Tag Archives: program

WaPo Sponsors Gay Business Advocacy Group

The National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce held their seventh annual Business and Leadership Conference in Washington from Thursday to Saturday. One of the “Manager Level” corporate sponsors was The Washington Post. The Post didn't just fund it. They participated. On Friday afternoon, the program touted their Communities of Color Business Initiative, with speaker Jonathan Capehart (page 18 of the program): MSNBC contributor and Washington Post editorial writer Jonathan Capehart will lead a discussion among business owners and professionals of color about their experiences in the marketplace and how the LGBT business community can help break down barriers empower diverse businesses. Roundtable attendees are encouraged to share stories of success and challenge and bring ideas that will help the NGLCC grow the CCBI. The keynote speaker for the conference was Obama's Commerce Secretary, Gary Locke . There's no question that what the Post is funding here is a socially liberal advocacy group : read more

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WaPo Sponsors Gay Business Advocacy Group

EPA Nixes External Adaptors from Energy Star Program

Photo via alistairas The Environmental Protection Agency decided that external power adapters aren’t eligible for inclusion in the Energy Star Label program, the reason being that they’re doing too good a job meeting qualifications anyway. Since most external adapters meet qualifications, there’s no point in wasting resources putting them through the labeling process. On the one hand, it makes perfect sense to streamline the program where possible (after all, Energy Star is

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EPA Nixes External Adaptors from Energy Star Program

New Predictive Software Aims to Save Endangered Zebras

Photo credit: PRNewsFoto/IBM Knowing that a species is endangered is one thing, but knowing how to save it is a whole other problem. For the Grevy’s zebra, which has only 2,500 individuals left in the wild, how and why people hunt them. IBM has created a new predictive analytics software that Marwell Wildlife can use to collect huge amounts of complex information — such as what herdsmen think about the zebras, where the animals are located, why they hunt the… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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New Predictive Software Aims to Save Endangered Zebras

More Reaction To The Decision To End The EPA Climate Leaders Program

Last week’s announcement that the EPA is bringing its Climate Leaders program to an end shocked many in the greenhouse gas reporting community. The Environmental Director of a Global Technology Company told me that he was “very disappointed that the EPA would withdraw this program” and Paul Baier with Groom Energy says that the announcement “clearly caught our customers off guard, after they have invest… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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More Reaction To The Decision To End The EPA Climate Leaders Program

Adriana Volpe height biography

Biography for Adriana Volpe Date of Birth : 1973-05-31 Place of Birth : Trento, Italy Height: 5#39; 7″ Adriana Volpe (May 31, 1973, Trento, Italy) is a former Italian model, showgirl and actress. After scientific high school, she moves to Rome, where in 1990 begins the model profession, managing to model in various capitals of fashion: Milan, Paris, Zurich, Tokyo. In 1992 is taken by RAI to participate as showgirl of the program Scommettiamo che…, remaining until 1995, when she debuted on

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Adriana Volpe height biography

Complete, Remastered Hour of ‘Orson Welles: War of the Worlds’ radio broadcast!

The War of the Worlds was an episode of the American radio drama anthology series “Mercury Theatre on the Air”. It was performed as a Halloween episode of the series on October 30, 1938 and aired over the Columbia Broadcasting System radio network. Directed and narrated by Orson Welles, the episode was an adaptation of H. G. Wells' novel, 'The War of the Worlds'. The first two thirds of the 60-minute broadcast were presented as a series of simulated “news bulletins”, which suggested to many listeners that an actual alien invasion by Martians was currently in progress. Compounding the issue was the fact that the Mercury Theatre on the Air was a 'sustaining show' (it ran without commercial breaks), thus adding to the program's quality of realism. Although there were sensationalist accounts in the press about a supposed panic in response to the broadcast, the precise extent of listener response has been debated. In the days following the adaptation, however, there was widespread outrage. Because the program's oration included a segment in which “radio has a responsibility to serve in the public interest at all times,” the news-bulletin format was decried as cruelly deceptive by some newspapers and public figures, leading to an outcry against the perpetrators of the broadcast and some confirmed suicides. ————- The Full, Unedited 1938 Welles Production is brought to you in 7 parts: (Part One) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wf5TPVz56A (Part Two) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUBisKB5l98 (Part Three) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejt_aWUrEp8 (Part Four) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aYZPkHEp_s (Part Five) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wxLjcz1oE8 (Part Six) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fFLmXZ9Lmk (Part Seven) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QuDdAe17OL0 ————— For more on “Yellow Journalism,” please indulge in the following: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_journalism added by: jeffissleeping

NSA project "perfect Citizen " won’t invade privacy it promises

The surveillance by the National Security Agency, the government's chief eavesdropping agency, would rely on a set of sensors deployed in computer networks for critical infrastructure that would be triggered by unusual activity suggesting an impending cyber attack, though it wouldn't persistently monitor the whole system, these people said. Defense contractor Raytheon Corp. recently won a classified contract for the initial phase of the surveillance effort valued at up to $100 million, said a person familiar with the project. An NSA spokeswoman said the agency had no information to provide on the program. A Raytheon spokesman declined to comment. Some industry and government officials familiar with the program see Perfect Citizen as an intrusion by the NSA into domestic affairs, while others say it is an important program to combat an emerging security threat that only the NSA is equipped to provide. http://online.wsj.com/article/NA_WSJ_PUB:SB1000142405274870454500457535298385046… added by: notyourbabiesdaddy

Muslim Scholar on MSNBC: ‘Vocal Minority’ Spreading Fear, ‘Demonize’ Islam

During the 10 a.m. ET hour on MSNBC, anchor Chris Jansing spoke with Islamic scholar Hamza Yusuf Hanson about the Ground Zero Mosque controversy, who proclaimed: “I think there’s a lot of fear….there has been a concerted effort by a certain segment. It’s a very small minority, but their powerful and vocal, to demonize the Muslim community.”              Yusuf was on to discuss his founding of Zaytuna College in California, the nation’s first Islamic higher education school. However, Jansing introduced the segment by placing the college in this context: “…the [mosque] controversy prompted Time magazine to ask, Is America – if America is Islamophobic. A Time poll found that 46% of Americans believe Islam is more likely than other faiths to encourage violence against nonbelievers. And a small college in Berkeley, California, may become the new battleground in America’s uneasy relationship with Islam.” After briefly discussing the college, Jansing turned to the mosque: “Do you understand the unease among many Americans, and we are seeing a lot of it come out with this mosque controversy?” After denouncing opponents of the project, Hanson defended the imam involved: “Feisal Abdul Rauf, who’s the imam there, is an extremely gentle person and to frame him as an extremist means that the whole community is mad…these are people that have spent their life in interfaith dialogue…” Rauf claimed the United States was an “accessory” to the September 11th attacks during a September 2001 60 Minutes interview on CBS. Jansing again cited the Time magazine poll and asked: “I wonder what your reaction is to that poll and what can be done to turn it around?” Hanson argued Islam was one the world’s most peaceful religions: “I would look at, there’s a paper on Google called ‘Body Count,’ which shows that Islam, actually, out of the seven major religions, the only religion less violent, historically, is Hinduism. And I think people tend to forget Muslims historically have lived very well with people.” The study Hanson cited, put out by the Royal Aal Al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought, claimed that only 5.52% of war deaths in the past 2,000 years were caused by Islamic belligerents. In conflicts such as the current war in Iraq, the United States was described as the “Christian Belligerent Civilization” and the death toll listed was between 614,000 and 1,100,100, as if American forces were solely responsible for the casualties. The report concluded that Christians were the cause of 30.73% of war deaths in the past two millennia, the single largest percentage out of the seven faiths included.   Later in the 10AM ET hour, Jansing discussed the mosque controversy with construction worker Andy Sullivan, who was organizing a boycott of aiding in the construction of the proposed building. Jansing made sure to bring up the Time magazine argument: “And to people who say that we’re sort of playing into the hands of these folks because we’re displaying religious intolerance. What do you say to them?” Sullivan replied: “If it was a religious matter, September 12th, we would have went in there and stormed the place, okay? Did we? No. We didn’t….We do not want this gigantic mega victory mosque – because that’s what it’s going to be looked at from around the world, especially our enemies – built right in that location, especially when we haven’t even built the Trade Center yet.” Here is a full transcript of Jansing’s August 20 interview with Hanson: 10:13 a.m. ET CHRIS JANSING: Former DNC Chairman Howard Dean is against the plan to build an Islamic Center and mosque near Ground Zero. Dr. Dean laid out his case last night with Keith Olbermann. HOWARD DEAN: This is a very polarized topic and I think the right place for this is to really listen to what people are saying. If people have strong feelings about this – I’m not talking about bigoted, prejudice feelings – I’m talking about strong emotional objections to this, then I think we ought to hear what they are and we ought to listen to them carefully. JANSING: Meanwhile, the controversy prompted Time magazine to ask, Is America – if America is Islamophobic. A time poll found that 46% of Americans believe Islam is more likely than other faiths to encourage violence against nonbelievers. And a small college in Berkeley, California, may become the new battleground in America’s uneasy relationship with Islam. Zaytuna College in Berkeley is the first accredited Muslim college in the U.S.. The first classes were held this summer. I’m joined by Zatuna College founder Hamza Yusuf Hanson. Thanks very much for joining us, good morning. HAMZA YUSUF HANSON [FOUNDER, ZAYTUNA COLLEGE]: Thank you, good morning. JANSING: Yeah, classes began this summer, I think people are just starting to hear about this. Tell us a little bit about the mission of the college, why did you find it – found it? HANSON: Well, first of all, just to clarify, it’s not actually accredited. It’s – we’re in the process of accreditation and that takes a considerable amount of time. But, I mean, basically the idea behind it is the Muslim religious community is quite extensive now in the United States and every religious community in America eventually develops institutions in order to train people and teach people and colleges, Harvard began as a seminary, Yale began as a seminary, so we tend to forget that actually many of our greatest colleges began as religious institutions. JANSING: So, let me ask you why you think that there was a need for a Muslim university. As I understand it now, if you want to be an imam and you want to have a mosque in the United States, you have to leave the country to study, right? HANSON: Well, that’s the problem. I mean, we have foreign imams that often come to the country and many of then are very fine, decent people but they don’t understand the nuances of the American society. They haven’t studied the traditions of our own country. And it’s important, I think, to have those two elements. You have to have people that are Muslim, but – here teaching. But also people that understand the culture that they’re living in, understand the community itself, the young people, the immigrant children that are born here, they’re Americans, they’re not from Cairo, they’re not from Rawal Pindi in Pakistan, so, it’s really important. JANSING: And in fact, you, yourself, grew up Christian, as I understand it. Both in Walla Walla, Washington and Northern California. Do you understand the unease among many Americans, and we are seeing a lot of it come out with this mosque controversy? HANSON: I – know you, I think there’s a lot of fear and some of it’s justifiable in that over the last ten years there has been a concerted effort by a certain segment. It’s a very small minority, but their powerful and vocal, to demonize the Muslim community. Abdul Rauf, who – Feisal Abdul Rauf, who’s the imam there, is an extremely gentle person and to frame him as an extremist means that the whole community is mad because, you know, if you take somebody like that or Daisy Kahn, I mean these are people that have spent their life in interfaith dialogue and really trying to attack the very ideology that I think people are afraid of. JANSING: You know, you heard that poll, 46% Of Americans see Muslims as more likely than other religions to be violent against nonbelievers. I wonder what your reaction is to that poll and what can be done to turn it around? HANSON: Right. I would look at, there’s a paper on Google called ‘Body Count,’ which shows that Islam, actually, out of the seven major religions, the only religion less violent, historically, is Hinduism. And I think people tend to forget Muslims historically have lived very well with people. You know, I think Muslims are not redefining America here. And there’s a lot of fear that they are. I think that we’re reasserting the original definition of this country, which is about religious freedom. So it’s really important. My own great, great-grandfather, Michael O’Hanson, his greeting to America coming from Ireland was the nativist, anti-Irish, Catholic, anti-Catholic Irish riots in 1844 in Philadelphia. But those riots actually led to the consolidation of the city of Philadelphia and the Irish Catholics now are fully enfranchised. One out of every four Americans has Catholic roots in this country now, even though they were 1% of the population at the founding of the country. So, I think Muslims now are new kids on the block and every community that comes to this country, you know, they have to really find their place at the table and I think that’s what Muslims are negotiating now. America is a process of negotiations. And I think- JANSING: And you, as you say, are part of that renegotiation process with this new university. We have to leave it at that. But Hamza Usef Hanson, thank you so much for being with us today. HANSON: Okay, well, thank you very much.

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Muslim Scholar on MSNBC: ‘Vocal Minority’ Spreading Fear, ‘Demonize’ Islam

Reinforcements Ordered in the War on Brains [video]

Rachel Maddow talks about her former show, The War on Brains — she mentions that even though the program no longer exists, America’s war on brains continues. Perhaps the most ridiculous example is the woman who claims that “the separation of church and state” is not mentioned in the US Constitution — a fact that can be easily confirmed by anyone who can read by checking the original document. added by: GrrlScientist

Tribune Co. Chief Innovation Officer Develops Newscast Sans Anchors or Reporters

Remember Lee Abrams , the eccentric (some would say nutty) Chief Innovation Officer of the Tribune Company best known for writing bizarre stream of conciousness memos that sound like the author is on an acid trip? Well, he and his memos are back to promote the launch of a new newscast at KIAH Channel 39 in Houston which will be notable for its lack of anchors or reporters. This development comes on the heels of the utter failure of another Abrams project launched with much enthusiasm last year at WSFL-TV in South Florida, The Morning Show. The sad fate of that show was described in a memo yesterday sent out to the staff by publisher Howard Greenberg of the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel which runs that station: Earlier this morning, WSFL-TV announced the cancellation of The Morning Show, with today being the last broadcast. Launched on April 13, 2009, the program was designed to provide the competitive South Florida market with a fresh take on morning news. We had high hopes for the program, and significant effort from throughout the company went into developing the show. While we’re proud of what we accomplished in a short period of time, the audience didn’t build the way we had anticipated, and we had to make the difficult decision to end production. Every effort is being made to help affected employees with this transition, including assisting them in exploring placement within our organization and at other Tribune properties. We’re also helping facilitate the production of resume tapes and other material for departing staff members. Bob Norman of the Daily Pulp makes an observation about what the real problem with that show was: The problem, of course, was that there wasn’t really anything new about it all — it was a traditional morning show at its core, only with younger hosts and an emphasis on the show’s website that never really created any buzz or took off.  However, at the time of the launch of The Morning Show, Abrams waxed enthusiastic about it in this memo : Very blown away by the morning show! Not only the show, but the spirit and attitude of EVERYONE involved. If we can get 10 percent of this level of afdi, energy and willingness to reinvent at our other stations, we’ll truly revolutionize TV. There were quite a few nitpiks that I’ll review today with the group, but overall, they are soooo local and soooo refreshingly and NOTICEABLY different from EVERYone else. The other stations look disconnected, TOO professional and slick and “nationalized” in comparison, and I think this show is on track to hit its psychographic head on. Watched the competition and it was hilariously dated–Stiff, evil looking Ivory Tower news people wearing 1987 Reagan era suits, taking “news speak” with blue and silver everywhere. As organic and real as a chunk of linoleum. The CONTENT was generally fine, but undermined by a dated-playbook presentation. They know their place on the intellectual/culture scale—and nail it well. Undettered by that massive flop, Abrams has gone on to apply his Chief Innovation Officer skills to a new project in Houston as described by David Barron of the Houston Chronicle: Channel 39 will end its traditional newscasts by this fall to launch a new format called NewsFix, which discards on-camera anchors and reporters and focuses on natural sound and video to tell stories. KIAH employees were informed Thursday about the changes, which apparently involve reassigning anchors and reporters to new, off-camera duties and signal a sharp reversal from the station’s recent advertising campaign focusing on its lead anchor, Mia Gradney. Somehow I don’t think that idea of ditching on-air anchors and reporters was exactly popular with the staff. One can only imagine the mood in the KIAH newsroom when that announcement was made.  Roger Bare, Channel 39’s general manager, said KIAH will be the pilot program for Tribune Broadcasting’s NewsFix, which is expected to launch in late September or early October. “The core concept is to focus more on storytelling by allowing those in the story to tell the story and to place video and audio at the center of all that we do,” Bare said, repeating a sentence included in a memo given to employees. One Channel 39 employee, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak on the station’s behalf, said employees were told that the newscast would feature fast-paced stories, added special effects and a minimum of on-camera appearances by reporters or anchors. “It’s not going to be as much of a newscast as a collection of stories that will roll into each other,” the employee said. “There will be natural sound, and you won’t see the reporters. “It will be news for people who don’t watch news, which sounds a lot like opening a bar for people who don’t drink.” And who was the “genius” behind this innovation? None other than the Chief Innovation Officer: NewsFix is the brainchild of Lee Abrams , the former radio executive who is Tribune Co.’s chief innovation officer. In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Abrams said the company wants to “bring us into the 21st century in terms of what (viewers) see and hear. It’s elevating us and escaping the grip of the 1970s television playbook that seems to be what every station in America is addicted to.” So having failed with a newscast in Florida, Abrams is rewarded by being allowed to apply his “innovative” ideas to another newscast in Texas. Perhaps with his next project, Abrams will launch a newscast without news. Oops! That’s already been done. I think it is called MSNBC. Looking forward to more entertaining Lee Abrams memos! 

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Tribune Co. Chief Innovation Officer Develops Newscast Sans Anchors or Reporters