Hard-Working Reporter Gets Birdpoop in Mouth

Canada, Humor, Video

♫There’s a whole lotta Brown Finch overpopulation going down…. ♫

Patriots' Brady Disappointed in the Plaxico Score

Brady, New York Giants, NFL, Patriots
Man.
the Pats are LOVING this……

Obama Literally Turns Away From Hillary Clinton as She Attempts Handshake

Hillary, Obama, Politics

I thought it was very gracious of her to go over to Ted Kennedy and shake his hand

d8uf9t503ud6.jpgaleqm5gscsum0ntiza8npbgkb1.jpg

The New York Football Giants Land In The Valley Of The Sun

Stories
Giants Tell Story Behind Their Smiles

CHANDLER, Ariz. — Giants defensive end Michael Strahan arrived at the first of many Super Bowl news conferences dressed in all black. Five teammates and his coach appropriately followed suit.

Linebacker Antonio Pierce said none other than Coach Tom Coughlin put him in charge of the team attire for the Giants’ first public appearance after arriving in Arizona on Monday. Pierce told all participants to wear black suits as a sign of unity.

The fact that Coughlin allowed Pierce to make that decision fit perfectly with the Super Bowl theme of the kinder, gentler Giants coach. That sure-to-be-told story line, along with a few others, kicked off Monday, as the Giants met the national news media here for the first time at their team hotel.

“He opened up to everybody,” Pierce said of Coughlin this season. “He’s showing us his teeth. He’s letting us know he has cheekbones and everything.”

The kinder Coughlin emerged as a favorite topic Monday. Pierce and his teammates described bowling nights and casino nights introduced this season by Coughlin. They spoke of the leadership council he formed.

Pierce said players who rarely dealt with Coughlin did not know who their coach really was. That changed this season, according to the Giants.

The new Coughlin stood at the podium Monday, wearing the requisite dark suit and a red tie, hair parted just so underneath two bright lights pointing toward his head. The new Coughlin turned his opening news conference into a stand-up comedy routine, cracking a couple jokes.

Of the crowd of reporters gathered around him, along with dozens of TV cameras lining the back wall, Coughlin quipped, “This is like a normal day in New York, media-wise.”

Of the Giants’ 10 victories on the road this season, Coughlin joked, “We have a lot of secrets we can’t share with you.”

The Monday session was basically a preview of what this week will be like for the Giants. Surrounded by a small army of reporters, cameramen and radio hosts, they answered the same questions dozens of times, even in this first setting. There was no trash talk, at least not Monday.

The Patriots arrived in Arizona on Sunday night, but the Giants elected to land Monday afternoon. Most players described a subdued flight. Several Giants even slept. Others watched the movie “Michael Clayton.” The buzz picked up as the plane neared landing, with Coughlin describing the feeling of “anticipation and excitement.”

The Giants went straight to the team hotel, the Sheraton Wild Horse Pass. If they were looking for seclusion, the hotel provided it. Located outside of Phoenix, the hotel sits in the Sonoran Desert, surrounded by mountains and cactuses, instead of fans and bars. The hotel complex includes two 18-hole golf courses and a spa that measures 17,500 square feet.

The six Giants selected to participate in the news conference talked of savoring the experience of the week. Strahan and receiver Amani Toomer recalled what it felt like to lose a Super Bowl, the fireworks exploding for the team that beat them, the newspaper the next morning announcing their loss.

“If you lose,” Strahan said. “What is there to remember?”

As if playing the undefeated Patriots did not serve as enough of a challenge, the Giants also came down with a flu bug this week. Coughlin said the bug surfaced in the past day or two, and that three players missed practices with high temperatures. Coughlin said he hoped the sickness “will not be an issue.”

And with that, attention turned back to the story lines sure to dominate the week. Coughlin said the Giants were familiar with the underdog role. He repeated that he never considered not playing his full roster when the Giants faced the Patriots in the regular-season finale.

Across the ballroom, punter Jeff Feagles talked of remembering the experience. A 20-year veteran, Feagles has never been in a Super Bowl before, same as Coughlin, his kinder, gentler head coach. Feagles talked of how fast the plane ride went by, of how giddy his teammates were.

At the airport, he pulled out a camera and started taking pictures. And with that, Super Bowl week was under way for the Giants.

“This is special,” Feagles said. “I’ve been to that airport I can’t tell you how many times. But this felt different. This felt good.”

Bill Maher | January 25 2008

Stories

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

Part Five

Part Six

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank

Heath Ledger Found Dead In New York City Apartment; Autopsy Is Inconclusive Official Says

Film, Hollywood

::Developing::

Heath Ledger

…………………………………………………………………………..

FROM THE NY TIMES CITY ROOM  BLOG 

Updated, 2:35 p.m. | An autopsy of the actor Heath Ledger was performed on Wednesday morning, but the results are inconclusive, according to Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for New York City’s chief medical examiner, Dr. Charles S. Hirsch.

Additional blood and tissue testing needs to be performed before the manner and cause of death can be determined, Ms. Borakove said in a phone interview, estimating that the process could take 10 days to two weeks. “If you have no apparent cause, you have to do further testing,” she said.

No cause of death has been ruled out, she added. The autopsy, at the medical examiner’s headquarters at 520 First Avenue, near 30th Street on the East Side of Manhattan, began around 8:30 a.m. and lasted about two hours, she said.

The two types of tests that still have to be performed include toxicology, which examines the adverse effects of chemicals in the bloodstream, and histology, in which thin slices of tissue are analyzed by pathologists.

Ms. Borakove said the body was ready to be released to Mr. Ledger’s family for burial. “We don’t need to keep the body once the family is ready,” she said.

Mr. Ledger, 28, the Australian-born actor whose breakthrough role as a gay cowboy in the 2005 movie “Brokeback Mountain” earned him a nomination for an Academy Award, was found dead on Tuesday afternoon in an apartment at 421 Broome Street, between Crosby and Lafayette Streets, in SoHo. Prescription sleeping pills were found near his body, but it is not known if the medication played a role in his death.

WCBS-TV reported today that “along with the prescription drugs that were found in the apartment, police also recovered a rolled up $20 bill with narcotic residue on it” and that police “also found several drug packets containing an unknown substance.”

Asked about the CBS news report, Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman, said it was largely inaccurate.

Mr. Browne said that investigators found a “rolled-up $20 bill” in the apartment where Mr. Ledger’s body was found, but he said that the police “never said residue was found on it.”

He said the bill had not yet undergone forensic tests. “We have a rolled-up $20 bill and we never said it had residue on it or was tested,” Mr. Browne said. “It will be tested, because it was rolled up.”

Mr. Browne said no other narcotics were found in the apartment. He speculated that WCBS — in reporting that several drug packets were found — might have been confusing it with some “blister pack” of prescription drugs. He said some prescription drugs were in bottles and some in blister packs.

“There was no narcotics found in the apartment, period,” Mr. Browne said.

Mr. Browne declined to identify the name of any physicians listed on the prescription drugs.

Al Baker and John Sullivan contributed reporting.

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

The Independant is reporting that the New York City Police Department is calling the death “possibly drug-related”

UPDATE:: NO EVIDENCE OF SUICIDE AS OF WEDNESDAY MORNING JAN 23 4:20 am

249525heath-ledger-posters.jpgledger_dogtown.jpg

FOXNEWS DOT COM

NEW YORK — New Yorkers clustered outside the Soho loft apartment building where Heath Ledger was found dead on Tuesday said they were “devastated” and “anguished” to learn of the tragedy.

Tamba Mossa, the superintendent of 421 Broome Street — where Ledger had lived for the past four or five months — called the “Brokeback Mountain” actor a “very great man” but said he was blindsided by the news.

“I wasn’t prepared to hear about his death at that moment,” Mossa told a crush of reporters at the scene. “I’m very, very sad.”

But Ledger had seemed depressed recently, according to the superintendent.

“He looked sad,” said Mossa.

New York City Police officers guarded the entrance of the white apartment building, which sits on a cobblestone street in the swanky SoHo section of New York City next to a Nanette Lepore boutique. Swarms of paparazzi, fans and passersby milled about on the sidewalk. One woman came carrying flowers.

The Australian-born Ledger, 28, was found dead by his housekeeper Tuesday afternoon, naked and at the foot of the bed. Sleeping pills and other medications that had been prescribed to him were discovered in the apartment, according to police.

“I’m devastated,” said a young woman who lives in the neighborhood and identified herself only as Jen. “There was never any news of him being involved in anything other than his acting. I’m definitely a fan of his. This is shocking.”

She said she had spotted Ledger in the area a few times while he was still with his former fiancée, actress Michelle Williams, whom he met on the set of “Brokeback Mountain” and with whom he had a 2-year-old daughter named Matilda.

The couple, who lived together with the baby in Brooklyn, broke up last year. In recent months, Ledger had been renting the SoHo apartment.

One passerby on his way home was stunned to learn of the actor’s death.

“I wasn’t familiar with his work, but I just feel anguished,” said David M. Rheingold, 35, who works for a nonprofit. “I feel terrible for his daughter. It’s horrible, just horrible.”

One SoHo resident marveled at the throngs of people who had descended on the scene of Ledger’s death.

“In life, he would not have drawn any kind of crowd like this,” said Roark Dunn, 50, who produces photo shoots. “He’s comparatively obscure.”

Many of those who stopped in front of Ledger’s apartment building said they admired the actor’s work.

“I was moved by the movie ‘Brokeback Mountain,'” said Paul Khor, 40, a fashion buyer visiting from Singapore.

Three Fordham University freshmen and self-professed Ledger fans said they came to SoHo as soon as they heard the news.

“We’re sad,” said Daria Tavana, 19, a playwright major. “He’s somebody who recently had begun to take on really hard roles. It’s totally unbelievable.”

Another onlooker said he appreciated Ledger’s acting and called his performance in “I’m Not There,” the recent Bob Dylan film, “tortured.”

“I respect him very much. He seemed like a legitimate artist,” said the 28-year-old journalist, who declined to give his name but said he works in the neighborhood. “In this day in age, it’s hard to get shocked about any celebrity passing, but he was a really talented actor. It’s sad he’s not going to be around anymore.”

6160571heath-ledger-deathsff.jpg

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

From The Seattle Post Intelligencer Blog

Update, 3:25 p.m.: Paolo Dayao, 26, attended Stadium High School in Tacoma and was an extra in “10 Things I Hate About You.” In an e-mail we asked what he remembered of Ledger. He responded:

I remember him being really nice and down to earth. I guess since he was unknown at the time we did that movie, he didn’t have that Hollywood snobbiness that some of the other actors had. He hung out with the extras in between takes and I remember that he didn’t always go back to his trailer like some of the others would when they were setting up the next scenes. I did get a chance to hang out with him and play hacky sack in between some of the scenes that we shot. He was a pretty nice guy.

Hacky sack with Heath Ledger. Wow.

**********

Two years ago this month, actor Heath Ledger learned that his breakthrough performance in Ang Lee’s “Brokeback Mountain” earned him an Academy Award nomination. Today, hours after a new slate of actors heard about their Oscar hopes, Ledger was found dead.

Ledger was not a Seattleite. He was a not a Northwesterner. But for anyone who remembers the filming of “10 Things I Hate About You,” he was — at least for a short time — a presence in the region.

At Gasworks Park, he tamed Julia Stiles over a game of paintball. At Stadium High School in Tacoma, he frolicked over the bleachers, singing to Stiles during soccer practice and delighting dozens and dozens of student extras. The film also featured location shots at Seattle’s Fremont Troll and the Buckaroo Tavern. (See our 1999 review and the Seattle Film Office map for more.)

Tom Brady's Cast Is Already Off; Dinner At Butter With Bunchen

Betting, Las Vegas, New York City, Patriots

Sir Thomas will be ready and able come two Sundays from now, as if you hadn’t clued into that one….

But I bet lots of people are going to make a heap of cashish on this game

castnot.jpg

Right-Wing Talking Points Alive and Well on Movie Websites

Blogs, Clooney, Douchebaggery, Hackery, Journalism, Lions For Lambs, Oscar, Rendition, Right-Wing Talking Points

Cinema Blend Writer Ed Perkis

gets in a nifty bit about movie-goers being tired of “America Sucks” movies.

douchebag.jpg

Take two Medveds and call me in the morning douchebag.

Man, we do suck.

Howie Kurtz Slobbers All Over John McCain

Stories

thanks-corporate-news.jpg

From Monday’s WAPO 

Accessibility Opens Doors For McCain

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, January 21, 2008; C01

SPARTANBURG, S.C. — As the JetBlue charter from Michigan touched down in South Carolina, I strolled up to John McCain‘s front-row seat — none of his aides batted an eye — and asked if he would continue to chat with reporters around the clock if he won the Republican nomination.

Most candidates, after all, grow more cautious around the media mob as the stakes get higher.

McCain said he couldn’t stop, because “that destroys credibility.” And besides, he said, “I enjoy it a lot. It keeps me intellectually stimulated, it keeps me thinking about issues, and it keeps me associated with a lower level of human being than I otherwise would be.”

There he goes again.

McCain’s ability to charm the press wasn’t responsible for his big win in Saturday’s South Carolina primary, but it didn’t hurt. After the slimy, rumor-filled campaign run against him in that state in 2000, media outlets yesterday embraced the notion that his triumph was “poetic justice” (Chicago Tribune), “exorcising the ghosts” of South Carolina (New York Times) and a “spiritual victory” (Slate).

Every presidential campaign is constantly calculating whether journalists are potential allies or incorrigible foes. The media are a great — and dirt-cheap — vehicle for carrying a candidate’s message, but submitting to questioning also carries the risk of being thrown on the defensive, as Mitt Romney learned in a tense exchange with Associated Press veteran Glen Johnson last week over the role of lobbyists in his campaign.

Thoughts On John McCain

Stories

surf2.jpg

….his surge talk is just pure nonsense though; NONE of the bench marks have even been given a sniff.

2006 was the bloodiest year of them all and these numbers appear to me to be about comparisons, only in Baghdad and environs, of the casualty rates to 2007.

Again,-no political process at all and Shiite death squads cleaning up with our resources.

McCain: “Folks, this surge is working-don’t let those pesky facts get in the way of this shiny new groupthink meme”

That said, he is indeed the least unpalatable….by far

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started