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Jason Derulo Recalls ‘Embarrassing’ Ride On ‘When I Was 17’

Singer talks about his car, nicknamed ‘The White Jellybean,’ in the episode premiering on MTV this Saturday at 11 a.m. By Mawuse Ziegbe Jason Derulo Jason Derulo is riding high with two MTV Video Music Awards nominations and hit songs like “Whatcha Say” and “In My Head” under his belt. But before the Moonmen nods and chart-topping tracks, Derulo’s ride was a major problem. “Everybody else had nice cars, so my dad bought me this white Chevy. People would call it ‘The White Jellybean,’ ” Derulo says on the episode of “When I Was 17” that premieres on MTV Saturday (August 21) at 11 a.m. “[It was] very, very embarrassing.” One of Derulo’s pals, Frank, remembers the rising hitmaker’s vehicle failed to strike a chord with the ladies. “I know girls were not impressed by this car,” Frank says. The Florida native, who was 17 in 2006, recalls that his raggedy wheels put his chances with one lady in jeopardy. “I can remember one time I took this girl on a date and I picked her up in this car. I could tell she was a little surprised [because] I didn’t have any air conditioning. I put the windows down, like this [makes hand-cranking motion],” Derulo says. “We’re good, we’re flowing, we’re riding.” But the singer’s smooth drive didn’t last long. “Suddenly I hear it go ‘boom, boom, boom, boom.’ I just try to keep going. We’re still riding … but I know that we got a flat tire,” Derulo recalls. Trying to maintain one’s cool while tooling around with a busted tire is already a challenge. And the singer was faced with an even bigger problem: “But I also know [that] I don’t know how to change the tire.” “When I Was 17” airs Saturdays at 11 a.m. on MTV. Related Videos ‘When I Was 17’ Episode 16 Preview Related Photos When I Was 17 | Ep.16 | Celebrity Photo Flashback Related Artists Jason Derulo

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Jason Derulo Recalls ‘Embarrassing’ Ride On ‘When I Was 17’

BP Catastrophe: Scientists Have Confirmed That Toxic Organisms and Oil Have Been Found on the Gulf Floor | Video

Scientists: Toxic organisms, oil found on Gulf floor John Paul says, at first, he couldn't believe his own scientific data showing toxic microscopic marine organisms in the Gulf of Mexico. He repeated the field test. A colleague did his own test. All the results came back the same: toxic. It was the first time Paul and other University of South Florida scientists had made such a finding since they started investigating the environmental damage from the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The preliminary results, the scientists believe, show that oil that has settled on the floor is contaminating small sea organisms. Paul is a marine microbiologist with the University of South Florida. He and 13 other researchers were in the middle of a 10-day research mission that began August 6 in the Gulf of Mexico when they made the toxic discovery. The researchers battled 12-foot waves and storms but returned to St. Petersburg, Florida Monday night. We were there as the team pulled its research materials into the lab and got the first report back of their initial findings. The researchers found micro-droplets of oil scattered across the ocean floor and they also found those droplets moving up through a part of the Gulf called the DeSoto Canyon, a channel which funnels water and nutrients into the popular commercial and recreational waters along the Florida Gulf Coast. The scientists say even though it's getting harder to see the oil the Gulf is still not safe. “This whole concept of submerged oil and the application of dispersants in the subsurface and what are the impacts that it could have, have changed the paradigm of what an oil spill is from a 2-dimensional surface disaster to a 3-dimensional catastrophe,” said David Hollander, a chemical oceanographer and one of the lead scientists on the recent USF mission. added by: EthicalVegan

Devon James’ Mom — My Daughter Belongs in Jail

Filed under: Tiger Woods , Devon James , Celebrity Justice , Tiger Affair Devon James can’t even convince her own mother that Tiger Woods fathered her 9-year-old son — in fact, her flesh and blood thinks Devon is such a money-grubbing liar … she belongs behind bars. Outside of court in Manatee County, Florida — where the… Read more

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Devon James’ Mom — My Daughter Belongs in Jail

Olbermann Hints Moral Equivalence Between U.S. & Islamic Empire, Blocking Mosque May Be First Step to New Holocaust

On Monday’s Countdown show, MSNBC host Keith Olbermann delivered a “Special Comment” in which he invoked Nazi Germany and suggested that blocking construction of a mosque near Ground Zero could be the first of a “thousand steps” toward another holocaust. He also suggested a moral equivalence between the Islamic Empire’s conquests and America’s expansion into the lands of Native Americans as he attempted to discredit former House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s concerns about the choice of “Cordoba House” as the original name planned for the mosque as being intentionally symbolic of a Muslim victory at Ground Zero. After starting his “Special Comment” by quoting Pastor Martin Niemoller’s famous words about the Holocaust of World War II, he at first tried to make his rant sound more moderate and not really a comparison to the Holocaust: “I make no direct comparison between the attempts to suppress the building of a Muslim religious center in downtown Manhattan and the unimaginable nightmare of the Holocaust.” He added: “Such a comparison is ludicrous – at least, it is now.” But the Countdown host was still alarmist enough to fear the mosque controversy could lead in that horrific direction: “Niemoller was not warning of the Holocaust. He was warning of the thousand steps before a holocaust became inevitable. If we are at merely the first of those steps again today, it is one step too close.” Citing Gingrich’s contention that members of the Islamic Empire historically engaged in a practice of building large mosques on the holy sites of their conquests as monuments to their victories – citing the mosque that was built in Cordoba, Spain, as an example – Olbermann at first argued that, because Cordoba was eventually recaptured by Christians, Gingrich’s concerns are somehow undermined. The MSNBC host even sounded as if he were defending the Muslim expansion into Spain as he recounted that Christians continued to fight even though the Muslim conquerors built “multicultural, nondenominational institutions of learning.” Olbermann: Those Muslim conquerors are a figment of Gingrich’s lurid imagination. In Spain, in Cordoba, though the Muslims established multicultural, nondenominational institutions of learning, they were under constant attack from Christian armies and from a series of internal all-Muslim civil wars. The Muslims lost Cordoba and the Christian church they transformed into the world’s third largest mosque complex, that was turned back into a Christian cathedral in the 13th century, and it has been one ever since. But moments later, Olbermann seemed to contradict himself by acknowledging that Gingrich was correct in his reasoning about the historical significance of the name “Cordoba” being provocative, as the MSNBC host gave the Muslim group credit for changing the name in response to the former House Speaker’s criticism. Olbermann: “When the historical implications of Cordoba were made clear to the backers of this project, the property developer, Sharif Gamal, changed the name. They’ve already compromised.” Olbermann did not theorize about why the Muslim group was motivated to choose this provocative name in the first place. The Countdown host also suggested a moral equivalence between America’s history of confiscating land from Native Americans and the Islamic Empire’s conquests. Olbermann: “And is there not a logical extension to Mr. Gingrich’s conclusions about Cordoba and triumphalism? Virtually every church, virtually every synagogue, every mosque built on this continent stands where a Native American lived or died or was buried or saw his world – his religions included – wiped out, by us. What are we, then, Mr. Gingrich?” But, unlike many predominantly Muslim countries, the United States provides full citizenship rights to Native Americans, who are now even greater in number than when Christopher Columbus first visited the New World. By contrast, not only do many countries that are successors to the Islamic Empire sharply restrict the rights of their citizens, but, as recently as the period between 1948 and 1975, in many predominantly Muslim nations, Jewish residents faced so much persecution in the form of violence and confiscation of property that the number of Jewish refugees who fled Muslim countries is estimated to be greater than the number of Palestinian refugees who fled Israel after the Arab states invaded the tiny nation in 1948. Some estimate that the land confiscated from Jewish residents by governments in Muslim countries amounts to several times the total area of the state of Israel. After recounting the story of a mosque that was bombed in Jacksonville, Florida, Olbermann also declared that Muslims in America are more likely to be targeted by terrorism than non-Muslims: “As the Jacksonville mosque bombing shows, since 9/11, Muslims have been at far greater risk of being victims of terrorism in the United States than have non-Muslims.” Below is a complete transcript of the “Special Comment” portion of the Monday, August 16, Countdown show on MSNBC, with critical portions in bold : KEITH OLBERMANN: Finally, tonight, as promised, a “Special Comment” on the inaccurately described “Ground Zero mosque.” “They came first for the communists and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a communist. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. And then they came for me and by that time, no one was left to speak up.” Pastor Martin Niemoller’s words are well known, but their context is not well understood. Niemoller was not speaking abstractly. He witnessed persecution; he acquiesced to it. He ultimately fell victim to it. He had been a German World War I hero, then a conservative who welcomed the fall of German democracy and the rise of Hitler, and he had few qualms about the beginning of the Holocaust until he himself was arrested for supporting it insufficiently. Niemoller’s confessional warning came first in a speech in Frankfurt in January 1946 – eight months after he had been liberated by American troops. He had been detained at Tyrol, Sachsen-hausen, and Dachau for seven years. He survived the death camps. In quoting him, I make no direct comparison between the attempts to suppress the building of a Muslim religious center in downtown Manhattan and the unimaginable nightmare of the Holocaust. Such a comparison is ludicrous – at least, it is now. But Niemoller was not warning of the Holocaust, he was warning of the willingness of a seemingly rational society to condone the gradual stoking of enmity towards an ethnic or religious group or more than one, warning of the building up of a collective pool of fear and hate, warning of the moment in which the need to purge outstrips the parameters of the original scapegoating, when new victims are needed because a country has begun to run on a horrible field of hatred – magnified, amplified and multiplied by politicians and zealots within government and without. Niemoller was not warning of the Holocaust. He was warning of the thousand steps before a holocaust became inevitable. If we are at merely the first of those steps again today, it is one step too close. Yet in a country dedicated to freedom, forces have gathered to blow out of all proportion the construction of a minor community center to transform it into a training ground for terrorists and an insult to the victims of 9/11 and a tribute to Medieval Muslim subjugation of the West. There is no training ground for terrorists. There is no insult to the victims of 9/11. There is no tribute to Medieval Muslim subjugation of the West. There is, in fact, no “Ground Zero mosque.” It is not mosque. A mosque, technically, is a Muslim holy place in which only worship can be conducted. What is planned for 45 Park Place, New York City, is a community center. It’s supposed to include a basketball court and a culinary school. It is to be 13 stories tall, and the top two stories will be a Muslim prayer space. What a cauldron of terrorism that will be. Terrorist chefs and terrorist point guards. And truly those who will use the center have more to fear from us than us from them, for there has been terrorism connected to a mosque in this country, in this year. May 10, Jacksonville, Florida, a pipe bomb at the Islamic Center of Northeast Florida. The FBI thinks the man in this surveillance video could be the bomber. The bomb went off during evening prayers and it was powerful enough to send shrapnel flying 100 yards. Fortunately, the bomber didn’t know where to place it, so the 60 Muslim worshipers were uninjured. If he had put it inside and not outside, they had been dead and you probably would have heard about it on the news. Or maybe not. Maybe those exploiting 45 Park Place would still shake their fists and decry terrorism by extremists who happen to be Muslim and never faced the shameful truth about our country. As the Jacksonville mosque bombing shows, since 9/11, Muslims have been at far greater risk of being victims of terrorism in the United States than have non-Muslims . But back to this Islamic center. Its name, Cordoba House, is not a tribute to the Medieval Muslim subjugation of Spain. Newt Gingrich has been pushing that nonsense that Cordoba is dog whistle for triumphalism : “It refers to Cordoba, Spain – the capital of Muslim conquerors who symbolized their victory over the Christian Spaniards by transforming a church there into the world’s third largest mosque complex. Today, some of the mosque’s backers insist this term is being used to ‘symbolize interfaith cooperation’ when, in fact, every Islamist in the world recognizes Cordoba as a symbol of Islamic conquest.” Those Muslim conquerors are a figment of Gingrich’s lurid imagination. In Spain, in Cordoba, though the Muslims established multicultural, nondenominational institutions of learning, they were under constant attack from Christian armies and from a series of internal all-Muslim civil wars. The Muslims lost Cordoba and the Christian church they transformed into the world’s third largest mosque complex, that was turned back into a Christian cathedral in the 13th century, and it has been one ever since. And is there not a logical extension to Mr. Gingrich’s conclusions about Cordoba and triumphalism? Virtually every church, virtually every synagogue, every mosque built on this continent stands where a Native American lived or died or was buried or saw his world – his religions included – wiped out, by us. What are we, then, Mr. Gingrich? And by the way, a point Mr. Gingrich has not even whispered as he has shouted fire in a crowded theater: When the historical implications of Cordoba were made clear to the backers of this project, the property developer, Sharif Gamal, changed the name. They’re already compromised. “We are calling it Park 51 because of the backlash to the name Cordoba House,” he told the Financial Times. “It will be a place open to all New Yorkers, and that is a very New York name.” A very New York name. Like Ground Zero. Except that this place, Park 51, is not even at Ground Zero. Not even right across the street. Even the description of it being two blocks away is generous. It is two blocks away from the Northeast corner of the World Trade Center site. From the planned location of the 9/11 memorial, it’s more like four or five blocks, even. You know what is right across the street, though? I went there yesterday to refresh my sense of the World Trade Center, in which I worked nearly 30 years ago. At Church and Veezy Street so close that the barbed wire of Ground Zero obscures its spire is St. Paul’s Chapel. Been there since 1766, where Washington went the day he was inaugurated, where the first responders came for relief nine years ago. You know what’s also closer to Ground Zero than this Muslim community center will be? Church of St. Peter, at Church and Barclay Streets. As the sign says, “New York’s Oldest Catholic parish.” People hear “Ground Zero mosque” and they think Mecca in the backyard and the loud call to prayer and they take umbrage. “We’ve got no more than a few inches of skin and a couple pieces of bone. Ground Zero is the burial place of my son,” said Joyce Boland at the public hearing about this center. “I don’t want to go there and see an overwhelming mosque looking down at me.” I honor her pain and her fear, but Mrs. Boland has nothing to worry about. Unless she walks directly over to it, several blocks away, she’ll never see the thing. This is what you see from where the center will be. Another nondescript building is across the street. This building and others like it would block views of the Trade Center and views from the Trade Center. The community center certainly will stand out on the north side of Park Place, but amid the canyons of lower Manhattan, it will just be a distinctive building that, if you happen to wander down a side street near the Trade Center, you might see it. You know what you’ll see there now? This. The Burlington coat factory, abandoned since 2001, when the landing gear from one of the planes fell 90 stories and went through the roof. For nine years, nobody’s been willing to buy that building, just to knock it down and build a new one. It sold for $4,850,000. In New York City real estate, that is spare change. And you know why it’s spare change? Because walk around Ground Zero any day of the week and it’s packed with tourists and our version of pilgrims. But walk two and three blocks away, and not so packed. Not packed at all. Empty stores, boarded up windows, nine years later, and two and three blocks from the action, it’s a ghost town. What was that about government not getting in the way of private business? What was that about letting the private sector spur new jobs in blighted areas? Oh, and what was that about Iraq? Why did we go into Iraq again? I don’t mean the real versions or the naked vengeful blindness that enabled the forging of a nonexistent connection between Iraq and 9/11, I mean, the official explanation. To free the world, and especially Iraq’s citizens, of the tyranny of Saddam Hussein. That’s its supporters’ defense of the Iraq invasion to this hour. Well, who lives in Iraq? Muslims. I hate to reveal this to anybody on the right who did not know this, but when they say Iraq is 65 percent Shia and 32 percent Sunni, you do know that Shia and Sunni are both forms of the Muslim religion, right? We sacrificed 4,415 of our military personnel in Iraq to save Muslims, and there are thousands of us still here tonight to protect Muslims, but we don’t want Muslims to open a combination culinary school and prayer space in Manhattan? From the beginning of this nation, we have fought prejudice and religious intolerance and our greatest enemy, stupidity, exploited by rapacious politicians. It is only 50 years now, this month, since Americans publicly and urgently warned their countrymen not to support a presidential candidate because he was a Roman Catholic. He would bow to the will, not of the American people, but of the Pope. He would be a papist. He would be the agent of a foreign state! His name was John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

Sunday Funnies: Obama Brings His Teleprompter On Vacation

As President Obama headed to the Florida Panhandle for a vacation with the family, he felt the need to drag his teleprompter along (h/t Freedom’s Lighthouse ):   Swimsuit? Check.  Sunscreen? Got it. Insect repellent? Yep . Teleprompter? Teleprompter?   The Teleprompter of the United States: Don’t leave home without it!  

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Sunday Funnies: Obama Brings His Teleprompter On Vacation

Water Scarcity Facing 1/3 of US Counties

One out of three U.S. counties is facing a greater risk of water shortages by mid-century due to global warming, finds a new report by Tetra Tech for the Natural Resources Defense Council. For 412 of these counties the risk of water shortages will be “extremely high,” according to the report, a 14-fold increase from previous estimates. In the Great Plains and Southwest United States, water sustainability is at extreme risk finds the report, which is based on publicly available water use data from across the United States. “This analysis shows climate change will take a serious toll on water supplies throughout the country in the coming decades, with over one out of three U.S. counties facing greater risks of water shortages,” said Dan Lashof, director of the Climate Center at NRDC. “Water shortages can strangle economic development and agricultural production and affected communities.” “As a result,” he said, “cities and states will bear real and significant costs if Congress fails to take the steps necessary to slow down and reverse the warming trend.” Counties shown in dark red are at greatest risk of water shortage by 2050. (Map courtesy Tetra Tech) The report, issued Tuesday, finds that 14 states face an extreme or high risk to water sustainability, or are likely to see limitations on water availability as demand exceeds supply by 2050. These areas include parts of Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Sujoy Roy, principal engineer and lead report author, Tetra Tech, said, “The goal of the analysis is to identify regions where potential stresses, and the need to do something about them, may be the greatest.” “We used publicly available data on current water withdrawals for different sectors of the economy, such as irrigation, cooling for power generation, and municipal supply, and estimated future demands using business-as-usual scenarios of growth,” Roy explained. “We then compared these future withdrawals to a measure of renewable water supply in 2050, based on a set of 16 global climate model projections of temperature and precipitation, to identify regions that may be stressed by water availability,” Roy said. “These future stresses are related to changes in precipitation as well as the likelihood of increased demand in some regions.” The report also is based on climate projections from a set of models used in recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change work to evaluate withdrawals related to renewable water supply. Water withdrawal will grow by 25 percent in many areas of the United States, including the arid Arizona-New Mexico area, the populated areas in the South Atlantic region, Florida, the Mississippi River basin, and Washington, D.C. and surrounding regions, the analysis projects. added by: JanforGore

Obama, Daughter Take a Dip in the Gulf

President Barack Obama and his daughter Sasha took a dip in the water on Saturday afternoon during their brief family vacation in Panama City Beach. White House officials said the two went for a swim at Alligator Point, behind their hotel, before eating lunch at Lime's, a waterfront restaurant at the Bay Point Marriott. Below are earlier versions of this report: 3:30 p.m.: PANAMA CITY BEACH — The first family indulged in a simple lunch by Grand Lagoon at Lime’s Bayside Bar and Grill at the Bay Point Marriott on Saturday afternoon. Early rain eased for the family, allowing them to dine outside on the dock under a partly cloudy sky, despite the heat and humidity. The first family’s menu included chicken tenders, fish tacos and a burger with an order of guacomole. White House officials said the family shared each of the items. Lunch was taken at a leisurely pace appropriate for the family vacation; President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle and their daughter Sasha spent a few hours at the hotel before departing for their next destination, which has not been announced. — 2:15 p.m.: PANAMA CITY BEACH — The oil has stopped flowing and the well has been capped, but the work is far from over in restoring the Gulf region to the pristine condition it enjoyed before the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. With a backdrop of U.S. Coast Guard ships at Navy Support Activity Panama City, President Barack Obama on Saturday vowed he and his administration will not slacken their efforts in the Gulf until the environment and economy are fully recovered. “Our job is not finished, and we are not going anywhere until it is,” he said. VIDEO: President speaks at Naval Support Activity Panama City

Rape Accuser: Johan Santana Impregnated Me

Filed under: Johan Santana , TMZ Sports , Celebrity Justice New York Mets pitcher Johan Santana allegedly knocked up the woman who accused him of raping her last year … according to a new civil lawsuit. TMZ obtained the documents filed yesterday in Florida state court by a Jane Doe. In the docs, the victim… Read more

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Rape Accuser: Johan Santana Impregnated Me

Hardball Panelist Bemoans: Townhallers Only Getting News From Limbaugh, Drudge and Fox News

NBC’s Chuck Todd, substitute hosting for Chris Matthews on Monday’s Hardball, invited on Vanity Fair’s Todd Purdum and the Politico’s Jonathan Martin to navel gaze about what ailed the political structure as Todd questioned “Is Washington broke and beyond repair?” Pivoting off a Purdum article, that in part, blamed lobbyists, Martin offered his own explanation as he brought up the typical mainstream media boogeymen of the Drudge Report, Rush Limbaugh and Fox News. After Todd noted that it’s not just the “lobbying community” causing distress in D.C., that the “media is playing a role here” and “it’s not clear which came first, the polarized Washington or the polarized way that people get information” Martin offered his account of how townhallers in Florida were “listening to Rush Limbaugh,” “reading Drudge” and “watching Fox News.” JONATHAN MARTIN, POLITICO: But it’s also, it’s also the break down in not just Washington media but in regional newspapers. Last August, a year ago, I was down in Florida, the panhandle, going to Allen Boyd town hall meetings. The folks at those town hall meetings – Chuck, they, they were not reading the Pensacola News Journal, they were not reading the Tallahassee Democrat, they were listening to Rush Limbaugh, they were reading Drudge, and they were watching- CHUCK TODD: Local news has gone national. MARTIN: -and they were watching Fox News. And that’s where they got their information entirely! The following is the full exchange as it was aired on the August 9 edition of Hardball: CHUCK TODD: Well, we are back. Is Washington broke and beyond repair? Vanity Fair’s national editor Todd Purdum has a great big piece. One of those big think pieces in the latest issue of the magazine, which of course has Lady Gaga on the cover, because you have to sell the magazine. But it’s called “Washington, We Have A Problem.” We’re also joined by a Washingtonian from birth, Politico’s senior political reporter Jonathan Martin. And look you’ve gotten, Todd, you’ve gotten a lot of attention for this piece. This idea that it’s broken. I think Rahm Emanuel refers to Washington, in cementing his own four letter legacy as “F” Nutsville. But one part of your piece has not gotten a lot of attention and it was striking to me and that was the fact that the media is not the Fourth Estate it’s the industry of lobbying. Let me, this figure you used, you said in 2009 expenditures for lobbying – $3.5 billion, with a “b” dollars or $1.3 million for each hour that Congress was in session according to the Center for Responsive Politics. That’s, that to me, is the eye opener of this piece, almost more than anything now. TODD PURDUM, VANITY FAIR: It’s pretty incredible. And a single lobbying entity, the Chamber of Commerce, spent $144 million last year, which is more than the combined payroll of all 535 members of Congress. So I mean the, the stakes are so wildly disproportionate in terms what have resources can be brought to bear. And the typical congressman or senator, you know, doesn’t need that much. John Breaux, senator from Louisiana once famously said, “My vote can’t be bought, it can occasionally be rented.” TODD: You know Jonathan I was looking at this piece and I went into it with a little bit – cynical. You know is Washington broken? You know what? We’re all gonna thumb suck. You see a number like that though and you say, “Okay think maybe things have changed.” This lobbying community, like I said, you’ve grown up around here. JONATHAN MARTIN, POLITICO: Right. TODD: K Street is no longer just a street. It’s a community. MARTIN: Well it’s the entire, it’s the entire culture now of Washington. And also, if you go to the Hill, those bills are frequent, this is not a cliche, those bills are actually written by lobbyists. I mean the actual language itself, because the lobbyists are the only ones that actually are the experts on the issues. They’re the ones feeding the committee staff, the actual language of the bills. That’s a fact. But I was struck, Chuck, in this piece and also the New York piece by George Packer about the U.S. Senate. PURDUM: Wonderful piece. MARTIN: Two things. Increasingly, the, the real campaigns are played out within the parties themselves, not against each other, R’s versus D’s. But these folks are so scared of primaries nowadays that you’ve got now Republicans, for example talking about overturning the 14th Amendment. Why are they doing that? Does Mitch McConnell suddenly care about this issue? I would doubt it seriously. They are scared of a radicalized GOP base that, that right now is demanding action on immigration and they’re talking about addressing this issue because they’re scared of their own base and being primaried. That’s what drives the folks on the R side and the D side now increasingly. It’s primaries. TODD: Now you, rightly, I think put a focus, Todd, on this, the, the lobbying community as this sort of hidden Fourth Estate that no one talks about. You hear it sort of used as a punching bag. But the media is playing a role here, a little bit, too. And that is the fact that it’s not clear which came first, the polarized Washington or the polarized way that people get information about Washington. And then we’ve shined a spotlight on it, but with our own lens and we focus it in its special way. PURDUM: Well first of all, I mean the media from the French Revolution on, the media thrives on conflict. And that’s why we say “man bites dog,” and not “dog bites man.” So that’s, that’s a given. But it’s the intensity- TODD: Wait a minute, breaking news. Another plane has landed safely at National Airport. That is correct. Another – right, we never break in for that. Yeah. MARTIN: One hundred today now… PURDUM: You scared me for one second. I thought that’s going on here? TODD: No, no but that’s my point. We don’t break in for that. PURDUM: And we don’t say Washingtonians got up and had their coffee and went to school and… TODD: Right. PURDUM: But, but what has happened to the frequency, the velocity of it, has so increased, that even 15 years ago when I covered the White House for the New York Times, we like to say we had a 24/7 media, we really did not. We had CNN, which every 22 minutes kind of had the world headlines. But it wasn’t that some blogger sitting in a house some place, could cause a story that would make the White House reacted at midnight. That just didn’t exist. MARTIN: But it’s also, it’s also the break down in not just Washington media but in regional newspapers. Last August, a year ago, I was down in Florida, the panhandle, going to Allen Boyd town hall meetings. The folks at those town hall meetings – Chuck, they, they were not reading the Pensacola News Journal, they were not reading the Tallahassee Democrat, they were listening to Rush Limbaugh, they were reading Drudge, and they were watching- TODD: Local news has gone national. MARTIN: -and they were watching Fox News. And that’s where they got their information entirely!

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Hardball Panelist Bemoans: Townhallers Only Getting News From Limbaugh, Drudge and Fox News

Teen Choice Awards 2010: Full List of Winners!

The 2010 Teen Choice Awards, held at the Gibson Amphitheater on Sunday in Universal City, Calif., and airing tonight on Fox, were filled with big names. Sandra Bullock, for one. She didn’t walk the blue carpet, but accepted the award for choice movie actress for her Oscar-winning role in The Blind Side . “I don’t know if you should bring attention to this. Some things are better left unsaid. It’s been awhile since I was a teen,” she said. “I’m so blessed and lucky.” She then danced to Lil Jon’s “Get Low” with Betty White. Seriously. Sandra Bullock shows Betty White how to shake dat THANG . Among the other stars to walk away with prized surfboards included Selena Gomez, Channing Tatum, Taylor Lautner, Megan Fox and the cast of Glee . Katy Perry, who hosted the event, kicked off the night on a colorful and flashy stage with a stirring performance of her latest song, “Teenage Dream.” Teen pop sensation Justin Bieber accepted an award and sang “U Smile” via satellite. Who else took home awards for music, TV, movies and more? You can find out tonight at 8 p.m. on FOX … or you can just follow the jump for the full list of Teen Choice Awards winners right here, right now … MOVIES Choice Movie: Action Adventure: Sherlock Holmes Choice Movie Actor: Action Adventure: Channing Tatum, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra Choice Movie Actress: Action Adventure: Rachel McAdams, Sherlock Holmes Choice Movie: Sci-Fi: Avatar Choice Movie: Liplock: Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart, The Twilight Saga: New Moon Choice Movie: Fight: Mia Wasikowska vs. The Jabberwocky, Alice in Wonderland Choice Movie: Hissy Fit: Miley Cyrus, The Last Song Choice Movie: Chemistry: Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson, The Twilight Saga: New Moon Choice Movie: Male Breakout: Liam Hemsworth, The Last Song Choice Movie: Female Breakout: Taylor Swift, Valentine’s Day Choice Movie: Male Scene Stealer: Kellan Lutz, The Twilight Saga: New Moon Choice Movie: Female Scene Stealer: Ashley Greene, The Twilight Saga: New Moon Choice Movie Actor: Sci-Fi: Sam Worthington, Avatar Choice Movie Actress: Sci-Fi: Zo