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Sean Duffy

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Sean Duffy

Wisconsin congressman whines about $174ka year GOPers Demand Sean Duffy Salary Tape Be Pulled From The Internet VIDEO TPMDC.mp4 Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI) “I’m struggling on my $174000 a year salary” Daily Kos: WI-07: GOP Rep. Sean Duffy 'struggles' on only $174000 … You have to imagine that freshman Republican Congressman Sean Duffy was hoping a gaffe this bad would stay hidden. One month later, however, thanks to the DCCC and local media, Duffy’s lucky streak has come to an end. … GOPers Demand Sean Duffy Salary Tape Be Pulled From The Internet … Here’s a one-minute clip, excerpted from roughly 45 minutes of video of the public Duffy townhall, that the Polk County GOP doesn’t want anyone to see. Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI) – Congress Is a Shit McJob, and the … You could be me, Sean Duffy of Wisconsin, and have the shittiest, lowest paying McJob with benefits that suck. You could be a member of Congress, like me. So my life totally rocks, right? I’m a big deal TV star from Real World: Boston … Time for Sean Duffy to Meet the Real World | HYSTERICAL RAISINS Sean Duffy’s recent exchange with a Polk County constituent about his congressional pay. In a videotape of a town hall meeting in Amery, Duffy, R-Ashland, is seen telling a construction worker who lost his job and now drives a bus that … Once Upon A Time– Sean Duffy's Commitment to not do what he's … The GOP has demanded that the tape of Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI) whining about his $174000 salary at a Town Hall Meeting be purged from the Internet. One would think Duffy would neverallow such a move given what he had… icyspook says: RT @thenewdeal : WI-07: impoverished GOP Rep. Sean Duffy 'struggles' on only $174,000 per year http://t.co/74GS6oS Poor Baby. #WIunion #p2

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Milk

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Milk

radioactive milk, washington state, Plutonium, high levels. Mini Bong Milk david throwing a milk carton Fonterra accused of milk price games | Stuff.co.nz Dairy market heavyweight Fonterra is artificially inflating the price of milk in New Zealand in a deliberate campaign to lessen competition, says an official complaint to the Commerce Commission. EPA Detects Radiation In Washington State Milk : The EPA’s Radnet system conducts radiological monitoring of milk and then hands jurisdiction over safety, labeling, and identify of milk and milk products to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. “Results from a screening sample taken … Low levels of radiation found in US milk Low levels of radiation detected in U-S milk http://bit.ly/dFIgF5. Low Level Radioactivity Found In US Milk , Despite Obama Promise … All cow’s milk and all human milk has been contaminated with radio-isotopes since the era of American above ground atomic testing. The thing to struggle to keep in mind, while being bombarded with this endless stream fear-mongering … The Old Foodie: Random Ideas for Milk . I have something different planned for you tomorrow, so to end our milk series I give you a little cache of milk recipes that didn’t fit in the posts earlier in the week. Milk Yeast. Take a pint of new milk , a tea-spoonful of salt, … KinkyBeau says: Mmmmmf. Muscle Milk .

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Richard Blais

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Richard Blais

WATCH Top Chef’s Richard Blais Welcomes a New Daughter (VIDEO) Scott on Discovery Channel’s Blais Off Sous Vide Burger by Richard Blais Using the PolyScience Sous Vide ® Professional Richard Blais Wins 'Top Chef All-Stars' Over Mike Isabella Top Chef season 4 near-winner Richard Blais won the first Top Chef All-Stars Wednesday night over season six’s Mike Isabella. Michelle Weber: Top Chef All-Stars Finale Liveblog: Richard Blais … But before Richard Blais and Mike Isabella get to judges’ table, they are faced with some of their past competitors as all All-Stars return for the chance to be a sous chef. Who will assist in the Finale? … Richard Blais For The Win… Please? Why I Love Top Chef: All-Stars … Not for nothing am I so glad that Richard Blais has made it to the finals, having felt since 2008 that he deserved the title (Also an interesting experience: Growing to like chefs that I’d previously been cold towards: I may be Team … Your Richard Blais Adventure Begins Here – rivermaya's blog Richard Blais is going to be crowned the Top Chef All Stars winner Wednesday night. To participate leave your comments. Editors Note Michelle Weber of Thursday Night Smackdown is liveblogging the Top Chef AllStars finale with HuffPost … Blais | Hot New Music TV Not for nothing am I so glad that Richard Blais has made it to the finals having felt since 2008 that he deserved the title Also an interesting experience Growing to like chefs that Id previously been cold towards I may be Team. … leftyjonno says: Hooray for Richard Blais and his Top Chef win! I ate at his restaurant FlipBurger last year and it was amazing

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Judge Judy

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Judge Judy

Judge Judy Sheindlin rushed to hospital!!! Judge Judy Sheindlin rushed to hospital Judge Judy Falls Ill, Rushed to Hospital (VIDEO) Update: Judge Judy Medical Emergency: I Needed a Day to Chill … Judge Judy just called Harvey Levin from her hospital bed to tell him she’s fine, saying, “I’m just exhausted, and my body was telling me it needed a day… Judge Judy Hospitalized — Taken To Hospital By Ambulance | TMZ.com Judge Judy was rushed to the hospital this morning by ambulance after complaining of intestinal pain. TMZ has learned Judy was at her studio in… EXCLUSIVE: Cameras Rolled During Judge Judy Health Scare, 'I Need … An incoherent Judge Judy told shocked audience members she “needed to stop” one of her made-for-TV cases because she was “not feeling well,” RadarOnline.com is exclusively reporting. Judge Sheindlin was rushed to a Los Angeles. Judge Judy Rushed To Hospital | Radar Online Judge Judy Sheindlin was rushed to a Los Angeles hospital Wednesday morning “feeling nauseous” and suffering “intestinal discomfort”, RadarOnline.com is exclusively reporting. The Los Angeles City Fire Department confirmed to. Judge Judy Hospitalized Judge Judy has been taken to the hospital, her publicist confirmed to RumorFix.com. The website (which was founded by Dr. Phil’s son Jay McGraw) reported Wednesday morning that the iron-fisted queen of the courtroom had been taken to a … jmplusw says: @NikkiCloer Judge Judy was rushed to the hospital today. You might want to protect Jimmy from this information.

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Ex-MP Devine jailed over expenses

Former MP for Livingston sentenced for submitting false invoices for cleaning and printing work totalling £8,385 The former Labour MP Jim Devine has become the third MP to be jailed over the expenses scandal after being sentenced to 16 months at the Old Bailey. Devine, who succeeded the late foreign secretary, Robin Cook, as the MP for Livingston, was found guilty last month of two charges of false accounting. The 57-year-old had submitted false invoices for cleaning and printing work totalling £8,385. He was the first MP to plead not guilty and face trial over expenses fraud . A former psychiatric nurse and union convenor of Bathgate, Lothian, Devine was alleged to have submitted the claims to clear an overdraft. He used a blank receipt he had requested from the landlord of his local pub in London, who also ran a cleaning service and provided Devine with a Polish cleaner. He subsequently submitted three further fraudulent blank receipts, all purporting to be signed “with thanks” by the landlord, Tom O’Donnell, who had no idea that money was being claimed in his name. Devine also submitted claims for printing costs amounting to £5,505, using receipts from a printing company. The court heard he had contacted the company to ask them to write out the receipts in advance for work. Initially hesitant, the company agreed in the belief that the work would be forthcoming, but it never came. He was cleared of a third count relating to a further £380 of cleaning work. Devine had denied the charges and his defence counsel, Gavin Millar QC, told the court that, if he had wanted to clear his debts, he would not have falsified invoices for just a few hundred pounds. During the trial, Devine claimed his former office manager, Marion Kinley, paid herself more than £5,000 from his staffing allowance without his knowledge. But an employment tribunal in Edinburgh last autumn found in her favour, and after the trial she said: “Far from receiving anything I was not entitled to, the employment tribunal judge ruled fully in my favour and, in November 2010, Mr Devine was ordered to pay me £35,000.” Devine was formally declared bankrupt last month after failing to pay Kinley £35,000 for unfair dismissal. Kinley ran his constituency office in West Lothian after being elected to parliament in 2005. The employment tribunal heard he bullied and harassed her and made up stories to justify firing her. Devine, who claimed to have been given advice on his expenses “with a nod and a wink” from a fellow MP, was Scottish health organiser for the Unison union. He was chairman of the Scottish Labour party from 1994 to 1995, and election agent for Cook, whom he succeeded after Cook’s death during a walking holiday in Scotland . Earlier this month, David Chaytor, 61, lost an appeal to reduce his eighteen month prison sentence to 12 months . The former Labour MP for Bury North pleaded guilty in December to submitting bogus documents to falsely claim £18,350 for rent and IT work. Eric Illsey, 55, who pleaded guilty to dishonestly claiming £14,000 relating to insurance, repairs, utility bills and council tax at his second home, was jailed for one year in February. The former MP for Barnsley Central, he stood down before sentencing, with his resignation triggering a byelection. The former Tory peer Lord Taylor of Warwick is awaiting sentence after becoming the first member of the House of Lords to be convicted . In January, the 58-year-old was found guilty of making £11,277 in false claims in relation to overnight subsistence and travel costs, claiming a residence in Oxford when he in fact lived in Ealing, west London. MPs’ expenses House of Commons Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

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Libyan defector not offered immunity, says Hague

• Libyan foreign minister flees to Britain • Obama authorises covert action in Libya • US hands over operations to Nato • Loyalists push further east 11.19am: The Guardian has been told that General Khouildi Hamidi, Muammar Gaddafi’s intelligence coordinator, is defecting from the Gaddafi regime. We’re trying to confirm this. 10.55am: Worrying reports from Bahrain that the prominent blogger Mahmood al-Yousif has been arrested in the country. The Guardian has just spoken to Mahmood’s brother, Hani, who said police turned up at Mahmood’s house outside Manama at 3am on Wednesday morning with a warrant for his arrest. The al-Yousif family have since not heard anything from Mahmood since he was permitted one phone call to his son on Wednesday morning. Hani, who has lived in the UK for the past 16 years, said that only Mahmood, 50, and his 17-year-old son Arif were in the house at the time of the arrest. Mahmood’s wife, who is Scottish, is in Scotland at the moment, while he has two daughters who are studying in Vancouver. Hani, 42, said Mahmood tweeted just before his arrest “the police are here for me”, but said that post, and several other tweets were deleted after Mahmood had been detained. Hani told the Guardian that Arif, who witnessed his father’s arrest, said police had taken all Mahmood’s computer equipment after the arrest. The most recent tweets on the blogger’s @mahmood twitter account all appear to have been automatically generated, with the last ‘real’ tweet apparently sent on 28 March . Hani said from his knowledge of other bloggers’ travails with security forces in Bahrain writers are usually arrested and then released. “But the family are worried, because we’ve not heard anything,” Hani said. You can read Mahmood’s blog – Mahmood’s Den – here . 10.45am: Our politics live blogger Andrew Sparrow is following the foreign secretary’s speech : Hague says he is launching the Foreign Office report on human rights. The full report is now on the Foreign Office website . The government promised a foreign policy that would have support for human rights and poverty reduction at its core, he says. Support for human rights “is part of our national DNA”. The Libyan people have suffered serious human rights abuses for decades. Their plight is now worse than ever, he says. Britain and its allies have intervened in Libya to save lives. It is action that is “legal, necessary and right”. Hague says Moussa Koussa travelled to the UK under his own free will. The government will release further details later. He is one of the most senior members of the regime. His resignation shows that Colonel Gaddafi’s regime is “fragmented, under pressure and crumbling from within”. • Moussa Koussa is not being offered any immunity from prosecution, Hague says. 10.39am: William Hague is speaking at the Foreign Office. He’s expected to give more details on Moussa Koussa’s defection. We’ll follow it live here. 10.21am: The Belgian newspaper De Standaard has posted footage of Belgian F-16 fighter jets in action. This video shows one jet bombing a (grounded) Libyan plane. Hat-tip to LibyaFeb17.com for the link. 10.12am: CNN has interviewed the mother of Iman al-Obeidi, the 29-year-old Libyan woman who said she was raped by Gaddafi militia. “If I were to see his face, I would strangle him (Gaddafi),” Aishah Ahmad told CNN in an interview at her home in the eastern coastal city of Tobruk. 10.05am: The BBC live blog has come across this blog written by regime spokesman Musa ibrahim’s German-born wife, Julia Ramelow. She wrote on 14 March. I’m not sure what to write really. I am stunned by the atrocities I have seen committed by these so-called rebels. Hangings. Beheadings. Immolations – and then they pulled out the heart and stamped on it. Is that what they want Libya to become? 9.50am: More evidence of mounting international pressure on Gaddafi. His regime has been ordered to appear before Africa’s highest court to face charges of “massive violations of human rights” for killing peaceful demonstrators, in a story Owen Bowcott and Maya Wolfe-Robinson had last night . The announcement from the African court on human and peoples’ rights in Arusha, Tanzania, is likely to be welcomed by the Nato coalition as a significant sign of international support. The “order for provisional measures” issued by the court unanimously declares that the “government of the Great Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya” must immediately refrain from any action that would result in loss of life or breach human rights. It also summons the Tripoli regime to appear before the court within 15 days to explain what measures have been taken to implement the order. 9.40am: Nato is now officially in command of all air operations over Libya, having taken over from the US. The alliance took charge at 6am GMT this morning. The operation, codenamed Unified Protector, includes includes enforcement of the no-fly zone, maintaining the arms embargo on Libya, and the protection of civilians. The handover came after some fractious haggling , with the French reluctant to move to a structure that it feared would hamper its capacity for action. Turkey, a Nato member, wanted to clip France’s wings. 9.28am: Jack Straw, the former foreign secretary, told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that Kousa’s defection could be a tipping point. From a distance, what’s clear is that there is unlikely to be any military ‘victory’ for either side. So it does depend on which side psychologically collapses. I don’t think the rebels are going to, and nobody wants them to, so it is about boring your way inside the brain and heart of the regime. There is a tipping point with all of these regimes and I think Musa Kusa’s apparent defection – certainly his unscheduled visit here – will be a very important factor in just adding to the weight against the Gaddafi regime and tipping the balance against him. 9.22am: Chris McGreal, who is in Benghazi, tells us that Gaddafi has taken a leaf out of the rebels’ book, copying their tactics and putting them to effective use. He seems to have adopted the rebel tactics of using pick-up trucks with machine guns mounted on the back. Highly mobile, much faster than using heavy armour, they’re able to sweep through the desert and around the rebels. Not only is he copying what the rebels are doing, he is doing it much better in the sense that he has much more disciplined troops. Chris also thinks giving the rebels more weapons won’t do much good as they lack training or the tactical nous. Those weapons might even fall into the hands of Gaddafi’s troops and turned against them. 8.50am: This Observer article in 2003 underlines Mousa’s importance in bringing Libya in from the cold and has good background on Mousa’s earlier radicalism. Kousa first came to notoriety in 1979 when he became head of the Libyan mission and de facto Libyan ambassador to Britain, delivering an astonishing interview to Times journalist Michael Horsnall in 1980 that amounted to an announcement of intent to commit murder. 8.41am: Vivienne Walt at Time magazine has a typically thorough piece on the importance of Kousa’s defection. Kusa was a long-standing chief of Libya’s intelligence service, before being appointed Foreign Minister in 2009. That means he likely holds critical information which could ultimately lead to international indictments against Gaddafi and his family, including whether the Libyan leader ordered the Pan Am jet to be shot down over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1989, an attack which killed 270 people. She also points out that Kousa was a central figure in helping to negotiate Libya’s detente with the US in 2003. Along with Saif al-Islam (one of Gaddafi’s sons), he persuaded Gaddafi to abandon his pursuit of weapons of mass destruction, and opted to share intelligence information with the US on al-Qaida operatives in Libya. It was Kusa’s sharp instincts which in fact led to the drastic change in Libya’s political international standing in 2003. 8.23am: It seemed inevitable that tales of CIA skullduggery in Libya would emerge sooner or later. Sure enough, it’s all over the US papers today after Reuters broke the story . Both the New York Times and the Washington Post report on the presence of CIA operatives to gather information about the rebels. Both say that Obama signed a secret order several weeks ago authorising the CIA to carry out a clandestine effort to provide arms and other support to Libyan opposition groups. The New York Times says in addition to the CIA presence, dozens of British special forces and MI6 intelligence officers are working inside Libya. US officials told the Times that British forces have have been directing air strikes from British jets and gathering intelligence about the whereabouts of Libyan government tank columns, artillery pieces and missile installations. More from the Times. In recent weeks, the American military has been monitoring Libyan troops with U-2 spy planes and a high-altitude Global Hawk drone, as well as a special aircraft, JSTARS, that tracks the movements of large groups of troops. Military officials said that the Air Force also has Predator drones, similar to those now operating in Afghanistan, in reserve. Air Force RC-135 Rivet Joint eavesdropping planes intercept communications from Libyan commanders and troops and relay that information to the Global Hawk, which zooms in on the location of armored forces and determines rough coordinates. The Global Hawk sends the coordinates to analysts at a ground station, who pass the information to command centres for targeting. The command center beams the coordinates to an E-3 Sentry Awacs command-and-control plane, which in turn directs war planes to their targets. The Washington Post notes that such operations are risky. The CIA’s history is replete with efforts that backfired against US interests in unexpected ways. In perhaps the most fateful example, the CIA’s backing of Islamic fighters in Afghanistan succeeded in driving out the Soviets in the 1980s, but it also presaged the emergence of militant groups, including al-Qaida, that the United States is now struggling to contain. Gaddafi can be expected to exploit these reports for maximum propaganda and to try to tar the rebels as “imperialist stooges”. 8.00am: Diplomatically, Muammar Gaddafi suffered a blow as his foreign minister and close adviser, Mousa Kousa, fled to Britain on a specially arranged flight organised by the British intelligence services. Gaddafi’s justice and interior ministers resigned shortly after the uprising began last month, but Kousa is the first high-profile resignation since the international air campaign began. Kousa’s decision to abandon the regime came as it emerged that Barack Obama had signed a secret government order authorising covert US help to the Libyan rebels via such organisations as the CIA. The order, known as a “finding” was signed within the last two or three weeks. The move will undoubtedly fuel speculation that the US and its allies are planning to arm the rebels. On the ground, Gaddafi’s forces have recaptured much of the ground they lost at the weekend, pushing the disorganised rebels out of the important oil towns of Ras Lanuf and Brega. The regime’s counterattack has outmaneouvred the poorly disciplined and untrained rebels. They barely made a stand at Brega before turning and fleeing toward Ajdabiya, 100 miles south of Benghazi. If the government were to move on Ajdabiya, the road to Benghazi, the rebel stronghold would be open again. • Libyans could face deadlock as both sides run low on arms . • Libyan and Middle East unrest as it unfolded yesterday. • Interactive: Gaddafi forces push rebels back. Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Syria Yemen Bahrain Middle East Mark Tran Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Walmart women watch and wait

The sex-bias class action pitting millions of women against the embodiment of corporate America will have a huge impact In one of the most closely watched cases on the US supreme court docket, the court has heard oral argument in the largest American employment class action litigation ever. Betty Dukes , representing millions of Walmart female employees, filed suit in 2001 alleging that Walmart engaged in a discriminatory pay and promotion practices. The women sued for backpay and an injunction requiring the company to change its practices. The class includes between 500,000 and 1.5 million current and former female employees. How the justices resolve the case will have significant impact. The litigation pits millions of female employees alleging company-wide, gender-based discrimination against the country’s largest retail establishment. Whether the supreme court upholds this class certification is being closely watched by not only female employees, but by corporate America, which is concerned that if the class certification is upheld, almost every large American corporation would be vulnerable to sweeping allegations of employment discrimination based on generalised theories of discriminatory corporate culture and subjective local decisions. The class action device permits millions of allegedly injured people to “aggregate” their claims in one representative litigation. The American class action rule has been in existence since 1938, but the procedure took its modern form through a rule revision in 1966. If a court approves or certifies a class action – as the California courts did – only the individual class representatives’ claims (such as Dukes’s case) would be tried to a jury. In the Walmart case, there are only three women who are class representatives; a court would not individually adjudicate the millions of other women’s claims. In addition, the women’s attorney proposed that each woman’s damages could be determined through a mathematical formula, rather than by examining individual work records. American class action litigation has always been a controversial means for pursuing group relief. Indeed, most civil law countries have historically rejected it – the UK, for example, has a very limited means for aggregating claims, known as a “group action”. However, in recent years, the idea of an American-style class action has gained traction in some European countries. Advocates in favour of class action view it as a means to empower large number of injured victims whose claims have comparatively little value. Such victims most likely would not be able to hire a lawyer, because attorneys have little interest in representing individuals with small claims. In this vein, the Walmart women’s attorney argued that a class action was appropriate because each woman’s claim was probably worth no more than $1,100. Without a class action, millions of Walmart employees would not be able to recover on their discrimination claims. In contrast, large corporations that are sued view this as a means to coerce them into enormous settlements without providing fair trials on individual claims. Several prominent American appellate courts have suggested that when a court certifies a class action to proceed to trial, this decision amounts to “settlement blackmail”. Corporate defendants maintain it denies them their rights to examine, challenge and defend against the individual claims of class members. With over 3,400 stores, Walmart is America’s largest private employer. Women comprise over 80% of workers and hold only one-third of managerial store management jobs. Walmart has a company-wide policy that bars workplace discrimination based on sex. Notwithstanding this policy, individual Walmart store managers have substantial discretion in making salary and promotion decisions in each individual store. The women complained that they had been subjected to an array of discriminatory actions, including denial of management training, retaliation for initiating internal grievance procedures, failure to promote, harassment and denial of equal pay. The complaint alleged that Walmart “fosters or facilitates gender stereotyping and discrimination … and that this discrimination is common to all women who work or have worked in Walmart stores”. California federal courts granted and upheld class certification, which is a green light to proceed to trial. Walmart asked the supreme court for review, arguing that the litigation should not to go forward as a massive class action. It is important to understand what the supreme court will not be deciding. It will not address whether the women employees have legitimate claims, whether Walmart engaged in discrimination, or whether either side should win. Instead, the court will evaluate whether the proposed litigation satisfied the requirements to go forward as a large class action. In order for a court to permit this, the court must be satisfied that the Walmart female employees share common legal or factual questions about their claims. In addition, the women’s claims must be typical of all the women in the lawsuit, and they must be adequately represented. Walmart argued that lower courts’ liberal application of class certification requirements was inappropriate where hundreds of thousands of individualised employment decisions were involved. Therefore, the women’s claims did not share common facts and were not typical of each other. The company argued that the class action effectively denied the corporation’s right to present evidence concerning how individual women were treated with regard to promotion or pay decisions. In particular, it also objected it was unfair to determine possible backpay awards based on a mathematical formula. Women’s groups, on the other hand, are concerned that the court may seize the Walmart appeal as a platform for tightening class certification requirements in employment discrimination cases, thereby increasing the difficulty for female employees to seek recovery. Thus, if the court reverses class certification, the Walmart case could signal a significant regression in women’s rights in the workplace. Walmart Women Gender Retail industry United States Linda Mullenix guardian.co.uk

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Pass notes, No 2,951: Top of the Pops

Yes, it’s back on our screens! No, it’s not a new series but a run of repeats starting on BBC4 in the year 1976 . . . Age: 47. Appearance: The oldest swinger in town. Good old TOTP! Not just British TV’s longest-running chart show, but a reminder that there’s more to music than expensive videos. Such as? Such as embarrassed pop stars miming to their own recordings. Is the BBC still threatening to shut it down? Not any more. It’s been off air since 2006, if you don’t count Christmas specials. And I thought it had been buried on one of the digital channels. I’m devastated. On the other hand, I’m delighted. Because? Because if we’re talking about it now, it must be making a comeback. Got it in one. From next Thursday, TOTP will be on BBC Four in its old time slot of 7.30pm. So it’s about to be buried on one of the digital channels. Still, that’s prime time. Didn’t the show die because everyone stopped watching it? Pretty much. At its peak audiences were 15 million. By the end 14 million of them had vanished. How’s the BBC going to make it work this time? Can we look forward to a big-budget Doctor Who-style revival, ideally featuring Karen Gillan in an extremely short skirt? Only if she really can travel through time. The BBC’s not so much rebooting TOTP as repeating it – one episode a week, starting in 1976. A golden year for pop? More like a golden year for the Beeb not losing its recordings. No 1s in 1976 included Brotherhood of Man’s Save Your Kisses for Me, The Wurzels’ Combine Harvester and Showaddywaddy’s Under the Moon of Love. As for the show’s DJs . . . Or smug gits, as they were officially known . . . They were led by Jimmy Savile, Tony Blackburn and Dave Lee Travis. This suddenly sounds a lot less appealing. Especially since I’ve just realised it could drag on into the 2040s. Don’t worry. Punk will be along to shake everything up in 2012 – or, as we must now call it, 1977. Do say: “Now that’s what I call music!” Don’t say: “Now that’s what I call cheap TV!” Television guardian.co.uk

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New Skittles Video Campaign Stars…Your Finger

Skittles has just launched one of the creative (and bizarre) online video campaigns we’ve seen. They have gotten interactive in the literal, physical sense, making you (or at least…your finger) part of the action. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Social Times Discovery Date : 30/03/2011 11:35 Number of articles : 5

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Whale That Killed Trainer Back at SeaWorld Show

The killer whale that drowned a trainer last year at SeaWorld in Orlando resumed performing Wednesday for the first time since the woman’s death. Tilikum participated in SeaWorld’s signature show before a crowd of thousands. (March 30)

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