2011 has been one nutty year. We’ve seen President Obama carry out the murder of the world’s most wanted criminal. We’ve seen a movie allegedly about sewing people to other people’s butts become a thing. And we’ve seen Lady Gaga become a dude. Needless to say, LOTS OF STUFF has happened in popular culture that could carry over to your Halloween costume come October 31st. Here are fifteen …
Continue reading …2011 has been one nutty year. We’ve seen President Obama carry out the murder of the world’s most wanted criminal. We’ve seen a movie allegedly about sewing people to other people’s butts become a thing. And we’ve seen Lady Gaga become a dude. Needless to say, LOTS OF STUFF has happened in popular culture that could carry over to your Halloween costume come October 31st. Here are fifteen …
Continue reading …For better or worse, you will now be able to watch Beauty and the Beast while teacup saucers and plates whiz past your head. The massive success of Disney’s The Lion King in 3D has prompted the studio to announce that four of its animated films—two old animated classics and two Pixar ventures—will be rereleased in
Continue reading …Dust storms are once again rolling across Arizona, leading to a series of crashes that killed one person and shut down Interstate 10 for hours. Another six people are in critical condition following the three accidents yesterday, the Arizona Republic reports. One pile-up involved 16 vehicles, the BBC notes. “The…
Continue reading …Good news for Coen brothers fans: Soon you won’t even have to leave your house to get a fix. The Oscar-winning filmmakers are creating an hour-long TV series for Fox, according to the Hollywood Reporter . The single-camera comedy Harve Karbo will center on a Los Angeles private investigator, his deadbeat…
Continue reading …Moody’s followed Standard & Poor’s lead and downgraded Italy’s credit rating yesterday, slashing it from Aa2 to A2 and setting its outlook to “negative,” meaning it envisions more cuts to come. Moody’s said its decision wasn’t based on Italy’s government finances, but on worries about its economic growth and, more…
Continue reading …NEWPORT, Pa. — A Pennsylvania man attacked by a bear inside his home when the animal followed his dog inside has a newfound appreciation for the power of nature after he needed 70 staples and stitches to close the gaping wound on the back of his head. “I know what it’s like to be a salmon now,” Richard Moyer told WHTM-TV. His head and arms heavily bandaged, Richard Moyer said the bear ran inside his Perry County home as he let the dog in early Monday morning. Moyer and his wife, Angela, were hospitalized for bite and scratch marks but released in the afternoon. The bear jumped on him and attacked his wife when she tried to intervene, Moyer said. Angela Moyer was knocked to the ground and dragged on to the home’s patio, prompting her husband to jump back into the fray, he said. “That’s when the bear tried to make a meal out of me, and started tearing my head apart,” Moyer told WHP-TV. The 6-foot-6, 300-pound Moyer said a doctor who treated him said he was fortunate that his size helped him fight off the bear. “I’m just thankful it stopped,” Moyer told WGAL-TV. “Because if it didn’t stop I might be in a box right now.” The bear was likely a female who felt her cubs were threatened by the dog, said Pennsylvania Game Commission spokesman Jerry Feaser. “A bear encountering a dog is more likely to run away,” he said. Pennsylvania has not experienced a fatality from a black bear attack in more than a century, Feaser said. The game commission has set up a bear trap in Moyer’s yard.
Continue reading …Another mishmash of schedules along with a sense of urgency to rant the afternoon away have combined midweek, and the result is a quickie Apple Edition of Engadget Mobile Podcast. Yes, some big news came our way yesterday and we have something to say about it. Get prepared for a lot of Apple talk, everyone; we’ll try to open up some time to have some dessert after our fruit, though, if you catch our drift. Anyways, we hope you can join Myriam Joire and Brad Molen in our emergency edition of the Engadget Mobile Podcast, live at 5PM ET (2PM PT, 9PM GT)! Continue reading The Engadget Mobile Podcast, Apple Edition, live at 5PM ET! The Engadget Mobile Podcast, Apple Edition, live at 5PM ET! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 16:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Protesters flood into streets of Athens Greece edged deeper into chaos as workers brought the country to a standstill with a general strike. The closure of the entire public sector – from schools to hospitals to government offices – left Athens airport looking like a ghost town and kept museums and archaeological sites shut. Anger was evident on the faces of the protesters who flooded into the streets. “We have no work, we have no money,” they screamed, denouncing the EU and IMF which have propped up the near-bankrupt Greek economy with rescue funds. “Erase the debt! Let the rich pay. There will, there can, be no more sacrifices.” Nearly two years after Europe’s great debt crisis erupted beneath the Acropolis, the people on its frontline have clearly had enough. An austerity programme that has begun to resemble a bad dream of relentless wage cuts, tax increases, price rises and pension drops has crushed the middle class and sent poverty levels soaring. Wednesday’s demonstrations, the biggest anti-austerity protest since June, were the “beginning of a battle” to eradicate further emergency belt-tightening measures announced last month. “The government is behaving as if it has a pistol to its head,” said Stathis Anestis, a spokesman for the Confederation of Greek Unions. “It is not just that it is the poor who are forced to carry the burden of this barrage of measures,” he insisted, denouncing the terms of the €110bn (£95bn) bailout Greece received from the EU and IMF in May last year. “It’s not just that all our hard-earned rights are being peeled away. It is that we wake up every day to another cut, another tax, another pay rise. No one can keep up!” The prospect of more public sector strikes in the coming months was as inevitable as the precision with which the austerity measures had failed to solve the country’s spiralling debt problem, he added. “None of these measures have been effective. They have only served to worsen recession, miss [budget] targets and deepen desperation and despair worse. We have no choice but to take to the streets.” George Papandreou, the Greek prime minister, says nothing short of a revolution can change the debt-stricken country. Since triggering the crisis with the revelation that Greece had clearly cooked the books, hiding a deficit that was three times bigger than originally thought, the ruling socialists have drawn up an array of economic and structural reforms not seen since the second world war. “The only way that we are going to see real results, real change, is if the reforms are implemented,” said a source close to the “troika”, which is made up of the EU, IMF and ECB. Last week Greece acknowledged that it had missed the fiscal goals set out in the 2011 budget, blaming a worse than expected recession. Without the reforms being enacted, the country has been told that it will not receive the next vital €8bn tranche of aid needed to pay wages and pensions in the public sector. The pressure on a government that is showing all the signs of becoming increasingly shaky is beginning to mount. This week Papandreou admitted that the changes he was being asked to apply were much greater than he would have liked. “We are forced to take decisions much faster than we would have wished,” the prime minister said after his cabinet approved the decision to move 30,000 civil servants into a special labour reserve on reduced pay – the first step towards mass lay-offs in the bloated public sector. The demonstrations were much less violent than previous protests in a capital that has become increasingly used to toxic chemicals and tears – even if more riot police than ever were dispatched to the city centre. Instead, it is a new sense of helplessness and hopelessness that is haunting Greece. “We are mourning the loss of our country,” sighed Elena Vitali, a national economy ministry employee who, with black flag in hand, joined hundreds of others protesters outside the building. “The 300 people in that place,” she said pointing to the Greek parliament across Syntagma square, “are traitors. They have decided not just to sell our dignity but to sell out our country, to sell assets to privatise the lot. Soon there will be nothing left that is Greek. It will all have gone to those who are supposedly helping us in the EU.” European debt crisis Greece Europe European banks European Union IMF European Central Bank Helena Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In his speech to the Conservative party conference, the prime minister said that there was ‘too much sogginess around’ David Cameron has urged Britain to shun “can’t-do sogginess” and instead lead itself from recession by tapping into Britain’s indomitable bulldog spirit. Speaking against a chilling backdrop of ever gloomier economic news, on the day that new official figures showed Britain’s economy had flatlined over the past nine months, he sought to lift the country’s mood by saying: “Let’s show the world some fight”, adding: “We can turn this ship around.” Closing his party’s conference in Manchester, the prime minister said: “Frankly there’s too much can’t do sogginess around. We need a sharp, focused, can-do country” that would form the basis of a new economy built on fairness. In a patriotic speech suffused with one nation rhetoric and promises to tear down educational “apartheid” in Britain, he repeatedly hailed the country’s historic capacity to recover from reverses, such as the loss of empire, the threat of communism, or economic decline in the 1970s. “Britain never had the biggest population, the largest land mass, the richest resources – but we had the spirit,” he said. “Remember it is not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog. Overcoming challenge, confounding the sceptics, reinventing ourselves, this is what we do.” He said: “It’s called leadership,” a phrase that occurred 17 times in his speech. The attempt to offer optimism, as well as a portrait of a Tory purpose that goes wider than deficit reduction, ran the risk of appearing out of touch with the depth of economic crisis. Cameron fervently argued that Britain should not be paralysed by gloom and fear, saying it was “possible to turn this time of challenge into a time of opportunity”. His officials privately admitted it had been a difficult speech to pitch with Cameron only 18 months into government, the crisis in the euro overshadowing all else, and the need to balance optimism with realism. Cameron also had to tweak the speech at the last minute after an earlier draft appeared to instruct the entire country to pay back their credit card debts, a move that some calculated would shrink GDP by 15% at a stroke. Despite a string of right-of-centre policy announcements during the week the prime minister was firmly camped on the compassionate centre ground, defending the international aid budget, more help with parenting, and legalising gay marriage as “a way of strengthening the ties that bind us”. He declared: “I don’t support gay marriage despite being a Conservative. I support gay marriage because I am a Conservative.” He also promised a new focus on getting very young children out of state care by allowing black children to be adopted by white families. “We’ve got people flying round the world to adopt babies while the care system at home agonises about placing black children with white families.” He also defended the way in which he had distributed the pain in the spending cuts, claiming controversially: “This is a one nation deficit reduction programme – from a one nation party.” Similarly he promised that the new economy he was in the process of building would be a different economy, built on solid ground and working for everyone. But he offered little fresh detail on how growth was to be achieved, apart from the familiar litany of deregulation, controlling debt, tax breaks for enterprise and a determination to push through planning changes to give industry the space to grow. Ministers are increasingly confident that the argument over planning reform is being won, with Cameron angrily telling his implacable critics: “Take your arguments down the jobcentre. We’ve got to get Britain back to work.” In probably the strongest section of his speech, he claimed “something massive” was already under way in schools as standards and aspiration rose. “Rigour back in learning. Standards back in schools. Teachers back into control. Yes, the Conservatives are back in government.” An old Etonian, he demanded private schools take greater responsibility, by starting or sponsoring more academies: “The apartheid between our private and state schools is one of the biggest wasted opportunities in our country today, so let it be this party helps tear it down.” To some of his loudest applause he said: “Believe me, I do understand and I am disgusted by the idea that we should aim for any less for a child from a poor background than a rich one. I have contempt for the notion that we should accept narrower horizons for a black child than a white one. Yes, it is the age-old irony of the liberal left: they practise oppression and call it equality.” Without mentioning Ed Miliband, he accused Labour of giving Britain a casino economy and welfare society. He said the government’s deficit reduction programme was “just one big bail out of the last Labour government”. Labour was “on a sort of national apology tour”, he said, adding: “There has not been a peep on the one thing they really need to say sorry for – wasting billions and billions of your money.” Miliband, preparing to reshuffle his shadow cabinet, was struck by the number of themes he set out in his speech last week, including attacks on personal irresponsibility and vested interests, that reoccurred in Cameron’s.But Cameron also offered a stronger defence of liberal interventionism than Miliband by defending the British leadership role in Libya: “This is a party – ours is a country – that never walks on by. Earlier this year some people said to me: ‘Libya’s not our concern’, ‘don’t start what you can’t finish’, and even – ‘Arabs don’t do democracy’. “But if we had stood aside this spring, people in Benghazi would have been massacred. And don’t let anyone say this wasn’t in our national interest … let’s be proud of the part we played in giving the Libyan people the chance to take back their country.” David Cameron Conservative conference 2011 Conservative conference Conservatives Economic policy Welfare Tax and spending Foreign policy Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
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