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Millennials: Eager To Change The World Millennials care about giving back. From involvement with charities and nonprofits to spreading awareness about key environmental concerns, many millennials view both social and environmental justice as being top priorities. In fact, according to the 2014 Millennial Impact Report, millennials will only accept jobs at certain companies depending on the company’s involvement with charitable causes. The report notes that, of the 1,500 millennials surveyed, 55 percent of them noted that a company’s involvement with charitable causes directly influenced their choice regarding accepting employment. Companies that donate to charity or disaster relief organizations will be able to retain additional pull with millennials, which is why working with an organization like Good360 can be tremendously beneficial. Good360, which helps nonprofits connect with companies that can offer much-needed goods and supplies, can assist a company with promoting general social impact, a positive sense of sustainability and it can even help to attract additional customers.




Millennials shouldn’t be overlooked. As noted by Forbes, by 2025, millennials will make up 75 percent of the workforce in the US. Around the world, millennials will make up roughly 50 percent of the workforce. Currently, there are 80 million millennials, and 45 million are employed. Because charitable acts and social and environmental justice are so important to millennials, companies that donate to charity will find that they will be able to establish a strong connection with both their millennial-aged employees and customers. While some companies might assume that performing social outreach might be time-consuming and costly, working with a company like Good360 is relatively simple and cost-efficient. Good360 connects companies with nonprofits that are in dire need of goods and supplies. Good360 can help a company donate these products, making it easy to provide critical support to disaster relief organizations, disaster response organizations and nonprofits. Social and environmental justice is important, and companies that donate and do their best to give back will find that their actions will reverberate with customers and employees alike.




Social Responsibility Is Good For BusinessBlending Reverse Logistics And Charity With Good360JACKETS, WOVENS, AND HOODIES JACKETS, WOVENS, AND HOODIES Poler x Rocky Boots Available In Three Colors I visited the Regal La live cinema to see the movie the Suicide Squad. The venue is the only place in Los Angeles that offers the 4DX theater experience. 4Dx is an experience quite like anything I've ever felt watching a movie before. The seats vibrate, lift up and down, rock slowly back and forth, etc. Your seats are synchronized... I went to Regal cinema to watch the legend of Tarzan in 4DX. The theatre was superb and the experience was simply fantastic. You should try watching a movie in 4DX at least once. I will definitely be back. Loved the theater, it was clean, comfortable seating, and great sound, but it is pricey. Parking was a mess and very confusing. Bad signage and unhelpful parking garage staff. Do not forget to get your validation for parking. I went there on the day after opening of Star Wars: The Force Awakens to watch it, I was surprised at the insanely wide selection of movie types.




They have the usual digital movies, 3D movies, 3D in premiere cinemas and even 4DX! The only thing you have to worry about would be the price of the food. This movie theater was really nice! The first thing was prices to me were really good for it being a very nice theater and it being near the Staple Center. Prices were cheaper then i thought they were going to be. Also customer service was good. They're very helpful and nice. Once inside there were plenty of counters where you... While visiting the shops and restaurants in L.A. Live in downtown Los Angeles stop and see a movie here. Large theaters plenty of seats. Been here to see many movies. Thought I lost my keys there once but didn't and the manager was gracious anyway and really kind! Sure to have a movie showing at the time you... If it wasn't for the 4D theatre this would just be any old generic multiplex. The 4D theatre is the only one in the US. The seats move in unison to the movie scenes. There are fog, blasts of cold and hot air, scents, water sprays and much more all in sync with the film.




It makes for a very... My husband and I are from Upstate NY and Regal was pretty much our only theater choice back home. Since moving to the Santa Monica area, we have fallen in love with the AMC chain and the comfy lazy-boy style theater chairs, plus we adore the $6.50 first showings of the day which we attend on weekends. First experience with an american movie theather. I'm normally used to very tight and small European cinemas but the amount of space we had in this theater was great. Loved the chairs and the screen. The airco was a bit on the strong side for the amount of people in the theater. The theaters in LA we've seen are all very good to excellent. We like the assigned seating and quality of the movie presentation. The LA Regal Cinema we visited was very good. We watched Maize Runner: Scorch Trials. The Regal is a very good place for movies.Plycraft Eames-style Recliner with Built-in Footrest Speaking of Plycraft’s take on the Eames lounge, here’s one I’ve never seen before: a recliner with a built-in footrest.




Many Plycraft lounges have the ability to do something an Eames 670/671 can’t do: tilt back. But this one extends a footrest as it reclines, doing the job of an ottoman in a fraction of the space. That’s right, a la Barcalounger. This is as close as you can get to a La-Z-Boy and still stay somewhat true to mid-century modernism. This naugahyde and walnut Plycraft was built in the ’60s. The seller makes the point that while you can still buy a new Eames lounge, the Plycraft knockoffs are no longer produced and this model is especially rare. From the glossy, international beach dream of tobacco titan Abbot Kinney, to an oilfield slum for half a century, Venice's history has been turbulent. Because of its affordability the neighborhood attracted a diverse counterculture population in the '60s, followed by the skateboarding Z-Boys who used derelict elements of Venice as a foundation for sport. Some of that colorful population remains today but is now contrasted by an influx of affluent residents.




Some of the diviest watering holes of bygone years have been replaced by trendy haberdashers and high-end baby couture. Still, some remain, and our picks below are the best of what Venice bar culture has to offer, both old and new.See also: The Top 10 Bars in Santa MonicaFor the week between paychecks, Nikki's has your back with the best budget buzz in town. $3 beer, house wine and well drinks wash down weekday food specials -- the three-cheese nachos will feed a crowd. With ample TVs, it's a great place to watch the game, college football especially. A DJ comes on at 10 p.m. and the kitchen is open late. 72 Market St., Venice; The Maria Schneider Orchestra You may not start out your night at The Brig but you may well end it here. This longstanding Venice establishment has a retro space age vibe. The drink list is familiar, the lighting is moody, and the jukebox plays loud. No one is taking themselves too seriously -- a refreshing change from the rest of Abbot Kinney. 1515 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice;




(310) 399-7537.See also: A photo tour of Venice's best barsThe Venice Whaler is a wild card bar. There's no way to anticipate what the crowd is going to be like, or how the night will end -- which is part of the fun. From the downstairs bar, bear witness to rollerbladers, skateboarders and the many eccentrics of Venice converging. Upstairs is its own beast, with a rowdy crowd taking down pitchers of beer and working the smoking patio. 10 Washington Blvd., Venice (310) 821-8737.See also: The 10 Best Bars in Culver City7. High Rooftop Lounge Great views from High Rooftop Lounge at Hotel Erwin look out over the coast and all the way to Catalina on a clear day. You can also rub elbows with international tourists, hotel patrons and neighborhood residents as everyone tries to out-instagram each other's sunset pics. Perch on a lounge chair with a plate of sliders or just show up for a quick Strawberry Mule while the sun tucks behind the Santa Monica mountains. 1697 Pacific Ave., Venice; (424) 214-1062.On Abbot Kinney, The Otheroom is the place to see and be seen.




The wine and beer aren't the cheapest in town but you don't come here just to drink. It's a great place for a first date -- flattering light and even amplified music (in case your match is a miss). It's a treat to have a room that breathes in a neighborhood that holds each square foot so dearly. 1201 Abbot Kinney Blvd., Venice; (310) 396-6230.Think of Wurstkuche as a modern interpretation of a German beer hall -- long communal tables and traditional Bavarian beers, but with exotic sausages (rattlesnake and rabbit, duck and bacon) and a DJ. By dark it will be loud and take on a nightclub vibe; on a weekend afternoon it's the perfect place to peruse the 24 beers on tap, the extensive mustard lineup and dipping sauce for fries. Let the Gemutlichkeit (and beer) wash over you. 625 Lincoln Blvd., Venice; Venice Beach Wine No Venice bar list is complete without a Rose Avenue representative. Venice Beach Wines took a chance opening doors and offering a reliable selection of wine to thirsty locals almost eight years ago, on what was then a transient superhighway.




It has become a casual-chic gem where there's always a seat for folks stopping in for a quick happy hour drink and charcuterie plate, before heading to one of the numerous neighboring restaurants. 529 Rose Ave., Venice; Townhouse and the Del Monte SpeakeasyIf suspenders and the 21st Amendment get your heart racing, go no further than Townhouse and the Del Monte Speakeasy on Windward Avenue. After just one happy hour Old Fashioned, you'll wonder if ghosts of the Volstead Act still haunt the 1915 building smelling of bathtub gin and hip flasks. Between 5- 8 p.m. the alluring 2 oz. classic whiskey cocktails made with single-barrel Buffalo Trace bourbon are only $5. Come later for live jazz, DJs and burlesque. 52 Windward Ave., Venice; Venice Ale House Beachfront bars rely so heavily on location that food and drink typically become an afterthought. Not so at Venice Ale House, where the beer list is of such high calibre that the ocean view and boardwalk people-watching are secondary. No other Venice bar comes close to the 32 taps of West Coast craft beer, making it the only destination in town for beer lovers.

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