Tag Archives: seattle

Furrygirl’s sexy stripdown protest in Seattle airport mocking TSA security theater (NSFW video) – Boing Boing

Self-described pornographer, sex worker, and sex blogger Furrygirl opted for a patdown instead of the pornoscanners at the TSA checkpoint at the airport in Seattle, citing health concerns about radiation emitted by new devices. To protest the TSA's invasive new “enhanced” screening procedures, she stripped down to see-thru, sexy underwear prior to her “grope-up,” and videoblogged the whole thing (well, what the camera could capture from its vantage point on the little tray traveling down the conveyor belt). “Instead of being scared and humiliated like the TSA wants me to be, I'm going to try and enjoy this experience the best I can,” she says before she enters the screening area. “I'm just sorry the TSA doesn't work like a brothel, where you get to pick the one that's hottest.” I'd say what's most interesting about the video is what it doesn't show: the facial expressions of the TSA workers, the reactions of other passengers. At any rate, I applaud her efforts to stick it to The Man. (click on the link to access the video) added by: Vierotchka

Watch The Office Season 7 Episode 1 – Nepotism

Watch The Office S7E1: Nepotism The Dunder Mifflin staff of The comedy hit TV series’ The Office have now returned after their four months fall hiatus. The new season begins with a new assistant that have been giving the other staff of Dunder Mifflin a hard time with his bad attitude is not being fired by Michael. Meanwhile, with the thought of letting Jim see her playful side, Pam tries to make a practical joke in the office. Also, with Erin showing some interest in another man, Andy commits himself to ignoring it. The premiere installment of the new season of our office mates of The Office, which is entitled “Nepotism” is the hit comedy TV series’ 1st episode of the 7th season that aired last 09/23/2010 Thursday 9:00 PM on NBC. Watch The Office 7×1(0701) Free Online Streaming Full HDTV Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Watch The Office Season 7 Episode 1 – Nepotism

Grey’s Anatomy Season 7 Episode 1 – With You I’m Born Again

Watch Grey’s Anatomy S7E1: With You I’m Born Again Dr. Meredith Grey and the other resident of Seattle Grace-Mercy West hospital will now return to their time slot after the fall break. The new season of Grey’s Anatomy begins with an active all around frenzy, when right after the shooting at the Seattle Grace-Mercy West, all of the doctors has their own ordeal to deal with as someone was sent to prison, and a couple tied their knot, and the rest are feeling the pressure of the blood bath that just happened. The premiere installment of the latest season of our hospital residents of Grey’s Anatomy, which is entitled “With You I’m Born Again” is the hit hospital drama TV series’ 1st episode of the 7th season that aired last 09/23/2010 Thursday 9:00 PM on ABC. Watch Grey’s Anatomy 7×1(0701) Free Online Streaming Full HDTV Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Grey’s Anatomy Season 7 Episode 1 – With You I’m Born Again

New York Times Reporter Kevin Sack Issues White House Press Releases for Obama-Care

The first wave of Obama-care goes into effect today, and New York Times health-care reporter Kevin Sack celebrated with a series of propaganda-style articles for the front of the National section, topped by ” For Many Families, Health Care Relief Begins Today .” (As did higher costs and denied coverage, but the Times didn’t get into that.) The Times’s headline reads more like an Obama administration press release than an actual instance of journalism, and Sack’s reference (in a news story) to the “Darwinian insurance system” doesn’t inspire confidence in his objectivity. Sometimes lost in the partisan clamor about the new health care law is the profound relief it is expected to bring to hundreds of thousands of Americans who have been stricken first by disease and then by a Darwinian insurance system. On Thursday, the six-month anniversary of the signing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, a number of its most central consumer protections take effect, just in time for the midterm elections. Starting now, insurance companies will no longer be permitted to exclude children because of pre-existing health conditions, which the White House said could enable 72,000 uninsured to gain coverage. Insurers also will be prohibited from imposing lifetime limits on benefits. The law will now forbid insurers to drop sick and costly customers after discovering technical mistakes on applications. It requires that they offer coverage to children under 26 on their parents’ policies. After Sack allowed a single middle paragraph for dissent from House Republicans, and a brief mention that Democrats had managed to defer “the pain of tax increases and penalties until after the election,” he indulged in more leftist boosting of the program’s alleged popularity, or at least “many of the provisions.” Sack conveniently bypasses the findings of recent New York Times/CBS News polls that find most respondents disapprove of the plan. Polls have found that many of the provisions taking effect Thursday are popular, tugging at a national sense of fairness and feeding off distrust of health insurers . They bear particular appeal for the 14 million people who must buy policies on the individual market rather than through employers and are thus at the mercy of the industry. And they land on the heels of a government report showing that the recession drove the number of uninsured Americans to 50.7 million in 2009, up 10 percent in a year. Three other brief profiles on the same page were headlined as if the Obama administration were free-lancing as copy editors. “Chronically Ill, and Covered,” “Cap Lifts, and So Do Spirits,” and “24, and Back in the Fold.” (Insurers must offer coverage to “children” (?) under their parents’ plan until they turn 26.) The Washington Examiner has an alternative view in an editorial: ” Obamacare is even worse than critics thought .” A couple of the editorial’s bullet points: Obamacare won’t decrease health care costs for the government. According to Medicare’s actuary, it will increase costs. The same is likely to happen for privately funded health care. Obamacare will increase insurance premiums — in some places, it already has. Insurers, suddenly forced to cover clients’ children until age 26, have little choice but to raise premiums, and they attribute to Obamacare’s mandates a 1 to 9 percent increase. Obama’s only method of preventing massive rate increases so far has been to threaten insurers.

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New York Times Reporter Kevin Sack Issues White House Press Releases for Obama-Care

David Gregory Admires Jon Stewart’s ‘Serious’ Work ‘A Lot,’ Laments Helen Thomas ‘Lost Her Way’ With Polemics

NBC Meet the Press host David Gregory spoke on Tuesday at the City Club in Seattle, Washington, and John Hamer of the Washington News Council reported on Gregory’s remarks, which he found pretty bland. He found some spice in Gregory’s answers to audience questions.  On Jon Stewart’s “sanity” rally on Halloween weekend: “He’s a comedian, but he’s also got a point of view. I think what they do is serious. It’s not a joke.” However, “They are part of the media polarization.” As for Stewart: “He asks tough questions. He does a great job. I admire him a lot.” On suddenly retired columnist (and former UPI reporter) Helen Thomas: I think Helen lost her way. I don’t know when that happened..I thought she was miscast as the ‘dean of the press corps.’ She was a polemicist. Her views in the press corps were well known.” Left unsaid (at least from this report): None of the star White House reporters ever questioned the “Helen the Dean” legend, including Gregory. They underlined it. They only abandoned that position once she lashed out at the rabbi that Jews should “get the hell out” of Israel and “go home” to Germany. There’s more: The blogosphere, naturally, is weighed down with a whole lot of er, excrement: “I like to see what the Zeitgeist is in that community, but even with millions of people it’s a limited community. It can be an echo chamber. It can be partisan in one way or another..Is there some good reporting that goes on? Of course. But there’s also a whole lot of crap. It’s not a monolith.” The Tea Party, and sigh, its racist elements: It’s a “populist, conservative, small-government, anti-Washington [D.C.] movement,” upset with “bailouts” and “too much deficit spending.” Also: “And a real antipathy toward Obama that in some cases is racism.” (Hamer said, “Easy to say. Any clear evidence?”) Obama not “big enough” to get advice from Dubya: “Certainly President Obama is not as popular as he would like to be – or as he was expected to be.” Gregory said Rahm Emanuel told Obama that he “had to get close to Bill Clinton,” and Obama did that. “President Obama is not going to be big enough to call on President Bush all that often.” As for his own job, Gregory was asked if he missed the White House front-row seat. He called Meet the Press “is the ultimate front row. This is the ultimate job..We try to set the agenda. We try to move the story forward. We try to make news – and we do.” He said the show’s mission is accountability, relevance, constructive engagement, thoughtful discussion. It’s a place to ‘put it all together.'” But, he lamented: “There ought to be more outlets where we’re really listening to each other, not waiting to pounce. We don’t have enough intellectual spontaneity. I like to see people really wrestling with issues.”  Like many “mainstream” media types, Gregory sang the Scarborough song about too much divisiveness in politics: “We’ve always been polarized,” and that is “compounded by a media culture that has become increasingly polarized..I just don’t feel like constructive engagement with the other side is something that’s celebrated anymore..There’s a big political center in this country but we tend to write them off.” Replied Hamer: “This from the ‘firebrand in the front row’ whose current show delights in conflict?”

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David Gregory Admires Jon Stewart’s ‘Serious’ Work ‘A Lot,’ Laments Helen Thomas ‘Lost Her Way’ With Polemics

Reports: Facebook CEO At Facebook Movie Screening [The Cinema]

Mark Zuckerberg attended a screening of The Social Network near Seattle, a film critic and another person who was at the Facebook movie preview are claiming on Twitter. Facebook does have a new office in the city. More

Gorgeous Garage Conversion By Shed Architects

The appropriately named SHED Architecture and Design has done a lovely garage conversion into a 300 square foot studio apartment in a Seattle backyard…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Gorgeous Garage Conversion By Shed Architects

Nutty Twilight Fan Blows $60K To Hang Out On Breaking Dawn Set

So does this mean the recession is over? A zealous sparkly vampire fan reportedly shelled out more than $60,000 for the privilege of going to the Breaking Dawn set in Vancouver and hanging out with Kristin Stewart and Robert Pattinson to talk about God knows what. Now, granted the money is going to the Stand Up To Cancer charity, but still! That’s a lot of money! And plus, for all that dough, he/she doesn’t even get to fly directly into Vancouver. He has fly to Seattle and drive to Vancouver. That’s like a three hour ride! Way to make him work for his money, Twilight .[ ONTD ]

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Nutty Twilight Fan Blows $60K To Hang Out On Breaking Dawn Set

Book Review: NY Times Reporter Kate Zernike Still Finding Tea Party Racism in "Boiling Mad"

New York Times political reporter Kate Zernike’s thin new book ” Boiling Mad — Inside Tea Party America ,” is among the first of what will surely be a flood of related books by journalists. Like her reporting for the Times, “Boiling Mad” covers the movement from a mostly hostile perspective that only intermittently becomes something like empathy when she’s talking to one of the invariably pleasant Tea Party citizens themselves. Behind the (of course) red-as-a-Red State-cover lies a mere 194 pages of text, not including a 33-page reprint of an old, biased Times poll on the Tea Party. While not wholly a notebook dump, there’s little new, and Zernike evinces little sympathy or feel for conservative concerns. Her expertise is instead finding racism everywhere she looks in Tea Party land. Even such benign conservative boilerplate as opposition to the minimum wage is racially suspect in Zernike’s eyes, as proven in her dispatch for the Times criticizing Glenn Beck’s gathering on the National Mall on the anniversary of Martin Luther King’s March on Washington: Still, the government programs that many Tea Party supporters call unconstitutional are the ones that have helped many black people emerge from poverty and discrimination….Even if Tea Party members are right that any racist signs are those of mischief-makers, even if Glenn Beck had chosen any other Saturday to hold his rally, it would be hard to quiet the argument about the Tea Party and race. Zernike once wrote that Tea Party members “tend to be white and male, with a disproportionate number above 45, and above 65. Their memories are of a different time, when the country was less diverse.” And during the Conservative Political Action Conference in D.C. in February, Zernike falsely accused conservative author Jason Mattera of using a racist “Chris Rock” voice in a speech (turns out Mattera just has a thick Brooklyn accent). So it’s no surprise Zernike quickly reestablished her race obsession on page 3 of “Boiling Mad,” reflecting on a Tea Party speaker “looking out at the sea of faces, almost all of them white.” The book’s index reveals that 23 pages worth of the book’s slim content refer to”race and racism.” Unlike many mainstream journalists, Zernike grasps shades on the right, noting the Tea Party’s social-media savvy young are “largely libertarian,” and interestingly described the odd mix of young activists and retirees as a “May-to-September marriage of convenience.” But “Boiling Mad” lacks a cohesive narrative, which may be an accurate rendition of the decentralized, libertarian nature of the movement but doesn’t make for a satisfying organic read. That’s partly the function of a merciless pre-electoral book deadline leaving crucial questions unanswered. Will the movement lead the GOP to take back Congress or cause it to blow a historic opportunity? Besides her chapter on the Kentucky Republican primary won by Rand Paul, Zernike uncovers few clues about the political possibilities of the movement. And Zernike’s empathy only goes so far. Showing a touching (and Timesian) trust in government statistics, Zernike marveled at the Tea Party’s ignorance, “impervious to reports from the Congressional Budget Office…that the federal stimulus had cut taxes and created millions of jobs and that the health care legislation passed in 2010 would reduce the federal deficit.” If Zernike truly thinks the CBO is the last word on those issues, she is more gullible than any Tea Partier, especially with new indications health spending is on the rise since Obama-care was enacted. Zernike reaches back to the California’s anti-property tax movement of the 1970s for more racial subtext. “Race was more subtle in conservative populist movements like the tax revolts than began in California and spread across the country in the late 1970s.” So subtle that only liberal journalists can spot it. While loathing the movement’s aims, Zernike genuinely seems to like her individual subjects, like Keri Carender, perhaps the first Tea Partier, a 29-year-old Seattle woman with a nose ring who Zernike called “an unlikely avatar of a movement that would come to derive most of its support from older white men.” Zernike followed resident Jennifer Stefano’s evolution from a random visit to a park in Bucks County, Pa., where she encountered a Tea Party rally in progress, to being nearly arrested barely a year later outside a polling place while trying to get Tea Party candidates on the Republican state committee. She allows activists to have their say, like two women at a rally “agitated that government could force you to wear a seatbelt but left it to women to ‘choose’ whether to have an abortion.” But whenever Zernike steps back to take in the movement as a whole, her observations can be gruesomely unfair. Zernike consistently portrays the movement as antediluvian and racially suspect: To talk about states’ rights in the way some Tea Partiers did was to pretend that the twentieth century and the latter half of the nineteenth century had never happened, that the country had not rejected this doctrine over and over. It was little wonder that people heard the echo of the slave era and decided that the movement had to be motivated by racism. Little wonder indeed! The most unfair section of the book, predictably, involves accusations of racism — the controversial claim that Obama-care protesters shouted racial slurs at John Lewis, black congressman and civil rights hero, during the heated debate before Congress voted on Obama-care. Zernike claimed the Tea Party had “organized the rally,” then took advantage of its loose structure to blame the entire group for any possible bad behavior by any individual in the vicinity, something the Times has never done when covering the truly violent acts committed by some at loosely organized left-wing rallies: It was difficult, if not disingenuous, for the Tea Party groups to try to disown the behavior. They had organized the rally, and under their model of self-policing, they were responsible for the behavior of people who were there. And after saying for months that anybody could be a Tea Party leader, they could not suddenly dismiss as faux Tea Partiers those protesters who made them look bad. Oddly, Zernike’s colleague at the Times, Carl Hulse, wrote an unsympathetic piece on the protesters the day afterward that didn’t mention the Tea Party at all. And the paper actually corrected the same charge when made in its pages by political writer Matt Bai, saying he had “erroneously linked one example of a racially charged statement to the Tea Party movement. While Tea Party supporters have been connected to a number of such statements, there is no evidence that epithets reportedly directed in March at Representative John Lewis, Democrat of Georgia, outside the Capitol, came from Tea Party members.”   Another recurring theme of “Boiling Mad” is anger: “The supporters were angry, but the activists were angrier.” The April 15 rally on Capitol Hill was “a blend of jingoism and grievance,” concerns which Zernike only occasionally attempted to explain. She spent just as much time pulling back her focus to chide the movement with civics lessons: “People might get frustrated with Congress or the federal bureaucracy. But they did not want to leave old people relying on the whims of the market or charity for health and security in their sunset years.” Vulgar critics of the Tea Party movement (“tea-baggers,” anyone?) are left out of her narrative, contributing to the sense of imbalance. Even that back page poll, supposedly a true-to-life snapshot of the movement, is blurred in the paper’s liberal prism. Here’s Question 72: “In recent years, do you think too much has been made of the problems facing black people, too little has been made, or is it about right?” Besides the unsympathetic slant, the problem with “Boiling Mad” is that it’s hard to draw conclusions about a political movement yet to test itself in a nationwide election. The subject needs time to steep. Months premature, “Boiling Mad” is all steam, no substance.

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Book Review: NY Times Reporter Kate Zernike Still Finding Tea Party Racism in "Boiling Mad"

‘Paranormal Activity 2’ Early Screening Could Be Coming To Your City

Fans can demand a free and early screening online. By Kara Warner “Paranormal Activity 2” Photo: Paramount Pictures Right around this time last year, Paramount unleashed a phenomenon via shrewd viral marketing and a very scary film, “Paranormal Activity.” Oren Peli’s “found footage” horror flick — with a reported $15,000 budget — went on to gross almost $200 million worldwide, the strongest budget-to-box-office earnings ratio in Hollywood history. Naturally with that kind of reception the powers that be ordered a sequel, and that film’s release date, October 22, is quickly approaching. For fans dying to see “Paranormal Activity 2” first, before any other audiences, Paramount Pictures is hosting an evening of screening parties across the country as a thank you to fans for embracing the first “Activity.” All you need to do to help bring a free screening of the film to your city is visit Eventful.com and click the “Demand It!” tab next to the appropriate city. Fans in the 20 most demanded cities will be able to see the film first, for free and with free popcorn and soda, beginning Oct 20 at 11:59 p.m. At press time, the top 20 cities in the running for the free screenings were: Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, Philadelphia, San Diego, Miami, Boston, San Francisco, Boston, Toronto, Seattle, Atlanta, San Antonio, Denver, Detroit, Las Vegas, Baltimore and Minneapolis. Also, in case you haven’t yet seen the extra-creepy trailer for “Paranormal Activity 2,” check it out along with our fancy frame-by-frame trailer and easter-egg analysis. Check out everything we’ve got on “Paranormal Activity 2.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Paranormal Activity 2’ Early Screening Could Be Coming To Your City