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Red Arrows crash: tributes paid to pilot

Wife and colleagues pay tribute to Jon Egging as witness says pilot was found with parachute open but not in ejection seat A witness has spoken of the moment rescuers searching for a crashed Red Arrows jet found the pilot’s body in a river. Flight Lieutenant Jon Egging’s Hawk T1 aircraft came down near Bournemouth airport in Dorset on Saturday, after a display over the town’s seafront. The pilot was discovered with his parachute open, but he apparently was not in his ejection seat. John Dugdale said he had not heard the crash but was soon at the scene when a rescue helicopter starting hovering above. “Somebody ran past me saying: ‘One of the reds has gone down.’ I ran over and there was a small group of people and you could see part of the wreckage of the aircraft on the riverbank,” he said. “At least one of the group had entered the water and was looking in the river for the pilot. One then shouted out he could see a parachute and then he shouted out he had got him [the pilot] and someone said: ‘Is he dead?’ and the man in the water replied: ‘Yes.’ “There were a lot of bushes on the bank and he was found just away from me in a bend of the river. I did not see him.” Dugdale said he thought the ejection seat was found away from the body. “Soon there were emergency services everywhere and the helicopter landed and we began to be cleared away. I went straight back home because it was extremely upsetting.” Tributes have been paid to Egging, who is said to have guided the plane away from houses and people before it crashed into a field and came to a standstill with its nose in the river Stour near the village of Throop. His wife, Emma, said she had been “the proudest I’ve ever been” after watching the display over Bournemouth before the crash. “Jon was everything to those that knew him, and he was the best friend and husband I could ever have wished for,” she said. “There was nothing bad about Jon. He loved his job and was an exemplary pilot. Watching him today, I was the proudest I’ve ever been. I loved everything about him, and he will be missed.” Colleagues described the 33-year-old pilot as a “true team player” and “gifted aviator”. Group Captain Simon Blake, commandant of the RAF’s central flying school, said: “Throughout his winter training and the display season to date, his professionalism, skill and humility have shone through. In such a close-knit team, this tragedy will be keenly felt by his fellow team members, the Reds, and all of the engineering and support staff, the Blues.” He told the BBC the MoD had grounded the Hawk team Mk 1 “temporarily until its safety can be assured”. “As for the rest of the season, it is too early to speculate as to when the Red Arrows will be back on the public circuit, but suffice to say in the short term they will not be able to perform in public.” An MoD spokesman said: “A full service inquiry into the details of the crash has been initiated. It would be inappropriate to speculate on the causes of the incident at this time.” One witness said the plane skidded for several hundred metres along the riverbank after it crashed. Mark Grogan said: “I heard a sound like a car backfiring. Within five minutes the helicopters arrived, there were at least five helicopters including the police and two from the coastguard.” Nicholas Gore, 22, who was walking close to the river when he saw all nine Red Arrows overhead, said: “There were quite a few people watching and we saw them go over but one seemed quite low. They then disappeared behind trees and I heard a crack – not an explosion, just a crack – and we got further down and I saw the plane with its red tail in the air and its nose in the river.” Wayne Kent, 30, the assistant manager at the nearby Broadway Pub, said some of his customers had seen the incident, and that the pilot guided the plane away from houses in the village and from people walking near the riverbank. Plane crashes Military guardian.co.uk

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Talk of a general malaise is misguided. The country’s problems stem from too many dysfunctional households Both David Cameron and Ed Miliband made excellent speeches last week and there was much to agree with in what they said. None the less, in the overall commentary on the riots, I think we are in danger of the wrong analysis leading to the wrong diagnosis, leading to the wrong prescription. There were some proximate causes of what happened that are relatively easily dealt with. The police are under huge pressure. If they go in hard, they fear inquiry, disciplinary action and abuse. It’s all very well to say that they should just follow the rules. The police need to know they have strong support from politicians and public. When the riots first occurred, they would have been naturally anxious as to how heavy to be. Once they saw the country behind them, they rallied. But my experience with the police is they need 100% backing. Otherwise, you’re asking a lot of the officer on the ground in a tough situation. Then, some of the disorder was caused by rioters and looters who were otherwise ordinary young people who got caught in a life-changing mistake from which they will have to rebuild. However, the big cause is the group of young, alienated, disaffected youth who are outside the social mainstream and who live in a culture at odds with any canons of proper behaviour. And here’s where I don’t agree with much of the commentary. In my experience, they are an absolutely specific problem that requires deeply specific solutions. The left says they’re victims of social deprivation, the right says they need to take personal responsibility for their actions; both just miss the point. A conventional social programme won’t help them; neither – on their own – will tougher penalties. The key is to understand that they aren’t symptomatic of society at large. Failure to get this leads to a completely muddle-headed analysis. Britain, as a whole, is not in the grip of some general “moral decline”. I see young graduates struggling to find work today and persevering against all the odds. I see young people engaged as volunteers in the work I do in Africa, and in inter-faith projects. I meet youngsters who are from highly disadvantaged backgrounds where my Sports Foundation works in the north-east and I would say that today’s generation is a) more respectable b) more responsible and c) more hard-working than mine was. The true face of Britain is not the tiny minority that looted, but the large majority that came out afterwards to help clean up. I do think there are major issues underlying the anxieties reflected in disturbances and protests in many nations. One is the growing disparity of incomes not only between poor and rich but between those at the top and the aspiring middle class. Another is the paradigm shift in economic and political influence away from the west. Each requires substantial change in the way we think and function. However, I would be careful about drawing together the MPs’ expenses row, bankers and phone-hackers in all this. We in politics love the grand philosophical common thread and I agree with Ed Miliband on the theme of responsibility. I became an MP in 1983. Then, MPs were rarely full time, many didn’t hold constituency surgeries and there were no rules of any bite governing expenses or political funding. So the idea that MPs today are a work-shy bunch of fraudsters, while back then they were high-minded public servants, is just rubbish: unfair, untrue and unhelpful. Likewise with the boardroom. I agree totally with the criticisms of excess in pay and bonuses. But is this really the first time we have had people engaged in dubious financial practices or embracing greed, not good conduct? If anything, today’s corporations are far more attuned to corporate social responsibility, far better in areas like the environment, far more aware of the need to be gender- and race-balanced in recruiting. Britain gives generously to those in need abroad: faster and more than many other nations. At a time of cuts, our aid budget – which saves countless thousands of lives – is being protected. There is criticism but the remarkable thing is not how much but how little. The spirit that won the Olympic bid in 2005 – open, tolerant and optimistic – is far more representative of modern London than the criminality displayed by the people smashing shop windows. And here is what I learned in 10 years of trying to deal with this issue. When I visited the so- called “bad areas”, whether in Liverpool, Bristol, Birmingham, London or elsewhere, what I found was not a community out of control. What I found were individuals out of control in a community where the majority, even in the poorest of poor parts, was decent, law-abiding and actually desperate for action to correct the situation. In witnessing the lifestyles these individuals have, I found two things came together. First, there was a legal system overwhelmed by the nature of the crime committed by these young people, buttressed as it is by gangs and organised crime. Second, these individuals did not simply have an individual problem. They had a family problem. This is a hard thing to say and I am of course aware that this, too, is a generalisation. But many of these people are from families that are profoundly dysfunctional, operating on completely different terms from the rest of society, middle class or poor. Most of them are shaping up that way by the time they are in primary school or even in nursery. They then grow up in circumstances where their role models are drug dealers, pimps, people with knives and guns, people who will exploit them and abuse them but with whom they feel a belonging. Hence the gang culture that is so destructive. This is a phenomenon of the late 20th century. You find it in virtually every developed nation. Breaking it down isn’t about general policy or traditional programmes of investment or treatment. The last government should take real pride in the reductions in inequality, the improvement in many inner-city schools and the big fall in overall crime. But none of these reaches this special group. By the end of my time as prime minister, I concluded that the solution was specific and quite different from conventional policy. We had to be prepared to intervene literally family by family and at an early stage, even before any criminality had occurred. And we had to reform the laws around criminal justice, including on antisocial behaviour, organised crime and the treatment of persistent offenders. We had to treat the gangs in a completely different way to have any hope of success. The agenda that came out of this was conceived in my last years of office, but it had to be attempted against a constant backdrop of opposition, left and right, on civil liberty grounds and on the basis we were “stigmatising” young people. After I’d left, the agenda lost momentum. But the papers and the work are all there. In 1993, following James Bulger’s murder, I made a case in very similar terms to the one being heard today about moral breakdown in Britain. I now believe that speech was good politics but bad policy. Focus on the specific problem and we can begin on a proper solution. Elevate this into a high- faluting wail about a Britain that has lost its way morally and we will depress ourselves unnecessarily, trash our own reputation abroad and, worst of all, miss the chance to deal with the problem in the only way that will work. UK riots Social exclusion Crime Ed Miliband David Cameron Tony Blair guardian.co.uk

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Teenager cleared of setting fire to Miss Selfridge during Manchester riots

Dane Williamson now suffering panic attacks after his flat was burned and he was subjected to abuse while on remand A teenager who spent nine days in prison after being charged with setting fire to Miss Selfridge during the Manchester riots has been cleared after new evidence emerged confirming his innocence. Dane Williamson, 18, said he had had a nightmarish ordeal after he was charged with being involved in causing £500,000 damage to the Market Street store during the riots, despite having five alibis. He was charged with criminal damage and being reckless over property damage or endangering life. His name was widely reported and Facebook groups were set up on which he was identified and subjected to abuse. Williamson’s flat in Salford was damaged by fire while he was on remand in Forest Bank prison; he lost all of his possessions and is now homeless. He suffered panic attacks after he was targeted by other prisoners who taunted him about what he had supposedly done. A 50-year-old man has since been arrested in connection with the incident but Greater Manchester police say they are still searching for those who started the fire. During his time on remand, Williamson was called a firebug, told he would be jailed for life by prisoner officers, and initially locked up for 23 hours a day as a category A prisoner. His solicitor, Kerry Morgan, criticised the judicial system for pursuing instant justice so much it resulted in an innocent man being locked up. Dane, who has spent much of his life in care and has two previous convictions, told the Manchester Evening News: “Being in Forest Bank was horrible. I had heard my name all over the radio. In prison I was being treated as if I was already guilty. It was quite scary and an experience I don’t want to repeat. “I was in there for nine days, 23 hours a day locked up in a cell. I was categorised as a category A prisoner at first then reduced to category B. I had a lot of snide comments from officers about the arson, like: ‘You’re that firebug,’ ‘You’re gonna get time for this,’ and ‘They’re gonna put you in Strangeways.’ “The worst thing that was said was: ‘You’re getting life and you’re scum.’ They must have told other prisoners because some would flick their fingers like a lighter in my face. “I was going through hell. I was depressed. I was having panic attacks. The stress was awful. I feared I was going to get convicted for something I didn’t do, which potentially carried a life sentence. “While I was in custody I got the news from my solicitor that there had been a fire at my flat. That was very distressing. All my personal belongings and photos were destroyed. I lost my home. On top of everything else it was a final blow.” Dane told how he had been arrested, saying: “One of my mates had said: ‘Are you sure you were not involved in the riots? The photo of the arsonist looks a bit like you.’ “We had a laugh and a joke about it. Two police officers were stood in front of Phones 4 You, and I said: ‘I’ll prove it’s not me,’ and walked in front of the coppers. When I came out of the shop they grabbed me and then three more approached and asked if I had been involved in the riots. I said no. “The next thing I was arrested in the middle of the street on suspicion of arson. I couldn’t believe it. It was surreal. I was taken into police custody and it was all very distressing. I was interviewed at Pendleton police station and gave an account of where I was that day. Then I was interviewed again and they were trying to pin the offence on me and get me to admit it. I wasn’t having any of it because it was not me.” He was charged with damage to the shop and presented before magistrates. He had been selling CDs on Market Street on the day of the riot but was at his brother’s home in Salford during the evening. Kerry Morgan, senior partner with Morgan Brown & Cahill, who represented him, said: “They notified us as part of their duty of ongoing disclosure that they had checked footage in relation to Dane’s account of where he was during the day and that CCTV showed him wearing similar clothes to the arsonist, but slightly different. “Also a police officer had identified someone other than Dane who he thought was the suspect. Those two things undermined their case and as a result Dane was bailed on Thursday by the recorder of Manchester and later that day we received notification that the case against him was being discontinued.” Dane has spent 17 of his 18 years in care, living in children’s homes and foster homes. He has two previous convictions: for possession of cannabis in March this year, and burglary three years ago, when he and friends broke into the reception of a holiday camp. For both offences he was given a youth referral order. He is annoyed that people were setting up Facebook pages about the riots, naming him and defaming him. He says he does not condone violence or rioting. This year, with the help of the charity Barnardo’s, he moved into his own flat in Broughton, Salford, and has completed business courses at college. UK riots Manchester Crime Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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On PBS, Former Bush Aide Laments Perry’s Importing Ann Coulter Lingo Into the Campaign

It might not be surprising to see someone sit in the rarefied liberal air of a PBS set and dismiss the undignified palaver of talk radio and Ann Coulter, but on Friday's PBS NewsHour , this line was coming from former Bush speechwriting chief Michael Gerson, and the target was Gov. Rick Perry. Gerson and liberal Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus were sitting in for David Brooks and Mark Shields. (In other words, Gerson was in the “I agree with Mark” chair.) Both agreed that Perry really gaffed in suggesting Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke was “treasonous” if he shoveled more dollars into the economy before the election: JIM LEHRER: Well, explain, Michael, why those gaffes wouldn't disturb the Republican electorate, for a candidate to use the word treasonous in the same — in a context of talking about Ben Bernanke? MICHAEL GERSON: I think the unfortunate context here is that that's the importation of language that's used on the Internet, used on talk radio, used in book titles. We have titles like “Treason.” We have — you know, so I think those — that type of language has been imported in the Republican primary process. I agree that it's a long-term problem. I don't think that it's necessarily a short-term political problem in Iowa and other places. Gerson must be referring to the Ann Coulter book “Treason” — which was about actual communist espionage, and the anti-anti-communist liberals who were soft on it. It doesn't exactly match the current controversy. It's more snobbish than artful. One can dismiss the idea that Bernanke is a traitor as overbaked without dragging Coulter books into it. Speaking of the Fed, Lehrer brought up Ron Paul's chances, since the pundits have dismissed his second-place straw poll showing as another insignificant CPAC-style outlier. (Lehrer didn't mention that the “End the Fed” author said Perry's remarks “make me look like a moderate.” ) Gerson gave the usual conservative line that Paul is too libertarian on drugs and too strangely supportive of Iran to win over the GOP: LEHRER: Why — there's been a lot of complaints from Ron Paul and his folks that he's been — he came in within 100 — within 200 votes of Bachmann in the straw poll, and he was just brushed aside. Is he not considered a serious contender for the Republican nomination? GERSON: Well, I think he's not a serious contender for the Republican nomination. He has a floor of very committed supporters and a ceiling that's not too much higher than the floor, because he has very radical views, which came out in the debates. He seemed very much excusing of Iranian behavior. He's a libertarian on even the hardest — legalization of the hardest drugs. You know, he has views that are definitely not mainstream views, in my view and in the view of most Republicans. So, I do think that he is a force, but I think that he has a very committed core that's not likely to expand beyond that group. At least on Friday, Marcus disappointed Obama partisans by agreeing with Gerson that the president's stance on unemployment is not cutting it: GERSON: So, I think the president's problem here is not just the vacation, which is easy to focus on, but it's the fact that he's coming up with a big jobs plan 28 months after unemployment went over the nine percent figure, which most people seem — see as quite late. He's playing catchup on the most important issue in American politics. JIM LEHRER: Ruth? RUTH MARCUS: I wish I could say I disagree. The — I thought the tour was very odd, because it was: I'm on a tour. I'm going to come up with a policy. Wait until September. And that was problem one with it. Problem two, I thought, was when he started to sort of ramp up this argument against Congress, you know: I need your help to get this Congress to get off its — and get something done. Well, when President Truman ran against the do-nothing Congress, he had not promised the voters earlier that he was going to be able to make the Congress do something and that he was the guy who was going to be able to come to town and change all of this. So, for the president now to be ramping up against a do-nothing Congress, I feel his frustration, but he did tell us he was the one who was going to be able on fix this broken political system that still turns out to be broken. Marcus may be one of the few media liberals who want to remind voters Obama pledged to be a terrific bridge-builder to the other party — something the other party can easily reject — as the Democrats proved with George W. Bush.

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UK leads clampdown on rhino horn trade

Countries and conservation groups will share intelligence and work on public awareness campaigns Britain has secured international agreement to clamp down on the illegal trade of rhino horn , which has become so sought after it is worth more than diamonds, gold, heroin and cocaine. The UK will lead a global steering group to dispel the myths that rhino horn can cure cancer or help stroke patients , which are fuelling demand for it in Asia and driving up its price to £50,000 a kilo. Countries and conservation groups will share intelligence and policing tactics and work on public awareness campaigns against the illegal trade. The agreement was reached at the Convention for International Trade in Endangered Species in Geneva. The environment secretary, Caroline Spelman, said: “Criminals trading in rhino horn have lined their pockets while bringing this magnificent animal to the brink of extinction, but their days are now numbered. “We will be leading global action to clamp down on this cruel and archaic trade, and to dispel the myths peddled to vulnerable people that drive demand for rhino products.” There has been a significant increase in the number of rhino killed in countries such as South Africa since 2010, in what conservationists warn is a “poaching crisis”. The UK will support a workshop in South Africa in September to develop better co-operation between countries where rhinos are poached and those where their horns are sold. Last September, after the UK’s animal health agency detected a rise in the number of rhino horn products being sold through auction houses, it issued a warning that it would refuse almost all applications to export such items from the UK. It was feared that the legal export of “worked items”, such as ornaments, created and acquired before June 1947, was being used to send rhino horn to Asia, where it is powdered and used for medicinal purposes. The trade could stimulate the market for products from the endangered animal, fuelling poaching, officials said. Under rules brought in for the UK and then backed by the EU, export licences are granted only if the item’s artistic value exceeds its potential value on the black market, if it is part of a genuine exchange of goods between institutions such as museums, if it is being taken as an heirloom by a family moving country, or if it is part of a bona fide research project. Endangered species Conservation Animals guardian.co.uk

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England v India – live! | Alan Gardner and Tom Lutz

• Hit the auto-update button or refresh for the latest posts • Send your thoughts to alan.gardner.casual@guardian.co.uk • View the full scoreboard from The Oval here 36th over: India 109-5 (Dravid 60, Dhoni 6) Broad beats Dhoni with a devil of a delivery (perhaps a devilry?), the batsman pushing forward outside off uncertainly. That’s just the line for Broad. “Morning Gardner, morning everybody. I’ve got tickets for tomorrow, so the most pressing question is how substantial a picnic to take. Can your reader(s) offer any suggestions?” According to our esteemed bookmaker friends, England are 3-1 to win today, Josh Robinson. So maybe you should consider breakfast and little more? 35th over: India 108-5 (Dravid 59, Dhoni 6) It’ll be Graeme Swann at the other end, naturelment. Dhoni goes after the spinner’s first ball, sweeping hard but missing, pad rather than bat coming into the equation. Swann appeals but the result is a leg bye to Dhoni. That, though, is a huge shout, again for lbw against Dhoni. The India captain stepped outside the line of off and lifted his arms above his head, offering no shot whatsoever. The ball would have had to have come back a fair way, and Simon Taufel decides it wouldn’t have done enough … only for Hawk-Eye to adjudge that it would have clipped the top of off. As Bumble says, though, it would have been a guess to give that out. 34th over: India 104-5 (Dravid 57, Dhoni 5) Hey ho, away we go, with Stuart Broad to bowl the first over of the morning. He starts with a no-ball. Try again, Stuey. His next delivery takes the outside edge of the bat but the ball stays low, bobbling its way to Anderson in the slips. Broad’s line for the rest of the over is largely angled into Dravid, trying to unpick that immaculate defense, before the final ball, an away swinger, is left by the batsman. “While the recurring finals anxiety dream is, indeed, a nightmare, waking to discover that you never have to take another exam is truly a fabulous moment of recompense,” notes Steve Busfield, our man Stateside. True, it’s a huge wave of relief that washes over you. Hang on, what time is it in New York? Have you just woken up from that very dream, Steve, and come to comfort yourself with a soothing session of the cricket? The England team are out on the pitch , and the crowd greet them with warm applause. The sun is struggling to break through low cloud cover, from the looks of it, and there’s the suggestion we might get a spot of rain at some point during the morning. Not that such inconvenience would throw England off the scent, you feel. The first email of the day and it’s a doozy: “Dear Sir,” begins Vladimir Harkonnen – a phrase to chill any OBOer’s heart. “I wish to protest against the careless use of the word whitewash which has crept into our latter-day demotic tongue. Especially as applied to England’s annihilation of India, the term is inadequate. A better way of expressing it would be to say that England have Rochestered India. See: John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, finest poem The Annihilation of Nothing. I trust you will correct your phraseology forthwith.” Didn’t Rochester write a lot of blue poetry? In which case, we might just as well say that England have Rogered India. But then, this is a family show, so we’ll stick with whitewash, until the guardian style guide dictates otherwise. Less chat, more hat: The bid for the sun hat signed by England’s three hundred-makers at Brisbane last winter currently stands at a round £300. Not bad you might say – but with all proceeds from the auction going to the Mines Advisory Group , it would be remiss not to aim higher. Email your price to the OBO and the highest bidder at the end of the series gets the prize. Preamble: You know those anxiety dreams you get? Like when you stand up to give that deal-sealing presentation and realise that you’ve forgotten to put your trousers on. Again. Or when you go for a job interview but can’t even spell CV, let alone describe what’s on yours. Followers of the England cricket team used to be well acquainted with the cold sweats. Even until recently, a night’s slumber could be suddenly, heart-thumpingly disturbed by the mental echo of a Chennai 2008 or a 51 all out. Men and women with stronger constitutions than I have woken in the middle of the night screaming the name of the south Australian ground out loud. Not any more. This England team gives the opposition nightmares and it would be no surprise to hear that even the Little Master has been going to bed with his bat for the last few weeks, to ward off the nocturnal spectre of Jimmy and his swingers. Andrew Strauss’s side may be 3-0 up in the series but, at The Oval, there’s been no rest for the wicket. In 33 intense overs yesterday evening, the bowlers ripped into India’s flagging line-up once again and, weather permitting, England have an excellent opportunity to wrap up a second consecutive victory by an innings. The last time India lost by such a margin twice in the same series was in 1983, at the hands of West Indies. So, English cricket is no longer responsible for your fret dreams. That doesn’t mean they don’t still occur from time to time, though, does it? And not just because of the cheese . I still sometimes wake to discover, thankfully, that my university finals took place several years ago and it doesn’t matter if I haven’t read any of the books. But enough about me – what’s your story? India in England 2011 England cricket team India cricket team Cricket Over by over reports Alan Gardner guardian.co.uk

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Saturday Night Funny Video: Putin Bags a Tiger While Obama Bags….a Pie

Another entry in my semi-regular series of Saturday night humor postings for NewsBusters drawn from the clips Bret Baier runs at the end of FNC’s Special Report which he and his staff usually select from video montages picked up off the late night comedy shows. Tonight, a fresh one from Friday night’s program which comes from the Colbert Report on Comedy Central in which Stephen Colbert contrasted Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s safari adventures with what excited Barack Obama during a stop at a store during his bus trip. My previous videos in this intermittent series: > Saturday Night Funny Video: Putting the Wrong Guest Expert on Air > Saturday Night Funny Video: Colbert Ridicules Reid Who Mused Over His Pomegranate Trees > Saturday Night Funny Video: Confusing the Weather Woman with Rudolph Hess > Saturday Night Funny Video: ‘ ObamaCare,’ ‘ObamaCare,’ ‘ObamaCare,’ ‘ObamaCare,’ Then Herman Cain … > “Funny Clips” compilation presented in May at the MRC’s “2011 Gala featuring the DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporting.” Scroll down the main page .

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Saturday Night Funny Video: Putin Bags a Tiger While Obama Bags….a Pie

Another entry in my semi-regular series of Saturday night humor postings for NewsBusters drawn from the clips Bret Baier runs at the end of FNC’s Special Report which he and his staff usually select from video montages picked up off the late night comedy shows. Tonight, a fresh one from Friday night’s program which comes from the Colbert Report on Comedy Central in which Stephen Colbert contrasted Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s safari adventures with what excited Barack Obama during a stop at a store during his bus trip. My previous videos in this intermittent series: > Saturday Night Funny Video: Putting the Wrong Guest Expert on Air > Saturday Night Funny Video: Colbert Ridicules Reid Who Mused Over His Pomegranate Trees > Saturday Night Funny Video: Confusing the Weather Woman with Rudolph Hess > Saturday Night Funny Video: ‘ ObamaCare,’ ‘ObamaCare,’ ‘ObamaCare,’ ‘ObamaCare,’ Then Herman Cain … > “Funny Clips” compilation presented in May at the MRC’s “2011 Gala featuring the DisHonors Awards: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporting.” Scroll down the main page .

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Open Thread with The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: The Last Premarital Podcast

enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly Professional Left Podcast from our own Driftglass and Bluegal who have tied the knot by now. Congrats and big hugs to both of you my friends! Mentioned in this podcast: Alexander Stephen’s Cornerstone Speech . You can listen to their archives at The Professional Left and you can also make a donation there if you’d like to help keep these going or just send them a wedding gift. For those of you on Facebook you can follow them at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . Enjoy the podcast and have a great weekend everyone. Open thread below…

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Newstalgia Backstage Weekend – Jamiroquai At Summer Festival di Lucca, Italy – 2011

enlarge Jay Kay of Jimiroquai – Jazz-Funk Greats since 1992. Click here to view this media Click here to view this media From the Summer Festival di Lucca in Italy this week comes a set from Jamiroqua i. Recorded live as it happened on RAI Radio 2 this past July 24th. Two hours of solid Funk, the set is broken up between two players so you won’t miss a note. Here’s the set list: Jamiroquai Set List – July 24, 2011 1.Rock Dust Light Star 2.Main Vein 3. Cosmic Girl 4. High Times 5. Little L 6. Morning Glory 7. Canned Heat 8. All Good In The Hood 9. Hey Floyd 10. Feels Just Like It Should 11. Love Foolosophy 12. Use The Force 13. Travelling Without Moving 14. Scam 15. Alright 16. Deeper Underground 17. White Knuckle Ride Because it’s Italian Radio the announcer is in Italian – you can check out your language skills or you can ignore it. But play it loud anyway.

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