শনিবার, ১৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১৩

Lisa Marie Presley Gets Intimate in NYC: Concert Review




The Bottom Line


Presley harkened back to her father's roots with this strong show heavily featuring selections from her acclaimed new album "Storm and Grace."




Venue


City Winery
New York City
(Sunday, Oct. 13)




It’s fitting that Lisa Marie Presley filmed the video for her song “Weary” at Memphis’ Sun Studios, where her legendary father recorded his early singles six decades earlier. That track, along with the rest of her new album Storm and Grace, features her performing in a roots rock mode that stands in marked contrast to her earlier pop-rock efforts. The style well befits the husky-voiced singer, who delivered a good portion of its songs during her intimate show Sunday night at NYC’s City Winery.



Accompanied by a first-rate five-piece band that included her husband Michael Lockwood (sporting a bizarre feathered top hat) on guitar, Presley delivered a strong 90-minute set that well showcased the strengths of her new material. Despite her heritage, she’s not a natural stage performer, displaying little sign of Elvis’ aggressive charisma. But she revealed an endearing warmth and vulnerability, especially when she phoned her son from the stage so he could her hear rendition of the album’s title track. “He better answer the phone,” she warned.


VIDEO: 'Chasing Nashville': First Look at Lifetime's New Docu-Series


Not that she’s shy and retiring, either. Her rendition of “You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet” featured an impressive swagger, as did “Idiot,” a self-described “mean” kiss-off song to a former lover that features such less than subtle lyrics as “I hate your guts.”


“This person is still very much running around, and still an idiot,” she said by way of introduction.


Although her vocals were occasionally drowned out in the mix, Presley did unveil impressive pipes on such songs as “Sticks and Stones,” the opening chorus of which she belted out unaccompanied.


STORY: Lisa Marie Presley to Debut Collaboration With Father During Elvis Week in Memphis


Her new sound features country, blues and folk influences, no surprise considering that the album was produced by T Bone Burnett. The stripped-down style was emphasized by the generous doses of fiddle, mandolin and steel and pedal guitar featured prominently in the arrangements.


Showmanship was largely absent, save for her dramatically pounding a drum during such final numbers as “Un-Break.” She also took the opportunity to urgently tout her charity partner for the tour, World Vision, an organization addressing worldwide childhood poverty.


While ballads like “Weary” and the plaintive “Just Like a Dream” featured her performing in a quiet mode, the show’s encore of “I’ll Figure It Out” and a cover of Tom Petty’s “Need to Know” allowed her and the band to unveil their harder rocking side.  


Set List:


So Long
Over Me
Storm of Nails
Weary
You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet
Just Like a Dream
Storm and Grace
People
Idiot
Lights Out
S.O.B.
Soften the Blows
Un-Break
Sticks and Stones
I’ll Figure It Out
Need to Know   


 



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/music/~3/R4FFv5R0WY4/lisa-marie-presley-gets-intimate-648171
Category: david wilson   Becky G   BBC  

The King Of The Sixties Sidemen Returns, 'Only Slightly Mad'





David Bromberg's new album, Only Slightly Mad, is out now.



Jim McGuire/Courtesy of the artist


David Bromberg's new album, Only Slightly Mad, is out now.


Jim McGuire/Courtesy of the artist


Only Slightly Mad, David Bromberg's new album, marks a substantial return for the multi-instrumentalist. In the late 1960s, Bromberg developed a reputation as a "first-call" guitarist, meaning that when artists — including Bob Dylan, Ringo Starr, Carly Simon, Willie Nelson, Emmylou Harris and John Prine, to name a few — needed someone to record or play live with them, Bromberg was at the top of the shortlist.


The highly sought-after musician enjoyed years of collaborations with many of the music world's biggest players. But after a little over a decade, something changed.


"I got burned out in 1980," Bromberg says. "At one point, I was on the road for two years without being home for as long as two weeks, and I was too dumb to realize that it was burnout. I just felt I had to stop. I decided I was no longer a musician, if I had ever been one. But maybe the intelligent part of it is that I didn't want to be one of these guys who drags himself onto the stage and does a bitter imitation of something he used to love."


NPR's Robert Siegel spoke with Bromberg about his musical influences and how he occupied himself after a self-imposed hiatus from life on the road. Hear more of their conversation at the audio link.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/18/231591537/the-king-of-the-sixties-sidemen-returns-only-slightly-mad?ft=1&f=1039
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শুক্রবার, ১৮ অক্টোবর, ২০১৩

'Glee' Star Chris Colfer Inks Three-Book Deal



Glee Star Chris Colfer has inked a new three-book deal with Little, Brown’s children’s imprint. 



PHOTOS: 'Glee' Season Five in Pictures


Fueled by the success of the first two books in his Land of Stories series, he’ll write the third and fourth volumes of the series.  


 


"The Land of Stories has been an incredible journey for me as a writers," said Colfer in a statement announcing the deal.


 



 


"The fan support and love for these characters has been more than a dream come true -- I'm humbled and excited to be able to share these new adventures with my readers."


 


Scheduled for publication in 2014 and 2015, the two new books will continue the adventure depicted in his previous two books -- a fusion of reality and fairytales that’s witnessed through the eyes of the twin protagonists, Alex and Connor Bailey. 


 


The first two books made The New York Times bestseller list.


 


He’s also doing his debut picture book, The Curvy Tree, inspired by part of The Land of Stories: The Wishing Spell. Brandon Dorman will provide illustrations for the book.



Colfer is best known for his performance in Glee as Kurt Hummel. He won a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor in a Series in 2011 for the role. 


 


Colfer was represented by Rob Weisbach at Rob Weisbach Creative Management.


 


Alvina Ling and Andrew Smith negotiated on behalf of Little, Brown.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/aE0Q7b04e9U/story01.htm
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Week In Politics: Shutdown Post-Mortem And Looking Ahead


Audie Cornish talks with regular political commentators, E.J. Dionne of The Washington Post and the Brookings Institution and David Brooks with The New York Times. They take stock of the winners and losers in the government shutdown and look forward to the next potential budget and debt crisis a few months from now.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=237166780&ft=1&f=1014
Tags: breast cancer awareness   futurama  

Justin Chadwick to Direct 'Tulip Fever'


LONDON -- British producer Alison Owen, is set to work on two high-profile projects in 2014, including her long-standing passion project Tulip Fever, a film she has been trying to make for more than 10 years.



Owen, talking after delivering this year's industry keynote speech at the BFI London Film Festival, said the production is aiming to start in April 2014 with Justin Chadwick in the director's chair.


Owen said the project is out to an "exciting" list of talent to star in the long-gestating project.


STORY: BFI London Film Festival Outlines Major Industry Events


Owen's effort to bring the 17th century Dutch drama based on Deborah Moggach's novel of the same name to the big screen has been a long and hard road.


Just months before cameras were set to roll with Jude Law starring in the film in 2004, the production was closed down, due to a surprise decision by the British government to change its tax-break program. The changes meant a large part of the $20 million budget was wiped away overnight.


But Owen said Friday that she will mount the film in "April 2014, touch wood."


She is also in pre-production on The Fury, starring Carey Mulligan, which she is billing as a "gritty, emotional" account of the British suffragette movement in 1910.


Sarah Gavron is directing that film from a script by Abi Morgan, marking the project out as a powerful indictment of women in British film.


STORY: Disney's 'Saving Mr. Banks' to Close BFI London Film Festival


Owen touched upon the representation of women in film and why the female of the species continues to be under-represented in the industry in a Q&A session after her keynote with BFI film fund chief Ben Roberts.


Owen noted that if women have children they generally have to take 10 years off before returning to their careers.


"It will get better," Owen said. "It's hard for women to step off the ladder and then start at the bottom again when they come back."


She cited successful female filmmakers Nora Ephron and Nancy Meyers as two women who had achieved "great success" in their 50s.


Owen also warned tongue-in-cheek of the dangers of expressing too much interest in material to an agent.


She said she had recently lost out on an option to turn East of Eden into a high-end TV series after asking an agent about it.


"The agent unfortunately used my interest in it and ended up taking it to Ron Howard [Imagine Entertainment] who's going to make it with Jennifer Lawrence," she said, smiling ruefully.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/YmbrC_gOBXs/story01.htm
Related Topics: politico   james spader   Allison Micheletti   rosh hashanah   Reza Aslan  

First Blood-Filled Mosquito Fossil Makes Jurassic Park Feel More Real

First Blood-Filled Mosquito Fossil Makes Jurassic Park Feel More Real

A team of scientists just made an exciting and very pop culture-friendly discovery in Montana: The first ever fossilized mosquito with a belly full of blood. This little guy's been hanging out underground for 46 million years, and it's a small miracle that it hung in there so long.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/UHqfsSxSvbc/first-blood-filled-mosquito-fossil-makes-jurassic-park-1445604310
Category: st louis cardinals   Donatella Versace   fox news   cbs sports   eminem  

Major next-gen launch title Watch Dogs pushed to Spring 2014

Ubisoft's major next-gen launch game Watch Dogs is now set to release in Spring 2014. The French game publisher announced as much this afternoon, also noting that The Crew is being pushed to the same window. That means that neither game will arrive until at least April 1, 2014.

Though Watch Dogs is ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/7WY6vvqfETE/
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Casey Kasem -- His Mind Is Gone


Casey Kasem
His Mind Is Gone



Exclusive


1017_casey-kasem_getty
Casey Kasem
is in terrible shape ... his mind is almost gone and he's unable to function -- this according to new legal docs obtained by TMZ.

The document outlines the mental state of the legendary founder of "America's Top 40" radio program.  According to the examining physician, Casey has

-- major impairment to short term, long term and immediate recall memory

-- major impairment to verbally communicate

-- major impairment to perform simple calculations, plan simple tasks and reason logically.

-- severe disorganized thinking

-- moderate hallucinations

The document was filed by Julie, one of Casey's daughters who is trying to become conservator.  Casey's wife of 33 years, Jean, is fighting the move to take control away from her.

The doctor says Casey has been sliding downhill for the last 3 to 4 years.  He's suffering from advanced Parkinson's and dementia.





Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/10/17/casey-kasem-conservatorship-mental-state-jean/
Tags: Miriam Carey   mila kunis   Jake Peavy  

বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৭ অক্টোবর, ২০১৩

Senate votes to reopen government, avoid default; measure heads to House (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.
Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334567469?client_source=feed&format=rss
Category: Red Sox Score   arcade fire   jay cutler   harry potter   kim zolciak  

Why College Freshmen May Feel Like Impostors On Campus

Psychologist Greg Walton has found that a simple intervention can help many students get the most out of college. The trick is in helping students see that setbacks are temporary, and often don't have larger implications.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Tens of thousands of freshman have just finished their first month in college. They've signed up for classes, met a bunch of other people and, if history is any guide, asked themselves a question: What am I doing here? Everyone else is smarter and better adjusted than I am. And for some, that question totally changes the college experience, may even cause them to drop out, which is why a researcher was determined to intervene. He told his story to NPR's Shankar Vedantam, who's here to tell it to us. Hi, Shankar.

SHANKAR VEDANTAM, BYLINE: Good morning, Steve.

INSKEEP: OK. So, what did he do?

VEDANTAM: Well, Greg Walton was looking at this fact that all students go through difficulties when they get to college, Steve. But some students look at the problems that they're facing and they draw global conclusions from them. They say this is not just a professor giving me a bad grade or someone not sitting next to me in the cafeteria. This reflects that fact that I am not ready for college, or I shouldn't be in this college at all.

INSKEEP: Because they're in this sensitive moment, and they're judging themselves.

VEDANTAM: And they feel like impostors. So, Greg Walton - who, by the way, is a psychologist at Stanford - here's how he explained it to me.

GREG WALTON: If you're walking around in an environment, asking yourself whether you belong, when something bad happens - if you get criticized, if you feel excluded or lonely - to you, in your head, you might think that it means that you don't belong, in general, in that school.

INSKEEP: And that is the moment at which you might, I suppose, socially withdraw, or just withdraw from school.

VEDANTAM: That's right. And Walton said that some minority students and some women were especially affected by this. You already feel like you don't quite belong or you stick out in class, and now you get negative feedback. And you connect the two things together, and now you feel like you really don't belong.

INSKEEP: And that's interesting, because you're suggesting that women or minorities might feel more like outsiders. There's a lot of different kinds of people that might feel like outsiders. I went to a university in eastern Kentucky, and there were a lot of people from small towns that just seemed overwhelmed by that experience in the same way you're describing.

VEDANTAM: That's exactly right, Steve. Because I think what Walton is talking about is that some students are just going to be more vulnerable than others. And he conducted an intervention to see if he could actually reverse this. He brought a bunch of freshmen in. He told them this is what earlier students who've been to this college have experienced. They went through difficult periods of time and then things got better over time, and they heard ostensibly from these earlier students who said when I first got to college, I didn't have any friends, but I realized it takes some time to make friends. And in the long run, everything worked out great. And then he had the freshmen themselves tell stories about how their own experiences matched this pattern.

INSKEEP: OK. So, all they really did was find out they're not the only people in the world who are having these feelings. How much of an effect did that have on them?

VEDANTAM: It had a remarkable effect. It improved the academic performance and well-being of students who went through the intervention compared to students who didn't go through the intervention. And what was most remarkable, Steve, is that the effects of this one-time intervention lasted the next three years of these college students' lives.

INSKEEP: Just from having, what, one brief session?

VEDANTAM: It seems remarkable, Steve. And I asked Walton this, because I said it's hard to imagine that this one session could have had such a big effect. He explained to me that he didn't think, actually, it was the intervention that made the difference. The reason these students did well in college is because they studied hard, they worked hard and they did well. That's why they did well. All the intervention was doing was it was removing a barrier inside their heads, this barrier that made them see a local setback as some kind of a global statement on themselves.

WALTON: What the intervention did was it prevented students from feeling that they didn't belong in general when they had negative experiences. You can then imagine how if you're feeling less vulnerable to threats, you are better able to connect with other people, to peers, to teachers and build the kinds of relationships that actually sustain performance over a long period of time.

VEDANTAM: You know, Walton gave me another analogy, Steve. He said this intervention might be like engine oil in a car. The engine oil doesn't actually make the car go forward, but it removes some of the friction inside the car and helps the engine run more smoothly, and that's what helps the car move forward.

INSKEEP: OK. So, did the young people who had the engine oil applied, did they themselves sense the difference after this intervention?

VEDANTAM: Here's the interesting thing, Steve. When Walton went back and talked with these students later on, they didn't even remember that they had done this three years ago. And Walton was very careful, when he brought them in in the first place, not to signal that he was actually doing an intervention. He dressed up the intervention as saying you're going to be helping future freshmen deal with coming to college. So, he placed them in a role where they were seeming like they were helping others rather than being in need of help themselves.

INSKEEP: Oh, because if you just went directly at them, it's one more adult giving you one more homily. But this way, the message just sneaked up on them.

VEDANTAM: Yeah, and not just that. When you bring students in and say we're doing an intervention to help you, what's the message you're sending those students?

INSKEEP: You're messed up.

VEDANTAM: You're messed up, and you need help. And I think Walton's point is if schools want to apply this intervention, it needs to be done with some subtlety, or it could backfire.

INSKEEP: Shankar, thanks very much.

VEDANTAM: Thank you, Steve.

INSKEEP: That's NPR's Shankar Vedantam. You can follow him on Twitter @HiddenBrain. You can follow this program, as always @MorningEdition and @NPRInskeep, as well as NPRGreene.

Copyright © 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235188760/why-college-freshman-may-feel-like-imposters-on-campus?ft=1&f=1007
Tags: Nothing Was The Same   apple stock   the league   Betty Pino   Aaron Paul  

IBM's results hampered by slowing hardware sales


Managing its way nimbly through times of economic sluggishness, IBM reported a 6 percent increase in profit for the third quarter even as its revenue declined.


IBM's third-quarter profit was $4.0 billion, compared to $3.8 billion in the third quarter of 2012, the company announced Wednesday. Revenue was $23.7 billion, compared to $24.7 billion in the year prior.


[ For quick, smart takes on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief -- subscribe today. | Find out what topics and issues affect tech's biggest names and news makers in the IDGE Insider CEO interview series. | Read Bill Snyder's Tech's Bottom Line blog for what the key business trends mean to you. ]


"In the third-quarter we continued to expand operating margins and increased earnings per share, but fell short on revenue," said Ginni Rometty, IBM chairman, president and CEO, in a statement.


Most noticeably, hardware sales continued to hamper the company's business.


Revenue from IBM's Systems and Technology segment generated $3.2 billion in revenue, down 17 percent from the third quarter in 2012. System x revenue fell by 18 percent, Power Systems revenue fell by 38 percent and storage system revenue fell by 11 percent.


Much of the hardware decline stemmed from China, CFO Mark Loughridge said in a webcast. The Chinese government is preparing a new and comprehensive economic policy, due to be implemented in November. As a result, government agencies are delaying procurements, which hit IBM's hardware particularly hard.


As a result, IBM's business overall in China was down by 22 percent, and IBM hardware sales fell by 44 percent, Loughridge said. While China's new economic plan aims to reduce its reliance on foreign suppliers, IBM doesn't see the downturn as permanent: Sales in China should resume by early 2014, Loughridge said.


Revenue from the Americas, totalling $10.3 billion, decreased 1 percent from the same quarter a year ago. Revenue from Europe, the Middle East and Africa increased 1 percent to $7.3 billion, while revenue from the Asia-Pacific region declined 15 percent to $5.5 billion.


The services divisions produced middling results for the company. Revenue from the Global Technology Services segment decreased 4 percent to $9.5 billion for the quarter, which ended Sept. 30, while revenue from the Global Business Services segment was flat at $4.6 billion.


Revenue from IBM's software segment climbed modestly to $5.8 billion, up 1 percent from the same quarter a year ago.


IBM is looking to the cloud for growth. In July, the company completed its purchase of cloud hosting provider SoftLayer.


Purchasing SoftLayer "significantly improved our capabilities in public and hybrid cloud," according to Loughridge. IBM's cloud revenue was up 70 percent from the same quarter a year ago, the company said. "For the first time, we delivered over a billion dollars in cloud revenue," Loughridge said.


Joab Jackson covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Joab on Twitter at @Joab_Jackson. Joab's email address is Joab_Jackson@idg.com.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/the-industry-standard/ibms-results-hampered-slowing-hardware-sales-228939
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Radical Republicans

184774639
Sen. Ted Cruz may not have helped his party during the debt crisis and government shutdown, but he's a hero to the far right.

Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images








For the past 20 years, American politics has been defined by Republican revolt. The right-wing radicalism that now worries the whole world first emerged in response to Bill Clinton's election in 1992. It's not that Republicans were never extreme before that time. Challenges to the legitimacy of federal authority from the people who now identify as Republicans trace back to pro-slavery attempts at nullification and segregationist assertions of states’ rights. But it was 20 years ago that the Congressional wing of the GOP, led by House Speaker Newt Gingrich, adopted belligerent noncooperation as its defining stance.











Jacob Weisberg is chairman and editor-in-chief of The Slate Group and author of The Bush Tragedy. Follow him on Twitter.










It was Gingrich who turned bipartisanship from Washington’s greatest virtue to its most reviled vice. Under his leadership, congressional Republicans refused any quarter on Clinton health care reform and supplied no votes for the economic plan that spurred the long boom of the 1990s. In their new mode, Republicans refused to vote on presidential nominations and buried the White House in investigations and subpoenas. It was Gingrich who in 1995 invented the tactic of refusing to raise the debt ceiling as a cudgel to get Clinton to agree to outsize spending cuts. It was Gingrich who invented the tactic of shutting down the government for the same end.










Bill Clinton's view was that the Republican refusal to be reasonable was all about him. Because he was elected in a three-way race without an absolute majority, he thought Republicans never accepted him as legitimate. An alternate view is that the radical Republican style was largely a matter of incentives and rewards. Abandoning traditions of responsibility and civility won the GOP control of both houses of Congress in 1994. Rejecting any compromise brought Republicans the perks and power of majority control for the first time in 40 years. Thus did the politics of total resistance become their path of least resistance.










Wednesday's surrender points to a change in the incentives that have favored two decades of reckless Republican behavior.












In subsequent years, the conservative movement built up an elaborate incentive structure to favor extremist views and tactics by individual politicians. State Republican parties redrew maps to create safe congressional districts where appealing to swing voters would no longer be required. Organizations like the Club for Growth and Americans for Tax Reform targeted Republican moderates for political extermination, recruiting primary challengers to run against them, scripting their attack ads and funding their campaigns. The Tea Party emerged partly out of inchoate anger at social and economic change, and partly in response to these incentives.  










In his first term, Barack Obama did his part to encourage the GOP hostage taking. When Republicans again tried demanded lopsided budget cuts in exchange for a debt ceiling increase in 2011, the president was too willing to negotiate, giving them a victory in the form of the budget sequestration that took effect this year. By the time of his re-election campaign, however, Obama had learned the lesson that compromising with bullies only fuels their aggression. This time, he refused to negotiate, sending a clear message that the debt ceiling could not be used for leverage.










Wednesday's unconditional surrender by House Speaker John Boehner was a watershed because it points to a change in the incentives that have favored two decades of reckless Republican behavior. The party’s Senate elders are chagrined and embarrassed. Boehner’s unwillingness to stand up to the Tea Party has made them look ridiculous. It has driven a wedge between the GOP and Wall Street, which was appalled by the calculated flirtation with default. It has seriously diminished Republican chances of recapturing control of the Senate in 2014, which looked like a real possibility before the latest crisis. They’re not going to try this tactic again.










But for many Republican politicians, the incentives remain unchanged. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz has done great harm to his party by instigating the showdown over Obamacare, but in the process he made himself into a national celebrity and the darling of the right. Many House Republicans will be home in their districts this weekend, bragging that they voted against the sell-out. In the mid-term election of 2014, no ultraconservative Republican is likely to face a moderate primary challenger with interest-group support and outside funding. 










What the GOP needs to become a serious governing party again is a set of countervailing incentives and rewards to support what were once its cardinal virtues: respect for tradition and process, aversion to radical change, and willingness to compromise. For the moment, however, the Tea Party remains its dominant force—soundly beaten in this round to be sure, but unbowed, unrepentant, and still deliriously irresponsible.  










A version of this article appears in the Financial Times.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/the_big_idea/2013/10/shutdown_and_the_tea_party_the_gop_s_radical_right_wing_is_still_in_charge.html
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College Football Playoff selection panel unveiled

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, former Nebraska coach Tom Osborne and College Football Hall of Fame quarterback Archie Manning are among the 13 people who will be part of the College Football Playoff selection committee in 2014.


The committee members were officially unveiled Wednesday, though the names had been reported last week by The Associated Press and other media outlets. Earlier this week, Arkansas athletic director Jeff Long was announced as the chairman of the first selection committee for the new postseason system that replaces the Bowl Championship Series next year.


The committee will choose four teams to play in the national semifinals and seed them. The winners of those games, played on a rotating basis at six bowl sites, will meet a week later for the national championship.


Long and BCS Executive Director Bill Hancock, who will assume the same position in the new postseason format, announced the committee members at a news conference at the College Football Playoff offices in Irving, Texas. The panel is made up of current athletic directors, former players and coaches and college administrators, and a former member of the media.


"Our work will be difficult, but rewarding at the same time," Long said. "We have important judgments to make during that process. We realize we represent all of college football."


The rest of the members:


. Barry Alvarez, athletic director, Wisconsin.


. Lt. Gen. Mike Gould, former superintendent of the United States Air Force Academy.


. Pat Haden, athletic director, Southern California.


. Tom Jernstedt, former NCAA executive vice president.


. Oliver Luck, athletic director, West Virginia.


. Dan Radakovich, athletic director, Clemson.


. Steve Wieberg, former college football reporter, USA Today.


. Tyrone Willingham, former head coach of Notre Dame, Stanford and Washington.


. Mike Tranghese, former commissioner of the Big East Conference.


Hancock said term limits for committee members will eventually be three years, but that will not be the case for all the current members because they do not want to replace the whole committee at once.


"We haven't worked out the stagger yet," Hancock said.


Committee members will recuse themselves when a team they have a direct relationship with comes up, and they will be allowed to "examine whatever data they believe is relevant to inform their decisions," Hancock said.


"No one single metric will be identified as paramount over all other data," Hancock said.


Long said the committee likely will release four or five rankings during the season, starting around midseason, before the final decisions are made at the end of the regular season.


Rice was a surprising pick because she has never worked in college athletics. She is currently a professor at Stanford and was provost at the school before serving under President George W. Bush as national security adviser and secretary of state.


"Condi definitely earned her spot on this committee," Hancock said. "She knows this game; she is a student of this game. Athletics reported to her at Stanford. She had to know the game. My conversation with her from the beginning was fascinating to me because it was clear from the start how well she knows the game and what a good, tremendous committee member she was going to be.


"Obviously, part of this is going to be the ability to make judgments under scrutiny, and Condi has that."


Osborne is one of the most successful coaches in college football history. He won three national championships at Nebraska, was elected to Congress and later served as the school's athletic director.


Manning, the father of Peyton and Eli, was a star quarterback for Mississippi and had a long NFL career, mostly with the New Orleans Saints.


___


AP Sports Writer Stephen Hawkins in Irving, Texas, contributed.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/college-football-playoff-selection-panel-unveiled-182355944--spt.html
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Second Child on the Way for Mike Myers

"We are thrilled," the couple tell PEOPLE.
Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/4Whk28fUsbA/
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Michel Martin's Movie Suggestions For Politicians


Some politicians and commentators amp up their rhetoric at the expense of the facts. In her regular "Can I Just Tell You" essay, host Michel Martin suggests that they get a reality check... at the movies.



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MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:


Finally today, if I ruled the world - which I do not - I would have a list of movies that politicians and would-be-politicians and pundits would have to see before they get to weigh in on any topic that involves anybody other than themselves. Yes, of course, I have a list of books, too, that I would prefer that they read. And maybe a podcast or two that they would download - you can guess which ones. But I'm going to stick with movies for now because movies are the way that anybody can see the world. Now I'm not talking about documentaries, although this country has produced some great ones. I'm talking feature films, because many people will see a feature who wouldn't be caught dead in an art house theater watching a movie about race relations or the Holocaust or farm workers or space. But they will go see a movie and they will be changed.


The movies on my current list aren't necessarily the ones with the big ideas and soaring rhetoric or most exciting visuals, although some of them have that. They are the ones that show the day-to-day reality of being the object of forces bigger than yourself. And that's why "Schindler's List" is on my list. Not just for the incredible scenes at the death camps, but because it shows the day-to-day moments of desperate fear and petty humiliations that are the meat of the oppressed. Demian Bichir's "A Better Life" is on my list because it shows what life is like for illegal immigrants living in the shadows. And "The Children's Hour" is on my list because it shows you that the closet can actually kill that which it seeks to hide. "The Right Stuff" is on my list because it shows why it's important to dream, but why dreaming is not enough. And "Miral", a little indie film about a Palestinian orphan is on my list because, love it or hate it, it offers a version of history that most Americans never see or hear about. And now there's a new one to add to the list. "12 Years A Slave," which will be in theaters this week.


It's a film based on the true story of a free black American named Solomon Northup who was kidnapped from his home in New York, sold into slavery and survives - barely - to tell about it. Now I'm no critic, but I must tell you it's one of the most beautiful films I've ever seen that's almost unbearable to watch. And I say that because it exposes in graphic detail one of the ugliest chapters in our history. More than that, it shows the humiliation and degradation of utter powerlessness of being subjected to the roaming hands, the fits of rage, the petty resentments of another human being with virtually no recourse except death. All this in a nation that says it cherishes the freedom and equality of everybody. As I say, it should be required viewing before anybody throws around slavery as a casual metaphor again.


Now I'm saying this because Dr. Ben Carson, the renowned surgeon, compared the Affordable Care Act to slavery last week in his remarks to a conservative political group. Dr. Carson, like the president, is African-American. And, like the president, has a compelling personal story behind his professional success. But he's no fan of President Obama and he likes the Affordable Care Act even less. He said that Obama Care is, quote, the worst thing that's happened in this nation since slavery, unquote. He went on to say that, quote, it is slavery in a way. Can I just tell you - he has a right to his opinion, but if Dr. Carson were as careless with his scalpel as he was with his words, he would not be the famous figure he is now. The healthcare law may be many things, but slavery it is not.


Comparing a law to extend health insurance to millions of people who don't now have it through a combination of private insurance, government-sponsored exchanges, and expanded subsidies, however flawed it may be, is not a system for owning human beings in perpetuity. To subjecting them to forced sex, forced work, forced ignorance and utter brutality. In the words of a former colleague and mentor of mine, it is not that words fail - it's that we have degraded them. There are slaves in the world right now. They are trapped in brothels, in fishing boats, making bricks, tending children not their own. They are hiding in plain sight. Let's not degrade their suffering and the suffering of generations by equating it with our disagreements of the moment. And that's our program for today. I'm Michel Martin and this is TELL ME MORE from NPR News. Let's talk more tomorrow.


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Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235384253/michel-martins-movie-suggestions-for-politicians?ft=1&f=46
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Jury Clears Mark Cuban of Insider Trading




Maury Phillips/Getty Images for DIRECTV



In a victory that could be as satisfactory as his Dallas Mavericks winning the NBA championship, Mark Cuban has beaten the Securities and Exchange Commission in a long-running contentious legal dispute.



The billionaire owner of Landmark Theatres, Magnolia Pictures and AXS TV, who also stars on ABC's popular Shark Tank, was charged with violating federal securities laws by trading on alleged inside information in the sale of Mamma.com. The SEC accused him of learning through the company's chief executive of a plan that would hurt the company's stock price. Cuban quickly sold his shares, avoiding $750,000 in losses, but he maintained that he didn't know that the information that was provided to him was confidential.


STORY: Mark Cuban Says Live TV Remains the Most Important Platform 


On the witness stand, Cuban testified that he didn't remember details of a conversation nearly a decade ago. Attorneys representing the SEC struggled to demonstrate his mindset at the time of the stock sale. The agency pursued the case for many years -- having the case dismissed by a judge before revived by an appellate court. Through that time, the SEC mocked Cuban's "Hollywood production schedule.” There were also Cuban attacks on the wisdom of the SEC's expenditure of time and resources to hunt him.


Cuban was facing $2 million in penalties if found liable.


Instead, after three and a half hours of deliberation, a jury found in his favor. The defendant reportedly smiled as the verdict was announced.


Twitter: @eriqgardner



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/business/~3/Vv4ouCT0Ags/story01.htm
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'Arrow': Stephen Amell on 'Evolving' Oliver/Felicity, 'Errand Boy' Roy and Flash



[Warning: Some spoilers ahead.]



Oliver Queen has a rough road ahead on Arrow.


In honoring Tommy's death through his vow not to kill again as he re-assumes his perch as the hood, Oliver's path to heroic is paved with dead ends and detours. With Queen Consolidated vulnerable, a kid in Roy Harper attempting to be the City's saving grace and Laurel desperate to lock up the vigilante away for good, time isn't on Oliver's side.


In a chat with The Hollywood Reporter, star Stephen Amell talks about playing a character who isn't "chasing a ghost" anymore, getting put in "precarious" situations, his bleak future with Laurel and why he believes Arrow is producing the "most engaging hour of television on TV this year."


First of all, Oliver's hangout received a major makeover at the start of this season. What has been your favorite part of shooting in the Arrow cave so far?


The scene where I walk into the Arrow cave [in the premiere] and it lights up, that was the first scene we shot this season. To me, it still feels like the same place but on screen, it visually looks really cool. We've come a long way since the pilot.


STORY: 'Arrow' EP on Oliver's Rocky Road to Hero, New Antagonists and Season 2


When Oliver returns to Starling City following Tommy's death and post-Undertaking, things are pretty grim. What has the journey been like playing a guy who's trying to do things differently?


It's been a lot of fun to play the character this year because he's not as haunted. He's not chasing a ghost, so to speak. He's doing things for a much more virtuous reason. So when he accomplishes his goals, there's a sense of accomplishment and possibly even good feelings, which is, again, not something we've had a lot of in the first thing. And that's an important step for the show because anger and revenge can only take you so far. It's really only a two-dimensional type of storytelling, whereas when you see a character work up a full range of emotions and be happy and content once in a while, that opens up so many possibilities for us on the show. That has made the first bunch of episodes that we've shot much more dynamic and much more well-rounded. The first five episodes that we have this year are definitely as good, or in some instances, better than what we put out in the first season.


That's a tall statement to make.


The show this year for me -- I read a lot of reviews of the first episode -- I think we're doing the most engaging hour of television on TV this year. I'm really proud of the show and the direction it's taking.


Tommy's death still looms large as Oliver goes on his journey to becoming the Green Arrow. How significant is the loss affecting Oliver's perspective?


He says it in the premiere. If they're going to get back to do this, it has to be about honoring Tommy and trying to become the version of himself that Tommy hopes he would be. For a lot of characters, not just Oliver, there's a tremendous sense of guilt. Oliver tried to save Tommy but he couldn't. To a larger extent, he put Tommy in harm's way to begin with. If Malcolm (John Barrowman) dies in episode 16, then the Undertaking never happens and Tommy survives. [Tommy] remains a pivotal part of the show; we can't just gloss over him dying like that. Otherwise, what was the point of doing that?


STORY: 'Glee' Star Set as CW's Flash


How does that affect Oliver's standing with Laurel (Katie Cassidy)?


I think Laurel has some misplaced anger at the moment toward the vigilante but maybe she shouldn't. We resolve that pretty soon in the show. Oliver and Laurel -- I wouldn't say they're in the best place because the best place for them always and forever (Laughs.) would be in a relationship since they both love each other. But at least it's in a much more honest place, let's just put it that way. Laurel and the vigilante on the other hand, they're not in a good spot whatsoever.


At the end of the second episode, Oliver is put in a precarious position.


He is. At the beginning of episode three, we pick up right where we left off. Precarious. 


What's Roy Harper's (Colton Haynes) journey like as he starts on his road to becoming Arrow's sidekick? In this latest episode, Oliver even throws him a bone.


Colton's killing it this year. We don't have a ton of scenes together so when I see his stuff, I always find myself laughing. I think he brings a lot of humor to the Roy character. I'm just tossing him something -- as the vigilante -- that I consider not a meaningless job -- in a future episode Oliver refers to him as "an errand boy" and I wouldn't say that he just considers him to be an errand boy but it's not that important of a job. But to Roy, it's like he's part of a team now. Oliver's just trying to give him a purpose and hoping to keep him out of trouble. The elephant in the room is his proximity to Thea (Willa Holland), that's what really worries Oliver. It's the same reason he doesn't reveal himself to Laurel and why he was so afraid to reveal himself to Tommy because proximity to the vigilante is dangerous. As Roy gets closer to the vigilante, Thea is in more and more danger. That's eventually going to become a factor this year.


Thea seems to be the one character who has evolved the most out of everyone. Talk a little bit about what we can expect for the Queen siblings.


When I was talking about the season, everyone wasn't in the best place. The hangover from the Undertaking has taken its toll and everybody has been demoted, so to speak, or had to move career positions whereas with Thea, she's in a great spot. She's together and she's managing the club. Her relationship with Oliver is good, but there is still that fence that she has that he's aware of, in that he hasn't opened up about what happened while he was away [on the island]. They've decided to shelve that conversation for the moment but they'll have to have it eventually. Certainly they're in a much better spot compared to the start of last year, when she wasn't happy with him.


What is it like for Oliver having to go up against a powerful businesswoman like Isabel Rochev (Summer Glau) at Queen Consolidated?


He's not trying to pull the wool over anyone's eyes. He's legitimately trying to save the company. It does mean a great deal to him. It's an extension of his family and he's the person who represents his family now. He's trying to make good for his company, his family and Isabel. As it happens, he has another job and it's constantly wreaking havoc for him to be the CEO of the company. He can't say to her, "I'm the vigilante and that's why I'm not here." He just has to appear to be a failure and some of that is irresponsible. He's working to earn her trust but it's not happening as quickly as he'd like.


When I spoke to producer Marc Guggenheim prior to the season, he hinted that the Isabel and Oliver's work dynamic will affect another relationship that he has. What can you say there?


We haven't really seen anything beyond business with Isabel's character. Last year Oliver had flings and we haven't really gone down that road this year. Oliver and Laurel have said they can't really be in a relationship right now. I'm interested to see if and when something romantic happens between Oliver and anybody because there hasn't been any of that so far this year.


Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards) has secured her spot in Oliver's inner circle, alongside Diggle (David Ramsey). What can we expect to see with Felicity and Oliver working more in tandem?


Their relationship is evolving. She is a full-fledged member of Team Arrow now and she's not afraid to give her opinion. She's smart and capable and Oliver's starting to see her that more and more. I don't know where it's going to end up but that relationship is going to continue to strengthen throughout the season.


You mentioned proximity being one of Oliver's biggest worry. Does that continue to affect who he brings in to his inner circle?


One of the things we reference later on in the season that we never talked about is how much Oliver vetted Diggle and Felicity before he revealed his identity. There was always the joke in the first season that he was revealing himself to everybody. It seemed like every week, somebody new was learning [about Oliver being Arrow]. There was more of a thought process because of how dangerous this knowledge is. Since Felicity's been a part of this, we've seen her life in danger several times. So he does consider it.


Will more focus be paid on the supporting players?


We've done an episode -- I think episode six -- that's Diggle-centric. It's his episode. In a lot of ways episode three is Detective Lance's (Paul Blackthorne) episode. Episode five is someone's episode that I can't say. It's very exciting to utilize the rest of the cast a little bit more this year. It'll be interesting to see how people react to that.


Lastly, what's your take on this iteration of Barry Allen/Flash (Grant Gustin).


He's a whippersnapper. He's young, he's enthusiastic, he's not stupid. In fact, he's incredibly smart. He's a little naive and his level of enthusiasm and his penchant for problem-solving is something we've seen on the show with Felicity. Their characters are incredibly similar and as a result, have an instantaneous chemistry with one another and fondness for one another.


Arrow airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. on The CW.


E-mail: Philiana.Ng@THR.com
Twitter: @insidethetube




Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/uiJnilzoP_0/story01.htm
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Ground employee arrested in LA airport ice blasts

In this framegrabbed image from APTN the entrance to the Tom Bradley International Terminal in Los Angeles can be seen Tuesday Oct. 15, 2013. A baggage handler was arrested Tuesday in connection with dry ice explosions Sunday and Monday at Los Angeles International Airport after police stepped up patrols and increased its checks on employees. Dicarlo Bennett, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair, was booked for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft. (AP Photo\APTN)







In this framegrabbed image from APTN the entrance to the Tom Bradley International Terminal in Los Angeles can be seen Tuesday Oct. 15, 2013. A baggage handler was arrested Tuesday in connection with dry ice explosions Sunday and Monday at Los Angeles International Airport after police stepped up patrols and increased its checks on employees. Dicarlo Bennett, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair, was booked for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft. (AP Photo\APTN)







(AP) — A baggage handler has been arrested following a police investigation into two dry ice explosions at Los Angeles International Airport.

Dicarlo Bennett, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair, was booked Tuesday for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft. He is being held on $1 million bail.

Police had stepped up patrols and increased its checks on employees after the blasts took place Sunday night and then again Monday night.

Bennett took the dry ice from a plane and placed it in an employee restroom Sunday night and another device that was found on a tarmac outside the international terminal, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation who wasn't authorized to speak publicly.

Police had previously said they didn't believe the explosions were an act of terror because of the locations of the devices and because people weren't targeted.

No one was injured in either incident, although some flights were delayed Sunday.

The incidents could be the work of a disgruntled employee due to an internal labor dispute, said Los Angeles Police Department Deputy Chief Michael Downing, who heads the department's counter-terrorism and special operations bureau.

Swissport recently agreed to acquire Servisair and the transaction is expected to close by the end of the year. An afterhours message seeking comment from Servisair was not immediately returned.

It wasn't immediately known what Bennett's motives were, but he was riding in a van with several others, including a supervisor, when he decided to plant one of the dry ice bombs, the official told The Associated Press. Those in the van were aware of the dry ice, the official said, but no other arrests have been made.

The bombs were made by putting dry ice in 20-ounce plastic bottles and could have caused serious injury to anyone in close proximity, Downing said.

One device exploded in an employee men's room Sunday night in Terminal 2. Remnants of an exploded bottle also were found that night on the tarmac area near the Tom Bradley International Terminal, but an employee threw it away. The same employee found an unexploded bottle Monday evening and then reported what he found the previous day.

While there are cameras in some of these restricted-access areas, Downing said there isn't as much camera coverage as in the public-access areas and investigators had been reviewing available video.

Dry ice is widely used by vendors to keep food fresh.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-16-LAX%20Explosion/id-2092e586e92243a3a8583eb4eb54fd06
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Buy Sonos, Get More Sonos, The Best Coffee Maker, Cheap Chromebooks




Sonos is hands down the best wireless audio streaming solution, and discounts on products from their lineup almost never happen. Buying one of their speakers from Amazon today will net you the Sonos Wireless Bridge, which normally carries a hard $50 price tag, for free. If you've been dying for a Sonos but found the their wares a bit too pricey, this is a rare opportunity to get in cheaper. We don't expect this deal to last long. [Amazon]


Join us over at Kotaku and nominate your favorite gaming keyboard.



Buy Sonos, Get More Sonos, The Best Coffee Maker, Cheap Chromebooks


This is the best automatic coffeemaker, and it's the only deal we've seen on it. Unlike standard drip machines, the Bodum actually manages to reach the optimum water temperature, and keep that temperature by running the water through high-grade glass instead of plastic. The water hits the beans shower head style, as opposed to a single drip point, so it covers them evenly, and that carafe keeps the coffee hot for 3 hours using no heating element. Also, it's a beautiful machine. [Amazon]



Buy Sonos, Get More Sonos, The Best Coffee Maker, Cheap Chromebooks


Even if you can't survive on a Chromebook alone, for just $160, it makes sense to keep one laying around as a backup machine.



Buy Sonos, Get More Sonos, The Best Coffee Maker, Cheap Chromebooks


If you recently picked up a new iPhone 5s, or you're rocking an old 5, Groupon has a solid deal to boost your battery life. $40 gets you a Lenmar Apple Certified battery case.



Storage


Headphones


Home Theater


Mobile Devices and Accessories


Computers and Accessories


Input


Monitors


Parts


Networking


Media and Gaming


Movies


  • Pacific Rim 3D Collector's Edition [Blu-ray/UltraViolet] ($35) | Amazon

Photography


Apps


iOS


Android


Clothing


Life


Hobomodo



Get in touch with Shane on Twitter or by e-mailing Shane@Gawker


Every weekday the Commerce Team brings you Gizmodo's Dealzmodo, Kotaku's Moneysaver, and Lifehacker's Dealhacker, the very best coverage of deals on consumer technology, video games, apps, and everything else you care about. When you buy, we also make money. We want your feedback.



Source: http://gizmodo.com/buy-sonos-get-more-sonos-the-best-coffee-maker-cheap-1445647440
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iPad 5 will sport fingerprint reader, suggests leaked image

Apple's Touch ID sensor makes an appearance in the latest alleged image of the next-generation iPad.


Read the CNET Editors' Take

Apple iPad (5th generation)


Editors' Take: Word on the street is that the iPad 5 is coming soon. Here's what we know and what we think we know about the anticipated device. Read More



Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57607514-37/ipad-5-will-sport-fingerprint-reader-suggests-leaked-image/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple
Category: harry potter   VMA 2013   Yosemite Fire   Lisa Robin Kelly   Outside Lands  

"The Family" Premieres in Berlin

Pushing international box office success for their new movie, the cast of "The Family" headed to the premiere in Berlin, Germany on Tuesday (October 15).


Classing up the red carpet was Michelle Pfeiffer in a white blouse, black and gold jacket, and slim black pants while her younger co-star Dianna Agron wore a black and white patterned gown.


Smiling brightly with his lovely castmates was Robert De Niro, who wore a pale blue dress shirt with his navy blue suit.


In the comedy, the Manzoni family is relocated to Normandy, France under the witness protection program where they struggle to fit in with the locals.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/family/family-premieres-berlin-943382
Tags: Beyond Two Souls   julio jones   katie couric   Whodunnit   pippa middleton  

মঙ্গলবার, ১৫ অক্টোবর, ২০১৩

Deadspin The Ballad Of The Fake Dodgers Bear Mascot | io9 Is the Ant-Man casting down to just two na

Deadspin The Ballad Of The Fake Dodgers Bear Mascot | io9 Is the Ant-Man casting down to just two names? | Jezebel Britney Got a Digital Slimdown to Look Skinny in 'Work Bitch' Video | Lifehacker How to Break the Living Paycheck-to-Paycheck Cycle

Read more...

Source: http://j-smith.kinja.com/deadspin-the-ballad-of-the-fake-dodgers-bear-mascot-i-1445564175/@gmanaugh
Category: Voyager 1   apple   jets   Pain and Gain   kate middleton  

Second Dry Ice Bomb Goes Off At L.A. Airport





A photograph taken last month of the south concourse of L.A. International Airport's Tom Bradley International Terminal.



Reed Saxon/AP


A photograph taken last month of the south concourse of L.A. International Airport's Tom Bradley International Terminal.


Reed Saxon/AP


Authorities in Los Angeles were investigating a dry ice bomb that went off at the city's international airport late Monday, causing no damage or injuries. The explosion of the relatively harmless device was the second in as many days.


Monday night's incident occurred outside the airport's Tom Bradley Terminal.


There were no reports of any injuries, authorities said and The Associated Press reports that there's no immediate word where either bomb was located.


Two other devices also were found at the airport but they did not explode, Detective Gus Villanueva said, according to the AP.


NBC Los Angeles describes dry ice bombs as "relatively harmless and simple" consisting of a plastic bottle and dry ice. The device on Monday went off about 8:30 p.m. PST.


The Los Angeles Times writes:




"On Sunday night, a dry ice bomb exploded about 7 p.m. in a restroom at Terminal 2, which is home to several international and domestic airlines.


Officials said an airport employee heard an explosion in a men's room and went to investigate. He discovered a 20-ounce plastic bottle that had contained the dry ice. The blast did no damage, and no injuries were reported.


That area is also off limits to the public, police officials said.


On Monday night, detectives from the Los Angeles Police Department's Criminal Conspiracy Section were investigating how the bombs were placed in security areas.


'Apparently there is no nexus to terrorism right now,' LAPD Det. Gus Villanueva told The Times.


The FBI was assisting the LAPD in the investigation."




Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/15/234649675/second-dry-ice-bomb-goes-off-at-l-a-airport?ft=1&f=1003
Category: today show   ufc   khan academy   EverQuest Next   Best Song Ever  

Jason Wahler Marries Ashley Slack: Former Laguna Beach Star's Wedding


Jason Wahler is hitched! The former Hills reality star and Lauren Conrad's ex-boyfriend has tied the knot with Ashley Slack, sources confirm to Us Weekly. The two were feted by about 180 family and friends at Calamigos Ranch in Malibu, Calif., on Saturday, Oct. 12.


PHOTOS: Celebrity weddings 2013


Wahler, 26, first proposed to the model in November 2012. "I said yes!" Slack shared via Facebook at the time. "I am the happiest girl in the whole wide world and I cannot wait to spend the rest of my life with my best friend."


The newlyweds met through mutual friends. "It was just so natural and organic," Wahler previously told Us about their romance. "We just hit it off! It was pretty meant to be!"


PHOTOS: Best celebrity engagement rings of all time


The Laguna Beach star jumped right into planning the wedding with his future bride after popping the question, but admits the process just made him anxious. "Six months went by, and we have coordinators and planners, and I was involved and then as its dwindled down, 'I'm like okay I want the wedding to happen,'" he told Us at the Celebrity Rehab reunion in September 2013. "I have no butterflies, no nothing. I just want the wedding to happen." (In 2010, the reality star signed up for VH1's Celebrity Rehab for a 21-day detoxification treatment program after six alcohol-related arrests.)


PHOTOS: Secret celebrity weddings


Before their nuptials, the couple also had separate bachelor and bachelorette parties. "Cabo was absolutely amazing," Wahler told Us. "I had my sponsor, my family, my best friends. Everything in my life right now is just like too good to be true. I feel over-deserving." As for Slack, before the big day she went to Napa Valley with some close girlfriends in August. "They did like the whole castle thing up there and wine tasting," he added. "They had a good time." 


Wahler and Slack are next headed to the Four Seasons in Maui after the ceremony, but are holding off on a honeymoon due to their hectic schedules. "We'll do something next year," he revealed. "Like a bigger destination, but we wanted to just go relax and go somewhere we're comfortable."


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/jason-wahler-marries-ashley-slack-former-laguna-beach-stars-wedding-20131210
Category: nascar   julio jones   Presidents Cup Streaker   abigail breslin   megyn kelly