North Korea’s football team landed in South Africa on Tuesday morning. The squad, led by striker Jong Tae-Se, dubbed as Asia’s Wayne Rooney, will play first in two…
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World Cup 2010: North Korean squad lands in South Africa
North Korea’s football team landed in South Africa on Tuesday morning. The squad, led by striker Jong Tae-Se, dubbed as Asia’s Wayne Rooney, will play first in two…
The rest is here:
World Cup 2010: North Korean squad lands in South Africa
Tagged 2010 world cup, bennyhollywood, celeb news, dream, dubbed-as-asia, korea, south-africa, tuesday, user-friendly, Videos

Watch Justified S1E13: Bulletville The latest episode of Justified is the TV show’s 13th episode of the 1st season that aired last 06/08/2010 Tuesday at 10:00 pm on FX. Watch Justified 1×13 (01013) Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:
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Watch Justified Season 1 Episode 13 – Bulletville
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Tagged 13th-episode, aired-last, bulletville, celeb news, episodes, episodes-replay, free tv, Hollywood, latest-season, online, stars, t v, the-1st, tuesday, video
More than 24 hours after NBC’s Matt Lauer prompted him to say it in an interview, the morning programs all showcased it – and even after day-long playback on the cable channels – CBS and NBC on Tuesday night delighted in again highlighting President Barack Obama’s boast that he’s gathering information on the oil leak “so I know whose ass to kick.” Katie Couric put the soundbite, from a competitor, at the top of the CBS Evening News: “In a TV interview aired today, the President said if BP’s CEO worked for him, he’d be fired. And Mr. Obama defended his handling of the disaster.” NBC Nightly News provided a re-run. A day after anchor Brian Williams trumpeted as “just into us” the bite illustrating how Obama “showed some anger on the topic of his handling of this spill so far,” reporter Anne Thompson touted: “Criticized for not conveying his anger over the nation’s greatest environmental disaster, President Obama fired back during an exclusive interview with NBC’s Matt Lauer.” Earlier, from Geoff Dickens: “ NBC’s Lauer Prompted Obama’s Use of the ‘A’ Word ” From the start of the Tuesday, June 8 CBS Evening News: KATIE COURIC: Good evening, everyone. The President is heading back to the gulf coast, his fourth trip there since the oil rig exploded seven weeks ago today. It will be a two-day visit to once again see for himself what’s going on in Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. Meanwhile, here’s what we’re seeing tonight– fire on the water as BP burns off some of the leaking oil. And this video just released shows the power of the gushing crude before the well was capped. Government scientists confirmed today that plumes of oil are spreading far below the surface of the gulf and far away from that leaking well. In a TV interview aired today, the President said if BP’s CEO worked for him, he’d be fired. And Mr. Obama defended his handling of the disaster. PRESIDENT OBAMA: I don’t sit around just talking to experts because this is a college seminar. We talk to these folks because they potentially have the best answers, so I know whose ass to kick. From the NBC Nightly News: ANNE THOMPSON: …Criticized for not conveying his anger over the nation’s greatest environmental disaster, President Obama fired back during an exclusive interview with NBC’s Matt Lauer. OBAMA: A month ago I was meeting with fishermen down there standing in the rain, talking about what a potential crisis this could be. And I don’t sit around just talking to experts because this is a college seminar. We talk to these folks because they potentially have the best answers, so I know whose ass to kick. THOMPSON: The President expressed particular displeasure with BP’s CEO Tony Hayward, who said last week he wanted his life back. OBAMA: He wouldn’t be working for me after any of those statements.

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Obama’s Knowing ‘Whose Ass to Kick’ Pledge Continues to Delight TV Network Journalists
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Tagged anne thompson, bennyhollywood, cbs evening news, democratic, florida, george-bush, Hollywood, Matt Lauer, nightly-news, politics, previous, primary-runoff, tuesday
Portugal#39;s Deco fights for the ball against a Mozambique player during a warm-up match at the Wanders stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa, Tuesday, June 8, 2010. Portugal are preparing for the upcoming soccer World Cup, where they will play in Group G. Hugo Almeida scored twice Tuesday to lead Portugal to a 3-0 win over Mozambique in a World Cup warmup match. After failing to convert their dominance into goals in the first half against a team ranked 85th in the world, the Portuguese scor

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Portugal Vs Mozambique friendly 2010 highlights
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Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb news, group, Hollywood, information, player-during, south-africa, stars, tuesday, upcoming-soccer, warm-up-match
Selling Shoo-Fly Pie underwear. Oh wow. When we saw “Emma the Amish girl” trending today, we almost thought the searches were related to a fire that affected an Amish family in Pennsylvania this week! This is a different story altogether, as Emma the Amish model appeared on Howard Stern Tuesday morning to peddle her…goods.

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Emma The Amish Girl Makes Howard Stern Appearance
Posted in Gossip, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged bennyhollywood.com, howard-stern, mma, model-appeared, pennsylvania, time, TMZ, tuesday, well-respected

Watch Law and Order: Criminal Intent S9E10: Disciple The new episode of Law & Order: CI which is entitled “Disciple is the TV series’ 10th episode of the 9th season that aired last
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Tagged criminal-intent, episodes, episodes-replay, Hollywood, latest, latest-season, new-episode, online, t v, TMZ, tuesday, usa, video-clip
PART ONE… http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/01/gulf.oil.spill/index.html?hpt=T1 Oil spill spreads to Mississippi, Alabama By the CNN Wire Staff June 1, 2010 6:59 p.m. EDT Tar balls and puddles of oil are reported on Alabama's Dauphin Island. * U.S. begins criminal investigation into oil spill * Robots make latest attempt to stop the oil leak * Spill makes a third of Gulf off-limits to fishing * BP puts cost of spill response at $990 million (CNN) — Oil from BP's massive Gulf of Mexico crude spill reached the shores of Mississippi on Tuesday, Gov. Haley Barbour's office reported. Residents and researchers reported oil in Alabama. In Mississippi, a long, narrow strand of oil came ashore on Petit Bois Island, Barbour's office said. The strand of oil was about 2 miles long but only 3 feet wide, said Laura Hipp, a spokeswoman for Barbour's office. Cleanup crews were on the scene Tuesday evening, she said. Petit Bois Island is off Pascagoula, Mississippi. It's about five miles west of Dauphin Island, Alabama, where oil was also washing ashore Tuesday afternoon. But Hipp said most of the oil remained more than 35 miles off Horn Island, the largest of Mississippi's barrier islands. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration had warned earlier this week that the spreading slick from an undersea BP oil well was heading toward the Alabama and Mississippi coasts. Tar balls associated with the Gulf spill had hit Dauphin Island, about 35 miles south of Mobile, in early May, but residents said that Tuesday was the first time they had seen oil hitting the beach. Nevertheless, people were still on the beaches and swimming in the blue-green waters. BP began its latest attempt to curtail the flow of oil from an underwater well in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, using robot submarines to cut into a damaged pipe a mile down. The operation carries the risk that the flow of crude from the ruptured well, already the largest oil spill in U.S. history, will increase — but if successful, the company says it will be able to catch most of that oil with a cap it plans to place over the severed lower marine riser pipe. “Even with an increased flow rate, this cap will be able to handle this,” BP Managing Director Bob Dudley told CNN's “American Morning.” Meanwhile, the Obama administration distanced itself from BP by announcing it would no longer hold joint news conferences with the company; and Attorney General Eric Holder, after meeting with Gulf-Coast-state attorneys general, told reporters the Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into the oil spill. The engineering involved in the latest work on the damaged well has never been attempted at a depth of 5,000 feet. But Dudley said Tuesday the latest attempt is “more straightforward” than previous, unsuccessful efforts. A mechanical claw began squeezing the heavy riser pipe late Tuesday morning, the first step in a series of planned cuts. After that, a diamond-cut saw was being brought in to make a “clean cut,” preparing the way for the custom-made cap to be fitted over the lower marine riser package. Oil has been gushing from the undersea well since April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and later sank. Government estimates are that up to 19,000 barrels (798,000 gallons) of oil a day are flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. Dudley said that could increase by up to 20 percent — nearly 160,000 gallons — when the pipe is cut, but he said the company has learned lessons from its earlier attempts that it is applying to the new process. Warm water and methanol will be pumped into the cap to limit the growth of gas hydrate crystals that thwarted an earlier attempt to cap the spill, he said. And a second line is planned to draw more oil off the well's blowout preventer, a critical piece of safety equipment that has so far failed to shut down the well, using equipment involved in last week's failed “top kill” operation. BP's handling of the spill and its statements regarding the status of operations have been sharply criticized by some in recent weeks. The Obama administration announced Tuesday that it would no longer hold joint news briefings with the company and that Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, its point man on the spill, will now become the face of the government's response effort. Allen told reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana, that his job is to speak “very frankly with the American public.” “I think we need to be communicating with the American people through my voice as the national incident commander,” he said. Rear Adm. Mary Landry, who has been the Coast Guard's on-scene coordinator for five weeks, will be returning to her duties as chief of the service's New Orleans district office. Coast Guard Commandant Robert Papp said the plan always has been for Landry to resume that role in preparation for the Atlantic hurricane season, which began Tuesday. Allen praised Landry's work leading “an anomalous and unprecedented response” to the spill, but said Landry now needs to focus “on the larger array of threats” to her district, which includes the U.S. Southeast and Midwest. CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan
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Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb news, coast-guard, Hollywood, mma, severe-damage, spill, tuesday
Every now and again someone raises a stern warning about the amount of space junk orbiting Earth. Those warnings are usually met with general indifference, as very few of us own satellites or travel regularly to low Earth orbit. But the DoD's assessment of the space junk problem finds that perhaps we should be paying attention: space junk has reached a critical tipping point that could result in a cataclysmic chain reaction that brings everyday life on Earth to a grinding halt. Our reliance on satellites goes beyond the obvious. We depend on them for television signals, the evening weather report, and to find our houses on Google Earth when we're bored at work. But behind the scenes, they also inform our warfighting capabilities, keep track of the global shipping networks that keep our economies humming, and help us get to the places we need to get to via GPS. According to the DoD's interim Space Posture Review, that could all come crashing down. Literally. Our satellites are sorely outnumbered by space debris, to the tune of 370,000 pieces of junk up there versus 1,100 satellites. That junk ranges from nuts and bolts lost during spacewalks to pieces of older satellites to whole satellites that no longer function, and it's all whipping around the Earth at a rate of about 4.8 miles per second. The fear is that with so much junk already up there, a collision is numerically probable at some point. Two large pieces of junk colliding could theoretically send thousands more potential satellite killers into orbit, and those could in turn collide with other pieces of junk or with satellites, unleashing another swarm of debris. You get the idea. To give an idea of how quickly a chain reaction could get out hand consider this: in February of last year a defunct Russian satellite collided with a communications satellite, turning 2 orbiting craft into 1,500 pieces of junk. The Chinese missile test that obliterated a satellite in 2007 spawned 100 times more than that, scattering 150,000 pieces of debris. If a chain reaction got out of control up there, it could very quickly sever our communications, our GPS system (upon which the U.S. military heavily relies), and cripple the global economy (not to mention destroy the $250 billion space services industry), and whole orbits could be rendered unusable, potentially making some places on Earth technological dead zones. added by: diode
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Tagged bennyhollywood, chinese, custom, Hollywood, package, tuesday, violently-erupting, warfighting
All of a sudden, volcanoes all over the globe have been violently erupting. In fact, some volcanoes that have been dormant for generations have been springing to life. So what are we to make of all this? added by: Revelation1217
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Tagged alabama, been-dormant, coast-guard, current, custom, Hollywood, mexico, mma, mobile, Obama, package, tuesday, violently-erupting
PART ONE… http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/06/01/gulf.oil.spill/index.html?hpt=T1&iref=BN1 U.S. begins criminal investigation into oil spill By the CNN Wire Staff June 1, 2010 4:24 p.m. EDT (CNN) — U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Tuesday that the Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into the massive oil spill spreading through the Gulf of Mexico. Holder said the investigation would be comprehensive and aggressive. He promised that the federal officials will prosecute anyone who broke the law. Holder, who made the announcement during a visit to the Gulf, called early signs of the spill heartbreaking and tragic. The attorney general was in the Gulf to survey the BP oil spill and meet with state attorneys general and federal prosecutors from Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi, according to the Justice Department. In May, a group of senators — including Environment and Public Works Committee Chair Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-California — sent Holder a letter expressing concerns “about the truthfulness and accuracy of statements submitted by BP to the government in its initial exploration plan for the site,” and asking Holder to investigate possible criminal and civil wrongdoing. In a reply to that letter last week, a Justice Department official did not say whether a criminal investigation had begun. “The Department of Justice will take all necessary and appropriate steps to ensure that those responsible for this tragic series of events are held fully accountable,” Assistant Attorney General Ronald Welch wrote. Holder said in May that the Justice Department would “ensure that BP is held liable.” BP began its latest attempt to curtail the flow of oil from an underwater well in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, using robot submarines to cut into a damaged pipe a mile down. The operation carries the risk that the flow of crude from the ruptured well, already the largest oil spill in U.S. history, will increase. But if successful, the company says it will be able to catch most of that oil with a cap it plans to place over the severed lower marine riser pipe. “Even with an increased flow rate, this cap will be able to handle this,” BP Managing Director Bob Dudley told CNN's “American Morning.” While the engineering has never been attempted at a depth of 5,000 feet, Dudley said Tuesday the latest attempt is “more straightforward” than previous, unsuccessful efforts. A mechanical claw began squeezing the heavy riser pipe late Tuesday morning, the first step in a series of planned cuts. After that, a diamond-cut saw will be used to make a “clean cut,” preparing the way for the custom-made cap to be fitted over the package. Tar balls and puddles of oil from the oil spill reached the shores of Alabama's Dauphin Island on Tuesday, residents and researchers involved in cleanup efforts reported. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said authorities were investigating reports that the outer sheen of oil was reaching coastal waters off Mississippi and Alabama earlier Tuesday, but those reports had not been confirmed when he spoke to reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration had warned earlier this week that the spreading slick was heading toward the Alabama and Mississippi coasts. Tar balls associated with the Gulf spill had hit Dauphin Island, about 35 miles south of Mobile, in early May. Oil has been gushing from the undersea well since April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and later sank. Government estimates are that up to 19,000 barrels (798,000 gallons) of oil a day are flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. Dudley said that could increase by up to 20 percent — nearly 160,000 gallons — when the pipe is cut, but he said the company has learned lessons from its earlier attempts that it is applying to the new process. Warm water and methanol will be pumped into the cap to limit the growth of gas hydrate crystals that thwarted an earlier attempt to cap the spill, he said. And a second line is planned to draw more oil off the well's blowout preventer, a critical piece of safety equipment that has so far failed to shut down the well, using equipment involved in last week's failed “top kill” operation. BP's handling of the spill and its statements regarding the status of operations have been sharply criticized by some in recent weeks. The Obama administration announced Tuesday that it would no longer hold joint news briefings with the company and that Allen, its point man on the spill, will now become the face of the government's response effort. Allen told reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana, that his job is to speak “very frankly with the American public.” “I think we need to be communicating with the American people through my voice as the national incident commander,” he said. Rear Adm. Mary Landry, who has been the Coast Guard's on-scene coordinator for five weeks, will be returning to her duties as chief of the service's New Orleans district office. Coast Guard Commandant Robert Papp said the plan always has been for Landry to resume that role in preparation for the Atlantic hurricane season, which began Tuesday. Allen praised Landry's work leading “an anomalous and unprecedented response” to the spill, but said Landry now needs to focus “on the larger array of threats” to her district, which includes the U.S. Southeast and Midwest. CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged bennyhollywood, celeb news, Cnn, custom, environment, government, gulf, Hollywood, mexico, mississippi, News, spill, tuesday, Voice