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RICHMOND, Va. — The Latest on the legal challenges to President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban targeting six-Muslim majority countries (all times local):
4 p.m.
An attorney challenging President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban says the Republican’s anti-Muslim rhetoric is evidence that the policy was motivated by hostility to the religion.
Omar Jadwat of the American Civil Liberties Union urged a 13-judge panel of the 4th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on Monday to uphold lower court ruling that blocks the president’s revised travel ban.
Jadwat said Trump’s anti-Muslim rhetoric continued even after he was elected.
He noted that Trump’s call for a “total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the country remained on his campaign website after he took office. The statement, was still online Monday morning, appeared to have been taken down before the hearing.
Judge Robert B. King said the case appears to hinge on whether the court considers Trump’s statements or focuses solely on the text of the order, which is religiously neutral.
3:25 p.m.
An attorney for President Donald Trump is urging a federal appeals court to focus on the religiously neutral text of Trump’s revised travel ban rather than the Republican’s anti-Muslim campaign statements.
Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey B. Wall told the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday that the court should not second-guess the president’s national security decisions because of comments made on the campaign trail.
A 13-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is examining a ruling that blocks the administration from temporarily barring new visas for citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
A handful of judges appeared skeptical of Wall’s arguments that they shouldn’t give weight to Trump’s campaign statements.
The judge’s aren’t expected to issue a ruling Monday.
___
2:55 p.m.
Dozens of demonstrators are gathered in front of the federal appeals court in Richmond, Virginia, as a hearing is underway on whether to allow an executive order targeting immigrants from six predominantly Muslim countries to go into effect.
Rabbi Michael Knopf of Bend the Arc Jewish Action said on Monday that people were there to assure the Muslim community that they oppose the ban imposed by President Donald Trump’s administration and they want to invite all Americans of conscience to join them in saying they oppose any ban any time. He said the ban has caused Muslim men, women and children to live in fear.
Attorneys for the Justice Department are defending Trump’s executive order before the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. It’s the first time an appeals court has heard arguments on the revised travel ban, which was issued in March.
The court is examining a ruling that blocks the administration from suspending new visas for citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
___
8:10 a.m.
Three judges appointed by President Bill Clinton will hear the Trump administration’s appeal of Hawaii’s so-far successful challenge to the president’s travel ban that targets six predominantly Muslim countries.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will listen to arguments on May 15 at its Seattle courthouse. The 9th Circuit hears appeals from federal courts in nine western states.
A federal judge in Hawaii blocked the travel ban in March, ruling that it unfairly targets Muslims. Hawaii’s attorney general argued the ban would harm the state’s universities and tourism industry.
The three 9th Circuit judges who will consider Trump’s Hawaii appeal are Michael Daly Hawkins, Ronald Gould and Richard Paez. Hawkins was appointed in 1994. The other two were appointed in 1999.
___
10 a.m.
A panel of 13 appeals court judges in Virginia will hear a challenge to President Donald Trump’s revised executive order targeting six predominantly Muslim countries.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Judge Allyson K. Duncan and Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III will not hear arguments in the case Monday. Wilkinson’s son-in-law is Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall, who’s arguing the case on behalf of Trump.
It was not immediately clear why Duncan isn’t on the panel. Both judges were appointed to the court by Republican presidents.
Of the 13 judges remaining, three are Republican appointees and nine are Democratic appointees. Chief Judge Roger Gregory was given a recess appointment to the court by President Bill Clinton and was reappointed by President George W. Bush.
___
3:20 a.m.
President Donald Trump is hoping that a federal appeals court will approve his revised travel ban that targets six Muslim-majority countries.
Attorneys for the Justice Department will defend Trump’s immigration executive order before the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday. It’s the first time an appeals court will hear arguments on the revised travel ban, which was issued in March.
The court in Richmond, Virginia, will examine a ruling that blocks the administration from suspending new visas for citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
The revised travel ban has also been blocked by a judge in Hawaii. A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear arguments in that case next week.
Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Tnooz, the leading global provider of digital/tech news, analysis and commentary to the travel and hospitality industry has recruited Kerry Cannon as chief marketing officer.
He most recently served as managing director for leading travel marketing agency MMGY Global, based in Orlando.
Cannon brings proven leadership and business development skills to the Tnooz team and a wealth of experience in marketing strategy, brand development, information publishing, content marketing and sales management.
Named Travel Technology Innovator of the Year by Phocuswright for mobile tech startup – iM@ – Cannon has been immersed in travel tech, marketing and media for most of his career.
A pioneer in online travel video in the 1990s, Cannon launched and built Destinations On Tape into the industry’s largest online database of travel video content, which was ultimately acquired by Cahners Travel Group (now Northstar Travel Media).
More recently, he served as Group Publisher of Questex Media’s Travel Agent Media Group, responsible for Travel Agent and Luxury Travel Advisor magazines, digital assets such as TravelAgentCentral.com, Travel Agent University e-learning platform, and live events including Luxury Travel Expo.
Tnooz also recently welcomed Michele McDonald to the team as a senior editor. Michele, who is US-based, has covered the travel industry for more than two decades.
Michele can be reached at mmcdonald@tnooz.com.
Kerry can be reached at kcannon@tnooz.com.


Posted on Monday, May 8th, 2017 by Peter Sciretta
Guardians of the Galaxy – Mission: BREAKOUT! is gearing up to open at Disney California Adventure on May 27, 2017. Now that Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 has hit theaters, Disneyland Resort is pushing the marketing campaign into high gear for the Twilight Zone’s Tower of Terror redo. A new message has been received from Rocket Raccoon calling for our assistance in breaking the Guardians of the Galaxy out from the Collector’s fortress. Watch the new video, embedded after the jump.
Discov[GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY]r the M[ARE]gic of Di[TRAPPED]eyland this s[HELP US BREAK OUT]mmer! pic.twitter.com/givZPLOY8w
— Disneyland Resort (@Disneyland) May 8, 2017
The above video features Rocket Raccoon explaining the predicament that the Guardians of the Galaxy find themselves in. This piece was rendered just for marketing and is apparently not part of the video that will play in The Collector’s office (remember the study from the old Tower of Terror attraction) with Rocket hacking into the security channel and enlisting the help of the park guests touring the Tivian’s museum.
A couple of weeks back we learned that the new queue would feature over 2,200 props on display spanning comics to movies to tv series and that the new version of the ride would feature six different ride experiences set to music from Starlord’s Awesome Mixtapes: Born to Be Wild” by Steppenwolf, “I Want You Back” by Jackson 5, “Hit Me With Your Best Shot” By Pat Benatar, “We Want The Funk” by Parliament, “Burnin’ Love” by Elvis Presley, and “Free Ride” by Edgar Winter. Castmember and Annual pass holder previews will begin in less than two weeks, leading to a grand premiere party and opening.
Cool Posts From Around the Web:
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – University of New Mexico officials and students are reacting to an obscene video posted to a popular social media app.
They say this is a situation they’ve definitely never dealt with before.
UNM officials say they don’t know whether a UNM student appears in the obscene Snapchat video or whether it’s even shot on campus. However, it does come up under a UNM search on the Snapchat app.
Snapchat users searching for content under the University of New Mexico on Monday found a man who appears to be sitting in a library exposing himself while someone else records a Snapchat video.
“I was pretty taken aback,” said Cinnamon Blair, Chief Marketing and Communications Officer.
KRQE News 13 brought the snap video to the attention of UNM communications representatives.
“I can’t say for sure if it was one of our students or if it was on our campus but it was definitely within the vicinity of campus,” Blair explained.
The Snapchat app groups together photos and videos taken within a close proximity of a certain location.
The snap in question, appears in UNM’s group.
“Well the first thing we did was contact our social media person within our university communication and marketing department, contacted Snapchat let them know that they should look at it and consider it under their guidelines,” said Dianne Anderson, Director of Media Relations at UNM.
University reps have reported the snap to Campus Police.
The Office of the Dean of Students is also investigating. If it finds the person in the video is a student, he could face disciplinary action.
“It’s kind of disturbing honestly,” said UNM student Carlos Zavala.
“I feel it’s kind of disrespectful to the community and to the university and to the students,” said UNM student Taha Bueshit.
UNM reps say they’re proud of the university’s use of Snapchat to connect with students, rewarding students who post pictures of themselves studying for finals on campus.
“Even now our account holders, they’re going out and delivering coffee and cookies to our students who are studying late at night,” Blaire explained.
Officials say most students use social media responsibly, but there are problems once in awhile.
“And it makes kind of all of us look bad as well,” said student Elizabeth Davila.
That obscene video still appears under UNM’s location on the app, despite the university having reported it earlier Monday.




Advertisement

By Mitch Carson
Now that Twitter has launched its own native live video service, they are prioritizing video content on their feed. This means that, now more than ever, Twitter is an excellent way for a savvy marketing executive to reach potential clients or customers.

Reaching your potential client base is the most important function of marketing, of course, so it’s a good idea to learn more about the different styles of video upload allowed on Twitter, the various differences between them, and the ways in which you can use each of them to create more engaging content for your business Twitter account. This article will provide you with all the information you will need to start generating excellent video marketing content for your business Twitter.
The first option for generating a Twitter video for marketing purposes is to create a live video feed within the Twitter app itself. This allows the user to create content ‘on the go’, taking advantage of the live and in-real-time nature of Twitter. The live video feature is run by Periscope, but not to worry – you don’t need to download Periscope or have an account in order to use the feature. Note that this feature is only usable for public Twitter accounts.
To use the function, simply create a new tweet and press the ‘Live’ button. Once the camera opens, you may choose whether to film facing front or rear. You may also add a short description in the “what’s happening?” area, so that your viewers know what the video is about, giving them a reason to tune in. Once you have everything set up as you desire, tap the ‘Go Live’ button to start streaming.
While your viewers are watching your live broadcast, they can interact with you, leaving a comment or a heart emoji. You can even respond in real time, making the viewers a part of the broadcast. Once you have concluded your live video feed, simply swipe down and tap the ‘End Video’ button.
After your live feed ends, the video will appear as a tweet, and will remain in your timeline. This allows for repeated views of the same content, generating additional exposure for your business. The broadcast will also be available on Periscope, even if you don’t have an account. You will be able to see the difference between your live content and prerecorded content, by looking in the bottom left corner of the video. Prerecorded videos will have a video length in the corner of the screen, while live content will display the word ‘ENDED’ and the number of live viewers the video had at the time it was recorded.
Another popular method for video marketing through Twitter is by using prerecorded video content. Uploading content that has been previously recorded has several advantages. For instance, you can edit and re-edit your content until it is exactly the way you want it – one way in which live video feeds can be frustrating for marketers.
Uploading a prerecorded video is very similar in function to creating live video content. First you compose a tweet and open the camera icon. Then you choose a video file stored on your mobile device. This can be either MP3 or MOV format. The file may not be any larger than 512 MB, and cannot exceed 2:20 in length. This is fine, because if your video is too long, Twitter will prompt you to edit the length using their trimming tools. This function also works well for recording content directly through the Twitter app and then uploading it separately.
Simply record your content, and then add to it with a second or more recordings if you choose, then upload the entire video at once. The versatility of this method cannot be over stressed – you can use multiple clips to create one video, you can drag and drop various clips into whatever order you choose, or even remove a single clip altogether. Before you post your finished video, you can preview it to make sure it is the content you want, then simply click done and write a tweet to accompany the video.
Another method you can use for creating video marketing content for Twitter is by using video looping. Twitter recently removed the Vine app and replaced it with the Vine Camera app for iOS and Android systems. You can use this feature to create short video clips of up to six and a half seconds, which will then loop automatically. Simply hold your finger on the screen to record, and then upload the resulting video.
Just like with Vine, any video of that length or shorter will automatically loop, so you can actually use this function to promote your business across several platforms at once, such as posting short sections of video content taken from your Instagram and Snapchat apps.
Studies have shown that the most successful video content on various social media platforms play automatically in the viewer’s feed, play silently unless interacted with, and come in under fifteen seconds in length. With that being the case, it’s easy to see why looping short videos on Twitter can be so successful for marketing strategies.
Now that we’ve covered the different ways in which video marketing can be achieved on Twitter, let’s explore a few ways to get the most impact out of your video content. The first and most important thing to remember about video marketing on Twitter specifically is that it’s a mobile app, so you need to showcase your video with that in mind. Keep your videos short and to the point, to avoid boredom in your potential audience.
Also make sure to deliver the message in such a way that it will be understood without volume, as most Twitter users watch timeline-intruding videos on silent. In addition, remember that these videos need to be compelling within the first few seconds so that viewers will stop scrolling and pay attention. This can be achieved through the use of captions or text overlays on the video content.
Another great way to deliver video content to potential clients is to simply ask them what they want to see! This type of content is fairly difficult to quantify, but simultaneously easy to explain – there really is no explanation, because it is all dependent upon the type of business you are promoting.
Regardless, asking your potential customer base what content they would like to see can generate some surprising results. You can use a Twitter poll to ask your followers what they want to see from you, or you can even ask in a video promotion. Doing this will encourage people to keep paying attention, which will generate even more attention for your marketing campaign.
Another important thing you can do to promote your business using Twitter video marketing is to coordinate your video events with other marketing strategies. Timing a marketing campaign with several mixed media elements can be a bit of a hassle, but the real-time nature of Twitter makes it easy to coordinate the promotion of a particular video with real world events or other marketing notions.
In addition, generating video content that comes at the same time of day, or the same day each week, can help to create a following from people who eagerly await your next video offering. Much like a television show, this episodic style of content creation allows people to remain repeatedly engaged, and that directly translates into higher traffic and more people talking about your business.
Finally, an excellent use of Twitter’s video functionality is through answering customer questions, complaints, or problems, and also the use of ‘Welcome’ style video content for your new followers. You can use the Reply function on your video content to add a reply to your video, which means you’ll be able to update your video to reflect questions which you have answered. You can also collect all the various questions and then answer them all at once with a ‘FAQ’ style video.
Posting video content of this nature allows you to stay on top of any issues that might arise, giving you an edge when interacting with potential customers. Welcoming new followers with a special personalized video will make them feel included, and like you want them to be a part of what you are doing, which means you will have more engaging followers in the future.
By following these various methods, you can quickly and easily ensure that your video marketing content for Twitter is useful and brings you the added business you desire. Don’t forget, all content may not always be good, but having no content will always be bad, so get out there and start recording your marketing campaign now!
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PARIS — Emmanuel Macron received congratulations from around the world — including Moscow — on Monday after French voters made the centrist political neophyte their new president and rejected anti-E. U. firebrand Marine Le Pen.
But the raucous celebration among Macron supporters Sunday night — which also served as pep rally for the European Union — quickly gave way to the steep challenges ahead for Macron’s untested leadership.
Among the immediate demands will be trying to maintain momentum in next month’s parliamentary election, in which hundreds of candidates will run under the banner of Macron’s year-old movement, En Marche, or Onward.
The longer-term hurdles are even more daunting. The 39-year-old Macron must try to pull together a nation left with many of the same political scars carried by the United States: deeply divided voters and lingering suspicions of Russian hacking to try to sway the results.
On Monday morning, Macron joined his mentor and soon-to-be-predecessor, François Hollande, in laying a wreath in honor of the country’s war dead on Victory in Europe Day.
The outgoing president made time to pat Macron on the back and to offer an apparently heartfelt “Bravo,” a sentiment echoed by leaders from around the world, including Russian President Vladimir Putin.
In a message to Macron — who has taken a tough line with Moscow — Putin urged the president-elect to “overcome mutual distrust” and wished him “strong health.”
Macron, the youngest French leader since Napoleon, will be inaugurated Sunday and will have little time to adjust to his new office before he is thrust back into campaign mode with the parliamentary elections.
Without a majority in the National Assembly — or something close to it — Macron’s five-year tenure as president could be severely compromised before it even starts.
But Macron has beat the odds before.
[Macron’s unlikely path to the French presidency]
His election brought to a close a tumultuous and polarized campaign that defied prediction at nearly every turn, although not at the end. Pre-election polls had forecast a sizable Macron victory, and he delivered — winning 66 percent of the vote with an ambitious agenda that borrows from both the right and left.
The landslide was just the latest blow in 2017 for far-right movements that had seemed to be on the march last year but have suffered setbacks in recent months across continental Europe.
In a pointed endorsement of European unity, Macron strode to the stage at his raucous victory party in the grand central courtyard of Paris’s Louvre Museum on Sunday night to the strains of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” theme, the European Union’s anthem.
“The task that awaits us, my fellow citizens, is immense and it starts tomorrow,” Macron said as thousands of supporters cheered and waved French flags.
Alluding to the deep divisions laid bare by the campaign, he said Le Pen backers had “expressed an anger, a dismay, and I respect that. I will do everything possible in the five years to come so that they have no reason to vote for the extremes.”
At her own gathering at a Paris restaurant and events center, a downcast Le Pen conceded defeat, telling her demoralized supporters that the country had “chosen continuity” and that the election had drawn clear lines between “the patriots and the globalists.”
She also vowed to make her National Front the “primary force of opposition” to Macron’s government. She later danced with supporters, shimmying to the tune of the Village People’s “Y.M.C.A.”
[A youth revolt in France boosts the far right]
The repudiation of Le Pen by French voters will soothe Europe’s anxious political establishment. Across the continent, mainstream politicians had feared that a victory would throw in reverse decades of efforts to forge continental integration.
But the outcome instantly puts pressure on Macron to deliver on promises made to an unhappy French electorate, including reform of two institutions notoriously resistant to change: the E.U. and the French bureaucracy.
With a background in investment banking and a turn as economy minister under a historically unpopular president, he may have seemed an ill fit for the anti-establishment anger coursing through Western politics.
But by bucking France’s traditional parties, Macron managed to cast himself as the outsider the country needs. And by unapologetically embracing the E.U., immigration and the multicultural tableau of modern France, he positioned himself as the optimistic and progressive antidote to the dark and reactionary vision of Le Pen’s National Front.
Le Pen, 48, has long sought to become the first far-right leader elected in Western Europe’s postwar history. Sunday’s vote frustrated those ambitions but is unlikely to end them.
By winning about 34 percent of the vote, she nearly doubled the share claimed by her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in the 2002 election, the only other time the National Front’s presidential candidate has made it to the second round of voting. The result seemed to cement the party’s long march from the political fringe to the center of the nation’s discontented political discourse, if not the pinnacle of its power.
[Marine Le Pen lost the French election. But her power is growing.]
Struggling with chronically high unemployment and recurrent terrorist attacks, France’s mood on the day of its presidential vote was reflected in the dark clouds and chilly spring rains that blanketed much of the country.
Nonetheless, the public voted at a rate that would be the envy of many Western democracies: From the chic neighborhoods of Paris to the struggling postindustrial towns of the French countryside, turnout nationwide was about 75 percent, down slightly from previous votes.
Macron’s victory could have profound implications not only for France’s 67 million citizens, but also for the future of Europe and for the political trajectory across the Western world.
After a pair of dramatic triumphs for the populist right in 2016 — with Brexit in Britain and Donald Trump in the United States — France’s vote was viewed as a test of whether the political mainstream could beat back a rising tide.
Many of Europe’s mainstream leaders — both center-right and center-left — lined up to cheer Macron on after he punched his ticket to the second round in voting last month. The endorsements were a break from protocol for presidents and prime ministers, who normally stay out of one another’s domestic elections.
But they reflected the gravity of the choice that France faced. A victory by Le Pen was seen as a possible market-rattling death blow to decades of efforts to draw Europe more closely together, with the National Front leader expected to try to take the country out of both the E.U. and the euro.
Former president Barack Obama had also endorsed Macron, and the young French politician often appeared to be trying to emulate the magic of Obama’s 2008 campaign with speeches that appealed to hope, change and unity — while eliding many of the details of his policies.
[Emmanuel Macron is 39 and his wife is 64. French women say it’s about time.]
The current White House occupant was cagey about his choice, saying before the first round that Le Pen was “the strongest on borders and she’s the strongest on what’s been going on in France.” Trump predicted that she would do well, but he stopped short of endorsing her.
After Macron’s victory, Trump tweeted congratulations shortly after 3 p.m. Washington time on “his big win today as the next President of France. I look very much forward to working with him!”
Stanley-Becker reported from Laon. Benjamin Zagzag in Laon and Virgile Demoustier in Paris contributed to this report.
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