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Friday, November 13th, 2009


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Cheyenne Jackson would like to see Alec Baldwin naked.
Posted by:sterling_cooper.
Time:1:33 am.
Mood: amused.


Alec Baldwin may have admitted to my pals over at Entertainment Weekly that he used an "ass double" for a naked scene in It's Complicated, his upcoming flick with Meryl Streep, but he should know there are people out there who would like to see the real thing.

Like 30 Rock's new hunkster Cheyenne Jackson.

"I'd look at that," Jackson, a Broadway musical star who makes his debut on the NBC comedy tonight as TGS' new castmember Danny Blake, tells me. "Alec Baldwin is incredibly sexy. He's an alpha male."

That doesn't mean the openly gay Jackson wants Baldwin in a biblical sense…

"I wouldn't say that," Jackson, 34, laughs when asked if he has a crush on A.B. "I would say I have a talent crush on him. That's what we say here in New York—a talent crush."

I caught up with Jackson in NYC, where he's currently starring in the Broadway revival of Finian's Rainbow. (He also just released The Power of Two, his new album with Michael Feinstein.)

Jackson isn't allowed to say much about his 30 Rock storyline, but does reveal he's been working with all of the shows' stars and he just finished his third episode.

Which brings us to more Baldwin gushing. "He knows comedy! He knows timing!" Jackson says. "He knows what a little flick of your eye will do. I learned so much from him already, even in the short time I've been there."

As for Fey, she cast Jackson after seeing him onstage in Xanadu and Damn Yankees. "She's one of the most naturally funny people I have ever met," he says. "She's has this quiet confidence. Watching how she conducts herself and how she runs the ship over there is really fantastic."

So will he be belting out a tune with fellow Broadway babe Jane Krakowski? "You're going to have to wait and see," he says, adding, "They rely on the element of surprise so much. I wish I could shout it from the rooftops, but I wanna stay in good with everybody."

SOURCE

I would totally and shamelessly tap this, ngl. Simply can't wait for It's Complicated to come out.

Hellooo undressing!Baldwin:

Comments: Read 4 or Add Your Own.

Thursday, November 12th, 2009


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:'Paranormal Activity' Becomes Top Grossing "R" Thriller Of Past Decade
Posted by:teambritspears.
Time:8:32 pm.


'Paranormal Activity' Crosses $100M Cume: Top Grossing "R" Thriller Of Past Decade

So say my Paramount insiders about the $15,000 thriller that's been in national release for only 5 weekends and began its distribution being shown at midnight only in a handful of college towns. This pic is one of the biggest entertainment stories of 2009 for sure. “What is truly amazing about PARANORMAL ACTIVITY is the depth of commitment from fans who demanded to see it,” said Paramount Pictures Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Brad Grey in a statement to be released later today. “Adam Goodman, our head of production, believed in the film and championed it from the very first screening. This box-office milestone is also a testament to Oren Peli’s considerable talents as a filmmaker. All of us at Paramount are proud to have been involved with his revolutionary project.” Directed, written and produced by Oren Peli, Paranormal Activity stars Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat. The film was produced by Jason Blum. Steven Schneider served as executive producer.

Source
Comments: Read 14 or Add Your Own.


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:For the Janelle Monae Fans: Monae Reveals Deatils on New Album!
Posted by:spacenaut.
Time:7:22 pm.
If you're a fan of Janelle Monae like we are, then you've been waiting on her full-length debut album for a minute now. In this clip, Janelle sheds some light on the project with SoulCulture, right before this performance. Suites 2 & 3 from Metropolis will be coming out together as a "self-realisational" album entitled, The Ark Android. Watch below as she explains the concept behind it. No word yet on the release date.



SOURCE
Comments: Read 5 or Add Your Own.


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Lindsay Lohan’s Diet Cola Dousing
Posted by:star_cuddles.
Time:7:48 pm.
Lindsay Lohan joined a few of her friends for a night at Bardot in Los Angeles on Wednesday (November 11).

Sporting a big stain on her shirt upon leaving, Lindsay tweeted, “So fun when someone spills a STICKY diet cola ALL OVER YOU!!!!!! NOT even regular cola! Diet it GROSS!”


Lindsay welcomes you with her dirty looks )
Comments: Read 36 or Add Your Own.

Friday, November 13th, 2009


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:LAW & ORDER: Extreme Stupidity Unit
Posted by:davejohn.
Time:1:57 am.

'Terminator' Kid Pleads Not Guilty to DUI

Thomas Dekker -- the guy who played John Connor on the "Terminator" TV show -- just pled not guilty to two counts of DUI stemming from his arrest last month.

According to the police report, Dekker was allegedly hammered when he slammed his car into a 17-year-old kid on a bicycle near an on-ramp in Los Angeles.

The victim was treated for minor injuries -- Dekker was hauled to Van Nuys jail.

Balloon Dad -- Booked

TMZ has learned Richard Heene is currently in police custody, and his wife Mayumi is expected to turn herself in shortly.

Richard's attorney announced earlier today that Richard will plead guilty tomorrow to attempting to influence a public servant -- a felony -- and Mayumi will plead guilty to false reporting to authorities -- a misdemeanor.

The lawyer also said the Heenes aren't expected to do jail time.

UPDATE: Richard has been released. We're told Mayumi will not be booked because her charge is a misdemeanor.


Just fine them til it hurts and be done with them...

CASE: 1 2
Comments: Read 4 or Add Your Own.

Thursday, November 12th, 2009


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Demi Lovato's new video for "Remember December"
Posted by:fairyonacid.
Time:5:20 pm.


hot beautiful fierce gorgeous fabulous amazing (even though the song sucks)

source
Comments: Read 23 or Add Your Own.

Friday, November 13th, 2009


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Chris Brown Interview on 105 & Park
Posted by:risdilinjah.
Time:12:37 am.


source - http://www.bet.com/video/665789
Comments: Read 11 or Add Your Own.

Thursday, November 12th, 2009


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Rihanna "Cold Case Love" & Chris Brown's "Sing Like Me"
Posted by:b_mckinley.
Time:7:23 pm.
Music:Vampire Diaries.
Image and video hosting by TinyPic

It'll be gone soon

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ )
Comments: Read 30 or Add Your Own.


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Exclusive: Kardashian Sisters Join the NOH8 Campaign
Posted by:jennyinla.
Time:3:58 pm.


Celebuzz reveals that the Kardashian sisters are the latest celebs to join the NOH8 Campaign, the silent photo protest created with the goal of ultimately overturning Proposition 8! Prop 8 is a topic Kim, Khloé and Kourtney hold near and dear to their hearts and all were very honest and outspoken about the topic.

Khloé stated, “There should be no limitations as to who we choose to spend our lives with [...] If someone had told me that I couldn’t marry Lamar, I would have told them to go F themselves!"

Kim exclaimed, "What I love about the NO H8 campaign is that it symbolizes more than just people's desires to bring down Prop 8... it's about promoting love in general! Stop the H8, people!"

Kourtney said, “I want my son to grow up in a world where love conquers hate. It's crazy to me that in today's modern world, the fight for same sex marriage is even an issue.”

Full Story: http://www.celebuzz.com/kardashians-join-no8-campaign-s154321/
Comments: Read 10 or Add Your Own.


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:lolwut
Posted by:mediocrechick.
Time:6:52 pm.
Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Burger King announces New Moon meal and swag

Good news for all you grease-loving Twihards out there. Burger King is here to satiate your appetite – both literal and metaphorical. They’re doing a huge “New Moon” promotional tie-in that features all sorts of kids’ meal-esq products – but for adults. That means water bottles, to those of you hoping for a 32 cent Edward Cullen action figure. They’re also doing special New Moon crowns, New Moon-emblazoned gift cards (so you can buy the Meat’Normous omelet sandwich and other non-New Moon items while still looking at New Moon cast members), and six pack of BK Burger Shots that come with collectible cards featuring “stunning imagery from the film.” Stunning.

Here are your options:

Read more )
Comments: Read 73 or Add Your Own.


ohnotheydidnt
Subject:Carrie Prejean Still Loves Sarah Palin, Larry King is still "Inappropriate" and "Palinizing" Her
Posted by:corporate.
Time:6:51 pm.


source
Comments: Read 35 or Add Your Own.

Friday, November 13th, 2009


wiredtopstories
Subject:Verizon's $100 Android Phone Is a Hot Mess
Time:12:55 am.
Finally, a $100 Android phone! I'll take one. What's that you say? There's a catch?


Comments: Add Your Own.


wiredtopstories
Subject:Navy Pirates Wired.com With Online Sea-Jacking Game
Time:12:30 am.
The U.S. Navy announces it's looking for an online game about Somali pirates. Funny, Wired.com launched something similar in July.


Comments: Add Your Own.

Thursday, November 12th, 2009


4chan
Subject:noddin' mah head like yeah
Posted by:snarerush.
Time:8:17 pm.
( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )
Comments: Read 1 or Add Your Own.

Friday, November 13th, 2009


thinkgeek
Subject:Gadgets: Mathmos Fireflow Candle Lava Lamp
Time:1:15 am.
Comments: Add Your Own.

Thursday, November 12th, 2009


jwz
Subject:cowgirl
Time:5:08 pm.
Music:Veruca Salt -- All Dressed Up.

Comments: Read 2 or Add Your Own.

Friday, November 13th, 2009


warrenelliscom
Subject:Conan! What Is Best In Life?
Time:12:43 am.

"DAY-GLO HUMAN UDDERS!"

tumblr_kt0ltn519I1qzocfyo1_500

(I feel I must point out that these are really not what are best in life, and that Molly Crabapple should be arrested and probably waterboarded for making me look at this.)

(And also this.)

(Cowgirls. Honestly.)

Comments: Add Your Own.


huffington
Subject:Dick Patten: Should We Keep Corporate Welfare for Big Insurance?
Time:12:20 am.

As the President of the American Family Business Foundation, I hear the stories of family businesses and their employees everyday. Stories of family businesses that have survived for generations only to be lost to estate taxes are heart wrenching. Contrary to what is commonly known about the estate tax, the biggest losers in the estate tax schema are the 57% of American workers employed in those family businesses.

Family business owners who are compelled to pay additional, second-to-die life insurance premiums in order to pay the estate tax cannot put those funds back into expanding their businesses and hiring new employees. That, in turn, is a drain on federal revenues that could be generated from additional income tax in order to provide meaningful government services.

The estate tax isn't a progressive or conservative issue: It's an economic one. Family businesses -- the backbone of economic growth in America -- don't deserve to have Congress colluding with life insurance companies to keep alive an archaic tax that only results in the elimination of jobs and decreased federal revenues. Lawmakers have a responsibility to encourage small businesses, not weaken or diminish destroy them.

Big Insurance's interest in the estate tax goes far beyond their agents' interest in representing their clients. Large life insurance companies see the estate tax as their primary sales point with aging family business owners. This year, alone, the top eight life insurance companies spent more than $18 million lobbying to secure favorable estate tax legislation. Insurance companies have done this purely to pad their own pocketbooks. And they have padded them well. The life insurance industry brought in over $12 billion on second-to-die policies in 2005. Rest assured, that Warren Buffett, whose company owns several insurance companies did not testify in favor of the estate tax out of the goodness of his heart.

A recent study by Douglas Holtz-Eakin, the former head of the Congressional Budget Office, found that eliminating the estate tax could get President Obama half way to his goal of saving or creating 3 million jobs. According to that study, eliminating the estate tax would create the conditions necessary to produce 1.5 million new U.S. jobs.

While many proponents of the estate tax argue that it is the most progressive tax in the tax code, the fact is that it produces less than 1 percent of annual federal tax revenue. By comparison, the income tax generates more than 50 times that amount. In an economy that has reached 10.2% unemployment can we really afford not to ask: Is it worth maintaining what amounts to little more than corporate welfare for Big Insurance at the cost of family business created jobs?

For more information visit www.estatetaxtruth.org and watch the video.

More on Economy
Comments: Add Your Own.


huffington
Subject:Geoffrey R. Stone: Church and State in JFK's America
Time:12:12 am.

On Sept. 12, 1960, presidential candidate John F. Kennedy gave a major speech to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association, a group of Protestant ministers, on the issue of religion. At the time, many Americans questioned whether Kennedy's Roman Catholic faith would allow him to make important national decisions as president independent of the Catholic Church. Kennedy put those concerns to rest:

"I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute, where no Catholic prelate would tell the president (should he be Catholic) how to act, and no Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote. . . . I believe in an America . . . where no public official either requests or accepts instructions on public policy from the Pope, the National Council of Churches or any other ecclesiastical source; where no religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace or the public acts of its officials. . . . That is the kind of America in which I believe. . . . Whatever issue may come before me as president - on birth control, divorce, censorship, gambling or any other subject - I will make my decision in accordance with . . . what my conscience tells me to be the national interest, and without regard to outside religious pressures or dictates."

It was on this basis that the United States elected our first Catholic president. Sadly, a lot has changed in the almost fifty years since Kennedy delivered that historic address. According to today's Washington Post, the Catholic Archdiocese of Washington is threatening to abandon its social service programs if the District of Columbia Council enacts a pending same-sex marriage law.

According to today's New York Times, Congressman Patrick J. Kennedy of Rhode Island, a nephew of John F. Kennedy, has been attacked by Thomas J. Tobin, the Roman Catholic bishop of Providence, for his opposition to the Stupak amendment, which would prohibit insurance plans in the new health care program from covering abortion. According to Bishop Tobin, Kennedy's support of abortion rights is "unacceptable to the Church." He insists that, in order for Kennedy to repair his "relationship with the Church," he must obey "the teachings of the Church" and oppose any law supporting abortion.

The Catholic Church also played a critical role in the campaign to defeat same-sex marriage in Maine. Bishop Richard Malone spearheaded a parish-based petition drive against same-sex marriage, plastered church bulletin boards with anti-same-sex marriage messages, insisted on special collections at church services to raise funds to oppose same-sex marriage, and required pastors to preach that their parishioners must vote against same-sex marriage.

All this is consistent with official Catholic doctrine. In 2003, the Vatican issued two documents declaring that Catholic politicians have a "grave and clear obligation" to oppose any law that violates church teaching on abortion or same-sex marriage. Indeed, the Vatican declared that Catholic lawmakers have a "moral duty" to vote against any law that supports abortion rights or recognizes same-sex marriage.

We have a serious problem in our nation. Whatever happened to the America John F. Kennedy believed in? The America in which "no religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace or the public acts of its officials"?

This problem, of course, is not limited to the Catholic Church. I focus on Catholics only because of the sharp irony of Kennedy's comments. But Mormons, Evangelical Christians, and other religious groups have also been quite aggressive in recent years in their determination to mix religion with politics.

At some level, of course, religion cannot be neatly separated from politics. We are who we are as individuals, and we are in no small part the product of our religious beliefs and upbringing. But in a nation committed to the separation of church and state, it is incumbent upon each of us to try to know the difference between what John Kennedy called "the national interest" and what he called "religious dictates."

Freedom of religion in our nation means, first and foremost, the right of individuals to live their lives in accord with their most cherished religious beliefs, and free of government interference. It is not for our government to tell Muslims they must drink alcohol or eat pork, it is not for our government to tell Jews they must consume shrimp or work on Saturday, and it is not for our government to tell Catholics they must have abortions or marry persons of the same-sex.

At the same time, though, the reciprocal of that freedom is an equally fundamental responsibility. This is the responsibility not to use the authority of the government to compel individuals to live their lives in accord with our "religious dictates" that they do not share. Muslims have the right not to consume pork, but they should not use the power of the government to forbid others to eat pork. Jews have the right not to work on Saturday, but they should not use the power of the government to prohibit others from working on Saturday. And Catholics have the right not to marry people of the opposite sex, but they should not use the power of the government to forbid others from marrying the person they love.

As John F. Kennedy understood and stated so eloquently, in America "no religious body should seek to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace."

Comments: Add Your Own.


huffington
Subject:Piaget Building Examined By Feds: Links Between Iran, Skyscraper Suspected
Time:12:03 am.

The Piaget Building, a skyscraper on 5th Avenue in New York, was one of five locations that federal prosecutors took steps to seize today due to suspicions of links with Iran.

The building is owned by a nonprofit Muslim organization called the Alavi Foundation, at the center of today's activity.

Building data-collector Emporis notes that the 36-story building was erected in 1978 for the Pahlavi Foundation (of the late Shah of Persia). It was built next to the 666 5th Avenue structure in Midtown and replaced the DePinna's department store.

Emporis describes the building further: "The facade is of light brown granite facing, with horizontal stripes of windows on the Fifth Avenue and 52nd Street side, extending also a bit over the corner to the 51st Street side and western facade."

The address of the Piaget Building is 650 Fifth Avenue.

The Google 3D Warehouse has a 3D model of the building that can be explored.

More on Iran
Comments: Add Your Own.

Thursday, November 12th, 2009


huffington
Subject:Dr. Jon LaPook: How To Save Billions in Health Costs Starting Now
Time:11:59 pm.

President Obama has stressed the importance of "bending the cost curve" in order to put the brakes on galloping health care expenses that total 2.5 trillion dollars a year and are increasing at 6% a year. The fastest way to do this is shockingly simple: carefully explain to patients the known risks and benefits of procedures.

Dr. Elliott S. Fisher, Director of Dartmouth's Center for Health Policy Research, estimates that thirty to forty percent of elective procedures are unnecessary. This includes elective angioplasty ($16,000), spinal fusion ($22,300), knee replacement ($14,400), and hip replacement ($15,700).

And it's not just costly procedures that are ballooning our health tab; the annual price for diagnostic imaging studies such at CT's and MRI's is about 100 billion dollars, roughly 35% of which is estimated to be wasted.

A prime example of an overused procedure is angioplasty, which opens up clogged arteries in the heart. Over a million are performed every year in the United States. Most patients believe it will prevent a heart attack and prolong life. But that's only true if the procedure is performed when a patient is actually showing signs of a heart attack. In elective cases which, according to the American College of Cardiology's National Cardiovascular Data Registry, account for 37% of angioplasties, it has not been shown either to prevent heart attack or prolong life. For a segment that aired last June on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, cardiologist Dr. Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic told me, "Cardiovascular interventional procedures are big money makers for hospitals and for practitioners." For a lot of doctors, "it's tough to walk away from that."

Our fee-for-service payment system certainly creates perverse incentives for doctors, a major reason for the spiraling cost of health care. But there is another factor that is more insidious: the reluctance of physicians to accept new evidence about the medicine they practice. For example, doctors have been taught for many years that an open artery is always better than a closed one. Despite convincing data showing that this simply isn't true, many physicians remain unconvinced and refuse to change their behavior.

When I interviewed President Obama about health care in July, I asked him about unnecessary elective angioplasties and the friction between what a physician believes to be true and what is supported by evidence-based medicine. He replied, "I have enormous faith in doctors. I think they always want to do the right thing for patients. But I also think, if we're honest, doctors, right now, have disincentives to making the better choices in the situations you talked about. If you are getting paid more for the angioplasty, then that subconsciously even might make you think the angioplasty is the better route to take. And so if we're reimbursing the physician not on the basis of how many procedures you're performing but rather how are you caring for the patient overall - what are the outcomes - then I think you start seeing some different choices."

Trying to figure out which medical interventions actually work is the whole point of the so-called "comparative effectiveness" studies for which Congress has budgeted 1.1 billion dollars. There has already been good progress in this kind of research. Aside from data showing that elective angioplasties don't save lives, a recent study found that vertebroplasty, a common procedure to treat pain from back fractures, was no better than a placebo treatment with a shot to temporarily numb the area.

Ultimately, insurers will try to change behavior by refusing to cover services that have performed poorly in comparative effectiveness research. That strategy will likely take years to implement and will be complicated by the fact that medicine is both an art and a science and will never be able to be reduced to perfectly predictable algorithms. Clinical judgment and even what has recently become a politically incorrect term - intuition - will always play an important role.

So how do we save billions starting now? By doctors and patients agreeing to discuss carefully whether procedures and tests are worth it.

This will have to involve consent forms. A review of hundreds of these forms at more than 150 hospitals found them to be of "limited value."

They are loaded with confusing language, often omit specific risks and benefits, and are generally not well explained by doctors. Patients often sign the forms minutes before a procedure without even reading them. Experts such as Dr. Fisher say that 30-40% of unnecessary procedures could be eliminated through proper informed consent - what is increasing being called "informed patient choice" to emphasize that doing the suggested procedure is not a foregone conclusion.

Gerry O'Connor, PhD, Associate Dean for Health Policy and Clinical Practice at the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, has implemented a pilot program that personalizes the consent process. In the case of angioplasty, the physician collects detailed medical information about a patient, then searches a database of angiogram results to estimate individual risks and benefits by finding out what happened to similar patients who had the same procedure.

"It's not generic," he told me. "It's for people like you. If we get that right, we'll create a better informed consent."

Ultimately, electronic medical records will connect with electronic medical knowledge, including comparative effectiveness results, to give doctors and patients information - so-called "decision support" - at the moment a test or procedure is electronically ordered. But until then, and starting immediately, doctors and patients can try the low-tech solution of setting aside enough time to weigh adequately the pros and cons of medical options - not just for procedures but for other treatments and diagnostic studies. Of course, this is more easily said than done in a system that reimburses far better for doing things to patients than for communicating with them. That must change.

More on Barack Obama
Comments: Add Your Own.


huffington
Subject:Janet Murguía: CNN Drops Dobbs: To All Those Who Joined Us in the Drop Dobbs Campaign
Time:11:54 pm.

Lou Dobbs's resignation from CNN yesterday is an important step forward in restoring greater fairness, accuracy, and balance on CNN and cable news. It is our hope that his resignation begins to undo the climate of intolerance fostered on his show, restore journalistic integrity to the CNN brand, and bring civility and truth back to the immigration debate.

Yesterday's resignation came after thousands of people and organizations pressured CNN to stop Dobbs's biased coverage of our community and the immigration debate. For years, NCLR has raised concerns with CNN about the gross distortions, misrepresentations, and falsehoods that Dobbs's program has perpetuated in describing the impact of immigrants on American society. We have documented a litany of issues, including:

• His regular use of guests representing hate groups, vigilantes, and nativists as "experts" on immigration
• His relentless repetition of stories on immigrants and crime that project an impression far from reality
• His association of immigrants as carriers of disease that has been both inaccurate and pejorative

Just since July of this year, our colleagues at Media Matters have posted 299 items highlighting and correcting erroneous information from Lou Dobbs's show. I appeared on his show to ask Dobbs to curtail his bias and distance himself from the vigilantes and nativists he has featured. I have also partnered with CNN to address the levels of diversity before and behind the camera, in hopes that this would help.

However, in the wake of Dobbs's participation at an anti-immigrant rally sponsored by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR)--an organization designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC)--we joined the Drop Dobbs campaign and began to educate advertisers about the impact his rhetoric has on the Latino community.

As someone who has gone head to head with Dobbs, I must say that this has never been personal. This is an important substantive matter to the entire Latino community. We welcome Dobbs's departure, and we wish him well.

There are others giving voice to extreme and polarizing rhetoric on cable network news and talk radio, so our campaign to take hate out of the immigration debate will continue. We look forward to working in partnership with you--with your passion, your vision and support. Thank you for everything that you did to make sure that the Drop Dobbs campaign was a success.

More on Crime
Comments: Add Your Own.


huffington
Subject:Matt Osborne: Palin-Bachmann Syndrome™
Time:11:51 pm.

The strange nexus of right-wing Christian identity politics and beauty pageants has produced Sarah Palin, Michele Bachmann, and Carrie Prejean. What is it about their world that turns toxic and causes flaky behavior?

For those who missed it, here is Miss California's meltdown on Larry King Live the other night:

When the biggest story about you is that your lawsuit against a pageant over "religious discrimination" was settled 24 hours after the pageant obtained your sex tape, you can't expect Larry King and Celebrity News Network to avoid the question unless you make it a condition in advance. In which case, you probably won't get the interview and your fifteen minutes are officially over. Prejean shouldn't have gone on a call-in talk show if she wasn't interested in taking, you know, questions.

Prejean had positioned herself to take advantage of right-wing outrage over the way she lost the pageant crown. Her stumbling response to Perez Hilton's question about gay marriage has become exhibit A for culture warriors, who argue that creeping political correctness violates their "right" to despise Teh Gay. Sex tapes are the last thing Prejean wants to talk about. Yet somehow, Miss California had not armed herself with a cover story for her target demographic. Taking off your microphone and walking away is a childish act of childish avoidance, but unwillingness to spin is the only sin left in mass-media.

In modern Christian communities, beauty pageants are an acceptable hobby for young women. Southern belles have more than their share of victories in Miss USA, and every last one of them describes her Christianity at some time in the process. Miss USA itself is a politically conservative organization (which made Hilton's question all the more strange).

By making an underage sex tape, Carrie Prejean had already broken the rules when she gave her answer. Prejean refused an obvious question because the answer was self-evident, and demolishes her credibility in a way that damages her chosen career of media martyr.

The Miss USA pageant set these rules long ago to make the competition acceptable in conservative places; now they produce conservative movement leaders. Sarah Palin is also a former beauty queen, and like Prejean she is also a creature of charismatic Christian identity politics. Her recent behavior, too, has been exceedingly flaky. There was her lengthy, rambling word-salad of a speech, described best by Shannyn Moore:

With such a large national audience, Palin didn't talk about the plethora of issues facing Alaska. Why would she? She has much bigger fish to fry. She decided to slam Ashley Judd instead. Yes, really.

I don't know Ashley Judd, but I like her. I know this must shock the Palinistas; they think I dislike Sarah because she's pretty. According to Palin, she is some sort of Hollywood pixie; a "delicate, tiny, very talented celebrity starlet." I don't judge Ms. Judd on her stunning appearance; but on the criteria of her politics...just like Palin.

Nothing Palin says is apolitical. Her entire world-view consists of what she has learned from the conservative movement itself. As a result of that faith-based education, Sarah doesn't know enough facts to stand up to rational examination. She was weighed, judged, and found wanting -- against Joe Biden, of all people! -- and her poll numbers have plummeted ever since.

In an effort to control her message, Palin's publicity staff has done two things: (A) restrict everything but her book tour to Facebook, and (2) agreed to public speaking events only to deny they'd ever confirmed them and leave event planners in the lurch at the last minute.

Nor were these speeches scheduled for unsympathetic audiences: she was asked to speak at the Ronald Reagan library, even an Alaskan anti-abortion rally. She doesn't hesitate to demand cash, even in Iowa. The 2012 Palin campaign has started by asking for the love-offering up front and insists the event sign a rider. You can see that in the event publicity materials.

The message control is amazingly strict. Press and cameras have been banned from all the appearances she has made, but also cell phones and personal recording devices -- little wonder, as all the speeches she has done have been panned by notetakers. Her 90-minute Hong Kong speech was described by Paul Krugman as "half a Castro" in length.

As if in imitation, Carrie Prejean has gotten in the habit of canceling appearances, too (though not Larry King, for some reason). Another famous conservative woman with a similar background is Michele Bachmann (R-Oppositesland), who placed in the top 10 in the Miss Anoka Pageant and was crowned Miss Congeniality. Today, she has her own action figure and stars in a "conservative women" calendar along with Prejean.

While Bachmann rarely flakes on apearances, she often flakes in person. There's a moment in this video when Michele Bachmann gets too crazy even for Glenn Beck. By happenstance, you don't even have to play the video to see it:

 

If you do play the video, you'll hear her ask of the US Census:

Do they really need to know our phone numbers? Do they really need to know, like you said, the date and time that we leave...mental stability?

Followed by a prolonged blink.

That's Teh Crazy™.

You know the one question that is not on this survey, Glenn? "Are you a U.S. citizen?"

This is Teh Stupid™, because she also argues that this information can be used to round up Republicans and ship them off to the Glenn Beck doom bunker death panels.

"This would be your perfect opportunity to find out how many illegal aliens are in the United States."

This is Teh Wacky™, wherein reflexive stupidity and and insane scenarios collide at the limits of mental reach. The chances of American government awarding Republicans an all-expenses paid vacation at FEMA death camps are remote. A non-citizen's fear of deportation is far more likely, and rational, by comparison -- and the whole point of the US Census is to count people, not citizens -- it's in their 200-year old charter.

After delivering this nonsense, Bachmann makes another prolonged blink. That blink is a recurring pattern with her special flavor of Teh Wacky™. In poker parlance, it's her tell. Watch as she describes Teh Evil Plan™ to turn school clinics into abortion factories through health care reform:

Blink much?

I wasn't sure what to make of it; I'm no psychologist. So I talked to a friend of mine with a degree in psychology and a fascination for neurolinguistic studies.

But wait, I hear you cry. What is that...neuro lingua thingy again? That's fine; I should explain that neurolinguistics has gotten a bad rep from con men and entertainers, the former group using it for ill and the latter passing it off as "mind-control." Neurolinguistics is the study of verbal and non-verbal cues. In plain English, my friend PistolPro can "read" people in a way similar to Tim Roth's character on Lie To Me.

The problem, he says, is that we'd need a sample of Michele Bachmann telling the truth to serve as a baseline -- and try as I might, I cannot find a video of Bachmann that doesn't have Teh Wacky™ in it. So rather than pursue a more exact diagnosis, I have decided to coin a phrase: Palin-Bachmann Syndrome™, defined as the psychological imbalance produced by a toxic mix of right-wing identity politics and diva training.

Palin-Bachmann Syndrome™ manifests in the following behaviors: rambling, inane "word-salads" while speaking in public; paranoid access-control; espousal of fringe insanity; appeal to prejudices. See also: borderline and narcissistic personality disorders. In rare cases, Palin-Bachmann Syndrome™ can produce strongly offensive behavior:

 

Won't someone please help these poor women?

 

Osborne Ink is a Website of Media Deconstruction

 

"News that's fairly liberal, but never unbalanced"

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huffington
Subject:Jennifer Boulden: How Animated Stick Figures Can Start a Fire (Or At Least Evolve the Eco Discussion
Time:11:45 pm.

I attended Opportunity Green here in LA this past weekend to get a pulse on where things are now and reconnect with my darker green contemporaries after more than four years of having my head somewhat stuck in the operational sands of Ideal Bite and it’s now parent company, Disney. 

One of my first eye-openers was how much the conversation has deepened around principles that had previously only been discussed on purely academic levels.  For example, the phrase “closed loop processes” was being bantered about the way bra sizes would be at a sports bar. Lorrie Vogel of Nike helped visual a closed loop process in action.  She said that although Nike recycles 23M pairs of shoes a year in its Reuse-a-Shoe program, she wants to turn an old shoe into a new shoe, not just a running track – a concept known as “downcycling” -- as is done now.  Additionally there wouldn’t be any waste created in the manufacturing process -- the byproducts of production would be nutrients for enriching the soil, say. 

The second eye opener is something that has consumed my deepest thoughts over the past year:  We need to evolve the conversation from the importance of taking small steps (like changing to CFLs, bringing your own bag, and driving less) to creating a true transformation, and not just slow us down on our current (not-so-good) path.  So what did I learn at the conference that could ever hope to accomplish such a feat?  I believe, as do many others it turns out, that to correct our course we not only need to appeal to people’s pocketbooks and health concerns but also to the creative, evocative right side of the brain.

The green media brigade, of which I include myself, has done a great job pumping out volumes of easy breezy tips and top 10 ways to save the earth.  Yet, even if everyone in the world adopted all of our tips, we’d still be in trouble because our industrial systems are set up wrong, our economy doesn’t assess a fair price for using natural resources, and we’ve already far exceeded the amount of carbon we can have in the atmosphere for a healthy planet.  (Uplifting, huh? But there is hope. Keep reading.)  This is a hinge moment in history -- so let’s tap everything we know about creating behavioral and systemic change, quickly.  I call upon all “Creatives” in advertising, marketing and the social sciences to help tell compelling stories…online.  Then we’ll let our stories spread like wildfire and burn up that bandwidth… because they are just that good.  

Thanks to the advent of narrowcasting via the web and social media, we no longer need to spend $90M to run ads on the major networks to evolve the dialog as Al Gore did with his “WE” campaign.  

At the conference Annie Leonard shared highlights from her 20 year journey in researching materials usage, and how for years she gave this heady, data-packed presentation.  She explained that materials are extracted from the earth and eventually end up in the landfill, and when done ad nauseam, it creates one giant pile of crap for a planet (I am paraphrasing, clearly).  But people just didn’t “get it.” Then a breakthrough moment came while presenting her idea for the umpteenth time to her contemporaries:  almost as a joke, she used stick figures on a whiteboard to connect the dots.  Light bulbs went off, and so did a viral campaign that has educated over an estimated 20 million* who have watched her 20 minute web film.  

Annie and her producer, Jonah Sachs of Free Range Studios, shared their “keys to success” on how to effectively communicate complex and sometimes unpleasant topics, and I have added links to web videos that exemplify each point (and I promise are worthy of a look-see): 

1. Show the connections.  In the Story of Stuff, Annie literally draws the lines from the forests to the factories to the big box stores to our homes and then to the landfill…how can we not “get it”?

2.  Make it human scale.  Macro level problems seem unapproachable. The Girl Effect takes you through a scenario with just one girl… and only at the end do you see the effect multiplied by the 600M girls in developing countries.    

3.  Simplify without dumbing down.  The Meatrix uses humor and cartoons to help people understand the many, many issues related to factory farming. I was able to show it to my mom even after she told me she didn’t want to know where her meat came from.  Both her tune and her menu plans have now changed.

4. Tell your story with emotions -- not facts.  No web video does this better than YES WE CAN.

5. Speak to core truths -- don’t be lazy and not research your points fully, don’t exaggerate, and don’t leave key things out- even if they don’t support your point.   There are too many negative examples of videos that do this, so let’s move on.

Lastly, for good measure, I’ll add one of my own:

6.  Provide an actionable next step. Here’s my most recent video that, looking back, doesn’t hit the mark on a few of the points above but it does at least empower the viewer with an immediately actionable step to stop those stupid, unrequested phone books from landing at your doorstep. 

If you have been feeling uninspired, take a moment to visit the above web videos – they are all exceptional (besides the last one!) and may provide creative insights into how we can craft our environmental messages with more heart and soul, and therefore have them permeate outside of the choir.  In other words, let’s weave the ancient powers of storytelling into our new medium and rapidly evolve the discussions  - and therefore expand the audience.  Speaking of discussions, do let me know your thoughts on this topic, or submit your favorite evocative right brain creations for all of us to see. Let’s start a few fires today.     

------------

*I did the estimation based on 7M views on the website, 6M views on YouTube, and more than 7,000 schools, churches and other groups ordering the DVD for public viewing.

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huffington
Subject:Leslie Hatfield: A Farm in Danger: Help Save the Bed-Stuy Farm
Time:11:29 pm.

Originally published on The Green Fork.

In one Brooklyn community, neighborhood residents are fighting to keep their farm. Bed-Stuy Farm, once a neighborhood garbage dump, was transformed into an urban oasis that produces over 7,000 lbs of fresh food every year, helping feed more than 4,000 people a month through the Brooklyn Rescue Mission.

The Farm is a source of community pride that has inspired neighborhood greening, backyard food gardening and food pantry agriculture projects. It is a constant reminder to residents that better nutrition and healthy eating are within our grasp. Now, though, the project is threatened by development.

Check out the post Kerry Trueman wrote about it back in August to learn more and help save the Bed-Stuy Farm by signing this petition.

More on Food Politics
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huffington
Subject:Tom Sparks, "Wipeout" Contestant, Dies
Time:11:28 pm.

LOS ANGELES — A contestant who was hospitalized after competing briefly on the game show "Wipeout" died two weeks later of a stroke apparently caused by a rare condition, his father said.

Tom Sparks, 33, was participating in the first segment of an obstacle course Oct. 19 when he complained of knee pain, according to Endemol, the company which produces "Wipeout" for ABC.

Producers had him stop, Endemol said Thursday. On-set medics examined Sparks, noticed he was short of breath and took him to a local hospital.

He was moved to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and underwent several brain surgeries, according to TheWrap.com, which first reported Sparks' Nov. 5 death. Sparks couldn't be saved because of the brain damage that had occurred, the Web site said, citing an e-mail to alumni from a faculty member at Sparks' alma mater.

Sparks, a former Sun Valley, Idaho, radio disc jockey, earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Southern California and later earned a master's degree from the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism.

In a statement to the Idaho Mountain Express and Guide, Bill Sparks, his father, said doctors determined the stroke probably was caused by antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, known as APS.

APS is associated with recurrent clotting events including premature stroke and heart attack, according to the APS Foundation of America Inc.'s Web site.

"Wipeout" contestants undergo medical examinations before they are cleared for the show, Endemol said. However, the diagnosis of APS requires specialized blood tests, the foundation said on its site.

"We offer our heartfelt condolences to the family," ABC and Endemol said in a joint statement. "This is a tragic loss and our thoughts are with them at this time."

Sparks, who was a runner and recently competed in a marathon, had just married and was competing on "Wipeout" with his wife, Kate, on a couples episode.

The show is in production for the third season, premiering next summer.

___

On the Net:

http://www.apsfa.org/

http://www.abc.go.com

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huffington
Subject:Mehmet Oz, M.D.: Real Health Care Reform: What's Next?
Time:11:27 pm.

On a recent episode of my show, I met a woman named Sandi. Her eyes streamed with tears as she told me about how she binged on food every night after her children were asleep. She was at her wit's end. She was suffering with complications from obesity -- borderline diabetes, hypertension, fatigue and most importantly, depression and anxiety. To modern medicine, she was a simple math equation -- her BMI needed to be under 30, her blood sugar around 100 and blood pressure around 120/70. There are any number of useful drugs that could help. But they would by no means deal with the cause of her problems or bring her to wellness.

Sandi isn't just a math equation that I can fix with drugs or surgery. She is a person, plain and simple. To treat her properly I need to understand every aspect of her life -- her food cravings that she likens to getting a crack hit, her feelings of defeat as she gives in night after night, her feelings of powerlessness and isolation. I need to look at her family; her life circumstances; her mental and spiritual health; her relationships; her daily routine; where she lives and how she gets to work each day. I need to provide to her with a comprehensive list of additional resources -- therapists, counselors, nutritionists, exercise trainers, spiritual counselors, her personal "go to" team to buttress every corner of her personhood.

Sandi will go to a long-term rehabilitative facility that treats patients with chronic eating disorders by addressing the physical and emotional components that make up the distress I witnessed at her intervention. The list of factors is lengthy, but each of them is deeply embedded in every tear that rolls down her cheek as she shares her story. And Sandi's tears are a call to action.

As I write this, the news is that the House passed the health care reform bill which will now move to the Senate. As government does its part to grapple with the economics of coverage, we the care providers and we the people have an enormous part to play. All of us must work together to create the change we need so that all Americans can experience a culture of health and well-being. Health care reform is not just about who pays. It must also address what we are paying for. And we have to start paying for health rather than treating sickness.

We need to create a culture of health and wellness that fosters a nationwide understanding that personal behaviors are a major factor in health and well-being. And at the same time, we need to make the necessary societal changes so that all individuals are supported in making the correct choices. We need to make it easier to do the right thing.

We need to create a culture of health and well-being in our country that teaches a new vision -- that true health involves being well in body, mind, and spirit in the context of one's community. We need to change the idea that health is simply the absence of disease. It isn't. It is much more than that. Health provides for a vital state of engagement with life.

Americans pay far more for health care than the citizens of any other nation, and these costs are escalating every year. In fact, spending on health care related expenses now consumes more than one out of every six dollars we earn. Yet we experience greater incidence of disease and the World Health Organization's analysis of healthy nation indicators puts our life expectancy near the very bottom of the top 40 nations.

How can this be?

The problem sits at the very core of how we approach health care.

American health care does not help people become or stay healthy and does not make it easy for people who are seeking prevention. We have a disease management system based on the episodic care of illness or trauma, which means we treat symptoms instead of causes. In essence, we can operate on Sandi, but we can't give her a comprehensive pathway to wellness after her surgery. True healing can only begin when we correctly diagnose the problem and treat the root cause.

When we treat body parts without caring for the whole patient, it means that we are leaving out one of the strongest healing forces available -- YOU, the person with the ailment.

We know from research that the digestive system is controlled by the mind and anxiety, depression, and fear affect its functioning. Social and psychological stress can aggravate a wide variety of diseases, such as diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure, and migraine headaches. Emotions affect heart rate, blood pressure, sleep patterns, stomach acid secretion, and elimination processes. Treating Sandi isn't about the biology of what caused her weight problem -- it's about understanding and addressing those dark hours at night where she finds herself in that vortex of anxiety, defeat and feelings of helplessness. That's a complex understanding that has taken me a lifetime to learn. We can't afford to ignore these connections when we treat people. We can't leave the person out of the equation.

Currently, the majority of our health care dollars are spent after a person is in crisis -- like when I have to bring in an interventionist and watch them go through an emotional catharsis. It costs the most to intervene when the possibilities for full recovery are the slimmest. Think about it. Last year, $2.1 trillion dollars were spent in this country on medical care, or roughly $12,000 per family, and 95 cents of every dollar were spent to treat diseases after they had already occurred.

The fact is -- it is much easier to prevent a disease from developing than it is to cure it once the problem has reached a critical stage.

Let's look at chronic disease as an example. More than half of Americans suffer from one or more chronic diseases and we know that conditions such as heart disease, cancer, and diabetes are not only the leading causes of death and disability in the United States, they drive more than half of the health care expenditures of the nation.

But we also know that seven of the most common chronic diseases -- cancer, diabetes, hypertension, stroke, heart disease, pulmonary conditions, and mental disorders -- have been linked to behavioral and environmental risk factors that can be addressed. They might even be prevented altogether if people were helped and encouraged to make better choices. By this I mean eating nutritionally sound food, adopting healthy habits such as not-smoking, building healthy relationships, living and working in non-toxic environments, being purposefully engaged in life, practicing stress reduction activities, and staying fit through exercise.

People often have a hard time believing that something as simple as the choices we make about our daily lives can be as powerful as drugs and surgery. But they are.

The World Health Organization just released a report revealing that global life expectancy could be increased by nearly five years and millions of lives could be saved annually by addressing 24 factors affecting health. The list includes a mixture of environmental, behavioral and physiological factors, such as air pollution, tobacco use and poor nutrition.

In a recent study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, CDC researchers found that individuals who adhered to four healthy lifestyle habits had a 78 percent lower risk for chronic disease, including diabetes, stroke, heart disease, and cancer. The four factors were never having smoked, having a body mass index (BMI) less than 30, exercising for at least 3.5 hours per week, and eating healthfully.

The Lifestyle Heart Trial published in the Lancet showed that people with severe coronary heart disease were able to stop or reverse it without drugs or surgery by simply making intensive lifestyle changes.

A trial published in the Journal of Urology by my colleague Dean Ornish showed that lifestyle changes can slow, stop, or even reverse the progression of early-stage prostate cancer.

You get the point. Or do you? This isn't theory. These aren't utopian pipe dreams. This isn't idealism. This is evidence-based peer reviewed science that even the most methodical and empirically minded individual can understand.

Said differently, the science suggests that the reason lifestyle change programs work so well is because the combined interventions affect gene expression, turning on genes that prevent disease and turning off genes that promote heart disease, prostate cancer, breast cancer, and other illnesses.

When you look at the big picture, improving the health of all Americans cannot be achieved by addressing the health care system in isolation from the rest of society. We have to change our entire culture. That's not as daunting as it sounds. It's simply a matter of how we look at things. The steps themselves are simple, but they require a social choreography and a new outlook. On a positive note, in all my years in medicine, I have never felt we were at such a critical mass as we are now for these ideas to take root and grow. Regardless of the outcome of the health care reform debate, the national discussion has created a turning point for the way we see and prioritize health.

We have to make the promotion of health part of what we do in our homes and in our places of work. This could range from reducing the amount of toxic chemicals we use for cleaning -- to planning nutritional meals for our families -- to demanding smoke-free work environments -- to making time in our schedules for exercise -- to adopting corporate wellness programs that reward healthy behaviors.

Being health conscious involves monitoring what food we grow and how we manufacture it, which includes anything from supporting local farmers -- to buying organic foods -- to regulating how our food is genetically altered -- to asking major food processing companies to remove trans fats and reduce sugar content in their products.

Our cultural emphasis on health must involve improving the quality of our air and water. This could mean planting more trees, placing stricter demands on automobile emissions, eliminating contamination sources flowing into our lakes and oceans, and creating riparian buffers along our rivers.

City planning and health departments need shared goals. Having health as a priority in community design would mean creating more bicycle and walking paths, establishing a network of green rooftops, creating community gardens and ensuring that all residents have access to fresh food.

Health promotion has to be part of the educational process of our children. This would include teaching nutrition and stress reduction in elementary and middle schools, ensuring that food served in cafeterias is healthy and nutritious, banning the sale of soda and candy on school premises, and demanding that recess and physical education classes are never cut from the school day.

Our focus on health has to be part of the work processes of our corporations, which means helping employees in their pursuit of better health, eliminating toxins from the manufacturing process, and creating products that leave smaller footprints or -- in the case of medicines -- produce less side effects.

And it has to be part of our everyday culture. This can mean anything from having access to calorie counts for restaurant items -- to encouraging our friends to make better choices -- to ensuring that insurance companies reimburse for prevention.

When we do all this, not only will each individual benefit, so will the whole country. An investment in health and wellness is an investment in our future prosperity and the strength of our nation.

We are so close, and I hold great hope. Lets do it.

More on Health Care
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huffington
Subject:Mars Rover Stuck: NASA Struggles To Free Spirit From Sand
Time:11:26 pm.

LOS ANGELES — For NASA's stuck Mars rover, the Spirit may be willing, but the wheels could prove too weak. The space agency on Thursday outlined a rescue plan to try to free the rover Spirit, which has been bogged in a sand trap on the red planet for half a year. The risky operation is expected to last several months.

"If it cannot make the great escape from this sand trap, it's likely that this lonely spot straddling the edge of this crater might be where Spirit ends its adventures on Mars," said Doug McCuistion, who heads the Mars exploration program at NASA headquarters.

The plucky rover was driving backward in April when its wheels broke through the crusty surface and became mired in a patch of talcum-like dirt. It tried to crab its way out, but its wheels sunk deeper.

After rehearsing various escape tries on Earth using prototype rovers, NASA said it was finally ready to provide some roadside assistance on Mars.

The first driving commands will be sent to Spirit on Monday, but engineers cautioned the wheels likely will have high slippage.

The plans calls for Spirit to drive forward and retrace its steps.

"If we follow our old tracks out, we may be able to make better progress," said rover driver Ashley Stroupe of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Spirit landed on Mars with six working wheels but soon lost movement in its right front wheel. It had been rolling around the red planet dragging the gimpy wheel before it got stuck.

To complicate matters, images snapped by the rover show rocks pushing up against its underbelly, which could make it harder for the wheels to get traction.

Freeing Spirit is the toughest challenge faced by NASA since Spirit and its twin Opportunity parachuted to opposite sides of Mars in 2004. The twin rovers beat expectations by working beyond their three-month warranty.

Efforts to extract Spirit will continue until at least February. If the rover is not free by then, a review panel may decide whether it's worth it to keep on trying, McCuistion said.

It's been a tough year for Spirit. Along with being stuck, it had recurring memory glitches and problems with its antenna.

Despite its predicament, the rover has not been idle. Instead, it has been busy studying the soil to get a better idea of the past environment of Mars.

___

On the Net:

Free Spirit page: http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/newsroom/free-spirit.html

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huffington
Subject:Andy Borowitz: Carrie Prejean Storms Off Own Sex Tape; Calls Vibrator's Behavior 'Inappropriate'
Time:11:23 pm.

NEW YORK (The Borowitz Report) - One day after clashing with CNN host Larry King, former Miss California Carrie Prejean showed another flash of anger today, storming off the set of her own sex tape.

While it is unclear what precisely set Ms. Prejean off, she seems to have been riled by the behavior of her vibrator, which appeared in the tape with her.

"I'm sorry, but you are being inappropriate," she snapped at the vibrator before leaving.

The vibrator, which was left to complete the remainder of the sex tape on its own, could not be reached for comment. More here.

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huffington
Subject:Nicole Kidman Busts Out At CMAs (PHOTOS)
Time:11:16 pm.

Nicole Kidman attended the Country Music Awards Wednesday night with husband Keith Urban, and the Oscar-winning actress shed her often demure look with a daring pink dress.





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huffington
Subject:Alex Remington: Ong-Bak 2: The Best Martial Arts Movie You Never Saw
Time:11:11 pm.

You probably didn't see Ong-Bak 2, the prequel to spectacular 2003 film that introduced American audiences to muay thai, the Thai national martial art. Filmed in an almost distractingly slick style, with slow-motion replays of its hero's most eye-popping stunts, it made a star of Tony Jaa and a minor splash on this side of the Atlantic. But Jaa has worked slowly, and just 2005's The Protector was his only star vehicle between the first and second Ong-Bak. If you like martial arts, it was worth the wait.

Homegrown American martial arts stars are virtually nonexistent, following the primes of Chuck Norris, Eric Roberts, Jeff Speakman, Steven Seagal, and the Three Ninjas. But in Asia, with numerous state-subsidized film industries and national fighting styles, and nearly a century of collective chop-socky film history, martial arts movies are more than just a genre, they're a medium through which other genres can be filtered. In recent years, those films have been less occupied with envelope-pushing fights and more with relationships between characters: doomed love story (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), opera (Curse of the Golden Flower), historical drama (Jet Li's Fearless), meditation on romance and politics (Hero). In the hands of arthouse directors, export martial arts movies have gotten highbrow, while the domestics are as they always have been: as interchangeable, delightful, absurd, and intricately choreographed as a Bollywood musical.

While Ong-Bak was a modern classic set in contemporary Bangkok, its successor is set in medieval Thailand, with a poorly-explained plot about a military uprising against the rightful monarch and a main character who finds himself caught up in larger matters against his will. There's a halting love story that's completely abandoned, and a series of extended flashbacks to childhood that fills in the plot gaps. Jaa, who codirected, often uses a fairly monochromatic color palette. The movie is often unintentionally funny, as often happens when serious philosophical themes are surrounded by a guy beating the crap out of 20 people standing in a circle attacking one at a time. Reviewers and raters of the film have tended to focus on its flaws -- it only has a collective 6.4 out of 10 on IMDB -- rather than on its eye-popping action sequences.

And those action sequences are among the best ever committed to film. Ong-Bak 2 expands its ambition considerably, and despite its flaws, it is one of the best action epics since the woefully underseen Apocalypto. The actor who plays a younger version of Jaa, Natdanai Kongthong, is stunning in his own right in a crocodile mud wrestling sequence at the start of the movie. Another flashback shows the boy becoming a man, capped by a spectacular extended training sequence even better than Gordon Liu's showstopper as Pai Mei in Kill Bill Volume 2. Its climax makes the Bollywood connection even more explicit, as Jaa crashes a royal dance and attacks the usurper in a seamless spectacle, and then attempts to fight off the entire royal guard.

Tony Jaa is the best martial artist in movies today, and the charisma of his fists is nothing short of breathtaking. Like Bruce Lee in the '70s and Jet Li in the '80s and '90s, he's quite simply the most compelling action star in the world. Jaa's three movies are each modern classics for martial arts aficionados: it's just a shame that it's taken him years to complete each film. This is quite simply one of the most vital and necessary martial arts films in years.

Rating: 90

Crossposted at Alex Remington.

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huffington
Subject:Larry King Defends Carrie Prejean Interview: "I Didn't Ask Anything Wrong"
Time:11:08 pm.

Larry King has responded to his controversial interview with Carrie Prejean, telling "Entertainment Tonight" that he did no wrong.

King told "ET" that he "didn't understand it all" when Prejean call him "inappropriate," removed her microphone and threatened to walk off his show Wednesday night.

"I won't even dignify it," he said. "I didn't ask anything wrong. I didn't know what was inappropriate. I'm doing my job."

Donald Trump agrees. The Miss Universe owner told HLN's "Showbiz Tonight" that he as surprised by Prejean's reaction.

"'Inappropriate' is more of a sexual term, as far as I'm concerned," Trump told "Showbiz Tonight" in an interview to air Thursday. "I mean -- inappropriate? He asked a very, very easy question and I was surprised that she just didn't say, 'Hey, listen, I can't answer that question.' Instead she wants to walk off the stage? It was very surprising."

"Anyway, life goes on," King said.

The interview airs on Thursday's "Entertainment Tonight."

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gizmodo
Subject: Behind the Scenes of Avatar [Image Cache]
Time:7:40 pm.

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gizmodo
Subject: Want To Upgrade Yourself? Head To The Bionic Body Shop [This Cyborg Life]
Time:7:00 pm.

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gizmodo
Subject: Why Aren't More People Talking About the Palm Pixi? [Chart Of The Day]
Time:6:25 pm.

We, as in the tech press, are all over Palm's new mini-Pre. But we, as in the internet, just don't seem to care about it—just ask Google.

Compared against the Droid Eris, the decidedly secondary, little-advertised rebranded Hero that happens to be launching alongside the Droid Droid (and also happens to be the cheapest new Android phone on the market), the Pixi's hasn't been driving much Google traffic at all, according to Google Trends. More odd is that even with reviews starting to hit, exciting deals showing up online and a release date rapidly approaching, the Pixi's buzz is flat. Yes, that Pixi—thelegitimately interesting handset aimed at a broader audience than its much buzzier predecessor. Hm.

A couple of points: Although I searched for "Droid Eris" in quotes, there's a good chance the Eris is getting a leg up on Google searches by piggybacking on the hyper-hyped Droid Proper. Also, I've seen three people, two of whom work with gadgets for a living, write "Pixi" as "Pixie" in the last 24 hours, which is funny! Also: probably a bad sign, for the buzz. But still, that explains a disparity, not totally flat interest, or the weirdly tiny bump in attention the phone got when pricing was announced back in October. General public: what gives? [Google Trends]




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yankeesfans
Subject:the teeth don't really fit, though...
Posted by:lilliah.
Time:8:00 pm.
Mood: amused.
Derek has a cameo as a homeless dude in Mark Wahlberg/Will Ferrell's new movie The Other Guys. The wig is breathtaking, lol.

Because it's big )
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fleshbot_feed
Subject: Where The Party's At: The Real Stars Of The Fleshbot Awards [You Are There]
Time:7:00 pm.

Sure, the press at the Fleshbot Awards may have been focused on Levi Johnston, but what were the real VIPs doing? Nikola Tamindzic shot some of our favorite sexy stars in the upstairs. Take a peek below the jump.

Belladonna
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Belladonna
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Syd Blakovich, Jessie Lee, and Ellen Stagg
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jessie Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Syd Blakovich and Jessie Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jessie Lee and Ellen Stagg
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Darenzia and Jade Vixen
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Darenzia and Jade Vixen
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Playgirl go-go boys Matt and Chris
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Playgirl go-go boys Matt and Chris
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Playgirl go-go boys Matt and Chris
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Justin Bond and John Cameron Mitchell
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jo Boobs, The Baroness, and Dante Posh
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Our sponsors at njoy
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Miss Calico
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Miss Calico
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Lorelei Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jiz Lee and Lorelei Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jiz Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Lorelei Lee, Jiz Lee, and Joanna Angel
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Lorelei Lee, Jiz Lee, and Joanna Angel
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Joanna Angel
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Joanna Angel
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jessie Lee and Jonathan Ames
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Ellen Stagg and Jessie Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jiz Lee and Justine Joli
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jiz Lee and Justine Joli
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Justine Joli and the njoy Eleven
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Arpad Miklos and Jiz Lee
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Brian Moylan and Arpad Miklos
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Jiz Lee, Lux Alptraum, and Justine Joli. Editors get all the babes.
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Syd Blakovich and Lux Alptraum. Editors really get all the babes.
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)
Syd Blakovich
Photo by Nikola Tamindzic (homeofthevain.com)



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officialgaiman
Subject:A VERY SEKRIT PASSPHRASE
Time:10:04 pm.
posted by Neil
There were 38 independent bookshops around the land who had Graveyard Book parties. The people at Harpers somehow got it down to 11, and they sent them to me to judge the winner. The winner gets me for a signing in December. I watched the 11 videos/descriptions/ photos. I watched them again. I watched them yet again, this time with Lorraine, my assistant, watching too and saying helpful things like, "They are all so good. Whoo. Don't know how you'll make a decision. Look at that! They're line dancing to Monster Mash! And that Death is on stilts, isn't he. Is that a horse? A horse in a store? These are amazing." The fourth time, Woodsman Hans wandered in from the deep woods (where he is making a pond) and watched them too.

Then I made my decision. I called Elyse Marshall at Harpers and told her. "Ah," she said. "I'll have to check with the lawyers to find out if you can do that."

So we wait.

...

I posted the Amanda Palmer current East Coast tour dates here last night. http://www.amandapalmer.net/afp/upcoming-shows for venues and details.

Today it occurred to me that in the past when I've had friends on tour, I've often done special "Neil sent me" things, where people who come from this blog get some special free thing, which a) is nice for the people who get the free thing and b) tells the person on tour that people are really coming from the blog. I did it with Thea Gilmore (who is starting a new UK tour next week. People in the UK, go and see live Thea Gilmore, for she is wonderful: http://www.theagilmore.net for dates and venues.) I've done it for The Magnetic Fields, who, incidentally, have a new album coming out on Jan 26th. And then there's the Green Goddess restaurant in New Orleans, where you can mention the "Mezze of Destruction" to tell them you came from here and get sent something wonderful to eat or drink. (It changes, depending on what chef Chris DeBarr feels like making.)

I should do it for Amanda. I called her up and told her.

She called me back. "Beth and I have put our heads together and come up with a code phrase for people from your blog," she said. "So they say it and get a special free thing from the merch table."

"Fire away," I said.

"We think they should come over to the merch table and point to this poster...




...and say 'That chick in the yellow corset crowdsurfing looks kind of hot. I wonder if she's dating anyone?' And then they get something for free."

I said I thought that was a very bad idea, because people might say that anyway, and it was an awful lot for people to remember. And what if they sold out of that poster early that night?

I said, "What about any variant of 'Neil sent me from his blog?'"

"Absolutely not," she said. "That's boring."

I told her to leave it with me.

And then I stared at this screen glumly, with nothing happening in my head, and real work I should be doing starting to nip at my heels. So I turned to the Oracular Orb of truth at http://www.neilgaiman.com/oracle/ and I clicked on the orb and shook it.


Here is Doug Jones and some strange man it said.

If you go to one of Amanda Palmer's shows on this tour, wander over to the Merch table, and say that you found about it from some strange man's blog. And something good will probably happen. (If they just stare at you, tell them it was me, and this blog. If they keep staring tell them that the chick in the yellow corset in the poster looks like she probably has a really nice boyfriend.)

....

This seemed like a very good cause to me:

Hi Neil,

I am a long-time fan, and have even met you backstage at a Tori show (though that was many years ago!). I am writing to ask a bit of a favor.

About 10 years ago, I appeared on 20/20 with Tori, speaking about sexual violence. Since then, I've stayed close with Tori whose been a mentor of the best kind. I also started a nonprofit, Pandora's Project, that provides support, information, and resources to rape and sexual abuse survivors and their supporters. We operate Pandora's Aquarium, an online support group with more than 20,000 registered members.

Recently, I was named a 2009 L'Oreal Woman of Worth for my volunteer work with Pandora's. I was chosen for this honor from more than 2,500 applicants.

Now, one of the ten 2009 Honorees will be selected as the national honoree through a public online vote. Her cause will get an additional $25,000, and a lot of media exposure. This is the first time L'Oreal has recognized a sexual violence organization, and becoming the national honoree would allow me to shine a spotlight on this issue that affects so many women and women.

Voting is easy - people just need to go to the url below, enter their email address in the box on the right, and click the "submit vote" button. Each email address is allowed one vote, and voting ends November 24.

http://www.womenofworth.com/Honorees/Honoree2009Detail.aspx?nomid=5657c940-425b-47a2-879d-ed3c2d82b56f

I am wondering if you might be willing to send people to this voting link via your (infinitely popular) twitter or blog. I understand if it's not something you can do, but my experience running a small-budget nonprofit tells me it's always wise to ask!

Thank you for taking the time to read this.

Shannon Lambert


I'll plug it happily.

Your correspondent asks "Will you be reading the original version where the wolf actually is killed, and not the 'oh my goodness our kids can't hear about death' version in which they bring him to the zoo?"

I fear she's in error; in the original version, written by Prokofiev, Peter snares the wolf, then convinces the hunters NOT to kill it, but to take it to the zoo.


I've been researching, and that's what I found out too. Wikipedia has a list of changes made in various versions of the story (Disney, for example, had the wolf not eat the duck). But the wolf was always taken to the zoo...
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wiredtopstories
Subject:Playlist: MGMT's Goldwasser Walks You Through Killer Tracks
Time:11:00 pm.
The musician shares tunes that influenced his songwriting in a podcast chat with Wired senior editor Nancy Miller.


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wiredtopstories
Subject:Use Google to Create Graphs and Charts
Time:10:00 pm.
If you're stuck making graphs with clunky desktop software — or with pen and paper — you’ll be interested to know there are some simple web tools for creating them on the fly. Specifically, Google offers some easy ways to generate graphs without having to pull out the Sharpies.


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