including the following:



  • Vegetable lasagna

  • Tofu vegetable lasagna

  • Garden vegetable lasagna

  • Tofu scramble

  • Enchilada Verde (meal)

  • Spinach pizza

  • Brown rice and vegetables bowl

  • Stuffed pasta shells bowl

  • Vegetable lasagna warehouse club pack

  • Gluten-free tofu scramble breakfast wrap

  • Gluten-free and dairy-free vegetable lasagna

  • Family-size vegetable lasagna


Customers can return the meals to the store where they were purchased for a refund, and can call Amy’s at (707) 781-7535 if they have any questions about the recall.


Listeria usually only causes a short stomach bug in healthy adults: they might experience a headache, vomiting, diarrhea, stiff muscles, and a fever. However, it can be very dangerous to people who are sick, immunocompromised, or pregnant.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

jikContractor Sues Spike TV’s “Catch A Contractor” For False Imprisonment, Defamationde

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The three co-hosts of the Spike TV show, Adam Carolla, Alison Bedell, and Skip Bedell.

The three co-hosts of the Spike TV show, Adam Carolla, Alison Bedell, and Skip Bedell.



Spike TV show “Catch a Contractor” uses the infamous model of NBC’s “To Catch a Predator,” but instead of snaring creepy men with the promise of an underage female, the Spike show lures in contractors “who have done their clients wrong” by posing as a new customer. But one contractor featured on the show says he was forced to sign a release for the show under duress and that the show unfairly portrayed his participation.

In a complaint [PDF] filed last week in a Los Angeles court, the contractor details how he appeared on the Spike show hosted by Adam Carolla.


According to the contractor, he began working on remodeling the clients’ house in July 2013. In September of that year, a building inspector flagged a framing issue, requiring an engineering proposal. The contractor claims the clients moved into the home in spite of the fact that the repair had not been made, and then, in Oct. 2013, stopped payment and ultimately canceled his contract.


Then in Dec. 2013, the contractor arrived at the home of “Elizabeth Stevens” to pick up a check for a new job only to learn once he got inside that the nice woman watering the front lawn had not been Ms. Stevens, but show co-host Alison Bedell.


Inside the house, the contractor says he was confronted by Carolla, Alison and her husband and third co-host, contractor Skip Bedell. According to the complaint, a “bouncer” blocked the door.


Carolla presented the contractor with three options — pay back all the money to the clients; walk away but with the caveat that the show would aid the homeowners in helping them sue the contractor; or finish the job under the show’s supervision.


But when the contractor says he tried to leave, the bouncer “moved to block” the door. Additionally, he claims that he felt “physically intimidated and alarmed” by Skip’s imposing presence and his martial arts and wrestling background.


The contractor says he was told that he “would look like a good guy,” and that there would be no further claim on the bid bond if he signed the release and agreed to finish the work on the house.


And so he signed the release and finished the work on the house. However, just days after completion, he says the homeowners revised the bond bid. And when the show eventually aired on Spike in 2014, the contractor says he was painted in an unfairly negative light, with the clients and co-hosts referring to him as a “criminal,” and with Alison Bedell trailing him around as if he were in hiding.


“Plaintiff’s address was readily available to [the clients],” reads the complaint, which also questions Alison Bedell’s claim to be a licensed private investigator. “There was no need to track him down… Plaintiff was readily available if Defendants had reached out, as opposed to creating drama for the sake of ratings.”


Producers paid the contractor a total of $10,000 for appearing on the show. He claims that he offered to use some of this money to fly in the homeowners’ family for the holidays and to help fix their motorcycle, but his offer was denied.


The day the show aired, one of the homeowners allegedly went on Facebook and noted the similarity between the Spike show and NBC’s “To Catch a Predator,” writing that Carolla “busts a contractor who touched me in the naughty places.”


The suit, which names Spike, Skip Bedell, the homeowner, the production companies, and various John Does, as defendants, alleges fraud, false imprisonment, defamation, and violation of right to name or likeness. The contractor seeks damages of at least $25,000.


If your cable company allows you to, you can watch the whole episode here to see if you think it portrays the contractor fairly.


[via Hollywood Reporter]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikAccused Dine-And-Dashers Arrested For Allegedly Running Over Waitress Who Confronted Them About Billde

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As if it isn’t bad enough to deliberately avoid paying a restaurant tab, a group of diners is accused of not only skipping out on the bill, but then allegedly running over the waitress who confronted them.

The 19-year-old waitress at a Mexican restaurant in Anaheim, CA was struck in the parking lot of the business last night, reports CBS Los Angeles.


Four customers accused of dining and dashing instead of settling up their bill were in a car in the parking lot when their waitress reportedly ran out to ostensibly demand they pay up. That’s when police say they ran over her in their car.


She suffered abrasions and contusions during the incident, for which she was treated at a local hospital.


The foursome were all arrested on charges of assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy and defrauding an innkeeper.


4 Dine-And-Dash Patrons Arrested After Allegedly Running Over Anaheim Waitress [CBS Los Angeles]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikBecause Technology Isn’t Going Away, FTC Creates Division Dedicated To Internet Of Thingsde

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With technology now touching nearly every aspect of consumers’ lives, the Federal Trade Commission wants to put more focus on privacy, big data and “smart” everything. To ensure it’s capable of protecting consumers from these rapidly evolving innovations, the agency announced the creation of the Office of Technology Research.


The FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection director Jessica Rich announced the new division Monday, saying it would usher in the next generation of consumer protection.


The Office of Technology Research and Investigation (OTRI) will replace the current Mobile Technology Unit (MTU), which focused on protecting consumers from deceptive mobile apps and other smartphone-centric topics.


While Rich says the OTRI will continue the work of the MTU, it will broaden the scope to protect consumers from every aspect of technology.


The office will provide research, investigations and insights regarding technology issues such as privacy, data security, connected cars, smart homes, algorithmic transparency, emerging payment methods, big data and the Internet of Things.


“The FTC keeps its finger on the pulse of markets, channeling its resources to protect consumers from deceptive and unfair practices involving new technologies,” Rich says in a blog post. “New consumer technologies are coming online daily – and OTRI will make sure that the FTC is protecting consumers in emerging marketplaces.”


BCP’s Office of Technology Research and Investigation: The next generation in consumer protection [The Federal Trade Commission]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

jikNo, IKEA Is Not Selling A Rainbow Pillowcase Called “PUTIN”de

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fakepicputin The Internet, while a vast and varied resource rich in information on innumerable topics, is also a rascally son of a boomerang and will often regurgitate fiction as fact. To that end: Though a photo circulating Twitter yesterday appeared to show a rainbow-striped pillowcase called the “PUTIN” on sale at an IKEA store, the company says it doesn’t sell that particular item anymore and oh yeah, it was never named after the president of Russia.


According to a report by The Independent, the photo making the Internet rounds since yesterday morning purporting to show a scene from a Stockholm branch of the store is all a lie. Perhaps the odd mouthless emoticon next to the “49” tipped someone off?


Social media users had pointed to the rainbow stripes as perhaps a poke at Russian anti-homosexuality laws. The company recently announced that it would shut down its online lifestyle magazine in that country so it wouldn’t potentially violate a law that forbids the promotion of gay values to minors, the Independent notes.


But an IKEA spokesman has confirmed that the pillowcase isn’t for sale anymore, was never named PUTIN — it was called SKARUM — and besides, the company wouldn’t make statements like that in any case. And a quick images search of SKARUM backs that up as well.


“We stopped selling the product in October 2014 to make way for new designs in our range. We can’t comment on the origin of the photo as the name of the cushion was SKARUM the entire time it was on sale,” the rep told the Independent. “However, we would never make political statements with the naming of our products.”


Here, we fixed it:


There, we fixed it.

Edited.



IKEA Rainbow Putin pillow is a fake [The Independent]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist