Milo Yiannopoulos | |
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![]() Milo Yiannopoulos at the moonwalk flash mob tribute at London Liverpool Street station |
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Nationality | British |
Alma mater | Wolfson College, Cambridge |
Occupation | Journalist, columnist, broadcaster |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Milo Yiannopoulos is a British journalist, columnist and broadcaster, and the founder and Editor-in-Chief of The Kernel, an online magazine focusing on European start-up technology.[1]
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Yiannopoulos studied English literature at Wolfson College, University of Cambridge.[1][2]
Yiannopoulos specialises in privacy, piracy, start-up technology companies, and gossip. He has written for a number of publications, including DGA Quarterly,[3] The Commentator, The Wall Street Journal,[4] Wired UK, TechCrunch,[5] and The Spectator.[6][7] He was a technology columnist and blogger for The Daily Telegraph, and is currently a columnist and advisor to Blottr and contributor to the The Catholic Herald.[7]
Yiannopoulos hosted the Young Rewired State competition in 2010, an initiative to showcase the technological talents of 15–18 year-olds,[8] and organised The London Nude Tech Calendar, a calendar featuring members of the London technology scene to raise money for Take Heart India.[9] He also organised the moonwalk flash mob tribute to Michael Jackson in London's Liverpool Street station shortly after Jackson's death in 2009.[10] He explained that the idea of a flashmob as a tribute to Jackson was originally a humorous suggestion on Twitter, but then decided to make it happen, inviting people via social networking websites.[10]
He has appeared on Sky News discussing social media,[11] and on BBC Breakfast discussing Pope Benedict XVI's visit to the United Kingdom.[12]
As a gay Roman Catholic, he has debated gay marriage on Newsnight,[13] and on Channel 4's 10 O'Clock Live with Boy George.[14]
Yiannopoulos received criticism in 2009 for tweeting that he hoped the police 'beat the shit out of those wankers' at G20 protests, and then deleting the tweet after a protestor was killed.[15]
Controversy followed his appearance at the TechCrunch Europe GeeknRolla conference in 2009, during which he was criticised for remarks described as "men and women are different, men are better at tech, deal with it"[16] by another participant in the conversation.
Nero is a Flemish comic book character and the main protagonist in Marc Sleen's long running comic book strip series The Adventures of Nero (1947–2002). He is one of the most recognizable comic book characters in Belgium and comparable to Lambik from the Suske en Wiske series by Willy Vandersteen.
Nero is a middle aged, fairly obese man who is bald except for two long hairs on his head. Furthermore, he wears a huge red bow tie and has laurel leaves behind his ears, in reference to the Roman emperor Nero after whom he was named.
Nero is an anti hero. He is a complex character with many good character traits, but also many human fallities. He is sometimes stupid, lazy, naïve, egotistical and vain, but in other situations he proves himself to be clever, friendly, determined and melancholic.
When Marc Sleen started a comic strip series in 1947 for De Nieuwe Gids Detective Van Zwam was originally the central character, therefore naming the series after him. In the very first story, "Het Geheim van Matsuoka" ("Matsuoka's Secret") (1947) Nero made his debut. Van Zwam meets him while trying to solve a case, yet Nero is still named "Schoonpaard" (in reprints "Heiremans", after a colleague of Sleen at his office) here. Because he drank the insanity poison, Matsuoka beer, Schoonpaard thinks he is the Roman emperor Nero. At the end of the story he gets his senses back. Still, in all other albums everyone, including himself, refers to him as "Nero".
Nero (37–68) was Roman Emperor from 54 to 68.
Nero may also refer to: