Sunday, May 9, 2010

Dallas Braden PERFECT GAME: Oakland A's Pitcher Perfect Against Tampa Bay Rays

OAKLAND, Calif. — Dallas Braden definitely owns the mound now.

Braden pitched the 19th perfect game in major league history on Sunday, shutting down the majors' hottest team and leading the Oakland Athletics to a 4-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays.

Braden threw his arms in the air after Gabe Kapler grounded out to shortstop for the final out, his simmering feud with Yankees star Alex Rodriguez merely a footnote to the first perfect game for Oakland in 42 years.

The closest the Rays got to a hit was Jason Bartlett's liner to third leading off the game. Evan Longoria tried to bunt leading off the fifth, drawing boos from the small crowd.

"Pretty cool," Braden said. "I don't know what to think about it just yet. There's definitely a select group. I'd like to have a career more than today."

Before this gem, Braden was best known for his enraged reaction to Rodriguez walking across the mound on April 22. Still angry after the game, he told the slugger "to go do laps in the bullpen" if he wanted to traipse across a mound.

The squabble was still simmering last week. On Friday in Boston, Rodriguez said he didn't want to extend Braden's "extra 15 minutes of fame."

A-Rod struck a far more conciliatory tone Sunday.

"I've learned in my career that it's always better to be remembered for some of the good things you do on the field, and good for him," Rodriguez said before facing Boston. "He threw a perfect game. And, even better, he beat the Rays."

Jesse Stone No Remorse

JESSE STONE: NO REMORSE, starring Emmy® and Golden Globe® Award winner Tom Selleck, will be broadcast Sunday, May 9th, 9/8c (2 hours) on the CBS Television Network. Selleck reprises his Emmy-nominated role as Jesse Stone ("Jesse Stone: Sea Change") in the sixth installment of the Jesse Stone franchise from Sony Pictures Television. The series includes "Stone Cold," "Jesse Stone: Night Passage," "Jesse Stone: Death in Paradise," "Jesse Stone: Sea Change" and "Jesse Stone: Thin Ice." The movies are based on characters created by the late Robert B. Parker in the best-selling series of books.

In JESSE STONE: NO REMORSE, Police Chief Jesse Stone, who was suspended by the Paradise, Mass. Town Council, begins moonlighting for his friend, State Homicide Commander Healy, by investigating a series of murders in Boston, leaving Rose and Suitcase to handle a crime spree in Paradise on their own. Jesse pours his energy into his work in an effort to push away his twin demons: booze and women. When his investigation leads to notorious mob boss Gino Fish, Jesse's pursuit becomes hazardous.

Emmy and Golden Globe Award winner Kathy Baker ("Picket Fences") and Kohl Sudduth ("Grosse Pointe") reprise their roles as Rose Gammon and Luther "Suitcase" Simpson, the only police officers in Paradise. Stephen McHattie ("2012") reprises his role as State Homicide Commander Healy, as does William Devane ("24") as Jesse's psychiatrist, Dr. Dix, and William Sadler ("The Shawshank Redemption") as Gino Fish. Saul Rubinek ("Warehouse 13") returns as Hasty Hathaway, fresh from a stint in prison, and Krista Allen ("The Starter Wife") joins the cast as Hathaway's ex-wife, Cissy, who never misses an opportunity to tell Jesse she's interested.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Your request is being processed... Bethenny Frankel In Labor? Real Housewife Having Baby Early

Bethenny Frankel is reportedly having her baby almost a month early. A source told Life & Style she went into labor late Thursday night. If true, she is tweeting from the delivery room.

"Thanks so much everyone.your messages were so thoughtful and sweet.I read every one.I love you guys!" Bethenny tweeted around noon on Friday. Her Twitter account had been strangely silent for the past 14 hours.

Life & Style released the following statement:

Oh, baby! Real Housewife of New York City Bethenny Frankel is in labor, a source tells Life & Style.

"Her water broke at 12:46 a.m. She's at the hospital now," says a friend close to the reality star, who recently married entrepreneur Jason Hoppy.

Bethenny and baby are running a little ahead of schedule, as the mama-to-be's due date was set for early June.

The New Cast of 'Friday Night Lights' Gets Ready to Play Some Football

Most television shows set in high school go to ridiculous lengths to keep the characters together long past graduation day (see: 'Beverly Hills, 90210' and 'Gossip Girl'). But when the time comes for the high school-ers on 'Friday Night Lights' to move on -- most of them actually do.

For season 4, which aired on DirecTV last fall and premieres tonight on NBC, 'Friday Night Lights' has introduced a new set of characters played by Michael B. Jordan, Jurnee Smollett and Matt Lauria. The three talked to TV Squad about joining the critically-acclaimed show.

Last season, after being forced out at Dillon High School, Coach Eric Taylor (Kyle Chandler) went over to the other side of town to field a team at the newly-reopened East Dillon. Jordan (who may be best known as Wallace on 'The Wire') plays troubled quarterback Vince Howard, while Lauria's Luke Cafferty is a star running back. Smollett's character, Jess Merriweather, has history with Vince, but also forms a friendship with transfer student Landry (Jesse Plemons).

Vince and Luke, Friday Night LightsJordan, Lauria and Smollett chatted with me about the big shoes they had to fill, love triangles and doing their own stunts. (Note: I saw the first run on DirecTV, but there are no major spoilers ahead.) Read a season 4 preview here.

How did you guys feel coming on this already-established show as the "new generation"?

Lauria: It's a huge honor, for sure. I'm a huge fan of the show and I've watched all the episodes leading up to the fourth season. To go and become a part of it is really a dream come true. Definitely when we first started, I had this huge feeling of responsibility to try and live up to the standards of myself and so many other fans.

Were you worried about being accepted by fans who'd grown to love the original characters?

Jordan: You can't really think about that ... you can't really get that inside your head, because people are going to blog, people are going to comment. Everyone has their own opinions, they have their own favorites and what not. But, you can't compare yourself to other characters on the show because everybody has their own thing, their own way and they bring something different to the table. I think for us, it was just [about] coming in and figuring out our characters and being true to who they are.
Lauria: The writers did an amazing job of transitioning from Dillon to East Dillon really smoothly. I've found that all the die-hard fans of the show have even said that to us at different times. They said, "I didn't know if I'd like the new school, or the new characters," but it just happened so seamlessly that they love it. They've all been rallying behind us and really wanted to see this underdog school succeed. [The fans] are eased into it. Some of the characters graduate and move on, but many of the really awesome characters that we all love are still on the show. Landry and Matt Saracen, Tim Riggins, even Lyla shows up for a little bit and of course Aimee Teegarden's Julie is going to be around, even in the fifth season. There's some of the new, but it's not like they got rid of the old. All the stuff that we love about 'Friday Night Lights' is still there and it's back.

Kyle Chandler, Michael B JordanDid you guys feel like you integrated easily into the cast? Was it difficult to fit in at all?

Smollett: Thanks to the cast and crew, it was seamless, honestly. They made such an effort to make us feel at home, they went above and beyond the call of duty just to make us feel like one of them, one of the 'Friday Night Lights' family members. When we landed, there was a huge cast dinner where the producers and the cast got together to welcome all of us. They described what it's like and they just pumped us up, almost like coach was giving us one of those --
Jordan: Pregame speech?
Smollett: Yeah, yeah! He was giving us a pregame speech or something and it was great. It completely broke the ice and we were so fired up that we just wanted to get in and get our fingers wet.
Jordan: Exactly. The more they talked about it -- it didn't really do it any justice because you can't really explain what it's like to shoot a scene for 'Friday Night Lights' until you're actually in it and you're actually doing it because there's nothing like it. Any job that I've done prior to this just doesn't come close.

Sometimes, in shows that feature high school-age characters, they try to keep everyone together. Maybe they all happen to end up at the same college, even that's not realistic. But 'Friday Night Lights' didn't choose to go that route ...

Smollett: I think it speaks volumes about the level of integrity the writers and creators try to maintain on this show. No one is trying to just write things for the sake of drama, it's really about searching out what's truthful and what's not. Some of the characters graduate this year, we're going to graduate. That level, that tone is set from the top and it just trickles down to everyone who is part of the crew, all of us as actors. We all just try to search for our own individual truths and maintain that kind of credibility with the show.

Jurnee Smollett, Michael B JordanDo any of you identify with your characters? Are you able to relate to them?

Lauria: It's interesting, because Mike plays a character who is really, really athletic and really masculine and tough. I mean, it couldn't be further from the truth in reality. [Laughs] No athletic ability whatsoever -- no, I got to give credit where credit is due. He does a lot of his own stunts, he's really learned how to play football and throw the ball. He's got a cannon and I'm a little jealous [laughs].
Smollett: We can definitely relate. As an actor though, there's always something in your character that you see yourself in ... I know that the kind of dynamic I have with my siblings and my brothers, I definitely can relate to the way I tease them and joke with them and the way I kind of sometimes feel like I'm one of the boys. I have four brothers in my own life and my character has three brothers, it's kind of those dynamics where they tease me about who --
Jordan: Who you're dating?
Smollett: Yeah, like with Vince. My character is dating two football players -- or in a love triangle I should say -- and that I can't relate to, that's not me, but ...
Lauria: I think that each of us has ways that our characters probably -- I mean there are things about our characters that attracted all of us to them and those are the parts that really shine because we can rally behind them. It's the same way that you as a fan relate to some characters ... I definitely am inspired by my character's passion and drive. It's easy to be inspired by these characters.

Jesse Plemons, Michael B. JordanJurnee, as you said, your character is involved in a love triangle. Can you see both sides of it or do you have a favorite in your head?

Smollett: [Laughs] My character, Jess Merriweather -- it's interesting because she's the daughter a former football player and my father never went pro, so he hates the game, yet he loves the game. He doesn't want her dating football players, he doesn't want her around them. She ends up in a love triangle with two of them and I guess this is how life works some times. It's crazy, when I'm in the scenes, I feel so bad for Jess, because she really, genuinely has a connection with both guys. I would always try and heckle the creators and the writers to try and find out who she goes with. There's such friction and history between Jess and Vince. He's broken and she likes to fix things [laughs].

Matt and Michael, did you play football before? And Michael, are you really doing your own stunts?

Jordan: I never played football before I got the role and came down to Texas. I threw the football around maybe five or six times before, honestly. Once I got down there, I just took responsibility and tried to step up and do the part justice. That's one of the joys of being an actor -- you wear so many different hats. You learn different trades that you never would have done or you never would have experience doing one thing or being in one occupation. Michael B. Jordan as Vince HowardI kind of enjoy the fact that I can become this high school football star. So, yeah. Doing my own stunts, yeah.
Lauria: Yeah, people are impressed. Me on the other hand, the only teams I've ever been on growing up were track teams and also soccer. I played a lot of backyard football, but never actually wore pads and stuff. That was something to get used to. All of a sudden you're a lot wider, you've got a heavy helmet on. Now I'm used to it, but I remember us hugging a bunch of people on set, like the ladies who do your make-up or whatever, and then clocking them in face with our shoulder pads. [Laughs] But, no, it's a lot of fun. The thing I love about being on a football show is it's like being in a war movie or something like that. There's something tangible that you can fight for right in front of you. It's like instant drama, instant obstacles, so it's pretty exciting.
Smollett: Nice way to put it, Matt!
Lauria: I wrote it down.


Matt, you're involved in a pretty heavy, dramatic storyline when your character, Luke, gets into a difficult situation with a girl, Becky (Madison Burge). Without spoiling anything, it's a storyline that could be somewhat controversial.
Lauria: Yeah, Luke finds himself in trouble with a lady. [Laughs] without giving too much away, it's just like Jurnee said, the writers of this show never compromise the truth and if that means dealing with the hard issues, that's what they do.Matt Lauria and Madison Burge They do it in an honest way and I don't think that they sugar coat it. What I loved about this challenge with this young lady, was that these kids are just 16, 17 years old and it's not going to be easy. They're not going to have all the answers, they're going to make mistakes and they're not going to have the most smoothly-operated course through those mistakes. There's a lot of learning on the way and so I think I was privileged to be able to play the part with these two kids who are struggling to make it work, to figure things out and in a situation that's well over their heads. For an actor, that's the exciting part, that's the fun stuff, that's the stuff that lets you get dirty and have fun.

You guys are filming season five?
Jordan: Yes, we're currently shooting season five right now.

What's the mood on set, since it's probably the last season?

Jordan: Nah, we'll be back, we'll be back. They say that all the time.
Smollett: We're fired up!
Jordan: We're on episode five right now in the fifth season, it's going pretty quick, pretty fast. We have eight more to go. We'll knock 'em out.
Matt Lauria, Taylor KitschLauria: The mood on set -- I mean everyone loves to come to work on this show. It's the greatest, most artistic and unpressured atmosphere except for when Mike's --
Smollett: Being a diva.
Lauria: He's a diva. She said it, not me. But the mood on set when I'm --
Jordan: That's what I've got to do to end the conversation? Next. [Laughs]
Smollett: See, we have so much fun. It's criminal to work on 'Friday Night Lights.' [Laughs]
Lauria: I've got to give a shout out to our caterers, the food that we eat here is the best.

Well, you are in Texas.

Jordan: Very true, very true.
Smollett: Another great thing is we are in Texas. Honestly, one thing that Nan [Bernstein, producer] was saying to all of us was like, "Isn't it great to fly to Dillon and see what Dillon would look like?"
Jordan: You can't get this in L.A. The commodities, the atmosphere -- you can't fake it, you have to be in it.
Smollett: The weather? it's hot.
Jordan: Yeah, it's hot down here.

Michael, do you still get recognized for your role on 'The Wire'? Do people still come up to you and ask "Where's Wallace?"

Jordan: All the time! I learned to answer to Wallace quite frequently, that's just the proof of the pudding. A show like 'The Wire,' everybody is a fan, it's a good show, people don't forget it. 'Friday Night Lights' is one of those shows that people won't forget for years to come, what we're doing will never be forgotten.

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One of the longest standing rumors in football circles was finally confirmed on Friday evening. Adam Schefter reported that Houston Texans linebacker and reigning Defensive Rookie of the Year Brian Cushing has been suspended the first four games of the season for violating the league’s policy on performance-enhancing drugs. Making matters worse for Cushing is his appeal was already denied by the NFL. As Pro Football Talk points out, Cushing joins Shawne Merriman and Julius Peppers as the third Defensive Rookie of the Year to be busted for steroids in the last eight years.

As far back as high school, Cushing was rumored to be a steroids user. Cushing went on to star at USC despite being limited by shoulder and ankle injuries at various points in his career. Then around draft time in 2009, a report said both Cushing and fellow USC linebacker Clay Matthews tested positive for steroids at the combine. That report turned out to be false. Now, we have confirmation that Cushing has used steroids. Whether he’s been escaping positive tests for years and just now was finally caught or if he just began using we don’t know. We do know that one of the longest standing rumors in football circles has finally been confirmed: Brian Cushing is a steroids user. Maybe some of the teams that passed him up in the draft are saying “told you so.”

Thursday, May 6, 2010

AP US history practice tests

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Detlef Schrempf

Detlef Schrempf born on 21st January 1963, in Leverkusen, Federal Republic of Germany, is a retired German NBA basketball player.

He played college basketball at University of Washington, where he was named to the All-Pac-10 Team and The Sporting News All-America Second Team. At college, he was a member of the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity and majored in International Business.

Originally selected eighth overall by the Dallas Mavericks in the 1985 NBA Draft, Schrempf became a regular after being traded to the Indiana Pacers in exchange for veteran center Herb Williams. With the Pacers, he won consecutive NBA Sixth Man Awards in 1990 and 1991. He finished second in the NBA with a .478 three-point percentage in 1987, and eventually worked his way into the starting lineup. In the 1992-93 season, he was selected to the first of his three National Basketball Association All-Star Games with the others being in 1995 and 1997. He was the only player in the NBA in 1992-93 to finish in the top 25 in scoring (19.1 ppg), rebounding (9.5 rpg) and assists (6.0 apg).

Following the 1992-93 NBA season, Schrempf was traded to the Seattle SuperSonics for forward Derrick McKey and guard/forward Gerald Paddio. He ranked second in the NBA in three-point accuracy during the 1994-95 season with a 51.4 three-point field goal percentage.

Schrempf was released in 1999 and signed the same day by the Portland Trail Blazers, with whom he played until his retirement from professional basketball in 2001, playing in a total of 1136 regular season games and 114 playoff games. He was the first European player in NBA history to score over 15,000 career points. On January 24, 2006, the Seattle SuperSonics hired Schrempf as an assistant coach under Bob Hill, who coached Schrempf in Indiana.Schrempf played for the West Germany national team in the 1984 Olympics and the 1983 and 1985 European championships. In 1992, he played for the German Olympic team.

Schrempf established the Detlef Schrempf Foundation in 1996 to benefit local charities. The foundation hosts the Detlef Schrempf Celebrity Golf Classic at McCormick Woods Golf Course in Port Orchard, Washington every summer.

In 2004, Schrempf appeared in a commercial for IBM. He also appeared in two episodes of the German soap opera Gute Zeiten Schlechte Zeiten. Schrempf also had a cameo appearance in the hit television show, Married… with Children.

On May 6, 2010 Schrempf appeared as himself on the NBC Television show, Parks And Recreation.

PTSD: Get tougher, soldiers

It really upset me to read of the use and misuse of post-traumatic stress disorder ("PTSD rules an invitation for false VA claims," May 2). The Department of Veterans Affairs and we American taxpayers are being scammed by all too many of the soldiers who are coming home from a so-called war claiming permanent mental damage from the war's trauma. The VA is paying way too much to too many claimants whose trauma is with doubtful cause, and certainly self-made to draw VA disability dollars.

I'm a very old veteran of two wars. In WWII, I was a combat infantryman in Italy. Our battalion had more casualties each day than all of the services have in the Middle East in a month. We fought one of the best armies ever, while now our services are fighting unorganized terrorists. We had no roofs over our heads, no meals except canned/boxed rations. We had no sanitary facilities except our shovels. We went for weeks without showers or clean clothes. Further, I spent the first very cold winter in Korea, where living conditions were terrible, and we were inadequately clothed.

Certainly, when we were back in the USA, we had a lot of adjusting to do, but we did it, just as we did our jobs against our nation's foes. In our time in the wars we were soldiers and did our duties with much risk of our lives and well-being.

Perhaps the VA should hire a lot of combat veterans to interview these PTSD applicants and to weed out the fakes, of which there have to be way too many. Many of their grandpas fought in real gory wars and had the strength of character to adjust again to civilian life.

After each war, I bit my tongue to avoid soldier's language and straightened my back to be a man -- and a self-sufficient man. The same can be done in 2010.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Kristi Gibson, Bret Michaels Wedding?


Is there going to be a Kristi Gibson, Bret Michaels wedding? Read about Kristi and see why marriage may finally be in the cards for this long term couple.

Thank goodness Bret Michaels is doing so well after suffering a life-threatening brain hemorrhage. It is a miracle, and it seems the rocker knows it.

He has now talked to People, who featured him on the cover, and revealed his bucket list. It seems that he is finally considering a wedding!

“As painful as this experience has been, I was given a second chance, right? I don’t want to sit around every night worrying this is going to happen again. What I want to do is make a positive bucket list and say, ‘I’m just gonna go for it.’ There’s just so much more I want to do and experience…[Getting married], for sure, is something I have never done. Kristi’s such a great person. We’ll see if that happens. But yes, that may be one of the big things on the list. My first goal is to get back (to) 100 per cent. I want to continue to rock the world, and I want to continue to love my family and be a good father.”

Here is a bit of background information on Kristi Gibson. First off, many people spell her name Kristy, but she opted for a different approach. She and Bret dated from 1994-2005 and they have two beautiful children together: Raine Elizabeth Sychak born May 20, 2000; and Jorja Bleu Sychak. Sychak is Bret’s real last name.

Kristi is gorgeous, she is 29 and a former model, just Bret’s type, as you can see from the picture above and his Rock of Love show, video of that is below. Photos of Kristi Gibson are hard to find, but you can see one photo here.

Readers, what do you think about a

Elisabeth Hasselbeck, Erin Andrews Dancing With The Stars Apology


Today on The View, Elisabeth Hasselbeck started crying as she apologized for the remarks she made criticizing Erin Andrews on her “skimpy” Dancing With The Stars outfit.

Here’s the transcript of the apology:

Speaking of Erin Andrews, who we just saw—you know, we talked about Dancing with the Stars yesterday, and I went home, wasn’t feeling that great about it. And I’m sitting there with Grace, my five-year-old, and she said, ‘Mommy, why do you look so sad?’

And I said, ‘Well, Grace, today… mommy hurt someone’s feelings, and…’ Gosh! And it’s harder when you’re explaining it to your kid. It was a moment that I thought I should explain to her, so I… yesterday, when we were talking about Erin, even though I was focused on the detestable criminal who’s behind bars, thankfully, who’s really made her life a living hell and, um, is in jail, I ended up hurting her. And, so I told Grace, I said, ‘Grace, Mommy feels really bad because I hurt somebody.’ So I took out her little devotional that we read, and I read her, ‘You know, Mommy always reads you reckless words pierce someone’s heart like a sword.’ And I told her and I promised her that I would use my words more mindfully, like I try to do, to build people up, not break them down.

And thankfully, she’s five and so cute, and she said to me, ‘Mommy, why don’t you just call Erin and tell her you’re sorry?’ So, thankfully, I listened to her, she’s a wise little girl, and I did. So, I’m really sorry and I wanted to offer that publicly, too, even though I did file that advice.

Here’s what Elisabeth Hasselbeck said originally to Erin Andrews:

I think in light of what happened … and as inexcusable as it was for that horrific guy to go in and try to peep on her in her hotel room … in some way, if I’m him, I’m like, ‘man, I could have just waited 12 weeks (nervous laughter from crowd)’ … I could have seen this, a little bit less, without the prison time

Kristi Gibson Helped Bret Michaels To The Hospital


Kristi Gibson apparently played a key role in saving the life of her boyfriend Bret Michaels.

Bret Michaels held an exclusive interview for the first time since being released from the hospital and talked to People Magazine about his incident the morning he experienced a massive brain hemorrhage.

Bret Michaels said that when he was actually having the brain hemorrhage it felt like he ‘was shot in the back of the head’. That’s when Bret’s girlfriend Kristi Gibson stepped in to rush him off to the hospital.

After it felt like someone shot him in the back of the head during his brain hemorrhage, Bret Michaels said that he also heard something pop. And it was then that he started pacing around his living room before asking his girlfriend Kristi Gibson to take him to the hospital emergency room.

“I knew I was slurring my words, and I was like ‘OK, this isn’t a headache. There’s something really bad happening,’” he said.

Finally, Bret Michaels reflected on the entire incident and had this to say:

“I’m a believer it’s a combination of will and good faith,” Michaels said. “Will — and good medical attention — and faith. It just wasn’t my time yet. I really believe that. If I had stayed on the couch for another hour, that probably would’ve done me in. In a weird way, God intervened: The appendicitis forced me to come home for a couple of days.”

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Spoof for a Cause: “Total Eclipse of the Cancer”


You’ve seen them in The Wedding Singer, Starsky and Hutch, Old School, and The Hangover, to name a few. Now, LA comedy band, The Dan Band, is starring in their most important music vid to date: a hilarious spoof of “Total Eclipse of the Heart” by Bonnie Tyler for the Noreen Fraser Foundation’s “Men For Women Now” campaign.

The lyrics aren’t exactly G-rated, but it might be the funniest way ever to remind women you care about to take care of themselves.
Like the song says, "detecting that sh*t early is the key to making sure that all the ladies that we love will grow old."

Glee – Run Joey Run Lyrics and Ringtone:-

[Rachel Berry]
Daddy please don’t it wasn’t his fault
He means so much to me
Daddy please don’t, we’re gonna get married
Just you wait and see

[Noah Puckerman]
Every night the same old dream I hate to close my eyes
I can’t erase the memory the sound of Julie’s cry
She called me up late that night she said :
Joe, don’t come over
My Dad and I just had a fight
And he stormed out the door

I’ve never seen him act this way,
My God, he’s goin’ crazy
He said he’s gonna make you pay
For what we done, he’s got a gun!

So run, Joey run, Joey run

[Rachel Berry]
Daddy please don’t, it wasn’t his fault
He means so much to me
Daddy please don’t, we’re gonna get married
Just you wait and see

http://lyrics-ringtone-download.com/glee-run-joey-run-lyrics-ringtone-download/

[Jesse St. James]
Got in my car and I drove like mad
Til I reached Julie’s place
She ran to me, with tear-filled eyes and bruises on her face
All at once I saw him there sneaking up behind me (watch-out!)
Then Julie yelled, “He’s got a gun!”
And she stepped in front of me

[Finn Hudson]
Suddenly, a shot rang out and I saw Julie falling
I ran to her, I held her close
When I looked down, my hands were red
And here’s the last words Julie said

[Rachel Berry]
Daddy please don’t, it wasn’t his fault
He means so much to me
Daddy please don’t, we’re gonna get married

aaaaaaah aaaaaaaaaah

Run, Joey run, Joey run, Joey run, Joey run
Joey run, Joey run…..!

RIP Ernie Harwell


In this life, you only get to meet so many beautiful people. I’ve been lucky. I knew Buck O’Neil. And I knew Ernie Harwell. This is the story I wrote about Ernie last September for Sports Illustrated. You know one of Ernie’s favorite poems was Sam Walter Foss’ “The House by the Side of the Road.” He would sometimes use a line or two during his broadcasts.

The key line in the poem: “Let me live in my house by the side of the road/and be a friend to man,”

For 92 years, William Earnest Harwell was a friend to man. Rest in peace Ernie.


* * *

Baseball is the President tossing out the first ball of the season and a scrubby schoolboy playing catch with his dad on a Mississippi farm. A tall, thin old man waving a scorecard from the corner of his dugout. That’s baseball. And so is the big, fat guy with a bulbous nose trotting home at the end of one of his 714 home runs.

I once asked Ernie Harwell why people loved him so. That’s a hard question for any person to answer, but it is especially challenging for a man as modest and decent as Ernie Harwell. “I’m just a failed newspaper man,” he would say whenever the praise grew too thick.

But the question remained: Few around sports have ever been as loved as Ernie Harwell, the Detroit Tigers baseball announcer for a half-century, going back to the summer before John F. Kennedy was elected president. Every room he walked into was filled with friends. Ernie said that maybe it was because his voice had always been, day after day, year after year, barbecue after barbecue, booming through summer thunderstorms. Maybe, he said, it is because baseball on the radio cools humid Sunday afternoons and lights up darkened nights for weary drivers, and keeps children company when muffled by flattened pillows.

“It’s just there,” he said of his own voice on the radio. “You can listen to it, if you want. Or you can be doing something else, and it just sort of drifts into your psyche.”

When I told him, no, that there was more in his 50-plus years of calling baseball games on the radio — something reassuring and wonderful and honest and warm and… well, he just cut me off with a grateful smile. I’m just a failed newspaperman, he said.

“It isn’t me that people love,” he said. “It’s baseball.”

There’s a man in Mobile who remembers that Honus Wagner hit a triple in Pittsburgh 46 years ago. That’s baseball. So is the scout reporting that a 16-year-old pitcher in Cheyenne is a coming Walter Johnson. Baseball is a spirited race of man against man, reflex against reflex. A game of inches. Every skill is measured. Every heroic, every failing is seen and cheered, or booed. And then it becomes a statistic.

Ernie Harwell was traded into the major leagues. It’s a pretty famous baseball story, but Ernie never hesitated to tell famous baseball stories. He felt certain that someone out there was hearing it for the very first time. Harwell was a Georgia boy, born in a little town called Washington, raised in a growing metropolis called Atlanta. He was a batboy for the minor league Atlanta Crackers when he was 5, and the radio announcer for the Atlanta Crackers when he got out of the Marines.

“The Atlanta Crackers!” his contemporary Buck O’Neil once said to Harwell. “Can you believe they actually called a team the Atlanta Crackers? And you know what’s even better? There was once a Negro Leagues team, and they called them the Atlanta BLACK Crackers!”

And the two of them laughed and laughed.

In 1948, the Brooklyn Dodgers announcer Red Barber was hospitalized and the team needed an announcer fast. And so Branch Rickey — a man who always believed a good trade could make all the difference — dealt a catcher named Cliff Dapper to the Crackers for their announcer, Ernie Harwell. Dapper, Harwell would occasionally mention, hit .471 in the big leagues (in 17 at-bats) and became the manager of the Crackers.

And Ernie Harwell went to the big leagues. To Brooklyn. In the first inning of his first game, he always said, Jackie Robinson stole home.

In baseball, democracy shines its clearest. The only race that matters is the race to the bag. The creed is the rule book. Color merely means something to distinguish one team’s uniform from another.

Baseball is a rookie, his experience no bigger than the lump in his throat as he begins fulfillment of his dream. It’s a veteran too, a tired old man of 35 hoping that those aching muscles can pull him through another sweltering August and September. Nicknames are baseball, names like Zeke and Pie and Kiki and Home Run and Cracker and Dizzy and Dazzy.

Words. Oh, how Ernie Harwell has loved words. That was the failed newspaperman in him. He did not speak much about numbers on the air. Radio was for words, for splashes of imagination, for poetry. He loved the Sam Walter Foss poem The House by the Side of the Road.

“Let me live in my house by the side of the road/and be a friend to man,” Foss wrote.

“He stood there like the house by the side of the road,” Ernie Harwell would say after strike three, “and watched that one go by.”

With Harwell, there was always something surprising — a story, a line from a play, a refrain from an old song. Oh, yes, there were familiar Harwell lines — what is baseball without the familiar? “It’s two for the price of one,” Ernie would say after a double play. When the fans booed an umpire he might offer something like, “Some of the umpires who paid to get in disagreed with that call.” And, of course, when a fan caught a foul ball, Ernie would give that fan a hometown. “That ball was caught by a fan from Ypsilanti,” or “and a fine catch was made by a lady from Windsor.”

For more than 40 years doing Detroit Tigers baseball, people in Michigan wondered how he knew.

Baseball is the cool, clear eyes of Rogers Hornsby, the flashing spikes of Ty Cobb, an overaged pixie named Rabbit Maranville.

Baseball is just a game as simple as a ball and bat, yet as complex as the American spirit it symbolizes. A sport, a business and sometimes almost even a religion.

Why, the fairy tale of Willie Mays making a brilliant World Series catch and then dashing off to play stickball in the street with his teenage pals. That’s baseball. So is the husky voice of a doomed Lou Gehrig saying, “I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth.”

He stayed in Brooklyn for only a year. And then he broadcast a game for the New York Giants — he was the quiet television voice when Bobby Thomson hit the home run in 1951 and Russ Hodges shouted, again and again, “The Giants win the pennant! The Giants win the pennant!” Ernie Harwell always loved Hodges’ call. But that wasn’t the way he called baseball games. He did not intrude. He did not care to be noticed. He believed that the sound of the crowd could be poetry.

After a time in Baltimore, he came to Detroit in 1960. And that was home. He would spend his days describing the grace of Al Kaline, the raw power of Willie Horton, the brief but blinding brilliance of Denny McLain, the remarkable arm strength of Aurelio Rodriguez, the tango of Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker, the force of Kirk Gibson. He would talk about Miss Lulu and home runs that were long gone and foul balls caught by men from Walla Walla.

And after a while, as it goes with the best baseball announcers, his voice blended into the Detroit summer. It was hard to tell one from the other. There was a ruckus back in ‘91, when he was briefly fired when a new owner wanted something new on the radio. But there was an outcry and Harwell was back a year later. People didn’t want new. They wanted their summer back. They wanted their summers to last forever. And Ernie Harwell did not retire until 2002, when he was 84 years old.

“Rather than goodbye,” he said to the fans in his last broadcast, “please allow me to say ‘Thank you.’ ”

Baseball is cigar smoke, hot roasted peanuts, The Sporting News, Ladies Day, “Down in front!” Take Me Out to the Ball Game and the Star Spangled Banner.

Baseball is a tongue-tied kid from Georgia growing up to be an announcer and praising the Lord for showing him the way to Cooperstown. This is a game for America, still a game for America, this baseball. Thank you.

Ernie Harwell, you have no doubt heard, has inoperable cancer. He is 91 years old, and he says that he doesn’t know how long much longer he will live. A year. A half year. Less. He says that he is at peace. He says that the faith he has in God sustains him. He says — exactly as he said in his last broadcast — that he is ready for a new adventure.

Of course, there is sadness, even if sadness is not what Ernie wants. Well, people in Detroit do love Ernie Harwell as much as he loves them. The voice and the city suited each other — Ernie always has believed in Detroit, through the hardest times, and for a simple reason. “Good people,” he said, time and again. The other day he was on the field in Detroit, and he said a few words to the crowd. He said that his life has been a great journey. He said that he loved the people of Michigan. He said that the Detroit Tigers fans were the best.

But it wasn’t so much what he said… the deepest meaning was in that voice, that familiar voice with the lingering Georgia twang. In Detroit, in Michigan, in the memories of anyone who turned car radio dials in search of baseball, this is the voice of breezes and lemonade and late evening sunshine and the last days of school. This is the voice that wafts through screen doors and sounds over splashing at swimming pools. This is the voice of Tiger Stadium and a stolen base by Ron Leflore and a line drive off the wall by Norm Cash and a Jack Morris scowl and a Mickey Lolich fastball that would dive into the dirt.

This is the voice I would listen to while sitting in my father’s beat-up green Audi — Dad bought that car for $600 and it often seemed that the only thing that worked in it was the radio. I was 16 years old in Charlotte, N.C., and that radio could pick up the scent of baseball in far-off places like Cincinnati and Philadelphia and St. Louis. And that radio could especially pick up Detroit and an announcer who would not chastise a man for looking at strike three but would instead say he was “window shopping.”

“You used to listen to me in your father’s car?” Ernie Harwell asked with wonder. And when I said yes, he said the two words that he probably has said more than any man over the last 50 years, two words that ended his beautiful 1981 speech in Cooperstown (excerpted above) — when he was given the Ford C. Frick Award, the highest honor the baseball world can bestow upon an announcer — two words that probably do a better job than any of summing up the emotions people have about beloved baseball announcers, the emotions that everyone feels about Ernie Harwell.

He said: “Thank you.”

Monday, May 3, 2010

Pontiac Aztek

The Pontiac Aztek was a mid-size crossover produced by the General Motors marque Pontiac from the 2001 model year to the 2005 model year — the first crossover offered by General Motors.

The Aztek was heavily criticized on its exterior styling, with Time magazine in 2007 calling the Aztek one of the worst cars of all time, and a poll in The Daily Telegraph in August 2008 placing the Aztek at number one of “The 100 ugliest cars” of all time.

GM forecast sales of up to 75,000 Azteks per year, and needed to produce 30,000 annually to break even. Just 27,322 were sold in 2001 with more than 50% being sold to captive rental company fleets or used by General Motors executives.

Pricing of the Aztek was also an issue at launch. In addition to being widely criticized for styling, the vehicle was simply too expensive for its intended “Generation X” audience and was priced significantly higher than competing vehicles. After the 2001 model year, the GT model was dropped and pricing was slashed, in addition to extremely generous rebates and cut-rate financing instituted by GM in the wake of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.

Yeardley Love Facebook Account

The full story of Yeardley Love’s death is here. The 22-year-old, 4th-year University of Virginia, UVA student is reported to have been murdered by fellow senior UVA lacrosse player, George Huguely.

Yeardley Love has a facebook account here.

There is also a Facebook page dedicated to her: In Memory of Yeardley Love: UVA Lacrosse Player.

Yeardley Love Personal Information:

• Full name is Yeardley Reynolds Love
• Born July 17, 1987 Baltimore, Md.
• Passed away on May 3, 2010 Charlottesville, Va.
• Daughter of Sharon and John Love
• One sister, Lexie

“And let us all acknowledge that, however little we may not know now about Yeardley Love’s death, we do know that she did not have or deserve to die–that she deserved the bright future she earned growing up, studying here, and developing her talents as alacrosse player. She deserves to be remembered for her human goodness, her capacity for future greatness, and not for the terrible way in which her young life has ended.”


‘Devastated’: UVA rocked by lacrosse death, arrest

Police have arrested 22-year-old UVA men’s lacrosse player George Huguely and charged him with first degree murder in the death of Yeardley Love, a fellow UVA fourth year and a member of the women’s lacrosse team. Love was discovered in her apartment at 222 14th Street at around 2:15am by one of her two roommates, who called 911.

Speaking at a press conference this afternoon, Police Chief Tim Longo says that while emergency responders initially believed they would be dealing with an alcohol overdose, upon arrival they realized the situation was more serious.

There was “obvious” trauma to Love’s body, Longo says, and efforts to revive her failed. Longo says he doesn’t believe a weapon was involved, and says a cause of death will be determined following an autopsy.

Love and Huguely had been in a relationship, Longo says, however the nature of that relationship and its status as of last night are focal points of the investigation. Longo says he does not believe Huguely has a criminal record and says Love had not sought a restraining order against Huguely— nor had police been called to the apartment for previous domestic disturbances.

The crime has stunned the university community, which for the past week had been celebrating the men’s lacrosse team’s ACC Championship victory.

“We’re torn apart by the news of Ms. Love’s death,” says UVA athletic director Craig Littlepage, who joined Longo and UVA’s Leonard Sandridge at the press event.

“That shock and disappointment and concern is magnified by the fact she could have been murdered by one of our own,” added Sandridge, who promised investigators the school’s full support and expressed gratitude that an arrest was made so quickly.

“Uncertainty and not knowing is very difficult,” said Sandridge, perhaps thinking of Morgan Harrington, who disappeared after attending a concert at John Paul Jones Arena in October and whose death remains an unsolved crime more than three months after her body was discovered on an Albemarle County farm.

Lynn Redgrave, 67, Is Dead


Lynn Redgrave, the theater, film and television actress and scion of the Redgrave acting clan, has died. She was 67. The death was confirmed by her publicist, Rick Miramontez, who said that Ms. Redgrave died Sunday night at her home in Kent, Conn. A cause of death was not immediately given.

Ms. Redgrave, the daughter of Sir Michael Redgrave and sister of Vanessa Redgrave, recently presented her autobiographical one-woman show “Nightingale” at the Manhattan Theater Club. In an interview with The New York Times she said that the piece had come to her in the clarity she found after undergoing a mastectomy and chemotherapy for breast cancer in 2003. During preparations for the show Ms. Redgrave said she had undergone treatment at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, and that her cancer was Stage IV, meaning that it had spread to other organs.

In a statement, the Redgrave family wrote:

Our beloved mother Lynn Rachel passed away peacefully after a seven-year journey with breast cancer. She lived, loved and worked harder than ever before. The endless memories she created as a mother, grandmother, writer, actor and friend will sustain us for the rest of our lives. Our entire family asks for privacy through this difficult time.

Ms. Redgrave is survived by a son, Ben, and daughters Pema and Annabel. The family said a private funeral will be held later this week.

David Boreanaz Cheated On Wife, Jaime Bergman & Got Blackmailed

David Boreanaz cheated on wife, Jaime Bergman & got blackmailed. According to TMZ , Fox “Bones” star and former “Angel” star, David Boreanaz apparently confessed to Jaimie Bergman that he cheated on her briefly during their nine year marriage after Gloria Allred contacted his lawyer,demanding six figures.

They say David admitted to People magazine that he had a relationship with a woman,and felt like he just got blackmailed. He stated, “She asked for money. I felt as though I was being blackmailed.” David had a short-term relationship with a woman,and they hooked up 2-3 times. Then he started paying her money,which was about $7,000 here and there. However, she began demanding more money from him, or she would go public with the affair.

After that, Boreanaz confessed the whole affair to his wife of 9 years, Jaime Bergman. Then Gloria Allred started representing David’s mistress,and demanded a six figure amount from David,so he went public with the affair,and refused to pay any more money to the mistress.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

THE CELEBRITY APPRENTICE (2010) Season 9 Episode 8

Watch a sneak peek and check out photos of the upcoming episode of THE CELEBRITY APPRENTICE (2010) Season 9 Episode 8 which airs Sunday May 2 on NBC (9-11 p.m. ET).

Episode Synopsis: THE CELEBRITY APPRENTICE (2010) Season 9 Episode 8 - Both teams are assigned the task of creating three radio commercials for Clockwork Home Services. To impress the executives, the teams must create original commercials for the company's plumbing, electrician and heating & air conditioning services, and one team may have pushed the envelope too far. Tempers flare when one celebrity questions another’s ability to perform, but in the end, one team’s commercial wins over the client, and Mr. Trump sends another celebrity packing. Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump also star.

Jose Andres Restaurants : 60 minutes with Chef Jose Andres

Jose Andres Restaurants- Chef Jose Andres is a famous Spanish chef, who owns a number of restaurants or eateries along with thinkfoodgroup that includes Jaleo, Zaytunya, Oyamel, Cafe Atlantico and the critically acclaimed minibar by jose andres as well as Los Angeles’s The Bazaar.


Jose Andres was born on July 13, 1969 in Mieres, Asturias, Spain, trained under Ferran Adria at El Bulli, a famous restaurant in Spain.

Chef Jose Andres was featured on a segment of CBS’ “60 Minutes,” he calls himself a pilgrim from Spain – a chef who arrived in the United States 20 years ago with just $50 in his pocket and a set of cooking knives. But these days it’s hard to call him anything less than an amazing American success story. He was GQ magazine’s chef of the year, runs restaurants on both coasts and has been nominated for outstanding chef in America by the James Beard Foundation.

While watching him on 60 minutes, I was taken by Chef Jose Andres words, “Eating has to be fun, has to be a social event, but where you have fun that you are relaxed. But at the same time that you are relaxed, doesn’t mean that you cannot be putting a lot of thought behind what eating, what the food means to you.”

Surely chef Jose Andres will make his Jose Andres Restaurants remarkable.

900 Employees of Quinn Insurance to Lose Jobs

administrators have verified that 900 employees at Quinn Insurance are on the verge of losing their jobs.

Around 200 jobs will go in Enniskillen and Derrylin, leaving a labor force of 450 people.

The insurance company is now formally up for sale. Employees at the different centers were informed of the movements on Friday afternoon.

The company's possessor, Sean Quinn has said that he and his family are "devastated" by the redundancies.

The job losses are bigger than expected. It was contemplated that 800 jobs would go.

Previously on Friday, the Board of Quinn Group said that Quinn Insurance should be sold.

Managers said that the enormous hacks, affecting over one-third of the company's 2,400-strong labor force, were required to protect the business's future.

The redundancies will be proffered on a voluntary basis and are anticipated to occur over a 12-month period across all of Quinn Insurance's centers.

Joint Administrators, Paul McCann and Michael McAteer of Grant Thornton said, "This is a difficult announcement to make and a considerably more difficult announcement for the workers ofQuinn Insurance to hear".

In a statement, Mr. Quinn said that he hopes to state his appreciation for the "huge effort" of workforce.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Peter Lopez


Catherine Bach,The Dukes of Hazzard” she called police this morning saying her husband had shot and killed himself at their Encino home on Friday, 30th April 2010.

When paramedics arrived to the home around 11:30 a.m. on the 15900 block of Woodvale Road , Lopez was already dead. Police are investigating it as a possible suicide .

Peter Lopez, one of Michael Jackson’s music attorneys

Catherine Bach, the wife of Peter Lopez is known for her role as Daisy Duke in the TV show “The Dukes of hazard”. They both married in 1990.

Fastpitch makes big gains with three extra feet ||

YAKIMA, Wash. — “Three feet,” said West Valley sophomore Molly Rubidoux, “is more than you think.”

When tacked onto 40 feet and factored into the middle of a fastpitch diamond, it is indeed. Which was, for all aspects of the game, exactly the point.

Getting a year’s jump on a National Federation rule change that becomes mandatory in 2011, Washington high schools and middle schools increased the pitcher’s distance from home plate from 40 to 43 feet this season.

The intent was not meant to be subtle — less dominant pitching, more contact at the plate and, as a result, a more active defense. For Rubidoux, the adjustment has been double as the Rams’ full-time pitcher and one of their best hitters.

“At first it was difficult because I had to put a lot of effort into changing my breaking ball,” she explained. “There’s more distance so there’s more break. That takes time to work on.

“But for hitting, it’s definitely a little easier,” she countered. “There’s more time to react. Three feet doesn’t sound like much, but for hitters it is.”

Try to find such a far-reaching rule change — in any sport — getting as much support and you won’t. Everybody, it seems, is enthusiastically onboard, and halfway through this season there is strong evidence that the desired effect is being achieved.

Here’s a sampling of how it breaks down:

PITCHING — Straight fastball gas will be, for the most part, less effective with the additional three feet. Which, as Rubidoux points out, is more than you think.

It’s been calculated that the additional distance is worth 4 mph on a pitch, so a 55 mph heater is now down to 51 or so — ask any grateful batter what that means.

The strikeouts that once came a bit quicker now require a greater variety of pitches and adjustments in speed. Pitchers who relied on overpowering batters must now fine-tune their ability to locate.

What three feet takes away from fastballs, however, enhances breaking pitches. And that’s why top-quality pitchers — like CWAC standouts Monica Stout of Selah and Jessica Harris of Ellensburg — can still dominate a game.

“Monica has had to make adjustments and learn to pitch a little more,” said Selah coach Bill Harris. “She’s not going to have the strikeouts like before, but she’s found ways to use that extra distance to her advantage, especially with the way the ball breaks.”

“It’s still tough to get the hits off a tough pitcher — there’s no change there,” noted East Valley’s Scott Kokenge. “But against average pitching there’s definitely a difference.”

Added Eisenhower’s Harry Pratt, who sees plenty of skilled hurlers in the CBBN, “The pitchers who are more throwers than pitchers face the biggest challenge. They may not get the strikeouts they have in the past, but they still are able to pitch to contact and give their defense opportunities.”

Which takes us to …

HITTING — Batting averages are up. And according to Kokenge, they are “across the board.”

“We’re hitting better and it’s noticeable,” he added. “We’re not striking out as much and we’re not popping out as much. We’re simply putting the bat on the ball more.”

Ellensburg’s state-runnerup team last year batted .436. Through 11 games this season the Bulldogs are hitting .490. Coach Dave Kopczynski’s ‘09 crew, the best of his career, struck out an average of 3.5 times a game. This season that number has plunged to 2.0.

“Our belief is, the bubble hitters are doing much better,” Kopczynski said. “They do have a bit more time to see the ball, but the more aggressive hitters are having to sit and adjust to it.”

Pratt’s numbers at Ike are similar — a .278 team batting average last year spiking to .320 this season. The Cadets’ strikeouts per game, however, remain the same at four.

Selah’s hitting coach, Ben Graf, has the Vikings’ batters making specific adjustments.

“We’ve worked really hard on looking middle right,” Harris explained. “It’s all to help the timing. It doesn’t sound like much, three feet, but it’s quite a bit and there’s some patience involved.”

When considering the rule change, the National Federation was impressed with results from Florida and Oregon, states that had already moved back to 43 feet — the college distance. Coaches from both states overwhelmingly favored the change, siting a more even balance between offense and defense with considerably more balls put in play.

Taking us to the most popular result of the change …

DEFENSE — As the NFHS notes in its rule-change assessment, ‘the main thrust is getting the defense more involved, thus enhancing skill development.”

There’s no arguing that.

And plenty of support for it.

“It’s a more complete game now,” insisted West Valley coach Brad Cramer. “It’s opened up the game with more hitting and that’s put more emphasis on better defense.”

“It’s required everybody to sharpen up their defense,” Kokenge said. “For my team, we’re young with a lot of first-year varsity kids so it didn’t come overnight for us. There’s a lot more defense going on and we’re getting progressively better at it each week.”

Pitchers developing diversity, hitters getting more balls in play and defenders on their toes — it’s all good.

Or, as Harris put it, “It’s made a great game better.”

BRIEF-Frontier Bank of Washington has failed-U.S. FDIC

WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) - The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp said on Friday:

* U.S. fdic says frontier bank of Everett, Washington has failed

* U.S. fdic says union bank, national association, of San Francisco,

California, to assume all of the deposits of frontier bank

* U.S. fdic says frontier bank had approximately $3.50 billion in total assets,

failure to cost insurance fund $1.37 billion

* U.S. fdic says frontier bank is the 64th U.S. bank failure so far this year

(Company news desk in Washington; +1 202 898 8400, washington.newsroom@thomsonreuters.com)

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Copyright Thomson Reuters 2010. All rights reserved.

The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.

Catherine Bach Speaks out After Husband's Shocking Death

Former "The Dukes of Hazzard" star Catherine Bach's husband Peter Lopez was found dead Friday, and Bach is reacting to the tragic news.

"The Lopez family has suffered a tragic personal loss," a rep for Bach tells "The Insider." "Catherine and the girls would appreciate your prayers."

"The Insider" has learned that the fire department was called at 11:27 a.m. for a reported shooting in Encino, CA. Medical response was dispatched to the location. Officers tell "The Insider" that Lopez's death was an apparent suicide, although they are still investigating. The case has been handed over to the coroner's office pending an official determination of the cause of death.

Bach, perhaps known best for her role as the iconic, cut-off-shorts wearing TV character Daisy Duke on "The Dukes of Hazzard," was married to Lopez since 1990. They have two children together.

Ozzfest 2010 Lineup Announced, First Tour Dates Announced

Ozzy Osbourne's famous Ozzfest will see it's return this year when it kicks off in August. As predicted, Ozzy himself will headline the event, along with co-headliners Motley Crue. Also performing on the main stage will be Judas Priest frontman Rob Halford, Devildriver and Nonpoint.

The second stage of the event will be headlined by Black Label Society, led by former Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Zakk Wylde. Other bands confirmed for the second stage include Drowning Pool, Kingdom Of Sorrow, Goatwhore, Skeletonwitch, Saviours and Kataklysm.

Each OzzFest date will include 13 bands on two stages with music beginning at 1:00 PM. In addition, concert-goers can once again visit the OZZFest “Village of the Damned” featuring a mix of interactive activities, shopping and entertainment throughout the venue concourses.

The initial Ozzfest 2010 tour dates are as follows:

August 14 - San Bernardino, CA - San Manuel Amphitheater
August 17 - Chicago, IL - First Midwest Bank Amp.
August 19 - Pittsburg, PA - First Niagara Pavilion
August 21 - Hartford, CT - Comcast Theater
August 22 - Camden, NJ - Susquehanna
August 24 - Boston, MA - Comcast Center

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Poptropica Cheats for Mythology

Poptropica is a massively multiplayer online game and virtual world, targeted at children ages 6 to 15, where players can travel, play games, compete in head-to-head competition, and communicate safely with each other. There is a role-playing component as players are encouraged to finish “island missions” and get medallions. Poptropica was developed by the Family Education Network, a division of Pearson, which also owns kids’ site FunBrain.com. Poptropica has an Alexa Internet rating of 2,166. Its official launch date was in September 2007. It now has over 75 million registered users and about 35 million of these are in the 15-25 age group.

When players first arrive at Poptropica, they are given a character avatar they can either customize immediately, or modify while playing. Such modifications include changing hair color, clothes, hair style, and skin color.

On May 30, 2009, Poptropica began selling “Poptropica credits” online. The credits are used to “buy” costumes that cannot be costumized and special abililties such as the ability to change the player’s character’s hair or skin color quickly. Credits can also be earned through the completion of different islands.

Once a player enters Poptropica, he chooses an island to explore; as noted before, each island has a central mission. To travel between islands, the user boards a blimp with the Poptropica logo, which shuttles between the Main Streets of the various islands.

Early Poptropica was the first island created for Poptropica.

24 Carrot Island is the fourth island released on Poptropica. The Poptropicans on 24 Carrot Island are in trouble. Someone has stolen all their carrots, citizens are disappearing, and the economy, which appears to be based on carrots, is in ruins.

Super Power Island is the fifth Island released for Poptropica. A giant radioactive meteor has crashed into Super Power Island’s county prison, freeing six criminals and giving them super powers. Now they are wreaking havoc on the island, committing various crimes. The player must defeat five villains using wits alone, and earn the power to fly (only on Super Power Island). The final villain, Betty Jetty, can only be defeated by flying after her. The island was opened on July 26, 2008.

Spy Island is the sixth island released for Poptropica. In this plot, a new threat to the residents of Poptropica has been discovered by Poptropica’s top three spies, but the spies have been captured by an evil group called B.A.D. The island was opened on September 10, 2008.

Choose Your Own Adventure: Nabooti Island was the seventh island released on Poptropica. This island was made in conjunction with the publishers of Choose Your Own Adventure books. The Nabooti tribe is looking for five missing jewels from the mysterious Nabooti totem. The player flies to various locales across Africa to find the jewels and return them. The island was opened on December 10, 2008.

Reality TV Island is the eleventh island released on Poptropica and is based on the hit reality TV show Survivor. The player has to compete in challenges against seven other (game-operated) characters, to avoid being “voted off” the island. The island was released to Poptropica monthly members on February 24, 2010 and was open to the public on March 24, 2010.

This week: Tim Conway on ‘CSI’; Shania Twain on ‘American Idol’; Sharon Stone on ‘Law & Order: SVU’; ‘The Hills’ returns

Here are words that I never thought I’d write: Tim Conway is guest-starring on “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.” (The funnyman, right, is pictured with Jennifer Tilly and Paul Guilfoyle in this CBS photo by Sonja Flemming.)

Thursday is the start of the May sweeps, which run through May 26. And the networks will fill their series with major developments and big guest stars.

Conway plays a Las Vegas comic on this Thursday’s episode of “CSI” at 9 p.m. on CBS.

Malcolm McDowell plays a cult leader who matches wits with Patrick Jane (Simon Baker) on “The Mentalist” at 10 p.m. Thursday on CBS.

Will Forte plays the boyfriend of Jenna (Jane Krakowski) on “30 Rock” at 9:30 p.m. Thursday on NBC. Forte’s character has a secret, which NBC has given away in promos.

Before the sweeps start, the networks will load up on new fare this week:

Shania Twain plays mentor to the six finalists on “American Idol” at 8 p.m. Tuesday on Fox. Lady Antebellum and Rascal Flatts perform on the results show at 9 p.m. Wednesday. The six finalists are pictured in this Fox photo by Michael Becker: Aaron Kelly, Crystal Bowersox, Casey James, Michael Lynche, Siobhan Magnus and Lee DeWyze.

Sharon Stone plays the former partner of Stabler (Christopher Meloni) on “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” at 10 p.m. Wednesday. In one promo, the Stone character suggests they had a close personal relationship.

CBS has new episodes of “NCIS,” “NCIS: Los Angeles” and “The Good Wife” on Tuesday.

On “Dancing With the Stars,” the seven remaining couples will perform the samba or the Argentina tango at 8 p.m. Monday on ABC. Melissa Etheridge will perform two songs on the results show at 8 p.m. Tuesday.

ABC premieres “Happy Town,” a small-town mystery that has been compared to “Twin Peaks.” Yeah, right. ”Happy Town” doesn’t have much of a pulse. Are you in the mood for boring gore? You can see when it debuts at 10 p.m. Wednesday.

Gore of another variety will spread across MTV when “The Hills” returns for its final season at 10 p.m. Tuesday. Take that as your warning.

Early Halo: Reach multiplayer beta code giveaway!

If you own an Xbox 360, then we’re fairly confident that you’re salivating over getting early access to the Halo: Reach multiplayer beta. Sure, the beta goes public on May 3rd, open to all who have a copy of Halo 3: ODST, but who wants to wait 4 more days to get in on the action if you can have it today? Yep, that’s where we come in. We’ve got a bunch of Halo: Reach beta codes that we are going to be giving away today, and if you get one, you’ll be able to download and play the Halo: Reach beta today! So, how do you enter to win one of these super-exclusive codes? Here’s your answer:

1. If you don’t have one already, sign up for a Twitter account
2. Follow the Gear Live Twitter account
3. On Twitter, post this tweet about our contest: “Hey @gearlive hook me up with a Halo: Reach Multiplayer Beta code please! http://bit.ly/haloreachbeta” (Click here to tweet this now)

That’s it! You must be following the Gear Live Twitter account, because we will be sending the codes to the winners on Twitter via DM, and if you aren’t following, we can’t DM you. Simple as that. Again, we’ve got a bunch of these, so you have a good chance of walking away with a code! We will start choosing winners this afternoon.

Murdered Trans-teen Gwen Araujo Vindicated by CA Appeal Court Ruling

Newark, CA, May 13, 2009 – A California state court of appeal upheld the second degree murder convictions of two young East Bay men for their part in the strangling, beating, and murder of 17 year old male-to-female transgender Latina Gwen Amber Rose Araujo in 2002. Jose Merel and Michael Magidson had appealed their convictions on the grounds that the Alameda County trial judge had not defined the crimes properly to the jury at the time of the original trial in 2005, and that there had not been sufficient evidence for second degree murder convictions. The appeal court ruled 3-0 against the petition of the defendants, who will continue to serve out their 15-year sentences for the grisly murder.

The 2002 Araujo case drew national attention to the plight of transgender people in the United States, especially transgender people of color. Araujo, born biologically male and originally known as Eddie, had transitioned to being female by the time of the assault. After she died, her mother legally changed her name to Gwen as a sign of love and respect. Her killers, who knew her as “Lida” had known her for months, and Gwen believed they were fast friends. Both Merel and Magidson had sex with Araujo orally and anally. According to their defense, she had not revealed her biological identity to them. When her biological maleness was discovered, the defense went on to contend, the men attacked Araujo “in the heat of the moment,” and therefore deserved convictions for a lesser charge of manslaughter instead of murder. The prosecution successfully argued against this version of the “trans-panic defense,” and secured the murder convictions against them. Two other defendants in the case, Jaron Nabors and Jason Cazares pled guilty to manslaughter and were sentenced to 11 and 6 years respectively. They have not sought to challenge their convictions.

The Araujo case sharpened the national debate on the trans-panic defense. The outcome of the 2002 trial went a long way toward refuting the once widely held notion that trans people somehow brought on attacks against themselves. As Masen Davis, executive director of the Transgender Law Center noted to reporters,the ruling of the court of appeal definitively rejected the claim that the murder of a young woman like Gwen should be reduced to a lesser charge just because she was transgender. “We are thankful that the Court of Appeal saw through this blatant prejudice, and upheld the convictions of Gwen’s killers,” she said.

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