Tag Archives: houston

NY Times Loses Its Distaste for Religion As Houston Churches Push Amnesty for Illegals

Last Friday, the New York Times continued its front-page hammering of Pope Benedict as sharing the blame for the scandalous child sex abuse cases brought against priests. On Tuesday, the Times led with a story on the alleged scandal of the United States giving tax breaks for donations to strengthen Jewish settlements in the West Bank that Obama doesn’t approve of. So when the paper suddenly starts showing deference to religion in politics, it’s a giveaway that a plea in aid of an unlabeled liberal cause will soon follow. The Times continues to push for amnesty for illegal immigration by providing gross overexposure to pro-illegal immigrant protests and marches that function as press releases for the pro-amnesty position. On Monday, Texas-based reporter James McKinley Jr. brought in “an unusual display of ecumenical solidarity.” ” Many Churches, One Plea — Houston’s Clergy United to Urge Support for Immigration Reform .” McKinley lets a minister ramble in Marxist fashion: The Rev. John W. Bowie knows it is hard to sell the people in his neighborhood on the idea that they should support changing immigration laws to give illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. His church lies in one of the oldest black settlements in the city, where unemployment is high and many people see immigrants as competitors for jobs. Yet there he was in the pulpit at True Light Missionary Baptist Church on the Fourth of July, with a full choir behind him, urging his flock to support an overhaul of immigration laws that “lets the undocumented come out of the shadows.” “All 13 colonies were made up of illegal aliens because they had not gotten permission from the residents here, who were the Indians,” he said. “Then a few years later, they brought us here and made us illegal, too. These immigrants, we immigrants, have built the greatest nation in the world, coming from everywhere, all over, because, you see, nobody owns this world except God.” All over Houston, in an unusual display of ecumenical solidarity on an explosive issue, scores of pastors, priests, rabbis and ministers used their sermons on Independence Day to promote the cause of fixing a broken immigration system. The coordinated effort was part of a broad-based campaign begun in January by an interfaith group, the Metropolitan Organization, to lobby Congress to pass an immigration overhaul package this year. The group has collected 12,000 signatures to be sent to lawmakers and has organized workshops to persuade churchgoers to support their effort. McKinley didn’t find any “liberals” on the pro-amnesty side, but managed to identify opponents of immigration “reform” as “conservative” and “right-wing.” Many clergy members say they face an uphill battle with their congregations, some of which tend to be conservative on social issues and regard immigrants without visas as lawbreakers. Their effort has also drawn fire from right-wing talk radio hosts.  McKinley also piled on the “right-wing politicians” and “conservative” labels in a slanted May story on the Texas governor’s race that will pit sitting Gov. Rick Perry against Democrat Bill White.

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NY Times Loses Its Distaste for Religion As Houston Churches Push Amnesty for Illegals

Contessa Brewer: MSNBC Audition Like ‘Marine Corps Obstacle Course;’ Whines About Guests ‘With An Agenda’

In an interview on MediaBistro.com’s ‘Media Beat,’ MSNBC anchor Contessa Brewer told TVNewser editor Kevin Allocca about the cable network’s high standards in its audition process: “…it’s got to be like the Marine Corps obstacle course in order to land this job.” She later complained about “difficult” guests: “When someone comes on with an agenda and their agenda is to take you down.” Allocca asked Brewer about some her toughest interviews. She responded by describing certain guests who “come on and they are prepared to be challenging and to be difficult.” Two examples came to her mind, former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Republican Senator Judd Gregg. In recalling a January interview with Gregg, Brewer whined about how “it was a difficult interview to conduct.” In reality, Gregg simply pointed out Brewer’s liberal bias on the issue of government spending, after she equated Republican calls for less spending with cutting off funding for schools. Gregg pointed out that she was “being fundamentally dishonest” in her reporting.     During the Media Beat interview, she said of guests like Gregg: “…when you have guests on who are difficult or if they’re – if they’re sticking they’re heels in the ground and they’re really – you just end it, you move on.” Here is a transcript of the first part of the Media Beat interview posted July 5 on TVNewser.com: KEVIN ALLOCCA: Hello, and welcome to MediaBistro.com’s Media Beat. We’re here today with Contessa Brewer and I’m Kevin Allocca, the editor of TVNewser. Thanks for joining us, Contessa. CONTESSA BREWER: I have never heard you’re name pronounced, I’m glad to know it. ALLOCCA: Really, Allocca? BREWER: Yes. ALLOCCA: So, Contessa is an anchor at MSNBC and we’re going to talk a little about you’re career and how you got there. BREWER: Okay. ALLOCCA: And like a lot of newscasters, you sort of spent some time making the rounds at some local stations, and I’m kind of wondering how did you make that jump to a major network? BREWER: Um, I went through unemployment first. That was – that was a big part of getting the job at MSNBC. Because, I had applied for a lot of jobs at stations in Boston and Los Angeles and Houston and Phoenix and there were – some of those stations, I thought, would have been a good fit for me and it just – it didn’t happen. And then my agent said MSNBC was interested and I went through a wicked audition process. I mean, this audition at MSNBC, I think, has become famous, because it is – it’s like – it’s got to be like the Marine Corps obstacle course in order to land this job, yeah. I re-wrote a lot of my scripts for this, I’m thinking I’m big stuff, right? I’m tackling the scripts for this audition and as soon as you launch into the script they’re in your ear and they’re throwing breaking news at you and they want you to jungle [juggle] it. And the thing is, is that in local news, you don’t juggle breaking news like you do in cable news. So – well, I must have – I finished the obstacle course because I landed the job, but I’ll tell you, I’ve never been through an audition like that. ALLOCCA: Really? BREWER: Yeah. ALLOCCA: I read that you had an academic background in politics, also. Do you think that that’s been an asset for you since you’ve been there? BREWER: Absolutely, I mean, you know, I studied politics in college. I went to Europe and I studied European politics. And I never – once you were in local news – I never really anticipated that I was going to use it. Here, there are – there’s really an opportunity to dive in and to see politics in action and see the storyline develop and get to know the players in a way that I just never could have imagined. ALLOCCA: I’m sure you’ve used – put that to use a lot in a lot of interviews that you’ve done and I’m kind of wondering which do feel like was one of the toughest ones that you’ve had to do? BREWER: Political interview? ALLOCCA: Or any sort of interview, actually. BREWER: Well, I think – I mean the hard thing is I do have some guests who are – they come on and they are prepared to be challenging and to be difficult, those are always the hardest interviews. When someone comes on with an agenda and their agenda is to take you down. You know, it’s challenging when you’re dealing with someone who is so well-prepared on a specific topic, you know, that they’re the expert and they’ve spent they’re whole lives diving into a certain subject and you have to play Devil’s advocate with them and challenge them on something that, you know, you spend, at best, hours preparing for. You know, I had a pretty intense interview with Michael Chertoff, back when he was the Homeland Security secretary. I had – you know there was an interview with Judd Gregg recently, where I think, you know, I think what he was expecting out of the interview and what we – and my partner at the time was Melissa Francis, when we were doing ‘It’s the Economy’ – I think that was a – you know, it was a difficult interview to conduct. But you know, usually, when you have guests on who are difficult or if they’re – if they’re sticking they’re heels in the ground and they’re really – you just end it, you move on.  

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Contessa Brewer: MSNBC Audition Like ‘Marine Corps Obstacle Course;’ Whines About Guests ‘With An Agenda’

Underreported: The Irony of BP’s ‘Beyond Petroleum’ PR Crusade

One narrative the liberal media has strenuously failed to develop is the incredible irony of BP presenting itself as the greenest oil company, the “Beyond Petroleum” folks who recognized they were boiling the planet with oil. In Friday’s Wall Street Journal , Mark Mills reviewed a new book, Oil, by Tom Bower:   But the most interesting figure in Mr. Bower’s narrative is not Mr. Putin but BP’s Lord Browne, who understood cultural politics better than his peers. In the 1990s, BP launched what was arguably the oil industry’s most successful public-relations campaign, for all the good it is doing the company now. The campaign transformed BP into a shining example of a progressive company—one supposedly “Beyond Petroleum.” It is clear from Mr. Bower’s account that, while BP remained first and foremost an oil company, Lord Browne drank his own Kool-Aid, basking in encomia from the media and green mavens. He gave lectures at Stanford, appeared on “Charlie Rose,” cozied up to Greenpeace and promised to spend $1 billion on solar technology. The Beyond Petroleum campaign, conceived by PR masters Ogilvy & Mather, was originally intended as an internal strategy, aimed at making the company appear more green-sensitive. But it so excited Lord Browne that he delivered a May 1997 speech proclaiming BP the first “green” oil major. The company produced a 200-page “Reputation Manual” with facts about BP’s greenness, formed a political-style “war room” in Houston, and launched a multiyear media blitz. Mr. Bower claims that the rebranding cost BP $200 million. The cost is now measurable in irony, as the Gulf of Mexico grows ever more slick and BP ever more hated. But the campaign was hokum from the start. At this point in history it is almost impossible to find a place “beyond” petroleum. It’s not just the scale of the task but its nature. Energy-dense liquids are valuable, and oil is uniquely valuable in its combination of density, ease of storage and transport, and, believe it or not, safety. Every alternative is worse on all metrics, including cost, even at twice today’s oil price. If liquid hydrocarbons didn’t exist, we would have to invent them

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Underreported: The Irony of BP’s ‘Beyond Petroleum’ PR Crusade

Lilith Fair Forced To Ax 10 Shows

Sarah McLachlan-headlined festival is struggling at the box office. By Gil Kaufman Sarah McLachlan at Lilith Fair in Calgary, Alberta, on June 27 Photo: David Bergman/ Getty Images In the midst of one of the cruelest summers the touring industry has had in decades, the Lilith Fair announced on Thursday that it was canceling 10 dates as a result of soft ticket sales. The female-centric tour, headlined by founder Sarah McLachlan, made its return to amphitheaters after an 11-year layoff on Sunday in Calgary, but co-founder Terry McBride admitted in a statement that slow box office has forced him to pull a number of upcoming dates. “We are in the midst of one of the most challenging summer concert seasons with many tours being cancelled outright,” McBride said in a statement. “Everyone involved with the tour would like to apologize to the fans and artists scheduled to play in these markets, and express appreciation for all the support for the festival’s return. Lilith remains the only tour of its kind, and we are confident that fans will be amazed by what each date has to offer.” The affected dates are: Salt Lake City (July 12), Montreal (July 23), Raleigh (August 4), Charlotte (August 6), West Palm Beach (August 10), Tampa (August 11), Birmingham (August 12), Austin (August 14), Houston (August 15) and Dallas (August 16). Because of the cancellations, some of the artists who were set to appear later in the tour may be performing in other cities. Fans are encouraged to check Lilithfair.com for updates on lineups. One of the most successful package tours of its era in the late 1990s (1997-1999), McLachlan and McBride decided to bring Lilith — which features a rotating list of headliners — back this year with a roster of tour veterans and a number of new stars. Among the acts taking part this year are: Erykah Badu, Rihanna, Gossip, Colbie Caillat, Cat Power, Selena Gomez, Corinne Bailey Rae, Indigo Girls, Kelly Clarkson, Jill Scott, Heart, Queen Latifah, Norah Jones, Mary J. Blige, Metric, Miranda Lambert, Sheryl Crow, Tegan and Sara, Sugarland, and Janelle Monae. The cancellations come during a summer in which the touring industry — which had record $4.4 billion grosses last summer — is struggling in the midst of a rash of concert cancellations and soft-selling tours. U2 were forced to postpone the latest leg of their 360 Tour when singer Bono suffered a back injury during rehearsals; Christina Aguilera pulled the plug on a summer tour promoting her Bionic album, citing scheduling conflicts; and Limp Bizkit called off its entire slate of amphitheater shows after complaining that they were not appropriate venues for the band. Maxwell also mothballed a leg of his summer tour just weeks before Simon & Garfunkel did the same due to a vocal injury suffered by Art Garfunkel. Related Artists Sarah McLachlan

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Lilith Fair Forced To Ax 10 Shows

Bun B Says ‘I Was Drake’

‘I was in the same predicament in terms of being a new artist,’ he tells Vibe of UGK’s beginnings. By Mawuse Ziegbe Bun B Photo: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images Few can understand the outsize buzz that has accompanied Drake’s hotly anticipated debut, Thank Me Later. However, Houston hip-hop stalwart Bun B, who first started out with Pimp C in the influential duo UGK, said that he relates to the frenzy the Canadian MC has experienced during his rise to stardom. “To be honest, I was Drake,” Bun B told Vibe magazine. The Texas MC said he can relate to artists like Drizzy and Kid Cudi — who both leveraged their undeniable popularity as unsigned artists to score successful mainstream success — because he grappled with the same type of attention and hype from the industry while he was still grinding on the indie circuit. “I was in the same predicament in terms of being a new artist,” he said. “I was involved in a bidding war when we first came out independently. Labels were calling us and inviting us to meetings.” Bun B also told the magazine that his ability to stay relevant and uphold UGK’s legacy after being in the game for years has endeared him to the younger generation of MCs. “We were able to work it out in terms of UGK’s legacy and longevity. And we have inspired a lot of cats. I definitely get calls from up-and-coming artists about how to stick around for a while. I feel like some of these cats could use a little direction.” Bun also defended Drake against detractors who say the Toronto MC’s blending of lyricism and crooning isn’t authentic hip-hop. “I don’t know what they are talking about, personally, because if you are saying that, then that means you are trying to say that people like T.J. Swan, Slick Rick and Biz Markie are not hip-hop. Come on … all of those guys sung on their songs,” Bun said. “Singing in hip-hop is nothing new. We’ve always had people that incorporated singing in their raps. And believe me, if MCs could sing, they wouldn’t get singers to sing on their albums.” What do you think about Bun B’s Drake comparison? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Bun B Drake

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Bun B Says ‘I Was Drake’

BREAKING: Ask BP Questions for LIVE VIDEO Interview

Google, YouTube and the PBS NewsHour are teaming up to bring you into BP headquarters in Houston, Texas for an exclusive interview with Bob Dudley, Chief Executive for BP’s Response. Dudley will respond directly to your questions and concerns in a live session moderated by the PBS NewsHour’s Ray Suarez. Starting now, submit your questions and vote the best ones to the top. Then join us for the live interview tomorrow, Thursday, July 1, at 3:30 pm ET where you can watch the interview LIVE on NewsHour.PBS.org and YouTube. added by: captainplanet71

Peggy West Milwaukee Democrat Don’t Know Arizona Borders Mexico YouTube Video

Milwaukee County Supervisor Peggy West, Democrat, seems knew Google well but not the Google maps. She also forgot about YouTube. added by: f4schennai

Democrat county supervisor: Arizona is not a border state

OK, well this may explain why Democrats don't understand why Arizona passed SB 1070. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQp8M0bkarM&feature=player_embedded According to her, Arizona is not a border state. No, it's “removed from the border.” After making a comment that is so obviously ignorant…what needs to be said? Meanwhile, we are finding out that there is a nexus between Hezbollah and the Mexican drug gangs… http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/06/25/congresswoman-raises-red-flag-hezboll… You'd think this intel would inspire the Federal Govt–that would be Obama–to take our border issues seriously, as a matter of national defense. But no. This week Obama met with Arizona Senator Kyle, who reports that Obama refuses to seal the border until the Republicans agree to work with him for “immigration reform”…also known as “AMNESTY”. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpyrlX52TwA And now we learn that Obama has decided to appoint a Sanctuary City kook to head ICE. http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/06/24/obama-administration-picks-critic-imm… The Obama administration has tapped an outspoken critic of immigration enforcement on the local level to oversee and promote partnerships between federal and local officials on the issue. Harold Hurtt, a former police chief in Houston and Phoenix, has been hired as the director for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Office of State and Local Coordination. …as a police chief, Hurtt was a supporter of “sanctuary city” policies, by which illegal immigrants who don't commit crimes can live without fear of exposure or detainment because police don't check for immigration papers. What other evidence do you need to prove that the Democrats are out of touch…and are just being stupid? added by: curtisreed

Nipsey Hussle Reps L.A. New Class As ‘Hottest Breakthrough MCs Of 2010’ Candidate

Fans decide our ‘Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010’ — vote now! The winner will be revealed on July 25. By Shaheem Reid Nipsey Hussle Photo: Cinematic “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010” Candidate: Nipsey Hussle Yeah, he’s living up to his name. Nipsey Hussle is hustling, building his brand across the board. He has a deal for his own shoe with Pony, just finished a film with Vivica A. Fox and another one with Ving Rhames, he opened a clothing store in his native Los Angeles, appears on the new “Def Jam Rapstar” video game, has a tour coming and still has more mixtapes and a debut album on deck for October. “My album, it ain’t got no wrinkles in it,” Nip said recently in New York about his debut, South Central State of Mind. “From the sonic quality of it, every verse, every hook, to the features, to the production. Ain’t no excuses for the album.” Nipsey’s candidacy for “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010” comes from his grind in the streets. Last year, he dropped a trilogy of mixtapes called Bullets Ain’t Got No Names, which introduced him and immediately captivated fans. His work in the ‘hood garnered him co-signs by the likes of Snoop Dogg and the Game, both of whom he toured with. Drake also appeared on the potent Hussle underground smash “Killer.” The momentum has made Nip one of the leaders of the new wave of West Coast MCs, also including Fashawn and Jay Rock. “Nipsey, he brings the real to the table,” said Rock, who will be teaming up with Nip for a duet mixtape called Red and Blue Make Green. “He brings that struggle. He’s telling you his story. Nipsey is bringing a story as a whole package, as well as he’s bringing real music. Reality rap.” “You gonna be hard-pressed to come to L.A. and not hear a car playing Jay Rock music, playing Nipsey Hussle right now,” Nip said. “It’s gonna be almost impossible. They say it starts in your backyard. I feel we putting forth that legwork. We really took our city without the traditional outlet, the Dr. Dre, the Snoop Dogg, the Death Row. That’s not to take anything from them, but we wasn’t really waiting. We kinda like stood on our own foundation of hard work. That’s the brand that the new breed of West Coast artists gonna bring to the table. Self-made. Off the top!” Besides the authenticity of his music, Nip’s appeal lies in his laid-back delivery. You look at him or hear his music and you see your homie from around the way. Nip knows that all the love in the streets is eventually going to have to translate in his official releases. He just dropped the single “Feelin’ Myself (I’m So Fresh)” with Lloyd and has South Central State of Mind in cook-up mode right now. J.R. Rotem, Scott Storch, Houston’s Mr. Lee, Grammy winners Play-N-Skillz, Terrence Martin and Nip’s live band, 1500 or Nothin’, produced on the album thus far. Trey Songz and Sean Kingston are among the guest performers. “Regardless of people’s opinion about it, the dominant culture in L.A. is gang-banging,” Nipsey, a Crip, said about “Blue Laces,” a song from his LP. “Us being young dudes in our 20s, we not the cause of that. We was born into this culture. We reacted to it from the perspective of survival. I feel like that record, ‘Blue Laces,’ speaks on the realness of that culture. We not the cause of this. This is what led us into that mentality.” Nip said South Central State of Mind speaks to young Angelinos. “I’m kinda revolving around that concept on a lot of records on that album,” he said. “On the state of mind in growing up in L.A. Whether you from Compton, Watts, Long Beach, the east side, west side, it’s a state of mind that’s way more powerful than an individual. I might feel a certain way personally, but this is what it is. “I might feel like one of my dudes is a Blood, one of my dudes is from Hoover. So me, personally, this is my homeboy and I got love for him,” he added. “But I’m from the 60s, and it’s a politic that goes with that. I just feel like I revolved around that concept, the cause of this mind state. I want to impact the culture with the project and raise the consciousness of the people that’s being affected by this. And bring a human element to what this is about and stop people from looking at us like we just mindless killers and we glorifying this type of life. We really striving for change from within. We ain’t gonna go Hollywood with it and get a record deal and start blasting where we come from, but at the same time, we do wanna see change. It’s a lot of general concepts that revolve around that theme.” Nipsey and 19 other up-and-coming MCs are in the running to become MTV News’ “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010” — and the winner will be decided by you! Cast your vote for the “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010” right here . The top five will be revealed beginning July 19, and the winner will be announced on the “Sucker Free Summit” July 25! Related Videos Hottest Breakthrough MCs of 2010

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Nipsey Hussle Reps L.A. New Class As ‘Hottest Breakthrough MCs Of 2010’ Candidate

Bryant Leads Fourth Quarter Rally As Lakers Knock Off Celtics, 83-79

Los Angeles, CA (Sports Network) – Kobe Bryant and the Lakers looked half- asleep at times during their most important game of the season, but in the end it was their suffocating defense that propelled them to a 83-79 Game 7 win over the Boston Celtics to capture their 16th NBA championship and second in a row. Bryant captured his fifth title despite going 6-of-24 from the field for just 23 points, as the Lakers used their length to win the rebounding battle by a sizeable 53-40 margin. He also added 15 rebounds, while Pau Gasol provided a huge presence inside with 19 points and 18 boards. Ron Artest added 20 points in the win. “This is the sweetest (of the five),” Bryant said as he accepted the Bill Russell Award as Finals MVP. “We understood how badly the city wanted it. This one is by far the sweetest because it was against (Boston) and it was the hardest, by far.” Boston held the lead for a majority of the game, but Los Angeles outscored the Celtics, 30-22, in a decisive fourth quarter, including 10 points from Bryant. “I try not to (get caught in the hype of a Game 7). Tonight, it got the best of me,” Bryant said. “I wanted it so bad. Sometimes when you want something so bad, it slips away from you. I can’t say enough about (Gasol). We wouldn’t have won it without him.” Historically, the Celtics had dominated the Lakers in the NBA Finals coming into this matchup, winning nine of the previous 11 series, including 4-of-4 Game 7s. Los Angeles, though, exacted some revenge for its 2008 loss to Boston and handed head coach Phil Jackson his 11th championship — extending a record. Paul Pierce led a balanced Boston attack with 18 points, but the Celtics didn’t have enough firepower despite a heroic defensive effort for the first three quarters. Pierce also added 10 rebounds, although the C’s clearly missed their center in Kendrick Perkins , who sat out the game after spraining his knee in Game 6. Rasheed Wallace , who started in his place, finished with 11 points and eight rebounds. Kevin Garnett added 17 points, while Ray Allen struggled with only 13 on 3-of- 14 shooting, as Boston failed in its attempt to win its second title in three years. Gasol’s basket on the opening possession of the fourth quarter brought the Lakers to within 57-55, but both teams had some ugly play over the next few minutes. Neither team scored for over 2 1/2 minutes, until Garnett’s short bank shot put the Celtics back up by four with nine minutes to go. The Lakers, who trailed for all of the third and the first four-plus minutes of the fourth, finally drew even with Boston on Artest’s acrobatic three-point play in the lane, making it a 61-61 game with 7:28 to play. After Derek Fisher kept the game tied with a rainbow three-pointer, Bryant gave LA its first lead of the second half with a pair of free throws for a 66-64 advantage with 5:56 showing on the clock. Following an Allen miss on the other end, Bryant rose up just inside the arc and drilled a jumper for a four-point Lakers lead. Boston settled for another deep shot on its next possession — a Pierce miss from three — and Gasol extended the LA lead to six, 70-64, on a pair from the line with 4:38 to go. The Celtics managed to stay in it, climbing back to within three on a Garnett dunk with 3:21 left, but a Gasol layup with 1:30 left seemed to give the Lakers an insurmountable edge at 76-70. The dormant offenses finally got going in the final moments, as Wallace and Allen drained threes around an Artest triple to pull within 79-76 with 51.3 ticks remaining. Bryant tried to continue the three-point shooting contest, but missed; however, Gasol was there to grab the rebound, dish to Bryant in the lane, and Bryant drilled two free throws after a foul for a five-point advantage with 25.7 seconds to play. Rondo kept it interesting with a three-pointer in the corner off a broken play with 16.2 seconds left, making it a two-point game. The Lakers then chose to substitute little-used Sasha Vujacic in for Artest, and Vujacic was fouled with 11.7 seconds left. Vujacic came up big, sinking both free throw attempts for a four-point lead, and Rondo’s missed three-point attempt in the final seconds sealed Boston’s fate. The story in the early moments was Boston’s shooting prowess versus Los Angeles’ rebounding ability. Without Perkins manning the middle, the Lakers were able to outrebound the Celtics, 10-3, in the first few minutes, but shot a dismal 3-of-15 from the field. Meanwhile, the Celtics made five of their first six shots, including two baskets apiece from starting center Wallace and Rajon Rondo , en route to a 10-7 edge after 4 1/2 minutes of play. While Los Angeles continued to struggle from the field, the Celtics slowly increased their lead with help from Glen Davis . Davis added six points in the opening period to help the visitors take a 23-14 advantage to the second quarter. Bryant was a non-factor for the hosts to start, going 1-of-7 from the field for three total points. LA, though, got back into the game quickly in the second quarter, beginning the frame on a 11-0 burst to move in front. Artest’s layup gave the Lakers a 25-23 advantage with 7 1/2 minutes until halftime. The Celtics, who missed their first seven shots of the second quarter, finally cracked the scoreboard with a Rondo layup with 7:14 to go, and Garnett put Boston back ahead, 27-25, with a layup just past the midway point. The Lakers continued to hang around due to their rebounding prowess, and an Artest three with just under four minutes left drew the hosts even, 29-29. Boston, as they did in the first quarter, finished strong, scoring nine of the next 11 points. Pierce had five, including a three-pointer from the corner with 1:42 left to give the Celtics a seven-point advantage, 38-31. Tempers got a bit testy shortly thereafter, with Artest and Pierce meeting under the basket after a personal foul on Pierce. Double technicals were issued with 1:22 to go, and Artest made both of his shots from the line to bring the Lakers to within five. LA didn’t get closer than four in the final moments, and Pierce’s two free throws in the final minute pushed the Boston lead to six at halftime. The Celtics, armed with their 40-34 halftime lead, picked up right where they left off to start the third quarter. Boston stormed out in the second half with seven of the first nine points, forcing the Lakers to take a timeout after Rondo’s six-foot jumper provided a 47-36 advantage a little more than two minutes in. The Celtics lead ballooned to as high as 13 before the Lakers surged back. Los Angeles went on a 9-2 burst to climb back to within six, as a Lamar Odom putback dunk made it a 51-45 game with 5 1/2 minutes remaining in the quarter. Pierce stemmed the run with a three-pointer, but LA hung around, as a pair of Gasol free throws pulled the hosts to within 56-51 with 2:37 left. Another Odom putback shot made it a four-point game with a minute to go, and Artest missed a three that would have trimmed the deficit to one. The margin remained at four, 57-53, in favor of Boston heading to the fourth. Boston had been 7-0 overall in NBA Finals Game 7s…The Lakers are now one championship behind the Celtics’ all-time record of 17…Jackson is 6-3 all time in Game 7s and 5-0 at home. His teams are also an impeccable 48-0 when winning Game 1 of a series…The Lakers became the seventh team out of 41 to climb out of a 2-3 Finals deficit. The last was Houston, which beat New York in 1994…Bryant is now tied with Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Cooper, Jim Pollard and George Mikan with five titles as a Laker…The Celtics went 12-2 in the postseason when holding their opponent under 90, with both losses coming in the final two games…LA is 14-1 all time at home in Game 7s, including 10 straight dating back to 1969…Fisher is now tied with Shaquille O’Neal for first among active players with 32 series wins. Bryant has 31…LA finished just 32.5 percent shooting from the floor, while Boston went 40.8 percent…The Lakers are the first repeat champs since they did it with Bryant and O’Neal from 2000-02.

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Bryant Leads Fourth Quarter Rally As Lakers Knock Off Celtics, 83-79