BuzzMedia.com bills itself as “pop culture amplified.” It recently acquired a former Turner Broadcasting site called ” The Frisky .” BuzzMedia's press release announcing the acquisition said that “The Frisky has struck a major chord with female audiences for its authentic voice and fierce sense of humor.” Last Tuesday, The Frisky “Guys” section contributor and Julie Gerstein, whose occupation per her profile is Style Editor , criticized another web site's 25 Hot Guys under 25 list . You see, Ms. Gerstein fiercely believes that Crushable.com's Number 13, Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow, should not have been on the list because — and only because –
Continue reading …Title: Gospel Medley Happy Easter!
Continue reading …James Taranto at the Wall Street Journal editorial page finds it amusing that “Former Enron adviser Paul Krugman” (the columnist for the New York Times )
Continue reading …The establishment press's lack of interest in associating President Obama with the sharp run-up in energy costs has been thoroughly documented by several folks at the Media Research Center, including but not limited to Julia Seymour when gasoline hit the $3 mark, and more recently Brent Bozell . Saturday, the Associated Press's Mark S. Smith took the gas-price propaganda to the next level. As anyone would predict, he failed to assign any blame for the energy cost run-up to specific Obama administration policies such as the Gulf drilling moratorium and other barriers to production, and paid relative lip service to the pain it is causing average Americans. To Smith, those are apparently mere trifles. Smitty's real problem is that those darned gas prices might be hurting Barack Obama's reelection chances (bolds and numbered tags are mine): Costly gasoline clouds Obama re-election prospects
Continue reading …I agree with Duncan and with Albus . I dream of the day I join the “perpetually failing upward” crew. Last week, we lost the latest in a list of mediocre scam artist superintendents in our urban school district. This one’s name is Jean-Claude Brizard, who ditched his contract to go run Chicago’s schools. Chicago apparently wasn’t fazed about the Rochester teacher’s union 95% vote of no confidence . As the top-notch local reporter Rachel Barnhart documents , Brizard’s tenure was full of bureaucratic waste, bullshitting about graduation rates, and no real improvement in the school district’s status. The previous full-time superintendent before Brizard, Clifford Janey, went on to become Michelle Rhee’s predecessor. Janey recently quit his $280K/year post in Newark, a job he got after being fired in DC . Janey’s tenure at Rochester was similar to his experience in DC and Newark: a lot of empty promises about change as graduation rates fell. I can’t really blame these grifters for running their cons in Rochester, Chicago, Newark and DC, because those places were on a quest for Superintendent Chocolate Jesus. Instead of addressing or even acknowledging the underlying reasons for school failure (structural poverty, no job opportunities, crime, drugs, teen pregancy and neglectful parenting), they put all their hopes into an out-of-town savior who can dream up unrealistic programs with the help of overpaid consultants, giving them asinine names like “Great Expectations”. In real America, if you suck you go home and take your ball and string with you. That’s not the case for these hacks.
Continue reading …Alitalia cabin crew restrain would-be hijacker on Paris to Rome flight with 131 passengers on board An attempt to hijack a plane to Libya was foiled on Sunday night by the cabin crew, according to the Italian airline, Alitalia. Italy’s Ansa news agency said the would-be hijacker was armed with a small knife. He was thought to be from Kazakhstan. The incident took place on a flight from Paris to Rome with 131 passengers on board. Alitalia identified it as flight AZ 329 which had taken off from Paris at 8.24pm local time. The airline said in a statement: “A passenger in an evident state of agitation assaulted a flight attendant, demanding that the flight be diverted to Tripoli. Thanks to the swift intervention of the other flight attendants the attacker was restrained in his seat and the flight continued towards Rome Fiumicino where it landed normally at 21.55.” Ansa reported that, after he was immobilised, the would-be hijacker was sedated by a doctor who was among the passengers. The crew radioed ahead to alert the police who escorted the man from the plane. Early on Monday, he was reportedly being interrogated by officers of the Italian frontier police. The flight attendant who had been seized was taken to a first aid post, but she was found not to have been seriously hurt in the incident. Italy Libya Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Boy, don’t you wish you lived in Vermont ? If only my state (and maybe yours) didn’t have another dirtbag Republican corporatist extremist at the helm. Maybe we could actually look at the numbers and admit it’s the only system that makes financial sense: MONTPELIER, Vt. — The Vermont Senate is expected to discuss and vote on an historic health care bill that would effectively create the path towards a single-payer system. All Vermonters would be eligible under the tax-payer funded plan . Supporters also say it will be cheaper than the current system because it is more efficient. “We estimate we can save $500 million, and that’s a conservative estimate,” said Sen. Claire Ayer. Their goal would be to have the bill on the Governor’s desk by early Ma y, but opponents want to take it much slower. They are worried that this whole process is going too fast for a bill that is too important. “We are hoping we can spread it out over a day or two,” said Republican Sen. Joe Benning. “This is probably the biggest piece of legislation to come out since the Civil War. We are talking about, not millions, but billions of dollars that are being discussed.” The total cost of the bill is still unclear since financing decisions won’t be made until 2012. That has some small businesses and corporations like IBM concerned .
Continue reading …There was no truly salient issue this past week for Daily Kos bloggers. Instead, they took on a wide range of topics from the urgent need for a federal crackdown on Rush Limbaugh and other conservative “hate-talkers” to a portrayal of America as sort of a global Grampa Simpson. Each headline is preceded by the Kossack's name or pseudonym.
Continue reading …• All women could lose their seats, says Fabian Society • Report suggests grandees give up safe constituencies The Liberal Democrats face the prospect of having no female MPs after the next election if their current poll ratings continue, the Fabian Society says. The society, affiliated to the Labour party, suggests radical moves for the Lib Dems such as making former leaders Charles Kennedy and Sir Menzies Campbell offer their safe seats to female candidates to reverse the trend. Only seven of the 57 Lib Dem MPs are female and in the last couple of months the party has created a “leadership programme” to ensure more women and members of ethnic minorities become MPs. A list of 50 candidates – 50% of them women and 30% ethnic minority – will get strong support to stand for some of the party’s safest seats. The party will not introduce all-women or all-black shortlists since its structure means it cannot impose decisions on local parties; but in recognition of the scale of the task, its central office will stipulate that if one candidate from the leadership programme is asked to stand, the local party must also ask another from the programme. Lib Dems say this provides a high chance that there will be 50 more candidates from under-represented groups at the next election than would otherwise be the case. In the Fabian Society report, its authors, Sunder Katwala and Seema Malhotra, show how the Lib Dems’ seven female MPs include five in the party’s 10 most vulnerable seats. There are no women in the party’s 20 safest seats – those with the largest majorities. The Fabian Society points out that the majority of all seven women Lib Dem MPs put together (17,224 votes) is only just greater than that of Nick Clegg in Sheffield Hallam (15,284). Most vulnerable is Lorely Burt in Solihull, whose majority is only 175 votes, followed by Annette Brooke in Mid Dorset (269) Katwala and Malhotra write: “If the current polls were even half right, not a single Lib Dem woman MP would survive. An early election where they held four out of five seats (a result they would bite your arm off for) could mean 43 men and two women.” They add: “It seems almost certain that the party’s currently poor 12% of women MPs will now fall to below where the Liberals were in the 1930s (one out of 10).” In his speech to the Lib Dems’ spring conference in March, Nick Clegg read out all the Lib Dem ministers in government, and asked the audience: “Do you notice something about that list? There are only two women on it. Our party is too male and too pale. I wish it wasn’t the case, but it is.” The report suggests that women in the Lib Dems face a “toxic triple cocktail”. If they fail to recover in the opinion polls, then both women and men will lose out. But the party’s unpopularity is made worse by the planned shrinking of the Commons from 650 MPs to 600, which will see the smallest new intake in any postwar election, slowing down progress because new intakes have tended to have a better gender balance than the whole house. “The Lib Dems would have expected to select six or seven new candidates to replace retiring MPs; this will probably now fall to two or three – even if all current seats were deemed winnable.” The third factor is that woman are often selected in less safe seats compared with men and “are proportionately more electorally vulnerable than their male counterparts”. The authors propose that the party drop its opposition to all-women shortlists for the two or three constituencies where it is certain to replace a sitting MP. They also suggest encouraging a “retirement or two” and, failing that, a swap: “Tinkering will merely limit the damage unless the Lib Dems respond to new boundaries by reopening every selection, with the aim that women candidates should contest a quarter of the party’s 20 most defendable seats, rather than none of them. “This might mean Sir Ming Campbell or Charles Kennedy swapping their safe seats with a colleague to defend a marginal. If this seems too difficult or painful, the party should admit it’s willing to run the risk of only electing men in 2015.” A Lib Dem spokesman said: “We have made steps towards positive discrimination in favour of women and ethnic minority candidates because we are the most under-representative party.” However, the spokesman added that “much more must be done”. Liberal Democrats Women Equality Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
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