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Continue reading …‘Your Highness’: Reviews, Trailer, Synopsis For Danny McBride Comedy (VIDEO) Your Highness Movie Review: Beyond The Trailer Your Highness Movie | Official Site for the Your Highness Film … Your Highness Video Review Related. Your Highness Trailer Starring James Franco, Danny McBride, Natalie Portman, and Zooey Deschanel · 10 Pictures of James Franco, Zooey Deschanel, Danny McBride, Natalie Portman in Your Highness · Your Highness Movie Review … Movie Review: Your Highness | California Literary Review Your Highness Trailer . Related articles: Movie Review: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice · Movie Review: Scott Pilgrim vs. the World · Movie Review: 127 Hours · Movie Review: Gnomeo and Juliet · Movie Review: Drive Angry … Your Highness Trailer | Area Bay Your Highness – Restricted Trailer Video – IGN Your Highness Trailer Watch Restricted Trailer and more Your Highness videos and movies at IGN Among of most of. andrew lloyd webber masters leaderboard falco titanic your … andrew lloyd webber masters leaderboard falco titanic your highness trailer . Posted by USA in April 9th 2011. harlem globetrotters your highness trailer tiger woods helen mirren legally blonde your highness trailer outpost meryl streep … 'Your Highness' – What Did You Think? Newsroom News | Newsroom News ‘Your Highness’ Red-Band Trailer #2: Cads and Boobie Traps Abound · ‘ Your Highness’ Trailer · New Photo From ‘Your Highness’ · Red Band Movie Trailer: ‘Your Highness’ · Early Buzz: Your Highness · First Official Photo: David Gordon … Cellobean says: I watched the Your Highness trailer . http://bit.ly/b3M1bb @GetGlue #YourHighness
Continue reading …The Kennedys had nothing to say that hasn’t been said without cardboard cutouts, while Romola Garai was vengeful with a vengeance in BBC2′s new Victorian drama The Kennedys | History The Crimson Petal and the White BBC2 | iPlayer Louis Theroux: America’s Most Hated Family in Crisis BBC2 | iPlayer My Brother the Islamist BBC3 | iPlayer Any film that finds something new and captivating to say about the Kennedy family deserves the most generous and sincere applause. But what of The Kennedys , which had nothing new or captivating to say about anything and yet says it for eight hours? Well it has some good actors in Greg Kinnear (JFK) and Tom Wilkinson (JFK’s father, Joe). While neither was called upon to deliver the subtlest performance of his career in the first episode, Kinnear was at least a clever piece of casting. He’s built a reputation for playing weak, vain men with a superficial charm that can’t hide their hopeless neuroses. Here he did something different, playing a weak, vain man with a superficial charm that couldn’t hide his boundless priapism. There were also some nice period frocks, particularly those worn by Katie Holmes as Jackie Kennedy. Holmes was a revelation – who would have thought she could act the part of a young wife of a clean-cut, well-known American with a twinkling smile, religious baggage and a rumour-filled sex life? All said, that was the extent of its plus points. After the many celebrated innovations of American television in recent years, this was a return to the cut-out characterisations and stillborn dialogue of the old-fashioned miniseries. Not so much Camelot as Ham-a-lot. “But you’re a Catholic!” protested a young JFK when his father said he intended to become president. “I’m an American!” he shot back. It was full of exchanges like this, written from the vantage point of headline history, as if every conversation was conducted for the benefit of an invisible reporter from Life magazine. Joe never made it to president, owing to his desire to appease Hitler, and nor did his eldest son, also called Joe, who died as a fighter pilot in the war. This was a tragedy for the family, but good news for America, if the drama was to be believed, because Joe Junior was depicted as the kind of boastful beefcake that used to be the first guy eaten by the monster in sci-fi matinees. Later this year The Kennedys will be shown on BBC2. But like a visit to the dentist, it’s probably one of those experiences that are best not postponed. If as part of the BBC charter there is a legal obligation to produce yet another drama about Victorian London, then The Crimson Petal and the White , an adaptation of Michel Faber’s novel, is a smart solution. It’s got all the corsets and maidservants that even the most demanding costume drama victim could wish for, as well as an unsettling atmosphere, elusive plot and two pitch-perfect lead performances, not to mention the likes of Richard E Grant, Gillian Anderson and the wonderful Shirley Henderson. Romola Garai is one of those actresses who seems like she can do, or become, anything to which she turns her hand or, in this case, bottom. As Sugar, a literary autodidact and highly sought-after prostitute, she excels as a kind of fabulous avenging femme fatale. Grieving for her dead co-worker, she goes in search of a “pompous trembling worm”. Enter William Rackham (Chris O’Dowd), a perfume company heir who fancies himself a blocked writer – a condition that appears to be at its most debilitating when composing cheques to creditors. Exactly what shape the complex deception between Sugar and Rackham will take remains pleasingly uncertain. In the first instalment she spent an awful amount of time on all fours getting screwed by Rackham. The laws of both physics and drama suggest that her reaction will be no less penetrating. It’s debatable whether the Phelps family, the bunch of attention-seeking religious cranks behind the Westboro Baptist church in Kansas, was ever worthy of one Louis Theroux documentary. But it’s very difficult to see how they came to warrant two. Certainly nothing in Louis Theroux: America’s Most Hated Family in Crisis , the follow up to his 2007 film, made the thinking behind this particular commissioning decision any clearer or easier to understand. Theroux spent much of the narration explaining that he was “trying to understand the motivations” and “hoping to discover the truth” beneath the family’s picketing of the funerals of Aids fatalities with placards proclaiming “God Hates Fags”. But no such motivation or truth emerged, other than the obvious one that the Phelps were attention-seeking religious cranks. And especially in a week in which one attention-seeking religious crank in Florida had triggered the demented violence of other attention-seeking religious cranks in Afghanistan, that did not seem nearly enough to justify further airtime for the Phelpses’ brand of hate-filled fundamentalism. “Why are you back here, Louis?” asked one of the cranks, to which there was no satisfactory answer forthcoming. “I’m confused,” Theroux put it to another crank. “No,” said the crank, “you’re not.” The worrying thing about this exchange is that it was the crank who spoke the truth. By the end, the only reason I could think of for making this second film about such a minuscule distant sect is that it once again conformed to the received image of middle America as a place of grotesque religious mania. And as such it was able to confer a sense of superiority on its secular British audience. But not so fast. Tucked away the following evening on BBC3 was a far more pertinent tale of religious extremism and hate-filled intolerance and set much closer to home in Weymouth and east London’s suitably named Barking. My Brother the Islamist was a fascinating film by novice film-maker Robb Leech. Leech, a former tree surgeon, set out to understand – and not in an ironic fashion – his stepbrother, Rich, a white twentysomething who had changed his name to Salahuddin, converted to Islam, and joined up with its most extreme wing, the Bin Laden sympathisers grouped around Islam4UK. Salahuddin’s opinions were almost identical to those of the Kansas cranks: the same hatred of homosexuals, of free choice and of everyone who doesn’t share his own self-dramatising moral myopia. The difference being that he didn’t express his abhorrent views in a redneck accent, but in the familiar monotone of urban Britain. We saw a thuggish religious “brother” of Salahuddin physically attack a drunk in Barking market, and the excitement of another white convert, a 17-year-old former heavy metal fan, who thrilled at this show of mob power. It was all rather disturbing but Leech did his utmost to explain and contextualise the behaviour. He admitted that he was becoming “desensitised” to his stepbrother’s extremism, and even apologised for getting upset that Salahuddin would only shake his dirty kuffar hand with the hand he reserved for wiping his strictly prophet-pleasing backside. Leech came across as the most liberal and well-intentioned interlocutor. But I wanted to tell him to wake up and stop dreaming. We’re not in Kansas any more, Toto. Television The Kennedys Louis Theroux Andrew Anthony guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Bob Dylan didn’t mention Ai Weiwei or gripe about not being allowed to play two of his songs in Beijing. But then, he was never really political, was he? On 12 May, 1963, less than a fortnight shy of his 22nd birthday, a little-known singer-songwriter named Bob Dylan staged a walkout from The Ed Sullivan Show , America’s top entertainment programme. The host and his producers demanded that he replace the song he had been planning to perform with something more innocuous. Talkin’ John Birch Society Blues was an uproarious satire on red-baiting and commie-hunting and it fell foul of Sullivan’s notorious aversion to songs dealing with politics, sex or drugs. Sullivan and his people wouldn’t budge, so the young Dylan told them, “No, this is what I want to do. If I can’t play my song, I’d rather not appear on the show”, and promptly took a hike. No one was going to censor him. Almost half a century later, Dylan – now about to turn 70 – faced a similar dilemma. His Far Eastern tour had finally brought him to China after several years of negotiation (he played Beijing last Wednesday), but he had submitted his set list to the Chinese authorities – and some of his most famous songs were deemed unacceptable by the Chinese culture ministry. What’s more, Dylan was also under fire for not speaking out in favour of the imprisonment of celebrated Chinese artist Ai Weiwei (who was taken away by authorities last Sunday as he waited to board a flight at Beijing airport). “Back in the day, if he had been in Ai’s shoes, he [Dylan] would have expected someone to speak up for him,” said a spokesman for Human Rights Watch. “What does he have to lose?” It was not just any two songs to which Beijing objected, either. Blowin’ in the Wind was the civil rights anthem that had established Dylan’s reputation when it first appeared on his second album, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan , back in 1962, and Desolation Row was the marathon poetic masterpiece that had climaxed Highway 61 Revisited three years later. Unlike other far more lyrically explicit works from Dylan’s brief but cataclysmically influential “protest song” period – a term that he always hated – such as The Times They Are A-Changin’, Masters Of War or With God On Our Side, both songs are oblique and allusive, dealing in metaphor, imagery and allegory rather than any issue-based topical specifics. Nevertheless, metaphor, imagery and allegory are the philosophical and linguistic meat and drink of the culture that gave the world Confucius, Lao Tzu and the I Ching, and the Chinese authorities understood exactly what subtexts those songs carried, even though they were written several decades ago as critiques of another society entirely. They also understood that they didn’t want those songs performed in Beijing and they said so. Dylan didn’t perform them. The times they have indeed a-changed, even though the songs haven’t. Two questions arise and the answers may or may not be blowin’ in the wind. Has the 69-year-old Dylan lost the bottle displayed by his younger self? And why is post-millennial China rattled by the same songs as 1960s America? To address the second question first: Dylan was not the only victim, either in the 60s or now. In 1967, both the Rolling Stones and the Doors fell foul of Ed Sullivan, over Let’s Spend the Night Together and Light My Fire, respectively. They coped in their different ways: Mick Jagger sang the substitute line (“Let’s spend some time together’) while pulling exaggerated faces of disgust. For his part, Jim Morrison defiantly delivered the contentious phrase (“girl, we couldn’t get much higher”) on the uncensorable live transmission at the price of having bookings for a further half-dozen appearances cancelled. More recently, in 2006, the Stones played the half-time show at the SuperBowl and had two of their three songs censored: Jagger’s microphone was muted for the lines “You make a dead man come” (from Start Me Up) and “Once upon a time I was your little rooster, am I just one of your cocks?” (from Rough Justice). Later the same year they made their own Chinese debut and Rough Justice was vetoed, alongside Let’s Spend the Night Together, Brown Sugar, Honky Tonk Women and Beast of Burden. Jagger may be one of rock’s veteran bad boys, but he’s also one of rock’s veteran businessman/performers, who has never been accused of not knowing on which side his bread is buttered. It must, however, be pleasing for these long-assimilated elderly rebels to know that someone, somewhere, is still scared of them and that their subversive potential has not yet been utterly absorbed and nullified. Which brings us back to Dylan. The notion of Dylan as a hardcore political activist and polemicist, or as a dyed-in-the-wool man of the left, is not only antiquated but was essentially erroneous even in the early 60s. His “protest period” lasted less than two years, and even then he was suspicious of leftie folkies who wanted him to be a singing placard: enter a cause, push a button, get a song. He paid a formal farewell to the Movement with My Back Pages (from Another Side Of Bob Dylan in 1964) and by 1966 was sufficiently irritated by his alleged ideological soulmates to hang a gigantic Stars and Stripes as a stage backdrop for his now infamous “electric” European tour. In the late 1970s he outraged his following by devoting an entire album, Slow Train Coming , to his conversion to born-again evangelical Christianity and, in the 1980s, by self-identifying as a hardcore Zionist with the song Neighborhood Bully. His priority is to follow his twinned muses as a poet and musician: indeed Robert Santelli, author of the invaluable The Bob Dylan Scrapbook 1956-1966 , doubts that Dylan was ever fundamentally interested in politics in the first place. And remember: he will turn 70 years old on 24 May. A 22-year-old with nothing much to lose will charge into battle at almost any provocation. A 70-year-old will choose his battles very carefully indeed, and the People’s Republic, as a nation, is eight years younger than Dylan himself. Our second question is that of China, its place in the world and the kind of society into which it is evolving. China, like Russia before it, was driven by historical circumstance to move directly from feudalism to communism without any intermediate phases, and both are now retracing their steps back to capitalism. In China’s case, this means a unique form of state capitalism that still retains many of the authoritarian practices common to both the feudal and communist stages of its history. Old-fashioned totalitarian societies control information by suppressing what they consider inconvenient for their people to hear, while the more sophisticated capitalist democracies control information by swamping the truth in a deluge of disinformation, through which it is virtually a full-time job to sift. China’s national narrative is veined with an ingrained distrust of the outside world: a lengthy period of utter isolation was followed by the opium wars (courtesy of Britain) and some nasty interactions with Japan, the reverberations of both still with us. Hence China’s battles with Google and the Great Firewalls the country’s techies erect around the internet; hence its fear of instability, whether generated internally or externally; hence the repression involved in the cases of Ai Weiwei, Liu Xiaobo and others less celebrated. These are not the manifestations of a secure or confident society, especially one considered in the west to be the coming masters of the new century and a phenomenon almost as terrifying as that of globalised Islamism. Ultimately, it all comes down to fear and paranoia. In the west, we’re scared of Islam and China; in China they’re still scared of Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones, who are considered over here to be a bunch of eccentric pensioners who shot their respective bolts half a century back. Everybody concerned needs, essentially, to grow the hell up… and lighten the hell up. The times are always a-changin’, just neither as much as some of us hope, or as much as some of us fear. Charles Shaar Murray is an award- winning rock writer who started his career in 1970 at Oz magazine. His books include Crosstown Traffic: Jimi Hendrix And Post-War Pop Bob Dylan China Censorship Charles Shaar Murray guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Remember I said Revolution was coming? Well, it turns out, I am not the only one who feels that way. So do the Marxists who want to turn America into a modern-day Soviet Union. The Video: (H/T Survivalist Forum) It’s coming, be ready. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Political Byline Discovery Date : 08/04/2011 16:17 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Remember I said Revolution was coming? Well, it turns out, I am not the only one who feels that way. So do the Marxists who want to turn America into a modern-day Soviet Union. The Video: (H/T Survivalist Forum) It’s coming, be ready. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Political Byline Discovery Date : 08/04/2011 16:17 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …• Click refresh to update or click the auto-update button • Email your thoughts to scott.murray@guardian.co.uk • Read Lawrence Donegan’s day two report • Official Masters leaderboard • And in case you’re desirous of more golf reading… 6.55pm: Matsuyama is still the day’s main mover, having picked up three to move to -2, but perhaps not the most significant. The heroic Ryo Ishikawa, and Adam Scott with his stupid bloody broomhandle putter, are both two under through 4, and -4 for the tournament. And the defending champion Phil Mickelson is doing his usual Keystone Kops skittering up and down the leaderboard: he came out of the blocks flying, with birdies at 2 and 3, but has just dropped one at the short 4th; still, he’s in credit for the day at -3 for the tournament. 6.40pm: You’re all out in the hazy orange evening sun, getting slowly gaddered on crisp rosé, aren’t you. Hoy! Masters golf on over here! 6.35pm: Seven years ago, Ernie Els and Phil Mickelson played out one of the greatest duels in Masters history. Els’ final-day 67 looked to have won it, but Mickelson, a few groups behind, came back with a late flurry of birdies to snatch the green jacket. Els has never won at Augusta – he was also second in 2000 – and now he’s reduced to going round on his own, the first out today, the odd man in the draw after the cut. It’s sad to see. He’s just this minute nearly drained a 40-footer on 15 for birdie, but it didn’t quite drop, and you get the sense neither the crowd, nor the man himself, gave much of a toss either way. Els is two over for the day, +3 for the championship. The 7 he carded on this 15th hole on the first day really took the puff out of him. 6.25pm: Unfortunate Juxtaposition alert! Kim’s playing partner Matsuyama has just sunk a birdie putt on 10 to move to -2. His is the best showing of the day so far: three birdies, no blemishes on the card yet. 6.20pm: Horror showing of the day so far comes courtesy of Kim Kyung-Tae. The young Korean bogeyed the 1st, steadied himself awhile, then dropped four more strokes between 5 and 9 to go out in an ugly 41. He was three under for the tournament after 14 holes of his first round, at which point a double-bogey 7 at 15 took the wind out of his sails. He recovered that day with a birdie 2 at 16, to card a very acceptable opening day 70, but yesterday took 75 strokes, and this sad trend appears to be continuing today. He’s now +6, after starting the day +1. 6.10pm: Bothering the lower echelons with mini-moves are Adam Scott and Ryo Ishikawa, both one under for the day and -3 overall. Martin Laird of Scotland, but America really, is one under for the day and -2 for the tournament, alongside the aforementioned Mr Palmer, who after his eagle at 2 has dropped one at 5. Tum te tum. Six O’Clock News with Sue Lawley, Nicholas Witchell and some troublemaking militant lesbians : Also two under for the day is Hideki Matsuyama, with birdies on 3 and now 8: he’s -1 for the tournament. I warn you, this is unlikely to hot up for a while. News at 5.45 with Leonard Parkin : Not a whole lot of early movement today. Only two men have picked up two shots on their travels so far: Ryan Palmer, now -3, and his compatriot Bubba Watson, at -2. The Ian Poulter rollercoaster continues apace: he bogeyed the 1st, but picked the shot back up again on 3, to return to -1 for the tournament. 5.40pm. Selected top tee times, worked out in the British money: Phil Mickelson is out at 5.55pm. Paul Casey at 6.05pm. SERGIO at 6.25pm. Ross Fisher at 6.35pm. Luke Donald at 6.45pm. Lee Westwood at 6.55pm. Freddie Couples and Rickie Fowler at 7.05pm. YE Yang and Ricky Barnes at 7.15pm. Geoff Ogilvy and Alvaro Quiros at 7.25pm. KJ and Tiger at 7.35pm. And Rory wanders round with his good mate Jason Day – an Augusta virgin this year, remember – at 7.45pm. As for the others – and let’s face it, everyone wants Tiger and Rory in the final pairing tomorrow, landing haymakers on each other as they both go on birdie blitzes down the back nine – there’s plenty of talent hovering. Lee Westwood. KJ Choi. Geoff Ogilvy. Luke Donald. YE Yang. Jason Day. Rickie Fowler. FREDDIE COUPLES. Alvaro Quiros. SERGIO. Someone’s likely to come bursting out of the pack to make a determined tilt at the top of the leaderboard; well, it is Moving Day, after all. Awww-gusta, it’s you that I love… Rory McIlroy will have plenty to say about that, however. He’s leading after 36 holes, having followed up his stunning 65 on Thursday with a staunch 69. After a lucky escape at 11 yesterday followed by his first dropped shot of the tournament so far at 12, he showed minor signs of nerves, putting very averagely indeed, but he got round without any more drama to hold onto his advantage. Hopefully he’ll have regrouped, ready to attack (sensibly) today. Now then, it’s Moving Day today, when the serious contenders traditionally elbow their way into position, ready for the big push on Sunday. Tiger Woods, however, couldn’t be bothered to wait for it. Yesterday, languishing at level par after seven holes, he decided 18 months of being a laughing stock was more than enough for the greatest sports star on the planet, and got relentless. Eleven holes and seven birdies later, he’d carded a 66, and from a nondescript position in the pack, suddenly found himself three off the lead. Now, if any other golfer struggling with their game had done this, you’d put yesterday down as a blip, and expect the vagaries of form to send them crashing back into the pack today. But this is Tiger. And this is Augusta. He’s got to be the favourite to win this, hasn’t he? It’s Masters weekend! All together now: “Awww-gusta, it’s you that I love…” Masters 2011 The Masters Golf Scott Murray guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Johnson & Johnson Agree To $70M Settlement Over Bribery Charges Johnson & Johnson on Friday agreed to pay $70 million to settle U.S. charges that it paid bribes and kickbacks to win business overseas, the first big drug company to settle since the Obama administration began its scrutiny of the … Johnson & Johnson Settles With SEC & DOJ For $70 Million For … Johnson & Johnson may have been eliminated from the Worst Company In America tournament, but the company’s craptastic year continues, as J&J has settled with the Securities and Exchange Commission and Dept. of Justice over allegations … Johnson & Johnson settles bribery case with feds | The Daily … WASHINGTON (AP) — Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson has agreed to pay $70 million to settle civil and criminal charges of bribing doctors in Europe. Johnson & Johnson Settles Bribery Complaint for $70 Million in … The company will pay $70 million to settle a complaint that it paid bribes and kickbacks to win business overseas. Johnson & Johnson settles bribery case with feds | The Associated … Health care giant Johnson & Johnson has agreed to pay $70 million to settle civil and criminal charges of bribing doctors in Europe and paying kickbacks to the Iraqi government to illegally obtain business. dinardodp says: Johnson & Johnson settles bribery case with feds http://flne.ws/26644889 on Fluent News
Continue reading …Weekly Update: Repealing the 1099; Potential Government Shutdown Feds Prepare for Government Shutdown Elliot’s thoughts on a shutdown In case of a federal shutdown … : SCOTUSblog In case of a federal shutdown … Even if the federal government shuts down this weekend due to an impasse in negotiations over a new budget, the Court plans normal operations for next week. The Supreme Court will operate on its normal … Threat of federal shutdown looms – NashuaTelegraph.com WASHINGTON – The threat of a Saturday morning federal shutdown grew more likely Thursday as. Federal Shutdown May Affect You « CBS Las Vegas If the federal government shuts down at midnight tonight, the effects could be felt here in the Las Vegas area. Tribes face struggles with federal shutdown | The Associated Press … The threat of a government shutdown Friday has America Indian leaders scrambling to determine what the stalemate on Capitol Hill would mean for their reservations, where the federal government’s presence often plays a vital role in … Federal Shutdown to Prompt Rating Cut: French Bank | www.bullfax.com Federal Shutdown to Prompt Rating Cut: French Bank · CEO Chambers Speaks Candidly on Cisco’s Future · Where the jobs · Climate models go cold · 5 Low Priced Stocks With Fresh Insider Buying · Stocks: Look out when first guy blinks … fox4now says: Nat'l Parks face federal shutdown on Civil War eve http://bit.ly/gazySe
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