Seriously?
This is what our world has come to.
Check out the rest that the company has to offer by visiting BulletBlocker.com
Home of the World Famous DJ Yoshi: Award-Winning Sports & Luxury Event DJ
This is what our world has come to.
Check out the rest that the company has to offer by visiting BulletBlocker.com
People want to read, view, and find out more about what DJ Yoshi and the DJ Yoshi Experience is all about!
Coming off of a successful first stop on the MTV VMA Popup Tour, coupled with the signings to Armadale Vodka & Full Armor Clothing,
DJ Yoshi’s weekly audience in Social Media and the web has grown to TEN MILLION.
Of the 10,000,000 impressions
55% is Male (of which 87% are in the coveted 18 – 44 age range)
45% is Female (of which 83% are in the coveted 18 – 44 range)
That translates to 4,785,000 & 3,735,000 respective males & females in the key demographics.
For hitting the milestone of 10 million in weekly audience, DJ Yoshi Entertainment will be giving away 4 Tickets to an up & coming Rutgers Football Game this season! Stay tuned to @DJYoshi, Facebook.com/djyoshi & IG: @RealDJYoshi
For more details on the giveaway!
For details on the MTV VMA Popup Tour including tour stops and how you can win free tickets to the 2013 VMA’s, follow
@MTV & IG: @MTV
New York NY To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Video Music Awards, MTV has tapped DJ Yoshi (Official DJ: Rutgers Football & Basketball, Armadale Vodka & Full Armor Clothing) to spin at the VMA Pop-up Tour.
The tour will travel throughout the New York City area at various locations promoting the MTV Brand as well as the primary sponsor of the tour Verizon Fios. The festivities will also feature House Music Producer Jimmy Ponzio as the event’s MC. The two will host interactive games with event attendees in which patrons can win MTV VMA Gift Bags. 1 Lucky person from each tour stop will win 2 tickets to attend the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards which will be held on Sunday August 25th at 9:00pm from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn
Fans are welcome to come to each Popup Tour stop and take pictures on the VMA carpet walk, check out the newly redesigned KAWS VMA Moon Man Award, and participate in the interactive games to win the prizes!
featuring
& Your Host MC
8/10 – Williamsburg Brooklyn
8/23 – Rye Playland prior to the Jake Miller Show
8/24 – Coney Island w/ Austin Mahone
Tune into MTV on Instagram & Twitter for more details on the events!
*Don’t forget to catch the 2013 VMA’s on Sunday August 25th at 9:00pm
Saturday August 24
Join us for the final
at the Legendary
Win Tickets to the MTV VMA’s Pick up your MTV VMA Swag Bag & enter contests for great prizes
Music By The World Famous
Official DJ: Rutgers Football & Basketball, Armadale Vodka, Full Armor Clothing
The Incredible
on the MIC
Live performance by
The 2013 MTV VMA Show Kicks off Sunday August 25th at 9:00pm
*Follow DJ Yoshi
@djyoshi
DJ Yoshi’s Facebook Page
IG: RealDJYoshi
It is perhaps common knowledge that playing golf can help keep a person healthy. However two articles point to separate study results highlighting what kinds of health benefits a golfer can expect from hitting the links. As expected, the findings support the basic premise that golf is good.
In an article by Becky Sauers posted on Tallahassee.com, research conducted by Neil Wolkodoff of the Rose Center for Health and Sports Sciences (Denver, Colo.) was used to show roughly how many calories were burned playing an average 9-hole golf course. According to the article golfers who walk and carry their own bag burn 721 calories, golfers using a pull cart burn 718 calories, golfers walking with a caddie burn 613 calories and golfers riding in a golf cart burn 411 calories on average.
According to research presented in the article, burning 2,500 calories a week can greatly reduce the risks of heart disease, diabetes and cancer. As such, it is easy to see how playing more rounds of golf can factor into a healthy lifestyle.
In addition to measuring the healthy benefits of golf, Wolkodoff’s study looked at how a golfer’s score was affected by the way they transported their bags. According to those findings, golfers using a pull cart were able to post the lowest average scores.
In related golf / health news, it is important to recall a recent study conducted by the Karolinska Institutet (Sweden) that found the death rate for golfers is 40 percent lower than for other people of the same sex, age and socioeconomic status. This equates to a 5-year increase in life expectancy for regular golfers.
The study was published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports and is based on data compiled from studying 300,000 Swedish golfers. For more information on this particular study, click HERE to view an article posted last year on redOrbit.com.
-via all tech considered-
When a young Indian-American woman walked into the funky L.A. jewelry boutique , store manager Lauren Twisselman thought she was just like any other customer. She didn’t realize the woman was actress and writer .
“I hadn’t watched The Office,” Twisselman says. Kaling both wrote and appeared in the NBC hit.
This lack of recognition is precisely what the VIP-identification technology designed by is supposed to prevent.
The U.K.-based company already supplies similar software to security services to help identify terrorists and criminals. The ID technology works by analyzing footage of people’s faces as they walk through a door, taking measurements to create a numerical code known as a “face template,” and checking it against a database.
In the retail setting, the database of customers’ faces is comprised of celebrities and valued customers, according to London’s . If a face is a match, the program sends an alert to staff via computer, iPad or smartphone, providing details like dress size, favorite buys or shopping history.
The software works even when people are wearing sunglasses, hats and scarves. Recent tests have found that facial hair, aging, or changes in weight or hair color do not affect the accuracy of the system.
The technology is being tested in a dozen undisclosed top stores and hotels in the U.S., the U.K., and the Far East. NEC hasn’t responded to NPR’s requests for an interview, so it hasn’t addressed why the stores that are testing the software are staying quiet about it.
Privacy Questions
, senior vice president of digital for retail agency TPN Inc., says the technology isn’t new, it is just a more sophisticated version of , which allows users to find photos that are similar to other images. But, he says, facial recognition verges on dangerous territory — Google had to from Google Glass over privacy concerns.
When Nordstrom disclosed that customers were being tracked through Wi-Fi signals on their smartphones, and had to stop. Brick-and-mortar stores are juggling with wanting to increase their revenue through analytics-based marketing.
Chris de Silva, vice president of IT Solutions at NEC, told the Sunday Times that the company had addressed privacy concerns and found that most high-profile customers are “quite happy to have their information available because they want a quicker service, a better-tailored service or a more personally tailored service.”
Too Gimmicky?
But retail consultant Almagro says the service is gimmicky — and not very cost-effective.
“There are so many easier ways to use things like a mobile phone, which everyone already has, in a retail location and do the same thing and actually get more information,” he says.
Stores like Family Dollar, Benetton and Warby Parker are using data from customers’ smartphones to analyze store layouts and offer customized coupons. Retailers argue that they are doing no more tracking than what’s .
“The level of convenience may outweigh the privacy concerns,” Almagro says. “But I think there is going to have to be some legislation that has to catch up to it.” He says that ideally, tracking technology would have to be something customers opt in to.
He says he’s less concerned about stores keeping his information than who gets that information after the retailers do.
Back at the jewelry boutique, store manager Twisselman says she could never see it happening at her store, since there is nothing like old-fashioned customer service — for everyone.
“I like to think that we treat all our customers like VIPs,” Twisselman says.