Tag Archives: books

2010 In 60 Seconds: Comebacks By Kanye, Eminem, Betty White And More

MTV News’ pop-culture expert Jim Cantiello takes a look back at the year that was: all in a minute. By James Montgomery Kanye West Photo: Jean Baptiste Lacroix/ WireImage Well, 2010 is nearly in the books, and if you’re a fan of octogenarians on the comeback trail, “California Gurls” gone wild and swoop-haired Canadian teenagers, congratulations on the best year of your life! Yes, it was quite a ride … Kanye West returned to top form, Eminem recaptured his old magic, Taylor Swift moved a million, Rihanna proved to be unstoppable, Katy Perry proved the doubters wrong and Ke$ha, well, she just proved to be Ke$ha. Lady Gaga dared to speak out, Weezy went away, and a host of new stars — everyone from Drake to Justin Bieber to Willow Smith — stepped up to the plate. In pop culture, we were mesmerized by the exploits of everyone from Amber Portwood to Zac Efron, obsessed with the likes of Antoine Dobson and the “Pants on the Floor” guy, cheered on Betty White and vilified Mel Gibson (and probably Miley, too). We watched as our favorite couples went their separate ways, said goodbye to “Lost,” “The Hills” and Jay Leno (whom we then said hello to all over again), and went absolutely crazy for the iPad. Oh, and everything in the universe was made in 3-D. And all of that was just the tip of a rather sizeable iceberg. It’s pretty difficult to sum up 2010 in any way, so let’s just say it was the “most” year in recent memory. The most stars, the most scandals, the most use of the word “vuvuzela.” There were more shake-ups, breakups and comebacks than we can even remember … so it’s a good thing we’ve got MTV News’ pop culture expert Jim Cantiello to do it for us. Here’s his look back on the year that was … in 60 seconds, of course. Ready? Go. Related Videos 2010 In 60 Seconds Related Artists Kanye West Eminem

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2010 In 60 Seconds: Comebacks By Kanye, Eminem, Betty White And More

Which Glee Stars Aren’t Participating in the War on Christmas?

From Movieline’s 2010 Gift Guide The final push of the holiday season — a time for last-minute shopping, family squabbles, exhausting travel and Fox News’ annual update on the War on Christmas. In honor of this precious slot on the calendar, 826LA is auctioning off ten different children’s books signed by individual cast members from Glee to raise money for their free writing programs. Great and good, but what everyone really want to know is which Glee stars are soldiers-in-arms against Christmas-hating Progressives.

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Which Glee Stars Aren’t Participating in the War on Christmas?

Us Online News: Yahoo Still Silent On Today’s Layoffs, But Employees Vent

may be tight-lipped about the layoffs that are taking place at once within the company, but that’s not stopping employees who have been handed pink slips from commotion unattended quietly. A Yahoo employee in the Flickr group just Tweeted added by: Nadia_Khan1

The internet is being captured by organised trolls – including covert biotech lobbyists

They are the online equivalent of enclosure riots: the rick-burning, fence-toppling protests by English peasants losing their rights to the land. When MasterCard, Visa, Paypal and Amazon tried to shut WikiLeaks out of the cyber-commons, an army of hackers responded by trying to smash their way into these great estates and pull down their fences. In the Wikileaks punch-up the commoners appear to have the upper hand. But it's just one battle. There's a wider cyberwar being fought, of which you hear much less. And in most cases the landlords, with the help of a mercenary army, are winning. I’m not talking here about threats to net neutrality and the danger of a two-tier internet developing(1,2), though these are real. I’m talking about the daily attempts to control and influence content in the interests of the state and corporations: attempts in which money talks. The weapon used by both state and corporate players is a technique known as astroturfing. An astroturf campaign is one that mimics spontaneous grassroots mobilisations, but which has in reality been organised. Anyone writing a comment piece in Mandarin critical of the Chinese government, for example, is likely to be bombarded with abuse by people purporting to be ordinary citizens, upset by the slurs against their country. But many of them aren't upset: they are members of the 50 Cent Party, so-called because one Chinese government agency pays 5 mao (half a yuan) for every post its tame commenters write(3). Teams of these sock-puppets are hired by party leaders to drown out critical voices and derail intelligent debates. I first came across online astroturfing in 2002, when the investigators Andy Rowell and Jonathan Matthews looked into a series of comments made by two people calling themselves Mary Murphy and Andura Smetacek(4,5). They had launched ferocious attacks, across several internet forums, against a scientist whose research suggested that Mexican corn had been widely contaminated by GM pollen. Rowell and Matthews found that one of the messages Mary Murphy had sent came from a domain owned by the Bivings Group, a PR company specialising in internet lobbying. An article on the Bivings website explained that “there are some campaigns where it would be undesirable or even disastrous to let the audience know that your organization is directly involved … Message boards, chat rooms, and listservs are a great way to anonymously monitor what is being said. Once you are plugged into this world, it is possible to make postings to these outlets that present your position as an uninvolved third party.”(6) The Bivings site also quoted a senior executive from the biotech corporation Monsanto, thanking the PR firm for its “outstanding work”(7). When a Bivings executive was challenged by Newsnight, he admitted that the “Mary Murphy” email was sent by someone “working for Bivings” or “clients using our services”(8). Rowell and Matthews then discovered that the IP address on Andura Smetacek’s messages was assigned to Monsanto's headquarters in St. Louis, Missouri(9). There’s a nice twist to this story. AstroTurf TM – real fake grass – was developed and patented by Monsanto. Reading comment threads on the Guardian's sites and elsewhere on the web, two patterns jump out at me. The first is that discussions of issues in which there’s little money at stake tend to be a lot more civilised than debates about issues where companies stand to lose or gain billions: such as climate change, public health and corporate tax avoidance. These are often characterised by amazing levels of abuse and disruption. Articles about the environment are hit harder by such tactics than any others. I love debate, and I often wade into the threads beneath my columns. But it's a depressing experience, as instead of contesting the issues I raise, many of those who disagree bombard me with infantile abuse, or just keep repeating a fiction, however often you discredit it. This ensures that an intelligent discussion is almost impossible – which appears to be the point(10). The second pattern is the strong association between this tactic and a certain set of views: pro-corporate, anti-tax, anti-regulation. Both traditional conservatives and traditional progressives tend be more willing to discuss an issue than these right-wing libertarians, many of whom seek instead to shut down debate. So what's going on? I’m not suggesting that most of the people trying to derail these discussions are paid to do so, though I would be surprised if none were. I’m suggesting that some of the efforts to prevent intelligence from blooming seem to be organised, and that neither website hosts nor other commenters know how to respond. For his film (Astro)Turf Wars, Taki Oldham secretly recorded a training session organised by a rightwing libertarian group called American Majority. The trainer, Austin James, was instructing Tea Party members on how to “manipulate the medium”(11). This is what he told them: “Here's what I do. I get on Amazon; I type in 'Liberal Books'. I go through and I say 'one star, one star, one star'. The flipside is you go to a conservative/ libertarian whatever, go to their products and give them five stars. … This is where your kids get information: Rotten Tomatoes, Flixster. These are places where you can rate movies. So when you type in 'Movies on Healthcare', I don’t want Michael Moore's to come up, so I always give it bad ratings. I spend about 30 minutes a day, just click, click, click, click. … If there's a place to comment, a place to rate, a place to share information, you have to do it. That's how you control the online dialogue and give our ideas a fighting chance.” cont. added by: JanforGore

Oriental Hornets Are Literally Solar Powered

Those yellow parts are much more than mere decoration… Photo: Wikipedia . While it’s true that the vast web of life on this planet is essentially solar powered–without the sun’s energy there is no life–new research shows that oriental hornets ( Vespa orientalis ) go one step beyond, employing special structures on their bodies to trap the sun’s rays and turn it directly into energy. Really…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Oriental Hornets Are Literally Solar Powered

Over 3 Million eBooks Now Available to eReaders, Thanks to Google

Image via Google video In a much anticipated launch, Google has now made more than 3 million ebooks available for download on reading devices, including both free classics and new titles for sale at the Google eBookstore. The new option from Google will likely amp up ebook sales and give ereaders from any brand a new push among consumers. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Over 3 Million eBooks Now Available to eReaders, Thanks to Google

Mounting State Debts Stoke Fears of a Looming Crisis

The State of Illinois is still paying off billions in bills that it got from schools and social service providers last year. Arizona recently stopped paying for certain organ transplants for people in its Medicaid program. States are releasing prisoners early, more to cut expenses than to reward good behavior. And in Newark, the city laid off 13 percent of its police officers last week. Yuki Scott, right, watched her daughter and other children one Friday last May in Hawaii, because the school year was shortened by 17 days. While next year could be even worse, there are bigger, longer-term risks, financial analysts say. Their fear is that even when the economy recovers, the shortfalls will not disappear, because many state and local governments have so much debt — several trillion dollars’ worth, with much of it off the books and largely hidden from view — that it could overwhelm them in the next few years. “It seems to me that crying wolf is probably a good thing to do at this point,” said Felix Rohatyn, the financier who helped save New York City from bankruptcy in the 1970s. Some of the same people who warned of the looming subprime crisis two years ago are ringing alarm bells again. Their message: Not just small towns or dying Rust Belt cities, but also large states like Illinois and California are increasingly at risk. Municipal bankruptcies or defaults have been extremely rare — no state has defaulted since the Great Depression, and only a handful of cities have declared bankruptcy or are considering doing so. But the finances of some state and local governments are so distressed that some analysts say they are reminded of the run-up to the subprime mortgage meltdown or of the debt crisis hitting nations in Europe. Analysts fear that at some point — no one knows when — investors could balk at lending to the weakest states, setting off a crisis that could spread to the stronger ones, much as the turmoil in Europe has spread from country to country. Mr. Rohatyn warned that while municipal bankruptcies were rare, they appeared increasingly possible. And the imbalances are so large in some places that the federal government will probably have to step in at some point, he said, even if that seems unlikely in the current political climate. “I don’t like to play the scared rabbit, but I just don’t see where the end of this is,” he added. Story continues here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/05/us/politics/05states.html?src=me&ref=us http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/12/05/us/05states_graphic2/05states_gra… added by: ThatCrazyLibertarian

Finally, A Practical Guide to Dealing With…Manure (Book Review)

Photo credit: Ross Tucknott / Creative Commons It’s not often that a book inspires you to go out and shovel steaming piles of horse poop on a cold November afternoon. But that’s exactly what happened to me after reading Gene Logsdon’s Holy Shit , and I mean it as a resounding compliment to the author. I should note, of course, that it doesn’t take much to get me thinking, and writing, about poop, pee, co… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Finally, A Practical Guide to Dealing With…Manure (Book Review)

Small New York Apartment to Receive Radical Revamp with LifeEdited Competition (Slideshow)

Credit and more images: gaborrieger TreeHugger founder Graham Hill is trying to radically reduce his footprint and live happily with less space, less stuff and less waste on less money, but with more design. He calls it ” LifeEdited. ” You can help: Enter the LifeEdited design competition and win up to $70,000 in prizes and the opportunity to design the apartment! I have been spending a lot of time over at Jovoto , looking at the amazing entries. I have bee… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Small New York Apartment to Receive Radical Revamp with LifeEdited Competition (Slideshow)

When Does Reuse Become Hoarding?

Image credit: striatic , used under Creative Commons license. Whether it’s brilliant ways to reuse your books , or an easy way to reuse wine corks , TreeHugger has seen plenty of craftsy, DIY examples of reuse as a creative way to greener living. But I’ve been thinking lately that good intentions can lead to bad decisions—more specifically, I’ve been wonde… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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When Does Reuse Become Hoarding?