Wedding Wars (2006) Part 5/9 Wedding Wars (2006) Part 3/9 John Stamos sings “Ben” in “Wedding Wars” humorfeast says: Humor Feast: Sean Maher Gay http://t.co/ArbgRi4D via @ humorfeast
Continue reading …Welcome back to season thirteen of Dancing with the Stars. Last we met, L.A. Laker Ron Artest, a.k.a. Metta World Peace, was on his way out. That’s right, America—we voted down World Peace. Explain that to your grandchildren. Three contestants rose to the top of the competition last week: 90s pop star Chynna Phillips, veteran-turned-actor
Continue reading …One man rescued by ambulance service but another killed at Kellingley colliery A miner has died after a roof collapsed in one of Britain’s deepest remaining mines. Emergency services were called to Kellingley colliery, in Knottingley, North Yorkshire at around 5pm after the incident in the 800 metre deep pit. Two men were trapped and, following a rescue operation, UK Coal said that one of the men died and the other was receiving treatment after he was trapped by the leg. An emergency call was made shortly before 5pm after the two men reportedly became trapped up to their waist by debris. A specialist hazardous area response team from the Yorkshire ambulance service, whose members are trained to work underground, played a key role in the operation. The team was joined by fire crews and doctors. Gareth Williams, managing director for coal mining for UK Coal, said: “UK Coal can confirm a fall of roof occurred at 4.35pm which trapped two of our colleagues. “Colleagues successfully recovered one of the two employees trapped by the lower leg. He is now on the surface. “UK Coal regrets to confirm the second colleague was confirmed dead by our own team, despite our best efforts.” Williams said the company’s thoughts were with the families of the miners. The fatality comes after four men died in a flooded south Wales colliery earlier this month in the UK’s worst mining disaster for 30 years. Kellingley colliery has been the site of a number serious accidents in the past, some fatal. Ian Cameron died at the colliery after an equipment failure in October 2009 while Don Cook died in a rock fall in September 2008, At the time, UK Coal received summonses from the Health and Safety Executive relating to four deaths in separate incidents at its collieries. UK Coal evacuated 218 workers last year after methane gas seeped into the area and ignited. The colliery supplies local power stations and produces some household coal. UK Coal Mining Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Chancellor faces widespread scepticism to enlarging eurozone bailout fund among German public and her own MPs Germany pledged support to Greece today in a desperate effort to shore up the eurozone, but fell short of revealing the package of measures that the markets hope will be enough to save the single currency. The chancellor, Angela Merkel, pledged solidarity at a meeting with her Greek counterpart, George Papandreou, just two days ahead of a crucial vote in the German parliament on the expansion of the bailout fund, which is regarded as the first step to increasing the firepower of the eurozone countries enough to buy up bonds and buttress troubled banks. However, conscious of animosity among the majority of German voters towards helping the less prudent nation, Merkel attached strings to her support, calling on Greece to “do its homework” in implementing painful cuts and reforms. The pair who avoided any talk of a Greek default, orderly or otherwise, or of any multitrillion-euro rescue plan, ahead of a dinner in Berlin on Tuesday night. Even so, stock markets rebounded strongly on hopes that the deal that emerged over the weekend at the International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington – to “leverage” the spending power of the €440bn (£382bn) bailout fund to €2tn, in conjunction with lending from the European Central Bank – was being worked on behind the scenes. But before the European Financial Stability Facility can be beefed up, the bailout fund’s strengthened mandate must be ratified by parliaments across the eurozone. On Thursday the Bundestag will vote on whether to increase the powers of the EFSF – the forerunner of the permanent rescue facility, the European Stability Mechanism, due to come into force in 2013. However, three out of four Germans are against the move, which would raise the country’s contributions to the pot from €123bn to €211bn. Some parliaments do not vote until the middle of next month and also face opposition from a sceptical public. Support from Germany’s opposition Social Democrat (SPD) and Green parties mean the bill is almost certain to pass. The question is whether Merkel will be able to command the so-called “chancellor majority” using only votes from her increasingly shaky coalition. She needs 311 of her coalition’s 330 MPs to vote for the bailout if she is to go it alone and prove she is still in control. Failure to do so could not only trigger the collapse of the government but harm the entire European project, analysts said. But there is scepticism. Carsten Schneider, a politician from the SPD, said it was “not acceptable” that the government was already adapting behind the scenes the very plans the Bundestag was being asked to vote on on Thursday. “Parliament will be systematically circumvented if [these] plans are not laid on the table before the vote,” he said. One rebel from the chancellor’s Christian Democratic party (CDU) said he believed the bill would solve nothing. “I’m voting ‘no’ on Thursday because I am of the view that in the best-case scenario, this expanded bailout fund will merely buy us time. It won’t solve the problems in the long run,” said Wolfgang Bosbach, an influential MP who chairs the parliament’s committee on internal affairs and who is not known as a eurosceptic. “The question needs to be answered: how we are going to deal in the long term with those states in the eurozone who are hopelessly indebted and are not in the position to finance themselves.” He said he was refusing to bow to demands from party whips to toe the line but admitted the pressure was there. He said he expected “five to 10″ other MPs from the CDU or its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), to vote against the government. Several politicians from the Free Democrats (FDP), the other coalition party, are also expected to rebel. They were meeting on Tuesday afternoon to debate the forthcoming vote. The Greek prime minister had travelled to Berlin to bolster support for his beleaguered nation. Papandreou gave an impassioned address to leaders of German industry, appealing to his European partners to help him tackle the country’s debt crisis. “I promise you, we Greeks will soon fight our way back to growth and prosperity after this period of pain,” he said. Papandreou said he understood the reluctance of taxpayers in other European Union countries to help his country out of its crisis but said it was not an investment in the mistakes of the past, rather in the success of the future. “The eurozone must now take bold steps toward fiscal integration to stabilise the monetary union. Let’s not allow those who are betting against the euro to succeed,” he said. In her own speech to the Federation of German Industries (BDI), Merkel pledged her support. “We will provide all the help desired from the German side so that Greece regains trust,” she said. “If the stability of the euro is at stake – and the experience of the last few years [tells us] that the difficulties of one country endanger our common currency – then that obliges us to show solidarity within the common currency. “We will help if the country does all it can in terms of its own homework,” she said, also reiterating her opposition to common debt issuance in the eurozone – the much-discussed eurobonds. A poll this month showed that 76% of Germans are opposed to granting any further aid to Greece and the mass-market Bild newspaper reflected public hostility to further bailouts by insisting Merkel should be tough on Papandreou. “This is what you have to tell the Greek prime minister to his face, Frau Merkel,” wrote the paper, listing demands ranging from ensuring taxes were paid to getting rid of the bloated state apparatus and “thinking the unthinkable” – namely default, a debt restructuring and even leaving the eurozone. European debt crisis Germany Europe Angela Merkel Euro Europe European monetary union European Union Greece Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A Pomeranian named Mango really disrupted the flow of freeway traffic in Portland, Ore. after escaping from her owner’s car, running down the freeway until she was eventually corralled. (Sept. 27)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Oh look, personal use fundraiser and pro-tort reform non-candidate Sarah Palin paid money to her lawyers to threaten a frivolous lawsuit . Palin said through a letter via her attorney that author Joe McGinniss and Crown Publishing, the Random House division which released “The Rogue” this month, published a book filled with “lies and rumors presented as fact.” So if she sues, McGinniss’s lawyers get to search her personal records for findings to defend their client. And she has to prove that he lied . Also, in keeping with her narcissistic MO, she threatens to sue all the time . Very few people have defended McGinniss and his book. And frankly, I don’t care who Palin screwed (and yeah I don’t think the euphemism “slept with” is at all accurate) or even what drugs she took back in the ’80s. Let’s face it: Palin has become incredibly boring. Those salacious details are the only thing keeping her even vaguely interesting, and very few people care enough any more to even look at the perpetual car wreck that is her personal and family life. There are better reality shows on the teevee. What Palin is doing now is hardly relevant, except that she’s screwing the political process by abusing campaign finance laws with her stupid bus tour and the unethical “PAC” that funds it, and she’s screwing the national political dialogue by pretending she has any qualifications to participate in it. Those issues are relevant. McGinniss’s hatchet job and her resultant pearl-clutching are not. And her fake outrage lawsuit threat? Yawn.
Continue reading …During an appearance on Morning Joe , Tuesday, Newsweek editor Tina Brown made an off-hand remark about Barack Obama, conceding that the politician “wasn't ready” to be President. Brown has previously attacked Rush Limbaugh and other conservatives for daring to oppose the Obama While discussing whether New Jersey Governor Chris Christie will change his mind and run for President, the former New Yorker editor blurted, ” Actually, I just hope he doesn't, because in the end, you know, his tremendous misgivings, maybe he is right. I mean, We had this with Obama. He wasn't ready, it turns out, really .” [See video below. MP3 audio here .] On December 31, 2009, Brown mocked Rush Limbaugh, who just hours earlier had been taken to the hospital with chest pains, as a “bad fairy” who ruined the magical story of Obama. She portrayed the radio host as “the bad fairy at Sleeping Beauty's christening” and added, “…Rush Limbaugh utters the words, 'I hope you fail.' 'I hope he fails,' he said, and from that moment, the sort of the Pandora's box opened.” Her full quote on Limbaugh: TINA BROWN: It's got to be that incredible inauguration of Obama….You started the year with this huge festival of hope and renewal and everything is going to be so different now, and then, like the bad fairy at Sleeping Beauty's christening, Rush Limbaugh utters the words, 'I hope you fail.''I hope he fails,' he said, and from that moment, the sort of the Pandora’s box opened, and the rest of the year has been just this big discord and toxic atmosphere in politics and partisan divide and people shouting at each other and the Tea Parties and death panels.” -Brown announcing her choice for the most important moment of 2009 on NBC's Today December 31, 2009 a few hours after Limbaugh went to the hospital with chest pains. For more on Tina Brown, see the MRC's Profile in Bias . A transcript of the September 27 exchange follows: 7:27am EDT TINA BROWN: But if he doesn't feel ready to run- Actually, I just hope he doesn't, because in the end, you know, his tremendous misgivings, maybe he is right. I mean, We had this with Obama. He wasn't ready, it turns out, really . MIKA BRZEZINSKI: Got four little kids. BROWN: Maybe Christie isn't ready. Maybe he feels like everybody wants him to but perhaps he does need longer. ANDREA MITCHELL: But, Tina, you could also argue that he might have a better chance at this moment of becoming the president of the United States than being re-elected governor of new Jersey and given all of the problems of running that state.
Continue reading …Well, this is kinda interesting: a brand new Roku just hit the FCC, sporting model number 2400X. Beyond the fact that we just got a trio of new streaming media boxes from the company, the model number would almost seem to imply this is a last-gen device (the Roku 2 lineup all start with “30″). It’s clear the Roku LT (the name it will eventually go to market with) is going to be the new low-cost member of the family, but it’s not just rebranded old tech. Inside is the same Broadcom 2835 SOC that powers the Roku 2 XD, XS, and HD and, while it tops out at 720p just like the low-end HD, it actually sports more RAM than the current budget model. Presumably the loss of Bluetooth and the SD slot will offset any cost increase associated with moving up to 256MB of memory. When the Roku LT will actually ship and how much it’ll cost is anyone’s guess, but we’d put our money on soon and cheap. For a few more specs check out the chart after the break. Continue reading Budget-friendly Roku LT pops up at the FCC as the 2400X Budget-friendly Roku LT pops up at the FCC as the 2400X originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Sep 2011 16:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …