Halfway through the July 21 edition of “NewsNation,” MSNBC anchor Tamron Hall brought on Time magazine assistant managing editor Rana Foroohar to diss a Boy Scout cited by John Thune (R-Neb.) on the Senate floor. After Hall aired a clip of Thune reading the Boy Scout's letter admonishing senators to spend only what the government can afford, she and Foroohar set about to dismiss his concern as quaint but ill-informed:
Continue reading …In the past week, you couldn't swing a debt cat without hitting a press report about how irresponsible the ” Cut, Cap and Balance ” bill passed by House Republicans is. A new CNN/ORC poll released a few hours ago finds the media very much on the wrong side of public opinion concerning this issue:
Continue reading …Her father was scary. Vincent Gallo got vicious. And Jack Nicholson taught her never to give a brown present. Anjelica Huston tells John Patterson about a life among Hollywood royalty The last time I met Anjelica Huston was six or seven years ago in a luxury oceanfront hotel in Venice, California. It was windy and cold, Huston was still a smoker – we talked outside in the wind while she lit up like a naughty schoolgirl. Today, it’s a blisteringly hot day, she’s an enviably youthful 60, an ex-smoker now, sitting in the lounge of the luxury hotel next door, before a gigantic cinemascope window affording guests a million-dollar view of the Pacific, which looks seriously tempting in today’s heat. “I went in the ocean this year, the day after my birthday,” she tells me as we watch the breakers gently roll in, “and it was actually really nice. It’s like the Eiffel Tower is for Parisians, though, the beach in LA. It’s right there, but you barely even look at it most of the time.” Spoken like a true Angeleno. We’re here to talk about Horrid Henry: The Movie , a swivel-eyed comedy based on the children’s books by Francesca Simon and Tony Ross, in which she plays the screechy teacher, Miss Battle-Axe (we’re on the uglied-up Morticia Addams end of the Huston spectrum again). “It’s very British material to me, and I’ve always been strangely attracted to these extreme characters, like Miss Battle-Axe. I found her irresistible! I hadn’t seen the cartoon or the book, which I hear is second in popularity in Britain to Harry Potter. I guess you have to have a few seven-year-old children to really appreciate that.” How was it working with all those kids? “Most of my scenes were with Theo Stevenson [the titular bad boy], but English kids are so polite and enthusiastic, and not blase. I did that movie Daddy Day Care , with a bunch of five- and six-year-old American kids, and they were so sophisticated and scarily together compared with this group, who were sweet and happy and enthusiastic. The script was very charming, I liked the director, and it felt like a good idea to go and play in London for a while.” Huston arrives alone, no PR flak, no retinue, no muscle, just a slender, well-dressed and coiffed California woman of a certain age and, if you look closely enough, a striking, instantly familiar cast of feature. But today, in white pants, a simple blouse and open-toed sandals, she might as well be in disguise. She probably walked here today from her home nearby, unrecognised and unmolested. To be as unassuming and well-adjusted and as smart and, well, as normal as Anjelica Huston has turned out to be is, to say the least, unusual among the children of fathers as legendary – and notorious – as hers, the buccaneering, larger-than-life, genius-hero-monster John Huston , a maverick back when that word still meant
Continue reading …Her father was scary. Vincent Gallo got vicious. And Jack Nicholson taught her never to give a brown present. Anjelica Huston tells John Patterson about a life among Hollywood royalty The last time I met Anjelica Huston was six or seven years ago in a luxury oceanfront hotel in Venice, California. It was windy and cold, Huston was still a smoker – we talked outside in the wind while she lit up like a naughty schoolgirl. Today, it’s a blisteringly hot day, she’s an enviably youthful 60, an ex-smoker now, sitting in the lounge of the luxury hotel next door, before a gigantic cinemascope window affording guests a million-dollar view of the Pacific, which looks seriously tempting in today’s heat. “I went in the ocean this year, the day after my birthday,” she tells me as we watch the breakers gently roll in, “and it was actually really nice. It’s like the Eiffel Tower is for Parisians, though, the beach in LA. It’s right there, but you barely even look at it most of the time.” Spoken like a true Angeleno. We’re here to talk about Horrid Henry: The Movie , a swivel-eyed comedy based on the children’s books by Francesca Simon and Tony Ross, in which she plays the screechy teacher, Miss Battle-Axe (we’re on the uglied-up Morticia Addams end of the Huston spectrum again). “It’s very British material to me, and I’ve always been strangely attracted to these extreme characters, like Miss Battle-Axe. I found her irresistible! I hadn’t seen the cartoon or the book, which I hear is second in popularity in Britain to Harry Potter. I guess you have to have a few seven-year-old children to really appreciate that.” How was it working with all those kids? “Most of my scenes were with Theo Stevenson [the titular bad boy], but English kids are so polite and enthusiastic, and not blase. I did that movie Daddy Day Care , with a bunch of five- and six-year-old American kids, and they were so sophisticated and scarily together compared with this group, who were sweet and happy and enthusiastic. The script was very charming, I liked the director, and it felt like a good idea to go and play in London for a while.” Huston arrives alone, no PR flak, no retinue, no muscle, just a slender, well-dressed and coiffed California woman of a certain age and, if you look closely enough, a striking, instantly familiar cast of feature. But today, in white pants, a simple blouse and open-toed sandals, she might as well be in disguise. She probably walked here today from her home nearby, unrecognised and unmolested. To be as unassuming and well-adjusted and as smart and, well, as normal as Anjelica Huston has turned out to be is, to say the least, unusual among the children of fathers as legendary – and notorious – as hers, the buccaneering, larger-than-life, genius-hero-monster John Huston , a maverick back when that word still meant
Continue reading …Art dealer William R Acquavella says the painter died after an illness British artist Lucian Freud has died at the age of 88, his solicitor said. In a statement, Diana Rawstron, who has represented Freud for many years, said: “Lucian Freud, artist, born 8 December 1922 in Berlin, died peacefully last night [Wednesday 20 July] at his home in London.” The painter, a towering figure in the art world for more than 50 years, died after an illness, his New York-based art dealer said. William Acquavella said in a statement that he would mourn Freud “as one of the great painters of the 20th century”. Mr Acquavella added: “He lived to paint and painted until the day he died, far removed from the noise of the art world.” Nicholas Serota, director of the Tate art gallery, said: “The vitality of his nudes, the intensity of the still life paintings and the presence of his portraits of family and friends guarantee Lucian Freud a unique place in the pantheon of late 20th century art. “His early paintings redefined British art and his later works stand comparison with the great figurative painters of any period.” • More details to follow shortly … Lucian Freud Painting Art guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Art dealer William R Acquavella says the painter died after an illness British artist Lucian Freud has died at the age of 88, his solicitor said. In a statement, Diana Rawstron, who has represented Freud for many years, said: “Lucian Freud, artist, born 8 December 1922 in Berlin, died peacefully last night [Wednesday 20 July] at his home in London.” The painter, a towering figure in the art world for more than 50 years, died after an illness, his New York-based art dealer said. William Acquavella said in a statement that he would mourn Freud “as one of the great painters of the 20th century”. Mr Acquavella added: “He lived to paint and painted until the day he died, far removed from the noise of the art world.” Nicholas Serota, director of the Tate art gallery, said: “The vitality of his nudes, the intensity of the still life paintings and the presence of his portraits of family and friends guarantee Lucian Freud a unique place in the pantheon of late 20th century art. “His early paintings redefined British art and his later works stand comparison with the great figurative painters of any period.” • More details to follow shortly … Lucian Freud Painting Art guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sen. Al Franken made FOF’s Thomas Minnery look like a blithering idiot by calling him out of his faulty use of a study that he mischaracterized to attack gay couples. Sen. Al Franken (D-MN) took on a representative of the conservative group Focus on the Family for mischaracterizing a study on “nuclear families” at a hearing on a bill which would repeal the Defense of Marriage Ac. At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday, Sen. Franken noted that the group’s testimony listed the benefits of children “living with their biological and/or adopted mothers and fathers” as surpassing those of children “living in any other family form.” He observed they listed a Department of Health and Human Services study as backing that up. “I actually checked it out,” Franken said in reference to the study FOF’s Thomas Minnery has cited. He then observed it uses the term “nuclear families” without specifically mentioning “opposite sex married families.” “Isn’t it true, Mr. Minnery, that a married same-sex couple that has had or adopted kids would fall under the definition of a nuclear family in the study that you cite?” Franken asked. “I think that the study, when it cites nuclear families would mean a family headed by a husband and wife,” Minnery said. “It doesn’t,” Franken said, getting laughs from the audience. “The study defines a nuclear family as one or more children living with two parents who are married to one another and are each biological or adoptive parents to all the children in the family,” Franken continued. “And I frankly don’t really know how we can trust the rest of your testimony if you are reading studies these ways. ” Much of the Televangelists that are engaged in the DOMA debate do not care much for truth or accuracy. They only see their hatred of the gay community and play the Game of Thrones Nixon or the politics of dirty tricks that Nixon helped define . The Conservative Top of The Ticket blogger writes: The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) needed a better defense witness than Tom Minnery could provide Wednesday after Rep. Al Franken exposed him for misrepresenting a study. Franken, the former “Saturday Night Live” cast member and now a Democratic senator from Minnesota, used some of his comedic skills and razor-sharp timing to take down the Focus on the Family representative. He also used the curious technique of actually reading the study his witness cited. Hilarity ensued when Franken discovered that Minnery had misrepresented a Department of Health and Human Services definition of a “nuclear family” to better fit FOTF’s conservative worldview. — The Defense of Marriage Act was found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein yesterday introduced a new bill , the Respect for Marriage Act, that would repeal it. President Obama has endorsed the new act. Once again the use of satire cuts to the heart of the matter better than long winded explanations.
Continue reading …On Wednesday's Hardball , Chris Matthews took a clip from a 24 year-old Ronald Reagan press conference and disingenuously passed it off as the Republican's take on “raising taxes to deal with the ballooning deficit.” Matthew's version was out of context and video from October 22, 1987 proves it. [See below for video. MP3 audio here .] After playing a snippet of Reagan that had nothing to do with taxes, Matthews touted, “That was, of course, the great Ronald Reagan in his own words back in October of 1987 about raising taxes to deal with the ballooning deficit.” The host continued, “Well today, many Democrats in Congress have picked up on Reagan's comments about raising taxes and are using the most revered of Republican' s words against his own party.” What did Reagan actually say on October 22, 1987? He asserted: RONALD REAGAN: …The spending is roughly 23 to 24 percent. So that it is in – it is what is increasing, while revenues are staying proportionately the same and what would be the proper amount they should – that we should be taking from the private sector. And I think that this is something we have to consider, if we're going to maintain prosperity. I will say this, with regard to taxes or sources of revenue: we must not do something that has an adverse affect – affect – on the economy. … But I'm going to tell you, I have not changed my opinion about ever accepting a tax that will have a deleterious effect on the economy, and most tax increases do. Taxing is not the policy, or the problem, with the deficit. The deficit is due to too much spending. Every dollar of increased revenue since 1980 – and that means including our tax cuts -every dollar of increased revenue has been matched by a dollar and a quarter of increased spending. Matthews was not being honest with his audience by trying to portay his brief clip as “the most revered of Republican' s words against his own party.”
Continue reading …The prince will concentrate on boosting training and apprenticeships within Britain after a series of scandals Prince Andrew, who has come under pressure to give up his role as a representative for British trade overseas, is to step down, Buckingham Palace has said. The prince is expected to announce that he will concentrate on boosting skills training and apprenticeships in Britain in future, in what is bound to be seen as a significant downgrading of his role. Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge are expected to take a greater part in promoting trade during their future foreign trips. The prince, who has held the trade envoy role for more than 10 years since he left the navy, has been embroiled in repeated controversies both for the lavishness of his transport arrangements and for his links with unsavoury foreign figures including billionaires and dictators in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Libya and Tunisia. There were unresolved questions over the purchase of his former home, Sunninghill Park near Ascot, for £3m over the asking price by a Kazakh billionaire. His judgment was further questioned in March when he acknowledged a mistake in meeting the American billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, who was jailed in 2008 for soliciting a minor for prostitution. The prince turned to Epstein last December to help pay off his former wife Sarah’s debts. At that time, government sources suggested his role would be downgraded, though he received the public backing of ministers and it was said that the nature of his work occasionally meant dealing with questionable figures. There were calls for his resignation at that time. Reports have suggested that Andrew’s future role will focus on boosting business in Britain and acting as a figurehead in the government’s plans to increase industrial apprenticeships for young people. His press secretary was said to be on leave on Thursday. The prime minister, David Cameron, said: “I would like to thank the Duke of York for the major contribution he has made over the last decade to UK trade and the huge support he has given to British businesses as the special representative for trade and investment. I am certain that he and others in the royal family will continue to support and promote British business interests both at home and overseas.” Prince Andrew Monarchy International trade Economics Global economy Stephen Bates guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Stockport nurse Rebecca Leighton continues to be questioned after sabotage of saline bags at Stepping Hill hospital Police investigating a hospital where bags of saline were sabotaged with insulin say they are now looking at five unexplained deaths after two further pensioners became ill and died. Detectives arrested a 27-year-old nurse, Rebecca Leighton, on Wednesday on suspicion of murder after bags of saline were found sabotaged with insulin at Stepping Hill hospital in Stockport. Police have been given more time to question her after a warrant of further detention was granted. It will expire at 9.05pm on Friday. No charges have been brought so far. An 83-year-old man who died on Thursday morning following a hypoglycaemic episode was named as electronic engineer Derek Weaver. A postmortem examination on an 84-year-old female patient who died on 11 July was inconclusive, but found she also had low blood sugar. Assistant chief constable Ian Hopkins sought to reassure the public that the patients who died became ill prior to police being called in, and noted that 60 detectives were working on the case. “Since the police have been investigating, and the measures have been stepped up in terms of security at the hospital, we have had no further incidents of deliberate damage or contamination of products within Stepping Hill hospital,” he said. Both pensioners had been patients on the wards in question, A1 and A3, where saline in a cupboard was injected with insulin. The police inquiry is focusing on patients’ treatment from 7 July. Hopkins said the police wanted to prevent further harm and once that was achieved they would look at cases before that date. Inquests have been opened and adjourned by the coroner into the deaths of Tracey Arden, 44, George Keep, 84, and Arnold Lancaster, 71, who are thought to have died following the deliberate contamination of saline with insulin. Hopkins said of the latest deaths: “The cause of this man and woman’s deaths is not known and it is important we do not lose sight of this fact.” He said it was likely police will be asked to investigate further deaths: “In the main these are likely to be deaths of people who are elderly and/or ill, and we fully support the coroner’s ‘belt and braces’ approach to ensuring future deaths that require further investigation are appropriately investigated and scrutinised.” He added that any suggestion the investigation was near to being complete was misleading. Weaver’s family said he was a self-taught electronic engineer who ran an alarm business in Stockport. “He loved dining out at French restaurants and had a keen interest in cars and classical music,” they said. “He was a lovely gentleman who will be deeply missed.” Meanwhile, Leighton’s friends expressed their shock at her arrest. On 8 July, four days before police were called in after a nurse realised something was seriously amiss on her ward, Leighton posted on her Facebook page that she was “shattered”, telling a friend that it was going to be a long night. Those who know her portray a hard-working, cheerful and polite young woman who enjoyed nights out with her friends but found night shifts difficult. She followed her mother, Lynda, into nursing after taking an Open University degree. Her mother is a manager at Stepping Hill hospital, responsible for nurse training, and her father is a bus driver. Leighton was educated at a high school in Stockport. She lives in a flat above a darts shop owned by her fiance, Tim Papworth, 28, on the main A6 Buxton Road, a mile from the hospital. Hamid Bayatpoor, who works at a convenience shop, said she was a regular customer, and advised him when his daughter wanted to pursue a medical career. A close friend, Gavin Heaton, said she was a bridesmaid at his wedding two years ago. He added: “She’s worked at Stepping Hill a long time and worked her way up there. She enjoyed nursing. I’m shocked, I can’t believe it. My wife and her grew up together and I found her just to be a normal person, like any mate.” Another man in his 40s is critically ill at the hospital after suffering a drop in blood sugar and a woman who suffered a seizure is said to be recovering. Hospital staff say they are not concerned about the health of nine other patients who were affected by a fall in blood sugar levels. Chris Burke, chief executive of Stockport NHS foundation trust, said: “Our thoughts are obviously with the families of those affected by recent deaths at the hospital. Because a police investigation is still underway, at the request of the coroner, all deaths are being referred to the coroner’s office.” He said they fully support the coroner’s thorough approach to scrutinising and investigating the deaths. The General Nursing and Midwifery Council said it had begun proceedings to suspend Leighton’s registration following her arrest. Crime NHS Health Helen Carter guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …