Tag Archives: atlantic

Sailor artist Reid Stowe completes record 1,152-day voyage

Maverick adventurer returns to New York and son he’s never seen To call Reid Stowe’s voyage “epic” barely seems to cover it. But as his 1,152 days spent continuously at sea came to an end today in New York, there seemed to be no other way of describing it. Stowe, 58, sailed his 70ft schooner, Anne, on the last short hop – from New Jersey to Manhattan – completing a trip that has taken him round the world, lasted more than three years, set a record for the longest continuous sea voyage, and presented him with the biggest surprise of all: the young son he had never seen. For although Stowe has been isolated for a very long time, he was not alone for the entire voyage. When he set sail in 2007, he was accompanied by his girlfriend Soanya Ahmad, a college graduate more than 30 years his junior, who had never been to sea and who had to be evacuated off the vessel after 300 days suffering from what she and Stowe assumed was an especially stubborn case of seasickness. Except that it wasn’t. It was morning sickness. Today, at the end of his voyage, Stowe was looking forward to finally meeting his 23-month-old son, Darshen. Since she left the boat the couple’s only communication has been by phone and email. They now plan to live together as a family and Stowe has even built a berth for Darshen on Anne. During their time apart, Ahmad had no fears over whether Stowe would stay faithful. “Reid’s not in a place where he can get distracted by anyone. So that eliminates any tensions arising from his end,” she wrote in a blog post explaining their relationship. For his entire voyage, Stowe has lived off his supplies, never putting into port or setting foot on land. He had dried fruit and vegetables, fresh fish and rainwater. Today, a mini-flotilla packed with family, friends and media followed him home in bright sunshine as he sailed up the Hudson River and docked in Manhattan. “It is an epic of exploration, like Shackleton or Scott. But with a much happier ending,” said his friend, Jeff Blumenfeld, who visited the schooner during her last full day at sea. Blumenfeld said Stowe had been in a great mood. He had served visitors, including US Customs, a meal of tea, crackers and cheese. “He was the perfect host, though the crackers were three years old. They still tasted delicious,” Blumenfeld said. Stowe has now been at sea for so long that many – including Stowe himself – have likened his experience of solitude to that which will be endured by astronauts on any future manned mission to Mars. “It is an experiment in self-exile,” said Blumenfeld, who showed Stowe an iPhone and asked: “Do you know what this is?” (Stowe did not. Nor, apparently, did he care). Stowe has triggered controversy in the sailing world. An artist and yoga enthusiast as well as a sailor, he is not the usual image of the reserved, stoical, long-distance sailor. He is a great espouser of New Age philosophy and has the air of a mystic. He built Anne himself and has lived on her since 1978, becoming well known as a sculptor and painter. Stowe’s journeys by sea have never been straightforward. He once sailed in the Atlantic for 197 days, tracing a course in the shape of a turtle. His current journey included the rough outline of a whale off South America. Such antics have drawn criticism. Several anti-Stowe websites have dismissed him as careless or an exhibitionist or a poor sailor. One blog, called 1,000 Days of Hell, depicted him as Don Quixote with his boat tilting for a windmill. “Reid is a hazard to navigation,” wrote one commentator on the Sailing Anarchy website. “He dead yet?” asked another. The abuse has shocked Charles Doane, a sailing writer who has followed Stowe’s journey and was among those waiting to greet him in New York. “I can think of no other long-distance ocean sailor who has ever endured such relentless and venomous public abuse while actively engaged in a voyage,” he wrote. It has not been an easy trip. Aside from the drama of Ahmad’s pregnancy, Stowe has battled the elements and catastrophe. After just 15 days at sea, Anne was hit by a freighter in the Atlantic and damaged so badly she drifted for a month. His sails were torn rounding Cape Horn and he even capsized once. His computer died several months ago, leaving him with just a satellite phone for contact. Yet Stowe persevered. Waiting for him today was a crowd of well-wishers. Whatever one thinks of Stowe’s motivation and methods, whether he is a madman or a genius or perhaps both, his achievement has gone down in history. “If you have a dream, if you want to do something unique, then he shows you can figure out a way,” said Blumenfeld. Sailing United States Paul Harris guardian.co.uk

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Sailor artist Reid Stowe completes record 1,152-day voyage

After Two Years with Obama, Linda Douglass Returns to News Media

Completing a full spin through the revolving door, Linda Douglass, a long-time CBS and ABC correspondent before jumping aboard the Obama campaign in 2008 – followed by HHS and White House positions promoting ObamaCare — has re-joined The Atlantic as a Vice President who “will concentrate on company strategy and communications,” the Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz reported online Thursday morning . Before joining the Obama campaign as senior strategist and senior campaign spokesperson on the road, Douglass toiled for National Journal , part of Atlantic Media which also owns The Hotline . Her first stint in the new administration was as Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs at the Department of Health and Human Services, followed by Communications Director for the White House’s Health Reform Office, a slot she left in April. Atlantic Chairman David Bradley recognizes the conflict between her political agenda and being a journalist, but he told Kurtz “she’s too big an editorial talent for us to keep her out of the editorial product.” From Kurtz’s June 10 post: While her political tenure “troubles me not at all” for the corporate part of the job, Bradley says, he sees a “blinking red light” when she gets involved with the journalistic side, especially as it involves the president or health care. But, adds Bradley, “she’s too big an editorial talent for us to keep her out of the editorial product.” Douglass, who left the ABC News Washington bureau in 2006 after spending much of the 1990s with CBS News, will advance the opinions of, amongst others, Andrew Sullivan, author of The Atlantic’s “ The Daily Dish ” blog. On last Friday’s Real time with Bill Maher, Sullivan applauded author Joe McGinniss for renting the house next to Sarah Palin’s, proclaiming he’s just trying “to find out who this farce and phony actually is.” > From April: “ Her ObamaCare Mission Achieved, ABC/CBS Veteran Linda Douglass Departs White House .” > My complete list of Obama-news media revolvers , updated just a few days ago, which now stands at 15.

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After Two Years with Obama, Linda Douglass Returns to News Media

Bret Easton Ellis on The Golden Suicides, His New True Story of Love and Death

Bret Easton Ellis has written six books (his seventh, Imperial Bedrooms, comes out next month ), and all six have been optioned by Hollywood. Of those six, four were made into movies, and they run the gamut from iconic to underseen, acclaimed to lambasted. Each day this week, Ellis has tackled a different adaptation of his books for Movieline, giving his take on what worked, what didn’t, and what went on behind the scenes. So far this week, Movieline’s talked to Bret Easton Ellis about movies made from his own books — movies he often didn’t script himself. His upcoming screenplay, The Golden Suicides , is for a very different film entirely. Adapted by Ellis from a Nancy Jo Sales article for Vanity Fair and written for producer Gus Van Sant, it’s based on the true story of artists Jeremy Blake and Theresa Duncan (pictured above), a glamorous couple who eventually secluded themselves in a cocoon of paranoia when they believed that government organizations and Scientologists were out to get them. Duncan killed herself in July 2007, and a week later, the despondent Blake walked into the Atlantic and drowned.

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Bret Easton Ellis on The Golden Suicides, His New True Story of Love and Death

Man Stabs Wife 250 times, Eats her Liver and Lungs: Gets 15 Years in jail

Insane? An Abuse Victim? A Muslim Husband? Late last week, Google directed me to a newspaper in Australia (!) where I read about a man who stabbed his wife 250 times; needless to say, he killed her. The report went on to allege that this killer also ate his wife’s liver and lungs while their four year-old daughter watched from the next room. The article also said that this fiend was sentenced to only 15 years to life. It also noted that although this man stabbed his wife 250 times, he hotly denies being a cannibal. That bad he’s not. Even monstrous killers have pride. What the hell is wrong there Down Under, I wondered. And then—I read the most amazing bit of information. This heinous murder had not taken place in Australia but in my own backyard, in Queens, New York, three years ago, in 2007. And, while the crime and 2010 sentencing were viewed as newsworthy in Australia and India, the sentencing was not covered at all in the (hardcopy) liberal mainstream media. Well, it does sound more like a National Enquirer story, doesn’t it? Now, who would commit such a savage murder? Was the murderer a domestic version of Jeffrey Dahmer who raped, murdered, then ate children and young men? But Dahmer and his ilk are not often married to women and do not have children. Well, a serial killer might do this to a girl or woman whom he does not know, someone whom he believes is a prostitute. Again, these psychopaths do not prey upon their wives. And then, of course, I knew, “racist” that I presumably am, that the murder had probably been committed by a Third World immigrant, let’s say, someone from South Asia, for these are all the pseudonyms for…Muslims and for Muslim terrorists. Sure enough, the murderer’s name is Mohammed Solaiman; his victim’s name was Shahida Sultanna. The New York Post and the Daily News covered the sentencing. The New York Times did not. Ironically, the Paper of Record did cover this murder, briefly, in 2007, when it happened—but in an article that also covered another Queens-based murder—as if to say that the borough of “Queens” was the true subject. Needless to say, no reporter dared note the murderer’s ethnicity, culture, or religion. It’s anybody’s guess. Clearly, journalists might not view this information as relevant or they may already know that their editors will simply take it out as “racist” profiling. In court, Solaiman’s lawyer claimed that Solaiman, who was 49 years old at the time of the crime, was an “abused” husband whose 32-year-old wife had verbally and physically “abused” him for six years. While May-December marriages certainly exist in the West, they more closely characterize marriages in the developing and Muslim world. Of course, the other Mo (Hassan), the husband who beheaded his wife in Buffalo, is also claiming that he was an “abused” husband too. Just like Major Nidal Hasan, Buffalo “Mo” is claiming that he’s the victim and/or that he suffers from some diminished capacity or emotional disturbance brought about by “abuse.” This is a consistent strategy. A number of Muslim wife-killers and daughter-killers honestly feel that they are the true victims, that their wives abused them and their daughters “dishonored” them—and that, in turn, these adult men felt “attacked,” and were forced to “defend” themselves. In 1989, Palestina Isa’s father, a St Louis, Missouri-based Abu Nidal terrorist, described how “attacked” he and his family felt by his too-Americanized daughter. Thus, after a lifetime of physical and verbal abuse had failed to tame his daughter, he and his wife stabbed the 16 year-old thirteen times. As I’ve discovered in my most recent study about honor killings, while there are Hindus and Sikhs who perpetrate honor killings, this is primarily a Muslim-on-Muslim crime. And, these deaths are often very torturous. Worldwide, the torture rate that accompanies a female honor killing is 54%; North America has the lowest torture rate (35%); the Muslim world rate is 51%; Europe has the highest torture rate (68%). Ellen Sheeley, the author of a study on honor killings in Jordan, wrote to me privately and congratulated me on the study. However, she said that every single honor killing she’d investigated in Jordan was a torture-killing (read it all) added by: crystalman

‘World’s Biggest’ Forest Protection Deal for Canada

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science_and_environment/10123210.stm Timber companies and environment groups including Greenpeace, Canopy, and ForestEthics have unveiled an agreement aimed at protecting two-thirds of Canada's vast forests from unsustainable logging. Over 72 million hectares are included in what will become the world's largest commercial forest conservation deal. Logging will be totally banned on some of the land, in the hope of sustaining endangered caribou populations. Timber companies hope the deal will bring commercial gains, as timber buyers seek higher ethical standards. The total protected area is about twice the size of Germany, and equals the area of forest lost globally between 1990 and 2005. “The importance of this agreement cannot be overstated,” said Avrim Lazar, president and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC). “We're thrilled that this effort has led to the largest commercial forest conservation plan in history,” said Steve Kallick of Pew Environment Group. “Together we have identified a more intelligent, productive way to manage economic and environmental challenges in the Boreal [Forest] that will reassure global buyers of our products' sustainability.” The Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement (CBFA) brings together FPAC's 21 member companies and nine environment groups, many of which have fought a bitter battle against what they have sometimes criticised as rapacious logging. As part of the agreement, those groups have agreed to suspend criticism of the industry and calls for boycotts. The Pew Environment Group, which has worked for about a decade on trying to “green” Canada's forestry, said it was “excited” by the agreement. “We're thrilled that this effort has led to the largest commercial forest conservation plan in history, which could not have happened without both sides looking beyond their differences,” said Steve Kallick, director of Pew's International Boreal Conservation Campaign. Pew notes that the total area covered by the deal is larger than in some agreements currently feted as global leaders, such as the Brazilian Amazon Region Protected Areas project. Throughout the protected lands – which run right across the country from the Pacific to the Atlantic coasts – companies and environment groups are pledging to work together to implement “world-leading forest management and harvesting practices”. The effects of forest protection on wildlife, particularly caribou, will be monitored; and timber will be certified as coming from sustainable sources. Pew believes the agreement could be a template for future forest agreements in other parts of the world, as industry leaders respond to an increasingly environmentally-aware public. “There is a recognition that this is how forestry will be done in the 21st Century, and there's a great interest in getting ahead of the rest of the industry,” Mr Kallick told BBC News. The agreement at present covers companies and environment groups; both parties are looking now for backing and reinforcement from governments. In the Canadian system that means the national and provincial authorities, and “First Nation” governments of indigenous groups, some of which have already indicated their support. added by: captainplanet71

Worry that Gulf oil spreading into major current

BP said Monday it was siphoning some of the oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, but worries escalated about the ooze reaching a major ocean current that could carry it through the Florida Keys and up the East Coast. BP PLC chief operating officer Doug Suttles said Monday on NBC's “Today” that a mile-long tube was funneling a little more than 42,000 gallons of crude a day from a blown-out well into a tanker ship. That would be about a fifth of the 210,000 gallons the company and the U.S. Coast Guard have estimated are gushing out each day, though scientists who have studied video of the leak say it could be much bigger and even BP acknowledges there's no way to know for sure how much oil there is. In the nearly a month since an oil rig called the Deepwater Horizon exploded off the coast of Louisiana, killing 11 workers, BP has made several failed attempts to stop the leak, trying in vain to activate emergency valves and lowering a 100-ton container that got clogged with icy crystals. Chemicals being sprayed underwater are helping to disperse the oil and keep it from washing ashore in great quantities. But millions of gallons are already in the Gulf, and researchers said that in recent days they have discovered miles-long underwater plumes of oil that could poison and suffocate sea life across the food chain, with damage that could endure for a decade or more. Tar balls have been sporadically washing up on beaches in several states, including Mississippi, where at least 60 have been found. Engineers finally got the contraption to siphon the oil working Sunday after several setbacks. BP PLC engineers remotely guiding robot submersibles had worked since Friday to place the tube into a 21-inch pipe nearly a mile below the sea. Crews will slowly increase how much the tube is collecting over the next few days. They need to move slowly because they don't want too much frigid seawater entering the pipe, which could combine with gases to form the same ice-like crystals that doomed the previous containment effort. As engineers worked to get a better handle on the spill, a researcher told The Associated Press that computer models show the oil may have already seeped into a powerful water stream known as the loop current, which could propel it into the Atlantic Ocean. A boat is being sent later this week to collect samples and learn more. “This can't be passed off as 'it's not going to be a problem,'” said William Hogarth, dean of the University of South Florida's College of Marine Science. “This is a very sensitive area. We are concerned with what happens in the Florida Keys.” Hogarth said a computer model shows oil has already entered the loop current, while a second shows the oil is 3 miles from it — still dangerously close. The models are based on weather, ocean current and spill data from the U.S. Navy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, among other sources. Hogarth said it's still too early to know what specific amounts of oil will make it to Florida, or what damage it might do to the sensitive Keys or beaches on Florida's Atlantic coast. He said claims by BP that the oil would be less damaging to the Keys after traveling over hundreds of miles from the spill site were not mollifying. added by: JanforGore

Terrible Shrek-Themed Weddings are Coincidentally Happening Again, Right Now

NOOO, it has begun anew! You may remember how taunted we felt last year when, in a burst of total coincidence that came just as the Broadway musical Shrek just happened to be struggling, a whole bunch of people dressed up as the green ogre in public, including Regis Philbin and some wackadoos getting married across the Atlantic. Now, it is happening again. And I think we need to take a closer look.

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Terrible Shrek-Themed Weddings are Coincidentally Happening Again, Right Now

Watch Bones Season 5 Episode 18 (S05E18) Online Free Streaming

Watch Bones 518 – The Predator in the Pool. When human remains are discovered in the belly of a shark, Brennan and Booth are brought in to identify the missing person. Evidence suggesting the victim had been the prey of several fish directs the team’s investigation to The Aquarium of the Atlantic, where a guest lecturer and notorious self-help guru preaching the healing power of the ocean has gone missing. Meanwhile, both Brennan and Booth navigate their own relationship when a marine biologist shows interest in Booth. Watch Bones 05 Continue reading

Volcanic Ash Disrupts Travel Plans For Miley Cyrus, Usher, Adam Lambert

Selena Gomez and Band of Horses are stuck in Europe, while Whitney Houston had to travel by ferry. By Eric Ditzian Miley Cyrus Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage The volcanic ash cloud that has been hovering over Europe for days mostly wreaking havoc on overseas travelers and businesses, but its effects are being felt by music fans on both sides of the Atlantic Miley Cyrus , Usher and are just a few of the artists who won’t be headed to the Europe because of travel restrictions imposed in the wake of the eruption of Iceland’s Eyjafjallaj

Malcolm McLaren, Sex Pistols Manager, Dead At 64

McLaren had been suffering from cancer ‘for some time,’ his spokesperson said. By James Montgomery Malcolm McLaren in 1984 Photo: Lisa Haun/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Malcolm McLaren, the manager of infamous punk act the Sex Pistols and the man for which the term “music impresario” was probably coined, died Thursday (April 8) in New York. He was 64. McLaren was born in London in 1946 and left home as a teenager, attending several art colleges (all of which he was expelled from) and taking up with the so-called “Situationist” movement, which favored absurd public demonstrations as a way of enacting social change. In 1971, he and designer (and partner) Vivienne Westwood opened a London clothing shop called Let It Rock, which would become the go-to outfitter for acts in the burgeoning punk scene on both sides of the Atlantic, starting with the New York Dolls, whom McLaren met in 1972. In 1975, he had begun to manage a London act called the Strand, who become the Sex Pistols after McLaren and his assistant spotted a snarling punk named John Lydon and made him audition for the group. Lydon was rechristened “Johnny Rotten,” and with him fronting the group, the Pistols began an assault on London’s art-school scene. With McLaren at the helm, the Pistols’ legend began to grow, reaching its pinnacle in 1977, when, during the Queen of England’s Silver Jubilee, they released their incendiary second single “God Save the Queen.” The song was regarded by many in the British public as an assault on both Queen Elizabeth II (mostly because it equated her to the head of a “fascist regime”) and the monarchy itself, because, as Rotten sneered, England had “no future.” In May of ’77, McLaren organized a boat trip down the Thames River, where the Pistols would perform the song outside the Houses of Parliament. The boat was raided by police, and McLaren was arrested, though he did succeed in his main goal: achieving massive amounts of publicity for both himself and his fledgling group. Riding that wave, the Pistols released their (only) album, Never Mind the Bullocks, Here’s The Sex Pistols, in October 1977 and geared up for an American tour in January 1978. They would implode after only 12 days in the States, splitting after a disastrous San Francisco gig. McLaren was accused by bandmembers (mostly Lydon) of not only mismanaging them, but refusing to pay them. The two would battle it out in court during the 1980s, with Lydon winning the rights to the entire Pistols catalog in 1987. The two men never spoke to each other again. McLaren also released albums of his own, most notably 1983’s Duck Rock, which saw him incorporate influences like pan-African rhythms, early hip-hop and even country. One of the singles from the album, “Buffalo Gals,” showcased scratching and a square-dance cadence, and the opening lines were even referenced by Eminem in his 2002 single “Without Me.” He continued to release albums well into the 2000s and branched out into painting, radio presenting and even the movie business, serving as a producer on the film adaptation of “Fast Food Nation.” McLaren’s spokesperson told London’s The Daily Mail that he had been suffering from cancer for “some time … but recently had been full of health, which then rapidly deteriorated” and that his body would be brought back to London for burial in Highgate Cemetary.

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Malcolm McLaren, Sex Pistols Manager, Dead At 64