Tag Archives: kennedy

CBS: Even With Susan Boyle ‘Warm-Up Act’ Pope Still Couldn’t Pull In A Big Enough Crowd

Reporting on Pope Benedict’s visit to the UK on Friday’s CBS Early Show, correspondent Mark Phillips noted how 65,000 people attended a Thursday outdoor mass in Scotland, but observed: “…it was only about a quarter of the size of the crowd Pope John Paul drew to the same park on his visit 28 years ago. And this crowd had a much better warm-up act…TV talent show star…Susan Boyle.” On Thursday , correspondent Richard Roth touted low turnout predictions during the Papal visit: “Some Church officials this morning were already lowering expectations, saying seats were still unsold for several outdoor events.” Phillips described the trip as “A test of whether Pope Benedict can get his message across over the background noise of the Church’s child abuse scandal. And that test gets harder as time goes on.” He went on to observe “This Pope finds himself with an ironic challenge, he bemoans the weakening role of religion in everyday life, yet it is the Church’s very own public struggle with its child-molesting priests that is helping to drive people away.” Phillips concluded his report by highlighting the Pope’s critics: “And, of course, the protesters against child abuse, for gay rights and other issues, promise to follow him wherever he goes.” On Thursday , Roth proclaimed the Pontiff’s visit was “bound to be shadowed by controversy along with ceremony” and  “courts criticism on a range of issues.” Here is a full transcript of Phillips’s September 17 report: 7:10AM ET SEGMENT: JEFF GLOR: Today is the second day of the Pope’s historic visit to Great Britain. And today he meets the leader of the Anglican church. This morning, Pope Benedict went to an outdoor prayer meeting at a school outside London. And CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips is in Twickenham this morning. Mark, good morning. MARK PHILLIPS: Good morning, Jeff. Well, this is, in fact, turning out to be more than just a Papal visit, it’s turning into a test. A test of whether Pope Benedict can get his message across over the background noise of the Church’s child abuse scandal. And that test gets harder as time goes on. [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Papal Pilgrimage; Pope Benedict XVI Confronts Controversies in UK] Pope Benedict brought his message to the classroom today, visiting a Catholic school in suburban London. This Pope finds himself with an ironic challenge, he bemoans the weakening role of religion in everyday life, yet it is the Church’s very own public struggle with its child-molesting priests that is helping to drive people away. POPE BENEDICT XVI: The life of faith can only be effectively nurtured when the prevailing atmosphere is one of respectful and affectionate trust. PHILLIPS: Pope Benedict has proved on this trip that he can still draw a crowd. Yet, impressive though the 65,000-strong open-air mass in Scotland was yesterday, it was only about a quarter of the size of the crowd Pope John Paul drew to the same park on his visit 28 years ago. And this crowd had a much better warm-up act, the former Scottish choir girl turned TV talent show star and internet sensation, Susan Boyle, who sang a medley of her hits. This is being billed as Pope Benedict’s most political day of the visit. He meets with the Archbishop of Canterbury, as you said, and he also gives a speech to British parliamentarians. And, of course, the protesters against child abuse, for gay rights and other issues, promise to follow him wherever he goes. Jeff. GLOR: Alright, Mark Phillips, this morning. Mark, thank you very much.

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CBS: Even With Susan Boyle ‘Warm-Up Act’ Pope Still Couldn’t Pull In A Big Enough Crowd

Ed Schultz as Historian: Invents Speech JFK Never Gave About First Glenn Space Flight

Achtung, Sgt. Schultz — you’re making it up again. The liberal radio host and MSNBC flamethrower got carried away in his indignation Monday over controversy about whether Obama’s speech on education should be shown in classrooms. My how things have changed, Schultz pontificated ( audio here ) — I don’t know, when I was a kid, and I was a little dude when John Glenn was flying around the, in outer space, and the president was going to speak to the nation! And all the kids in the elementary school, I remember, we were all so fired up! That we were going to hear from the president! And the president was going to say something about being in outer space and is John Glenn going to get home OK?! The president was going to talk to us, we were kids! We were excited! And then when John Glenn splashed down, we heard from the president and it was so cool! It’s just not cool anymore, I guess. It’s a different country. Notice how Schultz implies Kennedy gave two speeches that day — about a space mission lasting all of five hours. Will Glenn “get home OK?” Schultz recounts Kennedy telling what surely was an anxious nationwide audience, the anxiety based on fear of a faulty heat shield imperiling Glenn during his fiery re-entry. “And then when John Glenn splashed down,” Schultz claimed, embroidering along the way, “we heard from the president and it was so cool!” Only problem is, Kennedy didn’t give this speech — or should I say, either of them. At least not according to the Web site of the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum in Boston. (known around town as “The Shrine”). A listing at the site of scores of Kennedy’s speeches from 1946 to the day of his death in 1963 makes no mention of any speech on Feb. 20, 1962, the day Glenn became the first American to orbit the globe. Moreover, another part of the library site, the “White House Diary” of Kennedy’s daily schedule, does not cite any speech that day about Glenn’s mission. This link to a different part of the diary mentions that Kennedy spoke by phone with Glenn after he splashed down and was on board the destroyer U.S.S. Noa. ( Thanks, Mr. President … loved your speech, by the way! ) Kennedy’s alleged speech on Glenn’s first space flight (he flew again on the shuttle in 1998, at age 77, and remains the oldest person to have flown into space) is also mysteriously absent from two memoirs by Kennedy hagiographers. In his 1965 book “A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House,” court historian Arthur Schlesinger did not even cite Glenn’s mission in his index. That same year, in his book “Kennedy,” speechwriter Ted Sorensen wrote that Kennedy watched Glenn’s flight “most of the day on TV,” with no mention of any speech. Presumably Sorensen would have elaborated had a speech been given, if only to point out the sweep and beauty of the prose. Which is not to say Kennedy didn’t give speeches about the space program. That he did, including one I suspect Schultz was thinking of when he made this claim. Addressing a joint session of Congress in May 1961, only a few weeks after Alan Shepard became the first America to fly into space, Kennedy pledged that the US would send astronauts to the moon and return them safely to earth by the end of the decade. The speech was given on May 25, 1961, on a Thursday at 12:30 p.m. In other words, in the middle of a school day.

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Ed Schultz as Historian: Invents Speech JFK Never Gave About First Glenn Space Flight

Immigration: Richardson Sees McCain Going Squishy If Re-Elected

Seriously: is Bill Richardson trying to wreck John McCain?   Ask yourself: what would be the one thing most likely to undermine McCain with Arizona Republican Senate primary voters? Surely it would be the possibility that if re-elected, born-again immigration hawk McCain would revert to the squishiness that led him to collaborate with Ted Kennedy on a “path to citizenship” for illegals. Yet on this evening’s Ed Show, that’s exactly what the New Mexico governor—twice—imagined McCain might do.   Schultz set the stage, describing McCain’s recent adoption of a hard line on immigration as “the biggest flip-flop of the year.” Then came Richardson, imagining a McCain re-reversal . . . BILL RICHARDSON: My view is that he is in a tough re-election, in a primary against J.D. Hayworth, and this is such a hot issue in Arizona. My hope Ed is a fter he gets re-elected that he will come back to his old position, which was as you said the Kennedy-McCain bill which has increased border enforcement but also has a path to legalization, a guest-worker program, cracking down on illegal hires, but most importantly a path to legalization. And later . . . RICHARDSON: If you’re going to get into immigration reform, you got to have some Republicans , and right now it doesn’t seem we have any.  Maybe Lindsey Graham. Maybe John McCain after he gets re-elected. So what was Richardson up to? Offering honest analysis, or slipping the shiv into McCain by suggesting his new-found harder line on immigration is a farce?

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Immigration: Richardson Sees McCain Going Squishy If Re-Elected

New On DVD: Is Hannie Caulder the Original Rape-Revenge Pulp Flick?

By now the rape-revenge pulp movie is a staple, but in 1971, when Burt Kennedy’s Hannie Caulder leapt upon the anti-western bandwagon, they were brand-new. It was still five years before Lipstick (1976) and six until I Spit on Your Grave (1977) –incidentally two of the most reviled movies of that decade (and bombs to boot) — and Charles Bronson’s Death Wish (1974) was still a few years away, which in any case gave the gun to Bronson, not the woman in question. Did it all start with Burt Kennedy’s modest, Spain-shot paella western?

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New On DVD: Is Hannie Caulder the Original Rape-Revenge Pulp Flick?

USA Today’s Request Ted Kennedy-Related FBI Documents Ends with Surprising Lack of Chappaquiddick Papers

USA Today released the results of its Freedom of Information Act requests for FBI documents related to Ted Kennedy. John Fritze’s story leans heavily on the sympathetic “barrage of threats” angle to begin his story, and downplayed the lack of documents on the death at Chappaquiddick. Fritze began:  Sen. Edward Kennedy, who buried two brothers killed by assassins, endured a barrage of threats on his life that continued for much of his political career, thousands of FBI documents released Monday show. More than 2,200 pages of previously secret documents reveal Kennedy, the brother of President John F. Kennedy, received a constant stream of anonymous threats and warnings from members of the Ku Klux Klan and the militant anti-communist “Minutemen.” Fritze arrived at Chappaquiddick late in the article, and hinted without outrage that the Kennedy family may have removed a pile of documents that might have tainted the Ted Kennedy image:  “There might be a lead here or there,” said David Kaiser, a professor at the U.S. Naval War College who has written on the Kennedys. But Kaiser said he is “surprised by what wasn’t there,” including correspondence between the White House and the FBI over Chappaquiddick. The Kennedy family was given a chance to review the documents before they were released. Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., and family representatives did not respond to requests for comment. So much for “Freedom of Information.” Remember this one the next time leftists start complaining about George W. Bush being tight with presidential records. Fritze reported that documents show Nixon aide John Dean was asking the FBI to determine if Mary Jo Kopechne, who died in the car Ted Kennedy drove off of Dyke Bridge in 1969, had visited Greece in 1968. Bryan Bender of the Boston Globe suggests the Nixon team was trying to see if Kopechne accompanied the Senator on a Greek vacation.  The Washington Post story by Jerry Markon reported that former Kennedy adviser Bob Shrum said Ted Kennedy delayed running for president until 1980 because of the threats, and somehow not because the threat of Chappaquiddick would also be hanging over his campaign:  Kennedy waited 12 years after Robert was assassinated before running for president, largely because of his family’s concerns about such threats, according to a longtime aide, Robert Shrum. “You took precautions,” said Shrum, Kennedy’s speechwriter during his 1980 presidential campaign. “We had a doctor with us everywhere we went. We had ambulances in most places. The memory was there. But you just lived with it.” Markon’s story ended by relaying only 77 of the 2,200 pages of Ted Kennedy documents were on Chappaquiddick: The files include 77 pages on the drowning of Mary Jo Kopechne when Kennedy drove his car off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island off Martha’s Vineyard in 1969. The pages are nearly all newspaper articles, but one internal FBI document informed Hoover of the accident and says the police chief in Edgartown, Mass., “confidentially” advised that Kennedy was the driver. “Stated fact Senator Kennedy was driver is not being revealed to anyone,” the document said.

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USA Today’s Request Ted Kennedy-Related FBI Documents Ends with Surprising Lack of Chappaquiddick Papers

Gore Vidal on Cuba

Author: truthdig Added: Tue, 08 May 2007 07:34:06 -0800 Duration: 785 The venerable man of letters speaks to Truthdig editor-in-chief Robert Scheer about his recent tour of Cuba.

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Gore Vidal on Cuba

Katie Holmes Will Portray Jacqueline Kennedy in “The Kennedys”

natural sapphire American actress Katie Holmes will soon portray one of America’s famous first ladies. Holmes, wedded to actor Tom Cruise, will be Jacqueline Kennedy in the eight-hour mini-series ‘The Kennedys’ which  will premier in 2011 on History Channel.  She will be alongside with Greg Kinnear, British actor Tom Wilkinson and Barry Pepper. First host E!’s Talk Show Greg Kinnear will star as the US President John F. Kennedy and Canadian actor Barry Pepper will be Robert Kennedy, and Tom Wilkinson will protray as Joe Kennedy, Sr. Katie Holmes Will Portray Jacqueline Kennedy in “The Kennedys” is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Katie Holmes to Play Someone More Stylish Than Suri: Jackie Kennedy!

We know Katie Holmes can rock a bob, but can she pull off a pillbox hat? The first lady of Tom Cruise Land has signed on to play Jacqueline Kennedy in The Kennedys, an upcoming History…

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Katie Holmes to Play Someone More Stylish Than Suri: Jackie Kennedy!

Patrick Kennedy Cut Off After Six Vodka Shots [Lightweights]

Handling your liquor in public can be hard. But it can get really tough right after giving a speech about your personal history of substance abuse. Just ask Rep. Patrick Kennedy ; he tried and was cut off at the bar. More

Space Shuttle Discovery Back On Earth With Seven (7) Crew

About 6 Millions miles of travel the Space Shuttle Discovery returned to Earth in 15 days mission. After making a rare flyover of America’s continent, the Space Shuttle and the seven (7) crew landed smoothly and safely this morning at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The set down which is already a day late due to rain and fog that dispersed as the sun got up. “It was a great mission,” said by Shuttle commander Alan Poindexter. All crews were dropped off tons of supplies and equipment at the International Space Station and returned with a couple of tons of trash and discarded space station equipment. Read More Space Shuttle Discovery Back On Earth With Seven (7) Crew is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading