Tag Archives: spring

NASA: Last Spring Was the Hottest on Record

Last spring was the hottest ever recorded, according to data from NASA . While May only tied for the hottest May ever, with that of 1998, last April was far and away the hottest on the temperature record. Additionally, the entire period of January to May this year was also the hottest in the temperature record. You’re getting the idea: all kinds of records are being broken by hotter-than-ever temps. And yes, there are more of them: … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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NASA: Last Spring Was the Hottest on Record

Dutch Producer Afrojack Makes New York Debut With Roxy Cottontail

Promoter Cottontail embraces the Dutch house sound sweeping the clubs this year. By Akshay Bhansali Roxy Cottontail Photo: Getty Images After making a dramatic splash at this year’s Winter Music Conference, Dutch electronic DJ/producer Afrojack has been on his first U.S. tour for these past few weeks. This weekend will see him spinning on the East Coast for a gig Friday night (June 11) at Voyeur in Philadelphia, and on Saturday at Santos Party House in New York. It’s been an impressive year thus far for Afrojack (born Nick van de Wall). The 22-year-old rising star’s electro-house single “Bangduck” is a house-set favorite, and his collaboration with crossover star David Guetta , “Louder Than Words,” has been among the top downloads on the Beatport.com charts since the song dropped just over two weeks ago. Saturday’s gig at Santos will mark Afrojack’s first performance in New York, and fittingly, he will be sharing the bill with famous New York party promoter Roxy Cottontail. Cottontail, who’s had a hand in furthering the careers of the likes of Kid Cudi, Diplo and Spank Rock, is now an artist in her own right (though she still throws parties from time to time). She released “Let’s Make Nasty,” produced by electro-clash DJ/producer/promoter Larry Tee, and Afrojack went on to remix the song in time for this year’s WMC. The song quickly became one of the more sought-after house songs of the spring. “Larry and I had talked about who should do the remix,” Cottontail told MTV News this week. “We both agreed that Diplo should do it, but he was busy with Major Lazer. Then Larry said, ‘There’s this kid coming out, his name is Afrojack. He actually just remixed Major Lazer, and it’s getting a lot of play. I think he’s gonna be huge.’ Ultra [Records] had him remix it, and I was like, ‘This is awesome.’ I think it was kind of like a blessing that Diplo didn’t do it and gave the opportunity to Afrojack. “This past year, the Dutch house — Holland house — that sound has really taken over,” Cottontail continued. “And when I heard it, it was such a progressive sound. Very electronic, but still with a poppy kind of element to it. I really think he put the cherry on top of the cake.” Cottontail assured MTV News that she and Afrojack will be performing their hit song on stage this weekend in New York. And following the success of her first venture into the Holland house genre, she had her next single, “My Bad,” produced by Dutch electro outfit Party Squad, who have also collaborated with Diplo and Afrojack in the past. “I think it’s really cute, catchy, kind of naughty, but not offensive,” she said of the new track, which she hopes to release by the end of the summer. “It’s about making mistakes, but doing it a cute way.”

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Dutch Producer Afrojack Makes New York Debut With Roxy Cottontail

Sylvester Stallone Is ’99 Percent’ Sure ‘Rambo’ Franchise Is Done

‘That really was the legitimate finale,’ star says of 2008’s ‘Rambo.’ By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Sylvester Stallone Photo: Getty Images John Rambo has escaped death too many times to count. He’s survived bloody assaults from Vietnamese, Russian and Burmese soldiers, plus all manner of aggression from nefarious local law enforcement. Shoot, the guy healed his own bullet wound with nothing but a knife, a flame and some booze. So who’s to say that after four movies Rambo is done, never to return to the big screen with a truck-mounted .50-caliber machine gun blazing? Well, Sylvester Stallone, who burst our pie-in-the-spy “Rambo” dreams at the Spike Guys Choice Awards this past weekend. “I think so,” he said when MTV News asked if we’d seen the last of “Rambo.” That means the rumored plans for “Rambo V: The Savage Hunt” will likely never become a reality. Word was that the film would feature Rambo battling human traffickers and drug lords to save a girl kidnapped near the U.S.-Mexico border. Stallone was said to be gearing up both to direct and star in the flick, which would begin production in this spring. But by May, Stallone started backpedaling from not only that timeline but the stance that another “Rambo” was even necessary. Thus it seems like the conclusion of 2008’s “Rambo” — when the headband-wearing badass leaves Southeast Asia and is seen presumably returning to his family home in the U.S. — probably represents the final image in Rambo’s theatrical arc. And Sly is fine with that. “When he walked home, looked down the road, then looked straight ahead at the ranch, that really was the legitimate finale,” Stallone said. Yet he was reluctant to completely seal Rambo’s big-screen coffin. “Could anything happen?” Stallone said. “I’m 99 percent sure no. But …” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Artists Sylvester Stallone

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Sylvester Stallone Is ’99 Percent’ Sure ‘Rambo’ Franchise Is Done

Green Eyes On: Atrazine Higher in June – Watch Out Midwesterners!

Guest blogger Sara Snow is a green lifestyle expert and board member for Discovery’s 24/7 future-forward network Planet Green. I saw on my local news station’s website and recently in The Organic Center’s newsletter, The Scoop, warnings about The “June Effect.” The definition: Relatively high levels of the corn herbicide atrazine are present in Midwestern water supplies in June, following the spring spray season, triggering an increase in birth defects among children born nine months later. Source: “Atrazine Co… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Green Eyes On: Atrazine Higher in June – Watch Out Midwesterners!

“AWOL Bush” NY Times Coverup Revealed, President “Runs Away” During Vietnam War : Veterans Today

FLASHBACK: When the NY Times ignored gaping holes in candidate Bush’s war record May 25, 2010 2:10 pm ET by Eric Boehlert One of the striking talking points that came out of The New York Times in the wake of its controversial article last week about whether Connecticut Democrat Richard Blumenthal had, over the years, exaggerated his military service during the Vietnam War era, was the insistence from the Times that the story was a deeply important one and one that needed to be covered. The Times, faced with stiff criticism for its handling of the Blumenthal story, seemed to suggest it had a moral obligation, not to mention a newsroom duty, to look closely at the military service rhetoric from a New England politician running in a statewide election. A Times flack even appeared to lecture Blumenthal about how he needed to be straight with Nutmeg State voters. But I’m having a tough time buying the Times‘ sudden devotion to the topic, considering that during the 2000 presidential campaign, the same Times staff went out of its way not to report on the web of detailed allegations that Republican George Bush had failed to fulfill his military obligation while defending Texas air space as an Air National Guard pilot and that the presidential candidate had routinely lied about that fact. For that story, the Times team shrugged. But it’s decided this spring to go all-in over Blumenthal? Seems strange. Now, I realize that it’s been an entire decade since the 2000 campaign played out and that most people don’t recall what the coverage was like — and specifically have virtually no memory of how Bush’s Air National Guard story was covered. But I’m not overstating things when I say the Times’ stubborn failure to cover the controversy really did mark one of the true cases of journalistic malpractice of that crucial campaign season. The full scope of Bush’s lack of Guard service was revealed on May 23, 2000, when The Boston Globe’s Walter Robinson reported a Page One piece detailing all the holes in Bush’s military service: “1-Year Gap in Bush’s Guard Duty; No Record of Airman at Drills in 1972-73.” After combing through 160 pages of military documents and interviewing Bush’s former commanders, Robinson reported how Bush’s flying career came to an abrupt and unexplained end in the spring of 1972 when Bush asked to be transferred so that he could work on a family friend’s Senate campaign in Alabama. But Bush’s Alabama commander, Lt. Col. William Turnipseed, told the Globe that Bush never showed up for duty. (A trained pilot, Bush asked to be reassigned to an Alabama base that had no airplanes.) In 2000, a group of veterans offered a $3,500 reward for anyone who could confirm Bush’s Alabama service — and nobody from Bush’s unit stepped forward. Consider this: The Times‘ Frank Bruni tailed Bush obsessively on the campaign trail that year, filing more than 200 dispatches. But he never once referenced in print the Globe allegations. (Just try to imagine the Times‘ reaction if, during the 2000 campaign, the same Boston Globe had reported on Page One that Gore’s discharge papers from Vietnam showed he rigged his wartime duty and orchestrated an early exit by simply refusing to report for duty during the final two years of his commitment.) During 2000, the Guard story never landed on Page One of the agenda-setting New York Times. In fact, the Guard story barely even made it inside the daily, while key facets were boycotted. Here’s how many times in 2000 the Times, supposedly busy scouring the backgrounds of the candidates, reported the fact that Bush was grounded by his Guard superiors in 1972 for failing a mandatory physical: zero. Just more than a week after The Boston Globe had raised serious questions about Bush’s Guard service, the Times ran a May 31, 2000, story headlined “Bush Questions Gore’s Fitness for Commander in Chief.” The article noted that some were “questioning the nature of Mr. Bush’s military service in the Vietnam War,” but did not provide any further detail about the substance of the criticism. Instead, the Times simply reported that “Mr. Bush did not serve overseas but instead served in Houston in the Texas Air National Guard.” The article made no mention whatsoever of the thorny allegations swirling about Bush’s lack of military service. On July 11, 2000, the Times‘ Nicholas Kristof wrote a biographical feature on Bush’s life during the Vietnam War: ” Close to Home; Bush’s Choice in War: Devoid of Passion or Anxiety.” The feature omitted any reference to questions about Bush’s absenteeism, getting grounded, failing to take a physical, and walking away from the Guard for months at a time. But Kristof was hardly alone at the Times. It was a determined team effort to play dumb. In late July, the Times got around to addressing Bush’s wartime experience with an article headlined “Governor Bush’s Journey; After Yale, Bush Ambled Amiably Into His Future.” Certainly a piece focusing on Bush’s post-Yale years in the late ’60s and early ’70s would center its attention on the troubling allegations raised by The Boston Globe, right? Wrong. It wasn’t until 2,500 words into the article that the thorny issue was detailed. In total, the Times article dedicated about 300 words to the entire controversy, giving readers the sketchiest outlines of Bush’s perplexing missing year from the Texas Air National Guard. And that fleeting, buried reference represented the bulk of the Times’ coverage for most the entire campaign. In a September 4 article on the campaign debate over military readiness, the Times referenced the fact that “Mr. Bush trained as a fighter pilot in the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam War.” The Times politely omitted any mention of Bush’s Guard controversy. Twenty days later, the Times reported, “An array of veterans, including senior officers who served under Mr. Clinton and Mr. Gore, last week endorsed Mr. Bush, who served as a fighter pilot in the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam War and was, for the record, a lieutenant.” Again, the article politely omitted any mention of Bush’s Guard controversy. It wasn’t until the eve of the election that the Times set aside an entire news article to examine some of the crucial questions raised by the Globe. The Times‘ conclusion in November 2000? See for yourself [emphasis added]: Two Democratic senators today called on Gov. George W. Bush to release his full military record to resolve doubts raised by a newspaper about whether he reported for required drills when he was in the Air National Guard in 1972 and 1973. That’s right, half a year after the Globe published its scoop, the Times finally addressed the issue, announcing in the second paragraph that some questions about Bush’s Guard service were “unfounded.” (“The Times got spun,” was how the Globe’s Walter Robinson later described the Times’ Guard reporting.) Bottom line: In 2000, candidate Bush’s military record during the Vietnam War was very much in doubt, as was Bush’s repeated explanation as to why, after receiving $1 million worth of taxpayer-funded flight instruction, he had essentially vanished from the Guard and failed to fly, show up for monthly drills, or even take a mandatory physical. Yet back in 2000,The New York Times didn’t seem to care much about that military-record story. And the Times newsroom seemed to make a decision not to cover the controversy — a controversy that, given the historically close nature of the 2000 race, could have tipped the balance of the vote. So, yes, given that stark background, it’s tough to make sense of the Times‘ recent dedication to pursuing the Blumenthal story. More at the link: added by: Monkey_Films

Weekend Receipts: Shrek Beats The City

There must be something in the water over at Dreamworks Animation. As happened with the studio’s How to Train Your Dragon in the spring, Shrek Forever After appears like it has legs and knows how to use them. Who — besides David Poland — woulda thunk it?! The big green orge managed to beat the Four Ogres of the Apocalypse — better known as the gals from Sex and the City 2 — over the weekend, meaning Jeffrey Katzenberg is probably having a green-colored cosmopolitan right about now. Mix one up yourself and get ready for some weekend receipts.

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Weekend Receipts: Shrek Beats The City

Dennis Hopper Passes Away at 74

First, Gary Coleman. Now, Dennis Hopper. A day after the former sitcom star passed away , this veteran actor lost his battle with cancer. He was 74. Hopper died early Saturday morning at his house Venice, California, surrounded by family and friends. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in October 2009. The two-time Oscar nominee starred in such classic films as Easy Rider , Hoosiers , Speed and Apocalypse Now . Sadly, his personal life overshadowed his professional life during his last few months alive. Earlier this spring, Hopper’s fifth wife, Victoria, was accused of trying to have the actor killed. Our thoughts go out to his loved ones.

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Dennis Hopper Passes Away at 74

REVIEW: Agora Strains to Keep Up With Its Own Staggering Vision

Handsome to look at and driven by a passionate — if not exactly precise — political sensibility, Agora is this spring’s highest-brow sandal epic, by an Egyptian cubit. Considering its competition is the lumpy Clash of the Titans and this week’s video game-inspired Prince of Persia , it’s an endorsement earned by a pretty wide margin of default. Director Alejandro Amenábar has chosen the story of Hypatia, a fourth century Greek mathematician, as the subject of his seventh film, and sets it in a marvelous recreation of ancient Alexandria. A dust-and-geometry biopic with blaring modern resonances is a risky move even for Amenábar, who has been drawn to challenges of genre (as with the understated horror picture The Others ) and topical material (his lyrical meditation on the right to die, The Sea Inside, ) over the course of his still-young career. Unfortunately the one expectation that can be attached to the director — a gift for elegant, involving stories and consistent, inventive filmmaking — is obscured by Agora ‘s tendency toward the blandly overwrought.

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REVIEW: Agora Strains to Keep Up With Its Own Staggering Vision

Michael Bay To Produce ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ Reboot

‘Transformers’ director has plenty of experience adapting kid-focused properties for the big screen. By Eric Ditzian Michael Bay Photo: Dr. Billy Ingram/WireImage In the spring of 2009, at the same time that the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles celebrated their 25th anniversary as the gnarliest martial-arts-enabled reptiles in the pop culture universe, we got some news that Michelangelo and his buds would surely dub “wicked.” A new live-action “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” movie was in the works, almost two decades after the original. Friday (May 28) brings word that the upcoming flick will be produced by a guy with more than a little experience adapting long-established kid-focused properties for the big screen: Michael Bay. Deadline.com reports that Bay and his Platinum Dunes partners will take on producing duties after Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon approached them with the property. Bay, of course, produced and directed two “Transformers” movies for Paramount and is ramping up to shoot a third one this summer. Even before the movie was announced last year, MTV News spoke with “Turtles” co-creator Peter Laird about what a rebooted franchise might look like. “I can say that at this point there are a lot of positive feelings about a ‘Batman Begins’-style ‘reboot,’ which would, of necessity, include a retelling of the Turtles’ origin story,” he said. “Having said that, I would also be into an all-new story, if it was decided that that was a more desirable direction. Either way is fine with me, to be honest! “Simply telling the story of what happened in the first issue of the ‘TMNT’ comic book would be a pretty short movie, so I suspect other things from the Turtles’ history in the comics might be brought into it,” Laird continued. “I would not be unhappy to somehow see the tale of Baxter Stockman and the robotic ‘mousers’ folded into this movie, as well as some elements possibly setting up the TCRI connection for a possible sixth (or seventh) movie. But I think I’m getting a little ahead of myself there.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Michael Bay To Produce ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ Reboot

Paris Hilton Supports the Troops

Paris Hilton has taken a break from harassing Doug Reinhardt with phone calls to focus on a slightly more important task: Supporting American troops. The socialite showed up in New York City this week at “Swinging Salute to Our Troops,” an event sponsored by the USO. Even though one officer below didn’t seem excited to pose with Paris, it’s the thought that count. Gotta give her props for the effort. Earlier this spring, Kim Kardashian was also honored by the troops . What’s with these guys and former sex tape stars? We guess that answer is obvious, huh? They are still warm-blooded males, after all. They may have enormous hearts and courage that the average individual can scarcely comprehend – but they also have penises. Check out more shots of Paris and the soldiers now: [Photos: Splash News]

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Paris Hilton Supports the Troops