Eddie Murphy has taken a DNA test to determine if he's the father of Melanie Brown's 2-month-old daughter, Brown's spokeswoman said Friday. The 46-year-old actor "did indeed take a paternity test," Natalie Whorms said.
Brown, who was known as "Scary Spice" when she performed with the '90s pop group Spice Girls, dated Murphy last year and has maintained that the child is his. The 32-year-old singer gave birth to Angel Iris Murphy Brown on April 3. She listed Murphy as the father on the birth certificate.
Saturday, June 16, 2007
More unnecessary medical testing
Friday, June 15, 2007
Whiskey! Sexy! Democracy! XXX! Girls!!!
Drugs! Rock 'n' Roll! Stuff! MTV! Booty!!!

I'm the Mighty Favog.
KIND OF LIKE the three remaining supporters of President Bush, I'm in an echo chamber this week, spinning the hits and tripping out. In a good way.
I think you might like our trippy show this week, too. We'll be hearing from Joe Jackson, Don Covay, The Bees (And the Byrds!), along with some classic Joplin, Otis and all manner of tasty stuff.
Musically, that is.
Now, ah reckon you're faced with a choice. You can listen to to good music played by a guy who's trying to reimagine how we do "Catholic" media in this country, or you can go back to looking for smut.
Or researching U.S. foreign policy . . . I forget.
The flip side
Here's one of those reasons, as reported by The (New Orleans) Times-Picayune:
On a Friday night last June, a week after the massacre of five young men stunned New Orleans residents, police burst through the doors of the Sportsman's Corner bar in Central City, looking for two men in white t-shirts who they believed had just run in.
In the wake of the brutal killings just blocks away, police promised a strong presence in the city's most violent neighborhoods. At about 8:30 p.m., members of NOPD's Special Operations Division charged into the club at the corner of Second and Dryades streets. Two split off to search the bathrooms while others kept watch on the patrons, guns drawn. Where were the two men in white t-shirts who had just run into the bar? the officers asked.
You've got the wrong place, said the patrons, many of them regulars in a bar known as a hangout for oldtimers from the neighborhood.
"Not a man in here had a white shirt on," said Mary Jane Spears, 56, who had yet to taste the bourbon and tonic she'd ordered. "I'm scared of guns to begin with, and the way they came in with those big guns, with their hands ready to pull the triggers, that terrified me."
Spears, seated in a chair facing the door, knew the only patrons who'd come in after her: Myra Boudreaux and her companion, 64-year-old Joseph Hall, wearing a red shirt and a blue cap, Spears said.
Police did not find the men in the white t-shirts. But amid the typically older clientele, the youngest person there may have been the man running the Sportsman, 26-year-old Steven Elloie, a solid, broad-shouldered man who stands 5-feet-11 and weighs 265 pounds.
What happened next shocked the 17 people who were there that night. In separate interviews with nine of them, witnesses consistently offered the same version of events. Police have declined to discuss what happened during the search of the bar, but here is what the nine witnesses say unfolded.
Elloie was in the storage room, making a shopping list for the next day -- potato chips, cold drinks, napkins, paper towels, toilet paper, he said -- when through the wall he heard yelling.
He grabbed his keys and headed into the main room, through one of a pair of wooden doors. The two doors are set up like those in a restaurant kitchen -- cut about 10 feet apart and connecting the same two rooms -- the one-room bar and the back room, where supplies are kept.
As Elloie came out one door, an officer was yanking on the other door knob. Elloie said the trouble seemed to start when he turned and said, "I'm the owner. Please don't break it. I can open it."
Witnesses at nearby tables said Elloie introduced himself and that he was wearing a black shirt that bore the name "Sportsman's Corner" across the lapel. Elloie asked what was going on and the officers asked if he'd seen two guys run in wearing white t-shirts. Elloie said he had not, then looked at his barmaids. They shook their heads no.
When the officer resumed yanking on the door, Elloie turned to him and said, "If you need the door open, I can open it." According to Elloie, the officer said, "I don't care who you are. You're going to jail."
Elloie said, "For what?" The officer said, "Because you hit me." Indeed, a citation filed later in municipal court offered a scant description of the allegation, saying only that Elloie "struck officer in the chest." Witnesses said Elloie had not touched an officer.
Several officers then slammed Elloie against the wall, in a powerful blow that sent his glasses flying and flipped a table over, sending drinks flying. They cuffed him and threw him to the floor. He hit with full force. "Everybody in here could hear that lick, as Steven hit the floor," said Boudreaux, who winced as she recalled it.
Once Elloie was on the ground, a group of officers kicked and hit him, then fired twice into his back with a Taser, an electric stun gun, witnesses said.
"That was the most pain I've ever encountered," said Elloie, who as he twitched and hollered was heard asking the officers why they were doing this to him.
Charles Walker, a truck driver who stops in regularly after work, heard the cries. "Steven was asking them why they were beating him, but they didn't respond in words, they responded with violence -- they told him to shut up and beat him more."
One officer told Elloie that he was taking the beating like a woman. With a little kick, he ordered Elloie to get up and walk. Elloie said he couldn't, his legs were numb. The officer looked at his colleagues, then at Elloie and said, "Then drag the motherf-----."
''It was like when you take a trash bag that's too heavy and drag it to the curb. They grabbed onto his hands, which were cuffed behind his back, and that's how they dragged him,'' said Calvin Edwards, a 44-year-old bellman-valet at a St. Charles Avenue hotel.
(snip)As Elloie was dragged out, a barmaid called his mother, Teresa Elloie. Police were prohibiting all cell phone use. The barmaid spoke softly. She had to be brief.
With police yelling in the background, Teresa Elloie thought she heard that police had shot her son Steven.
She grabbed her wheelchair-bound father, Louis Elloie, 75, and left the house doors open as she rushed to the Sportsman's Corner. She knew the route well. Louis Elloie ran the bar for more than three decades until he suffered two strokes in the fall of 2005 -- one the day Hurricane Katrina, the second when Rita hit. Steven re-opened the bar in the spring of 2006. He added wireless Internet access, but kept the Sportsman largely the way his grandfather left it.
Teresa Elloie arrived to find the bar surrounded by police, about six cars she believes, and maybe 10 or 12 officers.
''I didn't know whether Steven was alive or dead,'' she said, adding that officers told her to ''to get the f--- back'' as she walked toward the bar to find out. She called 911 and asked the dispatcher to send a ranking officer. None came. Nothing was making sense, she said. She has another son who she said can be a little mouthy, but not Steven, who she describes as easygoing to a fault and whose normal speaking voice is so quiet it can be difficult to hear.
Teresa Elloie, who's describes herself as less easygoing, found herself getting angry on her son's behalf.
As the officer in the passenger seat wrote the report, he asked, ''What's the name of the bar?'' Elloie, slumped in the back seat, saw the officer look back at his shirt and say, ''There's the name,'' and write down ''Sportsman's Corner.''
The other officers walked back into the bar and asked to speak with the owner. ''You just dragged him out,'' the customers said.
Thirty minutes after their arrival, the police left, witnesses said.
Arresting officers took Elloie to Orleans Parish Prison's Central Lockup, where sheriff's personnel refused him until he received medical attention, he said. After a trip to a makeshift post-Katrina emergency room set up at the closed Lord & Taylor's store, where Elloie was treated for a black eye, bruises, abrasions, and numbness in his limbs, the officers took him back to jail, where at 1:12 a.m. he was booked with battery of a police officer and resisting arrest.
With the police gone, Teresa Elloie walked into the bar and pulled out a piece of paper and a pen. Every patron in the bar -- 16 in all -- wrote down his or her name and phone number, promising to be a witness for any investigation. ''Everybody signed because what happened was not right and we knew it,'' Calvin Edwards said.
Teresa Elloie gave a copy of her handwritten list to the NOPD's Public Integrity Bureau. In March, Steven Elloie received a letter from the bureau, which said the allegations of excessive force were ''not sustained.''
''They basically said that they'd found nothing and that the case was closed,'' Teresa Elloie said.
(snip)The charges against Elloie also never went anywhere. The patrons at the bar that night showed up religiously for every hearing date in municipal court, eager to testify on his behalf. At one point, a sheriff's deputy stationed at the court recognized the group and said, ''You guys again?''
When the officers failed to show up after multiple trial dates, the city attorney dropped the charges.
In a federal lawsuit filed this week against the city on behalf of Steven Elloie by the American Civil Liberties Union, Elloie alleges the Public Integrity Bureau's investigation of the incident ''was a sham, or that it was performed and concluded in an inefficient and biased manner.''
Katie Schwartzmann, ACLU staff attorney, said that she hopes to see changes in how the NOPD treats suspects, uses Tasers and oversees police officers.
''Basically, we're asking that cops treat people humanely and with respect,'' she said.
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Martin Luther King died for this?
I would like to think that, but I'd be fooling myself big time.
Anyway, here's a depressing non-hallucinogenic AP dispatch from the City Sanity Forgot:
Supporters of a Democratic congressman charged with bribery and money laundering harkened to their civil rights days on Wednesday as they denounced the allegations against U.S. Rep. William Jefferson.
The group, including ministers and the president of the local chapter of the NAACP, alleged the 16-count corruption indictment was the work of a Republican White House and Justice Department scheming to target black Democratic leaders and shift attention from legal troubles of Republican congressmen.
"When it's all over, Bill Jefferson will stand up like Booker T. Washington and George Washington Carver. He will stand up in the South and he will be victorious," said the Rev. Samson "Skip" Alexander.
The news conference attended by about 50 people was a sign Jefferson hasn't lost friends in New Orleans, which re-elected him to a ninth term from Louisiana's 2nd Congressional District in December 2006 despite an FBI probe of his African business dealings.
Prosecutors say Jefferson used his influence as co-chairman of the congressional Africa Investment and Trade Caucus to broker deals in numerous African nations, and that he demanded kickbacks for himself and for family members. He is also charged with bribing a Nigerian official.
He allegedly received more than $500,000 in bribes and demanded millions more between 2000 and 2005. He has pleaded not guilty.
The group said they would raise money for his legal defense and offer public relations help through the Justice for Jefferson Committee.
Washington asked the audience to give Jefferson the benefit of the doubt, the presumption of innocence until proven guilty.
Danatus King, president of the local chapter of the NAACP, said, "it's important that all of us keep our eyes on the prize and that prize is one word, and that one word is justice."
Asked to comment on allegations aired at the news conference, Bryan Sierra, a Justice Department spokesman, said "I'm not even going to dignify that with a response." White House spokesman Blair Jones also declined to comment.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Tell old Pharaoh to let My people go
After seeing this story on the NBC Nightly News tonight, I'm wondering whether ancient Egypt might be a more apt comparison:
A Kuwaiti contractor accused of abusing workers at the new U.S. Embassy in Baghdad has also worked on a host of other U.S. projects since the Iraq war began in 2003, according to Defense Department records.
Whistleblowers who worked on the embassy have told officials at the State and Justice departments, as well as NBC News, that the contractor, First Kuwaiti International Trading, had brought workers, mostly South Asians and Filipinos, to Baghdad under false pretenses, then abused and threatened them while there.
The State Department and First Kuwaiti deny the allegations, but State admits it is continuing to monitor human trafficking and abuse allegations and the Justice Department has begun a preliminary inquiry out of its Civil Rights Division.
First Kuwaiti is one of the biggest contractors in the Middle East and the main contractor on the troubled 21-building embassy project, which will cost $600 million to build, making it the most expensive diplomatic quarters in U.S. history. The company has already received nearly $400 million for the embassy project, according to contracting records reviewed by NBC News. It has also been awarded more than a billion dollars in other contracts from the U.S. Army, the Army Corps of Engineers and Halliburton, which hired it as a subcontractor on other projects.
“It is probably the second most influential company in Kuwait,” says a former U.S. intelligence official familiar with First Kuwaiti.
Its chief accuser, Rory Mayberry, signed a contract with First Kuwaiti in March 2006 to work as a medic on the embassy construction site.
Mayberry alleges that when he showed up at the Kuwait airport for his flight into Baghdad, there were 51 Filipino employees of First Kuwaiti also waiting for the same flight — except the Filipinos believed they were going to Dubai. He says the Filipinos were told to proceed to "GATE 26" at the Kuwait airport — but no Gate 26 existed. There was only a door to a staircase that led to a white plane on the tarmac, Mayberry told NBC.
Mayberry says even he was given a boarding pass that was marked for Dubai, though he knew he was going to Baghdad.
“The steward was having problems keeping guys in their seats because they were so upset, wanted to get off the airplane,” says Mayberry. “They were upset they weren’t headed to Dubai where they were promised they were working.”
He says when he arrived in Baghdad he notified the State Department official in charge of the embassy project about what had happened on his flight and she replied "that’s the way they do it."
And we're a' doin' it with your tax dollars. Billions of your tax dollars.
Now, take this Revolution 21 quiz about how you feel right now. Check off the statement closest to your take on American involvement in world affairs: A) I am proud about how we're doing things in Iraq.
thousand miles west to Washington, D.C.
NBC 1, CBS 0
Of course, this involved a CBS Radio property -- Philadelphia's 94.1 Free FM. Here's the long and shorts of it from the Philadelphia Daily News:
NBC-10's Lu Ann Cahn returned from a Florida vacation to learn that not only had a stranger rifled through her underwear drawer, but he'd made fun of her lingerie on the radio."DANNY OZARK" and the idiot crew of the Kidd Chris show aren't funny. At all. Actually, they're really pathetic and annoying. I know; I listened to the podcast.
Danny Ozark, a regular guest on 94.1 FREE FM's Kidd Chris Show, was on the radio show Wednesday and while sharing stories about sex and drugs, he revealed that at the June 2 Phillies game he met a girl who was house-sitting for Cahn, a longtime NBC-10 investigative reporter. She invited Ozark and another comic to join her at Cahn's Montgomery County home.
Once there, Ozark and his pal rummaged through Cahn's underwear and, Ozark, who admitted, "I'm just a freak," said he hoped to try some on, but he could tell it wouldn't fit him.
"She had government-issued really bad underwear . . . I wish she felt more sexier, because she's beautiful. I feel like I should get her red thong panties," he said."
"I am really upset about this," Cahn told us by phone yesterday.
"We're still trying to figure out exactly what went on," she said.
Asked whether the female house-sitter was someone her family had used before, Cahn said: "It's a personal matter and I can't really talk about her. We don't know what the facts are."
This, however, is funny. Behold the Revenge of LuAnn Cahn, as broadcast on Philadelphia's WCAU television.
Going after the double-wide vote
Fascinating, in an 'Oh, crap!' kind of way
The conclusion -- of Dreher and the book, which happens to be Cullen Murphy's Are We Rome? -- seems to be probably. Definitely probably.
The Romans were supremely arrogant, and thought that the world was as they thought it was -- and when it wasn't, they could create reality. Murphy says that attitude clearly informs the US now: "Across the board it fosters the conviction that assertions of will can trump assessments of reality: the world is the way we say it is."
Similarly, the Romans were so impressed by themselves that they not only didn't care what other peoples thought, they didn't think they had much to learn from other peoples. This attitude led the Romans to discount important information. And, when wedded to Rome's sense of having a divinely appointed mission to conquer and civilize the world, Rome tended to see information contrary to its wishes and desires as not only wrong (if it saw the information at all), but as somehow malign.
Yet like us, Rome saw it as possible for all people to become Roman, because it is entirely natural for people, if they understood that their best interests and their own perfected nature, led toward Roman-ness.
This has all kinds of parallels to contemporary America. Murphy: "Human nature, in other words, is basically American. This may be a comforting sentiment, but it can end up enabling just as much ignorance as arrogance or disdain does." This is especially true if your understanding of the American character is warped by sentimentality and idealism -- that is, if you discount the struggles we've had with the better angels of our nature.(snip)
The Roman government became besotted with patronage, bribery and featherbedding -- a practice that Murphy sees replicated in our political system being awash in campaign contributions buying access and favors. Indeed, here in Istanbul I was talking to a US scholar who has been involved with policymaking circles in Washington. He gave me a couple of examples of cases in which the taxpayer has been fleeced, and US national interests undermined, by the interaction of government with private business, for the sake of enriching business and political friends. If this gets out of hand, says Murphy, you have the fall of Rome.
In the end, Murphy says that we can avoid the fate of Rome through a conscious and determined program of reform, and the reclamation of Republican virtue. We are not fated to end up like Rome. The power to determine our fate rests largely with us Americans. But the signs don't look good.
Is there a smart way ahead? Can we avoid decline?We can’t control every variable, shouldn’t even try. The future is a mysterious place. Instead, it makes sense to focus on a handful of big factors that are within our control—and that will contribute to social strength no matter what the future brings. What are some of those things?
For starters, instill an appreciation of the wider world. To drive home the idea that “we are not alone” there is no substitute for fluency in another language. Every educated person in the Roman Empire spoke two languages. So did the strivers among the immigrants. In a globalizing world, Americans need to be like the Romans—and, frankly, like the barbarians.
Second, stop treating government as a necessary evil, and stop selling it off to private interests. Government can be held accountable in ways that the private sector can’t, and government programs—Social Security, student loans, safe food and drugs—promote a sense of common alliance and mutual obligation. Lose these things, and you’ll never get them back.
Third, fortify the institutions that promote assimilation: free schools, free clinics, and a program of national service. We can’t change the way the world works, can’t stop people from wanting to come to America. Our powerfully absorptive domestic culture will turn them into Americans soon enough, if we let it. But we have to bolster the engines of assimilation, not undermine them.
Finally, take some weight off the military. Like Rome, America is caught in a vise: the military is too big to sustain and too small to do everything we ask. Adopting a long-range energy policy—something we ought to do anyway—would at least let America pull away from military oversight of the Middle East. This may be a hundred year project, but a society with pretensions to staying power thinks in those terms. Rome wasn’t built in a day.
But you’re saying this won’t prevent “decline”?One person’s “decline” is another’s “rise.” America as we know it will melt into history no matter what we do. The important question is: will the world that ensues be better? Whatever comes to pass, the sheer fact of America will weigh on the world for millennia. Like Rome, America is in some ways indistinguishable. The whole planet may someday speak Chinese, but people will probably still be saying “OK.” What we can’t know is which characteristics will be extinguished and which ones won’t. I hope it will be our egalitarianism, our entrepreneurship, and our exuberant impulse to associate in civic groups—and not our hyper-individualism and our moralizing messianic streak.
Here’s the point: the outcome is partly in our own hands. The outcome depends on how we act today.
You're EVIL because you don't watch our crap
The man who brought us:
* Howard Stern, who talked dirty with naked women in the studio, among other outrageous acts . . .
* And then Opie & Anthony, who got fired over encouraging listeners to get it on in places like, ohhhhhhhh, St. Patrick's Cathedral for fame and prizes . . .
* And then Opie & Anthony again after a few years but not firing them from CBS Radio after they chuckled their way -- on their XM show -- through a "guest's" graphic descriptions of how he'd like to rape Condoleezza Rice and Laura Bush . . .
This is the man who's now telling us we're sexist for not watching Katie Couric deliver a dumbed down CBS Evening News. That, my friends, is cojones grande.
From The Financial Times:
“I’m sort of surprised by the vitriol against her. The number of people who don’t want news from a woman was startling,” Mr Moonves said of the audience’s reaction to Ms Couric, who this month brought ratings for the CBS Evening News to a 20-year low.OL' LES COVERED a lot of ground during his remarks today. Earlier, I blogged on his slimy, self-serving skewering of a straw man when, in the same talk, he went after former CBS anchor Dan Rather for alleged sexism in criticizing the Evening News.
He reiterated, however, that he was committed to Ms Couric and that he believed her programme would succeed in spite of its last place standing behind rivals ABC and NBC.
Ms Couric’s gender has been a central issue since CBS poached her from NBC’s Today show a year ago and made her the first woman to solo anchor a network newscast, filling the seat of such legends as Walter Cronkite and Dan Rather.
CBS was hoping to draw younger, female viewers to a US television institution whose audience has halved in the past 25 years.
Ms Couric has managed a 2 per cent increase in women age 18 to 49 since her September debut. However, that has been more than offset by an 11 per cent decline among men over 55, who still constitute the bulk of the evening news’ audience.
Mr Moonves has previously chided critics for scrutinising Ms Couric’s wardrobe and personal life. However, his latest remarks, made during a breakfast sponsored by Syracuse’s Newhouse School of Communications, were his most explicit about gender bias.
They come at a time when New York Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton is testing whether Americans are willing to accept a woman in another authority position – as president.
Linda Mason, head of standards at CBS News, last month told the network’s Public Eye blog: “I had no idea that a woman delivering the news would be a handicap,” and that the public seemed to “prefer the news from white guys”.
In the absence of specific research, some analysts took issue with that argument. “People get news from women all the time – on local news, on morning shows. I’m sceptical of his discovery of sexism,” said Andrew Tyndall, whose Tyndall Report monitors newscasts. He and others have criticised the style of Ms Couric’s newscast, which emphasised soft features over hard news – something CBS seemed to acknowledge this year when it replaced the producer.
Then we pick up The Financial Times, a British publication, and get a new angle -- that it's not just Rather who's evil and sexist. All of us are . . . or at least almost all of us, considering Couric's woeful ratings.
I'm a sexist, he's a sexist, she's a sexist, we're a sexist, wouldn't you like to be a sexist, too?
If for no other reason that it seems to torture a sleaze like Les Moonves soooooo bad.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Workers' rights Gone With the Wind
The travel trailer you always wanted: $75,439.
Season tickets to the symphony: $975.
Somebody to feed you and wipe your ass when you're too old and sick to do it yourself: Oh, about five bucks an hour. No overtime, though!
The Washington Post has the story of the Supreme Court's latest decision. (Oh, before you go, Mellie . . . will you have Mammy come in here to fluff my pillow? Tell her to bring me a julep while she's at it.)
The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that workers in the fast-growing home-care industry are not entitled to overtime pay.
The court unanimously agreed that a 1975 Labor Department regulation exempting workers paid by third parties from minimum-wage and maximum-hour rules was a valid exercise of the power given to the agency by Congress.
(snip)
The home-care case was brought by Evelyn Coke, a 73-year-old retiree who worked for more than 20 years as a home-care provider. She sued her employer, Long Island Care at Home, because she was never paid overtime despite her long hours and sometimes overnight care for clients.
She and her lawyers challenged the Labor Department exemption, saying its development at a time when Congress was including more workers under wage and overtime laws could not be what lawmakers intended.
But the Bush administration said Congress clearly had left the decision up to the agency. Otherwise, the administration contended, wage and overtime provisions for companionship services would have been applied in the law.
The court, in an opinion by Justice Stephen G. Breyer, agreed.
"Where an agency rule sets forth important individual rights and duties . . . and where the rule itself is reasonable, then a court ordinarily assumes that Congress intended it to defer to the agency's determination," Breyer wrote.
The decision set aside a ruling by the Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit that had allowed Coke's lawsuit to go forward.
Home-care workers make up one of the marketplace's fastest-growing occupations, the growth fueled by an aging population and a desire to keep more of the aged in their homes rather than in institutions.
Coke's supporters said the decision will make it even more difficult to find workers to take home-care jobs, which often are low-paying and come without benefits.
"If we are to avert a home-care crisis in America, our leaders must invest in living wages and health-care coverage for home-care workers to ensure that we can meet the home-care needs of our growing elderly population," said Gerry Hudson, executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union, which represents about 400,000 of the estimated 1 million home-care workers.
"Unfortunately, today's Supreme Court ruling is a step in the wrong direction," he said.
But home-care agencies had said an adverse ruling would have meant scores of lawsuits seeking retroactive pay and future wages that would have sent the cost of care skyrocketing. New York City, for instance, told the court that its Medicaid payments for such care would rise by as much as $250 million under the appeals court's decision.
William A. Dombi, vice president for law for the National Association for Home Care and Hospice, welcomed the court's ruling in Long Island Care at Home v. Coke, but said he is sympathetic to the workers and the union.
The decision, he said, "doesn't resolve the underlying problem about proper levels of compensation."
ALSO: The New York Times has the story here.
Oh, for cryin' out loud!
From The Associated Press:
CBS Corp. Chief Executive Leslie Moonves shot back at former CBS news anchor Dan Rather on Tuesday, saying his characterization of the network "tarting" up its newscast with anchor Katie Couric was "sexist."
Rather, speaking by phone on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" program with Joe Scarborough Monday, said CBS had made the mistake of taking the evening news broadcast and "dumbing it down, tarting it up," and playing up topics such as celebrities over war coverage. The comments subsequently appeared in blogs and in a story published Tuesday in the New York Daily News and the New York Post.
While referring to his successor, Couric, as a "nice person," Rather said "the mistake was to try to bring the 'Today' show ethos to the 'Evening News,' and to dumb it down, tart it up in hopes of attracting a younger audience."
Moonves, asked about the remarks at an appearance in New York sponsored by the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, called the remarks "sexist" and said he was surprised at the amount of negative coverage Couric was receiving. Couric, the first solo female news anchor, has been struggling in the ratings.
"She's been on the air for nine months," Moonves said. "Let's give her a break."
Couric started strong but has settled into a distant third in the evening news ratings race. Last month her "CBS Evening News" set a record for its least-watched broadcast for at least two decades, then broke it the very next week.
Rather left as "CBS Evening News" anchor in March 2005 and cut ties to the network a year later. He continued to be dogged by controversy surrounding his role in a discredited story about President Bush's Vietnam-era military service.
Moonves said he "absolutely" had confidence in Couric and the direction that CBS's evening was going, saying it was imperative to reach younger audiences. Evening news broadcasts couldn't continue to have audiences that are mainly over 60, Moonves said, otherwise "the evening news will die."
And by the way, Les, this would be sexist. A typical bit by the guys you have doing the morning show on one of your New York FM stations, and syndicated on several other CBS stations.
They're the sexist ones, Les, not Dan Rather. And you like having them around just fine.
Bring out your dead. . . .
Why is this? Can New Orleans not even bury its dead?
CNN has a few answers (video is here):
The bodies are in the charge of Dr. Frank Minyard, the city's coroner. Minyard won't let anyone inside the warehouse because he says it would be undignified, but he did show us pictures of the inside. The caskets are wrapped in plastic and sit on a raised platform behind a chain link fence. He says the fence is there as an extra layer of security. Above each casket is a white plaque with a black number, one through 100. Minyard wouldn't give us the pictures to broadcast, but we got our own video from inside the warehouse.
Minyard is trying to raise $1.5 million to build a group of mausoleums for the bodies and a memorial in the swirling shape of a hurricane. But as the second anniversary approaches, it's unlikely those bodies will find a permanent resting place anytime soon. The coroner has raised $250,000 so far, and Charity Hospital has donated an old cemetery for the memorial. But Minyard says they won't be able to break ground until they raise another $150,000.
Monday, June 11, 2007
Louisville newspaper forgot to purchase
First Amendment rights to super-regional
* Denied Auburn University permission to bus its football players to a teammate's funeral in the early '90s (the school did it anyway), and
* Denied Louisiana State permission to fly its basketball team to a teammate's funeral in St. Louis in 1980 (Coach Dale Brown gave them the money to go anyway), and
* Denied permission for Georgia fans to fly a Boise State player's father back from Iraq (where he was training Iraqi police) so he could see his son play against the Bulldogs in Athens, Ga., and
* Has given its full cooperation toward turning every national collegiate championship into a veritable whorehouse of corporate sponsorships and rank commercialism . . .
comes this, as told by the victim, The (Louisville) Courier-Journal.
A Courier-Journal sports reporter had his media credential revoked and was ordered to leave the press box during the NCAA baseball super-regional yesterday because of what the NCAA alleged was a violation of its policies prohibiting live Internet updates from its championship events.
Gene McArtor, a representative of the NCAA baseball committee, approached C-J staffer Brian Bennett at the University of Louisville's Jim Patterson Stadium in the bottom of the fifth inning in the U of L-Oklahoma State game. McArtor told him that blogging from an NCAA championship event "is against NCAA policies. We're revoking the credential and need to ask you to leave the stadium."
Courier-Journal executive editor Bennie L. Ivory challenged the NCAA's action last night and said the newspaper would consider an official response.
"It's clearly a First Amendment issue," Ivory said. "This is part of the evolution of how we present the news to our readers. It's what we did during the Orange Bowl. It's what we did during the NCAA basketball tournament. It's what we do."
U of L circulated a memo on the issue from Jeramy Michiaels, the NCAA's manager of broadcasting, before Friday's first super-regional game. It said blogs are considered a "live representation of the game" and that any blog containing action photos or game reports would be prohibited.
"In essence, no blog entries are permitted between the first pitch and the final out of each game," the memo said.
Bennett had filed Internet reports from U of L's NCAA Tournament games at the Columbia (Mo.) Regional and did so from the first two games of the super-regional.
He was told before yesterday's game by U of L assistant sports information director Sean Moth that he was violating NCAA policy by filing periodic reports for The Courier-Journal's Web site, courier-journal.com.
After consulting with his editors, Bennett filed a report at 4:12 p.m. after the top of the first inning and added 15 more reports before he was asked to leave. U of L won 20-2 to advance to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb.
"It's a real question that we're being deprived of our right to report within the First Amendment from a public facility," said Jon L. Fleischaker, the newspaper's attorney.
"Once a player hits a home run, that's a fact. It's on TV. Everybody sees it. (The NCAA) can't copyright that fact. The blog wasn't a simulcast or a recreation of the game. It was an analysis."
During the middle of yesterday's game, Courier-Journal representatives were told by two members of the U of L athletic staff that if the school did not revoke Bennett's credential it would jeopardize the school's chances of hosting another NCAA baseball event.
"If that's true, that's nothing short of extortion and thuggery," Ivory said. "We will be talking to our attorneys (today) to see where we go from here."
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Did you know . . . I'm an idiot?
Friday, June 08, 2007
Did you know . . . ?
If you can't do the time. . . .
And Shakwanda from Compton said "A-MEN!"
Of course, in that fine spoiled brat tradition, the heiress horrible was led from the courtroom Friday weeping and screaming. Yes, screaming.
It's a fine day in America. The Associated Press has all the poop in this early dispatch:
I REMEMBER WHEN we used to call Jerry Brown "Governor Moonbeam" when he led California in the '70s. But, you know, I always thought he had a deeply sensible streak in there somewhere. And, boy, is he right on this one. There's a couple of course corrections called for here -- for the system, and for the hysterical heiress.Paris Hilton was escorted from a courtroom screaming and crying on Friday after a judge sent her back to jail to serve out her entire 45-day sentence for a parole violation in a reckless driving case.
“It’s not right!” shouted the weeping Hilton. “Mom!” she called out to her mother in the audience.
Hilton, who was brought to court in handcuffs in a sheriff’s car, came into the courtroom disheveled and weeping. Her hair was askew and she wore a gray fuzzy sweatshirt over slacks. She wore no makeup and she cried throughout the hearing.
Her body also shook constantly as she dabbed at her eyes. Several times she turned to her parents, seated behind her in the courtroom, and mouthed, “I love you.”
Superior Court Judge Michael T. Sauer was calm but apparently irked by the morning’s developments. He said he had left the courthouse Thursday night having signed an order for Hilton to appear for the hearing.
When he got in his car early Friday, he said, he heard a radio report that he had approved Hilton’s participation in the hearing by telephone, but he had not.
“I at no time condoned the actions of the sheriff and at no time told him I approved the actions,” he said of the decision to release Hilton from jail after three days.
“At no time did I approve the defendant being released from custody to her home on Kings Road,” Sauer said.
Earlier Friday, a weeping Hilton was brought back to court in a police car, apparently handcuffed. She was taken from her home, where she returned yesterday after the sheriff’s department decided she could serve out her sentence in home confinement, with an ankle monitor.
The frenzy began early Thursday when sheriff’s officials released Hilton because of an undisclosed medical condition and sent her home under house arrest. She had been in jail since late Sunday.
Hilton was fitted with an electronic monitoring ankle bracelet and was expected to finish her 45-day sentence for a reckless driving probation violation at her four-bedroom, three-bath home.
The decision by Sheriff Lee Baca to move Hilton chafed prosecutors and Superior Court Judge Michael T. Sauer, who spelled out during sentencing that Hilton was not allowed to serve house detention.
(snip)California Attorney General Jerry Brown criticized the Sheriff’s Department for letting Hilton out of jail, saying he believed she should serve out her sentence.
“It does hold up the system to ridicule when the powerful and the famous get special treatment,” Brown told The Associated Press before testifying at a congressional hearing in Washington.
“I’m sure there’s a lot of people who’ve seen their family members go to jail and have various ailments, physical and psychological, that didn’t get them released,” he said. “I’d say it’s time for a course correction.”
However satisfying it is to see Paris Hilton get hers (courtesy of the Long Arm of the Law, no less) -- and satisfying it is -- we have to hope that this is that pathetic young woman's Divine Wake-Up Call.
Listen, we're all dirty rotten sinners here, and we all have our pathologies and areas where we might even be bat-s*** crazy. The difference between Miss Hilton and your average struggling, stumbling Christian imperfectly trying to cooperate with God's saving grace is that we know we're screwed up.
We care that we're screwed up.
We don't want to be screwed up.
We're not making millions solely because we're screwed up.
And we're willing to take The Cure.
I hope Paris gets to be sick and tired, and then sick and tired of being sick and tired. And I hope she -- one day -- is willing to take The Cure, too.
Thursday, June 07, 2007
But how do you store spare light bulbs?
I . . . CAN'T . . . CUT . . . OFF . . . THE . . . LIGHTS!!!!!
From the London Daily Mail:
Scientists have sounded the death knell for the plug and power lead.OH, OK, you need a receiving coil before the blame scheme will work. But why let something as mundane as facts screw up a good lede and headline, eh?
In a breakthrough that sounds like something out of Star Trek, they have discovered a way of 'beaming' power across a room into a light bulb, mobile phone or laptop computer without wires or cables.
In the first successful trial of its kind, the team was able to illuminate a 60-watt light bulb 7ft away.
The team from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who call their invention 'WiTricity', believe it could change the way we use electricity and do away with the tangle of cables, plugs and chargers that clutter modern homes.
It could also allow the use of laptops and mobile phones without batteries.
The inspiration came when the lead researcher, Dr Marin Soljacic, was standing in his kitchen at night staring at his mobile phone.
"It was probably the sixth time that month that I was awakened by my cell phone beeping to let me know that I had forgotten to charge it. It occurred to me that it would be so great if the thing took care of its own charging," he said.
To turn this dream into reality, Dr Soljacic needed a way of transmitting power wirelessly.
Scientists have known for nearly two centuries that it is possible to transfer an electrical current from one coil of wire to another without them touching.
The phenomenon, called electromagnetic induction, is used in power transformers and electric motors around the world.
However, the coils in motors and transformers have to be close for power to pass from one to another. Attempting to transfer power over distances is impossible.
The breakthrough came when Dr Soljacic realised there was another way of transferring energy through the air.
Rather than sending power from a transmitter to a receiver as a conventional electromagnetic wave - the same form of radiation as light, radio waves and microwaves - he could use the transmitter to fill a room with a 'non-radiative' electromagnetic field.
Most objects in the room - such as people, desks and carpets - would be unaffected by the electromagnetic field. But any objects designed to resonate with the electromagnetic field would absorb the energy.
It sounds complicated, but the result demonstrated by the American team this month was a dramatic success. Using two coils of copper, the team transmitted power 7ft through the air to a light bulb, which lit up instantly.
That there's a Sub-Zero-size job
Anyway, The (New Orleans) Times-Picayune clarifies the situation:
A federal judge on Thursday froze the assets of Rep. William Jefferson, D-New Orleans, three days after the congressman was indicted on corruption charges.I WONDER whether the feds are going to have to resort to this to freeze the congressman's financials.
U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III granted the government's request for a restraining order keeping Jefferson from using nearly $500,000 and about 33 million shares of corporate stock prosecutors say he was paid in bribes.
I'm going to throw up now
TMZ.com reports:
Psychiatrist Charles Sophy visited Hilton in jail yesterday and the day before. We're told after Sophy's visit yesterday, word was passed to the Sheriff that Hilton's mental state was fragile and she was at risk.
The reason for releasing her had nothing to do with a rash or other physical issues. It was purely in her head.
Last month, on the eve of a trial in which Hilton was accused of slandering socialite Zeta Graph, Dr. Sophy told the judge that Hilton was "emotionally distraught and traumatized" over her jail sentence, which prevented her from participating in a meaningful defense. That trial was put on hold until August.
On second thought, solitary is just fine, thankyouverymuch.