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‘Machete’ Cast Thinks Lindsay Lohan’s ‘Gonna Be All Right’

Lohan’s co-stars praise the performance by the actress, who recently left rehab. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Kara Warner Jessica Alba, Danny Trejo and Michelle Rodriguez at the “Machete” premiere Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Most of the cast of “Machete” was on hand in Los Angeles on Wednesday (August 25) to celebrate the premiere of their B-movie-inspired, Robert Rodriguez-directed flick. But one of the film’s stars was noticeably absent: Lindsay Lohan, who had been released from rehab a day earlier. The young actress’ road to recovery was on the mind of her co-stars. “You know what, I just care about her as a person,” Don Johnson told MTV News on the red carpet. “God bless her and she’s gonna do fine.” That sentiment was mirrored by Danny Trejo, who added, “Get home, girl! You’re gonna be all right. She’s gonna be fine. She knows what to do.” Another one of the flick’s stars, Cheech Marin, wanted to let Lohan know he supports her, and that he hopes this incident will be a catalyst for her getting her life back on track. “I wish her all the best. I mean, she’s a talented young actress,” he said. “Hopefully, she won’t let her personal life overwhelm her professional life … at some point, you gotta be responsible.” Michelle Rodriguez felt that publicly wishing Lindsay the best would not just benefit her former co-star. “I just think everybody should have in mind that when you wish the best for people around you, it only makes your country, your society, your culture better,” she explained. “So I think that we should all just respect the evolutionary paths of people and as much as we possibly can wish for the better, for light.” Earlier in the night, Jessica Alba praised Lohan , saying, “She’s so good in this movie. I can’t wait for people to see [her in] it.” Praise for Lohan’s performance also came from the film’s director. “She’s awesome in the movie. That’s what they’ll see: the actress behind all that paparazzi nonsense that follows her and won’t leave her alone,” Robert Rodriguez said. “They’ll get to see her and say, ‘Oh, that’s why we follow her around.’ ” Related Videos Lindsay Lohan: Crime And Punishment Related Photos ‘Machete’ Premieres In Los Angeles Related Artists Lindsay Lohan

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‘Machete’ Cast Thinks Lindsay Lohan’s ‘Gonna Be All Right’

Sandra Bullock To Give First TV Interview Since Divorce

Actress will sit down with Matt Lauer in New Orleans for Tuesday’s ‘Today’ show. By Jocelyn Vena Sandra Bullock Photo: Ethan Miller/ WireImage Sandra Bullock has had an up-and-down year, between winning an Oscar , getting divorced from Jesse James amid cheating allegations and adopting a baby boy. Aside from an interview with People magazine and a few high-profile appearances — including her Generation Award win at the MTV Movie Awards — Bullock has remained pretty tight-lipped about her personal life. But on Tuesday, Bullock will have her first TV interview since the divorce, sitting down with the “Today” show’s Matt Lauer in New Orleans, Us Weekly reports. The news comes just days after it was revealed that Bullock is in talks to star in the big-screen adaptation of Jonathan Safran Foer’s second novel, “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close,” alongside fellow Oscar winner Tom Hanks. As for her relationship with James , Bullock has said it is “a different one. A bittersweet one. One of new understanding. One of support for his recovery. One that changed my life.” She added: “I really don’t know how our paths will intersect in the future.” She has been open about the joys of being a mother to her young son, Louis Bardo. “It’s like he’s always been a part of our lives,” she had said about her nearly 8-month-old son. At the MTV Movie Awards back in June, Bullock made light of her personal life and famously kissed Scarlett Johansson. “No matter what you might have seen or heard or read lately, I love what I do,” she added with an emphatic finger wag. “And I’m not going anywhere.” Bullock has also been helping the victims of the Nashville floods, making a surprise appearance at Nashville Rising: A Benefit Concert for Flood Recovery . Are you interested to hear what Bullock has to say about her past year? Let us know in the comments. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Sandra Bullock

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Former White House Correspondents President Denounces ‘Travesty’ of Fox News Getting Front Row Seat

For some in the White House Press Corps, literally thanking God for the existence of a terrorist organization is less controversial than being owned by a company that gives more money to one political party than the other. That, at least, is the standard former WHCA president Edwin Chen has set forth. In an interview with the far-left blog Media Matters, Chen dubbed “a travesty” the WHCA’s decision to award a front-row seat in the briefing room to Fox News. His objection? “The vacancy was created because of an ideological conflict,” and would be filled by “another cloud of ideological conflict.” The first ideological conflict to which Chen referred was Helen Thomas’s retirement, forced by a video showing her making anti-Semitic comments. The second: the political contributions of Fox’s parent company, News Corp. The years of offensive, derogatory, and (to say the least) controversial comments from Thomas – such as “thank God for Hezbollah” and “why does [George W. Bush] want to drop bombs on innocent Iraqis?” – are apparently, in Chen’s mind, not indicative of “ideological conflict” as he uses the phrase in this context. Thomas’s presence in the front row was never an issue of concern for Chen until her final outburst as a White House reporter. In fact, Chen defended Thomas’s record of journalistic fairness even after she retired. “She was a bipartisan inflictor of pain,” he told NPR . But Chen lamented to Media Matters that Thomas retired in the midst of “this conflict over politics and a question of fairness,” and that Fox “drags in all of this controversy” because of its parent company’s political donations. But if the issue is controversy – if Chen believes that White House reporters should not drag controversy into the briefing room – why is this only becoming an issue now? Why is controversy surrounding Fox News any more of a disqualifying factor than controversy surrounding Helen Thomas? Of course Chen and others will note that Thomas is an opinion columnist, not a “straight news” reporter. To which any sensible observer will reply that no one is citing Fox’s coverage of the White House as cause for concern. The controversy has to do not with Fox’s news operation, but rather with its parent company’s political activities. If Fox’s discontents in the WHCA were able to claim that Fox’s news operation is too opinionated, or that its parent company’s political activities are directly affecting its work in the White House press pool, they would do so. Another former WHCA president, former Knight Ridder reporter Ron Hutcheson, takes a similar angle, raising the issue of whether Fox can report fairly without actually citing any of Fox’s reporting. Hutcheson told Media Matters that “a big political contribution by any news organization raises some questions. Clearly the management of Fox has political views.” Since Hutcheson and Chen are so concerned about “political views” staining the WHCA’s reputation for fairness, why are they more concerned with hypothetical bias from reporters who have not themselves demonstrated political favoritism than they are with Helen Thomas, a White House reporter who was open about her political favoritism? Thomas proudly proclaimed her political views on more than one occasion. “I’m a liberal, I was born a liberal, and I will be a liberal ’til the day I die,” she told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “I’d say I’m about as far left as you can go,” she told the Fox Business Network’s Stuart Varney. If the issue is journalistic fairness – whether White House correspondents can give those they are covering a fair shake – you would think that the litany of outrageous statements from Thomas, coupled with her self-proclaimed uber-leftism, would set off more alarms than the fact that the Fox correspondent’s news organization’s parent company gave more to one political party than the other. The real “travesty” is the double standard at play. A couple concluding notes on Chen: the Washington Examiner’s Julie Mason told Media Matters that the WHCA’s decision on the vacant seat came down to one between Fox and Bloomberg, Chen’s former employer. In other words, he’s not exactly a neutral arbiter of this dispute. Chen’s current employer is the Natural Resources Defense Council. If his double standard on controversial White House correspondents did not tip you off to his personal political views, that fact should.

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Former White House Correspondents President Denounces ‘Travesty’ of Fox News Getting Front Row Seat

In ‘Tillman Story,’ Anti-Bush Conspiracy Just Doesn’t Add Up

There are three important things going on in “The Tillman Story” (in selected theatres today), two of which almost make the conspiracy-mongering documentary worth your time. The first and best is the opportunity to get to know better the extraordinary and extraordinarily complicated and interesting Pat Tillman. In the best sense of the word, this was a fierce and fiercely passionate man – fierce on the football field, fierce on the battlefield, and fierce in his personal beliefs. This was also a man who only ever dated one woman, the woman he would marry the same week he enlisted; and my guess is that Tillman was the kind of man and husband who found leaving the fame of professional football much easier than leaving his young bride.  You also meet Tillman’s family; his parents, brother and wife – a decent, loving, inconsolable group dealing with the terrible loss of someone they obviously loved and miss very much. This is a family furious with a United States government who didn’t know all the facts before they told the story of Tillman’s death to them, and to the American people. And as far as that goes, they are right to be angry.  Unfortunately, you also witness a partisan filmmaker attempting to prop up the absurd anti-Bush conspiracy theory that it wasn’t the ever-reliable incompetence of government bureaucracy that caused what was probably the second worst day in this family’s life – the day they were told Tillman had been killed in a friendly fire incident, but rather a sinister plot hatched by the Administration and the Pentagon to use Tillman’s death as a flag-waving symbol to bolster military recruitment and support for the war. The Tillman family agrees wholeheartedly with this conspiracy, believes that the memory of their heroic son was maliciously abused in this way. But with all due respect to them (and they are due our respect), neither logic nor facts come close to making that case.    As far as addressing the specific details surrounding the film’s specific charges, using his military experience and keen mind, Kurt Schlichter has already taken much of the film’s case completely apart, piece by piece, and I urge you to  read his review . My review will remain focused solely within the context of the documentary itself, a documentary no intellectually honest person can respect, much less champion.    To director Amir Bar-Lev’s credit, the most important fact of this entire case is not left out of what basically plays like an overlong “60 Minutes” segment. But this important fact is glossed over and presented so early on that – probably by design – you might forget all about it during the third act as circumstantial evidence is laid out hot and heavy with the help of foreboding camera moves – such as the one that slowly rises though a mob chart of Administration “bad guys” until ominously arriving at the smiling face of one President George W. Bush. It’s just too bad for Bar-Lev that the melodramatic use of a camera crane doesn’t equal damning facts.  On May 3rd, 2004, a memorial for Pat Tillman took place in San Jose’s Municipal Rose Garden. Tillman was posthumously awarded the Silver Star and both his family and the whole world believed he had been killed in a Taliban ambush during a brave attempt to draw their fire in order to save his own men.  Just a few weeks later, the Army would come forward to acknowledge that this narrative was wrong and that Tillman had been killed by friendly fire.  At this point, the question that came to my mind was why would the Pentagon and the Bush Administration voluntarily come forward and uncover their own conspiracy? The film makes no mention of any outside pressure on the Pentagon from the Tillman family or even the media to get the bottom of anything. Meaning that at this point everyone believed the initial report and apparently all the Administration and military had to do to keep us all believing was to keep their mouths shut.  So the question is: If the idea was to use Tillman’s death for nefarious pro-war purposes, why just a few weeks after the memorial service would those with the most to lose from doing so, voluntarily kick over a political hornets’ nest by telling the truth? Why not milk the situation for as long as possible and for as much propaganda as possible, especially with a presidential election just five months off? At the very least, why not save all the political heartache and fallout this revelation was sure to bring (and did) and stall until after Bush is reelected?  A producer once told me that whenever you have a film character open a refrigerator door you either have to show them close it or include the sound effect of the door closing, or else the audience will get unsettled thinking the door has been left open. Bar-Lev’s refusal to address or explain why a supposed-group of conspirators would of their own volition blow the whistle on their own supposed conspiracy leaves that door open. And no fancy camera move or sinister scoring is going to close it.  As the film moves towards its climax, an August of 2007 Congressional hearing, the conspiracy becomes even less convincing. Democrat Rep. Henry Waxman brought together all the players, including Donald Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, to testify under oath and before the television cameras about what they knew and when they knew it. You get the sense that Bar-Lev actually wants us to believe that Henry Waxman, one of the most extreme Bush haters in all of Congress, was – at best – less than enthused at this opportunity or maybe even in on the alleged cover up.  Bar-Lev’s sin of omission is not giving the audience any background on Waxman’s  investigative crusades to bring Bush down , which would go a long way towards giving this Congressional hearing looking into the Tillman case credibility. But that kind of knowledge would also work against the filmmaker’s obvious political agenda. No one wanted Bush’s scalp more than Henry Waxman. Instead, however, all we see are shots of the Congressman looking indifferent and bored.  To anyone who’s even a tenth the independent thinker Pat Tillman was, this documentary looking into his death never rises above the level of left-wing propaganda.  Pat Tillman was a patriot and an American hero, and the truth of what happened that terrible day changes none of that. As far as Pat Tillman’s family, there is nothing they deserve more than whatever emotional closure one can have in such a situation. I do hope they find it. But where they’re looking for it now, it simply doesn’t exist. Crossposted at Big Hollywood

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In ‘Tillman Story,’ Anti-Bush Conspiracy Just Doesn’t Add Up

Fabolous Says He’s ‘Good’ After Having Tour Van Stolen

‘It was stripped down like a Magic City dancer,’ Fab tells MTV News of recovering the car in Washington, D.C. By Shaheem Reid Fabolous Photo: MTV News Some fun-loving criminals made traveling arrangements for some of Fabolous’ entourage a little more difficult this past weekend in Washington, D.C. The Brooklyn MC had a show in the area, and after his performance he discovered his crew’s transportation had been tampered with. “That was one of the few things on the Internet that was true,” Fab confirmed to MTV News on Thursday in the Bronx. “I had shows in D.C. this weekend. One of the turtle-top vans wound up getting stolen,” he continued. “I don’t know how, even the police were mind-boggled by it because it was parked right next to the Secret Service building. They found it though. It was stripped down like a Magic City dancer. It happens. I didn’t know people really go hard and steal cars like that. I think I tweeted , like, ‘Yo, do people really still steal cars?’ I thought that was something that kinda like fell off. What are you gonna do with a car after you steal it? Joyride? But I guess you can get some parts. But a turtle-top? You’re taking a big-ass van. Hopefully, it helped somebody out in their time of need. “I was good,” Fab laughed, correcting the record about his personal mode of transportation. “Let’s not get that mistaken. I had another ride. But my boys, they were in a little jam. We figured it out, made a police report. I thought it got towed at first. But we figured it out, made a police report, came back to New York. I don’t fault D.C. for it. Your van can get stolen anywhere I guess. I always have fun in D.C. [though]. D.C. shows me a lot of love.” Fabolous’ next project is The Grieving Music, an EP inspired by his DJ Drama-hosted mixtape There Is No Competition 2: The Funeral Service. The EP is due September 6. Are you excited for Fab to drop new music? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Fabolous

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Fabolous Says He’s ‘Good’ After Having Tour Van Stolen

‘Eat Pray Love’: The Reviews Are In!

Before you head to the theaters, find out what critics had to say about Julia Roberts’ globe-trotting flick. By Eric Ditzian Julia Roberts in “Eat Pray Love” Photo: Sony Earlier today, we took a look at what the critics are saying about “The Expendables,” Sylvester Stallone’s bullet-riddled action flick that should reel in around $30 million this weekend. Likely coming in second at the box office — a film that couldn’t be more different than Sly’s shoot-’em-up popcorn adventure — will be “Eat Pray Love,” Julia Roberts’ globe-trotting journey of nonstop noshing, sexual awakening and inner peace. Not that the two films have nothing in common. They both take place in exotic locals, see their main characters reprioritize their personal lives and have received decidedly mixed reviews. Here’s what critics are saying about “Eat Pray Love”: The Story “Based on the memoir by Elizabeth Gilbert, it’s the story of a successful writer (Roberts) who, like Dante, finds herself in her mid-thirties feeling lost and without direction. She ends her marriage to her sweet but hapless husband (Billy Crudup) and, after the obligatory affair with a sensitive young hunk (James Franco, of course), she decides to renew herself through travel. First she’ll go to Italy and enjoy good food. Then to India, to pray in an ashram. And then to Bali, to find love.” — Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle Julia “Roberts doesn’t look much like Liz Gilbert — although she has indeed absorbed some of her mannerisms — after all she gets paid to look like Julia Roberts. She gives a nice performance here, ranging from brassy to vulnerable to drunkenly flirtatious. It isn’t her fault that the script tries to jam a memoir into the romantic-comedy template, spiced liberally with New Age nostrums, and can’t quite get it right.” — Andrew O’Hehir, Salon The Adaptation From Book to Screen “The film’s most crucial constituency — the book’s rabid fans — are likely to feel well served by Murphy’s adaptation, which hews pretty faithfully to Gilbert’s story. (He veers off the path most wildly in India, where he was stuck filming Roberts meditating, or trying to meditate, for hours on end, full stop.) And even newcomers, men included, can enjoy being swept up in the film’s lavish third chapter, where Gilbert meets a seductive Brazilian named Felipe (Javier Bardem) and embarks on a luscious love affair amid the verdant terraces and soft beaches of Bali.” — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post The Look “Shot in burnished magic-hour light (the crew must have toiled feverishly over a hundred dawns and dusks), with rapturous attention paid to dishes of prosciutto and melon, and to the dishy men in Liz’s life (Billy Crudup as the husband she leaves, James Franco as the rebound beau and finally, Javier Bardem, as the hopelessly sensitive, sensual soul mate), the film is a glorious travelogue, a charmer.” — Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer The Final Word “For a film about a woman whose motto is ‘I’m through with the guilt,’ Roberts and [director Ryan] Murphy & Co. have delivered a guilty pleasure. It’s great to see her in something this light again, looking much as she did 10 years ago. ‘Eat Pray Love’ allows Roberts’ longtime fans to travel the world, and back in time with her. If only we all could eat until we pop and age in reverse and still have the glow of amber backlighting.” — Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel Check out everything we’ve got on “Eat Pray Love.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Photos Evolution Of: Julia Roberts

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‘Eat Pray Love’: The Reviews Are In!

Hype-brids: Networks Tout Green Vehicles, But Americans Buy Four Times as Many SUVs

If news outlets were fueled by bias, then ABC, CBS, and NBC would be Hummers. Over the past two years, the media have declared Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs) “dying” while celebrating the popularity of hybrid cars. Americans disagree. Data from Edmunds.com showed SUV market share has grown or remained stable whereas hybrid market share has declined. In July 2010 alone, SUVs outsold hybrids 4 to one. When gas prices were high in summer 2008, the media eagerly reported the demise of the SUV and wrote its epitaph, as CBS News’s Hattie Kauffman eloquently did on May 26, 2008: “Here lies the mighty sport utility vehicle, once a symbol of status and power, now collecting dust.” From July 2009 to July 2010, total SUV sales increased by 38.9 percent whereas hybrid sales have decreased by 32.7 percent. Large SUV sales alone have increased by nearly 40 percent. Yet back in 2008, the three networks all paid their respects to the “dying” SUV, with ABC’s Chris Cuomo jumping on the hybrid bandwagon before the SUVs body was even cold: “Everybody’s trying to sell their SUV, want to get into one of these new jobs, you know, the smart car, the hybrid, the high-mileage type vehicles, all these alternative cars.” The “everybody” Cuomo mentioned must only have included the hybrid owners and not the SUV owners. Despite the overwhelming numbers, since June 2008, the Business & Media Institute discovered the networks’ covered hybrid cars three to one over SUVs. Specifically, there were more stories about the Toyota Prius (37) than on the top 5 best-selling SUVs combined (24). Still, back in 2008 network reporters such as ABC News’s David Muir predicted a green upheaval as he erroneously reported on the SUVs demise. “American carmakers are looking for a revolution, too. The gas guzzlers so popular yesterday are no longer popular today,” Muir said on July 20, 2008. The only “guzzlers” are the media members who continually drink the liberal Kool Aid. In May 2008, the first month of high gas prices, hybrid models had 2.52 percent market share. The hybrid model market share in May 2010, two years into the “revolution:” 2.52 percent. Those numbers didn’t stop CBS’s Anthony Mason from ushering in the “electric era” on the April 1, 2010 CBS “Evening News:” “Well, it’s a real challenge, but Katie, we are at the dawn of the electric era,” Mason declared. That “dawn” may not be rising as fast as Mason hoped. According to the Market Data Center , the best selling vehicle in the month of July was the Ford F150, a pickup truck. Fortunately, for Kauffman, Muir, and Mason, as their network ratings crumble , there are plenty of “gas guzzling” SUVs around to carry their remains. Volt and Prius: A Media Love Story Despite pedestrian sales numbers and recalls, reporters at the big three networks continue channeling their inner Billy Mays, turning their segments into infomercials for eco-friendly cars. The media’s favorite green cars have been the new Chevy Volt and the Toyota Prius. The networks aired nearly twice as many Volt stories (42) as they aired on the top five selling SUVs combined (24). Further proof of network favoritism: Ford F150’s have outsold the Prius nearly three to one, yet the networks have covered the Prius over the F150 three to one (37 to 12). The Prius has established itself as an environmental symbol thanks to the media hyping its popularity with the liberal Hollywood elite, as CBS reporter Ben Tracy did on Feb. 11, 2010. Tracy interviewed actors Penelope Cruz and Orlando Bloom and concluded Hollywood star power “helped make the Prius a household name.” Being outsold three to one by a “gas guzzler” is an awfully big amount for a “household name.” The Chevy Volt, a plug-in electric car expected to hit the market in November, has also been popular with the media. Both NBC “Today” host Matt Lauer and CBS’s Mason took test rides in the Volt, with Lauer being the first non-GM person to actually drive it. Additionally, all three networks hyped the Volt in their coverage of the 2009 and 2010 Detroit International Auto Shows, nearly two years before the Volt was even expected to hit the market. Recently, some in the media were outraged when GM announced the Volt would be priced at $41,000. Of course, when challenged about the price in a July 29 press conference, Ron Bloom, Obama’s senior advisor to the Treasury Secretary for automobiles, distanced the government from GM. “We do not tell GM what to charge for cars,” Bloom said. “Most kinds of new technology are expensive.” Unlike batteries, which require positive and negative charges to work, the government only operates on positive charges, such as the positives touted by Obama in his July 30 visit to Michigan, but dismisses negative charges. The Obama Administration found plenty of positive charge in the network news reports, as all three networks praised Obama’s July 30 visit to GM where he test rode the Volt. ABC’s Karen Travers called it a “victory lap” and NBC’s Savannah Guthrie echoed Obama’s remarks that the “American auto industry [is] resurrected from the dead.” Since summer 2008, only ABC and NBC interviewed analysts skeptical of the green car business model. NBC’s Phil LeBeau interviewed Standard and Poor Equity analyst Efraim Levy on May 6, 2009, where Levy noted smaller, green cars would result in smaller profits but larger losses. “Smaller cars have smaller price tags. So, therefore, you have less room to make the profits, and if a car’s not successful, the losses are even more painful,” Levy said. Case in point: the 1997 GM EV1, which was named one of Time magazine’s ‘ Worst Cars of All Time. ‘ The EV1, GM’s first attempt at an electric car, flopped due to disappointing battery power and a lack of demand . The EV1 retailed at $34,000, cost GM $80,000 per vehicle, and ultimately GM lost $2 billion on the EV1 program. The $2 billion is more than the $1.3 billion second quarter profit GM recently reported. Instead of the SUV, the GM EV1 is now the vehicle “collecting dust.” Cart Before the Horse On April 1, 2010, the big three network news broadcasts fooled their viewers with reports on fuel emission standards. ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news shows each aired stories about the new fuel emissions standards, which had been based on the 2007 Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) rules and championed by the Obama Administration. According to the new standards, by model year 2016 all cars and light trucks must average 35.5 miles per gallon. ABC and CBS sandwiched their reports between stories on – you guessed it – Toyota and the Volt, whereas NBC’s Lee Cowan devoted a full two minute report on the new standards. He actually noted the cost of lowering emissions will trickle down to the consumer: “But reaching that new efficiency level does come with a price, an estimated $52 million for car manufacturers to be paid by the consumer. About $1,000 per car may be added on to the sticker price,” Cowan reported. But Cowan still encouraged viewers to buy a green car, saying it will save them money in the long run: “Now, Brian, although these new cars will cost a little bit more, the government says that will be more than offset by your savings in fuel, they’re saying about $3,000 over the course of that new environmentally-friendly vehicle.” Cowan’s report was misleading. A 2006 study by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine discovered that of the top seven hybrids, only the Prius will save you money over five years compared to a non-hybrid vehicle. According to the study, three out of the seven hybrids will cost you over $3,000 more, the amount the government claims you’ll save. Myron Ebell, director of energy and global warming policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a free market think tank, told BMI he thinks the new fuel emission standards will lead to more dire consequences than just hitting consumers’ pockets. “I think automakers will go bankrupt again,” Ebell said. “In order to meet the new standards, big cars will become expensive and they’re going to have to sell a lot of small cars. Detroit automakers have never figured out how to make a profit on small cars.” Ebell added that the 2007 CAFE standards “foreshadowed” the auto bailouts and that the bailouts have turned Chrysler and GM into “creatures of the Obama Administration.’ “The automakers are in worse shape than had they gone into bankruptcy,” Ebell said. “Bankruptcy would have broken the worst part of the union contract and they [GM and Chrysler] wouldn’t have to answer to the government.” Only ABC News interviewed anyone challenging the government’s boat-without-a-paddle auto policy and its relation to energy standards. On Jan. 11, 2009, ABC’s Bianna Golodryga interviewed Jean Jennings, editor-in-chief of Automobile magazine: “The government is on the wrong track because they are dictating fuel economy without an energy policy,” Jennings said. “And yet, they are forcing the car companies to spend billions of dollars in development costs for a technology that might be way ahead of what people want.” Yet the networks didn’t challenge the Obama Administration’s fuel emission demands for the auto industry. Ironically, for three networks that won’t cover SUVs, they’ve become SUVs for Obama’s auto plan: Steadily Urging Victory. End of the Road In “Home Improvement,” Tim “The Tool Man” Taylor often shouted “more power!” For the media, it’s worth shouting “less bias.” With SUVs alive and well, the network news shows remain committed to promoting green cars and cheerleading the Obama Administration’s auto policies. According to Michael LaFaive, director of the Morley Fiscal Policy Initiative at The Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a free market think tank, Obama’s auto praises are played out in the media like a “Rooseveltian victory lap.” “There’s no ribbon cutting ceremony for tax cuts like there is for opening a new battery factory,” LaFaive said. “The government has nothing to sell this as a way to stimulate demand.” Despite the unfavorable media coverage, SUVs are still in demand and rather than collecting dust, they’re making hybrids eat their dust. Methodology The Business & Media Institute examined news stories from ABC, CBS, and NBC from June 1, 2008, through July 15, 2010. June 1, 2008, was selected because it was after Memorial Day and in the thick of the high summer 2008 gas prices. BMI also examined the three evening news stories from Friday, July 30, 2010, the day Obama visited the Volt assembly plant in Michigan. Final numbers included 69 stories on hybrid vehicles and 19 on SUVs. Based on the June sales from AOL Autos, the top five best selling SUVs are the Chevy Traverse, Chevy Equinox, Toyota RAV4, Ford Escape, and Honda CR-V. Only stories longer than 100 words were counted. Recall stories were excluded because they focused on consumer safety as opposed to the actual cars. Data was provided courtesy of Edmunds.com, HybridCars.com, The Wall Street Journal Market Data Center and AOL Autos. Like this article? Then sign up for our newsletter, The Balance Sheet .

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Hype-brids: Networks Tout Green Vehicles, But Americans Buy Four Times as Many SUVs

Fantasia Released From Hospital

Singer is discharged two days after apparent suicide attempt. By Mawuse Ziegbe Fantasia Photo: Bennett Raglin/WireImage Fantasia Barrino was released from the hospital on Wednesday (August 11) after apparently trying to commit suicide by overdosing on medication . The “American Idol” season-three victor was rushed to the hospital Monday after she was found in a North Carolina home. Barrino’s manager, Brian Dickens, confirmed to MTV News that she was released from Carolinas Medical Center-Mercy in North Carolina after being admitted to the hospital under an alias. “She has been lifted up by the outpouring of love and support from her fans,” Dickens said in a statement to MTV News. “She is more committed than ever to her daughter and her work because they are her heart, her soul and inspiration.” The “Idol” champ shocked fans when she reportedly attempted to take her own life by ingesting a combination of aspirin and a sleep aid . Many Barrino fans have expressed their support during the past few days; however, some have blasted the singer for her alleged relationship with a married man and for almost leaving her young daughter without a mother. Although Barrino has been the subject of public criticism and is obviously experiencing setbacks in her personal life, public-relations expert Howard Bragman believes the Free Yourself singer will be able to bounce back. “I think the number-one thing Fantasia has to do is heal. I think she has to get some psychological help, find out what brought her to this moment, and make sure it doesn’t happen again … that is number one,” Bragman told MTV News. “And once that’s under control, then you start to look at your projects on the horizon. You don’t give yourself this timetable. But assuming she’s well enough in a matter of weeks or months to promote her album or her projects, well, the reality is, we live in a very forgiving society.” Share your well-wishes with Fantasia and her family in the comments. Related Artists Fantasia

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Fantasia Released From Hospital

Ex-Boyfriend of Ali Fedotowsky Shops Topless Pic

Ali Fedotowsky found love on The Bachelorette. But with Roberto Martinez comes the obligatory deluge of rumors about her personal life – including her past. An ex-boyfriend has reportedly shopping a topless photo of the reality TV star, according to Radar Online , and it sounds incredibly scandalous. Only not at all. Various media outlets have been contacted about the photo, which purportedly shows Ali Fedotowsky topless, on her knees, with her hands on her breasts. Beer is being poured on Ali’s breasts by someone who is off camera. Only one hand of that person is visible. Now a public couple, Roberto and Ali go for a stroll . “An ex-boyfriend of Ali is using a broker to shop the photograph,” a source said of the man from Ali’s supposed drug and sex fiend past. “No deal has been made yet but the ex has a lot of other material from his time dating her.” “The seller of the topless photo wants to remain anonymous right now,” the source said. “But it is one of her ex boyfriends. There’s more. She liked to party.” Wow. Shocking that a random, cute girl who went on The Bachelor and Bachelorette once went crazy at a party. This will surely stun and devastate Ali fans. Ali is engaged to Roberto Martinez , who proposed on the show’s finale, and the downside of fame hasn’t appeared to take a toll on their relationship … yet. Will it last between them?

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Ex-Boyfriend of Ali Fedotowsky Shops Topless Pic

‘Cannabis gave me my life back’

Marie Summers was in a 'prison of pain', until she overcame inhibitions about using an illegal drug. The result seemed like a miracle Read more: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/lifestyle/health/features/cannabis-gave-me-my-… http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/lifestyle/health/features/cannabis-gave-me-my-… added by: JackHerer