Tag Archives: sunset

Manchester City vs Chelsea 2010 highlights live stream 1:0

Manchester City#39;s Carlos Tevez, left, celebrates with teammates after scoring against Chelsea during their English Premier League soccer match at The City of Manchester Stadium, Manchester, England, Saturday Sept. 25, 2010. FULL TIME Manchester City 1 – 0 Chelsea (Tevez 59) Essien tries to thread it through to Strurridge, waiting in the box, but the ball is cleared and that#39;s it! Chelsea have lost their unbeated record, and City carry on their winning streak against the champions. They

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Manchester City vs Chelsea 2010 highlights live stream 1:0

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"

T.I. And Tiny Allegedly Caught With Ecstasy, Say Police

Tests on pills came back positive for narcotic. By MTV Staff T.I. and Tameka “Tiny” Cottle in L.A. county police custody Photo: Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Los Angeles police confirmed on Friday (September 3) that tests on the illicit substance allegedly found during a traffic stop involving rapper T.I. and his wife, Tameka “Tiny” Cottle , have tested positive as a type of the drug Ecstasy . Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson Nicole Nishida confirmed that lab tests on the pills found on both T.I., 29, and Cottle, 36, tested positive for Ecstasy, a Schedule 1 narcotic noted for a euphoric high that mixes the effects of hallucinogens and amphetamines. Nishida said only that “several” pills were found by detectives, but that no other drugs were confiscated during the search. Tip (born Clifford Harris Jr.) and Tiny were arrested after police stopped their Maybach for making an illegal U-turn on Los Angeles’ busy Sunset Boulevard on Wednesday night. After stopping the car, police allegedly smelled marijuana and then searched the vehicle, which resulted in the substance being found. Nishida said no mention was made by arresting officers of any marijuana confiscated during the search and, despite pictures on TMZ of the Maybach having white Styrofoam cups of the type typically used for sipping “sizzurp” (a narcotic drink popular in the South that contains coediene-laced cough syrup) inside, there was also no mention of that substance in the police report either. Both were arrested and charged with felony possession of a controlled substance and then released from jail a short time later on $10,000 bail. Neither is expected back in court for an arraignment before next month. T.I. is on probation following a seven-month prison stint for a felony gun charge, which is itself a violation of his probation from a previous felony arrest. T.I.’s new probation conditions included supervised release for three years, DNA testing and drug counseling, as well as a ban on owning firearms and an agreement to submit to reasonable searches. The rapper’s lawyers said on Thursday that Tip would be headed back to Atlanta within 24 hours , cautioning that it was too early to speculate on when, or if, he would have to appear before a judge. A spokesperson for the federal prosecutor’s office in Atlanta — where T.I. was prosecuted on the gun charge — said they are awaiting word from the probation department to find out what their investigation turned up about the Los Angeles incident. The probation officer handling T.I.’s case must first gather the facts on the arrest after consulting with Los Angeles County and then make a recommendation to the prosecutor’s office and the court as to whether the rapper deserves to be sanctioned for a violation of his probationary terms. A spokesperson for the probation department could not be reached for comment at press time. Related Photos T.I.’s Career Highs And Lows Related Artists T.I.

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T.I. And Tiny Allegedly Caught With Ecstasy, Say Police

Candy Spelling: My Stalker Wants to Move In

Filed under: Candy Spelling , Celebrity Justice Candy Spelling wants protection from a “mentally ill stalker” who allegedly believes he lives at Spelling’s Holmby Hills mega-mansion … this according to legal docs obtained by TMZ.

T.I. and Tiny — His and Hers Mug Shots

Filed under: T.I. , Celebrity Justice TMZ has obtained the mug shots taken by T.I. and his wife Tameka “Tiny” Cottle — right after they were arrested on the Sunset Strip in Hollywood late Wednesday night.

Completely Similar Directors Darren Aronofsky and David Slade Vying for Wolverine 2

“I guess I don’t do genre very well,” trippy filmmaker Darren Aronofsky recently admitted to MTV . Naturally, then, 20th Century Fox wants the filmmaker behind Black Swan and The Fountain to be a director for hire on Wolverine 2. No, really! Aronofsky joins the still in-contention David Slade as a contender for the gig, and it might not be quite as weird a choice as you think — after all, at one point Aronofsky wanted to direct a Batman film . But no, it’s still pretty weird. [ Deadline ]

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Completely Similar Directors Darren Aronofsky and David Slade Vying for Wolverine 2

On DVD: 10 Revenge-Killing Classics, With Your Host Harry Brown

The small, underseen Brit indie Harry Brown comes out Tuesday on DVD, and with it the opportunity to see septuagenarian Michael Caine lay waste to the neighborhood drug thugs that killed a longtime friend. It’s solid, noirish revenge pulp, but it may just whet your appetite for prairie justice — here are a battery of other rentables to satisfy that itch.

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On DVD: 10 Revenge-Killing Classics, With Your Host Harry Brown

Did You Miss Sofia Vergara Running Nude After Her Emmy Win?

Modern Family’s creators famously offered up a nude, Sunset Blvd-running Sofia Vergara should their show win Best Comedy at the Emmys, so did she make good on their offer last night? According to Vergara, she did — in fact, she somehow warped from downtown LA to a magically uncrowded stretch of Sunset just after the win, then teleported back twenty minutes later. “Yes, I mean, I’m fast. I run fast,” she told Access Hollywood’s Billy Bush. “They zipped me and they sent me to do press.” Costar Julie Bowen backs up Vegara’s magical account, claiming the Colombian sex bomb said, “No one said I had to do it at a certain time.” [ People ]

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Did You Miss Sofia Vergara Running Nude After Her Emmy Win?

Anna Paquin wedding

“Stephen Moyer and Anna Paquin were married on Saturday evening in Malibu surrounded by their family and friends,” the couple#39;s reps tell us. From True Blood to true love – Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer have tied the knot. Paquin – wearing a white halterneck gown and Neil Lane jewelry with her hair in an updo – and Moyer, clad in a dark suit, exchanged vows at sunset under a white tent at a beachside villa. “It was a beautiful evening to get married and the sunset was gorgeous. Anna and St

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Anna Paquin wedding

DMX Released From Jail, Rents Car, Pulled Over, Arrested For Lack of Valid License

DMX is the man. When barely a day passes in between your run-ins with the cops, that’s when you know you are hard core. Lindsay Lohan and her driving woes have nothing on him. Just hours after X was released from jail yesterday, the rapper was pulled over by the police driving down Sunset Blvd in a rented Mercedes and busted again! X’s manager says he recording studio around 11:20 p.m. when he was stopped for a minor traffic violation. Officers then learned he didn’t have a valid license. A rare kind of DMX photo – it wasn’t taken in a police station! DMX was issued a citation and will be due to appear in court sometime in the near future. Cops even allowed a passenger in the car to drive the rapper home. That’s nice. Give the man a break. He’s been in solitary confinement enough times this year already … might as well give him a night or two in his own bed. Yesterday’s release from jail came after the man served just 18 days of a 90-day sentence stemming from a reckless driving conviction way back in 2002. Lohan was let out after 14 for the same thing. Just saying.

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DMX Released From Jail, Rents Car, Pulled Over, Arrested For Lack of Valid License