Mobile GIF platform Tenor is out with the list of its top 5 gifts this year. The company's co-founder and CEO David McIntosh explains what they say about sentiment in 2017.
The top five GIFs of 2017 are the guy blinking, baby crying, Jonah Hill's "yay," Shaq laughing, and Obama's "Oh yeah." McIntosh says negative emotion searches went up 31 percent in 2017. Meanwhile, positive emotions decreased 18 percent.
"We can get a great sense of how people are actually thinking and feeling," says McIntosh. Though GIF searches were more negative overall, searches for "laughing" nearly doubled since 2017.
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Facebook is planning on launching a dating feature, fueling more competition in the online dating world. Sarah Jones Simmer, Chief Operating Officer at female-focused dating app Bumble, tells Cheddar that competition validates the industry and rids the stigma of online dating.
The entrepreneur and reality-TV star throws herself a baby shower on "David Tutera's CELEBrations." Coco tells Cheddar's Baker Machado that she and husband Ice-T "wanted to do it big" for their only child, a daughter named Chanel.
The blockbuster-to-be is the first major Hollywood film to feature a mostly Asian cast since "The Joy Luck Club" was released in 1993. "It's such a big moment to see this incredible cast, this story that really resonated with me as as second-generation kid, and I think it will resonate with lots of people whose families live between these two cultures," says Piya Sinha-Roy, a senior writer at Entertainment Weekly.
Seeing their own movie on the big screen is a thrill for the directors Jonathan and Josh Baker, whose new film "Kin" will hit theaters Aug. 31. The crime thriller with a sci-fi twist stars James Franco, Zoë Kravitz, Dennis Quaid, and Myles Truitt. "We're very luck," says Josh Baker. "You put professionals in a room together to talk, and usually gold happens."
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Janet Comenos, the CEO of celebrity marketing company, Spotted sat down with Cheddar anchors to discuss the rise in "disgrace insurance," the cost to protect brands from scandals surrounding celebrity endorsers -- something prompted by Harvey Weinstein and the #MeToo movement.
Haley Sacks says that her superpower is to create social media memes that explain high-level financial concepts as she pokes fun at Wall Street culture. "There needs to be a Suze Orman for the digital age," Sacks says. "That's me honey!"
The financial world is getting the meme treatment. Haley Sacks runs the popular Instagram account @MrsDowJones, and joins Cheddar to discuss how she uses pop culture to make business accessible.
Teens whose families earn $30,000 or less a year are more likely to rely on Facebook for homework help than their wealthier peers, according to Pew Research Center study. This shows how students who may have less access to resources, "use Facebook to kind of get ahead," says Hanna Kozlowska, a reporter at Quartz.
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