Tag Archives: chicago

TMZ’s NBA Insider — LeBron’s Going to the Knicks

Filed under: Jared Dudley , LeBron James , TMZ Sports Sorry Cleveland … and Chicago … and New Jersey … LeBron James is headed for the New York Knicks … at least according to Phoenix Suns superstar (and TMZ special reporter) Jared Dudley . Jared just phoned into TMZ Live … and revealed that his top… Read more

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TMZ’s NBA Insider — LeBron’s Going to the Knicks

January Jones as a Redhead: Hot or Not?

January Jones is featured in a new new photo shoot for celebrity hairdresser Mark Townsend. The Mad Men star, who was involved in an unusual hit-and-run accident last month, has traded in her flowing blonde locks for a short, red style. Says Townsend of the look: “You always see January as this ’50s, sort of Grace Kelly character. I wanted to really show off the power of hair and makeup with a bit of a ’20s influence.” Catch Jones as Betty Draper when Mad Men premieres its fourth season on July 25 – and sound off below on this change… With this look, the actress is…

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January Jones as a Redhead: Hot or Not?

Snooki, JWoww Sued Over Alleged Club Beatdown

Filed under: Snooki , JWOWW , Jersey Shore , Celebrity Justice ” Jersey Shore ” stars Snooki and JWoww are being sued by a Chicago woman who claims the guidettes roughed her up during filming of the show. Carrie Malec is suing the pair — along with MTV and Viacom — over a fight that allegedly occurred in a Miami… Read more

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Snooki, JWoww Sued Over Alleged Club Beatdown

Jersey Shore Shenanigans Spur Suit Against Snooki and JWOWW [Shore Thing]

A Chicago woman has filed suit against MTV, parent company Viacom, and Jersey Shore pugilists Snooki and JWOWW after the dynamic duo beat the snot out of her at a Miami club in what appears to be a territorial dispute. More

Dwyane Wade & Chris Bosh — The Steak Summit

NBA free agents Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh met up for a steak dinner in Chicago last night — but TMZ has learned, the meal was supposed to include a third NBA star … who just couldn’t make it. The two — along with their agent Henry Thomas — met up… Read more

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Dwyane Wade & Chris Bosh — The Steak Summit

Policing Free Speech / Political Spying: ACLU Review

Welcome to the surveillance society That’s what the American Civil Liberties Union concluded Tuesday with a report chronicling government spying and the detention of groups and individuals “for doing little more than peacefully exercising their First Amendment rights.” The report, Policing Free Speech: Police Surveillance and Obstruction of First Amendment-Protected Activity (.pdf), http://www.aclu.org/files/assets/Spyfiles_2_0.pdf surveys news accounts and studies of questionable snooping and arrests in 33 states and the District of Columbia over the past decade. The survey provides an outline of, and links to, dozens of examples of Cold War-era snooping in the modern age. “Our review of these practices has found that Americans have been put under surveillance or harassed by the police just for deciding to organize, march, protest, espouse unusual viewpoints and engage in normal, innocuous behaviors such as writing notes or taking photographs in public,” Michael German, an ACLU attorney and former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, said in a statement. Here are a few examples: At a California State University, Fresno lecture on veganism, six of the 60 in attendance were undercover officers from the local and campus police. The Oakland Police Department in California had infiltrated a police-brutality demonstration, and its undercover officers selected “the route of the march.” A vegetarian activist in Georgia was arrested for jotting down the license plate of a Department of Homeland Security agent who was snapping photos of a protest outside a Honey Baked Ham store. A Joint Terrorism Task Force in Illinois went on a three-day manhunt in Chicago searching for a Muslim man for his suspicious activity of using a hand counter on a bus. As it turned out, the man was counting his daily prayers. A Kentucky minister was detained at Canadian border trying to enter the United States because he had purchased copies of the Koran on the internet following the 2001 terror attacks. A New York, Muslim-American student journalist was detained for taking pictures of Old Glory outside a Veterans Affairs building as part of a class project. The authorities deleted the pictures before releasing her an hour later. added by: Stoneyroad

Most in Media Ignore Blago Characterizing Obama: ‘More Tony’d Up Than I Am’

Maybe it’s the sheer joy of celebrating recovery summer along with The Anointed One and Plugs Biden.  Perhaps they’re just Blagoed out. Whatever the reason, most of the mainstream media failed to report something intriguing said by the usually most quotable former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich.  From an FBI tape recorded last November and appearing on Fox Chicago News’s Web site , Blagojevich spoke of president-elect Barack Obama: BLAGOJEVICH I thin-, you know, it’s really, I get that I’m a big boy and I can handle that, but it’s really f***ing galling, this guy is more Tony’d up than I am. And it’s almost like they f***ing conspi-, made a concerted effort and they got the Chicago media to f***ing make me wear Rezko more. To f***ing dilute it from him. Blago’s disillusionment with Obama stemmed from a rebuff conveyed by a Service Employees International Union (SEIU) official used by the president-elect to let the Gov know of Obama’s interest in Valerie Jarrett filling his Senate seat. Blago makes for good copy and the mainstream media have rarely missed a chance to quote him.  Yet in this instance, they took a powder.  It’s not as though they’re unaware of the Obama-Rezko connection. In 2006, Obama told the Chicago Sun-Times he’d known Tony Rezko for years, having lunch with him probably once or twice a year. When Obama decided to buy a $1.65 million mansion in Chicago, he approached Rezko who “developed an interest” and purchased adjoining land. The closing on the properties took place the same day. The Obamas paid $300,000 less than the asking price; the Rezkos paid the full price. A few months later, Obama, wanting to increase the size of his backyard, bought a strip of Rezko’s property for $104,500. As the Sun-Times story noted: “The transaction occurred at a time when it was widely known Tony Rezko was under investigation by U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald and as other Illinois politicians befriended by Rezko distanced themselves from him.” Possibly Obama was indeed “more Tony’d up” than Blagojevich.  Yet almost no news outlets found Blagojevich’s description, made when he was unaware of being recorded, newsworthy.  Just a coincidence no doubt.    

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Most in Media Ignore Blago Characterizing Obama: ‘More Tony’d Up Than I Am’

Morning Shows Spare a Scant Two and a Half Minutes for ‘Landmark’ Gun Ruling

Despite referring to it as “landmark” and “huge,” the network morning shows on Tuesday mostly ignored Monday’s Supreme Court ruling, which declared the Second Amendment a fundamental right that cannot be violated by state governments. Good Morning America, The Early Show and Today devoted just two minutes and 34 seconds to discussing the important decision. ABC’s GMA offered 21 seconds with a single Juju Chang news brief during the two hour program. This didn’t stop the show’s hosts from covering crucial topics, such as spending eight and a half minutes dissecting whether Michael Douglas’ ex-wife deserves residuals from his upcoming Wall Street sequel. CBS’s Early Show allowed 25 seconds for Jan Crawford to explain the significance of the decision. Host Chris Wragge rushed, “Now what’s the importance, if you can just tell us quickly, of this 5-4 decision?” Crawford exclaimed, “Chris, this was a huge ruling that basically extended gun rights nationwide.” Apparently, it wasn’t as compelling as the five minutes and 15 seconds the same show devoted to cooking flank steak for the Fourth of July. NBC provided the most coverage, one minute and 48 seconds. This included an anchor brief by news reader Nancy Morales and a full report by Pete Williams. Morales described the decision as “landmark.” Williams actually included a brief clip of NRA Vice President Wayne LaPierre promising more lawsuits against cities and states that don’t follow the court’s instructions. The lack of coverage follows the same pattern from 2008 when the Supreme Court overturned Washington D.C.’s gun ban. On June 27, 2008 , all three morning shows gave a total of three minutes and 33 seconds to the story. Early Show, instead, focused four minutes on the extremely relevant subject of how to Feng Shui your house for pets A transcript of the coverage can be found below: GMA 06/29/10 7:14 JUJU CHANG: Chicago’s mayor is vowing to rewrite the city’s ban on handguns, after a Supreme Court decision made it unenforceable. The high court ruled Americans have a basic right to own a handgun for self-defense , wherever they live. Chicago may instead demand that gun owners buy insurance, register guns with local police and equip them with traceable bullets. Today 06/29/10 7:17 NATALIE MORALES: Major cities across the U.S. are bracing for new challenges to their gun control laws. On Monday the Supreme Court’s ruling on Chicago’s handgun ban said an individual right to keep and bear arms is among the fundamental rights necessary to our system of ordered liberty. 8:02 NATALIE MORALES: Some big cities in the U.S. are bracing for new battles over gun laws, following a landmark ruling Monday by the Supreme Court. NBC’s justice correspondent Pete Williams has more. Pete, good morning. PETE WILLIAMS: Natalie, for the first time in the nation’s history, the court said the Second Amendment, the right to bear arms, limits what state and local governments can do in restricting gun ownership. POLICE VIDEO: We have got shots fired over here. WILLIAMS: The ruling means the end of a 38-year-old Chicago law strictly banning handguns, challenged by city residents who wanted to have a gun at home for self-defense. By a vote of 5-4, the Supreme Court said the nation’s founders considered the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms among the fundamental rights necessary to our system of ordered liberty. Chicago officials said they might now try requiring gun registration or training courses. But, advocates of gun rights vow to fight any city that tries to raise barriers to gun ownership. WAYNE LAPIERRE (NRA): I think the action goes to wherever the politicians make it so hard for average citizens to qualify, make the process so intimidating, so restrictive, citizens never get the guns. WILLIAMS: The next legal battles are already brewing over carrying guns in public or taking them into bars and restaurants. But advocates of gun control say the court’s ruling applies only to the right to keep a gun at home for self-defense. PAUL HELMKE (Brady Handgun Control): It doesn’t mean anybody can have any gun any place, anytime. You are allowed to have reasonable restrictions in the middle on who gets guns. WILLIAMS: Local governments can still impose some restrictions on owning a gun but this ruling sparks a new round of legal challenges on what’s reasonable, Natalie. Early Show 06/29/10 7:15 CHRIS WRAGGE: And quickly, on a separate note here, I want to talk about this Supreme Court ruling. They ruled that had state and local governments cannot ban guns. Now what’s the importance, if you can just tell us quickly, of this 5-4 decision? JAN CRAWFORD: Chris, this was a huge ruling that basically extended gun rights nationwide. It said cities and states across the country cannot flatly outright ban handguns, that you have a fundamental right to own a gun in your own home to protect yourself.

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Morning Shows Spare a Scant Two and a Half Minutes for ‘Landmark’ Gun Ruling

Jennifer Hudson Calls Murders Of Her Family ‘Surreal’

‘It’s all a blur. It was surreal,’ she says in episode of VH1’s ‘Behind the Music.’ By Jocelyn Vena Jennifer Hudson Photo: Alexandra Wyman/WireImage On Monday night’s episode of “Behind the Music,” Jennifer Hudson openly discussed the tragic October 2008 murders of her mother, brother and nephew for the first time, describing that time as “surreal.” “It’s all a blur. It was surreal,” she said in the episode. “It was like I was outside of myself. For almost two weeks straight … [I was] inside one room with just family and friends coming in and out. I prayed when I’d get up in the morning and prayed before I laid down at night.” Not long after Hudson got engaged to David Otunga and released her debut album, the bodies of Hudson’s mother, Darnell Hudson Donerson, 57, and older brother, Jason, 29, were discovered inside the home Hudson grew up in on Chicago’s South Side. Julian King, Hudson’s 7-year-old nephew, was reported missing soon after. His body was later discovered in an SUV on Chicago’s West Side. All three victims died from multiple gunshot wounds. William Balfour , the estranged husband of Hudson’s sister Julia, was charged with the murders. Hudson remained relatively low-profile after the murders until the 2009 Grammys, where she performed “You Pulled Me Through.” “I was definitely thinking of my family when I was singing that song,” she said. “I could hear my brother in my head, like, ‘Jennifer, you need to kill this, you need to get up and do it.’ I knew he would be disappointed if I didn’t do it justice.” Since that time in her life she said, “I feel like I’ve lived about three or four different lives,” adding that her son, David Jr. , “reminds me of my nephew.” “In so many ways I channel [my mother] because she was such a great mom.” She said her son “makes me feel like the most special person on earth. I want him to get the same love and the same upbringing my mother gave us.” Related Artists Jennifer Hudson

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Jennifer Hudson Calls Murders Of Her Family ‘Surreal’

Open Thread: The 2nd Amendment as a Civil Rights Issue

Yesterday’s landmark Supreme Court decision overturning the blanket handgun ban in Chicago continues the legacy of the civil rights movement, some commentators argue . Within the text of the 214-page Supreme Court ruling on gun rights is a history lesson on how Americans’ right to keep and bear arms was a major issue in the struggle for black civil rights in the South after the Civil War. To wit, Southern resisters, black codes and lawless lawmen attempted to disarm freedmen (usually in order to make them more vulnerable to racist terrorism), and the federal government came to their rescue by protecting their 2nd Amendment rights. The quotations and detailed references leave absolutely no question that Congress and the ratifiers of the 14th Amendment viewed it — and accompanying post-war civil rights legislation — as a safeguard against state infringement of the 2nd Amendment right of the people to keep and bear arms. It’s not a part of our history that the Left has much stomach for, but fewer people argue against the obvious now that the Democratic Party has all but conceded the gun issue. What do you think? Is gun control a civil rights issue, or is this blogger muddying the waters? Follow the link above for a more complete history lesson.

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Open Thread: The 2nd Amendment as a Civil Rights Issue