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Jay Mariotti

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Jay Mariotti

Jay Mariotti: 10 Reasons He’ll Never Be on ESPN Again | Bleacher … Jay Mariotti Stalker Call Around The Horn: Bin Laden TV Is A Helluva Drug: On Jay Mariotti And The Sportspersona Machine The tale of Jay Mariotti , as sad and vile as it may be on the surface, isn’t entirely unique. During his interview with Fox’s Jason Whitlock months ago, Mariotti played off the first set of allegations as an isolated moment of rage (he … Jay Mariotti : Can We Ever Take Mariotti's Opinion Serioulsy Now … Jay Mariotti : Can We Ever Take Mariotti’s Opinion Serioulsy Now? Jay Mariotti’s Issues Places Doubt in Fans that Followed Him for Years I can only hope to. Former ESPN personality Jay Mariotti charged with felony, stalking … Former ESPN sports personality Jay Mariotti has been charged with three felonies – stalking, domestic violence and assault – after he confronted his ex-girlfriend the same day a court ordered him to stay away from her, prosecutors said. Remember When Jay Mariotti Said He “Learned a Lot” After Getting … See Source here. Jay Mariotti : Following up on the former sportswriter’s further demise, which continued late yesterday when he was charged. Jay Mariotti | ESPN | Felony | Stalking | The Daily Caller Ex-ESPN personality Jay Mariotti charged with felony, stalking and assault | He allegedly pulled a chunk of her hair out and grabbed her cellphone, while shouting at her, prosecutors said. DavidintheD says: @WhitlockJason , Please let me know if you received my email regarding Jay Mariotti /ESPN. I believe it to be worth your time. Thank you sir.

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Brian the Snail finishes London Marathon after 26 days

Lloyd Scott raises £20,000 for Action for Kids by completing course face-down on a sled, dressed as a Magic Roundabout character He has crawled for 26 days across broken glass, nails and dog faeces, enduring cramps, vomiting, and least one trip to A&E for a severe nosebleed along the way. But extreme fundraiser Lloyd Scott, dressed in a 9ft-long Brian the Snail from the Magic Roundabout costume, has finally crossed the finish line of the London Marathon. Scott, 49, from Rainham in Essex, who inched his way along the 26.2-mile course face-down on a sled using his knees and toes to scrape along, said finishing it was an “enormous relief”. Unsurprisingly, he said he was reluctant to repeat the experience. Scott, who started the race on 17 April, has raised £20,000 for Action for Kids. Charities London Marathon London Karen McVeigh guardian.co.uk

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Spanish earthquake: PM and royalty attend funeral mass

Crown prince and princess try to comfort relatives of Lorca earthquake victims, and PM pledges to help city rebuild Spain’s prime minister and the crown prince and princess have attended a crowded funeral mass for victims of Spain’s deadliest earthquakes in more than 50 years . Prince Felipe and Princess Letizia hugged and shook hands with relatives of the nine people killed in Wednesday’s twin tremors in Lorca. At one point the prince stooped down to speak to a boy and affectionately ruffled his hair. The prime minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, earlier toured the city to see the widespread damage that forced an estimated 3,000 people to spend another night sleeping in tents in makeshift camps. He said the government would help the city rebuild and return to normal as soon as possible. “It is my conviction that we are going to meet this test. The earthquake was hard and strong. But this country is stronger. Its desire for solidarity and reconstruction are stronger.” The Spanish cabinet approved an emergency aid programme for people who lost their homes or businesses. The plan includes money for people to rent elsewhere while their homes are repaired or rebuilt, and €25m (£30m) in credit lines for people to repair their places of business, farms, factories or vehicles. There were four coffins at the funeral mass, in part because some of the families of the deceased wanted private funerals, officials said. Lorca’s mayor said on Thursday that more than half of the 550 buildings inspected so far by engineers and architects were uninhabitable. Spain José Luis Zapatero Natural disasters and extreme weather Europe guardian.co.uk

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Driver in Rome is suspended after being videoed using his elbows to steer through the city’s notorious traffic Romans are inured to bus and taxi drivers trying to steer while talking on a mobile. But it would seem that at least some draw the line at using two telephones. A bus driver in the Italian capital has been suspended from duty after being videoed while speeding through the city’s notoriously dangerous traffic using a mobile with one hand and a smartphone with the other . He was steering with his elbows. The soundtrack shows he was taking instructions on the mobile on how to set up email on his smartphone. Visitors to Rome will be interested to know that the video was made on a journey from the Anagnina metro station to Ciampino airport – a route much used by low-cost airline passengers on their way out of the city. The regional official responsible for transport, Francesco Lollobrigida, said the driver had been suspended and an inquiry would be held. Italy Road transport Mobile phones Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk

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Driver in Rome is suspended after being videoed using his elbows to steer through the city’s notorious traffic Romans are inured to bus and taxi drivers trying to steer while talking on a mobile. But it would seem that at least some draw the line at using two telephones. A bus driver in the Italian capital has been suspended from duty after being videoed while speeding through the city’s notoriously dangerous traffic using a mobile with one hand and a smartphone with the other . He was steering with his elbows. The soundtrack shows he was taking instructions on the mobile on how to set up email on his smartphone. Visitors to Rome will be interested to know that the video was made on a journey from the Anagnina metro station to Ciampino airport – a route much used by low-cost airline passengers on their way out of the city. The regional official responsible for transport, Francesco Lollobrigida, said the driver had been suspended and an inquiry would be held. Italy Road transport Mobile phones Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk

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Is this really the death of political blogging?

Iain Dale, who is coming out of his ‘retirement’ from political blogging, decrees mainstream media has ‘eaten up the blogosphere’ – but leftwing bloggers claim rightwingers like him have just run out of puff • Iain Dale: My plan to revive UK political blogging He was among the most influential of political bloggers, who shocked the online community late last year by giving up posting. But next month Iain Dale makes a return to the internet at the helm of a new online magazine with a group of 60 “retired bloggers” and writers. Those already signed up for the Daley include Shelagh Fogarty, BBC 5 Live’s recently departed breakfast presenter, Tom Harris MP , and television personality Christine Hamilton – as Dale argues that the influence of individual political bloggers is waning. Dale said he wanted to set up the new venture because although he could no longer sustain an individual political blog as “I couldn’t write three or four times a day” while his other media interests expanded, and because he doubted their relevance. He added he had “come to the conclusion that the mainstream media had eaten up the blogosphere”. Nevertheless, Dale said he “still wanted an outlet” to write occasionally, and had taken to recruiting “sixty friends”, many of whom had given up on individual blogging. He said that “he was not even sure” that The Daley was a blog or even a group blog, but rather “an online magazine; it will be designed to look like a newspaper or periodical”. Dale’s “death of the political blog” thesis comes at a time when the US Huffington Post is preparing to move into the UK and when the first wave of high-profile political bloggers – a grouping dominated by conservatives – are no longer so active as individual writers. Tim Montgomerie, who set up and runs Conservative Home , wants to move on to “another phase in my career”, while Paul Staines, who set up the scabrous Guido Fawkes site leaves much of the day-to-day writing to his deputy, Harry Cole. Staines also told the Guardian that he also believed that “he thought some of the energy has gone out of blogging; it isn’t the new thing any more”. However, both of those have created small businesses, while Dale has focused on building up his personal own media interests. Montgomerie’s upmarket Conservative Home employs four and turns over “about £300,000″ selling “consultancy based on our knowledge of the Conservative party” and enjoys the backing of Lord Ashcroft. Meanwhile, Staines runs a blog advertising network and acts as a “mini Max Clifford”, selling some news to tabloid newspapers. For him the secret is turning a blog into a business, and although advertising rates have fallen by three quarters he says he can sell adverts at a still remunerative cost of £5 per thousand viewers. “There are a lot of bloggers like Dizzy Thinks bowing out, but we’ve made it sustainable – and we’re having as much fun as ever.” All continue to report healthy traffic – with Conservative Home running at 20,000 visitors a day and Guido’s Order Order site 50,000 visitors – and still can help set the news agenda as Guido Fawkes did last year when his reports about William Hague’s friendship with his male then assistant prompted the foreign secretary to deny they had a relationship. Leftwing and centrist pundits counter that the Dale’s death of political blogging argument is greatly exaggerated. Sunny Hundal, who runs the Liberal Conspiracy site, which claims to be the first to have revealed the details of the coalition agreement last May, said that “rightwing bloggers are suffering from fatigue” and have lost momentum because they “were in campaigning mode against the Labour government”. Traffic at the site runs at 100,000 visitors a month – it highest non-election level. Will Straw, who founded the self-styled “evidence-based” Left Foot Forward site and whose father is the former foreign secretary Jack Straw, did leave to join left of centre thinktank the IPPR at the end of last year. But Straw is emphatic that his decision does not endorse Dale’s thesis: “I went into my career to be more of an ideas person than a journalist” and said that his goal was to create “a research focused rebuttal blog for the left”. He points out that he has left behind an operation with two staff and an intern and about £70,000 a year in income from a mixture of donors. Left Foot Forward claims to be the first blog to have predicted Ed Miliband would win the Labour leadership election – and that Ed Balls would come third. Paul Waugh, who left a job at the Evening Standard to run the Ashcroft backed Politics Home site last year, admits that “a lot of people have got tired of blogging” because it is “hard to get going if you are not getting paid”. Money for all bloggers remains a major problem, and traffic levels in the tens of thousands make it very difficult to generate as much as a £1,000 a month without a very targeted advertising strategy. Waugh’s daily email, though, is read by David Cameron among others, and he says that his online focus means he can break stories by reacting faster than others to the Twitterstream – being the first for example to spot that Peter Hain was one of the first to tweet in complaint about the lack of camera coverage of Ed Miliband at the royal wedding. Nevertheless there is no shortage of emerging bloggers such as Sue Marsh, a disability campaigner, or Ed Jacobs who blogs about politics in the UK’s nations on Left Foot Forward, while many established political thinkers, such as Matthew Taylor, the number 10 aide who now is the chief executive of the Royal Society of the Arts, consider blogging as part of their day jobs. Waugh added that his Politics Home site links to “716 other political blogs” – suggesting that for all the teething pains and generational shifts political blogging remains in vigorous health. The emergence of The Daley also indicates that this is an activity that is growing up; as newspapers look more like blog sites – blogs are trying to look more like newspapers. Blogging Newspapers & magazines Digital media Dan Sabbagh guardian.co.uk

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Gainor Column: Over 30 Major News Organizations Linked to George Soros

First of Four Parts When liberal investor George Soros gave $1.8 million to National Public Radio , it became part of the firestorm of controversy that jeopardized NPR's federal funding. But that gift only hints at the widespread influence the controversial billionaire has on the mainstream media. Soros, who spent $27 million trying to defeat President Bush in 2004, has ties to more than 30 mainstream news outlets – including The New York Times, Washington Post, the Associated Press, NBC and ABC. Prominent journalists like ABC's Christiane Amanpour and former Washington Post editor and now Vice President Len Downie serve on boards of operations that take Soros cash. This despite the Society of Professional Journalist's ethical code stating: “avoid all conflicts real or perceived. “This information is part of an upcoming report by the Media Research Centers Business & Media Institute which has been looking into George Soros and his influence on the media. The investigative reporting start-up ProPublica is a prime example. ProPublica, which recently won its second Pulitzer Prize, initially was given millions of dollars from the Sandler Foundation to “strengthen the progressive infrastructure” – “progressive” the code for very liberal. In 2010, it also received a two-year contribution of $125,000 each year from the Open Society Foundations. In case you wonder where that money comes from, the OSF website is www.soros.org . It is a network of more than 30 international foundations, mostly funded by Soros, who has contributed more than $8 billion to those efforts. The ProPublica stories are thoroughly researched by top-notch staffers who used to work at some of the biggest news outlets in the nation. But the topics are almost laughably left-wing. The site's proud list of “Our Investigations” includes attacks on oil companies, gas companies, the health care industry, for-profit schools and more. More than 100 stories on the latest lefty cause: opposition to drilling for natural gas by hydraulic fracking. Another 100 on the evils of the foreclosure industry. Throw in a couple investigations making the military look bad and another about prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and you have almost the perfect journalism fantasy – a huge budget, lots of major media partners and a liberal agenda unconstrained by advertising.One more thing: a 14-person Journalism Advisory Board , stacked with CNN's David Gergen and representatives from top newspapers, a former publisher of The Wall Street Journal and the editor-in-chief of Simon & Schuster. Several are working journalists, including: Jill Abramson, a managing editor of The New York Times; Martin D. Baron, the editor of The Boston Globe; David Boardman, the executive editor of the Seattle Times; Kerry Smith, the senior vice president for editorial quality of ABC News; Cynthia A. Tucker, the editor of the editorial page of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Alberto Ibarg

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Pro-cuts activists to rally against debt

Hundreds of rightwing and libertarian activists expected to gather in London to press for deeper cuts to public spending Hundreds of pro-cuts activists are expected to descend on Westminster on Saturday to “rally against debt”, in the first sign of a radical Tea Party-style mass movement to challenge the anti-cuts lobby. The protest will be attended by an alliance of rightwing and libertarian activists including members of the TaxPayers’ Alliance (TPA), the anti-Europe UK Independence party and the Freedom Association, a libertarian pressure group set up by Norris McWhirter, better known for co-founding the Guinness Book of Records. More than 1,000 people have indicated online that they plan to attend and many said they believed the government was not cutting public spending deeply enough. The Conservative MPs Priti Patel and Bill Cash and the Ukip leader, Nigel Farage, are due to make speeches, and Toby Young, the broadcaster and free school pioneer, said he would attend. The action comes amid a growing interest among rightwing groups in learning from the US Tea Party movement, which has mobilised hundreds of thousands of activists to march against Barack Obama’s policies. Electoral Commission records show that in March Ukip activists registered the name Tea Party as a political party. It is not yet active but they said they could field candidates in general elections, byelection or local elections. “We have seen the Tea Party in the States and although I am not sure if it would take off here … we have set it up so we feel we can use it any time we want to get it off the ground,” said Michael McGough, national executive committee member of Ukip, who will attend the rally. “If we have to bail out Greece then there may be potential in the longer term, so we have got it in reserve for when we need it.” Last year it emerged that the TPA was being advised by Freedom Works, a powerful Washington organisation credited with helping to destabilise the Obama administration through its mobilisation of 800,000 grassroots activists under the Tea Party banner. “We are into freedom, small government, independence of the individual and low tax and low spending,” said Annabelle Fuller, a former assistant to Farage, who initiated the rally after being “completely appalled” by the TUC’s March for the Alternative , which attracted 500,000 people to London in March. “I was incredibly frustrated that the debate was about whether you could cope with the cuts or not because actually there are people happy with this policy and we want more.” Organisers have been urging activists to carry placards saying: “Stop spending my money”, “Reckless waste bankrupting Britain” and “Wake up to Britain’s debt”. The TPA, which calls for low tax and spending and has donors in common with the Conservative party, will bring its lorry-mounted debt clock, which constantly updates the national debt. It has urged its 55,000 supporters to turn out, citing three reasons: the “immorality” of living beyond our means and passing on debt to the next generation; taxes should pay for services, not debt interest; and UK taxpayers should not have to pay for bailouts of failing eurozone countries. The pro-cuts activists will include Mark Littlewood, the former Lib Dem spokesman and now director of the Institute for Economic Affairs free-market thinktank, and Ruth Lea, the high-profile economist. Littlewood said: “There seems to be a belief that the only reason we are in these problems is the behaviour of a few bankers in 2008, but it is down to collective greed of the voting population of this country. We need considerably more cuts. Public spending is out of control. This isn’t a government-sponsored rally by any means. Even if their cuts were carried through in full they will not solve this huge dead weight of debt.” He said it was morally wrong to expect future generations to pay off the debt. Anti-cuts activists are understood to be considering mounting informal counter-demonstrations. Tax and spending UK Independence party (Ukip) Economic policy London Robert Booth Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Updated Whitehall business plans unveiled – live updates

Rolling coverage as the documents, which reveal what each government department plans to do and by when, are published 11.41am: At first glance this publication looks more significant than we thought. Ministers have beefed up the two central areas that the government has come into most criticism for: its growth strategy and social mobility. Growth has been a sore point with the accusation that George Osborne’s programme has focused on cutting, without having a proper plan for improving the strength of the economy. Social mobility is politically crucial to the Liberal Democrats, still reeling from the reputational damage of the coalition top-up fee policy. The written ministerial statement is here and there’s a very useful document here (pdf) which itemises every change that has been made from the previous versions of the business plans. 11.32am: No 10 has today published a written ministerial statement in the Commons including details of new business plans for every Whitehall department. The plans are a key part of David Cameron’s plan to make government more business-like and transparent. They set out what exactly each department is going to do and by when. They were first launched last November when they were described as a power shift from the centre to the people, who are now able to clearly see what each department plans to do and has failed to achieve. The plans are updated every month and they have allowed us to track what coalition promises have been dropped, such as plans to give new protections to whistleblowers in the public sector and to identify where progress is stalling . Last week the latest update revealed huge delays across Whitehall departments documented in this Telegraph story . My colleague Damian Carrington also blogged on the slippage in the coalition’s green plans here . Today the government – led by the policy chief Oliver Letwin and chief secretary to the treasury Danny Alexander – has updated those plans to mark the first year of the coalition. This effectively rewrites the coalition’s delivery goals. We’re looking through them for two things: changes that amount to significant policy shifts, anything that’s been dropped and anything that they’ve reset the clock on to give them extra time having failed to achieve it in the first year. We have our policy experts across the Guardian combing through the plans but want to hear from you if you spot interesting detail below the line or email me at polly.curtis@guardian.co.uk. You can read them all here Liberal-Conservative coalition David Cameron Liberal Democrats Conservatives Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk

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Network Rail fined £3m over Potters Bar crash

• Seven people died in May 2002 crash in Hertfordshire • Company admits breaching safety regulations • Victims’ families voice frustration at nine-year wait Network Rail has been fined £3m by a court for failings over the Potters Bar train crash, in which seven people died. The company admitted breaching safety regulations that led to the West Anglia Great Northern train from London to King’s Lynn derailing just outside Potters Bar station in Hertfordshire in May 2002. Passengers Austen Kark, Emma Knights, Jonael Schickler, Alexander Ogunwusi, Chia Hsin Lin and Chia Chin Wu died in the crash. Pedestrian Agnes Quinlivan, 80, was also killed after being hit by debris. A further 70 people were injured. The track operator admitted it was criminally guilty under the Safety at Work Act for faulty points on the tracks, the responsibility for which it inherited from its predecessor, the privatised company Railtrack. Jarvis, the engineering company contracted to maintain the track, was also accused over failings in the installation, maintenance and inspection of adjustable stretcher bars which keep some sections of the track at the correct width for train wheels, but the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) dropped its pursuit of the case after the company went into administration last year. It had admitted joint liability for the crash after a humiliating apology for trying to blame a saboteur with “informed” engineering knowledge. Nicholas Hilliard QC, appearing for ORR, said in court that the poor state of a set of points on the track at Potters Bar had made the crash “inevitable”. Following the judgment, Network Rail apologised to victims and said that it had greatly improved safety since the accident. “Network Rail has today been sentenced for failings that contributed to this accident and we accept the fine as we accept the liabilities inherited from Railtrack,” it said. “We say again today that we are truly sorry … We recognise for many that the sorrow remains and we should all pause and reflect as we remember those who lost their lives.” The company said that the £3m fine would be paid from a Treasury fund which builds from savings the company makes from doing work that is cheaper than it budgeted for. However, the fine is unlikely to satisfy victims’ families, who have said others should have been accountable. Perdita Kark, the daughter of Austen Kark, said: “The fine means we can draw a line underneath this but we won’t be satisfied. The whole process shouldn’t have taken so long. It’s been handled badly and there needs to be a better system for when accidents happen – we shouldn’t have to wait nine years.” She added: “Individual directors of Jarvis and Railtrack should have also been fined as individuals to teach companies to take accountability and responsibility. What bothers me ultimately is that the taxpayer is going to foot the bill so I’m paying for the crash which killed my father, which I find insulting. £1m or £5m doesn’t really matter.” Network Rail’s fine had been expected to run into the millions after the company received a £3.5m fine for failings in the Hatfield rail crash in 2000, which killed four and injured 102. The company also inherited responsibility for that crash from Railtrack. Balfour Beatty, which was responsible for maintaining the broken section of track that caused it, was originally fined £10m, which was reduced to £7.5m. Network Rail, which owns the UK’s tracks and stations, sought mitigation in view of Jarvis’s role in the crash. It is government-backed and received a £3.7bn annual government grant last year. Some victims’ families are angry that the fine will therefore be largely funded by the taxpayer. Louise Christian, a solicitor who represented victims’ families during the inquest into the deaths last July, has called the proceedings a “charade”. “They deliver no accountability,” she said. “The only person paying the fine is the taxpayer … It could be a substantial fine but you need to ask what the point is.” Potters Bar train crash Transport Rail transport Network Rail Travel & leisure Jo Adetunji guardian.co.uk

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