Monkees frontman Davy Jones dead at 66

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 11:04 PM

Davy Jones, lead singer of 1960s made-for-TV band The Monkees, whose hits included "I'm a Believer" and "Last Train to Clarksville," has died , the local coroner said. He was 66.

The British-born star, whose TV antics with Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork drew fans but also unflattering comparisons with the Beatles, died of a heart attack in Florida Wednesday, the TMZ celebrity website said.

The singer died after being transported to Martin Hospital South in Martin County, southern Florida, near where Jones lived, said a spokesman for the hospital, Scott Samples, without providing further details.

"Mr. Jones began to complain of not feeling well and having trouble breathing," said the Martin County Sheriff's Office in a statement, adding that emergency services took him to hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The four-piece band initially gained fame through their TV show about a band called The Monkees, created by legendary US music producer Don Kirshner.

Jones's good looks and British charm -- he was born in Manchester, England -- went down well with US audiences, along with the three American group members: guitarist Nesmith, bassist Tork and drummer-singer Dolenz.

Their knockabout antics on the show -- with the toe-tapping theme tune "Hey Hey, We're the Monkees" -- drew criticism that they were a rip-off of the Beatles, who had taken America by storm a few years earlier.

But the show won two Emmy awards in 1967, for best comedy director and outstanding comedy series.

It only aired for three years in the United States in the 1960s, but it was re-run elsewhere over the years and is remembered by a generation of fans, if not by current younger audiences.

Other hits included "Daydream Believer" and "Pleasant Valley Sunday."

The band released nine albums between 1966 and 1970, after which they disbanded -- but they have come back together in various combinations over the years, according to the Billboard magazine.

The star's Monkees bandmates voiced sorrow and shock.

"His talent will be much missed; his gifts will be with us always .. Adios, to the Manchester Cowboy," Tork wrote on his Facebook page, calling Jones "my long-time friend and fellow-adventurer."

In an interview with CNN a mournful Dolenz recalled touring with Jones just a few months ago. "It was a huge success and the reviews were wonderful, and we left that particular tour on a huge high note."

Fresh-faced Jones was said to be the reason that David Bowie -- real name David Robert Jones -- changed his name in the mid-1960s to avoid any confusion.

The US band's producer Kirshner, once described as "The Man with the Golden Ear" for his ability to detect and promote a hit record, died in January 2011.

As well as launching the TV band, Kirshner also nurtured stars including Neil Diamond, Bobby Darin, Neil Sedaka and song-writing husband and wife Carole King and Gerry Goffin.

Jones was scheduled to perform with music contemporary David Cassidy, formerly of the Partridge Family, at the Magic City Casino in Miami on April 14th, CBS reported.

Jones was born December 30, 1945, and gained early fame as a child actor in Britain with roles in different series shown on the BBC.

He is survived by his wife Jessica and four daughters from previous marriages, TMZ said.

In Hollywood, flowers were laid on his star on the storied Walk of Fame stretch of sidewalk, where passing British and Australian tourists voiced surprise and sadness at the news, according to an AFP photographer.

Rolling Stone magazine published a tribute to Jones entitled: "In Memory of the Cute One," saying he "was the grooviest of the Monkees, which makes him one of the grooviest pop stars who ever existed.

"He was the best dancer in the Monkees, the Cute One, the one with the coy English accent, the bowl-cut boy-child who shook those cherry-red maracas and always got the girl."

"He was also the guy who stole David Bowie's original name," it added.

Pottersville Information Dump

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 8:50 AM

As they'll inevitably do, the Republican Party and Tea Baggers cover themselves in glory and other not so suitable substitutes. Submitted for your perusal, approval, disapproval, etc:

Professional scumbag and insurance salesman (pardon the tautology) Art Jones, running for Congress out of Illinois' 3rd CD, became the latest in a series of wingnuts to claim "the Holocaust never happened." As if that wasn't enough, Artie was also quoted as saying,
As far as I’m concerned, the Holocaust is nothing more than an international extortion racket by the Jews. It’s the blackest lie in history. Millions of dollars are being made by Jews telling this tale of woe and misfortune in books, movies, plays and TV. The more survivors, the more lies that are told.

Now, there's a Republican you can be proud to have in Congress, a man who doesn't pander to the Jewish, sane and historically-informed demographic!

(Sidebar: He also openly hosts "family-friendly" Neo Nazi events, thereby making him even more pathetic than his fellow Nazi-loving Midwest Republican Tony Zirkle.)

Speaking of anti-semites, the Mormon cult (and it is a cult) has long proved the most viciously Dominionist and intrusive force in all Christendom. They pumped millions of dollars and many man hours into ramming Prop H8 onto the CA ballot and getting it passed. They planned on baptizing Elie Weisel and already baptized the late Simon Weinsenthal's own parents.

But earlier this month, ex Mormon Helen Radkey found baptismal records in the Dominican proving the LDS had actually baptized Ann Frank (it was all a "mistake", they claimed). It's difficult to understand this creepy religious necrophilia unless you look at it from a Dominionist POV. The Mormons obviously feel as if the Jews cannot be trusted with their own souls and need to be put on the straight path even if it has to happen posthumously.

Think Ann Coulter and her assertions years ago that all Jews were merely "unperfected Christians" and you have the real mindset of Christians, so-called Christians and faux Christians such as the ones in Romney's cult that merely tolerate Jews and patiently awaiting the conversion of the 440,000 projected survivors after Armageddon.

Looks like Obama and his vile, brown-shirted Commie/Socialists are the last ones whose hands we have to worry about touching our Medicare and Medicaid. Because a Dallas-area doctor named Jacques Roy was recently arrested and charged with bilking Medicare and Medicaid. Yeah, he's a Republican and, yeah, he's also a Tea Bagger but what's really interesting about this particular instance of right wing hypocrisy is the amount of loot we're talking about: Over a third of a billion dollars. Yes, Dr. Roy is being charged with bilking the evil federal government for almost $375,000,000. So, what's worse, peeps? Obama's mad power grab and Socialization of our private health care system or one man's own mad grab for over a third of a billion taxpayer dollars?

As if Christopaths weren't a big enough problem in Michigan, there's now the threat of Muslims who want to turn Michigan into Michiganistan (or Mich-Mich-Michi-Michiganistan-stan, if you're Herman Cain). Pay no attention to the fact that Muslims only make up 3% of Michigan's population. Pay no attention to the fact that these Christopaths have their own brand of Sharia law that's at least as noxious and backward-looking as the Muslims' sharia.

There's a reason why Rick Santorum doesn't want your kids to go to college. Facts, as John Adams said, are stubborn things.

Newscorps' News International was rife with corruption, you say?

Political Game?

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:55 AM
What a mess this was.

Why the Court of Inquiry?

Was it politically motivated?

I don't know; ask the Guadalupe County Attorney, Ms. Elizabeth Murray-Kolb.



Banker cleared in death of S.A. girl
Ron MaloneyCorrespondent - Seguin Gazette

SEGUIN — A judge ruled Tuesday there was no evidence of wrongdoing or a cover-up on the part of 25th Judicial District Attorney Heather McMinn or Sheriff Arnold Zwicke in connection with Francesca “Frankie” Casseb’s 2007 drowning death, adding there was insufficient probable cause to believe the man who put her in the Guadalupe River was reckless or negligent.

Senior State District Judge Doug Shaver issued the rulings at the close of two days of hearing evidence in a court of inquiry that included emotional and tearful testimony by James “Dan” Rollins III and his daughter Kristin, who were the last people to see Casseb, 12, alive as she struggled while pinned to a tree by fast current in the Guadalupe River below Lake Dunlap dam.

“The court finds that there is absolutely no evidence of a cover-up or any criminal conduct on behalf of the district attorney and/or the sheriff of Guadalupe County,” Shaver said. “The court further finds insufficient evidence of any criminal wrongdoing by Mr. Rollins. The court finds this event to be a tragic accident and offers its profound sympathies to the Casseb family.”

The rest of the story:

Probing matter

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:40 AM
They need to get to the bottom of this before anyone possibly gets hurt

Rumor mill or not.


Death-threat stories prompt pair of probes
By Michelle Mondo - Express-News

The Junior ROTC program at MacArthur High School is under two separate investigations by the North East Independent School District and the district's Police Department after allegations of death threats followed a hazing outcry two weeks ago.

Parents of students in the drill team — a smaller, competitive team of JROTC cadets — publicized their concerns Tuesday, saying they didn't believe the district had taken the reports of death threats seriously.

“We're taking every issue seriously, whether a threat, hazing, and any inappropriate conduct whatsoever,” NEISD Superintendent Brian Gottardy responded.
.

Still the biggest!!

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:30 AM
Why?

Because everything's bigger in Texas!

That's why.


7 accused of largest Medicare fraud ever
By Terri Langford - Express-News

A Dallas-area doctor, his office assistant and five owners of Texas home health agencies have been charged in what federal authorities Tuesday called the largest such case in history, a “well-oiled” machine that submitted $375 million in bogus Medicare billings.

Unraveled by the nation's Medicare Fraud Strike Force, the case involves 11,000 home health care patients and 500 home health care agencies over a nearly six-year period.

The alleged scheme included suspected kickback payments to patient recruiters, the use of offshore banking accounts to hide Medicare cash, and secret pacts with home health care owners.

Texas Confidential !!

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:22 AM
Ahh Texas!

All the dirt, all the scoop, Mark Clark trial coverage from Comal County, all wrapped up in one book!!

Good price too!!


Texas Confidential: Sex, Scandal, Murder, and Mayhem in the Lone Star State  
Now selling at Amazon.com

From the Amazon Blurb -

“Everything is bigger in Texas,” as the saying goes, and this certainly applies to the history of sleaze, iniquity, and violence associated with the Lone Star State. Texas Confidential: Sex, Scandal, Murder, and Mayhem provides a glimpse at the state’s seamy underbelly and delves into some of the most striking episodes of lust, corruption, slaughter, and chaos in Texas and the people who have perpetrated them. To a colorful rogues’ gallery of lunatics, corrupt politicians, prostitutes, murderers, and every other sort of scoundrel that appears in the book, author Michael O. Varhola has added a smattering of UFOs, mythological beasts, and other paranormal oddities.

Specific chapters among the 54 that appear in Texas Confidential include “Rogues of the Alamo,” a look at the things that just about everyone connected with the famous battle had to hide; “The Ivory Tower of Death,” on the bloody 1966 University of Texas rampage that left 18 people dead and 42 wounded; “Porno, Texas Style,” which includes a list of adult actors from the state; and “The Aurora UFO Incident,” about the state’s oldest documented UFO incident, which occurred in 1897.

Katherine Jenkins signs up for Dancing with the Stars

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 2:30 AM

Katherine Jenkins, Jack Wagner and Melissa Gilbert are to take part in the next series of Dancing with the Stars.

The Welsh opera singer, the Melrose Place actor and the former Little House on the Prairie star are among the stars in the line-up for the 14th season of the hit show.

They will be joined by the likes of tennis legend Martina Navratilova, The View co-host Sherri Shepherd, and Jaleel White, who is best known as Steve Urkel from Family Matters.

TV host Maria Menounos, Motown great Gladys Knight, Disney star Roshon Fegan, NFL champion Donald Driver, singer Gavin DeGraw and Telenovela actor William Levy complete the line-up.

The contestants have already met their professional partners and last season's winner Karina Smirnoff - who won with war hero J.R. Martinez - has been paired with Gavin, while three-times winner Derek Hough is partnered with Maria.

Fan favourite Maksim Chmerkovskiy will teach Melissa her moves and his brother, Val Chmerkovskiy, will make his Dancing with the Stars debut with Sherri.

Two-time champ Mark Ballas will dance with Katherine and Cheryl Burker - who took Rob Kardashian all the way to the final on the last series - has got William. 

The new season of Dancing with the Stars will start on March 19.


Those born on leap-year day celebrate today

Published by Julia Volkovah under , on 2:19 AM

FENWICK ISLAND -- Here's a quick math question: How can a father be the same age as his 14-year-old daughter, who turns 15 a day later?

Answer: The father was born on leap-year day, Feb. 29, 60 years earlier, and his 15-year-old daughter's birthday is March 1. Think that sounds like a purely hypothetical? Think again.

Eight years ago, that's exactly what happened to Bob Buckler of Fenwick Island. Buckler was born Feb. 29, 1944, but is celebrating his 17th birthday today. He's a member of an exclusive club of leap-year day babies.

"I like it," Buckler said of having a quadrennial birthday. "I expect people to remember it, but I don't do anything huge. As a kid I enjoyed it, (because) it made me seem different.""I like it," Buckler said of having a quadrennial birthday. "I expect people to remember it, but I don't do anything huge. As a kid I enjoyed it, (because) it made me seem different."

According to the Honor Society of Leap Year Day Babies, statistically speaking, one in every 1,461 people should have a Feb. 29 birthday. The society estimates there are 200,000 leap-year day babies in the United States and 5 million worldwide.

Leap-year day doesn't just have significance for those who were born that day. Salaried employees who are paid based on a 365-day year work for free today.

For many leap-year day babies, the novelty is more for others than for themselves, said William Crompton, a 37- (or 9-) year-old from New York.

"My friends and family always insist on doing something when it comes around," Crompton said. "I don't really celebrate it. I feel like most people who would have a leap day birthday are probably like 'whatever' about it."

Some computerized databases -- like those used by insurance companies -- don't have Feb. 29 as a choice when potential customers need to fill out their birthday, but Crompton said the only confusion he's ever encountered because of his birthday came at bars.

"Turning 21 was ridiculous because, well, bouncers aren't the brightest of people so they thought it was a fake ID," Crompton said. "I've never had any problems other than that."

The persistent dilemma for any leap-year day baby is when to celebrate birthdays during the non-leap years. The Honor Society claims 80 percent of leap-year day babies celebrate their off-year birthdays on Feb. 28.

 
Buckler said that once you get to a certain age, you enjoy the leap-year day birthdays because, frankly, you don't have as many.

"When you get to be 68, you don't want to remember your birthdays," he said. "But it's nice because people will always send me a card who otherwise wouldn't talk to me, and I get a kick out of that."

Pandering and desperate is no way to go through a campaign

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 6:06 AM
This is pretty pathetic.

Not to mention that it reeks of desperation.


Santorum robocall makes appeal to Michigan's Democrats for votes
By John Katzenstein and Mark Hicks - Detroit News

GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum hopes Michigan Democrats can help him earn a victory in Tuesday's primary.

That's right. The former Pennsylvania senator's campaign paid for a robocall asking Democrats to vote for him in Tuesday's primary.

Recent polls show chief rival and Michigan native Mitt Romney and Santorum virtually even heading into the primary.

"We know that if we can get a Reagan Democrat in the primary, we can get them in the fall," said Hogan Gidley, communications director for Santorum. He confirmed the campaign paid for the call.

The rest of the story:

500,000 Visitors!

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:58 AM
Dear Readers;

We here at Man o' Law are pretty excited that we've reached a huge milestone.

Over 500,000 Visitors have visited our blog!

Thank you so very much for continuing to read and support our blog.

Best Regards,

Man o' Law

Here's what led up to the posting below

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:54 AM
Big times, big times.


$43,000 Party! More lavish spending by CPS Energy on your tab 
By Brian Collister - WOAI

SAN ANTONIO -- CPS Energy got approval last year to begin raising your rates after complaining it was strapped for cash. What the city-owned utility failed to mention at the time is that it uses some of your hard earned money to pay for lavish meals and parties.

Lionel Johnson says he recently had problems with his electricity meter that he says caused his bills to skyrocket. The disabled war veteran is on a fixed income.

“Being on a fixed income, if it escalates, I’m in big trouble. So if it goes up $20, that means I have to take away from my food to pay the bill,” Johnson told us.

What Lionel didn't realize until I showed him the receipt is that some of his money is going to pay for things like a $7,000 going away party for a CPS Energy board member.

The rest of the story:

Reigning in the free-loading

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:13 AM
After all it is our money not yours.

I do appreciate the token nod to that by returning the $5,000 in questionable expenses.


CPS Energy's CEO gives back $5,000
By Vicki Vaughan - Express-News

CPS Energy's CEO has paid the company $5,000 to reimburse it for expensive meals and entertainment that came under fire recently.

Doyle Beneby announced the payment at a CPS board meeting Monday in which board members laid out a range of no-nos for themselves and staff members, saying
the utility no longer will pay for alcoholic drinks under most circumstances.

Beneby told the board the $5,000 payment was for charges that might be questionable. “It's a gesture to make the community whole. I hope the changes mean to the ratepayers that we understand how they feel,” he said.

Juan Pablo Montoya crashes into jetdryer at Daytona 500

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 5:12 AM
A Juan Pablo Montoya crash into a jetdryer highlighted a bizarre Daytona 500—one that took more than 36 hours to complete. Matt Kenseth was your winner but the talk into the wee hours of the morning was Montoya’s spectacular crash that engulfed the track in flames.

Thankfully, Montoya was not seriously injured in the accident but the race was delayed for quite some time as NASCAR scrambled to clean more than 200 gallons of jet fuel from the track. During the delay, driver Brad Keselowski tweeted a picture of the fiery track and provided ongoing commentary for the viewing audience. As a result, he now has more than 200,000 followers.

What an intelligent way to take advantage of social media—tweeting and driving. No doubt, Danica Patrick has probably been doing this for quite some time. That’s the only explanation for her numerous accidents.

At last...Katie Price owns up that she's dating Leandro, whilst she says they're sleeping as one

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 4:35 AM

She gives the impression to be a bit puzzled even if, as she assumes this is a 'blind date' - we're pretty definite she's seen Leandro before

If there's one star we can far ever rely on to make us laugh, it's Katie Price. Which is why hearing that she'd disclosed photographers who snapped her and on/off boyfriend Leandro Penna coming out of a hotel that they had broken her 'blind date' made us do a rather loud chuckle at our desk.

In spite of clearly confusing the meaning of blind date – specifically that one goes on said date with a man one hasn't met before, sooner than one's own real boyfriend who resides at one's house (no idea why we're discussing like this) - the news is that Katie at least acknowledged that it was a date.

Just she's been saying that the two are only friends. In spite of the truth they split up because they couldn't converse the same language, which generally proves something of a barrier for friendships.

But don't fret! Because Leandro's on the case with that. As a minimum we feel he is, his tweets are pretty baffling.

"How I adore sleeping with the person I love in my arms. @MissKatiePrice," he said. "Now on my way to college to have perfect communication."

Astonishing so far, and so it continues...

"I love to feel the beating of your heart and the warmth of your body against mine two become one and the world is our oyster @MissKatiePrice (sic)."

Katie and Leandro were coming out of the grand Sanctum Hotel in London when she obviously told paps: "Thanks for ruining my blind date".

She was dressed casually for her night out, in a pink jumper and jeans, while Leandro was wearing a very feminine white scarf. We love it though - so much we want one ourselves.

All of this (well not the scarf, that's incidental) can be taken as facts that Katie and Leandro are formally back on, after separation at the end of last year. This is lovely. We can believe the beating of our hearts getting closer at the every thought. 


Samsung chief indicted by his sister over father's inheritance

Published by Julia Volkovah under , on 3:22 AM
The chairman of South Korean electronics giant Samsung, Lee Kun-hee, is being litigated by his sister.


Lee Sook-hee submitted the file case against Mr. Lee, 70, over shares their late father left, her lawyer told AFP on Tuesday.

She is claiming the take back of assets valued around 190bn won ($169m, £107m), said Yonhap news agency.

The suit is along the same directions as one filed two weeks earlier by Mr. Lee's brother, Lee Maeng-hee, 80, Ms Lee's lawyer said.

The elder Mr. Lee's suit is for 700bn won ($623m; £396m) in shares in the group's flagship, Samsung Electronics, and Samsung Life Insurance, over and above in cash.

As per to court records filed by Lee Maeng-hee, "the stocks... were assets put in a conviction under the name of non-heirs, and they should have been allocated to the inheritors according to law".

Lee Kun-hee is blamed of keeping the shares for himself.

This is a tale to struggle with the most fascinating of Korean television dramas, says the BBC's correspondent in Seoul, Lucy Williamson, with charges of underground shares inside South Korea's most profitable electronics company.

"We recognized that the issued of inheritance has long since been matured," a Samsung group spokesman told AFP without further aspects.

The siblings' father Lee Byung-chull, who passed away in 1987, established Samsung selling dried fish in South Korea in 1938.

The Samsung Group now contains shipbuilding, telecoms, electronics and construction among its companies, and had revenue of $220bn in 2010.

Last month, Samsung Electronics detailed a 17% increase in takings for the last three months of 2011.

Lee Kun-Hee acquired the chairmanship of Samsung in 1987. But, in April 2008, he resigned in scandal after being alleged with tax avoidance and infringe of confidence. 

He was found guilty on the tax allegations, but was given a presidential pardon in 2009 and come back to run Samsung in 2010.

According to the 2010 Forbes Rich List, he was the richest man in South Korea with a private wealth of $7.9bn.

When a Celebrity Clunk on the Head Becomes a Bright Idea

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 7:09 PM
At first glance it might not seem that President Obama and kid-rocker Justin Bieber have much in common. But both men had just a tad too much altitude going through the doorway of aircraft and - boom! the celebrity noggins got a good crack while the paparazzi snapped photos.

Yep, it is fun to put America's president and its most adorable heart-throb together in the same sentence and call them klutzes, but there's more to the story.

Ask the flight attendants who work on the smaller regional airplanes how often their passengers get an owie! for failing to mind their noodles on entering the airplane and you'll hear an astonishing number. Ninety seven percent said they've seen passengers crack their heads, three-quarters of them said the injury involved bleeding, bruising or a bump and more than half of the flight attendants surveyed said they've seen it happen dozens of times.

In the comments section of the survey, conducted by JDA Aviation Technology Solutions - one flight attendant wrote, "Passengers hitting their heads has been discussed with our Director of Safety and the flight attendant management before, but it is another "Que Sera, Sera Whatever Will Be, Will Be".

Photo courtesy Ron Whipple
Ron Whipple, an air transport specialist, who has 9,000 hours flying the Saab 340 told me he lost count of how many times he banged his head on the door frame during his 18 years of flying for American Eagle. "Luckily, I had my hat on most of the time," he said with a laugh, "so I didn't get really hurt." 

So there is a problem knocking around out there, but getting any attention paid to it is undermined by the fact that no one takes this kind of injury seriously - up to and including sometimes, the person injured.

Asking the Regional Airline Association for the number of skulls cracked while boarding got me nowhere.  Kelly Murphy, the industry's media representative said, it "does not keep reports of this nature."

So to quantify the problem, JDA had to ask the folks most likely to know, pilots and flight attendants who work for the regional carriers that are moving 430,000 passengers around America each and every day. Based on these interviews and a lot of what seems to be common sense, it has come up with a low-tech solution that borrows heavily from the baby's crib in the nursery. JDA has created a upholstered bumper that wraps around the upper edge of the hard metal airplane door frame - and here's the brilliant new take - they want to sell ad space on the thing as demonstrated in the company photo below.

Note the head guard being demonstrated on this airplane. Photo courtesy JDA
Now, one would think that given the airline industry's rush to find newer, better, wilder sources of revenue, which I reported in today's New York Times, selling ad space at  passengers' eye-level while simultaneously delivering the message that the airline values the cranium above your seat as much as the posterior that's in it, would be an easy sell. But one would be wrong.

Bill Norwood, the executive in charge of the head guard project says the regional airlines loved the idea when it was presented at their annual meeting in Nashville last year but the orders aren't exactly rolling in, even though JDA is offering to give the head guards away. What the company wants is a cut of what advertisers pay to have their message embroidered above the lowered heads of a half million travelers.

The whole project makes me think of that old cartoon in which someone gets knocked out cold and awakens with a light bulb going on symbolizing a brilliant idea. If that someone was a high ranking airline executive, well, maybe then....

Would you like some fries with those bags of money?

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 6:12 AM
Very accommodating of the bank tellers, no?


Teen robbed banks by drive-thru
KSL.com -


OREM — It almost sounds too bizarre to be true, a Utah County teen is under arrest, accused of robbing two banks in less than an hour.


Authorities said a 16-year old boy allegedly took his mother's car without permission, drove to a nearby Central Bank branch and pulled into the drive up lane.


"He sent a note through the drive-thru canister telling the teller to send him money," said Orem Police Sgt. Craig Martinez. "He inferred on the note that he had a weapon."


After complying with the young man's demands, the tellers contacted police and were able to give a detailed description of the vehicle, including the license plate number. But before investigators were able to track the boy down, he allegedly used the same modus operandi at an America First Credit Union branch just 20 minutes later.

The rest of the story:

See? Everyone thought he meant something else when he said he had 19 inches in his pants!!

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 6:06 AM
Oh my.


Police:  Columbia Heights man caught with stolen TV in pants
KSTP.com -

A Columbia Heights man was arrested for allegedly stealing a 19-inch television – by shoving it down his pants.

Twenty-one-year-old Eric Lee King was walking out of an Eagan business on Dec. 5, 2011, when he dropped a box of candy in the parking lot. An Eagan police officer was in the area and let King know, but King kept walking as if he didn’t hear the officer, according to the complaint.

The police officer said King was walking “straight-legged, shuffling his feet, and not bending his knees.” The officer also noticed that King’s pants were falling down and he was trying to hold them up.

The rest of the story:

Pee..oops, I mean Wee the people

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 5:47 AM
Where's the outrage by the left?

Tea Party protestors are excoriated for nothing yet all you hear from the left and the main stream media is crickets.
 

Protestors throw urine bombs at Denver police 
Fox 31 - Denver

DENVER — Several protesters were arrested Saturday evening during a disruptive anti-police protest in downtown Denver.

According to Lt. Matt Murray of the Denver Police Department, at 7:30 p.m. close to 60-70 anarchist protesters started marching on the 16th Street Mall.

The Mall Ride was forced to shut down as protesters allegedly threw urine-filled balloons, set off fireworks and spray painted several vehicles including an RTD bus.

The rest of the story:

Oscars 2012: 'Saving Face' wins for documentary short

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 11:00 PM
Saving Face' 

 "Saving Face" won the Oscar for documentary short at the 84th Academy Awards on Sunday.

The Daniel Junge and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy film follows British plastic surgeon Dr. Mohammad Jawad, who returns to his homeland to help victims of acid burns. The film follows one woman as she fights to see that the perpetrators of the crime are imprisoned for life.

The documentary competed against “God Is the Bigger Elvis,” a Rebecca Cammisa and Julie Anderson film about a mid-century starlet who chose the church over Hollywood; “The Barber of Birmingham,” a Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday film that follows the life of 85-year-old barber James Armstrong and the legacy of the civil rights movement; James Spione’s war film “Incident in New Baghdad”; and “The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom,” a film by Lucy Walker and Kira Carstensen that follows survivors of Japan's 2011 earthquake and their struggle to recover from the wave that crushed their homes and lives.

The Academy Awards are taking place in Hollywood and are being televised live on ABC. They are presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, whose membership was recently examined in depth by the Los Angeles Times.


'The Artist is the big 2012 Oscar winner

Published by Julia Volkovah under , , on 10:29 PM

Los Angeles— "The Artist" took best picture at the 84th annual Academy Awards on Sunday night, just minutes after Jean Dujardin was named best actor for his role in the film, a black-and-white homage to the early days of Hollywood. The film, nominated for 10 awards, took five in all: costume design, original score and Michel Hazanavicius for directing rounded out "The Artist" wins.

Martin Scorsese's Paris adventure "Hugo" which led contenders with 11 nominations, also received five statues, all for technical awards.

Meryl Streep joined a very exclusive club, winning her third acting Oscar for her role as a strident Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady."

Streep played the British prime minister as a senile retiree, as well as a hectoring, dominant figure who instilled fear and respect in her own Cabinet. At the film's pinnacle, Streep as Thatcher is the backbone of a nation that goes to war over the distant Falkland Islands after Argentina invades in 1982.

Streep, 62, won best actress with her 17th Oscar nomination, the most times any performer has been nominated by the Academy. Her third win put her in a category with other three-time Oscar winners Jack Nicholson, Walter Brennan and Ingrid Bergman. Only Katharine Hepburn with four wins had more.

In "The Artist," Dujardin plays silent film star George Valentin, who struggles with his place in a world of talkies, all while romancing the new face of cinema, personified by song-and-dance gal Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo).

Though Dujardin was not a major star before this awards season, he's a household name in France. He got his start through a one-man show, enacting the various characters he encountered during his military service. Dujardin competed against George Clooney in "The Descendants," Demian Bichir in "A Better Life," Gary Oldman in "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" and Brad Pitt in "Moneyball."

Claiming Hollywood's top-filmmaking honor Sunday completed director Hazanavicius' sudden rise from popular movie-maker back home in France to internationally celebrated director.

The supporting-actor prize Sunday went to "Beginners" co-star Christopher Plummer, who became the oldest acting winner ever at 82. But Plummer disputed that notion telling reporters backstage: "I don't believe that for a second. Charlie Chaplin was 83 when he won an honorary Oscar and an honorary Oscar is an Oscar."
Veteran player Octavia Spencer earned the supporting-actress prize for her breakout role in "The Help."

Meanwhile, the Iranian domestic drama "A Separation" won the best foreign language film at the Academy Awards.

It's the first time an Iranian film has taken the honor. The only other Iranian movie nominated was 1997's "Children of Heaven," which was defeated by Italy's "Life Is Beautiful."

The widely hailed "A Separation," directed by Asghar Farhadi, also won the best foreign film at the Golden Globes. Farhadi was nominated for a best screenplay Oscar.

Billy Crystal got the show off to a lively start with a star-laden montage in which he hangs out with Justin Bieber and gets a nice wet kiss from George Clooney.

Back as Oscar host for the first time in eight years, Crystal also did his signature introduction of the best picture nominees with a goofy song.

Before his monologue, Crystal appeared in a collection of clips inserting him in scenes from key nominees. The montage included re-creations from some 2011 films featuring Tom Cruise of "Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol" and Clooney's best-picture contender "The Descendants," with the actor planting a kiss on Crystal.

Outfitted extravagantly in character, Baron Cohen ran amok on the red carpet and all over E! host Ryan Seacrest's tuxedo.

After initially being dis-invited by the Academy, Baron Cohen was allowed to attend the ceremony acting as the kind of Moammar Gadhafi parody he plays in his upcoming film, "The Dictator." As expected, he brought his unique brand of publicity stunt and method comedy.

It came at Seacrest's expense, though.

Flanked by two flower girls, he jokingly claimed to be carrying the ashes of the late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, whose face was displayed on the container.

In an interview with Seacrest, he claimed it was Jong Il's dream "to be sprinkled over the red carpet and over Halle Berry's chest." Then, as Seacrest was bending down, he spilled the ashes over Seacrest's tuxedo.

Few maintain calm on the red carpet more than the awards show veteran, but even Seacrest looked shaken as he attempted to dust himself off.
As security muscled Baron Cohen away, Seacrest attempted to cut to commercial, but his E! colleagues sought to milk the incident. It quickly became the most-chatted about topic on Twitter, where commentators eagerly lapped up the rare breach in decorum at the Academy Awards.

Said Seacrest: "Anything can happen and it most certainly did, all over my lapel."

The stunt couldn't dampen Dujardin's hopes. He would like to become the first Frenchman to win best actor and his "The Artist" is favored to become the only silent movie to take the best-picture prize since the first Oscar ceremony 83 years ago.

Meryl Streep might join the acting three-peat club with a third Academy Award. Along with Streep, Hollywood's big night on Sunday has plenty of returning stars, too, with past Oscar winners and nominees such as Clooney — who arrived with girlfriend Stacy Keibler dressed like an Oscar statuette — Brad Pitt, Glenn Close, Michelle Williams and Nick Nolte in the running again.

The show also has a returning favorite as ringmaster: After an eight-year absence, Billy Crystal is back for his ninth time as host. Some early cheers were heard for dresses worn by Viola Davis, who wore a green Vera Wang, and Octavia Spencer in a gown by Tadashi Shoji.

Because of a change in voting rules, the Oscars featured nine best-picture nominees for the first time, instead of the 10 they had the last two years.

Competing against "The Artist" for the top honor were Clooney's family drama "The Descendants"; the Deep South tale "The Help," featuring best-actress nominee Davis and supporting-actress favorite Octavia Spencer; and the Paris adventure "Hugo," from director Martin Scorsese.

Also in the lineup: the romantic fantasy "Midnight in Paris," from writer-director Woody Allen; Pitt's baseball tale "Moneyball" and his family saga "The Tree of Life"; the World War I epic "War Horse," directed by Steven Spielberg; and Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock's Sept. 11 story "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close."

The lead-acting categories were where the drama lies. Best actress shaped up as a two-woman race between Davis as a courageous maid leading an effort to reveal the hardships of black housekeepers' lives in "The Help" and Streep as British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady."

The record-holder with 17 acting nominations, Streep had won twice and became only the fifth performer to receive three Oscars. Jack Nicholson, Ingrid Bergman and Walter Brennan all earned three, while Katharine Hepburn won four.
It had been almost three decades since Streep last received an Oscar, for 1982's "Sophie's Choice." Though she has the most acting nominations, she also has the most losses — 14. Another loss would have been her 13th in a row.

Best actor also looked like a two-person contest between Clooney as the distressed patriarch of a Hawaiian clan in "The Descendants" and Dujardin as a silent-era superstar whose career tanks as talking pictures take over in "The Artist."

Had he won, it would have been the second Oscar for Clooney, who won the supporting-actor prize for 2005's "Syriana." While French actresses have won before, among them Marion Cotillard and Juliette Binoche, Dujardin is the first actor from France to receive an Oscar.

Dujardin was picked as best actor Saturday at the Spirit Awards honoring independent film, where "The Artist" ruled with four prizes, including, like at the Oscars, best picture and director for Michel Hazanavicius.

"The Artist" has dominated Hollywood honors this season, winning key prizes at the Golden Globes and awards shows held by the Directors, Producers and Screen Actors guilds.

"This means a lot, because it's a small movie. It's not expensive. We did it with small money," Hazanavicius said backstage at the Spirit Awards. "And it's black and white and silent."

84th Annual Academy Award winners

Best Picture: "The Artist"
Actor: Jean Dujardin, "The Artist"
Actress: Meryl Streep, "The Iron Lady"
Supporting Actor: Christopher Plummer, "Beginners"
Supporting Actress: Octavia Spencer, "The Help"
Directing: Michel Hazanavicius, "The Artist"
Foreign Language Film : "A Separation," Iran
Adapted Screenplay: Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, "The Descendants"
Original Screenplay: Woody Allen, "Midnight in Paris"
Animated Feature Film: "Rango"
Art Direction: "Hugo"
Cinematography: "Hugo"
Sound Mixing: "Hugo"
Sound Editing: "Hugo"
Original Score: "The Artist," Ludovic Bource
Original Song: "Man or Muppet" from "The Muppets," Bret McKenzie
Costume: "Anonymous," "The Artist," "Hugo," "Jane Eyre," "W.E."
Documentary Feature: "Undefeated"
Documentary (short subject): "Saving Face"
Film Editing: "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo"
Makeup: "The Iron Lady"
Animated Short Film: "The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore"
Live Action Short Film: "Pentecost," "Raju," "The Shore," "Time Freak," "Tuba Atlantic"
Visual Effects: "Hugo"




A small sample of the evil, the horror, the sheer lunacy going on out there

Published by Julia Volkovah under on 9:16 AM
I can't write about or post them all.  I have a full-time job but today I just wanted to list just a few of the headlines out there that make me very worried about where we're headed.

Photo of murdered 9-month old




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