Jon Stewart did a good job of making me really sad that Bill Moyers is no longer on the air at PBS anymore with this interview this week. Stewart was Moyers first interview segment after coming back on the air at PBS and Stewart was happy to return the favor with him plugging his new book, Bill Moyers Journal: The Conversation Continues . Stewart and Moyers discussed the state of journalism today and our media relying on opinion rather than actual reporting to fill their airways.
Continue reading …O2 Arena, London The great master of observational comedy is back. This was Jerry Seinfeld’s first show in the UK in 12 years, and he arrived in the midst of a live comedy boom in full swing: a country crazy for standup, crazy for “have you ever noticed … ?” and “what is it with … ?” – all those things of which Seinfeld is the supreme exponent. And he soon demonstrated his superb knack for hyper-inflating the implications of some absurd little detail, getting massive laughs and making it all look very, very easy. He sets the joke up in the normal conversational voice – and builds, inexorably, to the cartoon-indignant voice: a squeaky-gravelly hysterical rant in which he will briefly fling his arms around with abandon, but complete control, and never a hint that he is seriously exercised or upset about anything. Can it really be true that Jerry Seinfeld is 57 years old? This great comic still appears to have the perky buoyancy of his great TV heyday: the 1990s –that innocent era between the fall of the Berlin Wall and that of the Twin Towers sometimes known, with various levels of irony or insensitivity, as the “Seinfeld decade”, the decade about nothing. Jerry Seinfeld could have been twenty years younger, and yet he still looked a very conservative figure in his sober dark suit and pale yellow tie done all the way up to the top button. This was an old-fashioned set in many ways, and it’s not too much of a stretch to imagine Bob Newhart doing it. His best material is about being middle-aged, about not being on Facebook and not being about to “twitter” any time soon. “I could actually set up a little round mirror for me to peck at between tweets,” he snapped, peevishly, exposing his top row of teeth. Only Jerry Seinfeld could do such utterly apolitical material – “The Middle East! Are they all crazy because it’s all sand and no beach?” – without it seeming bland. He talked about his mom in Florida, and we all grinned and applauded – perhaps imagining that his imaginary Florida-dwelling mom on the TV show was in fact his real mother and that we knew all about her. Nowadays, as he indirectly acknowledged in other parts of his set, Jerry himself is getting very close to the oldster time of life. And yet the eternal thirtysomething in him lived again on stage. His gags about marriage, and marriage problems are brilliant – though they do not have the edge of real pain, even despair, that Chris Rock brings to the same subject. Incautiously, Seinfeld sets up the fantasy that marriage is like a game show in which the wife is always last week’s returning, undefeated and undefeatable champion – incautiously, because it ran the risk of reminding the audience of Seinfeld’s recent, unhappy TV show The Marriage Ref. But the gags were just so good that nobody cared. Seinfeld still has the dependable alchemy that transmutes ordinariness – or at any rate a slightly unfamiliar American ordinariness – into comedy gold. His most brilliant line is about things like restaurants or movies which are supposedly “great” yet simultaneously “suck” – and that he longs for a restaurant which is “not bad”. Perhaps his comedy has that same unshowy, inspired not-badness which is also very, very good. There will always be something enigmatic about Seinfeld: he is a comic whose heart is worn invisibly, well away from his sleeve. What does he really think? What does he really feel? Who knows? Who cares? Seinfeld is just a naturally brilliant performer, who only gets better. He is becoming the Sinatra of comedy. Rating: 4/5 Jerry Seinfeld Comedy Peter Bradshaw guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Alright, class, are we ready for our American History class, courtesy of Sarah Palin? You betcha ! It’s been at least a few seconds since we last checked in on Sarah Palin’s Tour de Grift, which stopped yesterday in Olde Boston Towne. Her bus visited such historical sights as Paul Revere’s old shack, where Palin explained the colonist’s famous “midnight ride” before the 1775 battles at Lexington and Concord. The Internet is aflame in scholarly debate over this interpretation: He who warned, uh, the British that they weren’t going to be taking away our arms uh by ringing those bells and making sure as he’s riding his horse through town to send those warning shots and bells that we were going to be secure and we were going to be free and we were going to be armed. ::facepalm:: There’s a very well known saying that history is written by the victors. Can someone please tell Sarah she’s not winning??? Can we all just breathe a collective sigh of relief that this is not the person one heartbeat away from the Oval Office? But this brings me to my current state of disgust at the breathless way she is covered by the traditional media–or the “lamestream media” as she refers to them. She cannot even recall the most dumbed-down conventional history of Revere’s claim to fame (remember ” One if by land, two if by sea? “, turning it instead into some bizarro treatise on gun rights and the inherent liberty of being armed. Not to put too fine a point on it, but this is a non-serious person. Why does the media insist on treating her otherwise? Greg Sargen t: Come on, this is just crazy. Palin is not in this race, and even if she does run, most credible observers agree that she will be a weak candidate. Just imagine this kind of thing happening with regularity on the campaign trail. The GOP establishment doesn’t want her to run. If polls are to be believed, not even her own supporters want her to run. The other day, her camp actually leaked word that she would not be meeting with party leaders in key primary states in order to encourage a sense that she’s planning an unconventional presidential campaign ! To put it mildly, that’s not exactly credible. The bus tour itself has no coherent rationale whatsoever. She launched it, transparently, after media interest in her had died down precipitously. Palin is openly mocking reporters who are treating it as real news. Until she actually declares her candidacy, mark this his whole thing down as a complete con job. I’m with Justin Elliott on this : The sight of scores of reporters chasing after Palin’s shiny new bus is one of the most dispiriting media displays we’ve seen in a very long time. Even worse, it’s happening barely days after the political media got whipsawed badly by Donald Trump’s birther hucksterism! Please make it stop.
Continue reading …Ripping through awkward web of corporate ownership and subsidiary properties, Jane Lynch gutted up and went for broke in a rip-roaring introduction speech at the D9 tech conference on Tuesday, ripping News Corp and Fox News despite her and the conference’s contractual allegiance to the media behemoth. In a spoof speech that hit hard nonetheless, Lynch channeled Sue Sylvester, her Emmy-winning “Glee” character, as she hit out against the conservative bigwigs at Fox News and its parent News Corp. “Glee,” of course, is shown on the Fox broadcast network, while D9 is put on by All Things Digital, which is owned by News Corp, as well. Pretending to be acting CEO, Lynch said that she was enacting some changes while Rupert Murdoch was in China. She riffed on their iPad-only publication, The Daily, promising to shut that down, before promising the integration of “Family Circus” and other comics in The Wall Street Journal. Then, the big guns came out. “I’m launching a Fox News investigation into the young and fresh face cast of ‘Glee,’ she said, joking about Fox News’ coverage of President Obama’s birth certificate. “I have some inside information and I don’t believe one of them are real Americans. I’ve also convinced Glenn Beck to stay on at Fox for one final gig – as a dying patient ‘House’ — with a horrendous malady. His sickness is consuming him from the inside out.” Finally, a hit at Sarah Palin, who was also in New York on Tuesday to meet with Donald Trump. “I’m pretty sure we got Sarah Palin to do a guest spot on ‘Glee.’ She’ll perform an original tune I penned: ‘Look at Me, I’m Batsh*t Crazy,” she said to major laughs in the audience. WATCH:
Continue reading …Ripping through awkward web of corporate ownership and subsidiary properties, Jane Lynch gutted up and went for broke in a rip-roaring introduction speech at the D9 tech conference on Tuesday, ripping News Corp and Fox News despite her and the conference’s contractual allegiance to the media behemoth. In a spoof speech that hit hard nonetheless, Lynch channeled Sue Sylvester, her Emmy-winning “Glee” character, as she hit out against the conservative bigwigs at Fox News and its parent News Corp. “Glee,” of course, is shown on the Fox broadcast network, while D9 is put on by All Things Digital, which is owned by News Corp, as well. Pretending to be acting CEO, Lynch said that she was enacting some changes while Rupert Murdoch was in China. She riffed on their iPad-only publication, The Daily, promising to shut that down, before promising the integration of “Family Circus” and other comics in The Wall Street Journal. Then, the big guns came out. “I’m launching a Fox News investigation into the young and fresh face cast of ‘Glee,’ she said, joking about Fox News’ coverage of President Obama’s birth certificate. “I have some inside information and I don’t believe one of them are real Americans. I’ve also convinced Glenn Beck to stay on at Fox for one final gig – as a dying patient ‘House’ — with a horrendous malady. His sickness is consuming him from the inside out.” Finally, a hit at Sarah Palin, who was also in New York on Tuesday to meet with Donald Trump. “I’m pretty sure we got Sarah Palin to do a guest spot on ‘Glee.’ She’ll perform an original tune I penned: ‘Look at Me, I’m Batsh*t Crazy,” she said to major laughs in the audience. WATCH:
Continue reading …RALEIGH, North Carolina (AP) — A federal grand jury indicted two-time presidential candidate John Edwards on Friday over $925,000 spent to keep his mistress and their baby in hiding during the peak of his 2008 campaign for the White House. The case of USA v. Johnny Reid Edwards contains six counts, including conspiracy, four counts of illegal campaign contributions and one count of false statements. The indictment said the payments were a scheme to protect Edwards’ White House ambitions. “A centerpiece of Edwards’ candidacy was his public image as a devoted family man,” the indictment said. “Edwards knew that public revelation of the affair and the pregnancy would destroy his candidacy by, among other things, undermining Edwards’ presentation of himself as a family man and by forcing his campaign to divert personnel and resources away from other campaign activities to respond to criticism and media scrutiny regarding the affair and pregnancy,” the indictment added. The indictment and an arrest warrant were filed in Greensboro, N.C., which is in the district where his campaign was headquartered. Negotiations between Edwards’ attorneys and federal prosecutors to settle on a charge to which Edwards was willing to plead guilty continued through Thursday, but proved fruitless, according to people with knowledge of the negotiations. Prosecutors had insisted on a plea to a felony, which would endanger his ability to keep his license to practice law. An Edwards spokeswoman said she wasn’t aware of the filing and declined immediate comment. The indictment is the culmination of a federal investigation that lasted more than two years and scoured through virtually every corner of Edwards’ political career. That included his political action committees, a nonprofit and a so-called 527 independent political group. It even examined whether he did anything improper during his time in the U.S. Senate, which ended seven years ago. But the centerpiece of the investigation has long been the hundreds of thousands of dollars privately provided by two wealthy Edwards supporters – his former campaign finance chairman Fred Baron and Rachel “Bunny” Mellon, the 100-year-old widow of banking heir Paul Mellon. That money eventually went to keep mistress Rielle Hunter and her out-of-wedlock baby in hiding in 2007 and 2008, during the apex of the Democratic nomination campaign. The indictment refers to $725,000 in payments made by Mellon and another $200,000 made by Baron. It said the money was used to pay for Hunter’s living and medical expenses and for chartered airfare, luxury hotels and rental for a house in Santa Barbara, Calif., to keep her hidden from the public. It accused Edwards of lying when he told the media he never knew about any payments. Former campaign staffer Andrew Young, who initially claimed paternity of Hunter’s child, has said Edwards was aware of the private financial support that helped keep the mistress satisfied and secluded. Prosecutors believe the private gifts should have been considered campaign contributions since they aided his candidacy. The case opens a new front in how the federal government oversees the flow of money around political campaigns. An attorney for Edwards said last week that the government’s case was “novel and untested” and argued that the government’s theory was wrong on both the facts and the law. With one of Edwards’ former campaign rivals now sitting in the White House, the case includes a measure of political intrigue. Greg Craig, who was previously White House counsel for President Barack Obama, emerged as a leading figure on Edwards’ legal team just as Obama’s Justice Department was reviewing the case that prosecutors in North Carolina had prepared. Meanwhile, North Carolina’s two senators had asked to let Republican-appointed U.S. attorney George Holding stay on the job until he had finished the Edwards probe. Edwards and Hunter began their relationship in 2006, just as the 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee was plotting a second run for the White House. She was hired to shoot behind-the-scenes video footage of the prospective candidate. Edwards’ political action committee and a nonprofit affiliated with him both paid Hunter’s video-production firm about $100,000 for the work. Edwards initially denied having an affair with Hunter but eventually admitted to it in the summer of 2008. He then denied being the father of her child before finally confessing last year. His wife, Elizabeth, died of cancer in December. Young has said that Edwards agreed in 2007 to solicit money directly from Mellon. And the long-time Edwards aide, now estranged from his former boss, has said he received hundreds of thousands of dollars in checks from Mellon – some hidden in boxes of chocolate. Mellon and Edwards are still friendly despite the glare of the federal investigation. They had lunch together at her Virginia estate last week even as the indictment appeared imminent. Baron’s support was even more direct. The wealthy trial lawyer said in 2008 that he helped Young and Hunter move across the country to protect them from media scrutiny. Baron, who died a few months later, said Edwards wasn’t aware of the aid, but Young has said that Edwards did know. Young, Hunter and Baron’s wife were among many Edwards aides and supporters who were called to testify before a federal grand jury or have been interviewed by investigators. Read the indictment: John Edwards Indictmentvar docstoc_docid=”80895941″;var docstoc_title=”John Edwards Indictment”;var docstoc_urltitle=”John Edwards Indictment”;
Continue reading …• Non-farm payrolls show job creation weak • New jobs 96,000 below predicted figure The White House admitted on Friday that unemployment in the US was “uncomfortably high” after the latest set of figures for the American labour market showed only 54,000 new jobs were created by the world’s biggest economy last month. Amid signs that growth has slowed markedly during the first half of 2011, the closely watched figures for non-farm payrolls showed an across-the-board weakening in hiring during May. The news led to an immediate sell-off in shares on Wall Street amid speculation that the Federal Reserve, the US central bank, would be forced into a third round of electronic money creation, known as quantitative easing, to bring down unemployment. The report from the US labour department was the weakest since last September. Private-sector jobs grew by 83,000, the smallest rise since June 2010, while government payrolls fell by 29,000. Employment growth in March and April was revised down by a total of 39,000, while the jobless rate rose in May from 9% to 9.1%. In the London, share prices shrugged off the poor US figures, bouncing back from an earlier decline prompted by a drop in the latest CIPS/Markit report on the UK service sector from 54.3 to 53.8 in May. Although the cut-off point of 50 separates expansion from contraction, economists said the survey was consistent with quarterly growth in services, which account for about three-quarters of UK national output, of about 0.3%. John Lewis fuelled concerns that the recovery is weakening after turnover at its stores fell at the end of May. Wall Street economists expected payrolls to rise 150,000 and private hiring to increase by 175,000 but had been revising down their estimates since the release of a downbeat survey of private sector employment earlier this week. The economy has regained only a fraction of more than 8m jobs lost during the recession and analysts believe payroll growth above 300,000 a month is needed to make significant progress in shrinking the pool of 13.9 million unemployed Americans. Austan Goolsbee, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, which advises the president, said of the non-farm payrolls: “There are always bumps on the road to recovery but the overall trajectory of the economy has improved dramatically over the past two years. “While the private sector has added more than 2.1m jobs over the past 15 months, the unemployment rate is unacceptably high and faster growth is needed to replace the jobs lost in the downturn. “The initiatives put in place by this administration – such as the payroll tax cut and business incentives for investment – have contributed to solid employment growth overall this year, but this report is a reminder of the challenges that remain. We will continue to work with Congress to responsibly reduce the deficit and live within our means.” The US labour department said last month’s tornadoes and flooding in the midwest and the south did not materially affect data collection. It said that while some workers in those areas may have been temporarily displaced from their jobs, it found “no clear impact of the disasters” on the employment data. Wall Street economists said supply chain problems for US industry after the Japanese earthquake had been a factor in the drop of 5,000 in manufacturing jobs. Paul Ashworth, chief US economist at Capital Economics, said: “It is now pretty clear that the economy ran into a brick wall last month. We probably will see growth rebound in the second half of the year, as commodity prices drop back and any Japan-related disruptions unwind. For that reason we don’t expect the Fed to act immediately. Nevertheless, the extent of this slowdown is becoming a big concern, particularly with a potentially big fiscal consolidation on the way and we wouldn’t rule out a QE3 either later this year or in early 2012.” James Knightley at ING said the figures were “undeniably weak” but saw reasons for optimism. “In terms of what is driving the weakness in the labour market we feel that the lagged effects of rising energy costs plays a major part,” he said. “This has hurt household spending power since they are spending more of their income on fuel and gasoline, leaving less money to spend on other goods and services. This is damaging businesses from the revenue side, while their costs too have been increasing because of higher fuel bills. Aidan Manktelow, of the Economist Intelligence Unit, said: “The job creation figure for May was very disappointing. It is clear now that the weak patch in the economy has fed into the labour market. We still think this is likely to be a temporary soft patch – the result of high oil prices, some disruption to the manufacturing sector related to Japan’s disasters, and firms being spooked by recent weak data. “In underlying structural terms the recovery is now further advanced than in 2010, and more positive sentiment could come back pretty quickly, for example as the recent fall in the oil price feeds through”. US unemployment and employment data US economy United States Financial crisis Global recession Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Government claims attack on presidential compound was ‘attempted coup’ as fighting intensifies in Sana’a Yemen’s embattled president survived an apparent attempt to kill him on Friday as fighting intensified in Sana’a amidst warnings that the country is sliding inexorably into all-out war. Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled Yemen for 32 years, emerged defiant from his compound in the capital after it was attacked: shells or a missile hit a mosque inside, killing three guards and a cleric and lightly injuring him and two other senior government figures. The incident fuelled growing anxieties that the Arab uprisings, which have have brought dramatic changes to Egypt and Tunisia, is turning Yemen — already the Arab world’s poorest country — into something far more volatile and dangerous. The government was quick to accuse Saleh’s bitter rival, Hamid al-Ahmar of the opposition Islah party, of launching the attack, and government forces immediately shelled his mansion in Sana’a. “The al-Ahmars have committed a great crime, and crossed a red line,” said Tareq al-Shami, a government spokesman. “This was an attempted coup, and the government will take all necessary measures.” Sadeq al-Ahmar, head of the powerful Hashid tribal federation, blamed Saleh himself for the shelling, saying it was carried out to help justify the government’s escalation of streetfighting in the capital. Saleh, who was treated at a military hospital, was reported to be preparing to give a press conference later. Claims of his death were first reported by an oppostion TV station and made headlines around the world before being denied. Abdul Ghani al-Iryani, a Yemeni political analyst, told al-Jazeera it was “quite reasonable to assume” that Ahmar’s fighters were behind the palace attack. “[The tribesmen] probably wanted him to know that [Saleh] can no longer attack them with impunity, and that they can reach him as he can reach them,” Iryani said. Other regional analysts say the chances for a democratic or peaceful transition of power in Yemen are slim. It was a violent end to a violent week. On Thursday government jets strafed roads and villages north of Sana’a as thousands of tribesmen tried to enter the capital to fight Saleh loyalists. Residents described an atmosphere of fear and alarm at food shortages and rising prices. Saleh has reneged on a deal brokered by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states under which he would step down in return for an amnesty to be followed by free elections. The US, which has leaned on the Yemeni leader in its fight against al-Qaida, has increased pressure for Saleh to go, blaming the bloodshed on his backpedalling from the agreement. Britain and the EU are also pushing hard for him to implement it. The latest violence is likely to persuade neighbouring Saudi Arabia, which has strong ties with the Yemeni tribes, to strongly press Saleh to step aside, and so avert disaster in a country where half of the 23 million people owns a gun. The attack on the president came after Friday prayers, with heavy artillery repeatedly striking the presidential compound and shaking nearby buildings. The streets were deserted after many residents fled the city for the safety of nearby villages. “People there were happy to hear that he [the president] had been killed, but then the government denied that,” said Ibrahim Mothana, 22, a student. “It means we will experience an escalation and it will probably be more violent.” Another resident told the Guardian: “The streets are empty. I managed to go out yesterday to buy some food but the prices are going up daily. In the street where I live all the families have gone back to their villages and just left a family member to stay behind to look after the house. There must be more than 100,000 in total who have left the city.” The US emphasised the need for an orderly and peaceful transfer of power. “Violence cannot resolve the issues that confront Yemen, and today’s events cannot be a justification for a new round of fighting,” a White House spokesman said. President Barack Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, spent two days this week trying to peruade the Saudis and the UAE to boost efforts to help bring an end to Yemen’s violence. On Thursday, the official Yemeni news agency said the government was, again, willing to endorse the Gulf-brokered transition agreement. Yemen Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Government claims attack on presidential compound was ‘attempted coup’ as fighting intensifies in Sana’a Yemen’s embattled president survived an apparent attempt to kill him on Friday as fighting intensified in Sana’a amidst warnings that the country is sliding inexorably into all-out war. Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled Yemen for 32 years, emerged defiant from his compound in the capital after it was attacked: shells or a missile hit a mosque inside, killing three guards and a cleric and lightly injuring him and two other senior government figures. The incident fuelled growing anxieties that the Arab uprisings, which have have brought dramatic changes to Egypt and Tunisia, is turning Yemen — already the Arab world’s poorest country — into something far more volatile and dangerous. The government was quick to accuse Saleh’s bitter rival, Hamid al-Ahmar of the opposition Islah party, of launching the attack, and government forces immediately shelled his mansion in Sana’a. “The al-Ahmars have committed a great crime, and crossed a red line,” said Tareq al-Shami, a government spokesman. “This was an attempted coup, and the government will take all necessary measures.” Sadeq al-Ahmar, head of the powerful Hashid tribal federation, blamed Saleh himself for the shelling, saying it was carried out to help justify the government’s escalation of streetfighting in the capital. Saleh, who was treated at a military hospital, was reported to be preparing to give a press conference later. Claims of his death were first reported by an oppostion TV station and made headlines around the world before being denied. Abdul Ghani al-Iryani, a Yemeni political analyst, told al-Jazeera it was “quite reasonable to assume” that Ahmar’s fighters were behind the palace attack. “[The tribesmen] probably wanted him to know that [Saleh] can no longer attack them with impunity, and that they can reach him as he can reach them,” Iryani said. Other regional analysts say the chances for a democratic or peaceful transition of power in Yemen are slim. It was a violent end to a violent week. On Thursday government jets strafed roads and villages north of Sana’a as thousands of tribesmen tried to enter the capital to fight Saleh loyalists. Residents described an atmosphere of fear and alarm at food shortages and rising prices. Saleh has reneged on a deal brokered by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states under which he would step down in return for an amnesty to be followed by free elections. The US, which has leaned on the Yemeni leader in its fight against al-Qaida, has increased pressure for Saleh to go, blaming the bloodshed on his backpedalling from the agreement. Britain and the EU are also pushing hard for him to implement it. The latest violence is likely to persuade neighbouring Saudi Arabia, which has strong ties with the Yemeni tribes, to strongly press Saleh to step aside, and so avert disaster in a country where half of the 23 million people owns a gun. The attack on the president came after Friday prayers, with heavy artillery repeatedly striking the presidential compound and shaking nearby buildings. The streets were deserted after many residents fled the city for the safety of nearby villages. “People there were happy to hear that he [the president] had been killed, but then the government denied that,” said Ibrahim Mothana, 22, a student. “It means we will experience an escalation and it will probably be more violent.” Another resident told the Guardian: “The streets are empty. I managed to go out yesterday to buy some food but the prices are going up daily. In the street where I live all the families have gone back to their villages and just left a family member to stay behind to look after the house. There must be more than 100,000 in total who have left the city.” The US emphasised the need for an orderly and peaceful transfer of power. “Violence cannot resolve the issues that confront Yemen, and today’s events cannot be a justification for a new round of fighting,” a White House spokesman said. President Barack Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, spent two days this week trying to peruade the Saudis and the UAE to boost efforts to help bring an end to Yemen’s violence. On Thursday, the official Yemeni news agency said the government was, again, willing to endorse the Gulf-brokered transition agreement. Yemen Middle East Ian Black guardian.co.uk
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