Tag Archives: flight

ABC Hypes Michelle Obama’s ‘Lush,’ Luxurious’ Spanish Vacation, Hit Extravagance of Laura Bush

Good Morning America’s Yunji de Nies on Friday touted Michelle Obama’s “five-star,” “luxurious” vacation to Spain, skipping any discussion of controversy over the $148,000 trip. In January of 2009, however, the very same program chided Laura Bush for introducing new presidential dinnerware, despite the fact that the bill was being paid by a private organization. De Nies gushed, “They toured the plaza in old Marbella. Cooled off with chocolate gelato and bought matching sun dresses. Michelle and Sasha Obama are making a splash in Spain.” News reader Juju Chang vaguely hinted at criticism, allowing, “Michelle Obama may be taking heat for her luxury vacation with her nine-year-old daughter, but as Yunji de Nies shows us, the Spanish can’t get enough of her.” What that “heat” was, exactly, went unsaid. Good Morning America certainly hasn’t reported on it. ( CBS News reported that the”6.5 hour flight to Spain would run $73,781.50 – double for the round trip.”) ABC brought on reporter Ann Compton to defend the vacation: “Whether they’re sitting on a beach or meeting with a king in a palace. It is bringing forth the American culture, the American people, representing the United States of America. It’s never really just vacation.” Yet, on January 7, 2009 , the same Compton worried, “So, why is Laura Bush introducing new Bush china two weeks before they move out?” Co-host Robin Roberts warned about the “brewing brouhaha” and alerted, “President and First Lady Laura Bush are leaving behind a new set of dinnerware when they leave the White House in two weeks.” At the very end of the segment, Compton explained that the $485,000 cost was being paid by the private White House Historical Association. DeNies has a history of fawning over Michelle Obama. On October 1, 2009 , she predicted that the First Lady’s pitch for the 2016 Olympics in Chicago would leave not “a dry eye in the house.” On April 29, 2009 , she lauded Mrs. Obama as the “belle of the ball.” A transcript of the August 6 segment, which aired at 8:03am EDT, follows: JUJU CHANG: And the First Lady’s summer in Spain . Michelle Obama may be taking heat for her luxury vacation with her nine-year-old daughter, but as Yunji de Nies shows us, the Spanish can’t get enough of her. YUNJI DE NIES: They toured the plaza in old Marbella. Cooled off with chocolate gelato and bought matching sun dresses. Michelle and Sasha Obama are making a splash in Spain . UNIDENTIFIED SPANISH WOMAN [through translator]: She’s very beautiful. Very nice. I couldn’t see more, though, because the whole world is waiting. DE NIES: Wherever they go, the press follows. [Montage of Spanish reporters saying “Michelle Obama.] DE NIES: They’re traveling with old friends from Chicago. All staying at this five-star resort. Its website boasts lush gardens and luxurious suites. ROBERT GIBBS: It’s a private trip and is being paid for that way. DE NIES: She’s not the first first mom to jet set with her daughter. Hillary Clinton brought Chelsea around the world. Jenna Bush joined her mother in Africa. ABC’s Ann Compton covered it all. And says, there’s value to these visits. ANN COMPTON: Whether they’re sitting on a beach or meeting with a king in a palace. It is bringing forth the American culture, the American people, representing the United States of America. It’s never really just vacation. DE NIES: America’s littlest ambassadors have toured Russia’s Kremlin, Rome’s Coliseum. Even met with Queen Elizabeth. On Sunday, mother and daughter will lunch with the Spanish king and queen, a royal finish to this summer vacation. For Good Morning America, Yunji de Nies, ABC News, the White House. CHANG: I just love the way the Spanish say Michelle Obama.

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ABC Hypes Michelle Obama’s ‘Lush,’ Luxurious’ Spanish Vacation, Hit Extravagance of Laura Bush

Boeing Unveils Hydrogen-Powered Phantom Eye Unmanned Drone

Photo: Boeing First Flight: Early 2011 Boeing has just unveiled the hydrogen-powered Phantom Eye unmanned airborne system, and aircraft that should be able to stay up at 65,000 feet for up to four days without refueling. Of course Boeing’s first customer will no doubt be the U.S. military, but the company also mentions potential uses of the Phantom Eye for “civil and commercial customers”, and that’s where things get interesting. Such a drone could send a 450-pound payload to high altitude more rapidly and more cheaply than a satellite and with more range an… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Boeing Unveils Hydrogen-Powered Phantom Eye Unmanned Drone

McClatchy Story Notes Severe Lack of Skimmers in Gulf But Barely Touches on Reasons Why

Karen Nelson of the Biloxi Sun Herald wrote a report picked up by McClatchy Newspapers about the incredible level of frustration felt by the people living along the Gulf of Mexico over the severe lack of skimmers available in that region to combat the BP oil spill. She went into detail explaining the anger felt by the Gulf residents over the fact that few skimmers are cleaning up the oil. However, one thing that seems to be mostly ignored, except in passing, is WHY so few skimmers are currently in the Gulf. First the frustration felt over by the Gulf residents: GULFPORT, Miss. — A morning flight over the Mississippi Sound showed long, wide ribbons of orange-colored oil for as far as the eye could see and acres of both heavy and light sheen moving into the Sound between the barrier islands. What was missing was any sign of skimming operations from Horn Island to Pass Christian. Why?  U.S. Rep. Gene Taylor got off the flight angry. “It’s criminal what’s going on out there,” Taylor said minutes later. “This doesn’t have to happen.” A scientist onboard, Mike Carron with the Northern Gulf Institute, said with this scenario, there will be oil on the beaches of the mainland. “There’s oil in the Sound and there was no skimming,” Carron said. “No coordinated effort.” Why? Back on land in Gulfport, Taylor let loose. “A lot of people are getting paid to say, ‘Look! There’s oil’ and not doing anything about it,” Taylor said. “There shouldn’t be a drop of oil in the Sound. There are enough boats running around.” “Nobody’s in charge,” Taylor said. “Everybody’s in charge, so no one’s in charge.” Why? In the next sentence Congressman Roger Wicker comes close to the truth but the story does not elaborate: Taylor and U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., took the morning flight on a National Guard helicopter with representatives of the state DEQ and BP. After the flight Wicker said he feels it’s not too late for President Barack Obama to accept help from other countries that have offered the services of their large oil-skimming boats. Wicker blamed bureaucracy and the president, but said, “Mississippi has been a champ from the beginning of this.” And these brief hints are all a reader can find in this story as to WHY so few skimmers are in the Gulf. We learn about the anger felt over the lack of skimmers but beyond the above hints, it pretty much remains a mystery to the casual reader of this oddly incomplete article as to WHY the skimmers are missing.  Perhaps a review of the recent comments by Florida Senator George LeMieux on the floor of the U.S. Senate could shed some light on the missing WHY in this story: Why are there so few skimmers in the Gulf of Mexico?   Yeah, why, George? The article was no real help in answering that question but perhaps you can provide those conspicuously missing blanks: … there was a State Department report stating that 21 instances of help have been made and they were refused . Come to find out through discussions with my office that there are still offers and there have been offers from foreign countries and ports for skimmers and that, in fact, those skimmers were refused . … the state of affairs is that there are only now 20 skimmers off the coast of Florida for. When there were 32 last week, there are now just 20. While there are 2,000 skimmers available in the United States alone. That number comes from Admiral Allen. So what was reason for so few skimmers in the Gulf when so many are available? Now, when I talked to the President and Admiral Allen about this last week, they said, look, some of these skimmers are not available because we may need them for an oil spill. Well, we have an oil spill. Huh? And just because they may be required to stand on watch somewhere in case an oil spill happens someplace else, that’s like saying to the people in Pensacola, your home is on fire but we can’t send the fire engine because there may be a fire someplace else. The rationale by the administration for the lack of skimmers in the Gulf, on top of their initial refusal of skimmers offered by the Dutch, is beyond absurd. And you wouldn’t really know the reason for that lack of skimmers by reading the McClatchy report about…the lack of skimmers.

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McClatchy Story Notes Severe Lack of Skimmers in Gulf But Barely Touches on Reasons Why

Israeli Airforce land at Saudi base ahead of possible Iran strike

Islam Times says Israeli jets unloaded military equipment in Islamic country ahead of possible Iran strike. Israeli Air force aircraft landed during the past weekend at a military base in Saudi Arabia and unloaded large quantities of military gear, according to a report published Wednesday by Islamic website Islam Times. The report, which has questionable credibility, claimed the equipment was unloaded at a base in the city of Tabuk, in the north western part of the country, ahead of a possible strike on Iran. London Times reports Saudis carry out defense missile tests aimed at allowing Israeli warplanes to pass through airspace on way to bomb nuclear facilities in Iran. 'We will let them through and see nothing,' says source The controversial report was also published by the Iranian news agency Fars, under the title “Suspicious military activity of the Zionist regime in Saudi Arabia.” According to the report, the IDF built a military base approximately 9 km (5.5 miles) from Tabuk, and while Israeli planes landed there on June 18 and 19, all civilian flights were cancelled at the local airport. One of the passengers in Tabuk noted that civilians at the airport were not given an explanation for the flight cancellations, but were compensated by the Saudi authorities and accommodated in nearby hotels. The report further claimed that “the secret relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia became the main topic of conversation among the city's residents.” Another report published two weeks ago claimed Saudi Arabia tested its defense missile systems In order to allow IAF airplanes to pass through its airspace en route to bombarding nuclear facilities in Iran. Security elements in the Persian Gulf told the London-based Times magazine that Riyadh gave Israel the green light to fly through a narrow airspace in the north of the country, in order to shorten the flight time to the Islamic Republic. According to the Times, in order to ensure that IAF aircraft are not intercepted by Saudi defense missiles, Riyadh conducted tests to make sure the system does not activate if Israeli planes are detected. After the aircraft clear the area, the system will resume to normal activity. http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_kwz4BqmMfpo/TCIma2cznQI/AAAAAAAABjo/sN5MFhHYPPQ/s1600/… added by: crystalman

Tiger Banner Pilot: I Was Grounded by the FBI

Filed under: Tiger Woods , TMZ Sports The pilot who flew the ” Tiger: Are You My Daddy ? ” banner over the US Open golf tournament last weekend was supposed to make a second run — but dude claims the FBI shut down the flight.

Meet the Conservative Intellectual Elite: Kathleen Parker, David Frum, Christopher Hitchens?

There’s one big problem with the presentation of “ The Party, In Exile ,” Pamela Paul’s snobby but interesting front-page Sunday Styles section piece on so-called conservatism in exile. As Karol Sheinin noted on her Twitter feed  — it doesn’t feature many actual conservatives. The caption under John Cuneo’s illustration made the disparity clear: “Insiders On The Outside: Members of the conservative intellectual elite at a party include, clockwise from left, David Frum, Michael Oren, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Christopher Hitchens, Laura Ingraham and Kathleen Parker.” Of those six names, only one (Laura Ingraham) would be unanimously waved in to a garden party strictly for “conservatives.” The prolific, peripatetic, atheist writer Christopher Hitchens, is a long-time socialist who allied with conservatives on the Iraq War and some other issues (Paul noted he is a member “of the disenchanted left”). Former Bush speechwriter David Frum’s main interest of late is lamenting the popularity of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck. Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker is an inconsistent conservative ally at best. Ayaan Hirsi Ali — in whose name the party was held — may qualify as conservative in some respects. Yet the brave feminist apostate from Islam, who currently works with the American Enterprise Institute, has only been in America for four years after being forced to flee Holland. Michael Oren is Israel’s ambassador to the U.S. Otherwise, the ambience at this intimate cocktail and buffet in honor of the Somalian-born activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali — a woman who faced death threats even before she wrote a film that led to the murder of its director, Theo van Gogh — was one of ease. Wearing a Michelle Obama-esque sleeveless emerald dress and sipping wine, Ms. Hirsi Ali, who has spent recent weeks traveling to Britain, Denmark and her former country of refuge, the Netherlands, while on tour for her new book “Nomad,” warmly met guests as they circled in admiration. “Nice to see you,” total strangers said upon introduction, as if fearing the failure to recognize someone possibly met on a previous occasion. Or perhaps in certain Washington circles people assume they already know everyone else. Either way, here at the stately Wesley Heights home of the former Bush speechwriter, David (“axis of evil”) Frum, and his wife, the writer Ms. Frum, nearly everyone did. Far from the typical New York book party, this was more a bunkering of the conservative intellectual elite, a group that domineered its way through the Bush years but is now sidelined, a somewhat baffled shadow of its former blustery self. Whither the conservative establishment in today’s bilious political landscape? Certainly the typical Tea Party denizen, with his “I Wanna Party Like It’s 1773” T-shirt and “You Lie!” trucker hat, would seem out of place on the Frums’ well-tended grounds, nibbling chicken skewers and mini-B.L.T.’s. In the presence of Ms. Hirsi Ali, at least, there was a sense of shared purpose. Paul addressed the controversies surrounding Frum, who “lost his salaried post at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, in March, after calling the passage of health care legislation the Republican party’s ‘Waterloo.'” Also present was The Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker, prom-girl pretty and winner of a Pulitzer this spring for “gracefully sharing the experiences and values that lead her to unpredictable conclusions,” including a rebuke of Sarah Palin. “Like all the best conservatives, I started off as a liberal,” she trilled. In a similar display of the intellectual right’s discomfort with Wasilla-brand populism, Ms. Frum mocked a speech by Ms. Palin in April on The Huffington Post. (“There was not a single memorable line, not a single new political idea, not a single proffered solution beyond the cliché.”) And lending a poignant immediacy to the rejiggered state of affairs was the Republican Senator Robert Bennett, ousted last month in the Utah primary for his votes on health care and Wall Street reform. A certain kind of nomad, all. If you can get past the knee-jerk “ick, Palin!” snobbery and mockery of the Tea Party movement, the latter half of Paul’s party piece contained some interesting anecdotes about Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-born Islamist turned crusader for women and her shunning by her supposed liberal allies. Paul, to her credit, illuminated an issue Times Watch has discussed — the prickly response from the liberal media to Hirsi Ali’s crusade for women’s rights and against Islam: Not surprisingly, though she favors both gay and abortion rights, Ms. Hirsi Ali has alienated what might otherwise be fellow liberal travelers in her crusade against religious oppression. In The New Yorker, Pankaj Mishra dismissed Ms. Hirsi Ali’s “simple oppositions” and “growing familiarity with right-wing touchstones.” The Los Angeles Times called “Nomad,” which is dedicated to the former president of A.E.I., an “anti-Islamic screed” and “a tough jeremiad to read.” The historian Timothy Garton Ash and the Dutch-born academic Ian Buruma have both written dismissively of Ms. Hirsi Ali to the point that the N.Y.U. professor Paul Berman devoted much of his new book, “The Flight of the Intellectuals,” to mounting a defense. The Times review of Berman’s tome is here.

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Meet the Conservative Intellectual Elite: Kathleen Parker, David Frum, Christopher Hitchens?

The Lindsay Lohan Bad Excuse Hall of Fame

We know she lives in denial, but this one is an all-timer. Lindsay Lohan’s excuse, as relayed by her mother Dina, for her SCRAM ankle monitor shockingly going off Sunday at an MTV Movie Awards after-party? “Somebody spilled a drink on her leg , which must have set off the SCRAM bracelet,” Dina told the N.Y. Post . Right. ‘Cause that’s totally how it works. The device measures perspiration in the skin, not alcohol specifically. Even if someone did spill a drink on her leg, how would it distinguish the liquid? Hilarious. Dina adds: “She has done absolutely nothing wrong and shouldn’t have to wear the bracelet in the first place. She is doing absolutely fine.” Okay, Dina. NOTE: A judge ordered her to wear it after she failed to appear in court for probation hearings stemming from her two DUI convictions . Amazingly, this is up there with her best/worst excuses we’ve heard in recent memory, but this is Lindsay Lohan. It’s got legitimate competition for the #1 spot. Here’s a look at some other tall tales she’s told (via E! Online ): 1. The black guy did it : In the 2007 incident she’s still in hot water for, Linds tried to pin her drunk Pacific Coast Highway joyride on her assistant’s pal Dante. 2. Pants on fire : After she claimed “the black kid” was driving that night, cops found cocaine on her. Oh, she borrowed those jeans from a friend! That bitch! 3. Fearing for her life : Lindsay has blamed her reckless (substance-abusing) driving on the fact that cameras follow her every move. She was scared, okay??! 4. Dog ate my passport : Despite a looming court date, Lohan still went yacht hopping in France, missed her flight back, then said someone stole her passport . 5. It was a set up : While in Cannes, a photo surfaced of LiLo and a plate of cocaine. What?! No, those were just fans staging the cocaine pic to sabotage her. Mmm hmm . At this point, Pinocchio couldn’t front on this lunatic.

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The Lindsay Lohan Bad Excuse Hall of Fame

Libya Plane Crash has no technical faults

The plane which crashed in Libya on May 12 killed 103 people. The crash was not caused by mechanical failure according to a preliminary inquiry. The black box recorders pointed out that the Afriqiyah Airways plane had enough fuel and didn’t make any call for help. The sole survivor of the crash was a nine-year-old Dutch boy. Most people who were killed in the crash were Dutch citizens when the plane missed the runway at Tripoli airport as it flew in from South Africa. According to data recovered, there is no sign indicating technical failure in the plane before the incident. However, the flight recorders were sent to Paris for an examination that was overseen by international observers. Officials have also ruled out a terrorists act as a potential cause after studying the recorders. The Airbus 330 was carrying 93 passengers and 11 crew. The 70 dead individuals were Dutch citizens while all of the crew were Libyan, Others were nationals from South Africa, the UK, Australia, Germany, Zimbabwe and France. Libya Plane Crash has no technical faults is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Kanye West’s ‘Power’ Producer Explains How Song Happened

Symbolyc One got a text saying, ‘Kanye is loving your stuff, he said he’s about to change your life.’ By Jayson Rodriguez Kanye West Photo: MTV News Kanye West has aligned a murderer’s row of producers for his forthcoming album , including Pete Rock, the RZA and Q-Tip. But “Power,” the first track to emerge from the Chicago MC’s highly-anticipated LP, wasn’t produced by one of the aforementioned acclaimed beatsmiths. Instead, underground producer Symbolyc One manned the boards for the number. The Dallas-based producer (a.k.a. S1) has previously worked with Ghostface, Slim Thug, and Chamillionaire, but he’s hardly a household name. “The way it came together, I work with Rhymefest,” S1 told MTV News about the song, referring to another Chicago MC. “I did like four joints on his album. And one day, out the blue, I got a text from Rhymefest that said, ‘Kanye is loving your stuff, he said he’s about to change your life.’ Two days later, I got an e-mail that said my flight to Hawaii [where West recorded much of the album] leaves in three hours! So I was on a flight, and it just happened like that. I went down and stayed for like two weeks, banged out some joints. “The ‘Power’ joint that we did, it was actually a track that I already made and gave to Rhymefest, and he just so happened to play it for Kanye in the studio and he loved it. So when I got out to Hawaii, Kanye had already recorded to it.” A month later, S1 returned to Hawaii and heard “Power” again, this time with more “polish” added by ‘Ye, who co-produced the song. However, S1 picked the sample that drives the record: a snippet of British progressive rock band King Crimson’s “21st Century Schizoid Man.” Initially, he didn’t think West would be interested in the beat, because a drum break resembles a sound the rapper already visited on “Crack Music,” a song from one of his previous albums. But West showed a heavy interest in the song, and used it to fire back at his detractors: “I’m living in the 21st Century, doing something mean to it,” ‘Ye raps on the first verse. “Do it better than anybody you ever seen do it/ Screams from the haters, got a nice ring to it/ I guess every superhero need his theme music.” “It was incredible,” the producer said. “We would just listen to the joint in the studio over and over, with the lights turned down and these layers of lights on in the studio. And we would bang it loud, over and over.” In addition to producing, S1 is a part of a trio billed as the Strange Fruit Project, who have been releasing material since 2004. Their next project A Dreamer’s Journey — which S1 described as “alternative hip-hop” — is set for fall release; he and his production parter Caleb oversaw all the material. In the meantime, S1 said he’s fielding phone calls and learning as much as he can from West. “They kind of welcomed me into the family,” S1 said. “I’ve been doing a lot of work with him. He’s just a good dude. He has a super-good heart. He really took care of me and made me feel like a part of the family. And I’m so grateful for the position he’s put me in right now.” What do you think about Kanye West’s new song? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Kanye West

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Kanye West’s ‘Power’ Producer Explains How Song Happened

‘Lost’ Star Michael Emerson Talks ‘Bittersweet’ Flash-Sideways

‘I just like how he was in a different key or he was painted with a different palette,’ he says of his character’s two worlds. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Wigler Michael Emerson Photo: MTV News In one reality, Ben Linus is a cold-blooded killer, an always-one-step-ahead-of-you schemer — at least until he lost his leadership position, his daughter and his sense of merciless purpose. In the other, he’s a mild-mannered high school history teacher, a thwarted soul who lives with his elderly father and seems to go around wondering how his life turned out so … blah. Welcome to the two universes of season six’s “Lost”: in one, the timeline we’ve come to know since the first episode, in which Flight 815 crashed on the mysterious island and left its passengers to contend with all manner of freaky happenings; in the other, a new, so-called flash-sideways timeline, in which the island is submerged in water, Flight 815 lands safely in Los Angeles and every character lives an island-free existence. For months, we haven’t had a clue what would happen to these two realities — to these two Bens. Now, Sunday’s (May 23) series finale is behind us and the answers are in (of course, not all of them, “Lost” being a show whose answers only tend to raise more questions). What’s been clear for a while, though, is that Michael Emerson, the man behind Linus, has been having a damn good time playing each version of the guy. “I just like how he was in a different key or he was painted with a different palette,” Emerson told MTV News about sideways Ben. “He was a more muted character, more of an everyday character. Not the megalomania or the ambition or the madness or the single-mindedness or the nefariousness. Traces of those things, but in much smaller quantities, like you would get in an everyday person. It was fun to calibrate that.” Fun not just for himself, but for the rest of the cast and the fans too. “I thought the whole flash-sideways had a note that was bittersweet to it,” he added. “Oh yes, this is what a real life could be, and it’s smaller and it’s sadder and it has heroism in it, but they’re little bitty heroisms.” What did you think of the finale? Sound off in the comments! Related Videos Counting Down To The ‘Lost’ Finale! Related Photos Spin-Offs For The Characters Of ‘Lost’

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‘Lost’ Star Michael Emerson Talks ‘Bittersweet’ Flash-Sideways