Tag Archives: Cnn

Larry King Officially Quits

It’s finally happened. Larry King — a suspendered person famous for marrying ladies and interviewing people in a gruff, oft-confused haze — has announced that he will be ending his CNN show Larry King Live this fall. “With this chapter closing I’m looking forward to the future and what my next chapter will bring,” he said in a statement , “but for now it’s time to hang up my nightly suspenders.” Yes, and those suspenders? Try all you want, but they don’t fit you, Piers Morgan . [ CNN ]

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Larry King Officially Quits

For rent in China: White people

Beijing, China (CNN) — In China, white people can be rented. For a day, a weekend, a week, up to even a month or two, Chinese companies are willing to pay high prices for fair-faced foreigners to join them as fake employees or business partners. Some call it “White Guy Window Dressing.” To others, it's known as the “White Guy in a Tie” events, “The Token White Guy Gig,” or, simply, a “Face Job.” And it is, essentially, all about the age-old Chinese concept of face. To have a few foreigners hanging around means a company has prestige, money and the increasingly crucial connections — real or not — to businesses abroad. “Face, we say in China, is more important than life itself,” said Zhang Haihua, author of “Think Like Chinese.” “Because Western countries are so developed, people think they are more well off, so people think that if a company can hire foreigners, it must have a lot of money and have very important connections overseas. So when they really want to impress someone, they may roll out a foreigner.” Or rent one. Last year, Jonathan Zatkin, an American actor who lives in Beijing, posed as the vice president of an Italian jewelry company that had, allegedly, been in a partnership with a Chinese jewelry chain for a decade. When is being foreign a career advantage? Zatkin was paid 2,000 yuan (about $300) to fly, along with a couple of Russian models, to a small city in the central province of Henan where he delivered a speech for the grand opening ceremony of a jewelry store there. “I was up on stage with the mayor of the town, and I made a speech about how wonderful it was to work with the company for 10 years and how we were so proud of all of the work they had done for us in China,” Zatkin said. “They put up a big bandstand and the whole town was there and some other local muckety-mucks.” The requirements for these jobs are simple. 1. Be white. 2. Do not speak any Chinese, or really speak at all, unless asked. 3. Pretend like you just got off of an airplane yesterday. Those who go for such gigs tend to be unemployed actors or models, part-time English teachers or other expats looking to earn a few extra bucks. Often they are jobs at a second- or third-tier city, where the presence of pale-faced foreigners is needed to impress local officials, secure a contract or simply to fulfill a claim of being international. “Occasionally companies want a foreign face to go to meetings and conferences or to go to dinners and lunches and smile at the clients and shake people's hands,” read an ad posted by a company called Rent A Laowai (Chinese for “foreigner”) on the online classified site thebeijinger.com. It continued: “There are job opportunities for girls who are pretty and for men who can look good in a suit.” People like Brad Smith. When Smith — the nom de plume of the Beijing-based American actor — answered CNN's phone call on a recent morning, he was standing outside a meeting room at a Ramada Inn in Hangzhou, a city about 100 miles outside of Shanghai. Today's job: Pretend to be an architect from New York and give design plans for a new museum to local officials. “They have not told me what my name is today. I think it is Lawrence or something,” said Smith — unlike some jobs, no fake business cards were given to hand out. Earlier that morning he went over his script with his Chinese “business partners” at a Kentucky Fried Chicken. “It says, 'Good morning distinguished leaders. It is my privilege to participate in this program',” said Smith, who asked that his real name not be used for fear it could jeopardize future jobs. If Smith is asked a question, he is told to pretend to answer as his “translator” pretends to understand. Occasionally, these jobs can go awry. Smith said 18 months ago Beijing police showed up at his apartment after a financial company he worked at for a couple of months in Xi'an, a city in western China, allegedly swindled millions of yuan out of clients. “That company said I was the guy in charge,” he said. “I didn't even remember the company's name. After that, I decided I was never going to use my passport again with these fake companies. The small gigs are much less dangerous.” Sometimes companies will hire Caucasians simply to sit in the office a few hours a day near the window where clients and customers can see them. White women are also a hot commodity, sometimes to pose as phony foreign girlfriends, or, in the case of Vicky Mohieddeen, to pretend to be an oil tycoon. Mohieddeen, who is Scottish, took a job in 2008 to attend what she describes as some sort of “oil drilling conference” in Shandong province for 300 yuan ($44). Several busloads of foreigners, with nationalities ranging from Pakistani to Nigerian, were trucked to the event, she said. They were greeted by brass bands and feted with a sumptuous dinner. “I was like, 'Yeah, we have a lot of oil in Scotland.' I didn't know what to say. It was a bit nerve-racking. We were guests of honor of the vice mayor. We were put in a nice hotel. It was quite fancy.” For Mohieddeen, who had just arrived in Beijing at the time, the experience, albeit bizarre, was an introduction to a side of China most foreigners will never see. “It is part of what China is all about, you know,” Mohieddeen said. “There is quite an elaborate fantasy world going on here where if everyone buys into it, it does not matter if it is the truth. Those kinds of experiences give me a fuller understanding of the way the culture works.” added by: eden49

Obama Cryptically Warns He’ll Present "Very Difficult Choices to the Country"

Im doing it because i said i was going to do it and i think its the right thing to do people should learn that lesson about me, because next year when I start presenting some very difficult choices to the country, I hope some of these folks who are hollering about deficits and debt step up because i'm calling their bluff and we'll see how much of that political arguments theyre making right now are real and how much of it was just politics ” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Up2uoob1Huk added by: ibrake4rappers13

McDonald’s McNuggets made with ‘Silly Putty’ chemical

What kid doesn't love McDonald's Chicken McNuggets? The white meat chunks are tasty and perfect for little mouths and hands. And while most parents are aware that McNuggets aren't perfectly healthy, they probably don't know exactly what goes into making them. CNN has revealed that the fast-food chain makes this popular menu item with the chemical preservative tBHQ, tertiary butylhydroquinone, a petroleum-based product. Mcnuggets also contain dimethylpolysiloxane, “an anti-foaming agent” also used in Silly Putty. Across the Atlantic in Britain, McNuggets don't contain these chemicals and they're less fattening. CNN reports: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfmoms/detail?entry_id=66729 added by: CarlosBobthe3rd

AP Breaking: Supremes’ Ruling ‘Casts Doubt’ on Chicago Handgun Ban

Lord have mercy, even when it hits him in the face, the Associated Press’s Mark Sherman won’t concede the obvious : “Cast doubt”? Is that what court rulings do now? A USA Today item has it right: Other sources describing the ruling accurately include:  CNN — “Court rules for gun rights, strikes Chicago handgun ban” Fox News — “High Court’s Big Ruling For Gun Rights.” From text: “Today’s ruling also invalidates Chicago’s handgun ban.” Reuters, as carried at the New York Times — “Supreme Court Rules Chicago Gun Ban Unconstitutional” As with the Washington, DC Heller case in 2008 , the real outrage is that the ruling was 5-4. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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AP Breaking: Supremes’ Ruling ‘Casts Doubt’ on Chicago Handgun Ban

TV Bites: Katie Couric Rejects Larry King’s Leftovers

Tar Balls Reported Washed Ashore Onto Mississippi Mainland | Alex Heads Into the Gulf of Mexico

Tar balls reported on Mississippi mainland; Alex heads into Gulf By the CNN Wire Staff June 27, 2010 10:58 p.m. EDT (CNN) — Mississippi officials reported oily tar balls washing up on their mainland shores for the first time Sunday, as authorities throughout the Gulf Coast region kept a wary eye on Tropical Storm Alex. “It has hit our shores,” said Pascagoula, Mississippi, Mayor Robbie Maxwell, adding that tar balls washed up on a nearby stretch of beach during the afternoon Sunday. “This is what we've been expecting. We had hoped and prayed we would somehow miss this, but it's hit us now. The good news is that for the last five or six weeks we've been preparing to attack it when it hit our shores, and that's exactly what we've done,” Maxwell said. A 23-person crew was out on the beach Sunday afternoon, collecting tar balls, he said. “Now that we have it on our shores, every day it'll have to be attacked again,” the mayor added. Mississippi officials said while tar balls and glob-like “mousse patties” washed ashore in at least four locations, the areas affected were relatively small and no beaches were closed. Meanwhile, Alex restrengthened into a Tropical Storm Sunday night as it headed into the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico, according to the National Weather Service but it is expected to steer clear of oil-affected areas. The storm had temporarily weakened to a tropical depression as it passed over Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. “We think the storm is going to stay on a more southern track. That would be good news because it would avoid the area near the oil spill,” said Todd Kimberlain of the National Hurricane Center. However, forecasters have not ruled out an easterly shift in Alex's path. “We all know the weather is unpredictable, and we could have a sudden last-minute change,” said Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the federal government's response manager. The governors of Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi and Alabama declared Sunday a day of prayer in their respective states as efforts to cap the massive gusher continue. Researchers have estimated that between 35,000 barrels — about 1.5 million gallons — and 60,000 barrels — about 2.5 million gallons — of oil are gushing into the ocean every day. If Alex forces a work stoppage at the ruptured BP well, officials fear that as much as 2.5 million gallons of oil could flow into the Gulf for two weeks. That is because it would take 14 days to put everything back in place — meaning the containment cap would be off for that period, allowing oil to flow freely, Allen said. BP plans to place a third rig called the Helix Producer at the well site next week, which will increase the amount of oil being captured to 53,000 barrels a day, Allen said. That, too, could be disrupted if Alex affects the area. Alex is the first named storm of what is expected to be a fierce Atlantic hurricane season. It formed in the Caribbean on Saturday. Tropical storm warnings for the coast of Belize and the east coast of the Yucatan were discontinued earlier Sunday, the hurricane center said. Alex soaked Belize after making landfall in the Central American nation several hours earlier with maximum sustained winds of 65 mph. After dropping in wind speed over the Yucatan, Alex's winds increased to 45 mph with higher gusts Sunday night, the National Hurricane Center said. The system was moving west-northwest at near 7 mph. “Additional strengthening is forecast during the next 48 hours, and Alex could become a hurricane in the next 48 hours,” the hurricane center said. Alex is expected to make landfall Thursday morning near La Pesca, Mexico. In the meantime, forecasters said Sunday that Alex was expected to dump 4 to 8 inches of rain over the Yucatan peninsula, southern Mexico and Guatemala through Tuesday, with 15 inches possible over mountainous areas. “These rains could cause life-threatening flash floods and mudslides,” the hurricane center said. Oil company BP said the storm has not forced any evacuations at the oil spill site. But, to the south, BP and Shell were evacuating all nonessential personnel from oil platforms as a precaution. Gulf Coast residents feared that high winds and storm surges could spread the slick and push more oil ashore into bays, estuaries and pristine beaches, exacerbating the oil disaster triggered by BP's ruptured well. “The greatest nightmare with this storm approaching is that it takes this oil on the surface of the Gulf and blows it over the barrier islands into the bays and the estuaries,” Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida said. “And that is where you really get the enormous destruction, because it's just very difficult to clean up those pristine bays.” If the storm heads to the east of the oil spill, it would send the oil farther out to sea. If the storm heads more directly toward the central Gulf and Louisiana, it might push the oil toward Florida. “We've never been in this situation before,” CNN meteorologist Karen Maginnis said. “We've never seen an oil spill that encompassed the Gulf like this, end up so close to shore.” CNN's April Williams, Patty Lane, Chuck Johnston, Brandon Miller, T.J. Holmes and Moni Basu contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

U.S. Senator Robert Byrd, Longest-Serving Congress Member in History, Has Been Hospitalized in Serious Condition

Sen. Robert Byrd hospitalized in serious condition By the CNN Wire Staff June 27, 2010 5:41 p.m. EDT Washington (CNN) — Sen. Robert Byrd, the 92-year-old Democrat from West Virginia who is the longest-serving Congress member in history, has been hospitalized in serious condition, his office said Sunday. Byrd was admitted to a Washington area hospital last week and his condition is “seriously ill,” according to the statement by his office. Initially thought to be suffering from heat exhaustion and severe dehydration, Byrd was expected to remain in hospital for “not more than a few days,” the statement said. “However, upon further examination by his doctors, other conditions have developed which has resulted in his condition being described as 'serious,' ” the statement concluded. West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin said in a statement Sunday that he and his wife “are thinking about and praying for Sen. Byrd and his family.” “We are truly hopeful that he gets well soon because West Virginians need his leadership in Washington,” the statement said. “Sen. Byrd is a true champion for our state.” Slowed by illness in recent years, Byrd spent six weeks in the hospital in 2009 due to a staph infection. Last November, he became the longest-serving member of Congress at more than 57 years, surpassing the old record set by Arizona Democrat Carl T. Hayden. Byrd also is the only person elected to nine full terms in the Senate. He served six years in the U.S. House before becoming a senator, and has never lost an election. added by: EthicalVegan

CBS’s Logan Zings Hastings: He’s ‘Never Served His Country the Way McChrystal Has’

Lara Logan, CBS’s chief foreign affairs correspondent, took to CNN’s Reliable Sources on Sunday to accuse Michael Hastings, who was interviewed by Howard Kurtz in the preceding segment, of using subterfuge and Rolling Stone of pushing an agenda in their hit piece on General Stanley McChrystal, both of which unfairly tarnished McCrystal and will lead to more military wariness toward the journalists. Logan castigated Hastings: The question is, really, is what General McChrystal and his aides are doing so egregious, that they deserved to end a career like McChrystal’s? Michael Hastings has never served his country the way McChrystal has. As for Hastings’ insistence he didn’t break any “off the record” ground rules, Logan declared: “Something doesn’t add up here. I just — I don’t believe it.” The subterfuge really infuriated Logan: “What I find is the most telling thing about what Michael Hastings said in your interview is that he talked about his manner as pretending to build an illusion of trust and, you know, he’s laid out there what his game is. That is exactly the kind of damaging type of attitude that makes it difficult for reporters who are genuine about what they do….Clearly, you’ve got someone who is making friends with you, pretending to be sympathetic, pretending to be something that they’re not…” Taking on Rolling Stone, Logan charged the “magazine put their own spin on this. They said that the greatest enemy for McChrystal is the wimps in Washington. Nowhere in the article does McChrystal refer to ‘the wimps in Washington.’ That’s Rolling Stone magazine, how they chose to cast this, to make it as sensational as possible. And that was with intent.” In the pevious segment, Hastings insisted to Kurtz that he doesn’t have a political agenda: “If Bill O’Reilly is calling you a far-left critic, in my book, no matter what your political persuasion is, that probably means you’re doing a good job.” (A couple of tweets I sent a few days ago about the political persuasions of McChrystal and Petraeus, starting with banning the wrong outlet: > Marc Ambinder on McChrystal: A liberal, voted for Obama, “he banned Fox News from the TV sets in his headquarters.” http://bit.ly/cx1t8i > Petraeus has home in NH where “his personal vehicle sports ‘Live Free or Die’ license plates.” Union Leader story: http://shar.es/mIeUw ) From the Sunday, June 27 Reliable Sources on CNN: HOWARD KURTZ: If you had been traveling with General McChrystal and heard these comments about Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Jim Jones, Richard Holbrooke, would you have reported them? LARA LOGAN, CBS CHIEF FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT: Well, it really depends on the circumstances. It’s hard to know — Michael Hastings, if you believe him, says that there were no ground rules laid out. And, I mean, that just doesn’t really make a lot of sense to me, because if you look at the people around General McChrystal, if you look at his history, he was the Joint Special Operations commander. He has a history of not interacting with the media at all. And his chief of intelligence, Mike Flynn, is the same. I mean, I know these people. They never let their guard down like that. To me, something doesn’t add up here. I just — I don’t believe it. KURTZ: When you are out with the troops and you’re living together and sleeping together, is there an unspoken agreement- LOGAN: Absolutely. KURTZ: -that you’re not going to embarrass them by reporting insults and banter? LOGAN: Yes. KURTZ: Tell me about that. LOGAN: Yes, absolutely. There is an element of trust. And what I find is the most telling thing about what Michael Hastings said in your interview is that he talked about his manner as pretending to build an illusion of trust and, you know, he’s laid out there what his game is. That is exactly the kind of damaging type of attitude that makes it difficult for reporters who are genuine about what they do, who don’t — I don’t go around in my personal life pretending to be one thing and then being something else. I mean, I find it egregious that anyone would do that in their professional life. And, I mean, I take that to the point of, even when I apply to interview someone about something difficult, and they want to know the areas of the interview, I might not say, well, we’re going to spend the whole interview on this, but I will list that. I will list that controversial issue. KURTZ: Because you don’t want to blindside them. LOGAN: Because I don’t believe in that. KURTZ: But don’t beat reporters — aren’t they nice to people to gain their confidence, and sometimes they have to write things that are not flattering? LOGAN: Of course. I mean, the military is a good example. I have never been — they never know what to do with me because I’ve never been accused of being right wing. And they want to paint me as left wing because they expect the media to be that way. But, if you look at my body of work, it’s been always been accurate and fair. Now, Michael Hastings might look at my body of work and say, well, there’s an example of another one of those reporters, unlike me, that didn’t go and tell the truth because they wanted to come back. That’s not the case at all. KURTZ: He says that all of the things that have been written about Stanley McChrystal have been these glowing profiles. He’s suggesting that he did a job that the regular beat journalists have not done. LOGAN: I think that’s insulting and arrogant, myself. I really do, because there are very good beat reporters who have been covering these wars for years, year after year. Michael Hastings appeared in Baghdad fairly late on the scene, and he was there for a significant period of time. He has his credentials, but he’s not the only one. There are a lot of very good reporters out there. And to be fair to the military, if they believe that a piece is balanced, they will let you back. They may not have loved it. They didn’t love the piece I did about hand grenades being thrown in Iraq that were killing troops. They didn’t love that piece, it made a lot of people very angry. They didn’t block me from coming back. KURTZ: The Washington Post quoted an unnamed senior military official as saying that Michael Hastings broke the off-the-record ground rules. But the person who said this was on background and wouldn’t allow his name to be used. Is that fair? LOGAN: Well, it’s Kryptonite right now. I mean, do you blame them? The commanding general in Afghanistan just lost his job. Who else is going to lose his job? Believe me, all the senior leadership in Afghanistan are waiting for the ax to fall. I’ve been speaking to some of them. They don’t know who’s going to stay and who’s going to go. I mean, the question is, really, is what General McChrystal and his aides are doing so egregious, that they deserved to end a career like McChrystal’s? Michael Hastings has never served his country the way McChrystal has. KURTZ: Is this going to prompt the military, in general, the commanders in Afghanistan in particular, to be more wary of journalists? LOGAN: Of course, because what you see is not what you get. Clearly, you’ve got someone who is making friends with you, pretending to be sympathetic, pretending to be something that they’re not, and then they’re taking what you say — when you start an article with General McChrystal making obscene gestures, you’re not even using something that he said. And Rolling Stone magazine put their own spin on this. They said that the greatest enemy for McChrystal is the wimps in Washington. Nowhere in the article does McChrystal refer to “the wimps in Washington.” That’s Rolling Stone magazine, how they chose to cast this, to make it as sensational as possible. And that was with intent.

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CBS’s Logan Zings Hastings: He’s ‘Never Served His Country the Way McChrystal Has’

Kathleen Parker Uses Her WaPo Column to Play Up Her Humility…and Her New Lucrative Star Turn on CNN

Naturally, Kathleen Parker used her Sunday space on the Washington Post to do what every other Parker column in The Washington Post has sought to do: prepare for the next career step. That would mean proclaiming her humility, shock and/or horror that she would get a nightly prime time hour on CNN, defending/excusing Eliot Spitzer, and declaring that she’s keeping her syndicated column (after all, the ratings might not be promising). Her tender solicitations for Spitzer and his genius in tackling Wall Street are the pink-nausea-pill part: He was prescient about Wall Street, in other words, long before the recent financial crisis. Who wouldn’t be interested in what he has to say about financial reform today? I’m not defending Spitzer or condoning his behavior. [Ahem, yes, you are.] Ultimately, I decided that his obvious intelligence, insights and potential contributions outweighed his other record. As far as I’m concerned, especially given that he has resigned from public office, the flaws that brought Spitzer down are between him and his family. Like most Americans, I believe in redemption. In the Parker career plan, then, this is the motto: I don’t believe in the creepy G-O-D people who are ruining the Republican Party with their “oogedy-boogedy armband religion” of redemption, but I do believe in the redemption of people who can be my meal ticket on CNN at “almost $700,000 a year.” In addition to that number, the New York Post also reported that former CNN host Connie Chung dumped on the new project: “It’s sadly comical…and this is terribly disillusioning. Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert will give you more solid journalism than this program could possibly give.” Ouch. Parker’s Sunday column-slash-commercial has moments that are beyond parody. Mrs. Parker writes from “The Bunker,” and she is so writerly and anti-social that “Except when out for interviews and reporting, I mostly keep the company of one tiny blind poodle recently adopted from a shelter.” (Please report this to the NutraSweet Toxicity Information Center.) She loves shelter dogs, and those drooling, cheating politician dogs.    But the commercial continues. You’ll love this CNN show, she promises, because it will be like a “very interesting dinner party” (without the food or drinks). She is overcoming her quiet life with the Bunker and the poodle to be the Republican version of Alan Colmes:  That relatively quiet life is about to end, and I leave it with a mixture of excitement and trepidation. The trepidation is no mystery. It is the same for me as it would be for you. The excitement has to do with trying something new and challenging, as well as having resources at my disposal to explore the issues that really matter. For me those are the things we consider on our deathbeds — not who is up or down on a given day but how we have occupied our allotted space. Did we leave it better or worse? Did we cause someone to smile or laugh? Although the show is still in development, we intend to include regular contributors and guests selected in part from our own Rolodexes. Think of it as eavesdropping on a very interesting dinner party. It will be “interesting” because it won’t be a “food fight.” I’m sure that’s what CNN promised with the last several failed shows in the 8 pm hour. At this point, they ought to promise that watching Eliot and Kathleen fight will be almost as interesting as Mr. and Mrs. Spitzer fighting. If you’re going to build a show around shameless tabloid adultery, you ought to go whole-hog. But Mrs. Parker is above all that. In fact, she’s above the demeaning sphere of television:  I’m on record about my general dislike of the food-fight mentality of most television programming, which we hope to avoid. I’ve also expressed my kinship with aborigines who believe that the camera steals the soul. I think they’re on to something. If she really believed her own sales talk, she would have turned down the job, and the embarrassing you’ll-love-Eliot talk that comes with it. The first time I attacked Parker for selling out the conservative side to get on TV, she e-mailed me protesting that she wasn’t doing this to appear on the Chris Matthews Show, which she then began regularly doing. I would hope she’s beyond pretending now that she’s not selling out to get on liberal TV.

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Kathleen Parker Uses Her WaPo Column to Play Up Her Humility…and Her New Lucrative Star Turn on CNN