Tag Archives: helicopter

Microsoft Honcho’s Helicopter — Post-Crash Footage

Filed under: Paul Allen , accident , Nurse! TMZ has obtained video of Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen ‘s helicopter … after it crashed into the ocean today off the coast of Argentina

Beck: Obama Will Blame Terror Attack On TSA Resistance

Fox News host warns that administration is preparing to exploit event to squelch resistance to airport security In little noticed comments made during an appearance on Judge Andrew Napolitano’s show on Fox News, Glenn Beck warned that the Obama administration wouldn’t hesitate to exploit a terror attack targeting airliners to blame the event on people protesting naked body scanners and TSA groping in airports. The Fox News host said that the government was deliberately provoking the American people to rise up so they could squelch the growing resistance with an iron fist, noting that Obama has failed to give a single speech addressing the TSA revolt even amidst the biggest holiday travel period of the year. “Let’s get people to rise up and say no scanners….something happens, the President then has the ability to finally give a speech on airport security and say ‘I was trying to protect you and these people stood up against these scanners, and these people died because of it….you have to stop listening, I’ll protect you,” said Beck, implying that the Obama administration would exploit a terror attack to blame it on those protesting against scanners and TSA groping in airports. Beck added that people in the Obama administration were probably having casual conversations surrounding the potential of a terror attack targeting airline travel along the lines of, “Gee, it wouldn’t be so bad, would it?” Beck made similar comments earlier this month when he suggested that the Obama administration was preparing to stage an event that would be blamed on opponents of big government. Discussing how leftists need violence to realize their political agenda, Beck featured a clip in which former Clintonite and Democrat operative Mark Penn said Obama needs an OKC bombing-style event to regain his popularity. “Remember, President Clinton reconnected through Oklahoma, right?” said Penn on Chris Matthews’ Hardball show. “And the president right now seems removed. It wasn’t until that speech [after the bombing] that [Clinton] really clicked with the American public. Obama needs a similar” defining moment, according to Penn. As we have documented, Penn is not the only prominent insider to invoke exploitation of terror as a means of reinvigorating the big government agenda. Back in July, former senior advisor to President Bill Clinton Robert Shapiro wrote in the Financial Times that only an OKC bombing or 9/11 style event could provide Obama with the opportunity to demonstrate that he is a strong leader. After reading a letter written by Tides CEO and founder Drummond Pike that encouraged advertisers to boycott Fox News in a thinly veiled threat that implied Beck’s rhetoric is leading to another OKC bombing, Beck stated, “They are setting up an Oklahoma City, they are claiming that one is coming and they’re already marked the one who caused it,” referring to himself. The resistance to TSA groping and naked body scanners is only accelerating as Thanksgiving nears and a national opt-out protest is less than 48 hours away. More and more cases of TSA abuse continue to pour in on a daily basis as Transportation Security Administration head John Pistole indicates for the first time that the agency may be starting to cave to the backlash. Pistole told CNN’s State of the Union yesterday that screening procedures would not be altered but in a subsequent statement acknowledged that the TSA needed to make airport security “as minimally invasive as possible,” in response to the building nationwide outrage and vows by numerous airport directors to ditch the TSA altogether in favor of private security. http://www.prisonplanet.com/beck-obama-will-blame-terror-attack-on-tsa-resistanc… added by: im1mjrpain

‘Simpsons’ invents new Fox News motto: ‘#1 with racists’

In the world of The Simpsons, Fox News' well-known “fair and balanced” motto has been replaced. On Sunday's episode of the long-running cartoon series, a Fox News helicopter carrying a network executive reads, “Fox News: Not Racists, But #1 With Racists.” After the Fox News executive steps out of the helicopter into the head of the Statue of Liberty, the aircraft goes into a tailspin and crashes. The pilot can be heard saying, “It's not fair, we're unbalanced.” The executive conducts a secret meeting where his team plans a new health care scare that will send their ratings through the roof. Gawker calls The Simpsons episode one of the most anti-Republican ever. At one point in the episode, the likeness of former Vice President Dick Cheney laments the lack of terrorist attacks on America. The creators of the popular television show may cause for concern. Just last week, a Fox News anchor effectively said that all Hispanics were illegal aliens. The anchor, Trace Gallagher, claimed that a new study has shown 100,000 illegal aliens have left Arizona since the passage of a draconian new law, SB 1070, that allows police to check the immigration status of anyone they pull over. “The way they got the numbers is they crunched them using the current US population survey and then they had numbers from the Mexican government, is what they came up with, is that 100,000 illegals have left Arizona — there are 100,000 illegals fewer before SB 1070 was ever talked about,” Gallagher said. Only that's not what the study says. The study actually says that the immigration law in Arizona has likely provoked the voluntary departure of 100,000 Hispanics from the southern US state. This video is from Fox's The Simpsons, broadcast Nov. 21, 2010. added by: treewolf39

Today Show Invites on Rolling Stone Reporter to Complain About Pentagon Ban

NBC’s Today show invited on the reporter, whose Rolling Stone article essentially got General Stanley McChrystal fired, on Thursday’s show to complain that the Pentagon denied him an embed because the war in Afghanistan isn’t going well. After Today co-anchor Meredith Vieira questioned Michael Hastings for his explanation as to why the Pentagon denied him an embed, Hastings concluded “This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going…The war has hit its all-time low.” This caused Vieira, herself, to cry censorship, as she asked: “Do you think the military is trying to say to reporters,’We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?'” MEREDITH VIEIRA: So why do you think, ultimately, you lost this, this right to an embed? I mean, what do you think is going on? Is it the McChrystal article or is there something much bigger than that? MICHAEL HASTINGS: I think it’s, I think it’s much bigger. This is not just about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed. This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going. June and July were the deadliest months that we’ve ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings, so clearly there’s great concern in Washington about how the war is going, and the response to this embed. The response to me on this embed sort of indicates that. I think it’s important to, to just let you know, with this helicopter story, these are stories that I’m very passionate about telling. And it is a great privilege to tell the story of the troops. VIEIRA: But do you think, but do you think the military is trying to say to reporters, “We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?” The following Jim Miklaszewski set-up piece and entire interview with Hastings were aired on the August 5 Today show: MEREDITH VIEIRA: And now to the war in Afghanistan. It has been a difficult summer for U.S. troops there. July was the deadliest month yet for Americans. And a new commander took over after a controversial Rolling Stone article led to the end of General Stanley McChrystal’s military career. Well now the Pentagon is refusing to let that reporter, the reporter who wrote it, embed with another unit in Afghanistan. We’re gonna talk about that with Michael Hastings in a moment. But first NBC’s Jim Miklaszewski is at the Pentagon. Mik, good morning to you. [On screen headline: “Pentagon Payback? McChrystal Reporter Not Allowed Back With Troops”] JIM MIKLASZEWSKI: Good morning, Meredith. It’s been a couple of months since the story broke that forced General McChrystal out of the Army, but the fallout over media military relations is far from over. On his last day as a soldier, General Stan McChrystal managed to joke about the article that ended his career, with a word of warning to his fellow soldiers. GEN. STANLEY MCCHRYSTAL: I have stories on all of you, photos on many, and I know a Rolling Stone reporter. MIKLASZEWSKI: That reporter is Michael Hastings. In an interview on Today in June, Hastings explained how he landed that Rolling Stone scoop. MICHAEL HASTINGS: The access I got was almost a throwback to the old days of “fly on the wall” reporting, where, nowadays, access is almost so controlled, it’s always very so controlled. So it was very rare to get this kind of access anyway. MIKLASZEWSKI: But not any more. The U.S. military has revoked Hastings’ recent request to embed with American forces in Afghanistan, after first granting the request last month. Pentagon spokesman Colonel David Lepenn insists it’s not retribution but explains “a key element of an embed is having trust,” and essentially commanders in Afghanistan no longer trust Hastings. But as a freelancer, Hastings has covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan for various publications, and Internet news blogs with no apparent complaints. Military officials have, in fact, praised Hastings’ upcoming piece in the Men’s Journal on Army combat helicopters saying “It accurately portrays the Army’s warrior mentality.” So what is going on here? Media watchdogs claim the military is striking back. LUCY DALGLISH, THE REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS: Since they have all of the power, all of it, once he’s published his story they have, if he wants back in, they have all of the power. If they say they don’t trust him to do what they want him to do anymore, they’re just not going to play in the sandbox with him anymore. MIKLASZEWSKI: Meanwhile, the Army Inspector General is still investigating whether if any of McChrystal’s aides who were blindly quoted in that article should face disciplinary action. And as a reporter who’s often been embedded with the military, there is, indeed, a fine line between trust and control. And while the military can control a reporter’s access, there must be no control over the reporter’s content. Meredith? MEREDITH VIEIRA: Mik, thank you very much. Michael Hastings is with us, exclusively. Good morning to you. MICHAEL HASTINGS: Good morning, thanks for having me. VIEIRA: Not at all. Just so people are clear on this, you were offered this embed in June, then the article on General McChrystal comes out at the end of June, between then and now you didn’t hear anything, and then you get this letter this week. Who is it from, and what did it say? HASTINGS: The letter was from a public affairs official in Kabul, named Colonel Wayne Shanks, and it just basically laid out the case that I, noting that I had, had approval and that approval was being revoked because the military was unhappy with, first, the helicopter story, and actually, they, they, they mentioned the helicopter story, and then they mentioned the story that I wrote about General McChrystal for Rolling Stone. VIEIRA: So they specifically pointed out two stories? HASTINGS: Two stories, yes. But the more important part of their case being, what seemed it to be the General McChrystal story. And in fact, what they refer to as the “political fallout” from the General McChrystal story. So nothing to do, really, or there was no specific cases where they mentioned accuracy or anything I got wrong, or, or any, any rules I supposedly broke. VIEIRA: Well when asked about this, a spokesperson for the Defense Department said this, and I’m quoting here, “There is no right to embed. It is a choice made between units and individual reporters. And a key element of an embed is having trust that the individuals are going to abide by the ground rules. The command in Afghanistan decided there wasn’t the trust requisite, and denied your request.” In other words, they didn’t trust you to accurately report. HASTINGS: And that’s what’s very troubling about this. I’ve been doing this for five years. I’ve gone on dozens of embeds with American troops, accompanied them on many combat missions, traveled regularly with senior military officials and I’ve never had an issue. In fact I have many great friends, both Marines and soldiers, who, who I’ve met along the way for this. I think what also should be made clear is that my travels with General McChrystal were not considered an embed at the time. And if the military’s position now is that it was an embed, then the rules for embeds are very clear. Rule number seven says all comments are on the record. All interviews with service personnel are on the record. VIEIRA: Did you take comments off the record- HASTINGS: No. VIEIRA: -in that, in that interview with General McChrystal at all? HASTINGS: No, and, in fact, if you look at the, the people who are sort of making that assertion, and what, and what appears to be their case about why they’re, why they’re saying I can’t do this embed, those assertions are being made by people who, unfortunately, lost their job as a result of the article, and they’re currently under investigation. So they’re not necessarily the most credible sources. VIEIRA: So why do you think, ultimately, you lost this, this right to an embed? I mean, what do you think is going on? Is it the McChrystal article or is there something much bigger than that? HASTINGS: I think it’s, I think it’s much bigger. This is not just about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed. This is a symptom of essentially the war, and how the war is going. June and July were the deadliest months that we’ve ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings, so clearly there’s great concern in Washington about how the war is going, and the response to this embed. The response to me on this embed sort of indicates that. I think it’s important to, to just let you know, with this helicopter story, these are stories that I’m very passionate about telling. And it is a great privilege to tell the story of the troops. VIEIRA: But do you think, but do you think the military is trying to say to reporters, “We will stifle you, if you don’t tell the story the way we want it told?” HASTINGS: That appears to be the case. You’d have to ask the military if that’s what they’re doing. But, but I think if we look at just, say, the, the, the story about the Kaiwa pilots — the Kaiwa is a kind of an attack helicopter – you know, sometimes, sometimes reporters will do a story about policy. Sometimes that’s going to be very critical. I think that’s a good thing to be critical about policy, especially if the policy is not going well. And sometimes you do it about the people who are fighting the war, the American men and women over there who are actually implementing the policy, and whose stories deserve to be told. And for that I’ve always said it’s a privilege to, to be able to see that. VIEIRA: Alright, Michael Hastings. Thank you so much for joining us this morning. Appreciate it. HASTINGS: Thanks for having me. Appreciate it.

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Today Show Invites on Rolling Stone Reporter to Complain About Pentagon Ban

First Biofuel-Powered Helicopter Flight Made by Royal Netherlands Air Force

The Apache AH-64D deployed by the US in Iraq; the same type as used in the Netherlands’ test flight. Photo: Wikipedia . Aviation biofuels continue to gain momentum, with both commercial airlines and the military all conducting test flights and in general finding them more efficient than petroleum-based fuels. While we’re still

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First Biofuel-Powered Helicopter Flight Made by Royal Netherlands Air Force

Cute Pregnant Lady Alert!

Gisele’s baby Bundchen -in-the-oven is getting bigger by the day! But she still manages to squeeze into skinny jeans just over a month away from her due date. The model hasn’t let her pregnancy slow her down one bit. In fact, here she is with her helicopter instructor Stuart Matsumoto walking in Boston after having lunch.

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Cute Pregnant Lady Alert!

You Try Getting Randy & Evi Quaid in a Courtroom

Randy and Evi Quaid still aren’t up for a road trip just yet. After failing to turn up three other times to answer to charges of stiffing a resort on their $10,000 bill, the couple…

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You Try Getting Randy & Evi Quaid in a Courtroom

Gisele Bündchen: Mom-to-Be, Badass Chopper Pilot

Can Gisele Bündchen be any hotter? The pregnant supermodel is well on her way to getting a pilot’s license to fly helicopters.

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Gisele Bündchen: Mom-to-Be, Badass Chopper Pilot

Gisele — Hottest Pilot Ever

Filed under: Fly Me , Tom & Gisele In case of a water landing, your seat backs aren’t the only thing that can be used a flotation device. Sources tell TMZ Gisele Bundchen is in the process of getting her helicopter pilot’s license. We’re told she’s been taking lessons at the …

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Gisele — Hottest Pilot Ever

Michael Jackson is Alive!

Live Leak just posted a video of a figure that appears to be Michael Jackson walking out of the back of the same coroners van that picked his body up from the heliport. You may recall the video of Michael Jackson sitting up in the helicopter after his death! As soon as I find a Michael Jackson lunching with Elvis, I will post it here on Buzzfeed! Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment