spy

‘Spy’ Review: An Empowering but Uneven Female Spy Spoof
‘Spy’ Review: An Empowering but Uneven Female Spy Spoof
‘Spy’ Review: An Empowering but Uneven Female Spy Spoof
Paul Feig’s The Heat took a genre that has traditionally belonged to men — the buddy cop movie — and gave it a female twist. Feig’s new movie, Spy, does much the same thing, this time for spy films, a world that has long been by, about, and for dudes and their power fantasies. Spy explicitly subverts the genre’s typical gender dynamics by casting Melissa McCarthy as a lowly, desk-bound CIA analyst named Susan Cooper, who has spent her entire career in the shadow of a glamorous James Bond-esque spy (Jude Law) and then finally gets her opportunity to step into the spotlight and become a full-fledged field agent.
The N.S.A. Wants to Collect Pictures of Us So They Can Create a Facial Recognition Database [Audio]
The N.S.A. Wants to Collect Pictures of Us So They Can Create a Facial Recognition Database [Audio]
The N.S.A. Wants to Collect Pictures of Us So They Can Create a Facial Recognition Database [Audio]
This is scary! The N.S.A. (National Security Agency). Wanna know what's REALLY scary? Where they're getting these photos. The N.S.A. is picking the images up from social media, email, texts, videoconferences and more. In other words, ANYTHING YOU SEND, be it a normal posting on Facebook or a naked picture in a text or private message, may be picked up, looked at and saved by the N.S.A. in the name