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Jenelle Evans: MTV Just Treated Me Like Subhuman Garbage and I’m DONE!

Once again, Jenelle Evans is threatening to quit MTV’s Teen Mom 2, claiming producers are causing major damage to her life and marriage. In response to her portrayal on Monday’s episode, the Carolina Hurricane said she is “not healthy anymore” and put the network on blast. If you watch Teen Mom 2 online , you saw an episode last night that focused heavily on marital problems between Jenelle and David Eason. The 25-year-old did not take kindly to it. Slamming producers in an Instagram post early Tuesday, she said the way her marriage was portrayed by producers is just “uncalled for.”  “Yes, me and David have our ups and downs but yesterday’s episode was uncalled for,” she captioned the not-at-all-staged pic above. “Because David didn’t feel like explaining another argument or drama on camera,” Jenelle said, MTV distorted it terribly.  “They make it look as if David is hiding some weird ass shit from the public as if he was hurting me in some way?” Evans continued railing against last night’s Teen Mom 2 : “I have decided after this season I’m probably calling it quits for filming this show.” “I told [my Teen Mom producer] Morgan it’s getting to out of hand and it’s not healthy for us anymore, just harming us mentally.” “They treat all of us as if we are in a freak show and in cages. WE aren’t human beings to @mtv what-so-ever.” “The first screenshot of the custody episode someone posted photoshopping a hand mark on my arm.” “The other screenshots are pictures I’ve taken myself from the same episode… and there aren’t any hand marks. “Once they treat me with respect I’ll be back, if they don’t I’ll be happy with the life I’ve got. I told them this last night. #MarriedLife #MIA” Cameras followed the newlyweds last night as they planned a photoshoot for the Save the Date cards for their forthcoming wedding. At one point, Eason appeared to kick the film crew out of the house, though he acted like everything was fine the next day. It was not fine, however, as Jenelle saw it. She continued with a second rant later:  “MTV has done a great job this time. I watched last nights episode at 2 p.m. yesterday afternoon and have been very upset ever since.” Though her Instagram is active, she said, “I deactivated my accounts mainly because I don’t want to even begin to read the comments.” “Here are texts of me explaining that subtitling my son when he has speech therapy isn’t right at all,” she adds, with this screen shot: “MTV feels the need to keep it in their story and out the subtitle in ‘feed me,'” she laments, noting “I’ve blocked all my producers numbers.” “I will not stand for the negative shit anymore. I’ll be off social media for a while to be focusing on solely my family. @mtv” Jenelle’s parting shot to the producers? “You guys are making my marriage look like it’s one big f–king joke so thanks.” In Evans’ defense, she is not the only member of the cast to complain about editing, which certainly happens on any show. Producers have a vested interest in a “storyline” fans want to watch, and often times tension beats calm domestic bliss. On the flip side … come on Jenelle. View Slideshow: Jenelle Evans: Pregnant With Fourth Child?! To say she’s had a tumultuous life largely of her own making would be an understatement, and her relationship with David is no exception. Why would we possibly think this tension with David is manufactured, and moreover, why would she care what Teen Mom 2 fans think? If you’re a fan of Jenelle, you’ve come to accept the bad with the good a long, long time ago, and support her through thick and thin. Sure, you might hope reports of a fourth pregnancy (above) are false, and question her decisions, but no one hasn’t formed an opinion. It is what it is. Why hide behind editing like you’re protecting some pristine, otherwise immaculate reputation MTV is intent on ruining? Agree? Disagree? Discuss below. View Slideshow: Jenelle Evans: See All the Photos from Her Wedding to David Eason

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Jenelle Evans: MTV Just Treated Me Like Subhuman Garbage and I’m DONE!

‘American Horror Story’: Get Ready For A Freak Show

Creator Ryan Murphy finally confirms the season four subtitle. By Jessica Hyndman

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‘American Horror Story’: Get Ready For A Freak Show

AP Report on Small Biz Lending Bill Omits Required Govt. ‘Investments’ in Participating Institutions

In the earlier paragraphs of a Friday report on the recently passed small business lending bill at the Associated Press, reporter Pallavi Gogoi gave readers the impression that Congress’s allegedly noble intentions might be thwarted because banks and businesses who should apparently be grateful for the “help” don’t want it. Gogoi gives no direct indication that the bill involves government “investment” in (i.e., partial state ownership of) participating financial institutions. The AP reporter didn’t have to look very far to see what’s really involved. The defined purpose of the bill, which weighs in at over 40,000 words (full text here ), is right there at its beginning (bold is mine): An Act — To create the Small Business Lending Fund Program to direct the Secretary of the Treasury to make capital investments in eligible institutions in order to increase the availability of credit for small businesses, to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide tax incentives for small business job creation, and for other purposes. This is not very different from what ended up happening with the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) enacted two years ago. In fact, two lawyers writing on the law’s potential impact describe it as a “mini-TARP.” You’d never know that from Gogoi’s report (one cryptic reference to the underlying state control involved is in bold): President Barack Obama’s $30 billion small community business lending program faces one big challenge: many of the community banks and businesses it’s supposed to help don’t want it. The lending program is part of a bill that passed the House of Representatives on Thursday and now awaits the president’s signature. The legislation contains a mix of tax cuts and credits aimed at helping small businesses. The centerpiece of the bill is an effort to make billions of dollars available to community banks for loans to small businesses. It seems like a simple effort to unclog a credit pipeline that has been blocked since the financial meltdown two years ago. But interviews with seven community bankers, as well as small business owners, show a reluctance to participate. Bank executives say their customers don’t want loans, even at low interest rates, because the sluggish economy has chilled expansion plans. Some say the federal money isn’t worth it because they fear it will come with too much regulatory oversight. “We have taken a strategic decision not to have our primary regulator, the government, also be a partner in our bank,” said William Chase Jr., CEO of Triumph Bank in Memphis. Chase said the bank already has enough capital to meet the paltry demand for loans. “Our business customers are mired in uncertainty and are reluctant to invest in their businesses,” Chase said. Ninety-one percent of small business owners surveyed in August by the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) said all their credit needs were met. Only 4 percent cited a lack of financing as their top business problem. Plans for capital spending were at a 35-year low. As to “regulatory oversight,” let’s look at just one requirement present in the bill: (Part of Section 3005 — “APPROVING STATE CAPITAL ACCESS PROGRAMS”) At the time that a State applies to the Secretary to have the State capital access program approved as eligible for Federal contributions, the State shall deliver to the Secretary a report stating how the State plans to use the Federal contributions to the reserve fund to provide access to capital for small businesses in low- and moderate-income, minority, and other underserved communities, including women- and minority-owned small businesses. The states will have their hands in this enterprise, and will be under pressure to ensure that loan decisions are based on race, gender, or other “underserved” status, not on their economic merits. Imagine that. Then there’s this item, which, briefly translated, is a mandate that participating institutions work with their local “community organizers”: OUTREACH TO MINORITIES, WOMEN, AND VETERANS- The Secretary shall require eligible institutions receiving capital investments under the Program to provide linguistically and culturally appropriate outreach and advertising in the applicant pool describing the availability and application process of receiving loans from the eligible institution that are made possible by the Program through the use of print, radio, television or electronic media outlets which target organizations, trade associations, and individuals that– (A) represent or work within or are members of minority communities; (B) represent or work with or are women; and (C) represent or work with or are veterans. I don’t recall the fact that the government will be taking partial ownership stakes in participating financial institutions as a precondition of their participation getting any kind of establishment media coverage. Gigoi’s failure to note it is just one small example of a much larger epic media fail. P.S. Here’s a more detailed description of what is involved in “capital investment”: (b) Use of Fund- (1) IN GENERAL- Subject to paragraph (2), the Fund shall be available to the Secretary, without further appropriation or fiscal year limitation, for the costs of purchases (including commitments to purchase), and modifications of such purchases, of preferred stock and other financial instruments from eligible institutions on such terms and conditions as are determined by the Secretary in accordance with this subtitle. Original graphic was found here . Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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AP Report on Small Biz Lending Bill Omits Required Govt. ‘Investments’ in Participating Institutions

Stossel Argues Gun Control Increases Crime, ‘I Was Once as Clueless as Senator Schumer’

On Thursday’s Stossel show on FBN, host John Stossel devoted the program to making the case that gun control can increase crime rates and that higher rates of gun ownership tend to decrease crime. Stossel admitted that, even as a libertarian, it took time for him to come around to this truth as he and most in the mainstream media live in the New York City liberal bubble, not cognizant of all the states that have passed concealed carry laws and seen crime decrease. During a segment with Dennis Hannigan of the Brady Campaign, the FBN host observed: “Over the years, more and more states changed their laws to allow concealed carry. The mainstream media and my neighbors are so isolated here in New York City and in Washington, D.C., most of us had no clue that carrying a concealed weapon is already legal in the rest of the country. More places all the time, legal guns, and yet crime does keep dropping.” Stossel concluded the show by recounting Britain’s failed experiment with gun bans, and revealed that Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer, known for advocating gun control, had declined an invitation to appear on the show to argue his case as the FBN host took a self-deprecating jab at the New York Senator: I was once as clueless as Senator Schumer. Now I admit I was wrong about guns laws. Fewer guns don’t necessarily mean less crime. The opposite may be true. About 10 years ago, a mass shooting in the United Kingdom led Britain to pass one of the toughest gun control laws in the world. … This did not decrease crime. In fact, gun-related crime merely doubled after the ban passed. Crime increased in Britain while it decreased in America. … Britain just took guns away from the good guys, the people who obey the law. Doing that makes crime easier for the bad guys. The truth is gun control is not crime control. During a segment with University of Chicago Professor John Lott, author of More Guns, Less Crime – a segment which also included the Brady Campaign’s Hannigan – Stossel recounted: “We have this chart from your book that shows violent crime rates after concealed carry laws passed. Here it is for murder. It’s impressive. After the law passed, crime went down.” Another segment explored the issue of concealed carry on college campuses, and included advocates on both sides of the issue. David Burnett of Students for Concealed Carry on Campus notably contended: “I would point you to two colleges in Colorado. One of them banned guns in 2003. The other one decided they would allow guns. On the campus that allowed guns, the crime dropped like a rock. And on the campus that banned guns, the crime went up.” Stossel then hosted a segment which included Suzanna Hupp, who has lobbied against gun control in response to losing her parents in a mass shooting at a time when it was illegal to carry guns into restaurants in Texas. Also included was Nikki Goeser, whose husband was shot to death in front of her in a Tennessee bar where she was not legally allowed to bring her own gun for self-defense. And Mark Walters of Armed America Radio recounted the time he defended himself from being carjacked by brandishing a weapon to scare off his attacker. The FBN host then moved to a segment focusing on the effort to overturn Chicago’s handgun ban, featuring Chicago resident and plaintiff Otis McDonald. Stossel recounted the case of D.C.’s gun ban that was overturned by the Supreme Court two years ago, and how changes in the law affected crime in the city: “Murder and other gun violence have dropped in D.C. since the Supreme Court overturned the handgun ban. And let’s now go back 35 years to when Washington passed its gun ban. In the years that followed, crime went up compared to other big cities and compared to the rest of America. Fewer guns, more crime.” Stossel concluded the show by recounting Britain’s failed experiment with gun bans, and noted revealed that Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer, known for advocating gun control, had declined an invitation to appear on the show to argue his case as the FBN host took a self-deprecating jab at the New York Senator: As he concluded the show, Stossel showed a clip of Senator Schumer arguing in favor of gun locks, comparing the concept to put child safety locks on medicine bottles, as the FBN host pointed out the flaw in Schumer’s logic: “Well, Senator Schumer, you don’t suddenly need to open an aspirin bottle for self-defense.” Stossel recounted his show’s unsuccessful offer to allow Schumer to appear on the show, and informed viewers of the effects of strict gun laws in Britain. Below is a transcript of relevant portions of the Thursday, June 24, Stossel show on FBN: JOHN STOSSEL: Concealed carry terrifies a lot of people, and many people would be shocked to how many states already allow it. And here, I think, is a really cool map that shows which states already have it. States that have concealed carry laws are colored yellow. This is the law in 1986 – that’s 25 years ago. Over the years, more and more states changed their laws to allow concealed carry. The mainstream media and my neighbors are so isolated here in New York City and in Washington, D.C., most of us had no clue that carrying a concealed weapon is already legal in the rest of the country. More places all the time, legal guns, and yet crime does keep dropping. … STOSSEL: We have this chart from your book that shows violent crime rates after concealed carry laws passed. Here it is for murder. It’s impressive. After the law passed, crime went down. … DAVID BURNETT, STUDENTS FOR CONCEALED CARRY ON CAMPUS: I would point you to two colleges in Colorado. One of them banned guns in 2003. The other one decided they would allow guns. On the campus that allowed guns, the crime dropped like a rock. And on the campus that banned guns, the crime went up. … The college in Colorado, there’s not very many colleges that allow them. The college at Colorado, the sheriff there is a big fan of it, and he went to the college, and he said, “No, do not ban this. This works. Nobody is irresponsible. Everything is good.” … STOSSEL: If you’re an adult in America, do you have the right to own a gun? Thirty-five years ago Washington, D.C. said no. They passed a law that banned handguns. That law was challenged in court, and, two years ago, the Supreme Court ruled the ban was unconstitutional. The mayor was upset. MAYOR ADRIAN FENTY (D-WASHINGTON, D.C.): More handguns in the District of Columbia will only lead to more handgun violence. STOSSEL: But that didn’t happen. In fact, murder and other gun violence have dropped in D.C. since the Supreme Court overturned the handgun ban. And let’s now go back 35 years to when Washington passed its gun ban. In the years that followed, crime went up compared to other big cities and compared to the rest of America. Fewer guns, more crime. It’s counterintuitive, but it does seem to be true. Gun rights’ supporters were excited when the Supreme Court overturned the Washington law, but that case was not the big one because it just applies to D.C., the federal property. The big case that’s being debated now by the Supreme Court, and next week or maybe even tomorrow the court is expected to announce its decision. The case is called McDonald versus Chicago. If the court sides with McDonald, it would apply the right to bear arms to people in all cities. The lead plaintiff in that lawsuit is Otis McDonald. Here’s an interview done with him by Fox’s Chicago affiliate. UNIDENTIFIED MALE REPORTER: In the 38 years that you’ve lived here, how many times have you been burglarized? OTIS MCDONALD, CHICAGO RESIDENT: The house three times, the garage twice. STOSSEL: McDonald lives in a Chicago neighborhood that he says has been taken over by gangs and drug dealers. REPORTER: He says he’d feel safer if he had a handgun by his bed, but then he’d be breaking Chicago’s 28-year-old handgun ban. Why is owning a gun important? MCDONALD: When my life is threatened, I’d like to be able to at least feel that I can protect myself. STOSSEL: Chicago’s lawyer who opposes giving McDonald a gun wouldn’t come on to defend the ban, so, Dennis Hannigan from the Brady Campaign is back to give Chicago’s side. Also with us is the lawyer who argued McDonald’s case before the Supreme Court. But before we go to the lawyers, let’s go to the plaintiffs, 76-year-old Otis McDonald. So, Mr. McDonald, you own a shotgun. Isn’t that enough? You want a handgun, too? MCDONALD: Yes. I own a shotgun for hunting game. STOSSEL: Isn’t that enough? MCDONALD: No. STOSSEL: Why? MCDONALD: I don’t think it would be efficient enough for me to handle in close quarters with a would-be killer or something like that. … STOSSEL: I once wrote a book about myths with the subtitle, “Everything You Know is Wrong.” And that applied to me. It turned out so much of what I and my colleagues in the liberal media thought was true was just wrong. But, of course, I live here in New York City. We have all kinds of silly beliefs. We also have silly politicians who say things like this: SENATOR CHUCK SCHUMER (D-NY): Let me ask a simple question: If an aspirin bottle can have a safety lock, why not a gun? STOSSEL: Well, Senator Schumer, you don’t suddenly need to open an aspirin bottle for self-defense. There is a difference. We asked the Senator to join us on this program. His office said they’d call us back, but they didn’t. I was once as clueless as Senator Schumer. Now I admit I was wrong about guns laws. Fewer guns don’t necessarily mean less crime. The opposite may be true. About 10 years ago, a mass shooting in the United Kingdom led Britain to pass one of the toughest gun control laws in the world. When the law passed, Britain seemed to get safer by the minute if you watched as officials made sure cameras were there as 160,000 newly illegal firearms were forked over by law-abiding citizens and sent to be melted down in an incinerator. But the real result? This did not decrease crime. In fact, gun-related crime merely doubled after the ban passed. Crime increased in Britain while it decreased in America. This shouldn’t come as a surprise if you consider just two things. Criminals usually don’t obey laws. That’s why we call them criminals. And gun laws never totally get rid of guns. England’s ban didn’t magically eliminate all British handguns. Officials estimate a quarter million illegal weapons are still in circulation. Britain just took guns away from the good guys, the people who obey the law. Doing that makes crime easier for the bad guys. The truth is gun control is not crime control.

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Stossel Argues Gun Control Increases Crime, ‘I Was Once as Clueless as Senator Schumer’

Hitler Discovers Republicans Have No Ideas

Health care reform isn't officially a major cultural event until Hitler weighs in on it. The Best Links: Hitler Subtitle Mashups on BuzzFeed Via Huffington Post Watch

John Mayer’s Playboy Interview Caps A History Of TMI

Singer/guitarist’s recent attention-grabbing comments weren’t his first. By Gil Kaufman John Mayer Photo: MTV News John Mayer has a long-established reputation as a virtuoso guitar player and ladies’ man. But it’s one of Mayer’s other prodigious talents, his tendency to say and tweet outrageous comments, that has landed the “Waiting on the World to Change” singer in hot water this week. By now, you’ve probably read and/or heard about Mayer’s instantly infamous Playboy interview , in which he used the N-word and made sexually charged references to famous exes Jennifer Aniston and Jessica Simpson. Mayer quickly apologized for some of the comments he made in the interview, which also featured comments about black women and his ” ‘hood pass” that many have perceived as racist, including a number of prominent rappers . “I think it’s time to stop trying to be so raw in interviews,” Mayer said after the fact. “It started as an attempt to not let the waves of criticism get to me, but it’s gotten out of hand and I’ve created somewhat of a monster. I wanted to be a blues guitar player. And a singer. And a songwriter. Not a shock jock. I don’t have the stomach for it.” Indeed, the Playboy interview wasn’t the first time Mayer has said outrageous things or the first time he’s talked about not being able to stop himself from making potentially offensive comments. In October, Mayer sat down with MTV News’ Tim Kash and decried what he described as the “hatrix,” a fake Internet world of hate in which people criticize and put other people down. “People don’t like things that [are] purposely shocking,” he said. “They start to feel abused by it. … People are really concerned with what other people are saying about them.” While blasting the tabloid media that covers him and confidently saying his songs will last well beyond the gossip rags’ outrageous stories, Mayer said fans don’t need to worry about the effect those reports have on him. “All the things that play out in the media were, most of the time, by a choice I made in my life,” he said. “You make a choice in your life, and it affects your life in all the ways, good and bad.” In a cover story in January’s Rolling Stone magazine , writer Erik Hedegaard tackled head-on the insular world Mayer inhabits, titling his story, “The Dirty Mind and Lonely Heart of John Mayer,” with the subtitle, “He has everything a 32-year-old man could want. So why can’t rock’s biggest playboy shut up and enjoy?” What followed was six pages of Mayer’s stream-of-consciousness ranting, in which the reader learned that the “Daughters” singer has a $20 million watch collection, owns a bulletproof vest, can’t resist “poop Twitters,” believes he has “masturbated [himself] out of serious problems” in his life and describes how even in his sex dreams, he has to stop his virtual mate from grinding on him because he’s distracted by a phantom paparazzo. These were all very personal, TMI-style utterances that the average guarded modern pop star would never reveal. “I don’t know how much further I can do this before I’m a dead body on the side of the road,” he said. “I mean, either I’m a total f—ing nut case who can explain himself, or I’m really not crazy and I can explain myself. I don’t know yet.” If nothing else, Mayer is conflicted, at once painfully aware that he talks way too much, but seemingly unable to stop. “I have these accidents, these mistakes, these self-inflicted wounds, and then I tear my head to shreds about it for days,” he said about incidents such as the Playboy debacle (it’s unclear if he completed the men’s magazine interview before or after the Rolling Stone one). But, after a few days of reflection, he said, he typically decides he can’t just be quiet. “I don’t want to detach. I don’t want to go live in a gated community. So I will continue to make these worldwide dignity mistakes as often as it takes to not make them anymore.” Related Artists John Mayer

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John Mayer’s Playboy Interview Caps A History Of TMI