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France 0-2 Mexico | World Cup 2010 Group A match report

Manchester United have not seen much of Javier Hernández yet but the striker who will join them for the new season delighted the hordes of underdressed Mexican fans in chilly Polokwane by scoring the goal that set his side on the way to victory against a ragged France. Hernández came on as 55th-minute substitute and made the breakthrough nine minutes later, beating the offside trap by a matter of inches and leaving France looking at elimination. A penalty from another substitute, the veteran Cuauhtémoc Blanco made certain of victory 12 minutes from time, taking Mexico level with Uruguay at the top of Group A and leaving France and South Africa with a point each. A point is about all France deserve after two extremely underwhelming displays at this World Cup, and though they could finish their group games with a victory over South Africa, the worry will be that Mexico and Uruguay will draw to both progress. Mexico began as if they meant business, showing much more attacking desire than in their opening game against South Africa and giving France a couple of scares in the first 10 minutes. Giovani dos Santos was in an offside position when he struck a post after only two minutes, but France had been warned. Carlos Vela managed to stay onside when Mexico came forward again, though after expertly gathering Rafael Márquez’s lofted pass, he shot early and high with his left foot. Guillermo Franco, who picked up the game’s first caution for delaying the taking of a free-kick, also shot too high after easily turning Eric Abidal on the adge of the area. France weathered that storm and gradually pushed Mexico back before producing a few attacks of their own. There was no one in the middle when Franck Ribéry crossed invitingly across the face of goal from the right, and though Jérémy Toulalan sent over an even better centre a few minutes later Florent Malouda was unable to get on the end of it. There was a definite sense, missing in most of the opening round of games, that both sides wanted to win this fixture. That would make qualification almost certain, whereas to lose, with Uruguay already on four points, would make life tricky if not impossible on the final day. Carlos Salcido, Mexico’s impressive left-back, brought the first real save of the evening from Hugo Lloris with a galloping run into the box and a shot directly at the goalkeeper, but the El Tri cause was not helped when Vela disappeared after just half an hour. He went down injured after no obvious contact with an opponent and was unable to continue. Little had been seen of Nicolas Anelka until he brought a routine save from Oscar Perez with a tame shot on the stroke of half-time, though he was indirectly involved in Toulalan collecting a caution in the last act of the first half that will put him out of the next game. Anelka tried to shoot from a free-kick for a foul on Ribéry, but shot into the Mexican wall so meekly that the wall broke up and a downfield breakaway was launched. Toulalan could not get back in time and was obliged to block Franco near halfway to prevent the Mexican striker breaking into space. It was hardly the biggest of surprises when Anelka was hauled off at half-time, though Raymond Domenech chose to replace him with André-Pierre Gignac rather than Thierry Henry. PSV Eindhoven’s Salcido continued to show up well, cutting in from the left at the start of the second half and shaping to shoot before Bacary Sagna brought him down. Mexico produced a well worked free move from the free kick to get Dos Santos to the goal-line, only for the former Spurs player to waste the opportunity with a cross played behind his strikers. France came back down the pitch and Malouda brought a save from Perez with a rising shot that the goalkeeper tipped over the bar, before Dos Santos wasted a couple of free-kicks at the other end by a distance that suggested the ball was to blame. Both efforts, from a fair way out, sailed so harmlessly dead it was difficult to know what he was attempting, though the look Javier Aguirre shot him from the bench on the second occasion suggested he might be wiser trying something more reliable next time. That was rendered unnecessary by what happened next, with Hernández taking advantage of a stupendously good linesman’s call to stay onside and put Mexico in front. The substitute passed backwards to Márquez then set off upfield for the return, which was timed to perfection and left Hernández the relatively simple task of gathering in space, then rounding Lloris to score. The French appealed for offside, but the flag had stayed down throughout the move, and replays showed that Hernández was onside, though by no more than a foot, when the ball was played. France gave up without much of a fight, with neither Ribéry nor Malouda succeeding in taking the ball past opponents, and another perplexing attacking substitution by Domenech failing to make any discernible difference. Their off-night was summed up when Eric Abidal brought down Pablo Barrera for the penalty. The defender seemed to have time to pull out of the tackle when Barrera played the ball past him and drew the foul, but Abidal was either too tired or too resigned to be concerned. Contact was made, the referee was correct in pointing to the spot, and Blanco found the bottom corner. Surprisingly good last time, France are right back in the doldrums again. World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 France Mexico Paul Wilson guardian.co.uk

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France 0-2 Mexico | World Cup 2010 Group A match report

Drake To Visit Lil Wayne In Prison

‘FINALLY got some time for a visit to go see my brother,’ rapper tweeted. By Jayson Rodriguez Drake and Lil Wayne Photo: the305.com Drake announced via Twitter on Tuesday that he would be visiting his mentor in prison on Wednesday (June 2). “FINALLY got some time for a visit tmrw to go see my brother,” Drake wrote . “So if you got msgs that need to be delivered write #TellWayne.” The Toronto MC has been on the road and putting the final touches on his debut, Thank Me Later, since Weezy turned himself in to prison back in March. In an interview Drake gave to MTV Jams in honor of Lil Tunechi Weekend, the So Far Gone superstar admitted he missed his Young Money cohort, from their friendly rivalry to the veteran rapper’s guidance. “One of the most important things in my life was being able to always see that Weezy e-mail come in,” Drake explained while donning a white T-shirt emblazoned with the rapper’s face and the words “Free Wayne.” “Or be able to respond to that e-mail or be able to ask him a question. Be able to utilize his knowledge. Our communication, I would say I miss that.” Since the rapper has been away, Drake has done his best to keep Lil Wayne’s name alive , from shouting him out at shows to bringing him up in interviews. Wayne has done a good job himself of staying active in the public’s mind, releasing a spate of videos and hosting a mixtape from behind bars. According to the New York City Department of Correction website, Wayne is allowed visits on Wednesdays between the hours of 12:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. The two will be allocated an hour of time for the visit and Drake will be subjected to multiple searches before he’ll come face to face with Wayne. Fans have followed Drake’s instructions and are hoping he relays a number of messages, including notes of support and wishes for Wayne’s next album to arrive soon . Drizzy also will be relaying a message from his own mother to Wayne. “I talked to mother, she loves you to death,” Drake told MTV. “That’s from Mama Graham.” What do you think about Drake going to visit Lil Wayne? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Drake Lil Wayne

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Drake To Visit Lil Wayne In Prison

VA Docs Prohibited From Recommending Medical Marijuana to Returning Vets

The U.S. Veterans Administration (VA) recently adopted a policy prohibiting VA physicians from recommending medical marijuana to their patients, even if marijuana is the safest and most effective medicine to treat Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and other service-related conditions. No doubt the policy stems, in part, from the VA's efforts to address the serious problem of drug abuse among returning veterans. Veterans' advocates and organizations like the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) certainly share this concern; last fall, DPA issued a report calling for immediate policy changes to improve veterans' substance abuse and mental health treatment. Yet seen from the larger perspective of helping veterans adjust to civilian life, the VA's stance on medical marijuana is counterproductive and harmful. The ban means that–despite their service to our country–veterans who reside in the 14 states that have legalized medical marijuana are denied the same rights as every other resident of these states. At minimum, the VA should be actively studying whether cannabis and its unique chemical ingredients can be used to reduce post-combat trauma without contributing to drug dependency. Ample research and anecdote strongly suggest this is the case. Patient reports and published research indicate that marijuana can be a highly effective treatment for PTSD, a condition afflicting nearly one in five veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. And overwhelming scientific evidence has already proven marijuana's safety and efficacy for treating conditions like chronic pain, which affects many combat-injured veterans. Marijuana, moreover, carries none of the risks associated with prescription drugs used to treat PTSD, which have been implicated in the tragic overdose deaths of several current conflict veterans. “I've run the gamut of different medications at the VA, and basically I was at my limit,” said decorated U.S. Army veteran Paul Culkin, a New Mexico medical marijuana patient who suffers from PTSD after serving in Iraq. “The medications were turning me into a zombie…medical cannabis made me a father and a husband again. It's been a blessing.” http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-kerrey/va-docs-prohibited-from-d_b_587763.html added by: JackHerer

Rick Ross Steals Stacey Dash In ‘Super High’ Video Preview

‘I end up snatching her and spending the rest of the evening with her,’ the MC says of his co-star. By Jayson Rodriguez Rick Ross in “Super High” Photo: Def Jam He might shout out his name as Ricky Ros

Ice Cube’s ‘Straight Outta L.A.’ Documentary Premieres On ESPN

Rapper directed film about the 1980s Oakland Raiders and their influence on hip-hop culture in South-Central L.A. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Rahman Dukes Ice Cube Photo: Columbia When it comes to Ice Cube’s place in hip-hop history, he’ll be remembered for three distinct things: his scowl, his jerry curl and his black Los Angeles Raiders cap. Specifically, the legendary N.W.A. lyricist made the brooding football team’s logo — an eye-patched pirate adorned in silver and black with crossed swords in the background — a symbol in rap lore, long before Jay-Z did the same years later with the Yankees fitted hat. And in Cube’s documentary, “Straight Outta L.A.,” the veteran MC combines his two loves, rap and the Raiders, and delivers an insightful examination the tangled rise of two multimillion-dollar franchises, the Raiders and gangsta rap. “Nothing impacted my life more than the Raiders moving to L.A.,” Ice Cube told MTV News of the controversial relocation of the Oakland team in 1982. “Being in N.W.A. [at the time], we were trying to figure out what we were going to do to let people know we were a group. So we decided to wear [all] black. Then I started wearing the Raiders hats. Then, next thing you know, Eazy would show up in Raiders gear. It just became a thing.” In the production, premiering Tuesday night (May 11) on ESPN as part of their “30 for 30” film series, Cube weaves the story of the outlaw Raiders team, which won a championship with their tough style, and the poverty-stricken Southern California that spawned acts like N.W.A. The attitude players like Howie Long and Marcus Allen brought every Sunday helped power the swagger of a young Cube, Eazy-E and Dr. Dre. “That team represented the L.A. I knew,” Cube explained. “It wasn’t the ‘Showtime’ Lakers, where people saw the glitz and the glamour. It wasn’t the ’84 Olympics. It was a little more grimy, and the Raiders represented that, in South Central [where they played]. They had the whole city on lock. To me, [this project] is the true representation of music and sports.” Are you excited to watch the Ice Cube-directed “Straight Outta L.A.” documentary? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Ice Cube

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Ice Cube’s ‘Straight Outta L.A.’ Documentary Premieres On ESPN

Watch Deadliest Catch Season 6 Episode 2 Breaking ‘Em In Online Stream

Watch your favorite Reality TV series “ Deadliest Catch ” with its new episode entitles “ Breaking ‘Em In ” that released April 20, 2010. It’s a best show that you gonna wish to watch all the time. Get it free through streaming online. Current show and replays are always available on the specified television online. Synopsis of the episode: It’s week two of King season and a storm looms as the fleet hauls their first crab. One greenhorn cramps up after just a few pots, while two junior deckhands are tested on unfamiliar boats. But it’s the veteran deckhands that try the Skippers? patience. (from TV viewer) To get access, visit and watch it here: Deadliest Catch Season 6 Episode 2 Breaking ‘Em In or Watch it HERE . Watch Deadliest Catch Season 6 Episode 2 Breaking ‘Em In Online Stream is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Moment of Truth: Banksy is Selling, But Are You Buying?

Welcome back to Moment of Truth, Movieline’s weekly spotlight on the best in nonfiction cinema. This week, we hear from John Sloss, the veteran sales agent-turned-rookie distributor of Banksy’s directing debut Exit Through the Gift Shop. It opens Friday in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Leave it to mischievous street-art godhead Banksy to completely overturn cinema with his first foray into feature filmmaking, Exit Through the Gift Shop . More specifically, leave it to Banksy to permute the documentary genre with expert zeal, turning a film ostensibly about him into a film about its original director. It sounds both more and less complicated than it really is when you think about it — a testament to the shadowy artist’s dexterity with narrative and character. But what about his dexterity with facts?

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Moment of Truth: Banksy is Selling, But Are You Buying?

What One Former Infinity Ward Employee Thinks Of Ex-IW CEO Vince Zampella

What do Infinity Ward employees think of their bosses? We have a small slice of insight via a recent Linkedin recommendation for former Infinity Ward studio head and CEO Vince Zampella. The recommendation was penned on March 2 (the same period when the original Infinity Ward news was coming to light) by Jesse Heinig, a production coordinator at Infinity Ward from 2004 to 2005. Infinity Ward released Call of Duty 2 in October 2005. Heinig would have been present at Infinity Ward during the company’s hurried rush to finish development on Call of Duty 2 for Activision, a release timed to Xbox 360’s launch that fall. The game was received to stellar reviews. “I had the pleasure of working briefly for Vince and seeing his skills first-hand,” said Heinig, now a freelance writer at WhiteWolf, the company behind a number of major RPGs, including Vampire: The Requiem . “Vince’s history in the game development business should already be legendary. How he, Grant Collier, and Jason West forged Infinity Ward by turning around the talent from a team that was overworked and unhappy with their previous conditions.” Grant Collier is also a former president of Infinity Ward, who left to assume a mysterious “special projects” role within Activision. Jason West, the most recent president, left alongside Zampella. Activision is alleging “insubordination” related to Zampella and West, a claim currently involved in litigation. The state of Infinity Ward after the studio leadership departure remains an open question. It certainly doesn’t comes as much of a surprise other veteran employees are leaving the company , but it’s unknown if these now ex-Infinity Ward employees will follow their former leaders once again. “How this team proceeded to build one of the most successful and enduring franchises of this generation of video games,” he continued. “How the IW studio became synonymous with serious code and good gameplay. Vince is one of the few professionals that I’d call a visionary, in the most fundamental sense of the word: He has a powerful vision and he organizes a team to see it through. He’s able to juggle different divisions seamlessly, handle high-level meetings and interfaces between the team on the ground and the demands of the production studio, and still keep an eye on the final product.” Heinig went on to praise Zampella directly on Linkedin, saying he has “a real imagination” and “knows the ins and outs of what makes gameplay fun and engaging, not just a cost analysis.” He eventually proclaims Zampella doesn’t need his recommendation, citing an interesting industry rumor. “Don’t just take my word for it,” said Heinig. “Rumor in the industry is that EA [Electronic Arts] placed a million-dollar bounty for snapping up any IW studio lead, like Vince. Just the fact that the rumor is out there should speak volumes about how badly people want Vince working on their products.” I hadn’t heard of a million-dollar bounty, but the EA connection isn’t new. An internal Activision memo acquired by G4 showed Activision was seeking e-mails and other documentation about conversations. Have something to share? Sitting on a news tip? E-mail me . You can also follow me on Twitter . Infinity Ward – Activision – Video game – Jason West – Electronic Arts

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What One Former Infinity Ward Employee Thinks Of Ex-IW CEO Vince Zampella

Matthew McConaughey Invites MTV News Into The Studio With Mishka

Reggae singer’s second album with the actor-turned-producer, Talk About, hit iTunes on Tuesday. By Matt Elias Photo: MTV News In late December, Matthew McConaughey and Mishka were holed up in a cozy studio in Santa Monica, California, putting the finishing touches on a new album by Mishka, the first artist signed to McConaughey’s J.K. Livin’ label. The duo offered MTV News a rare glimpse into the recording process, allowing us to document the actual session — not just a re-creation of what they did before our cameras arrived. The guys were laying down the final track of the album, “Stars Will Be Shining,” a fitting title for the journey that connected Mishka and McConaughey in the first place. In a truly “stars were aligned” kind of story, McConaughey heard Mishka’s music while vacationing in Jamaica in 1999. The actor liked Mishka’s brand of roots reggae-meets-folk rock so much that he made several attempts to contact the musician, to no avail. “I kinda had an APB out looking for anything Mishka,” McConaughey recalled. “A guy in my office said, ‘There’s a guy named Mishka that’s at the House of Blues here in Hollywood, so we’ll go see if it’s him.’ ” It turned out to be him, and the duo began their relationship — both personal and professional (McConaughey launched his music label solely to get Mishka’s music to the masses). McConaughey joked that the artist had no idea who he was until Mishka’s wife remembered seeing him on TV from time to time. McConaughey grinned: “Yeah, I’m on TV sometimes.” And with McConaughey’s help, Mishka had his time to shine on TV too — with appearances on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” and “The Rachael Ray Show.” He also found success with the 2009 album Above the Bones, landing at #1 on Billboard ‘s reggae chart and earning iTunes’ Best New Artist honor. That album was McConaughey’s first venture as a music producer, and he continues that role on the new LP, Talk About, due Tuesday (March 23) on iTunes and March 30 in stores. McConaughey sees a lot of similarities between his day job and producing music — something he clearly gets a kick out of. “It’s very similar to making movies. It’s very similar to telling a story,” McConaughey said. “That’s what’s really neat about it. Maybe it’s a different vocabulary, but each song’s its own story. Each song kind of has their own three-act structure. … We start with a tease, then intro everybody, take it high, climax, pull off, give it a rest and then leave them wanting a little bit more.” McConaughey admits that he’s still learning the lingo — “When in doubt, I’ll throw ‘legato’ out there every 10 minutes,” he joked — but he’s not on his own. The album is also co-produced by Butch Walker, who boasts pop/punk producing credits with Fall Out Boy, Weezer and many others. While Mishka’s mellow genre is not usually on Walker’s radar, the veteran producer said reggae is not as scientific as producing a pop record. In other words, it doesn’t take as much tinkering and editing. That was the vibe when we visited the studio that day: an easygoing group making sun-drenched music, just in time for those lazy summer days.

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Matthew McConaughey Invites MTV News Into The Studio With Mishka

Barbara Walters Says So Long to Oscar Specials

For some, parting is such sweet sorrow. For Barbara Walters, she’s simply “been there, done that.” On Monday morning’s The View, the veteran newshound announced that…

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Barbara Walters Says So Long to Oscar Specials