Thursday, March 31, 2011

Alela Diane: Alela Diane & Wild Divine - review

(Rough Trade)

For her third album, US folk songwriter Alela Diane has given her beefed-up band a delicate new name ? Wild Divine ? and her traditional sound a glossy pop finish. Joining hubby Tom Bevitori and dad Tom Menig on guitar, bassist Jonas Haskins and drummer Jason Merculief weave the rhythm of the road through Diane's equally restless tales of hope, death and strange women. Musically, her new direction is colourful, with electric guitar brazen against pedal steel and slide, retro keyb oards shimmering next to bluegrass-hued banjo and accordion. But the result is surprisingly lightweight. Rising Greatness is only saved from Sheryl Crowish bland Americana by its defiant spirit, To Begin and Of Many Colours are rescued by Diane's remarkable, authorative voice. With the potentially great Desire snuffed out far too soon, it's only The Wind, with its "death is a hard act to follow" refrain and quirky, waltzy melody that distills Diane's uniqueness, rather than dilutes it.

Rating: 3/5


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Khloe Kardashian Gets Candid in Cosmo Middle East

Gracing the cover of the Middle East edition of Cosmopolitan, Khloe Kardashian opened up about her struggle with self-image in the public eye.

Along with talk about her career, her struggles with her father's death and husband Lamar Odom , the reality star gets candid about her body image - especially in comparison to her sisters - saying, ?I?m the ugly sister. I?m the fat one. I?m the transvestite. I have had those mean things said about me at least twice a day for the last five years."

The 26-year-old continued, "It?s horrible, you know? But I can brush that stuff off ... Kim and Kourtney have said to me, ?If we were put under the same negative attention that you are, we couldn?t handle it.?"

Khloe has talked about her weight in the past; in January, she wrote that her "weight is [her] biggest lifetime struggle" and in June she batted down pregnancy rumors, insisting that she was "just fat."

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Remarks by the President at a DNC Event

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

Studio Museum in Harlem
New York, New York

8:51 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody. 

AUDIENCE:  Hello!

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, New York.  (Applause.)  Hello, Harlem.  (Applause.)  It is good to be here tonight.  Hey, you, how did you get up there so high?  (Laughter.) 

I’ve got some acknowledgements I need to make.  Everybody here is important, but there are a few people I want to mention.

First of all, we are in the district of somebody who helped us to deliver on a historic legislative session over the last couple of years and has been a leader here for a very long time -- he doesn’t like to remember how long it’s been -- but Congressman Charlie Rangel is in the house.  (Applause.)

We’ve got your outstanding attorney general.  Eric Schneiderman is here.  (Applause.)  The former mayor of New York City, David Dinkins, is in the house.  (Applause.)  Several of Harlem’s outstanding leaders -- a great friend, one of my earliest supporters here in New York City, Senator Bill Perkins is in the house.  (Applause.)  Assemblyman Keith Wright is here. (Applause.)  Councilwoman Inez Dickens is here.  (Applause.) 

And finally, I just want to say how thankful I am for our Democratic National Committee Chairman.  I think some people obviously have seen Tim Kaine on television, and know that he was a governor of the great Commonwealth of Virginia.  What some of you may not know is Tim was the first person, the first elected official outside of the state of Illinois to endorse my candidacy for President.  (Applause.)

He made that announcement as governor of Virginia in Richmond, former seat of the Confederacy.  And this is back in February of 2007 when most people could not pronounce my name.  (Laughter.)  And there was not a big political upside to endorsing me at that point.  But he decided to do it because he thought it was the right thing to do and because we share a set of values about why to get into public service and who we were fighting for and the kind of America we were fighting for.

And I say all this because there have been some rumors swirling around that Tim might decide to plunge back into electoral politics.  And if he does I want even people up here to be paying attention and to be rooting for him, because he is not just a leader for Virginia, he is a leader for America.  And I'm very thankful to him.  Thank you, Tim.  (Applause.) 

Now, we meet here tonight, after as challenging a two years as America has gone through in our lifetimes.  And when we started this journey three or four years ago we understood that America was at a turning point.  We understood that the wheels of history were churning and that the old ways of doing business couldn't help us to get to where America needed to be.  It couldn't make us more competitive.  It couldn't make us more energy independent.  It couldn’t ensure that our kids were learning and able not only to go to college but also advance in careers.

We knew that how we approached international policy, trying to stand on our own without thinking about how we could mobilize the international community as a force multiplier, that that was not going to work given the incredible number of challenges that we faced.  And most of all, I guess we understood that unless we changed our politics, unless we changed how we did business, that the same problems that we had been talking about decade after decade would perpetuate themselves; that we had to undergo a transformation in how we thought about citizenship and how we thought about each other, and that we had to get beyond some of the old divisions that were holding us back as a people.

And so what our campaign tried to do was to resuscitate that notion that there’s something fundamental that binds us together, despite all our differences.  You look out on the room today, we’ve got people from every possible walk of life.  And that's part of what makes New York City such an incredible place.  (Applause.)  And so what we wanted to do was adapt to the times, adapt to the 21st century, but also remind ourselves that there are some old-fashioned, timeworn values; that whether your forebears landed at Ellis Island or they came here on a slave ship or they crossed the Rio Grande, or however they got here, they typically had a commitment to hard work and a commitment to community and a commitment to family and a willingness to dream big dreams, and a patriotism that was not rooted in ethnicity but was rooted in a creed and a set of ideals and a belief that in America anything was possible.  That's what brought us together as a campaign.  (Applause.) 

And what we then tried to do is to translate in concrete terms what would that mean in terms of policy.  It would mean that we were educating our kids not just to be outstanding workers and outstanding entrepreneurs, but also outstanding citizens.  It meant that we had to make sure that we had an energy policy that not only protected the planet but also ensured our long-term security because it ratcheted down our dependence on foreign oil.  It meant that we finally had, in a nation as wealthy as ours, a health care system that was rational and smart and did not leave millions of people uninsured or at risk of bankruptcy just because a family member got sick.  (Applause.) 

We had to make sure that the ideals of equality and justice had real meaning, and that we didn’t just stand pat on the progress that we had made during my lifetime, but in fact we kept on making progress so that 50 years from now people would look back and they’d say, this is a more just and a more equal place for everybody.  (Applause.)  It’s exciting, isn’t it?  (Laughter.) 

So here’s the deal, people.  We haven’t finished our task.  We’ve still got some work to do.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Fired up!

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Ready to go!

THE PRESIDENT:  There have been times where we had to make some really tough decisions, really unpopular decisions, digging ourselves out of this incredible economic hole that we were in. We had to stabilize the financial system.  That wasn’t always popular.  We had to save the U.S. auto industry, and everybody said that wasn’t going to work.  And I just want to report that GM just announced it’s hiring every single one of the workers that they laid off before we took office.  (Applause.)

But when you look back on the track record of accomplishments over the last two years, I think you can go down that list of commitments we made to each other -- not just commitments I made, but commitment we made to each other about the kind of country we want to be -- and I think we’ve got some things that we can be proud of. 

We passed health care reform, and it is going to make life better for millions of Americans.  (Applause.)  We pulled this economy out of the ditch, and just in this last year alone, over a million and a half jobs have been created, and we’re going to keep on creating more.  We made sure that we finally got rid of that archaic policy, “don’t ask, don’t tell,” because we wanted to make sure that every American who wants to serve, can serve.  (Applause.)

We raised fuel-efficiency standards on cars and invested in record amounts in clean energy, because we want to make sure that wind energy and solar panels and all of the incredible promise of a new energy future starts right here in the United States of America.

So we can go down the list domestically, and then we can talk internationally.  Obviously that's been on a lot of our minds lately.  And we are grateful to our men and women in uniform who have implemented so many difficult policies under such incredibly difficult conditions.  (Applause.)  And whether it’s helping the people of Haiti or it’s helping the people of Japan, whether it is being on the right side of history in the Middle East and North Africa or making sure that innocents who are seeking their freedom aren't slaughtered by tyranny -- (applause) -- what we've been able to do is to once again form the kind of American leadership that brings people together, as opposed to drives them apart, and that renews old alliances and creates new coalitions.

So we've gotten a lot of stuff done.  But right now what’s on my mind is what hasn’t gotten done yet.  We're going to have to fix a broken immigration system, and that is not yet complete. (Applause.)  We've got to make sure that even as we're securing our borders we also recognize that we are a nation of immigrants and that we want everybody to be able to partake in the American Dream.  (Applause.) 

We've got to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.  I mean, New York looks pretty good, but we've got a lot of work to do on bridges and sewer systems, but also on the new infrastructure of a new age, making sure that we've got the best broadband systems and the best wireless systems and the smart grids and the high-speed rails that will help move people and goods and services and information all throughout this great country of ours.

We still have a lot of work to do on energy.  You know, tomorrow I'm going to give an energy speech.  The last time gas prices were this high was in 2008 when I was running.  And you remember what was going on right back then.  The other side kept on talking about “drill, baby, drill.”  That was the slogan. 

What we were talking about was breaking the pattern of being shocked at high prices and then, as prices go down, being lulled into a trance, but instead let’s actually have a plan.  (Applause.)  Let’s, yes, increase domestic oil production, but let’s also invest in solar and wind and geothermal and biofuels and let’s make our buildings more efficient and our cars more efficient.  Not all of that work is done yet, but I’m not finished yet.  (Applause.)  We’ve got more work to do.

We’re going to have to work to get our deficit under control.  I inherited a big debt and a big deficit.  And regardless of how we assign fault, all of us are responsible to work together to try to make sure that we can actually in good conscience be able to tell our children and our grandchildren we didn’t leave a mountain of debt to them. 

And that’s going to require some hard choices and it’s going to require us not just telling the American people what they want to hear but telling them what they need to hear.  And I think the American people are ready for that, but it’s not going to be easy.  And if we’re serious about winning the future, then all of us are going to have to recognize that we’ve got to have a government that lives within its means, that's investing in the things that we have to invest in to win the future, which means that we’re going to cut out some things that we don't need -- even if they're nice to have.

So if you go down this list and you say, not bad for two years work -- the one thing that I want everybody here to understand is that I am as hopeful, if not more hopeful, now than I was when I was running.  (Applause.)

You know, I did a bunch of network interviews today to talk about what we’re doing in Libya and why what happens in the Middle East is so important to us, and why those images coming from Tahrir Square in Egypt speak directly to who we are as a people, and that ultimately our long-term security will be because a new generation of leadership in that region recognizes we aspire for them to have opportunity and to be successful. 

And Diane Sawyer I think it was, she started listing out, well, let’s see, two wars that you’ve dealt with, a couple of earthquakes, nuclear situation in Japan, H1N1 virus, worst recession since the Great Depression.  “No wonder you look old,” she said.  (Laughter.) 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  You look great!  (Laughter.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  No, she actually did not say, “No wonder you look old.”  (Laughter.)  But I do appreciate you saying that I look great.  (Laughter.)  I need encouragement, too, once in a while.  (Laughter.)

But no, what she said was, well, you know what, how do you kind of -- when you get up in the morning, how do you stay focused and motivated?  Don't you just want to pull the covers over your head sometimes? 

And what I said was that after two and a half years in this job -- or close to two and a half years, the thing that continually keeps me going is my complete confidence in the American people. 

There's a lot of talk about how divided America is, and how frustrated and angry and, in some cases people make arguments that especially the next generation, somehow they’re apathetic or they’re not involved.  I don't see that.  I mean, what I see are people who every day are doing the right thing by their families, by their communities.  They’re getting up, they’re going to work, or they’re out there pounding the pavement looking for work.  They’re managing budgets under incredible strain, but they’re doing so with grace and good humor. 

I see people who day in and day out are making sure that we got some -- do we have somebody here to just -- we don’t need -- we’ve got -- somebody is always following me around, so they’ll be fine.  It’s just -- next time you guys come, make sure to eat or drink ahead of time. 

But what I see in the American people is just a core goodness and a core decency that expresses itself in so many different ways each and every day.  But that spirit, it’s got to be expressed not just in the workplace, not just on the Little League field or in church or a synagogue or a mosque.  It also has to be expressed in our politics.

And so the biggest thing that we haven’t gotten done and the thing that I’m going to ask all of you to be part of over the next couple of years -- we still have a big job to do in transforming our politics; to make sure that we can have robust debate and real policy differences, but we never forget that what binds us together is always stronger than what drives us apart -- (applause) -- and that for all the differences in race and region and ethnicity and background, we are all Americans and we believe in a set of fundamental principles, truths that we hold self-evident.  That is going to be as much of the unfinished business that we focus on over the next couple years as anything that we do.  And having friends like you who are here and ready to commit to that vision, that, too, makes me extraordinarily confident. 

So thank you so much, everybody.  I love you.  (Applause.)  Let’s go to work.  Yes, we can.

AUDIENCE:  Yes, we can!

THE PRESIDENT:  Yes, we can.  God bless you.  (Applause.)

END
9:12 P.M. EDT 

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President Obama Announces Ambassador Princeton N. Lyman as U.S. Special Envoy for Sudan

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

I am pleased to announce the appointment of Ambassador Princeton N. Lyman as the new U.S. Special Envoy for Sudan.  With a lifetime of experience working on some of Africa’s most pressing challenges, Ambassador Lyman is uniquely qualified to sustain our efforts in support of a peaceful and prosperous future for the Sudanese people. I also want to thank my friend Scott Gration for his tireless and effective work as my previous Special Envoy. As the State Department’s Senior Advisor on Sudan North-South Negotiations since last August, Ambassador Lyman worked closely with General Gration, as part of the American diplomatic effort that led to an historic and peaceful independence referendum for South Sudan.

I was proud to nominate General Gration as our next ambassador to Kenya, and I am grateful that Ambassador Lyman has agreed to take on this new assignment and sustain the progress that has been made.  In his new capacity, Ambassador Lyman will oversee our support for full implementation of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, reduced tensions between north and south over the status of Abyei, the birth of an independent South Sudan on July 9, 2011, and a definitive end to the conflict in Darfur.  In those efforts, he has my full support and confidence.

Just as the United States depended on his diplomatic skills to help support the peaceful transition from apartheid to democracy when he was U.S. Ambassador to South Africa, I am confident that Ambassador Lyman’s deep knowledge of the African continent will advance U.S. interests and the aspirations of the Sudanese people during this time of transformative change in Sudan.

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A More Social Pandora

Tim Image for FB.pngDear listeners -

After months of furious development, this morning we're launching a major new initiative on Pandora.

As you may know, we've tried for a while now to figure out how to incorporate the more social aspects of music into our service. Sharing music is, after all, one of life's great pleasures.

The idea behind today's update is to make it really easy to share your Pandora stations and music discoveries with your friends - and vice versa. Now your friends can be a daily source of inspiration for new stations and music discovery. I've been testing out the service while we were developing it and I have to say it really brings a wonderful new human dimension to the listening experience.

To make this truly easy for you, we've partnered with the experts at Facebook. Starting today, you can easily link your experience on Pandora with your friends on Facebook. This quickly brings your Facebook friend list into Pandora along with your Facebook profile picture. It quite literally puts a whole new face on Pandora.

Know that this is entirely optional. Even though we're excited about the new dimension this adds to Pandora, we want to be very respectful of your privacy. If you don't want to bring your Facebook world into Pandora, just opt out. It will disappear forever. Period.

As always, and maybe on this one more than ever, we're eager to hear what you think.

Enjoy!

Tim (Founder)

P.S. For more detail, feel free to check out: blog.pandora.com/faq/contents/10010.html

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Urban League to President Obama: Black Jobless Rate Nearly Double That of Whites

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While the Congressional agenda has been focused on the federal budget and spending cuts, the National Urban League's State of Black America report is focused on the same thing the 15 percent of black America (in some cases, 50 percent) is focused on: jobs.

The reports cover topics like education and health care, but each summary is connected by a common thread: jobs. The League is not responding to a new phenomenon, but instead calling attention to a consistent pattern of black unemployment that transcends the country's overall economic condition.

"The most cursory look at the job numbers for African Americans tells the grim reason for that assertion. The black jobless rate is still nearly double that of whites. The rate for young black males is far worse. In some urban areas, one out of three young blacks are unemployed. The chronic high jobless rate is not solely the result of the economic downturn of the past two years. During the 1990s, a boom time for the economy, the black jobless rate was still double that of white males," The Grio reports.

In their report, the League details "A Dozen Ideas for Putting Urban America Back to Work" and points to two "grave dangers" in the high unemployment rate for black men: It creates a permanent underclass within black communities and it drains the social services resources within the already underfunded communities.

The Grio reports that the League, the NAACP and the Congressional Black Caucus have pushed the Obama administration to make black unemployment a priority, but alas, it has escaped the president's purview.


Source: Atlanta Post


Kevin Eason is a freelance editorial cartoonist and illustrator from New Jersey. His brand of satire covers news events in politics, entertainment, sports and much more. Follow him on Facebook.

 

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He's behind yo!: Vanilla Ice to star in panto in Kent

Ice Ice Baby star will play Captain Hook in 'the new hit play Peter Pan' ? although he doesn't seem entirely sure where Chatham is

After decades of rocking the mic like a vandal, Vanilla Ice is hitting the panto. With a new album due soon, the, er, acclaimed rapper has announced that he will star in a Christmas-time pantomime in Kent.

Vanilla Ice is spending a lot of time in the UK, these days ? shopping for a Rolls Royce, performing with Dancing On Ice, taking the train to Slough. But his true anglophile moment will take place in December, when he joins a three-week run at Chatham's Central Theatre. More than 20 years after Vanilla Ice scored an international hit with Ice Ice Baby, the Texas-born rapper will play neither the front half nor the back half of a panto horse ? he is instead donning a prosthesis as Captain Hook in Peter Pan.

"Ice is a huge name who I am sure will be a real draw for parents and children alike," Tony Hill, general manager of the theatre, told BBC News. "[He] has never performed in a pantomime before, but I am sure that he will go down as a hit." Though the rapper confirmed on Twitter that he will appear in Peter Pan, someone ought to remind him about the nature of the show, and of its location. "I will ... star in the new hit play Peter Pan in London," he announced last week. "Hope you all can come to see it."

Vanilla Ice has remained active in the years since Ice Ice Baby, releasing a string of hip-hop and hard rock albums, and spending time in real estate. He also received an unexpected bump last year, in a collaboration with X Factor rejects Jedward.

The 43-year-old's sixth album, described as "hip hop, techno, funk", is due later this year.

Peter Pan runs at the Central Theatre from 9 December 2011 to 2 January 2012.


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Statement by the Press Secretary on the President's Videoconference with President Sarkozy, Chancellor Merkel and Prime Minister Cameron

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

President Obama spoke by videoconference this afternoon with President Sarkozy, Chancellor Merkel and Prime Minister Cameron as part of his regular consultations with European allies.  They had a broad strategic discussion of recent events in the Middle East and focused particular attention on Libya and Egypt.  On Libya, they welcomed the international conference that will be held tomorrow in London.  They reviewed the significant progress achieved by coalition forces during the first phase of operations to enforce United Nations Security Council Resolutions 1970 and 1973, protect civilians in Libya, and prevent a humanitarian crisis.  They agreed that Qadhafi had lost any legitimacy to rule and should leave power, and that the Libyan people should have the political space to determine their own future.  They also discussed the transition to NATO command and control to enforce UNSCR 1973.  President Obama reiterated that the United States will provide supporting capabilities to the Coalition effort.  On Egypt, the leaders discussed the latest political developments following the March 19 constitutional referendum and additional ways the international community could help support the democratic transition there.

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Statement by the Press Secretary on the President's Videoconference with President Sarkozy, Chancellor Merkel and Prime Minister Cameron

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

President Obama spoke by videoconference this afternoon with President Sarkozy, Chancellor Merkel and Prime Minister Cameron as part of his regular consultations with European allies.  They had a broad strategic discussion of recent events in the Middle East and focused particular attention on Libya and Egypt.  On Libya, they welcomed the international conference that will be held tomorrow in London.  They reviewed the significant progress achieved by coalition forces during the first phase of operations to enforce United Nations Security Council Resolutions 1970 and 1973, protect civilians in Libya, and prevent a humanitarian crisis.  They agreed that Qadhafi had lost any legitimacy to rule and should leave power, and that the Libyan people should have the political space to determine their own future.  They also discussed the transition to NATO command and control to enforce UNSCR 1973.  President Obama reiterated that the United States will provide supporting capabilities to the Coalition effort.  On Egypt, the leaders discussed the latest political developments following the March 19 constitutional referendum and additional ways the international community could help support the democratic transition there.

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The Conservative States Of America

Richard Florida delves into the data: Conservatism, at least at the state level, appears to be growing stronger. Ironically, this trend is most pronounced in America's least well-off, least educated, most blue collar, most economically hard-hit states. Conservatism, more and...


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Eliza Doolittle ? review

ABC, Glasgow

It is surely no coincidence that Eliza Doolittle's UK tour has kicked off just as the clocks have gone forward and the first mild breezes of spring have begun to blow. The 22-year-old Londoner's sound (twee, gently soulful picnic pop) and look (tonight: midriff-exposing pink top, yellow shorts, sparkly trainers, waist-length curly locks) are so sunshiny she might as well have just emerged from hibernation since last summer, when her platinum-selling self-titled debut album was released. To have prompted so many of her teenage-girl fans to totter into town in their high heels and hot pants during colder months would have just been irresponsible.

The stage is framed by two huge pairs of legs, clad in rollerblades, stretching skywards. Doolittle's backing band sport perma-smiles, buttoned-up baby-blue shirts and bow ties. Her light, chirping, mockney voice brings an instant hit of minty freshness, and she dispatches tonight's opener, Moneybox, with all the effortlessness of Lily Allen's even cockier little sister.

It is a shame, then, that her repertoire reveals itself to be so limited, and that Doolittle delivers it with such limited conviction. The sweetness overload of her music suggests a performer with all the bounce and sparkle of a kids' TV presenter, but she comes across more like a moody teen roped into helping out at a younger sibling's birthday party. You can practically feel her blushes as she participates in the cutesy shtick of reaching into a big red toybox to pull out a ukulele, on which her guitarist strums the skiffly opening chords of Skinny Genes. When it comes to the mandatory audience-split-down-the-middle singalong, Doolittle rattles it off without so much as a cursory, "I can't hear you!"

Her best song, an unreleased R&B acoustic number penned when she was only 17, provides an intriguingly angsty counterpoint ? "You said you wouldn't hurt me/ Now I just feel dirty" ? though its impact is promptly negated by a tedious lounge cover of Bruno Mars's Grenade.

Doolittle's biggest hit, Pack Up, gets a mostly inert crowd swaying gently with its Cuban rhythm and upbeat chorus (lifted from Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit-Bag), before a take on Kanye West's mildly sweary Runaway ? a curiously biting choice of closing song, however brightened and abridged her version is ? adds to the nagging suspicion that Doolittle might next prefer doing something she, let alone everyone else, can take a bit more seriously. If she is to enjoy a career that lasts beyond another summer, that is probably wise.

Rating: 2/5


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It's not a family affair: Beyonc� and her dad split

Beyonc�'s dad is no longer her manager, another case of how showbiz and parents don't always mix

It's Johnny Sharpbeen 20 years since she joined her first girl group aged nine, but Beyonc� Knowles has finally parted company with father and long-time manager, Mathew. By mutual consent, they say, but you wonder if Mathew's plans to spend more time on his gospel label were announced with all the enthusiasm of those MPs who step down to "spend more time with their families".

You could hardly blame Beyonc�. Stories are legion of Mathew's strict control of her affairs and those of Destiny's Child, with whom she rose to fame. And he was never a man to fall out with, as early members LaTavia Roberson and LeToya Luckett discovered when they saw the band's video for Say My Name ? and two new singers in their place.

But if Beyonc� has been the instigator of this move, then it once again shows us that in showbiz, families and management rarely mix well. The rod of iron (not to mention other blunt objects) with which manager father Joe is said to have ruled the Jackson clan didn't exactly result in pop's happiest family, but at least none of them went as far as 80s teenpop sensation Tiffany, who, at 16, applied in court to be declared an "emancipated minor", in effect attempting to divorce her "momager".

Last year, Kylie Minogue sacked her mother from her touring party, citing the impeccably altruistic motivation of "wanting her to relax more". Dina Lohan's self-effacing approach to promoting herself and her daughters/clients Lindsay and Ali as a walking, squawking soap opera has provoked much debate, while the first act of Britney Spears's father Jamie when he became "conservator" of her affairs involved suing her old manager for allegedly drugging her. That one looks set to end well, then.

Stark contrast with Paul Weller, whose father John managed him for 30 years until his death in 2009, a confidante to the end. Mind you, couldn't John have had a word about some of those haircuts?


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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Quote For The Day II

"This is my 10th presidential campaign, Lord help me. I have never before seen such a bunch of vile, desperate-to-please, shameless, embarrassing losers coagulated under a single party's banner. They are the most compelling argument I've seen against American exceptionalism....


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Gabrielle Union Talks Planned Parenthood

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With all of the recent controversy about Planned Parenthood being disproportionately placed in minority communities - and allegedly being the cause of many African-American babies being aborted - actress Gabrielle Union has decided to speak up.

For Union, the Planned Parenthood controversy hits a personal note: Her best friend, who lacked health care, was able to receive both screening and treatment for cancer. Even though Union's friend recently died from the disease, Union contends that Planned Parenthood still gave her friend a fighting chance.


At the age of 32, my girlfriend Kristen Martinez was diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer. She fought incredibly hard for five years but ultimately lost her battle with breast cancer on June 16, 2010.

We knew she wasn't going to make it this past summer, so I asked her, What's the one thing that you want young girls to take away, what do you want your legacy to be?

She said just to remind people and women, especially, that you are your own best advocate, and if you don't put you first, no one else will. With all that's going on in the media about Planned Parenthood and abortions, I think the media is doing the public a great disservice. The fact that only 3 percent of the services that Planned Parenthood provides are abortions makes you wonder what's happening with the other 97 percent of what Planned Parenthood is doing.

The vast majority of the work that they do is preventative. Planned Parenthood provides low-cost reproductive information and care, which goes into providing contraception. For women who choose to keep their babies, they offer low-cost pregnancy services as well.

Planned Parenthood is providing vaccines, cervical cancer screenings, 830,000 breast exams, STD screenings and (overall) half-a-million HIV screenings. The way people are focusing now on Planned Parenthood is like they are taking one piece and deciding that the whole thing is bad, and that's just not the case.

As for Planned Parenthood's supposed targeting of African-American women, I think when you factor in socioeconomics and the fact that there are plenty of underprivileged and younger women who don't have access to proper health care and affordable contraception, you also see an increase in the number of African-American women getting abortions.

The reality of what Planned Parenthood is doing is trying to increase the number of planned pregnancies and give women the options of planning out their pregnancies by way of contraception.

That is the bulk of what Planned Parenthood is doing.

For a lot of women, the last stop for affordable health care and acceptable health care is Planned Parenthood. It's the place that a lot of people go to, certainly minorities, because you know it's the one place where you're not getting turned away when you're asking questions about reproductive care.

If we provide more access to quality and affordable contraception, and information, you're going to see those numbers go down across the board and not just in terms of the African-American community.

For women, and for society at large, we should care that Planned Parenthood's funding could get cut. If you look at the fact that a good chunk of the women that go to Planned Parenthood receive federal funding anyway and you realize this is where they're turning to go ... if you eliminate Planned Parenthood, think of all the STDs that will be spread, all of the women who won't be receiving preventative health care in terms of breast cancer, cervical cancer. Think of all the women who wouldn't get reproductive health and information. Cutting Planned Parenthood's funding does such a disservice to our already underserved community.

This should be the last place that should be cut.

One in five women will visit a Planned Parenthood at some point in their lifetime. We cannot eliminate the funding. It does not make good sense, it doesn't make good business sense, it doesn't make moral sense or health sense.

If you go to IStandWithPlannedParenthood, you can add your name to a petition asking Congress to stop Planned Parenthood from losing federal funding. Almost a million people are already signed up, but we just need to keep it going. Our elected officials want to hear from you, and there's strength in numbers.

The more numbers we can get saying we refuse to stand by idly and let you cut such a necessary institution like Planned Parenthood - they will respond to that. As people who want to eliminate the funding are rallying their troops, we need to rally ours, and it doesn't mean you need to be pro-life or pro-choice, it just means you don't want to see underprivileged women across the board stop receiving the health services that they so desperately need.

Gabrielle Union has starred in "The Perfect Holiday,""Meet Dave" and "Cadillac Records" and is the long-standing face of Neutrogena. She is currently filming a pilot and is an ambassador for the Susan G. Komen Foundation and the Young Survivor Coalition.

 

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BBC4's Top of the Pops revival: hits that could feature

Songs in the UK chart in 1976-77 that are likely to be included in BBC4's archive shows

Top 40 hits of early April 1976

1 Brotherhood Of Man Save Your Kisses For Me

2 Barry White You See The Trouble With Me

3 John Miles Music

4 Billy Ocean Love Really Hurts Without You

5 Abba Fernando

6 Elton John Pinball Wizard

7 10cc I'm Mandy Fly Me

8 Gallagher & Lyle I Wanna Stay With You

9 The Beatles Yesterday

10 Tina Charles I Love To Love

11 Marmalade Falling Apart At The Seams

12 Hank Mizell Jungle Rock

13 The Drifters Hello Happiness

14 The Glitter Band People Like You People Like Me

15 The Eagles Take It To The Limit

16 Diana Ross Theme From Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)

17 Randy Edelman Concrete And Clay

18 Sailor Girls Girls Girls

19 Guys 'N' Dolls You Don't Have To Say You Love Me

20 Hot Chocolate Don't Stop It Now

21 The Beatles Hey Jude

22 Peters & Lee Hey Mr Music Man

23 CW McCall Convoy

24 The Beatles Paperback Writer

25 Cliff Richard Miss You Nights

26 The Carpenters There's A Kind Of Hush

27 Isaac Hayes Disco Connection

28 Be Bop Deluxe Ships In The Night

29 Harold Melvin & The Bluenotes Wake Up Everybody

30 Brass Construction Movin'

31 David Essex City Lights

32 Silver Convention Get Up And Boogie

33 The Doors Riders On The Storm

34 Sheer Elegance Life Is Too Short Girl

35 Mary Hopkin If You Love Me

36 The Beatles with Billy Preston Get Back

37 The Beatles Strawberry Fields Forever

38 The Small Faces Lazy Sunday

39 Bay City Rollers Love Me Like I Love You

40 Chris White Spanish Wine

Top hits of 1976

1 Brotherhood of Man Save Your Kisses For Me

2 Elton John & Kiki Dee Don't Go Breaking My Heart

3 Pussycat Mississippi

4 Abba Dancing Queen

5 Dr Hook A Little Bit More

6 Chicago If You Leave Me Now

7 Abba Fernando

8 Tina Charles I Love To Love

9 Demis Roussos The Roussos Phenonemon (EP)

10 Showaddywaddy Under The Moon Of Love

No 1 singles of 1976

31 Jan Abba Mamma Mia

14 Feb Slik Forever And Ever

21 Feb Four Seasons December '63 (Oh What A Night)

6 Mar Tina Charles I Love To Love

27 Mar Brotherhood Of Man Save Your Kisses For Me

8 May Abba Fernando

5 Jun JJ Barrie No Charge

12 Jun The Wurzels Combine Harvester (Brand New Key)

26 Jun The Real Thing You To Me Are Everything

17 Jul Demis Roussos The Roussos Phenomenon (EP)

24 Jul Elton John & Kiki Dee Don't Go Breaking My Heart

4 Sep Abba Dancing Queen

11 Oct Pussycat Mississippi

13 Nov Chicago If You Leave Me Now

4 Dec Showaddywaddy Under The Moon Of Love

25 Dec Johnny Mathis When A Child Is Born

No 1 singles of 1977

15 Jan David Soul Don't Give Up On Us

12 Feb Julie Covington Don't Cry For Me Argentina

19 Feb Leo Sayer When I Need You

12 Mar Manhattan Transfer Chanson D'Amour

2 Apr Abba Knowing Me Knowing You

7 May Deniece Williams Free

21 May Rod Stewart I Don't Want To Talk About It / First Cut Is The Deepest

18 Jun Kenny Rogers Lucille

25 Jun The Jacksons Show You The Way To Go

2 Jul Hot Chocolate So You Win Again

23 Jul Donna Summer I Feel Love

20 Aug Brotherhood Of Man Angelo

27 Aug The Floaters Float On

3 Sep Elvis Presley Way Down

Source: Everyhit.com


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Readout of the Vice President's Call with Bahraini Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The Vice President spoke today to Bahraini Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa to reiterate U.S. support for the Crown Prince’s efforts to initiate a National Dialogue on political reform.  The Vice President recognized the important steps taken by the Crown Prince to reach out to the opposition and that law and order are necessary in order for a productive dialogue to proceed.  The Vice President encouraged additional outreach and meaningful reform that is responsive to the aspirations of all Bahrainis.  The Vice President and Crown Prince agreed that only a political solution would give Bahrain long-term stability.

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School Board Member Revisits 'N***er Heaven'

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Ann Murray, Nigger Heaven


The public school system in Broward County was thrust into the limelight earlier this month, after video surfaced of 29-year-old Ticora Daniels slapping a 7-year-old boy's hand from his mouth, because he allegedly struck her daughter on a school bus.

Now, the ignorant and racist statements of school board member Ann Murray (pictured below) will ensure that Broward County stays in the news for quite some time.

In 2007, Murray, at the time a bus terminal supervisor, told her colleagues, which included three African-American bus drivers, that she was forced to sit in "n**ger heaven" while attending a Bills game:

"Do you remember when a group of us from transportation came down to watch a Bills game, she asked fellow supervisor Lisa Spince. "Yeah, they had us up in n**er heaven. You know, way up at the top of the stadium.''

One of the bus drivers, Markeia Funchess, filed a complaint with the board's Equal Educational Opportunities Department, in spite of receiving a phony apology from Murray.

According to the Miami Herald, Funchess said Murray referred to it as the "n**ger bleed section,'' then apologized and said, "I forgot the company that I was in.'' In a statement, Murray issued another apology:

"In 2007, I used a word I should have never used,'' Murray wrote. " "Minutes after saying it, I apologized to my co-workers and subordinates. Eventually, I received a very strong reprimand from my supervisor. To this day, I have the deepest regret for the incident and the pain I may have caused others. I ask the African-American community and all communities who suffer with the ugliness of bigotry to accept my sincerest apology. I pray for healing and forgiveness from those I have offended as we move toward a new chapter and forever close the old.''

School Board Member Ann Murray Revisits 'N***er Heaven'


If Funchess's account is correct, "I forgot the company that I was in" can hardly be considered "deepest regret." It sounds like the instinctive reaction of a spineless bigot who forgot the target of her ingrained prejudice was within earshot.

During a school board meeting, where ethics and leadership were called in to question because two school board members were arrested for bribery and official misconduct, Freda Stevens, vice president of the Democratic Black Caucus, called for Murray's resignation, saying that her apology came "too late":

"If I didn't call her out, she never would have apologized,'' said Stevens. "She is just trying to save her political career.''

Her career may need saving from more than her Klan-ish tendencies.

According to the Palm Beach/Broward County New Times, after Murray's election to the school board, she "quickly cozied up to the special-interest campaign contributors [that] she claimed she would fight... and hasn't reformed a thing."

But that doesn't stop Broward County from protecting their own, and on Monday, Broward Superintendent Jim Notter made it clear how ineffective Murray's punishment was:

"[The reprimand] went in her personnel file and that was basically the end.''

While racist statements, such as the ones uttered by Murray, come a dime a dozen, when you look at the incident in a broader sense, this incident bothers me more than most.

Why?

Because it highlights not just racism, but the systemic classism that our black students in Broward County are forced to endure.

When turning the microscope on the county that was instrumental to the high-jacking of the presidential election in 2000 and where the dropout rate of African-American students is double that of white students, even though the population is 20.5 percent and 58 percent, respectively, what quickly becomes evident is that there is a culture of clinging to manufactured entitlement in this county that did not die with slavery.

As a young girl in Mississippi, I remember listening to my elders reminisce about the "Buzzards Roost," the "Coloreds Only" balcony seating at the old Clarke Theater. Under the cover of anonymity, their classmates would throw popcorn down on the heads of white moviegoers. During those days, where blacks sat was patronizingly coined "heaven" because we were considered lucky to even be allowed into the theater.

So while it comes as no surprise that this incident was regarded as something so small that it warranted nothing more than a "written reprimand," what is troubling is the nonchalant way in which Murray introduced Jim Crow-era racism into the conversation.

Like it was second nature.

This woman was not only allowed to keep her job in 2007, but to subsequently become a member of a local governing body whose sole purpose is to represent the public and ensure our children receive the best education possible.

Her insensitive statements show just how little respect she has for the public she's supposed to serve, and if nothing more than a written reprimand is given, Broward County will once again prove why they are considered a safe haven for cronyism and corruption, and no apology can ever heal that.

 

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The View From Your Window

Port Aransas, Texas, 12 pm


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