Tag Archives: Television

Watch Doctor Who Season 5 Episode 12 – The Pandorica Opens (1)

Watch Doctor Who S5E12: The Pandorica Opens (1) A fearful prophecy has bee revealed to the Doctor by Van Gogh’s painting that have been delivered from the past,across thousands of years, the said message was contained in the oldest cliff face in the whole universe. In the year 102 AD in England, the Romans got an unexpected visit from Cleopatra. Someplace else, The Stonehenge that hides the Pandorica, which is a containment box of legends, is now little by little getting unlocked from the inside that now causes some dangerous forces to form from the skies on top of us. Now, the TARDIS’ destiny is coming close, will this be the day that the Doctor breaks? The new installment of Doctor Who is the TV show’s 12th episode of the 5th season that aired last 06/19/2010 Saturday at 7:00 PM on BBC-1. Watch Doctor Who 5×12 (05012) Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Watch Doctor Who Season 5 Episode 12 – The Pandorica Opens (1)

Watch Family Guy Season 8 Episode 21 – Partial Terms Of Endearment

Watch Family Guy S8E21: Partial Terms Of Endearment The latest installment of Family Guy which is entitled “Partial Terms Of Endearment is the animated TV series’ 21st episode of the 8th season that aired last 06/20/2010 Sunday at 9:00 PM on Fox. Watch Family Guy 8×21 (08021) Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Watch Family Guy Season 8 Episode 21 – Partial Terms Of Endearment

Watch The Bachelorette Season 6 Episode 5 – Week 5

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Heroes Movie Sounds Iffy

In today’s superhero-saturated world, do we really need a return engagement with a whole bunch of putative crusaders who almost never use their powers? That was NBC’ s thinking when the network snuffed the low-rated Heroes , and though creator Tim Kring has been trying to muster up support for a wrap-up movie, he admits to EW that he network has yet to pull the trigger. “Movies sometimes need a little distance from the television show,” he rationalized. Sorry, Tim. We’ve already moved on to Ant-Man . [ EW ]

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Heroes Movie Sounds Iffy

Newsweek Wonders if Utah Republicans Will ‘Play Dirty’ by Voting for Leftist in Dem Primary

Liberals in the media frequently paint conservatives and Tea Party activists as pushing the GOP too far to the right to be electable in general elections. But the same complaint isn’t repeated on an endless loop when it comes to leftist activists challenging more centrist Democratic incumbents in primary contests. In fact, in some of those occasions, the media find a way to cast aspersions on Republicans. Take, for instance, a June 22 story on Newsweek.com, the headline for which posed the question, “Will Utah Republicans Play Dirty Today?” Writer McKay Coppins explained how one Republican state lawmaker had suggested that the party faithful in the state’s 2nd Congressional District should take advantage of the Democrats’ open primary system to cast votes for Claudia Wright, a liberal insurgent challenging Rep. Jim Matheson (D), rather than weighing in on the GOP primary contest. Although he noted that historically such tactical voting hasn’t been successful and that state Republican officials have officially “denounced the plan,” Coppins explained that the local media have become fixated on the notion and at least one radio host has described the crossover voting idea as “sleazy”: [F]or a while, it looked like a real possibility. An anonymously created Web site called “Conservatives for Claudia” has attracted thousands of page views, and Matheson himself has spent $800,000 this primary season to warn supporters that the party-crashing threat is real. And even though Republican officials (including, eventually, Wimmer) denounced the plan, it has continued to draw attention from the local press, with popular radio talk show host Doug Wright devoting significant air time to the idea. (He called it “sleazy.”) Republicans still might get their wish, though. A recent poll places Matheson 19 points ahead of Wright, but midterm primaries in Utah have historically garnered low turnouts, and early voting this year has been exceptionally unimpressive . With a passionate left-wing base, Wright could be poised for an upset in the primary – giving Republicans exactly what they hoped for.

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Newsweek Wonders if Utah Republicans Will ‘Play Dirty’ by Voting for Leftist in Dem Primary

Revolutionary Rot, But News It’s Not: AP Ignores Venezuela’s ‘Battle for Food’

Late last year, a story carried by the wire service AFP reported on an announcement by Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez that his government would launch “a new chain of government-run, cut-rate retail stores that will sell everything from food to cars to clothing.” Chavez reportedly said that these “discount socialist stores” would show people “what a real market is all about, not those speculative, money-grubbing markets, but a market for the people.” This initiative was on top of Chavez’s creation of Mercal (link is to the Venezuelan home page, complete with “The Bolivarian Government of Venezuela” logo), a state-run network of grocery stores , seven years ago. How is this great leap forward into state control working out? A June 18 Reuters dispatch carried at CNBC reports that the government can’t even keep its food fresh. But that’s okay. The wire service takes a while to get there, and even then a bit of interpretation is necessary, but eventually we learn that the Chavez “solution” to that thorny problem is to seize replacement goods from private merchants: Hugo Chavez Spearheads Raids as Food Prices Skyrocket Mountains of rotting food found at a government warehouse, soaring prices and soldiers raiding wholesalers accused of hoarding: Food supply is the latest battle in President Hugo Chavez’s socialist revolution. Venezuelan army soldiers swept through the working class, pro-Chavez neighborhood of Catia in Caracas last week, seizing 120 tons of rice along with coffee and powdered milk that officials said was to be sold above regulated prices. “The battle for food is a matter of national security,” said a red-shirted official from the Food Ministry, resting his arm on a pallet laden with bags of coffee. It is also the latest issue to divide the Latin American country where Chavez has nationalized a wide swathe of the economy, he says to reverse years of exploitation of the poor. Chavez supporters are grateful for a network of cheap state-run supermarkets and they say the raids will slow massive inflation. Critics accuse him of steering the country toward a communist dictatorship and say he is destroying the private sector. They point to 80,000 tons of rotting food found in warehouses belonging to the government as evidence the state is a poor and corrupt administrator. Jose Guzman, an assistant manager at a store raided in Catia, watched with resignation as government agents pored over the company’s accounts and computers after the food ministry official and the television cameras left. “The government is pushing this type of establishment toward bankruptcy,” said Guzman, who linked the raid to the rotten food scandal. “Somehow they have to replace all the food that was lost, and this is the most expeditious way.” Brilliant. The Reuters report goes on to inform readers that “Food prices are up 41 percent in the last 12 months during a deep recession,” that Chavez has “revived threats to take over the country’s largest private food processor, miller and brewer, Polar,” and that “government now controls between 20 percent and 30 percent of the distribution of staple foods.” A search on “Venezuela” at the Associated Press’s main site indicates that though there are several stories on developments in that country, the wire service has not reported on this latest ratchet-up of the country’s ongoing socialist horror show. It would be unfair to contend that AP is ignoring Venezuela, but its headlines and/or its dispatches have displayed an annoying tendency to downplay the significance of what should be seen as scary developments. For example, a June 14 story with a misdirecting headline (“Venezuela takes control of another private bank”) would appear to be about government seizure of a financially troubled enterprise. The real story is that the the bank’s owner/former owner “just so happens” to be “a minority shareholder of Globovision, the country’s last TV channel that takes a stridently anti-government line.” A June 8 AP report on the country’s inflation casually notes that “The government has sought to confront inflation with a range of measures including recent seizures and shutdowns of businesses that authorities accuse of driving up prices.” Pray tell, what does seizing and shutting down businesses, thereby restricting supply, have to do with fighting inflation? The wire service also gives a virtual PR voice to Chavez statements that appear at first glance to be ploys designed to position his government as the virtue police. In a deceptively titled June 11 report (“Chavez targets alcohol, smoking in Venezuela”), AP reporter Jorge Rueda uncritically relays Chavez’s assertion that “the transition (to socialism) requires a moral crusade to change Venezuelans’ values.” Readers have to get to Rueda’s final paragraphs before they understand what this appeal to virtue is really all about : Chavez has also recently used the issue in his criticisms of the country’s largest food producer, Empresas Polar, which sells the country’s leading brand of beer, Polar. Chavez has ordered the expropriation of some of Polar’s warehouses, and has warned he could decide to take over more of the company. If the government did take over the Polar brewery, it would be shut down, Chavez has warned. Addressing Polar’s president, Lorenzo Mendoza, during Thursday’s speech, Chavez said: “I don’t know what you’re going to do … with your little Polar.” He used the term “Polarcita,” which Venezuelans often use for the small beer bottles that are popular in the country. Here’s an idea: If CNN, which yesterday declared its independence and fired the Associated Press , wants to make a mark with its own wire service efforts, it might want to consider dispatching correspondents to Venezuela to catch the world up on the slow-motion horror there that the AP and broadcast TV networks have either ignored or downplayed for years. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Revolutionary Rot, But News It’s Not: AP Ignores Venezuela’s ‘Battle for Food’

World Cup winner Nobby Stiles recuperating after ‘very minor’ stroke

• 1966 World Cup winner hospitalised last week • Former Manchester United star requires ‘a small operation’ Nobby Stiles MBE, a member of England’s victorious 1966 World Cup team, reassured fans about his health today after suffering a “very minor” stroke. The former footballer spent two days in hospital last week but has been recovering at home since the weekend, his agent Terry Baker said. Stiles, 68, who also won two league titles and a European Cup during an 11-year career with Manchester United, was hospitalised after a period of “disorientation” which has been diagnosed as a transient ischemic attack (TIA). Baker said: “The doctors have described it as a very minor stroke and nowhere near as serious as some strokes can be. When I spoke to him this morning he told me he had suffered a moment of disorientation. He joked that both of us have been having moments of disorientation for the last 30 years.” Baker said Stiles has seen a cardiovascular consultant and is expected to undergo surgery in the next few weeks. “There is going to be a small operation to put it right,” the agent added. “In the meantime, he’s at home and in good spirits. But he’s had to cancel a number of engagements for the time being.” Baker said Stiles would “definitely” be following England’s World Cup game against Algeria on the television tonight. England Manchester United guardian.co.uk

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World Cup winner Nobby Stiles recuperating after ‘very minor’ stroke

NBA 2010 Finals: Celtics vs Lakers Game 7 Final Score and Highlights

The is the greatest game that ever happened in the history of NBA. All eyes are in their television now. The scores didn’t reach hundreds, and scores are so close with each other. This only shows that both teams are giving defense on each other. Up to the last minute, no dull moments has been shown. First Quarter has been dominated by Celtics and closed the quarter with a score of 23-14. It was a quite a wide lead for a very tight game as that. The first half has been dominated solely by Celtics but Lakers is on very tight offense and trying to outscore. There has been fouls which made the margin of scores slimmer this time. It was already in the 4th Quarter at 10:53 when the lead of Celtics lowered down to 2 points. The whole Staples Center has become the noisiest crowd ever. At 7 minutes, the score tied to 61 all. Then again a three point shot was thrown for the Lakers outscoring Celtics. 30 seconds left and the lead of Lakers was cut down to 3. Celtics scored once more cutting to 2. Then a 2 perfect free throws from Lakers increasing the lead to 4 with only 11 seconds left. Finally, the awesome game ended with an official score of 79-83 in favor of Lakers. It was awesome game. See you all again next season. NBA 2010 Finals: Celtics vs Lakers Game 7 Final Score and Highlights is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Movieline Has the Final Word on Conangate — and the First Interview with the Author

Back in February, Viking confirmed that Bill Carter, the bestselling author of the Late Shift had flown to Los Angeles to begin research on a new book chronicling the latest late night shakedown at NBC. Proof of the project arrived earlier this week online via cover art for The War For Late Night: When Leno Went Early and Television Went Crazy (pictured right) and a September release date. Anxious to hear more about the surefire bestseller, Movieline phoned Carter earlier this week to discuss the impending release date and whether Jay Leno is really as cold and calculating as Conan fans make him out to be.

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Movieline Has the Final Word on Conangate — and the First Interview with the Author

What Obama’s Oval Office Speech Could Have Sounded Like (Video)

Photo via the NY Times …According to Rachel Maddow Plenty of people felt let down by Obama’s oval office speech on the BP Gulf spill , and believed it was as a lost opportunity to rally for more progressive energy policy in a meaningful way. I was one of them, admittedly. But one pundit did more than complain about what was left unsaid — Rachel Maddow and her writers drafted up their version of a superior speech; one that included taking a hard line on the oil industry, f… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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What Obama’s Oval Office Speech Could Have Sounded Like (Video)