enlarge Credit: IMDB In the 1970s, the era of Watergate and Vietnam and many more official perfidies, Hollywood gave us a new genre of movies. The bad guys were great big, faceless institutions—corporations or the government, it didn’t matter; or sometimes corporations in cahoots with the government. The good guys were anything but faceless: they had rugged, sexy, sexy faces, that belonged to A-list stars like Robert Redford and Warren Beatty. They played lone-wolf investigators, characters straight out of the film noir tradition: tormented by a longing for justice, all but undone by the fallen state of the world. They usually were identifiably left-wing. For instance “Serpico,” played by Al Pacino, was a cop, but he was also a hippie—fat beard, floppy hat, cuddly dog. Frequently, they were journalists—think “All the President’s Men.” If they weren’t, they acted like journalists, for they were always, at bottom, investigators —even if they were only, like all those Biblical prophets in the Old Testament, accidentally drafted into the role, like Gene Hackman in “The Conversation,” in which he played a surveillance expert who accidentally gathers evidence of a potential murder. In “Three Days of the Condor” Redford returns from lunch to find all his colleagues at the CIA front where he works have been murdered—because, naturally, they had learned to much about a CIA-sponsored effort to manipulate world oil markets. That was the 1970s: never before had so defiantly anti-authoritarian popular culture been so popular. So popular, in fact, that by the end of the decade even middle-of-the-road pablum took on aspects of the general outline, just because that’s the way movies were by then were supposed to be. For instance, in Beatty’s “Heaven Can Wait” (1978), when Warren Beatty bargains with his guardian angel to return to earth, the vessel his soul inhabitants is a stinking corporate tycoon whose schemes which Beatty, of course, cannot but overturn. Things are different now. Investigating is out. “We need to look forward as opposed to looking backwards,” as Barack Obama said concerning the shadowy crimes of the Bush administration. I thought about that recently when I saw “Contagion,” the new thriller about a global epidemic starring Matt Damon. It’s a 1970s conspiracy movie turned inside out. It’s quite the cultural testament for the Age of Obama. The good guy turns out to be Lawrence Fishburn, a researcher at the Centers for Disease Control. He’s a quiet, cool, efficient bureaucrat, infinitely compassion for his colleague out in the field whom he keeps on begging to take time off for herself. (Who needs unions when America is filled with benevolent bosses like that? And, of course, she doesn’t take his advice: she works, and works, and works, to the point of contracting the dread disease herself—isn’t that what we’re all supposed to be doing to guarantee continued employment in our blessed age of austerity?) The media keeps on trying to press him into sensationalism. He’s cool about that, too. He’s human, to be sure: at one point he tells his beloved fiancée about secret plans to evacuate Chicago, giving her a jump on the chaos that ensues. That gets out in the media, and we see him scapegoated for a peccadillo, probably to lose his career, despite his manifest heroism throughout. But he’s even noble in that: willingly, maturely, he graciously prepares to fall on his sword, accepting the consequences of his actions. (For a contrasting view of the CDC as a seventies-conspiracy-style victim, see Steven King’s 1978 novel “The Stand.”) And here’s the point about that: the film is constructed to make us feel ashamed for ever suspecting him in the first place—even though he’s the guy that every other paranoia movie we’ve ever seen, all those ones rooted in the seventies paradigm, has trained us to suspect. We’re made to feel ashamed for identifying with the hectoring media types who victimize him. Of all the panoply of powerful institutions presented in the movie, the media is the only one for whom the viewer is to feel no sympathy. “Nothing spreads like fear” is the advertising tagline. And spreading fear, according to the picture’s logic, is what the media is all about. Indeed, we’re made to loath one investigator in particular—the guy who ends up as the film’s preeminent villain, worse, far worse, in fact than the multinational corporation responsible for the superbug in the first place, who it turns out is really only kinda sorta responsible, because it was all a fluke accident. The bad guy, you see, is a blogger. A really, really evil blogger. A moral monster, in fact. It sets up like this. Jude Law’s Alan Krumwiede is the mad investigator of 1970s paranoia movie fame—the guy who the powers that be always mark for death, after all, he always turns out to be right, and have the powers-that-be’s number. Not here. Krumwiede claims to be on the trail of a conspiracy: that there already exists a remedy, a homeopathic medicine, that can already cure the superbug. Only the powers that be are covering it up because there’s money to be made by developing a nicely corporate vaccine—which the powers that be proceed to do, as millions of people die. But things are not as they seem. How wicked is the blogger character? As the film unfolds he reports on his blog what happens when he contracts the disease, then takes the homeopathic remedy, and is cured. Then, in the last reel, we learn what really happened: he faked having the disease, so he could fake being cured, all to cash in on the investment position he holds in the homeopathic remedy. These days, Serpico goes to jail. Because it turns out he was the bad guy all along. Crazy Serpico, thinking our protectors are actually society’s malefactors. Why do I feel like there’s something Obama-ite about all this? Consider the Lawrence Fishurne character He’s just decent, decent, decent. Dare I say he’s an Obama stand-in—a figurehead for the notion that decent, public-spirited technocrats, acting beyond the constraints of “bumper sticker slogans,” are all we need to set the world aright? It’s a world where the right decisions can only get made when we trust the technocrats to do it behind closed doors, without pesky populist investigators getting in the way. Just like, this week, Obama’s former director of the Office of Management and Budget, and now the vice chairman of global banking at Citigroup, said in The New Republic : In an 1814 letter to John Taylor, John Adams wrote that “there never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.” That may read today like an overstatement, but it is certainly true that our democracy finds itself facing a deep challenge: During my recent stint in the Obama administration as director of the Office of Management and Budget, it was clear to me that the country’s political polarization was growing worse—harming Washington’s ability to do the basic, necessary work of governing. If you need confirmation of this, look no further than the recent debt-limit debacle, which clearly showed that we are becoming two nations governed by a single Congress—and that paralyzing gridlock is the result. So what to do? To solve the serious problems facing our country, we need to minimize the harm from legislative inertia by relying more on automatic policies and depoliticized commissions for certain policy decisions. In other words, radical as it sounds, we need to counter the gridlock of our political institutions by making them a bit less democratic. Who could disagree with that? Hippies with fat beards, floppy hats, and cuddly dog; bloggers, maybe. The people who spread fear. Certainly not the trustworthy powers that be who we can always, always count on to have our best interests at heart. Certainly not the whistleblowers —which the Obama administration has targeted as no administration has ever before. The seventies are over, kids. We’re all supposed to surrender to trust.
Continue reading …Note to those low on cash: Stay away from Denver. At $2.75, the mile-high city has the highest average ATM fee of any place in the country, 35 cents above the national average, according to Bankrate.com’s 2011 Checking Account Survey. Capping ATM fees has been a call to arms for consumer advocates and the bain of existence for some banks, who say that curbing the fees would mean fewer private cash machines at convenience stores, restaurants and the like as well as a reduction in bank-owned ATMs. Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) said earlier this year that the average ATM transaction costs 37 cents, according to The Huffington Post. Harkin couldn’t get his proposed amendment to cap ATM fees at 50 cents to the floor in May. JPMorgan Chase charged out-of-network customers $4 and $5 to take money out of their ATMs in Texas and Illinois as part of a pilot program in those two states earlier this year, according to CNN Money. The banking giant went back to charging $3 after too few customers were willing to pay the higher fees and opted for their own banks instead, CNN reported. Luckily, even in the cities with the highest ATM fees, the average is lower than $3, according to Bankrate.com. Still, all five cities have a fee that’s higher than $2 or 10 percent of a $20 transaction. And opting for a debit card instead of cash may not save you the fees. The Federal Reserve nearly doubled the limit banks can charge retailers and consumers for debit transactions, according to The Huffington Post. If you’re looking to get cash on the cheap, then head to the Midwest, four out of five of the cities with lowest ATM fees are in the country’s heartland, according to Bankrate.com. Here are the cities with the highest ATM fees, according to Bankrate.com:
Continue reading …It has come to our attention that George Costanza has hair. While we don’t normally keep such close tabs on George — er, Jason Alexander, the New York Daily News pointed out that recently, the famously bald “Seinfeld” star has been sporting an actual head of hair — when only three months ago the actor was as bald as ever. What gives? “I am experimenting with some interesting hair systems. Don’t be shocked if you suddenly see pics of me with more hair than usual,” Alexander tweeted on July 21. Yesterday the surprised reactions from fans and media spurred Alexander to post a longer explanation via Twitter, in which he said: What you see on my head is a really good, semi-permanent hairpiece. By semi-permanent I mean that I can wear it constantly for weeks at a time, if I so choose. I can swim, shower, work out — whatever. It stays on. Or I can take it off any time of any day I choose. The reason it looks thin is that I challenged my designer to make me a piece that would look very similar to the way I did 10 years ago. So, it looks like a guy who is losing his hair and isn’t an artificial mop of hair that I never had. Alexander’s not ready to start saying who made it or get into any sort of endorsements, he writes, but that “it’s honestly no big deal for me and hope it’s not for you either.” Fine by us — that’s one damn good hairpiece. Below, see Alexander on June 4 (left) and September 22. Read more on Alexander’s Twitter.
Continue reading …Liberals love to put comedian Jon Stewart up on a pedestal as being the most intelligent man on television aware of all that's impacting the nation. On Wednesday's “Daily Show,” guest Bill O'Reilly of Fox News exposed the host for having missed a major story last week about almost unthinkable waste in government spending (video follows with transcript and commentary): [Dedicated Newsbusters readers! We are up to $2940 of our goal to raise $5000. Help us continue to expose and defeat the insidious bias of the liberal media. Show your appreciation for NewsBusters and get "I Don't Believe the Liberal Media" buttons and bumper stickers, or a Chris Matthews floormat, as our thank you. Donate now! ] BILL O’REILLY, FOX NEWS: Now listen. JON STEWART, HOST: But that's my point. That’s a very… O’REILLY: You've got to downsize the government so they can watch what's happening and make intelligent decisions. It's insane. Right now, look, the $16 muffin. Do we all know what the $16 muffin is? Alright. STEWART: What? O’REILLY: See, you don't even know what the $16 muffin is. STEWART: What neighborhood do you live in? O’REILLY: Yeah. STEWART: Who makes a $16 muffin? O’REILLY: This is great. I'm glad. Look. STEWART: Alright. O’REILLY: $16 muffin, broke the story last week on “The Factor.” You were otherwise occupied, making your little wise remarks. Not reading what's happening. They had a bunch of conferences for pinheads, federal government, and they ordered 250 muffins at $16 apiece. STEWART: That's a lot for muffins. O’REILLY: Yeah! And you know what, I paid for the muffins. STEWART: I understand that. O’REILLY: And so did you. STEWART: I understand that. For Stewart's sake, Reuters reported on September 21: As the U.S. government grapples to find ways to trim the bloated federal deficit, a new report suggests officials might start with cutting out $16 muffins and $10 cookies. “We found the Department (of Justice) spent $16 on each of the 250 muffins served at an August 2009 legal conference in Washington,” said a DOJ Office of Inspector General report released on Tuesday. The DOJ spent $121 million on conferences in fiscal 2008 and 2009, which exceeded its own spending limits and appeared to be extravagant and wasteful, according to the report that examined 10 conferences held during that period. The review turned up the expensive muffins, which came from the Capital Hilton Hotel just blocks from the White House, as well as cookies and brownies that cost almost $10 each. I guess the smartest guy in the room missed this story. Might it have been important if a man he didn't like was in the White House overseeing such waste? Hmmm.
Continue reading …When Lenovo announced a pair of Android tablets this summer, we didn’t even pretend it was the IdeaPad K1 we were most jazzed about. Sure, it was exciting to see Lenovo enter the Android tablet market on any terms, but it was the ThinkPad Tablet that set our curious minds rolling. There was the design, for one — an obvious homage to those black, red-nubbed laptops with the same name. It has personality, one that’s inextricably tied to Lenovo’s laptop know-how. It offers a full-sized USB port, an SD slot, 1080p output, a 3G SIM and a slew of accessories that includes a dock, pen and keyboard folio case. It’s the kind of tablet we don’t review all that often: one that might actually make for some painless productivity on the road. As you can imagine, we’ve been waiting months to learn more, and if your tweets, comments and emails are any indication, so have you. Well, wait no more, friends. We’ve been spending almost a week with one and have oh-so much to say. So what are you waiting for? Meet us past the break, won’t you? Gallery: Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet review Continue reading Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet review Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Sep 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …One of the “high-value” detainees imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay has been charged with planning the 2000 terrorist attack on the USS Cole in Yemen that killed 17 US sailors, reports the LA Times . Abd al Rahim al Nashiri, a Saudi of Yemeni descent, faces the death penalty if convicted of…
Continue reading …Tampa Bay rays make 2011 playoffs orioles stun redsox!! Joaquin Phoenix SingsThe Collaspe Of The Boston RedSox 2011 Season (Audio) What is happening in the world today JaysRiders4life says: RT @ OfficialRima : Sorry Boston RedSox … You are the weakest link Gooodbye:) LOL they got the smack down
Continue reading …An increase in solar activity is causing more spectacular displays of the northern—and southern—lights, as recently captured by the crew of the International Space Station. NASA has released rare footage of the Aurora Australis, or southern lights, taken by ISS astronauts as the station passed over the Indian…
Continue reading …Elder sister, 16, jailed and younger sibling, 14, given rehabilitation order for involvement in family plot to steal money A 16-year-old girl has been jailed and her younger sister given a youth rehabilitation order for their part in a plot to kill their 89-year-old grandfather so they could steal his money. The elderly man, who suffered from dementia, was attacked with bricks at his bungalow in a village near Winchester, Hampshire. In the weeks before, some of those involved in the plot had researched how to kill him on the internet using Google searches such as “1,000 ways to die”, “poisonous toadstools” and “easiest way to kill an old person”. Last month, the elderly victim’s adopted daughter, 49, was jailed for 17 years and her son, 19, was given an indeterminate sentence in a young offenders’ institution after being found guilty of conspiracy to murder. The woman’s older daughter, 16, was also found guilty of conspiracy to murder and was given a 26-month youth detention order at Winchester crown court. Her younger sister, 14, was given a two-year youth rehabilitation order after she was convicted of wounding with intent, but was acquitted of the conspiracy charge. A third girl, aged 17 – the 19-year-old son’s girlfriend – was also found guilty of the conspiracy charge and sentenced to three years’ youth detention. The girls, sitting with social workers, sobbed as the sentences were handed down. Sentencing the two older girls, Mr Justice Foskett said: “The essence of the offence of which you were convicted is that you were prepared to contemplate the death of another individual. I cannot avoid a custodial sentence in your two cases.” Speaking to the younger sister, he said: “Despite your physical appearance, you are still very young and immature. I do not think the public interest calls for a custodial sentence in your case.” The judge described the three girls as “vulnerable” and under the influence of the mother, adding that they had acted out of fear of her. Sentencing the two adults last month, Foskett called the attack “despicable and inhuman”. He said the plot and the attempts to kill the pensioner, who lived with his wife, “will defy belief in the minds of any right-thinking person”. The family, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had launched a campaign to try to scare the OAP to death by smashing a window at his home and cutting the fuel line of his car to try to make it explode. During the six-week trial the jury was told the man was lured outside his home by his daughter pretending to have fallen over. He was knocked to the ground by her son and hit with bricks by the two young girls. The prosecution said the intention was to kill him for his money even though he had generously given cash for cars and horses for the family, which had been squandered. The man survived with cuts and bruises and was able to tell paramedics, who were called by his daughter, he had been hit. He is now in a residential home with his wife. The court heard that the daughter stopped the attack and tried to tell ambulance staff her father had fallen, but the family was arrested. Crime Youth justice Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …David Simmonds battered Chinese-born economics graduate to death in woodlands near her workplace A 21-year-old man has admitted murdering an economics graduate who was battered to death in woodlands near her workplace. David Simmonds, of Heanor, Derbyshire, pleaded guilty at Nottingham crown court to the murder of 25-year-old Jia Ashton. The body of Chinese-born Ashton was discovered in Sleetmoor Woods, near Somercotes in Derbyshire, on 13 March, three days after she was last seen leaving her job at the chocolate-maker Thorntons. Detectives launched a high-priority inquiry after Ashton’s music teacher husband, Matthew, reported her missing on the evening of 11 March. She was eventually found by a mountain search and rescue dog in Sleetmoor Woods. Detectives think she would have been walking her usual route home down a road known locally as the Yellow Brick Road when she was attacked. Speaking at a media briefing earlier this week, Detective Superintendent Terry Branson said she was subjected to a sustained and brutal attack, in which there was no evidence of any weapons being used. Simmonds, at 1.88 metres (6ft 2in) and 120kg (19 stone), was more than three times the weight of Ashton, who stood at 1.5 metres, weighed 41kg and wore a size two shoe. Branson said: “Whilst I believe this may well have been a chance meeting in the woods on 10 March, thereafter what took place was not chance, not coincidental. “It was a sustained violent and brutal attack on a young woman, a result of which was that she did receive horrendous injuries to her head and significant compression to her chest, resulting in trauma to her heart, which was the cause of her death.” All her injuries were consistent with having been kicked and punched, he added, and there was no evidence of a sexual attack. She was found some distance from the site where detectives believe she was attacked but it is not clear if she ran there or was dragged. Branson said Ashton was last seen leaving Thorntons just after 5pm on 10 March before walking through the woods with her hood up and listening to an MP3 player. Her body was found about 500 metres from some of her belongings, which included her glasses, her music player and earphones, her mobile phone, which had been snapped in two, five buttons from her coat, and an umbrella cover. Her handbag was found around 4.5 metres up a tree close to her body. Detectives believe Simmonds scattered her belongings around the woods to conceal the crime. He also covered her body with various tree branches and logs. Fingerprints and DNA evidence were recovered from her glasses and her phone but Simmonds was not on any national databases so was not matched. He was eventually arrested on 5 May, eight weeks into the investigation, and charged with Ashton’s murder on 6 May after officers searched the local register of homeless people following accounts from witnesses a dishevelled and unkempt man in the woods around the time of the murder. Simmonds, who has a tattoo behind his right ear at the top of his neck, appeared in court wearing a brown long-sleeved shirt and dark jogging bottoms. Ashton’s husband, who was in court with his mother, Sue, stared at Simmonds as he was brought into the dock. Simmonds spoke only to confirm his name and was remanded in custody to appear at Nottingham crown court on 7 October for sentencing. Crime guardian.co.uk
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