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Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter Pouts that Obama Has to Clean Up Bush’s Mess

Jonathan Alter of Newsweek once again blamed Bush and the Republicans for creating the mess that Obama is now cleaning up, preventing the President from accomplishing his agendas. Alter, appearing Wednesday on MSNBC’s “The Daily Rundown,” called the BP oil spill crisis “the perfect metaphor” for Obama’s presidency so far. “It’s been cleaning up a lot of the messes left to him by his predecessors,” he stated. Alter added that Obama is trying to stop an economic depression “that, you know, began to happen on George Bush’s watch.” “It is a distraction from Obama’s own agenda,” Alter added about the oil spill, “and in that sense, it irritates him.” Not to be outdone, MSNBC anchor Savannah Guthrie chimed in, affirming that the word of the day was “frustration.” “You mentioned frustration, and that’s really the word,” Guthrie opined. “Because you do get the feeling that the President, and certainly his lieutenants over there at the White House, really resent this Washington game that requires the President to emote for public consumption.” As Newsbusters reported Tuesday, Alter has sounded the same criticisms on other cable networks. Appearing on Comedy Central’s The Colbert Report Monday, he claimed that Obama had to run “the shovel brigade” at the beginning of his presidential term. “A shovel brigade,” he eloquently explained, “you know, the guys who sweep up after the elephants when the elephants leave their (expletive) all over the circus, right?” As a guest on the Joy Behar Show on HLN that same night, Alter said that Obama is “frustrated,” and is “cleaning up Bush’s messes,” namely Wall Street, the war in Afghanistan, the auto industry mess, and now the BP oil spill crisis. Describing his encounters with President Obama and his Cabinet  inside the White House during his first term, Alter said that “we were all living history. This man prevented another Great Depression.” The transcript of the June 9 segment of The Daily Rundown, which aired at 9:39am EDT, is as follows: CHUCK TODD: You know, watching him deal with a crisis–this is the first big test–what did you learn about him in year one that you sit there and say, ‘Boy, the lesson he learned from this he’s applying to the oil spill’? JOHNATHAN ALTER, NEWSWEEK: Well first of all, the oil spill is the perfect metaphor for Obama’s presidency so far. It’s been cleaning up a lot of the messes left to him by his predecessors, whether it was bank bailouts, auto bailouts, Afghanistan–which turned out to be a much bigger mess than anybody anticipated–preventing a depression that, you know, began to happen on George Bush’s watch. So this is more of the same, and I think they put it in that category, and in that sense, even though they’ve been much more focused on it from the beginning than I think a lot of the public realizes, it is a distraction from Obama’s own agenda–things like health care, education, that he wants to do that are not so-called ‘legacy issues’ for him. And in that sense, it irritates him. You know, you know that he–he’s very disciplined, very focused, does his homework, is on the case, but it’s not what he wants to be dealing with. And I think it’s part of the reality of being president is that you have to deal with the cards that you’re dealt. And that frustrates him. And then I think the other big problem for him in this is that he’s terrific behind closed doors–that’s what I try to do in The Promise, is I try to take you into what he’s like behind closed doors–at stripping out emotion from any of his calculations, right? And that gives him a higher batting average on decisions, if you make them rationally. But he fails to put emotion back into the equation for the public parts of his job. And that’s where he’s struggling on this oil spill. SAVANNAH GUTHRIE: You mentioned frustration, and that’s really the word. Because you do get the feeling that the President, and certainly his lieutenants over there at the White House, really resent this Washington game that requires the president to emote for public consumption. I mean, they really resent everything about Washington that’s expected of them. Just the way the President hates the idea of having to do a sound byte.

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Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter Pouts that Obama Has to Clean Up Bush’s Mess

California Election Results 2010

Democratic Richard William Aguirre 44,803 4.0% Edmund G. “Jerry” Brown 939,873 84.0% Lowell Darling 18,817 1.6% Vibert Greene 26,874 2.4% Charles “Chuck” Pineda, Jr. 47,268 4.3% Peter Schurman 16,853 1.5% Joe Symmon 25,641 2.2% Republican Bill Chambers 17,253 1.5% Douglas R. Hughes 13,652 1.2% Ken Miller 15,585 1.4% Lawrence “Larry” Naritelli 24,033 2.3% Robert C. Newman II 18,485 1.6% Steve Poizner 287,455 26.5% David Tully-Smith 13,084 1.2% Meg Whitman 699,043 64.3% The California primar

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California Election Results 2010

Hollywood Ink: Hilary Swank Draws Blood

The Daily Spill: Diamond Saw Fail, BP Should Not Pay Out Dividends

http://environment.change.org/blog/view/the_daily_spill_diamond_saw_fail_and_bp_… The Daily Spill serves you up the latest developments as oil continues to coat the Gulf. Forget Plan B, C or D. With how fast their schemes are failing, BP may be soon require the Greek alphabet. So, remember that diamond-tipped saw intended to cut through that troublesome well pipe in order to cap it? Yeah, that got stuck. Most of yesterday went by before it was freed. Now, I kid you not, the company has turned to giant “garden” shears, though it’s unclear when that will begin. Don’t hold your breath. Oh, but just in case you were worried, federal officials assured us that nuclear weapons are not on the table. Nothing would surprise me at this point. Back on the East Coast, President Obama gave a serious and politically important speech yesterday at Carnegie Mellon University. He finally spelled out the obvious: the Gulf disaster should be a catalyst to pass a climate bill with a price on carbon, and also said he wants to roll back billions of dollars in oil company tax breaks – something he had tried to do in past budget proposals. He also vowed to personally whip votes for a climate bill “in coming months,” which climate advocates have urging for awhile. While Obama talked policy, other politicians did what they do best (for better or worse): made demands. Alabama Republican state senator Ben Brooks explained that “there’s nothing inherently contradictory” with a small government advocate, such as himself, demanding the very same wimpy government protect public safety. Um, sure, no comment. Democrats, meanwhile, made some more sensible demands: Sens. Chuck Schumer and Ron Wyden rightly told BP it was “unfathomable” that the company is considering pay shareholder dividends before total cleanup costs are known (the latest estimates rise to nearly $40 billion). Florida Sen. Ben Nelson, in a letter, formally asked that the military take charge, and others said BP CEO Tony Hayward’s head should roll. Some news on this should play out when Hayward addresses his investors tomorrow. Speaking of – the man of the hour has been busy backpedaling, said he was “appalled” by his own “I’d like my life back” remark and admitting to The Financial Times that criticisms of BP’s spill preparedness are “entirely fair.” As for BP’s response since, Vice President Joe Biden seems to believe the company is doing the best it can. BP and Halliburton are certainly experts at getting politicians to favor their interests. The former hired at least 27 former government insiders to be their lobbyists in the first three months of this year alone, reports the Huffington Post, and is a company with incomparable influence. In a busy donation month, the latter gave $17,000 to candidates this November, Politico reports, several of whom are on committees investigating the oil spill. And so much for a respite from new offshore drilling. Yesterday, the Minerals Management Service approved the first new shallow oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico since President Obama put a short moratorium in place. The site is a mere stone’s throw from a Louisiana state wildlife refuge. Drilling in deeper waters, for the record, is still frozen, but I’m not sure I get why drilling closer to the shore is better. At the very least, Interior has taken steps to demand more in drilling applications and, as The Hill reports, is asking approved permit holders to resubmit plans if they’d used a loophole that exempted them from environmental review. And lastly, sometimes being funny pays. Or at least being friends with funny people. The anonymous tweeter behind BPGlobalPR’s fake feed donated $10,000 to the Gulf Restoration Network yesterday. added by: captainplanet71

A Very Posh Rider

Victoria Beckham ‘s rider isn’t the most outrageous we’ve ever seen… But the star did have some pretty particular demands. A source on set spills all the dirty deets: “Chopped fresh fruit – cut pineapple with grated lime peel, green seedless grapes, red grapes (frozen), cut-up pear with lemon juice, apples, peeled pink grapefruit, strawberries, blueberries, raspberries. Please DO NOT MIX up the fruit but keep separate. She’s obsessed with fruit and can’t get enough. The list always gets a chuckle from the lackeys who have to go and get this stuff. If we mix the fruit up there’s hell to pay. But it’s Victoria Beckham. What she wants she gets. Plain Green salad (no dressings on it) – balsamic vinegar on the side. This is NOT balsamic vinaigrette but PLAIN balsamic vinegar. The thicker version so either aged/glazed balsamic (buy at Wholefoods in USA) or take regular and reduce it on the hob. There is never a request for anything with more than a handful of calories. We joked about leaving a Big Mac in the dressing room – but we know we’d get fired.” Other requests include flavored water, tea, scented candles, iPod speakers, a clean robe, baby wipes, white, cream, or purple flowers, and ‘chewing gum’ as a snack! Not exactly what we’d want to nosh on…but that’s why we don’t look like her .

Gleebasing: Schue and Sue Make Sweet Funk

Last night, Schue & the Family Stone taught viewers about funk by moaning about Regionals-related depression, singing about how hard it is to be a pregnant teen, and saying the word “funk” over 50 times. Oh yes, the episode was funky — and not in a good way. Like most of Glee ‘s installments over the past two months, last night’s “Funk” introduced a funk jam of story arcs that won’t be continued next week, some heavy-handed after-school lessons, and another one of Schue’s embarrassingly white dance moves (let’s call it the funky butt rock). So grab your groove thang and let’s relive last night’s stank rhythms.

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Gleebasing: Schue and Sue Make Sweet Funk

New Interview Pretty Much Proves There’s No Explaining Killer Inside Me

If there’s anything Movieline learned from viewing Michael Winterbottom’s lady-pulverizing adaptation of The Killer Inside Me last January at Sundance, it was that the acclaimed British filmmaker may very well be answering for this one, like, forever . Keep in mind this is a guy who once managed to make graphic, unsimulated screen sex forgettable, so no one takes it lightly that Winterbottom might have really drilled into the cultural consciousness for the first time since 2002’s In This World . This could get good — if only he could articulate his impulse to make ground chuck out of Jessica Alba’s face.

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New Interview Pretty Much Proves There’s No Explaining Killer Inside Me

Justin Bieber, Jaden Smith Premiere ‘Karate Kid’ Video, ‘Never Say Never’

Bieber and Smith recorded the track together for Smith’s new movie. By Jocelyn Vena Jaden Smith and Justin Bieber in their video for “Never Say Never” Photo: The Island Def Jam Music Group Justin Bieber has recorded a duet with “Karate Kid” star Jaden Smith called “Never Say Never,” for the movie’s soundtrack. The two also star in the track’s video together, with Bieber saying the clip is “Chuck Norris Approved” and referring to Smith as his “lil’ bro.” The video is a combination of recording-studio footage and scenes from “The Karate Kid,” which hits theaters on June 11. The video shows the teen pop star bouncing alongside the 11-year-old star of the flick as they lay down the vocals for the hip-hop-flavored track. While Bieber has made a career of singing about puppy love, on this song the teen sensation gets his inspirational message on singing lyrics like “I will never say never/ I will fight till forever/ Whenever you knock me down/ I will not stay on the ground/ Pick it up.” The boys goof around with one another in the clip, with Bieber flexing some karate moves and Smith proving he has what it takes to be the heir to his father Will Smith’s rapping throne when he raps during the breakdown of the song. “I can handle him/ Hold up/ I can handle him/ Now he’s bigger than me/ Taller than me/ And he’s older and stronger than me,” Smith raps. He then goes on to say that he was “raised with the power of Will (No pun intended, OK?)” so he can do just about anything, including appearing on a song with Bieber. Bieber later tweeted a message to his fans, saying, “#NeverSayNever to believing in your dreams … u all make mine come true everyday. thank u :)” What do you think of the Bieber/Smith collaboration? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Justin Bieber

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Justin Bieber, Jaden Smith Premiere ‘Karate Kid’ Video, ‘Never Say Never’

Jack Johnson Previews New Songs From To the Sea At Free Concert

Johnson took the album title literally, performing for fans at Santa Monica’s famed pier. By Matt Elias Jack Johnson Photo: MTV News SANTA MONICA, California — Jack Johnson took fans to the sea (literally) on Monday night to celebrate the release of his aptly titled new album To the Sea . The free concert was given to show appreciation for fans who took part in a beach cleanup on Saturday in Santa Monica, which was organized by Southern California nonprofit Heal the Bay. Three thousand fans with free tickets covered a large portion of Santa Monica’s iconic pier for the show. An almost equal amount who weren’t able to score tickets lined the beach below with blankets (those blankets coming in very handy on the unseasonably cold night). Prior to the show, the crowd below was treated to a rare opportunity to hear the man of the night and his band’s soundcheck — thanks in part to the open-air stage. In between songs, the troubadour shouted out to those below, generating enthusiastic responses from the growing crowd. Following the soundcheck, Johnson told MTV News how special the rare pre-show audience was. “A lot of times in soundcheck, we end up just not playing a whole song because it’s just us and we’ve heard it enough times,” Johnson said. “But once there’s people listening — even if it’s 10 or 15 — we usually play a whole song because it’s just nicer to listen to. So this time we had what looks like a couple hundred people at least for a soundcheck. But it was fun. We just played a song that we’re not gonna play tonight — might as well use that one.” While fans might think it’s rare to catch Johnson in such an intimate setting, he continues to play smaller stages back home in Hawaii, mostly for his own nonprofit, the Kokua Hawaii Foundation. Usually in classroom settings, Johnson embraces the unpredictability of not having his road crew with him to set up a professional sound system (he says it’s usually “just me and the guitar”). And on the eve of the release of his fifth studio album, To the Sea (due June 1), the singer/songwriter shared his philosophy on playing new and for the most part never-heard-before songs during his set. “I think there will be a couple of the new songs, kind of finding that balance. Because I just know from being a music fan and going to shows as well, I like hearing some new stuff, but definitely want to hear a lot of the old ones that you already identify with,” Johnson said. True to his words, later that night Johnson sprinkled some new tunes in with his established crowd favorites. He and his band took the stage shortly after 8 p.m. and jumped right into the lead single from To the Sea, called “You and Your Heart.” Acknowledging a few missed chords, Johnson ended the song by saying, “The reason this show is free is because we haven’t played in a month.” The crowd chuckled with him and it set the tone for the loose and free-flowing show. “If I Had Eyes” was next, followed by the Curious George soundtrack song “Upside Down,” which drew a collective “Aww” from the crowd when Johnson dedicated it “to the little girl with the beanie on her head” who was hoisted on her dad’s shoulders. Next up were a series of pairings that Johnson and the band segued into without pausing. They followed “Flake” with the Steve Miller Band classic “The Joker.” “Do You Remember” went into “Bubbly Toes,” which drew a raucous sing-along on the “la da da da da da’s.” They ended the night’s pairings with the crowd favorite “Inaudible Melodies” and “Good People.” Some of the new songs that made it into the set were “To the Sea,” “From the Clouds,” and “At or With Me.” Highlights of the night included pianist Zach Gill’s efforts to keep the crowd warm by initiating an audience-wide pogo jump, bassist Merlo Podlewski’s rap on “Staple It Together,” and most of all, Johnson’s solo encore of “Better Together,” which brought a hush across the crowd, then a whispered sing-along of the tune. And there was no better way to end the night. Related Artists Jack Johnson

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Jack Johnson Previews New Songs From To the Sea At Free Concert

Watch Chuck Season 3 Episode 19 – Chuck vs. The Ring (2)

Watch Chuck S3E19: Chuck vs. The Ring (2) Casey must now go against the Ring as he try to secretly give protection to his daughter while the Ring is now closing in on Chuck and the members of the Operatin Bartowski. Meanwhile, Big Mike gets an unexpected news regarding the Buy More. The latest episode of Chuck is the TV series’ 19th episode of the 3rd season that aired last 05/24/2010 Monday at 8:00 PM on NBC. Watch Chuck 3×19 Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Watch Chuck Season 3 Episode 19 – Chuck vs. The Ring (2)