Tag Archives: mind

Hooters Swimsuit Pageant 2010

The 2010 Hooters International Swimsuit Pageant event returns to the Broward Center after its controversial debut (arts patrons were understandably aghast) last year at the richly appointed performing arts venue, where Raechel Holtgrave of Missouri, right, took home the crown. Again this year the invitation-only pageant will be broadcast live to a national audience on Spike TV (nice tourism visuals), hosted by onetime MTV heartthrob Dan Cortese, left. (It also will be beamed via DirecTV to area

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Hooters Swimsuit Pageant 2010

Lindsay Lohan Cancels Nightclub Birthday Party

Actress had plans to celebrate her 24th birthday on Wednesday night, but apparently decided to stay home. By Jocelyn Vena Lindsay Lohan Photo: Jean Baptiste Lacroix / Getty Images Although Lindsay Lohan turned 24 on July 2, she was reportedly expected to celebrate her birthday on Wednesday night, the day after her sentencing for probation violation , at the Hollywood nightclub Las Palmas. But she canceled the party at the last minute. Sources told People.com that the actress had confirmed her plans only hours before the party was scheduled to start. “Lindsay was planning to celebrate her birthday with the owners of Las Palmas, who are like family to her,” the source says. “And [she was going to celebrate with] her friend Ferras, who was also celebrating his birthday that night.” Then Lohan’s pal Marcus Molinari tweeted that she had in fact changed her mind and planned to spend time with her family instead of hitting the L.A. party scene. “Lindsay is not having her birthday @laspalmas!!!” he wrote. “She is at home with friends and family!!! We wish her well and love her!!!” Singer/songwriter Ferras re-tweeted Molinari’s post, confirming that Lohan ditched their joint celebration. Just hours after her sentencing, Dina and Michael Lohan reacted to the news of their daughter’s punishment, which includes 90 days in jail to be followed by 90 days in rehab for violating probation. “This is so not fair to do this to my child,” Dina said, but Michael had a more positive take on the jail time and rehab. Noting that he was dismayed by the thought of Lindsay going to jail, he added that he also felt “a little satisfaction that she’s going to rehab.” Do you think Lindsay is trying to turn her life around? Tell us in the comments! Related Photos The Highs And Lows Of Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Goes To Court Related Artists Lindsay Lohan

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Lindsay Lohan Cancels Nightclub Birthday Party

Prince on The Internet: It’s Over!

Well, World Wide Web. You had a good run while it lasted. According to a music legend, the computer age has already passed us up. Indeed, Prince is coming out with a new album (“20Ten”), which will be available as a free insert in various magazine and newspapers in Europe this week. A release date in America has not yet been announced, but one thing is for certain: fans will NOT be able to purchase it from iTunes. “The Internet’s completely over,” Prince told The Daily Mirror . “The Internet’s like MTV. At one time MTV was hip and suddenly it became outdated. Anyway, all these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers and that can’t be good for you.” Hmmm… if the Internet is over, how are you reading this right now? We just blew your mind, didn’t we? It’s time to take a side in this feud. Vote now:

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Prince on The Internet: It’s Over!

Freddie Gibbs’ ‘Tailor-Made Flow’ Makes Him A ‘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 Freddie Gibbs Photo: MTV News “Hottest Breakthrough MCs of 2010” Candidate: Freddie Gibbs Of course Freddie Gibbs wants to get a little paper, but he’s still giving away whole bodies of work for free. His fans should be familiar with his mixtapes Miseducation of Freddie Gibbs, Midwestgangstaboxframecadillacmuzik and The Labels Tryin to Kill Me, and the buzz around those projects have him in the running for “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010.” He introduced us all to his forceful baritone and Midwest flow. In the next couple of weeks, he’ll drop his Str8 Killa, No Filla Mixtape (July 29) and the Str8 Killa EP (August 3). “I been giving my fans the music with the Miseducation of Freddie Gibbs and Midwestgangstaboxframecadillacmuzik. I had so many projects with nothing for sale,” the Gary, Indiana, MC said of the EP; he did note that the EP will have several records the mixtape doesn’t, such as “Oil Money” with Bun B, Chuck English, Chip the Ripper and Dan Aurbach. “I just wanted to throw something in stores that people who ain’t on the Net can grab,” he said. “Really, you’re getting 25, 30 songs for $8. Get the mixtape first and try it before you buy it. If you wanna support, you can support.” Gibbs’ first release from Str8 Killa is “National Anthem.” ” ‘National Anthem,’ all I was really doing was documenting my personal struggle, the things I’ve been dealing with,” he said. “The struggle, that rebellion is a theme that everybody can relate to. I used my tailor-made flow.” Gibbs said the follow-up record is called “Face Down”: “Straight gangster sh– for the clubs and the streets.” “The whole process, man, it was just me taking my time doing what I wanted to do musically,” he added about the tape. “Getting creative, making my sh– sound more like an album than a mixtape. I look at dudes like 50 Cent. His mixtapes was sh– that sounded like records. Even if he was rapping on other people’s beats, he made them his own. I studied him, and I put my own flavor and came with the Str8 Killa. It’s going to jump me off like Trap or Die did for Jeezy. ” Str8 Killa is gonna blow your mind, he added. “The world kinda got A.D.D. right now. You gotta keep fresh material. With me putting out a body of work, it works in my favor. I want people to fall in love with me as an artist. I don’t want one song to be bigger than Freddie Gibbs. People get attached to one song with dudes, then when they done, they throw them out the window. I want the people to really fall in love with me. That’s why I put out good, structured bodies of work.” Freddie 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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Freddie Gibbs’ ‘Tailor-Made Flow’ Makes Him A ‘Hottest Breakthrough MCs Of 2010’ Candidate

Eminem ‘Finally Did Justice’ To Late D12 Member Proof With ‘You’re Never Over’

Rapper said he couldn’t get tribute right before recording song from Recovery LP. By Gil Kaufman Eminem and Proof in 1999 Photo: MTV News Eminem tried, and in his eyes failed, to pay tribute to his late friend and D12 partner Proof in the past. Though the subject of Proof’s death in 2006 weighed heavily on his mind, Em couldn’t quite figure out how to put it into words. But on the “Road to Recovery” special on Sirius’ Shade 45 channel last week, the rapper explained that on “You’re Never Over,” from his new Recovery album , he finally put the right bars together. Produced by Just Blaze, the song grinds along on fuzzed-out guitars and a spare beat as Em rhymes, “The days are cold livin’ without you/ The nights are long, I’m growing older/ I miss the days of old, thinkin’ about you/ You may be gone, but you’re never over … If Proof could see me now, I know he’d be proud/ Somewhere in me deep down, there’s something in me he found/ That made him believe in me, no one can beat me now.” “For me, this is the most important song off the record,” Em said of the tune in which he credits his “guardian angel” Proof (born DeShaun Holton) for inspiring him to keep going and not fall victim to his darker tendencies. “It’s a dedication to Proof. It is one of those records that I tried … I had several attempts at making. Every attempt just wasn’t good enough. It was one of those things, I tried a bunch of records and it just didn’t work. Like, ‘This is not good enough, the rhyme’s not crazy enough, the beat’s not crazy enough.’ When I finally got it, I felt like, ‘Thank you, thank you, God for just giving me the strength to be able to write this record and make it feel like it does.’ ” In an uncharacteristically gentle voice on the chorus, in which he sings, “I just miss you,” Slim Shady does his best to croon out the dedication, though he was the first to admit that he’s not a world-class singer. “I guess as long as the emotion is there … But it was one of those moments on the record where I feel like, ‘OK, I finally did Proof some kind of justice by being able to put that together and dump my heart on the record,’ ” he said. “It was one of those things that when it got towards the end of the record, I really didn’t even care about making the rhyme crazy, I just wanted it to say it.” What do you think of Eminem’s dedication to Proof? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Eminem D12

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Eminem ‘Finally Did Justice’ To Late D12 Member Proof With ‘You’re Never Over’

‘Inception’: The Early Reviews Are In!

‘Leonardo DiCaprio finds the tortured center of his character,’ one reviewer writes. By Eric Ditzian Leonardo DiCaprio in “Inception” Photo: Warner Bros. Almost one year ago, the teaser trailer for Christopher Nolan’s “Inception” hit the web. It featured acrobatic fight sequences, hallucinatory imagery, and left us with far more questions than answers. Just what the heck was this movie really about, anyway? In the months that followed, Nolan slowly peeled back the curtain to reveal peeks at his top-secret follow-up to 2008’s “The Dark Knight.” Now, with the movie’s July 16 release date approaching, “Inception” has been fully unveiled to industry insiders, and the first reviews are beginning to pop up online. Here’s what folks are saying about the flick. The Story “Leonardo DiCaprio plays Cobb, an expert in what the film calls extraction, the theft of secrets or information from the subconscious mind,” Todd Gilchrist wrote in Cinematical.com . After botching a job thanks to the intrusion of his wife Mal (Marion Cotillard), Cobb finds an unlikely opportunity for redemption from one of his former victims: Saito (Ken Watanabe), CEO of a flourishing multinational, offers him amnesty in exchange for planting an idea — known as inception — within the mind of Robert Fischer (Cillian Murphy), one of Saito’s competitors. Enlisting the help of teammates Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), Ariadne (Ellen Page), Eames (Tom Hardy), and Yusuf (Dileep Rao), Cobb reluctantly agrees to the mission, only to discover that the mind’s defenses are more formidable than any physical threat he could face. Heist-movie plot details notwithstanding, the above description scarcely scratches at the surface of what’s in the film, and certainly reveals nothing of the deeper conceptual and thematic dimensions of its story.” The Look “Shot across four continents by Nolan’s regular d.p., Wally Pfister, and outfitted by production designer Guy Hendrix Dyas, ‘Inception’ is easily the director’s most visually unbridled work,” Justin Chang wrote in Variety. “Its canvas stretches from the skyscrapers of Tokyo to the bazaars of Tangiers, from an amber-lit hotel corridor to a snowy mountain compound (a setpiece that plays like an homage to ‘On Her Majesty’s Secret Service’). Pic has arresting effects and images to spare, such as the sight of Paris folding in on itself like a book or Gordon-Levitt’s Arthur performing a fight scene in zero gravity (the explanation for which is even more dazzling).” The Performances “DiCaprio finds the tortured center of his character, a man who is part thief and part spy and whose own guilt-ridden subconscious stands to destroy his chances of succeeding at the proverbial one last job,” Jim Vejvoda wrote in IGN.com . ” ‘Inception’ is sort of a companion piece in a way to ‘Shutter Island,’ the year’s other mind-bender DiCaprio thriller. Gordon-Levitt — who, like DiCaprio, was a child sitcom actor — continues to prove he’s one of the brightest up-and-coming dramatic actors with his turn here. And although she has less screen time than the rest of the cast, Cotillard shines as the film’s closest thing to a femme fatale.” The “Matrix” Comparison “[T]here’s a sort of ‘Matrix’ action movie vibe about the [marketing] campaign, and despite some wild visual moments in the film, I wouldn’t describe this as an action film at all,” Drew McWeeny wrote in HitFix.com . “There are action beats in it, but all of them are ultimately in service of the emotional journey that Dom takes in the film, and as a result, the stakes seem so much higher than they would if it was just another movie where people were chasing around some empty Macguffin. Everything in this film … cities folding in on themselves, buildings filling with sudden floods of water, gravity that stops working, reality fraying at the edges … ties back in to whatever happened between Dom and his wife Mal years ago.” The Bottom Line “Following up on such ingenious and intriguing films as ‘The Dark Knight’ and ‘Memento,’ Nolan has outdone himself,” Kirk Honeycutt wrote in The Hollywood Reporter. ” ‘Inception’ puts him not only at the top of the heap of sci-fi all-stars, but it also should put this Warner Bros. release near or at the top of the summer movies. It’s very hard to see how a film that plays so winningly to so many demographics would not be a worldwide hit.” Are you excited to see “Inception”? Sound off in the comments below! Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Inception’ Dive Into Christopher Nolan’s ‘Inception’

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‘Inception’: The Early Reviews Are In!

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’

The Devil is in the Details: More on the Health Care Reform Bill

I'm starting to wonder just how stupid we actually were to believe that a Federal government that had just paid off the bankers for bankrupting the Nation was actually going to deliver on viable health care reform, and the gross mismanagement of the Gulf oil spill doesn't really shore up my confidence on what's in the mystery meat they are calling health care reform. Health law to bring longer ER waits, crowding? by CARLA K. JOHNSON, AP Emergency rooms, the only choice for patients who can't find care elsewhere, may grow even more crowded with longer wait times under the nation's new health law. That might come as a surprise to those who thought getting 32 million more people covered by health insurance would ease ER crowding. It would seem these patients would be able to get routine health care by visiting a doctor's office, as most of the insured do. But it's not that simple. Consider: * There's already a shortage of front-line family physicians in some places and experts think that will get worse. * People without insurance aren't the ones filling up the nation's emergency rooms. Far from it. The uninsured are no more likely to use ERs than people with private insurance, perhaps because they're wary of huge bills. * The biggest users of emergency rooms by far are Medicaid recipients. And the new health insurance law will increase their ranks by about 16 million. Medicaid is the state and federal program for low-income families and the disabled. And many family doctors limit the number of Medicaid patients they take because of low government reimbursements. * ERs are already crowded and hospitals are just now finding solutions. Rand Corp. researcher Dr. Arthur L. Kellermann predicts this from the new law: “More people will have coverage and will be less afraid to go to the emergency department if they're sick or hurt and have nowhere else to go…. We just don't have other places in the system for these folks to go.” Kellermann and other experts point to Massachusetts, the model for federal health overhaul where a 2006 law requires insurance for almost everyone. Reports from the state find ER visits continuing to rise since the law passed — contrary to hopes of its backers who reasoned that expanding coverage would give many people access to doctors offices. Premiums for pre-existing conditions could be costly. Massachusetts reported a 7 percent increase in ER visits between 2005 and 2007. A more recent estimate drawn from Boston area hospitals showed an ER visit increase of 4 percent from 2006 to 2008 — not dramatic, but still a bit ahead of national trends. “Just because we've insured people doesn't mean they now have access,” said Dr. Elijah Berg, a Boston area ER doctor. “They're coming to the emergency department because they don't have access to alternatives.” Crowding and long waits have plagued U.S. emergency departments for years. A 2009 report by the Government Accountability Office, Congress' investigative arm, found ER patients who should have been seen immediately waited nearly a half-hour. “We're starting out with crowded conditions and anticipating things will only get worse,” said American College of Emergency Physicians president Dr. Angela Gardner. Federal stimulus money and the new health law address the primary care shortage with training for 16,000 more providers, said Health and Human Services Department spokeswoman Jessica Santillo. But many experts say solving ER crowding is more complicated. Crowding at both ends. What's causing crowding? Imagine an emergency department with a front door and a back door. More at the link: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38054844/ added by: Incredulous

A Short Story from the Adventures of an Atheist at a Christian High School

Here's just one story of the many stories that I've written in the past year documenting my experience as an Atheist student at a Christian high school in, of course, Texas. More information on this little project of mine is written after the story. I watched, bemused, as Mrs. Kooch set two handfuls of fossils down on a display table at the head of the classroom and went to retrieve more from the classroom’s storage cabinet. That day, we were to examine fossils which, understandably, had me quite surprised. I would’ve thought that fossils would have been, at the very least, carefully omitted from conversation and curriculum. Mrs. Kooch had, by this time, gathered two dozen fossils and had neatly aligned them on the table top. Seemingly satisfied with her work, she stepped back and adjusted the bright green fanny pack which hung about her waist. Placing her hands upon her hips, she announced to the class in a voice accented with southern drawl, “Today, we’ll be havin’ a look-see at these fossils.” She ran her candy apple red fingernails through her curly blonde hair and fixed a smile upon her face. “But first,” she continued as she began to survey her class, her nose raised at an unfriendly level, “we’ll pray that God will bless this class.” Fifteen pairs of eyes closed instantaneously and fifteen out of the sixteen heads occupying the room were bowed. The sudden, synchronized movement caused me to wake with a start from the early morning stupor I had been enjoying. With sleep now out of the question, I took the time to watch my classmates and to enjoy the amusing oxymorons that had presented themselves that morning. Christian science teachers. Atheists attending Christian schools. Praying to the god of the New and Old Testament that a lesson on fossils would be successful. The prayer had ended and Mrs. Kooch began the discussion by asking, “Does anyone have any questions about these fossils?” “I do.” I said, being the first to raise my hand. “How old are these fossils?” “Aha, good question, dear.” she exclaimed warmly, picking up a large chunk of amber containing various insects, lifting it to an eye adorned with garish navy blue eye shadow and examining it closely. “Some of these fossils are as old as five thousand years old!” Oh, no. Had I heard her correctly? “How old?” I asked, sounding worried. “Five thousand years.” she repeated, growing slightly impatient. “It has to be said,” I thought. “Here goes.” “That’s ridiculous. These are fossilized prehistoric creatures! Their age is in the millions, not thousands.” I had barely finished saying this when Mrs. Kooch threw her head back and unleashed a shrill, panic-filled giggle. “But that’s impossible, the Bible says the world is six thousand years old and that means the world is six thousand years old! Nothing can be older than that except for Almighty God.” She rambled in an oddly reassuring voice. “But to suggest,” I continued levelly, “that the world began at about the same time that the Sumerians invented glue would be kind of silly, don’t you think? I mean, especially when you’re holding the evidence in your hand.” I heard the amber clatter back to the table, accompanied by the presumably imagined sound of a tea kettle full of boiling water. She began to slowly approach my desk with her hands once again resting upon her hips. She came to a halt directly in front of my desk and peered down her nose at me with a most peculiar expression in her eyes. I waited for her to speak, half-expecting a barrage of profanities to erupt from her pursed lips. Nothing, only silence. She began to turn a brighter shade of pink as each noiseless moment passed. The entire class seemed to be holding their breath, anxious to see what was in store for me. Interesting events were rare at the small, unremarkable private school, and with considerable shock they watched as an event of the “interesting” genre unraveled before their eyes. Wearing a quizzical look on my face, I continued to meet her stare, which appeared to be directed through my skull and into some macabre alternate dimension. Nothing continued to happen as she stood there considering me, her lip curling ever so slightly. Just as it became unbearable, the silence was broken when her phone began to ring and the tune entitled “Onward Christian Soldiers” pervaded the classroom’s stagnant air. Apparently, she at first intended to ignore the phone’s ironically cheerful ringtone and let it just go on ringing. “Oh, I love this song!” I exclaimed rapturously as I began to enthusiastically pantomime conducting an orchestra to the ringtone’s electronic beat. Mrs. Kooch’s carefully composed mask of solemnity shattered to reveal a face of flabbergasted revulsion. She was now visibly desperate to regain her until-recently unquestioned authority over this blasphemer, now gesticulating wildly before her. She knew what she must do to end this unwelcomed fun. She hastily sculpted her features into a toothy and strained grin which eventually collapsed and came to resemble a snarl. She retrieved her phone, violently jabbed its touch screen with her gnarled index finger, and flung it back into the neon green fanny pack around her waist without once interrupting her malevolent gaze upon me. My hands came to an abrupt stop as the music ended and I remember feeling a brief, but nevertheless overwhelming, wave of pity for her poor cell phone wash over me. My attention was promptly redirected to the rows of teeth that Mrs. Kooch was now baring at me. “Don’t…you…dare,” she growled, leaning nearer and nearer to me with each syllable, “question my God and his son, Jesus Christ! OR THE HOLY SPIRIT!” Her voice had gradually risen into a blood-curdling shriek. She seemed to right herself and to begin to slowly lean away from me until I bewilderedly replied, “But, really, I was only stating a fact, I never actually questioned –“ “Enough! Or you’ll find yourself cleaning the lunch tables for the rest of this year, startin’ today! And, don’t play dumb even though I’d bet that playin’ dumb ain’t hard for people like you.” She smirked a particularly nasty smirk and turned slightly towards the class, anticipating a chorus of laughter to erupt from the rest of her students. Silence resounded until a boy in the back of the classroom gave a thunderous sneeze and went to find a tissue. Quiet blessings were uttered by a few people. The sneezing boy thanked them. Looking slightly disconcerted, Mrs. Kooch turned back to me and grunted, “Where d’you go to church? I’mma have to have a talk with your pastor.” “Nowhere.” I answered curtly, with a nod. Mrs. Kooch’s dull gray eyes sparkled with what was indubitably undiluted hatred and she turned away and briskly strode toward her desk without speaking another word. It was only until after she had returned to her desk that I was able to lower my right eyebrow to be nearly level with my left one. Mrs. Kooch proceeded to make the decision to abandon the fossil discussion and instead distributed a class syllabus amongst the students. However, my mind was elsewhere. What is to be my fate this year? Am I to be crucified at the hands of this malevolent teacher? Stoned to death? Sacrificed on a stone altar to the Abrahamic god? I stole a glance towards Mrs. Kooch, seated at her desk across the windowless classroom. She had just commanded her students to read and reread her syllabus in silence, having put especial emphasis on the “silence” part. In the meantime, she was busying herself by wringing her hands and scowling fiercely at the fossils still lined up on the table. Note: The fossils were never spoken of or seen again for the entire year. They were, presumably, gathered up and carefully stowed away by Mrs. Kooch. However, I hold an alternate theory that some divine force destroyed the fossils in order to keep that pesky doubt down to a minimum. added by: EtVoila

Al Gore Accuser: Paid to Tell Her Story?

We reported her accusations in graphic detail last week, but Molly Hagerty, Al Gore’s sexual assault accuser, faces myriad questions about her credibility. Namely, that she went shopping her story for money years after the fact. Police in Portland, Ore., announced that they are reopening the investigation into allegations of sexual abuse against former the former Vice President. The accusation of unwanted sexual contact came from massage therapist Molly Hagerty , who was called to his hotel room at 4 a.m. on Oct. 24, 2006. Gore says he received a massage, but denies acting inappropriately. Hagerty says that he repeatedly forced himself upon her, despite her objections. He was never charged and the case was dropped due to insufficient evidence. It’s being reviewed, but there are reasons to be suspicious of Hagerty: Why didn’t she just leave? She said she feared she would be raped, a somewhat dubious claim in itself, or “accosted by some security detail,” when Gore had no detail that night. Why did she wait weeks to make her initial complaint to police? Hagerty waited six weeks to mention this, but she contends she told her friends immediately, and police may be interested in interviewing those people. Why did she cancel interviews with police regarding the case? Hagerty nixed three interviews with detectives about her criminal complaint. Three years later, Hagerty changed her mind again and decided to pursue it. Did she receive money to tell her story? The million-dollar question, possibly literally. Hagerty has twice been interviewed by the National Enquirer , which unabashedly and routinely pays sources. As the Rielle Hunter-John Edwards and Tiger Woods-Rachel Uchitel scandals prove, that doesn’t mean they lie. But it does make you question motive. Do you believe Al Gore sexually abused Molly Hagerty?

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Al Gore Accuser: Paid to Tell Her Story?