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"That Girl" 45 Years Later — Who Are the Game Changers This TV Season?

I received an email wishing me a happy 45th anniversary the other day and my first thought was, “Phil and I have only been married for 30 years.” And then I realized it wasn’t my wedding they were talking about — it was the anniversary of “That Girl.” Hard to believe now but 45 years ago, my character Ann Marie, was the only girl in town. In this season’s television lineup, there are nearly a dozen new shows starring bright, funny young women: “New Girl,” “2 Broke Girls,” “Whitney,” and others. And as they did with Ann Marie, the young women watching today will not only be entertained by these “girls”, they’ll also think, “Hey, that’s me!” Or, ” Wow, that could be me!” And that is one of the best things television can do: give people a chance to see themselves transformed. And to let ideas and characters come from below the surface and say, “I am here! See me!” Ann Marie seemed like a revolutionary figure at the time but, in truth, every home had a “That Girl” in it. She was the right character for that moment in time. She moved away from the traditional idea of a young woman in the society — she was independent, living alone, not defined by her family. She was out in the world and working for the life she wanted. She was making her own choices. Because of the collective wisdom of all of us working on the show — co-creator Bill Persky who grew up side by side with a sister and then raised three daughters of his own, our story editor Ruth Brooks Flippen with her experience of trying to make it in a male dominated television writing community, and me, who had fought for my independence in an old-fashioned Dad Is Boss, Mom Agrees atmosphere — we had each lived different parts of the old story … and brought with us the passion needed to change it. There I was playing a young woman just starting her life in the big city, struggling to get an acting job — any acting job. And today there’s Tina Fey as Liz Lemon. Liz not only has a good job on a show, she’s running the show. I can’t help but wonder if producer Liz would have hired actress Ann Marie? I was a great dancing chicken. And she should have seen me as a singing mop! Bill Persky said at the time, “‘That Girl’ threw a hand grenade into the bunker, and all the other female characters walked right through.” Every generation has it’s own grenade throwers. Chris Colfer is one as the scene-stealing Kurt Hummel on Glee — a character that truly impacts the lives of gay teenagers. And the loving gay couple on Modern Family. These characters show us television’s willingness — however late-coming — to embrace gay people and their relationships When I think of the 45th anniversary of “That Girl”, I like to envision a fabulous dinner party with all the women who followed Ann Marie. Mary Richards would be there, throwing her cap up in the air. Kate & Allie, who represented the first contemporary single moms on TV, would be there, too (they’d have to get a sitter, but still). I can see Ann worrying about Rosanne, who’s pretty outspoken and wondering if she’d like anyone. But then sitting her next to Murphy Brown, who’s got a few opinions of her own, and watching those two get along great. And then she’d put Rachel from Friends next to Carrie Bradshaw. We’d invite Donald — but of course, he couldn’t stay over. And Mr Big who could. What a great celebration it would be. And I know every one of those women would love hanging out with each other. After all, they’re all from the same family tree. And I’m sure someone would make a toast — probably Roseanne — who always calls it as it is. And her toast would be, “Here’s to television! May it always do what it can do better than anything, open the doors to what is truly happening in America, so everyone watching can say, “Hey, that’s me!” or “Wow, that could be me!” So here’s to a great new TV season. Hope you see someone you know!

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Kenyan runner Patrick Makau shattered the world record for the men’s marathon yesterday in Berlin, chopping 21 seconds from the previous best time, reports Reuters . With temperatures around 72 degrees, Makau ran the race in 2:03:38. “This is the greatest day of my running life,” said the 26-year-old,…

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An Afghan employee who “had the trust” of American CIA agents in Kabul shot and killed one US citizen and injured another last night at a compound believed to hold a CIA station. No motive is yet known, and it’s not clear whether the attacker—who was shot dead—was…

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Fujitsu-Toshiba unveils waterproof Arrows Z ISW11F handset with 13 megapixel CMOS sensor

Toshiba may be bowing out of its mobile joint venture with Fujitsu, but not without bestowing this Gingerbread-munching flamingo upon the Japanese market. The Wimax-enabled Arrows Z ISW11F, unveiled today by Japan’s KDDI au, is juiced by a 1.2GHz dual-core processor, sports a 4.3-inch 1280 x 720 LCD and, most notably, rocks a 13 megapixel CMOS sensor. It also features a 1.3 megapixel front-facing camera and supports 1080p video, along with your standard suite of 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and Bluetooth capabilities. Oh, and to top it all off, it’s waterproof, too. No word yet on pricing, but KDDI plans to bring this bubblegum to the Japanese market sometime in November. Doggie paddle past the break for more information in the translated presser. Continue reading Fujitsu-Toshiba unveils waterproof Arrows Z ISW11F handset with 13 megapixel CMOS sensor Fujitsu-Toshiba unveils waterproof Arrows Z ISW11F handset with 13 megapixel CMOS sensor originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Sep 2011 12:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Messi business! FC Barcelona stars in a sweat over new shirts

Barça stars complain Nike gear soaks up too much sweat and more than doubles in weight in the first 45 minutes It was supposed to be the sports business marriage from heaven. Nike makes the kit for European Champions FC Barcelona and both share the income from millions of shiny claret-and-blue shirts bearing the names of living legends such as Leo Messi. The shirts are more than just presents for children and paunchy middle-aged fans. They are also meant to make the players’ lives easier on the pitch, improving performance and helping the team win more titles. But embarassed Barcelona officials have now admitted that the players are unhappy with the shirt, complaining that it soaks up sweat to become a heavy, skin-clinging nuisance. Players have even taken to weighing their shirts on the scales at half-time to see how much weight they have gained, according to Spain’s El País newspaper. A shirt that weighed 200 grams at the beginning of a match can now weigh up to two and half times as much just 45 minutes later. Dressing room sources told El País that players noticed during a pre-season tour of the US that the shirt “weighed a tonne” and “stuck to the body like a limpet”. They hoped the problem would not persist when they returned to the more forgiving weather conditions in Spain, but on Friday the club called a meeting with Nike to seek solutions. Nike said it has begun testing the shirt. “Nike’s product team is working to address concerns with the FCB home jersey,” a spokeswoman said. “All product concerns are treated with the utmost importance and a solution is expected when all appropriate testing is completed.” Major clubs can sell more than 1m shirts a year, and Barcelona had said this season’s design looked set to break records. The much-vaunted eco-friendly shirt, said to use the recycled plastic of a dozen water bottles in a single garment, reportedly uses a version of Nike’s Dri-Fit fabric, made of polyester microfibres to help wearers stay dry and comfortable. Nike’s website boasts that the official Barcelona shirt it sells for £55 is “a game-ready performer with sweat-wicking fabric for distraction-free competition”. The description does not seem to fit the shirts worn by the club’s players. Barcelona Spain Europe European football Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk

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Messi business! FC Barcelona stars in a sweat over new shirts

Barça stars complain Nike gear soaks up too much sweat and more than doubles in weight in the first 45 minutes It was supposed to be the sports business marriage from heaven. Nike makes the kit for European Champions FC Barcelona and both share the income from millions of shiny claret-and-blue shirts bearing the names of living legends such as Leo Messi. The shirts are more than just presents for children and paunchy middle-aged fans. They are also meant to make the players’ lives easier on the pitch, improving performance and helping the team win more titles. But embarassed Barcelona officials have now admitted that the players are unhappy with the shirt, complaining that it soaks up sweat to become a heavy, skin-clinging nuisance. Players have even taken to weighing their shirts on the scales at half-time to see how much weight they have gained, according to Spain’s El País newspaper. A shirt that weighed 200 grams at the beginning of a match can now weigh up to two and half times as much just 45 minutes later. Dressing room sources told El País that players noticed during a pre-season tour of the US that the shirt “weighed a tonne” and “stuck to the body like a limpet”. They hoped the problem would not persist when they returned to the more forgiving weather conditions in Spain, but on Friday the club called a meeting with Nike to seek solutions. Nike said it has begun testing the shirt. “Nike’s product team is working to address concerns with the FCB home jersey,” a spokeswoman said. “All product concerns are treated with the utmost importance and a solution is expected when all appropriate testing is completed.” Major clubs can sell more than 1m shirts a year, and Barcelona had said this season’s design looked set to break records. The much-vaunted eco-friendly shirt, said to use the recycled plastic of a dozen water bottles in a single garment, reportedly uses a version of Nike’s Dri-Fit fabric, made of polyester microfibres to help wearers stay dry and comfortable. Nike’s website boasts that the official Barcelona shirt it sells for £55 is “a game-ready performer with sweat-wicking fabric for distraction-free competition”. The description does not seem to fit the shirts worn by the club’s players. Barcelona Spain Europe European football Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk

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Only three months after his release from a 26-year prison sentence, Randall Lee Church burned an empty house down so that he could return to jail, The San Antonio Express News reports. Church, who was locked up in 1983 for murder, says he didn’t know how to use a computer or a cell phone, and

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Only three months after his release from a 26-year prison sentence, Randall Lee Church burned an empty house down so that he could return to jail, The San Antonio Express News reports. Church, who was locked up in 1983 for murder, says he didn’t know how to use a computer or a cell phone, and

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Cherry-Picked Patriotism or Only Hating the Wrong Kind of Americans

Click here to view this media Liberals, as the tired conservative slander goes, hate America. This, of course, is nonsense. Liberals simply want to deliver on the national promise of a more perfect union, to shorten the distance, as Bruce Springsteen aptly put it, “between American ideals and American reality.” But if the past three Republican presidential debates are any indicator, it would appear that conservatives hate Americans. Or more precisely, some Americans. As audiences of the faithful booed an active duty U.S. soldier because he is gay and cheered the deaths of executed prisoners and the uninsured alike, the GOP White House hopefuls on stage remained silent. All because, it seems, they had to. Sadly, that complicity is apparently now a requirement to lead a Republican Party in which demonizing gays, minorities, immigrants and Muslims – that is, hating Americans – is increasingly a centerpiece of its politics. For his part, Weekly Standard editor and conservative strategist Bill Kristol summed up Thursday night’s GOP debate debacle in a single word – “Yikes”: Reading the reactions of thoughtful commentators after the stage emptied, talking with conservative policy types and GOP political operatives later last evening and this morning, we know we’re not alone. Most won’t express publicly just how horrified–or at least how demoralized–they are… The e-mails flooding into our inbox during the evening were less guarded. Early on, we received this missive from a bright young conservative: “I’m watching my first GOP debate…and WE SOUND LIKE CRAZY PEOPLE!!!!” As the evening went on, the craziness receded, and the demoralized comments we received stressed the mediocrity of the field rather than its wackiness. But Kristol’s discomfort was with his party’s messengers, not its message. And for years, that message has been unchanged. On this Republican Animal Farm, some Americans are more equal than others . That was clear during the 2008 election. Before Rep. Robin Hayes (R-NC) said – and then denied saying – “liberals hate real Americans,” the sound bite was firmly established as a GOP talking point. A few days before, McCain spokeswoman Nancy Pfotenhauer explained that northern Virginia was not the “real Virginia.” GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin amplified on the point during an event in North Carolina: “We believe that the best of America is in these small towns that we get to visit, and in these wonderful little pockets of what I call the real America, being here with all of you hard working very patriotic, um, very, um, pro-America areas of this great nation.” To be sure, the Republicans’ real Americans aren’t Muslims. Long before Mitt Romney and Herman Cain first announced they would not appoint Muslim Americans to their cabinet, Republican leaders and their amen corner were calling for their profiling , internment and worse. Keith Ellison, the first follower of Islam elected to Congress, was welcomed by Glenn Beck demanding he “prove to me that you are not working with our enemies” and his Virginia House colleague Virgil Goode warning about “many more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Koran.”) It came as no surprise that Republicans demagogued the Park 51 cultural center, the supposed ” Ground Zero mosque ” Sarah Palin asked Muslims to “refudiate.” (What is surprising is that Park 51 opened this week with only a whimper from its right-wing foes. Palin’s Republicans seem similarly intent on “refudiating” that gay and lesbian Americans are “real Americans,” either. Years before Rick Santorum used the Orlando GOP debate to denounce the “special privilege” gay Americans now receive by being allowed to serve their country, he introduced his frothy mixture of politics and hate by comparing same-sex marriage to ” man-on-dog ” relationships. It’s no wonder that GOProud demanded an apology: “That brave gay soldier is doing something Rick Santorum has never done – put his life on the line to defend our freedoms and our way of life. It is telling that Rick Santorum is so blinded by his anti-gay bigotry that he couldn’t even bring himself to thank that gay soldier for his service.” For his part, Texas Governor and GOP frontrunner Rick Perry headlined “The Response” in August, an event co-sponsored by the American Family Association whose director Bryan Fischer explained in June: “So it was homosexual thugs that helped Hitler to form the Nazi Party.” As for Michele Bachmann , whose husband Marcus’ clinic received federal funds for helping patients “pray away the gay,” proclaimed the “gay and lesbian lifestyle” is “personal bondage, personal despair, and personal enslavement” and “part of Satan.” Those views should win her the support of GOP officials like Oklahoma’s Sally Kern (who repeatedly claimed homosexuality is “more dangerous” than terrorism) and North Carolina’s Paul Stam (who explained that gay people are “things” whose relationships can be “treated differently.”) Then there are immigrants, legal and otherwise. Long before Rick Perry defended his record in Texas by telling his detractors “I don’t think you have a heart,” his Republican Party showed it didn’t have a brain, either. Four years ago, most of the Republican candidates snubbed debates sponsored by Univision and the National Council of La Raza (events which they later scrambled to reschedule). John Kerry carried only 53 percent of the Hispanic vote in 2004, but by 2006, Democrats won 69 percent support among the nation’s 43 million Hispanics who went to the polls. President Obama similarly won their vote by a 2-1 margin two years later. Even in the GOP’s 2010 landslide , Democrats earned the backing of 60 percent of Latino voters. ( Subsequent studies suggest the actual Latino support of GOP candidates was much lower than reported.) As NCLR’s Cecilia Munoz put it in September 2007: “It’s not just that they are not coming. It’s that some of them are visibly insulting us.” And, of course, there is the case of African-Americans. Slavery, unmentioned in the Confederate Heritage Month proclamations in Virginia and Mississippi, was in the words of Governor and former RNC chairman Haley Barbour “a nit.” The GOP’s neo-Confederate antebellum nostalgia runs deep. In 2009, Georgia Rep. Paul Broun declared, “If ObamaCare passes, that free insurance card that’s in people’s pockets is gonna be as worthless as a Confederate dollar after the War Between The States — the Great War of Yankee Aggression.” In February 2009, Missouri Republican Bryan Stevenson took exception to President Obama’s support for the Freedom of Choice Act, legislation which would codify the reproductive rights protections of Roe v. Wade nationwide, announcing, “What we are dealing with today is the greatest power grab by the federal government since the War of Northern Aggression.” So, it should come as no surprise that Arizona Congressman Trent Franks proclaimed in February 2010: “Far more of the African-American community is being devastated by the policies of today than were being devastated by policies of slavery.” In response to African-Americans’ monolithic support for Democratic candidates – 89 percent in 2006, 95 percent in 2008 – Republicans have come up with a novel strategy. Keep them from voting. Draconian voter ID laws first introduced in Georgia, Indiana, Arizona and Missouri have expanded to other states, most notably Wisconsin. Despite the almost complete absence of vote fraud in the United States, voter identification laws have joined unprecedented redistricting, barriers to registration and Election Day ballot box challenges to suppress minority (read “Democratic) turnout. As Georgia Republican Sue Burmeister explained the GOP smoke screen , claiming that when black voters in her black precincts “are not paid to vote, they don’t go to the polls.” It’s no wonder some tea party Republicans have called for restricting suffrage to property owners and, along with GOP presidential frontrunner Rick Perry, want to eliminate the 17th amendment to the Constitution which enabled direct election of Senators. And the none-too-thinly veiled racist venom is directed at Barack Obama, the nation’s first African-American President. While Newt Gingrich likened the Obama presidency to the threat posed by the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany, the Republicans’ tea party faithful have been even less subtle. While studies this year and l ast reflected the virulently racist attitudes of some tea party members, i ts elected officials called him “tar baby” and “boy” and have circulated emails portraying the President as a pimp , a monkey and a target for assassination . After South Carolina Rep. Joe Wilson interrupted President Obama’s address to Congress by yelling out “you lie,” supporters sent him hundreds of thousands of dollars of campaign cash. The Wilson episode was hauntingly familiar. In 1856, admirers sent canes to another South Carolina Representative, Preston Brooks , after he viciously caned abolitionist Senator Charles Sumner in the Capitol. As one laudatory editorial back in Brooks’ home state put it, “Meetings of approval and sanction will be held, not only in Mr. Brooks’ district, but throughout the State at large, and a general and hearty response of approval will re-echo the words, ‘Well done,’ from Washington to the Rio Grande.” And so it goes. Long after the Republican debates of 2011 are forgotten, the fear-mongering and demonization of some Americans will still be a staple of conservative politics. And right-wing bookshelves will still be populated with books like Treason , Guilty and Slander proclaiming things like: “Liberals hate America, they hate flag-wavers, they hate abortion opponents, they hate all religions except Islam, post 9/11. Even Islamic terrorists don’t hate America like liberals do.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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