Society's Child
Benjamin Glaze, 19, was hoping "his big moment would come as he belted out "Stadium", a song he wrote himself," The New York Times reported. But as he discovered, the moment that made the big headlines came before he even had a chance to perform, when Perry suddenly kissed him on the mouth.
"I was a tad bit uncomfortable," Glaze, who had never been kissed before, told the Times. "I wanted to save it for my first relationship. I wanted it to be special."

A farmer in a maize field in Wesselsbron in the Free State province of South Africa.
"If you look at the footage and read the stories, you hear the accounts, it's a horrific circumstance they face," said Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton. "I think these people deserve special attention and we're certainly applying that special attention now."
People took to social media to express their shock at the autocomplete search suggestions being peddled by Facebook. Some of the terms suggested reportedly included sexual and child abuse, as well as videos of the Florida school shooting.
Facebook appear to have eventually rectified the issue that was causing the unsavoury predictive search suggestions, and the company issued an apology. "We're very sorry this happened. As soon as we became aware of these offensive predictions we removed them."
An audience member dove right into the Russia debate, asking: "How certain are you that the Salisbury attack was beyond doubt the responsibility of the Russian state?"
Labour's Shadow Brexit secretary Keir Starmer commended the UK Prime Minister Theresa May in his response, stating that May was correct in expelling Russian diplomats following the attack on ex-double agent Sergei Skripal, which left the former spy, his daughter Yulia and a police officer in serious condition in hospital.
Rattansi swooped on Starmer's comments, stating: "This person to my right who has had close contact with the intelligence services says 'only Russia had these chemicals,'" he said, pointing at Starmer.
"That's something, given that Britain vetoed in the past few hours a UN Security Council resolution asking for an investigation into these atrocities in Wiltshire. Why did Britain veto that resolution? That's interesting, isn't it?"
Variouslocalmedia report that 63-year-old Constantin Reliu cannot be declared alive because he appealed against his certified death too late. Alarmingly, local authorities say the ruling is final.
Reliu moved to Turkey in 1992 where he found work as a chef, but his family reportedly did not hear from him after his last visit back to Romania in 1999. Hearing no news from him in the intervening years, his estranged wife sought to have him declared dead and managed to procure a death certificate for him in 2016.
A casual attitude towards underage sex is putting children in terrible danger
What do Torbay, Liverpool, Rochdale, Thurrock, Oxfordshire, Hampshire, Bristol and Somerset have in common? All have been the subject of serious case reviews published within the past five years in connection with child sexual exploitation. That's without mentioning Professor Alexis Jay's independent inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Rotherham.
In all nine regions, a clear picture emerges of a culture in which underage sexual activity is viewed as relatively harmless so long as it is perceived to be consensual.
To that growing hall of shame, we must now add Telford. According to an 18-month Sunday Mirror investigation, an estimated 1,000 girls suffered sexual exploitation and abuse in the Shropshire district over a period of 40 years.
Comment: The 'casual attitude' toward underage sex is a result of the elite's attempt to normalize pedophilia and a radical feminist agenda to destroy women and men, the family and traditional values by promoting promiscuity, eroticism, prostitution and homosexuality.
- How radical feminism ruined lives
- The Feminist Seduction of Western Society
- Normalization of Pedophilia: Psychopaths Try to Recreate Society in Their Own Image
- Why feminism wants to break up the family
- Meet Gabriele Kuby: The sociologist exposing the Western-led 'gender agenda'
It is the lowest level for the country since February last year.
"We absolutely do not hold American securities exclusively. The main thing is that these securities should be liquid. So should be the state that issued them," said Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov in an interview with NTV this week.
Russia also invests in the securities of European countries.
Inflation in Russia now stands at 2.18 percent, and for the first time ever it is lower than US inflation, which is currently 2.2 percent. This is another record low for Russia. In 2017, consumer prices rose by only 2.5 percent. In 2016, there was 5.4 percent growth. Thus, inflation has more than halved in a matter of a couple of years.
Such low inflation is unprecedented for Russia. For almost a quarter of a century the economy has lived through much higher rates of consumer prices growth. In the 1990s there was hyperinflation typical for the poorest countries: 2,509 percent in 1992, 840 percent in 1993, and 215 percent in 1994.
The situation improved only in 2000, when prices rose by 20 percent. The last time inflation in Russia was double-digit was in 2015 - 12.91 percent. And this year, inflation is approaching just 2 percent, half of the Central Bank of Russia's target of 4 percent per annum.
'Top moment of his life': Russian NHL player brings young fan to tears after giving him hockey stick
Rangers fan Benjamin was attending the game wearing a Severstal Cherepovets jersey, the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) at which Buchnevich began his career, with the player's name on the back.
When Benjamin waved to his idol during the warmup session, Buchnevich immediately spotted his old jersey and skated to the boards to toss one of his sticks to the boy - prompting the boy to burst into tears.
"I'm wearing this jersey tonight, my grandpa got it for me from a Russian website," the Rangers season-ticket holder said after receiving the stick.
The Japanese Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) said the firm was suspected of improperly forcing suppliers to shoulder part of the costs incurred for selling their products at a discount. Amazon Japan said it was "fully cooperating" with the JFTC, but declined to provide any details.
In 2016, the JTFC has also raided the firm's offices on suspicions it had unfairly demanded from retailers to set prices on Amazon Japan lower than prices for those products listed on other e-commerce sites. Regulators ended the investigation last year when Amazon Japan agreed to stop the practice.
Amazon has been operating in Japan since 1998. The country was one of the first international expansions for the US firm. It is Amazon's second-largest market outside the US, after Germany, with sales of $10.8 billion in 2016.














Comment: Imagine if this was a man kissing a teenage girl. There would have been dozens of furious liberal thinkpieces written before the show had ended.