Tag Archives: Culture

Wilmer Valderrama Bugs Out, the Teen Choice Awards Put on a Sustainable Show, and More

Photo via Blogamole If your reaction to insects is more fearful than interested, then Wilmer Valderrama has a show for you: He’s signed on to produce the Science Channel’s new series “Bugging Out,” which he hopes will get people to stop fearing creepy-crawlies and learn to appreciate them. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Wilmer Valderrama Bugs Out, the Teen Choice Awards Put on a Sustainable Show, and More

Australia’s Moreton Bay Could Become a Coral Lifeboat

Though ship traffic and pollution mean that Moreton Bay won’t be idyllic home, it might be just good enough to harbor the world’s threatened corals. Image credit: Cindy Andrie /Flickr Thanks to climate change, pollution, and ocean acidification, the fate of many of the world’s coral reefs is a good as sealed. This leaves biologists and conservationists with the troubling tasks of preservation —where possible—and rehabilitation. One possible solution is transp… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Australia’s Moreton Bay Could Become a Coral Lifeboat

Best of Ecouterre: 7 Fashion Labels With a Conscience

+ TOMS Shoes is arguably the best-known for-profit social enterprise. Its schtick? It donates a pair of shoes to a child in need for every pair you purchase. + Taking a page from TOMS is 141 Eyewear . For every pair of retro-flavored horn-rimmed spectacles you purchase, the company donates a pair of glasses to a child who can’t afford them. +

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Best of Ecouterre: 7 Fashion Labels With a Conscience

Incredible Images of Pilot Whales in the Strait of Gibraltar

Marine biologist Rory Moore and his team, including photographer Danny Kessler, came across pilot whales in the Strait of Gibraltar in the Mediterranean and managed to take some extraordinary photographs of the curious animals. Pilot whales rarely come into contact with humans thanks to strict diving regulations, so the images are an extra special treat. While they appear to be playful, graceful and comedic, the toothed pilot whales can also become aggressive and deadly, which makes the photos all the more intriguing…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Incredible Images of Pilot Whales in the Strait of Gibraltar

Open Thread: Steven Slater Is No Hero

At the Corner, Rich Lowry writes of the nation’s – and the media’s – strange fascination with a man who really has not done much to earn it, beyond throwing a temper tantrum. The opposite of Slater’s spectacular self-indulgence is Capt. Chesley Sullenberger’s unadorned professionalism. The air-travel hero of 2009, Sully landed his plane in the Hudson River while feeling, he said afterward, “calm on the outside, turmoil on the inside.” Which is the way it’s supposed to be. Sadly, Sully always felt like a throwback – steady, no-nonsense, thoroughly competent. This year’s air-travel hero managed, in contrast, to leverage a tantrum into an act of reckless endangerment, by risking dropping the legendary emergency chute on someone’s head. But, hey, he blew off steam. Back in 1982, a British Airways plane lost all four engines in flight. As the British newspaper the Daily Mail recounts, Capt. Eric Moody apprised the passengers of the dire situation, and added, “I trust you are not in too much distress.” The paper continues, “Incredibly, passengers and crew reacted to the captain’s cataclysmic announcement not with screams and hysteria, but with an extraordinary calm.” Miraculously, the engines were restored, and everyone lived to tell the tale. That’s heroism for this, or any, age. As for Slater, his slide was amusing, but not the least bit admirable. What does the mainstream media’s fascination with Slater tell us about how their worldview and opinion of the nation? Anything?

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Open Thread: Steven Slater Is No Hero

CMI’s Burchfiel Talks Media Double Standards on Fox & Friends

Culture and Media Institute Assistant Editor Nathan Burchfiel joined “Fox & Friends” co-host Steve Doocy on Aug. 13 to discuss media coverage of Harry Reid and the media double standard on controversial statements made by liberals versus conservatives. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., told supporters on Aug. 10 that he couldn’t understand why “anyone with Hispanic heritage could be a Republican.” “If you watch the national media, there’s no outrage,” Burchfiel said when asked where the uproar over Reid’s comments had come from. “There’s certainly a lot of confusion, I think, among Hispanic conservatives as to the reasoning behind Harry Reid’s comments. It’s clear that he is not reading the same polls that other people are reading about the way that Hispanics feel about the current administration, the way that the feel about the economy and jobs, and even the way they feel about immigration.” Burchfiel suggested that Reid “maybe ask Brian Sandoval why a Hispanic might affiliate himself with the GOP or with conservative ideology.” Sandoval, who is Hispanic, is the GOP’s nominee for Nevada governor. He is leading his Democratic opponent, Reid’s son, Rory, by 19 points in the latest Las Vegas Review-Journal poll . The English-language media often turn to Univision anchor Jorge Ramos as an expert on Latino opinion. Ramos, as the Culture and Media Institute reported, is an active supporter of open borders and amnesty for illegal immigrants. However, a recent AP-Univision poll of Hispanic Americans found that only 9 percent rated immigration as the most important issue facing the United States. Most rated the economy or jobs as most important, and only 43 percent said they felt the current administration was doing a good job of addressing the Hispanic community’s needs. Doocy and Burchfiel also discussed the double standard in media coverage of controversial statements made by liberals versus conservatives in light of the comments made by two New Hampshire Democrats this week about the plane crash that killed former Sen. Ted Stevens. Keith Halloran, a candidate for the state legislature, wrote on Facebook that he wished Sarah Palin had been on the plane that crashed. State Rep. Timothy Horrigan resigned his office after he wrote on Facebook that a dead Sarah Palin would be more dangerous than a living Sarah Palin. The national networks ignored the story. “I mean you get a random guy at a Tea Party rally saying something remotely controversial and the media have his name, his address, his tax records, his elementary school report card, anything they can find that’s going to help them discredit him,” Burchfiel said. “But when you have liberals who are in office or running for office who literally say that they wish Sarah Palin were dead, there’s media silence on it.” “It’s unfortunately par for the course,” he added, “but it’s part of the way that the media have covered Sarah Palin since the very beginning, since she was announced as John McCain’s running mate.” A Culture and Media Institute study of coverage of Palin late in the 2008 campaign found the national media had two portraits of the then-vice presidential nominee. Palin was either portrayed as a Dunce by highlighting her quirks or replaying “Saturday Night Live” impersonations of her, or as a Demon – McCain’s attack dog or poison for conservatives.

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CMI’s Burchfiel Talks Media Double Standards on Fox & Friends

Artful Transmission Towers Designed to Look Like Us

Images via Choi + Shine Who says that transmission towers need to be ugly? One of the biggest downsides of having easy access to energy has long been the unsightly way it’s carried from place to place, but one US design firm hopes to revolutionize all that — by giving electricity pylons a human touch. In a project entitled “The Land of Giants” those normally stark, utilitarian structures are transformed into more aesthetically pleasing sculpture… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Artful Transmission Towers Designed to Look Like Us

Today on Planet 100: The Heat is On (Video)

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Today on Planet 100: The Heat is On (Video)

Russia’s Peatland Fires May Continue Burning Underground Through Winter

photo: praegerr via flickr Burning for some weeks now, the fires in Russia are not only causing Moscow’s daily death rate to double as smog engulfs the city, but are also emitting tons of greenhouse gas emissions as drained peatlands burn. What’s worse,

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Russia’s Peatland Fires May Continue Burning Underground Through Winter

‘Civil War’ Apparently Only a Problem for GOP Squabbling

There’s a phrase that has been conspicuously absent the media’s coverage of the recent flap between White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs and those he dubbed the “professional left”: civil war. In contrast, media coverage of Republican infighting consistently pushes the term. Gibbs is under fire from the left for sharply criticizing liberal critics of President Obama saying that “they need to be drug-tested” and “will be satisfied when we have Canadian healthcare and we’ve eliminated the Pentagon. That’s not reality.” His comments have drawn heated criticism from the left. Democratic firebrand Rep. Alan Grayson, Fla., wants “Bozo the Spokesman” fired . Prominent activist and blogger Jane Hamsher claimed Obama is “having trouble across the board” with liberals. Lefties at the Daily Kos and Democratic Underground were frantic. Yet almost no “civil war” labels from the media, in contrast to coverage of other instances of intra-party squabbling. The ouster of Dede Scozzafava in the special election in New York’s 23rd District earned the “civil war” label 23 times from major media players, according to a Nexis search. The GOP “civil war” was invariably painted as a “Stalinist” (to use Frank Rich’s term) purge of moderates from the party in favor of more conservative, Tea Party-backed candidates. Of course all it was was run-of-the-mill intra-party politics. There was no purge – it was just Republican voters choosing the more conservative candidate in a year when conservatives’ electoral prospects seem bright. Or, as liberal Newsweek columnist Howard Fineman put it, “I`ve been a little skeptical of this Republican ‘civil war’ story. I mean, all major parties have conflicts and fissures within them.” Don’t tell that to Rich. Or George Stephanopoulos, Wolf Blitzer Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews, E.J. Dionne, Eugene Robinson, Donna Brazile, Roland Martin, David Gergen, or John King. They all labeled Scozzafava’s ouster a sign of a Republican “civil war”. Of course none of these A-list media personalities have used the term in reference to the battle currently ongoing between the White House and the Democratic base. And this is a fight that is not part of the squabbling that takes place whenever two candidates of the same party vie for a nomination. Gibbs’s comments represent an ideological chasm between the governing left and the liberal commentariat. The latter believe that the White House has elevated pragmatism above principle, while the White HOuse believes its far-left critics are too divorced from political reality. That is a more meaningful split than political differences among two candidates for office. Consider what Congressman Grayson had to say about Gibbs: No, I don’t think he should resign. I think he should be fired. He’s done a miserable job. People I know, refer to him as Bozo the Spokesman. He’s not conveying the value of the President’s strategies, or his plans or his programs. He’s doing a miserable job, it’s that simple. He’s so far in over his head he’d have to reach up to touch his shoes…. If I wanted Fox talking points I’d change the channel to Fox, not listen to the White House. He needs to get his head on straight and do his job… He’s doing a miserable job because his heart isn’t in it. He belongs on Fox. Not as the White House spokesman. The folks at major liberal blogs were more than a bit upset as well. Consider this excerpt from far-left blogger Glenn Greenwald: You may think that the reason you’re dissatisfied with the Obama administration is because of substantive objections to their policies: that they’ve done so little about crisis-level unemployment, foreclosures and widespread economic misery. Or because of the White House’s apparently endless devotion to Wall Street. Or because the President has escalated a miserable, pointless and unwinnable war that is entering its ninth year. Or because he has claimed the power to imprison people for life with no charges and to assassinate American citizens without due process, intensified the secrecy weapons and immunity instruments abused by his predecessor, and found all new ways of denying habeas corpus. Or because he granted full-scale legal immunity to those who committed serious crimes in the last administration. Or because he’s failed to fulfill — or affirmatively broken — promises ranging from transparency to gay rights. But Robert Gibbs — in one of the most petulant, self-pitying outbursts seen from a top political official in recent memory, half derived from a paranoid Richard Nixon rant and the other half from a Sean Hannity/Sarah Palin caricature of The Far Left — is here to tell you that the real reason you’re dissatisfied with the President is because you’re a fringe, ideological, Leftist extremist ingrate who needs drug counseling. Or this entry from Daily Kos’s Jesse LaGreca AKA MinistryofTruth: Turns out calling me “F$#^ing retarded” or “On Drugs” doesn’t make me FIRED UP, it makes me think you think I’m an asshole, and that doesn’t exactly win my vote, now does it?… The fact is, Mr. Gibbs, If you’re trying to convince us NOT TO VOTE FOR YOU in 2010 or 2012, Mission Accomplished! And if not, and you are this inept at messaging, maybe it’s time you stepped down from your post, Mr. Gibbs. Or these comments from deranged users at the Democratic Underground: they absolutely never learn and this should tell you the temperature of the white house, the ease with which they say things like this. Obama is no liberal, no leftie, he has contempt for us to allow this culture of thought to exist. and what a masterstroke of timing, to say something like this to an already apparently tepid base before elections. bravo, you b*st*rds. *you* should be drug tested. the folks that helped get them elected, they want to insult. Two words come to mind one starts with an “F” and the next one starts with a “Y”. Dump Gibbs and bring back Van Jones There is clearly a battle going in inside the Democratic Party between pragmatists and ideologues. But despite the relatively high level of media coverage if Gibbs’s events, the apocalyptic “civil war” rhetoric the media touted so often with regard to Republican infighting is noticeably absent. Yet again, the media are avoiding proclaiming dire straits for Democrats, despite deep divisions within that party.

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‘Civil War’ Apparently Only a Problem for GOP Squabbling