Tuesday, October 22, 2013

5 Million Lines of Obfuscation

Last weekend, some anonymous “specialist” told the New York Times that “5 million lines of software code may need to be rewritten” in order to fix the mess that is healthcare.gov. (The good news, according to the source, is that the project has a total of “500 million lines of software code,” so only 1 percent has to be rewritten. So the code’s 99 percent good—or something.)














I don’t mean to jump back on my hobbyhorse of complaining about lack of knowledge in tech journalism, but printing a claim like that is egregious.










Why? Well, here’s a line of C++ code:
















The close curly brace signals the end of a block of code. It could be put on the same line as the previous, more substantive line, but for the sake of cleanliness, programmers tend to put it on a line of its own. When it comes to coding in HTML, Perl, and AJAX, different programmers have different styles. Some will split code up into many lines; others will compress it into a handful of lines. I’ve seen nearly identical segments of code written in 10 lines or in 50.










Here’s another line of C++ code.










// TODO: make sure this code doesn’t crash!










That’s a comment. It doesn’t do anything—those two slashes at the beginning tell the compiler (which converts code into actual computer instruction) to ignore the line. It’s there to explain things to people reading the source code, or in this case to remind the programmer to fix whatever lies immediately below. I’ve written cryptic bits of code that required more lines of comments than lines of actual code, simply to explain what on earth was going on.










On the other hand, here’s a line of APL (“A Programming Language”) code:










(~R∊R∘.×R)/R←1↓ιR










That code prints out all the prime numbers from 1 to R. APL is a notoriously terse and nightmarish language. I have successfully avoided ever coding in it. One single line of APL code could contain half a dozen bugs.










The sources may well be “specialists,” but their specialty is more likely the art of procuring government contracts.










So not all lines of code are created equal. As a programmer, I had weeks where I produced 1,000 lines of code. I had weeks where I produced 20. Usually the latter weeks were more grueling, because any 20 lines requiring that much time and effort are going to be a) important, b) complicated, and c) bug-prone. The 1,000 lines were far more likely to be simple stuff that I could code by rote. I even had weeks where I removed 2,000 lines of code by removing redundancies between similar blocks of code. Those were the best weeks of all, because less code means fewer bugs.










Programmers who do user interface code—which is responsible for the visuals and input components of software—tend to produce far more code than other programmers, because user interface code requires a lot of boilerplate. I knew programmers who wrote 10,000 (good) lines of user interface code in a week. Many of them were copied and slightly modified from other projects or example code.










Consequently, it’s rather silly to say, as the Times article does, that “a large bank’s computer system is typically” 100 million lines of code. Investment banks have far more complex code than commercial banks—they need more in order to do all their clever, sneaky trading. Assuming the Times is referring to commercial banks, there is such variety among implementations and coding standards that speaking of an “average” amount of code is meaningless. Bank code written in FORTRAN will be far longer than bank code written in Python. Does it make a difference? Not really.










But while the numbers in the Times article don’t tell us much about the healthcare.gov codebase itself, they do tell us something about the “specialist” sources that inform the article. The sources are not programmers, because programmers would not speak in terms of lines of code with no further context. We hear that “disarray has distinguished the project” in part because government “officials modified hardware and software requirements for the exchange seven times.” The officials probably modified them 70 times—requirements for any software project are constantly in flux, and it’s expected that project managers and software engineers will adapt. Modifications alone do not signal a project in disarray.










We hear that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) lacked the expertise to link the individual pieces of healthcare.gov together. That does not explain why the “data hub”—the single component provided by Quality Software Services Inc.—proved to be “a particular source of trouble,” something I had surmised two weeks ago. If individual contractors were producing garbage, CMS’s expertise or lack thereof wouldn’t have made a difference to the final product.










The sources also say that CGI Federal, which won the $90 million contract to develop healthcare.gov’s back end, was asked to replace the data hub, though this approach was abandoned as “too risky.” That’s a hint that the article’s sources seem eager to shift the blame to CMS, to the White House, and to QSSI, and away from CGI. The Times claims that CGI was not responsible for healthcare.gov’s “integration,” but the Washington Post’s Lydia DePillis reports that CGI Federal was in fact responsible for “knitting all the pieces together, making Quality Software Services’ data hub work seamlessly with Development Seed’s sleek user interface and Oracle’s identity management software.”










I have no idea who the Times’ sources were, but they sure sound like employees of CGI Federal. Because they almost certainly aren’t programmers, I’d guess they are probably mid- or high-level managers who are trying to salvage CGI Federal’s reputation. They may well be “specialists,” but their specialty is more likely the art of procuring government contracts.










This is to be expected. What’s less expected is that such anonymous sources would be treated with this degree of credulity by national reporters who lack technical understanding of their subject matter and are thus more likely to parrot whatever a “specialist” tells them. The Times has a great tech reporter, Natasha Singer, who has done well-informed work on consumer profiling, taking little for granted. They should put her on this story.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/bitwise/2013/10/healthcare_gov_problems_what_5_million_lines_of_code_really_means.html
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Trains running after deal reached to end strike

AAA  Oct. 22, 2013 9:17 AM ET
Trains running after deal reached to end strike
By LISA LEFF and SUDHIN THANAWALABy LISA LEFF and SUDHIN THANAWALA, Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES 




With the BART transit system on strike, people line up along the Embarcadero near the Ferry Building to catch a ferry to Oakland, Calif., during the afternoon commute Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in San Francisco. Frustrated bay area commuters started the work week Monday facing gridlocked roadways and long lines for buses and ferries as a major transit strike entered its fourth day, increasing pressure on negotiators to reach a deal that resumes train service. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)







With the BART transit system on strike, people line up along the Embarcadero near the Ferry Building to catch a ferry to Oakland, Calif., during the afternoon commute Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in San Francisco. Frustrated bay area commuters started the work week Monday facing gridlocked roadways and long lines for buses and ferries as a major transit strike entered its fourth day, increasing pressure on negotiators to reach a deal that resumes train service. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)







With the BART transit system on strike, people line up along the Embarcadero near the Ferry Building and walk to catch a ferry to Oakland, Calif., during the afternoon commute Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in San Francisco. Frustrated San Francisco Bay Area commuters started the work week Monday facing gridlocked roadways and long lines for buses and ferries as a major transit strike entered its fourth day, increasing pressure on negotiators to reach a deal that resumes train service. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)







With the BART transit system on strike, traffic slows on Interstate 80 leading to the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge during the morning commute Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in Berkeley, Calif. San Francisco Bay Area commuters started the new work week on Monday with gridlocked roadways and long lines for buses and ferries as a major transit strike entered its fourth day. At the same time, federal investigators were searching for clues to a weekend train crash that killed two workers. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)







With the BART transit system on strike, traffic slows on Interstate 80 leading to the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge during the morning commute Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in Berkeley, Calif. San Francisco Bay Area commuters started the new work week on Monday with gridlocked roadways and long lines for buses and ferries as a major transit strike entered its fourth day. At the same time, federal investigators were searching for clues to a weekend train crash that killed two workers. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)







A traffic sign on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge alerts motorists to expect delays because of the BART transit strike Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. Frustrated San Francisco Bay Area commuters started the work week on Monday with gridlocked roadways and long lines for buses and ferries as a major transit strike entered its fourth day. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)







(AP) — The San Francisco Bay Area's main commuter train system is running limited service Tuesday morning after a tentative deal was struck to end a commute-crippling four-day strike.

Bay Area Rapid Transit tweeted that riders should expect up to 45-minute delays system wide as the trains get back on track.

Union officials announced the deal Monday night. It still requires approval from union members, then from the Bay Area Rapid Transit's board of directors.

The talks between BART and its two largest unions dragged on for six months— a period that saw two chaotic dayslong strikes, contentious negotiations and frazzled commuters wondering if they would wake up to find the trains running or not.

Associated PressNews Topics: Business, General news, Labor unions, Strikes, Rail transportation industry, Labor negotiations, Labor issues, Social issues, Social affairs, Transportation and shipping, Industrial products and services, Industries, Personnel




Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-22-BART%20Strike/id-33d82bb25f524419a6db7a4d95f952b2
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Election In Ultra-Orthodox Israeli Town Tests Gender Norms





Candidates for town council Michal Chernovitsky (left) and Adina Ruhamkin campaign in a park in El'ad, or Forever God, a small religious community in Israel. They could be the first women on El'ad's council, and the first ultra-Orthodox women to win public office in Israel.



Emily Harris/NPR

Voters across Israel choose new mayors and city councilors in local elections Tuesday. In one small town, a handful of ultra-Orthodox Jewish women are defying the norms of their community by running for office.


On a recent day, children mob two women in skirts, stockings and purple T-shirts in a neighborhood park in El'ad, or Forever God. The women are candidates for town council. As part of their get-the-word-out campaign, they're blowing up balloons for kids.


"I've been thinking about this for a year. I think it's crucial that women be represented on the town council," Michal Chernovitsky, the 33-year-old leader of the five female candidates running. "Because there are just men now, a lot of issues get lost."


Their slogan is "Mothers for El'ad." The town is young, just 13 years old. It was built specifically as a strict religious community, and the town spends extra money on synagogues and other religious institutions. No one is allowed to drive here on the Sabbath, and few residents have TV or the Internet.


All that is fine with Adina Ruhamkin, another candidate; what El'ad needs, she says, are basic services for children and the moms who take care of their daily needs.


"There's no library, nothing here. ... It's like a hotel," Ruhamkin says. "You come to sleep in town and leave the town. That's what's there — nothing."


Among the Mothers' pitches: Build a library and a swimming pool, increase bus service and add more stops. They also want to create jobs, for men and women. One voter at the park, a mother of nine, is hesitantly supportive.


"I've never heard before of women running for council," she says. "It's a new thing. I hope it will be accepted, but I'm not so sure. Here women who express themselves aren't seen as a good thing."


As the candidates hand out balloons, a car from another city council campaign drives by, touting over a loudspeaker the endorsements it's won from various rabbis. There are many ultra-Orthodox elected officials in Israel; none are women.


Racheli Ibenboim might have become one. She was supposed to be on the Jerusalem ballot for city council, but community pressure led her to drop out.


"My children were threatened that they would not be able to stay at their schools," Ibenboim says. "My husband was told he wouldn't be able to attend our synagogue anymore. His employers even got a phone call saying they should let him go."


She got many messages of support, too, but felt her particular ultra-Orthodox sect just wasn't ready for a woman to run for public office.


"When I had to decide whether to stay a part of my sect or take on this political task, I thought it was more important to try to create change from within," she says.


As Israel's ultra-Orthodox population has grown, its strict gender rules have crept into other parts of society. Rachel Azaria is not ultra-Orthodox, but is devout, religiously observant and an elected member of the Jerusalem City Council. She helped lead a fight against public bus lines that made women sit in the back. Azaria says many ultra-Orthodox women secretly called her during the campaign to thank her for her efforts, albeit in hushed tones.


Azaria believes with time, more ultra-Orthodox women will seek to make their voices heard in politics. Back in El'ad, the Mothers team is hopeful it will win at least one town council seat. But the candidates are in unfamiliar territory, says Ruhamkin.


"It's weird. We're not yet in, but weird," she says. "Because we are women and everybody [else] are men, and it's going to be weird.


After polls close Tuesday night, Forever God may indeed change.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/10/22/239347445/ultra-orthodox-towns-election-puts-gender-rules-to-the-test?ft=1&f=3
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4 Things We Think We Know on Obamacare


I’ve been seeing a few things floating around the blogosphere about Obamacare that aren’t true. They’re not really conservative or liberal talking points; they’re just misconceptions that people may have about how the health-care law works. So it seems worth pointing them out, especially because relying on some of these “facts” could get you into big trouble.






Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/21/4_things_we_think_we_know_on_obamacare_318206.html
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Verizon left security researcher hanging while reported URL hack revealed subscribers' texting history

Long wait times and a complete lack of transparency -- no, this isn't a story about a typical call to Verizon customer support. It's what happened when a security researcher discovered a critical privacy vulnerability on Verizon's consumer site and tried, nearly in vain, to get it patched. Back in ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/92ZKAGwtk_I/
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Sundance Channel, WE tv Expand Internationally


Sundance Channel and WE tv. are set to roll out in several new international markets.  



AMC/Sundance Channel Global, the international division of AMC Networks, made the announcement ahead of its participation at the CASBAA industry convention getting underway today in Hong Kong.


PHOTOS: Mad Men Season 6: 10 Fashion Looks We Loved


In Asia, Sundance Channel has been rolled out on IPTV provider LG Korea as a 24-hour linear high definition network, adding to the channel’s carriage on Skylife and Olleh TV, by KT and B.TV by SK Broadband, respectively. 


Sundance Channel is also launching as a mobile VOD service in Taiwan on leading mobile network Taiwan Mobile. And in Thailand, following the rollout of Sundance Channel by TrueVisions, WE tv has been added by the local carrier as a 24-hour high definition linear network.


In Philippines, Accion has been named the exclusive sales agent for Sundance Channel and WE tv. The company’s relationships with provincial cable systems throughout the country have lead to the both channels getting picked up by local operators, including Cablelink TV for Metro Manila, Asian Vision for Olangapo and Zambales region, Telmarc for Taytay and Teresea regions and Royal Cablevision for Cabuyao and Calamba regions.


On the other side of the globe, Sundance Channel is gearing up for a launch on TV Cable Ecuador, the country’s largest cable provider. Through the partnership, Sundance Channel will be made available to subscribers as a 24-hour linear, high definition channel.


“These exciting new distribution agreements reflect the importance of Asia and Latin America as critical regions in our global expansion strategy, said Bruce Tuchman, president of AMC/Sundance Channel Global. “We continue to experience strong demand for our high quality, globally renowned entertainment available on Sundance Channel and WE tv. We also look forward to further supporting the authenticated on demand initiatives of our subscription television partners around the world.”


Sundance Channel, founded by Robert Redford, broadcasts internationally series including Mad Men, Breaking Bad, The Walking Dead, and Hell on Wheels.


A women’s lifestyle focused network featuring industry figures in food, weddings and fashion, WE tv is broadcast elusively in Asia has been adding territories lately. It carries lifestyle series from Bobby Flay, Rachael Ray and Joe Zee


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HollywoodReporterAsia/~3/4eWLh3x-31Y/story01.htm
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Taylor Swift Hangs with her Castmates in "The Giver"

Enjoying her move to the big screen, Taylor Swift dined with her castmates from "The Giver" after filming in Cape Town, South Africa on Sunday (October 20).


The "I Knew You Were Trouble" singer wore a long-sleeved short black dress as she mingled with Alexander Skarsgard and Katie Holmes.


In the film based off of the classic bestseller, a young boy is chosen to learn about true pain and pleasure of the real world from an elderly man in a community without war, pain, suffering, differences, or choice.


Set for release in August 2014, the Phillip Noyce-directed movie also stars Meryl Streep and Jeff Bridges.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/taylor-swift/taylor-swift-hangs-her-castmates-giver-946823
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Monday, October 21, 2013

130 HTC Ones on a rail make bullet time shots easy

Stop. Bullet time.

Qualcomm wanted to demo how powerful the Snapdragon 600 chip can be, and decided to create a cool bullet time photo booth using 130 HTC Ones on window mounts attached to a spiraling rail.

Actors (and dogs) were placed in the midst of the ring, and caught in a full 540-degrees of excellent special effect footage that freezes space and time much like Neo can do. OK, so they just took stills from live video at the right time and stitched them together in an animation, but the former sounds way cooler.

This isn't really new, as you can find similar footage all over YouTube, but it is pretty slick to watch. They also have a poll to see where to send the roving studio next, which you can find at the source link. Be sure to vote for your closest spot, and if you get a chance to check it out make sure to use your Android to get some cool footage of it all.

Source: Qualcomm


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/PYZGtIqwU8k/story01.htm
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Obama Says He's 'Frustrated' About Health Care Site Issues




Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.



 



At the White House on Monday, President Obama acknowledged widespread problems with his health care law's website while still defending the Affordable Care Act. NPR White House Correspondent Scott Horsley talks with Steve Inskeep about the president's remarks.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:


NPR's business news starts with an acknowledgement of trouble by President Obama.


(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)


INSKEEP: OK, the president is speaking right now to reporters and others in the White House Rose Garden. Our White House correspondent Scott Horsley has been listening in. He's in our studios. Hi, Scott.


SCOTT HORSLEY, BYLINE: Good to be with you, Steve.


INSKEEP: OK, the president's talking about Obamacare. What's he saying?


HORSLEY: Well, this is really the first big acknowledgement by the president that the problems with the website, healthcare.gov, that people are using to access the new insurance marketplaces are more than the glitches. He'd said all along there would be glitches. It's now become clear that the problems are more deep-seeded than that.


The president said there's no sugar coating that, and that he's as frustrated as anybody else. He also said the government is working to fix those problems. They're bringing in some top IT talent from the private sector to help out. He also says some of those private sector folks anticipated this kind of problem with a big undertaking like this.


INSKEEP: They might have anticipated it but they weren't ready for it...


(LAUGHTER)


INSKEEP: ..but it's going to be a problem here, isn't it, to get it fixed on the fly?


HORSLEY: Absolutely. You're trying to fix the airplane while flying the airplane, as the saying goes. But the president also stressed that what he calls the underlying product, the insurance that's available through these marketplaces is still good, even if it's tough to get access to it. And he stressed that the Affordable Care Act is more than just this website and that there are ways for people to access that insurance offline, either by the telephone or in person.


INSKEEP: OK, Scott, thanks very much.


HORSLEY: My pleasure.


INSKEEP: We'll be hearing more about this. NPR's Scott Horsley.


Copyright © 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=239145590&ft=1&f=1019
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'Captain Phillips': A First-Time Actor, Opposite Tom Hanks

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Actor Barkhad Abdi plays the ruthless leader of Somali pirates in the film Captain Phillips. To train for the role, Abdi learned how to swim, handle weapons, drive a skiff — and act.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/O3f84emEKpM/captain-phillips-a-first-time-actor-opposite-tom-hanks
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Canada factory sales slip, weigh on August growth


By Louise Egan and Randall Palmer


OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian manufacturing sales unexpectedly fell in August, likely dampening economic growth in the month as the outlook for the sector remains murky in light of the fiscal standoff in its top market, the United States.


Factory shipments sank 0.2 percent from July to a seasonally adjusted C$49.5 billion ($47.6 billion) in the month, dragged down by weakness in the vehicle assembly and food industries as well as an outsized drop in the small jewelry and silverware sector, Statistics Canada said on Wednesday.


Analysts surveyed by Reuters had predicted a 0.2 percent gain in August. Eleven of 21 industries registered setbacks.


The volume of sales, used in calculating gross domestic product, fell 0.3 percent.


The report suggests manufacturing will contribute little to monthly GDP and supports the Bank of Canada's move to downgrade its growth forecast for the third quarter to between 2.0 and 2.5 percent from 3.8 percent, annualized.


"Manufacturing has stagnated in 2013 and not much positive momentum should be expected over the balance of the year as the prospects of a healthy recovery in the U.S. into the fourth quarter look precarious," said Mazen Issa, an economist with TD Securities.


After weeks of bitter fighting, U.S. lawmakers prepared on Wednesday to put forth a proposal to raise the debt limit and reopen a partially shuttered government in hopes of avoiding a historic default which could throw the economy back into recession.


Canada sells about 75 percent of its exports in the United States.


"Even if a short-term deal is brokered to extend the deadline into early next year, uncertainty will hang in the balance leaving the Canadian manufacturing industry in limbo," Issa said in a note to clients.


Year on year, sales were up by just 0.3 percent in current dollar terms and down 2.1 percent in volume.


Growth in the Canadian economy has disappointed this year, Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz said on Friday, and August trade data released last week showed exports were still not providing the much-wanted boost in the third quarter.


Factory sales and exports both remain below their pre-recession peaks.


In August, motor vehicle assembly plants saw their sales slide 2.5 percent, reflecting unusually meager gains after maintenance shutdowns in July, Statscan said. Excluding autos, sales were flat in August.


Food industry sales slid 1.6 percent and sales in the miscellaneous category, representing about 2 percent of total sales, plummeted 22.6 percent due to a drop in jewelry and silverware.


Aerospace products and parts and the primary metals industry offset the declines with gains of 17.8 percent and 3.0 percent, respectively.


Demand for aerospace shipments helped nudge up new orders by 0.1 percent and also helped explain the 0.4 percent increase in unfilled orders in August.


Manufacturers expanded their inventories by 0.3 percent, continuing a trend that began in 2010. The inventory-to-sales ratio was unchanged at 1.39.


(US$1 = $1.04 Canadian)


(Reporting by Louise Egan and Randall Palmer; Editing by Krista Hughes and Andrea Ricci)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/canada-august-factory-sales-slip-three-months-gains-124424507--business.html
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Damon Types

Damons will be described, detailed, and even categorized in this topic. Using a Threat Level, they will be marked as with a Level D through S rating on how dangerous they are.

If anyone has an idea for a Damon type, feel free to PM me about it so I can see if it'll do nicely for the list we'll make here. ^^

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/9C1Aif6yEEQ/viewtopic.php
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Daniel Radcliffe On The Script He's Written: "It's a Very Dark Comedy"


If there is any actor in the Hollywood that is truly doing work that makes them happy, it's Daniel Radcliffe. Since being part of the most successful box office franchises in history one could argue that every movie he's done since has been a "passion project", of course he would say that he loved doing the Harry Potter movies just as much as the rest of them. On top of all of that, he's having fun and making friends too.


Take his latest effort Kill Your Darlings, for example. In director John Krokidas' directorial debut about the grisly murder of David Kammerer, a largely unthought-of moment that happened around the true birth of the beat poetry movement in New York City, David was impassioned to play a young Allen Ginsberg. While many have turned the focus on the gay relationship he has with Lucien Carr (played by Dane DeHaan) that was just one element of the literary figure that Radcliffe saw and without his unrelenting support Krokidas has acknowledged that the movie likely would have not been made.


Daniel revealed that he's taking what he learns on every set and is looking to direct his own project in the future.


Us Weekly talked to the 24-year-old Radcliffe about friendship on the movie set, life after Harry Potter and the script he's just finished writing.


PHOTOS: Ten years of Harry Potter premieres!


Us: What was it about Kill Your Darlings that made the character of Allen Ginsberg appealing to you?


DR: Just talking about poetry is very fun for me. I don’t understand it as well as him, but I do understand poetry, it is an interest of mine. I've read the same books as him. I think when you read through a script you realize whether or not something is going to be fun and this was fun. There is a library heist, all of that stuff was very fun. After auditioning with Dane, one of the biggest draws for me was working with him.


Us: How did you and Dane connect after the first rehearsal together?


DR: Dane is the best friend I've made through acting, through the industry. He and his wife are just fantastic people. I think that building chemistry with people is just about being curious about people and meeting them. I had also known John for years but through this experience they've become two of my best friends.


Us: Dane admitted that he hadn't seen a Harry Potter movie before meeting you, do you think that the public is starting to disconnect you from Harry?


DR: I don't know if there is one movie that will do it. It's a process. I think that these three movies I have coming out together (Kill Your Darlings, Horns, The F Word) help. The main thing that I'm pleased about is that these three films are all so different; maybe people will see what I can really do.


PHOTOS: Some of Hollywood's breakout stars


Us: Has your theater work helped with that? Equus, How To Succeed and The Cripple of Inishmaan? Do you see yourself doing another play soon?


DR: I think so. Of course I'd love to do another play soon but that's like asking a woman who's just given birth if she wants to have another child. I literally just finished (The Cripple) and it was very psychically demanding. It may be awhile before I do another one.


Us: You grew up on the Potter film set, you've learned so much from experience, have you ever considered helming your own project?


DR: I would love to direct. I mean, I have written a script. I don't know if it's any good but it's nice to have finished something. That's an achievement in it's own. It's a very dark comedy. There are always themes that I'm interested in. Like friendship and when it becomes unhealthy. What you have to do to move on, but it's a much more heightened scenario. It's probably shit but the point is I've finished it and the next thing that I write won't be.


Us: Maybe you can cast some of your friends.


DR: You know if I had finished making it a year ago maybe, but now Dane (DeHaan), Adam Driver and Zoe Kazan, they're all going to be way to busy to make a movie with me.


PHOTOS: Stars take Toronto!


NYC: Director John Krokidas will be hosting Q&As at Landmark Sunshine & Walter Reade Theaters this weekend.


LA: Dane DeHaan will be hosting a Q&A at Arclight Cinemas.


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/entertainment/news/daniel-radcliffe-on-the-script-hes-written-its-a-very-dark-comedy-20131910
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Kerry lauds Pakistan as important US partner

Secretary of State John Kerry meets with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif at the State Department in Washington, Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)







Secretary of State John Kerry meets with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif at the State Department in Washington, Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)







Secretary of State John Kerry shake hands with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif prior to their meeting at the State Department in Washington, Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)







(AP) — America's top diplomat says the U.S. relationship with Pakistan "could not be more important" as the Islamic republic grapples with economic and security woes and regional stability.

Secretary of State John Kerry spoke Sunday as he sat down with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who is in Washington this week for talks with the White House.

Kerry declined to answer questions after brief remarks to reporters at the State Department. But U.S. officials say the Obama administration is posed to release more than $1.6 billion in military and economic aid to help bolster ties with Islamabad that have deteriorated over deadly American airstrikes and the 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.

"We have a lot to talk about, and the relationship with Pakistan could not be more important," Kerry said as his meeting with Sharif began. "On its own, (Pakistan is) a democracy that is working hard to gets its economy moving and deal with insurgency, and also important to the regional stability."

Sharif did not speak during the brief session with reporters.

The two men met over dinner, shortly before Kerry planned to head to Europe for peace talks for Syria and between Israel and Palestinian authorities.

He will be meeting with foreign ministers in Paris, London and Rome before returning to Washington on Thursday.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-20-US-Kerry-Pakistan/id-c23c954430a7459f8b552cfa6677f614
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

'Walking Dead' Predictions: Everyone Is 'Infected'


Is Daryl Dixon next to die? That's just one of our many predictions going into tonight's new 'Walking Dead.'


By Josh Wigler








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1715866/walking-dead-season-4-episode-2-infected-predictions.jhtml

Category: Case Keenum   Texas A&m Football   tim tebow   Whitey Bulger   the bachelorette  

Kris Humphries Auctions Off Kim Kardashian’s 16-Carat Engagement Ring!



1x1.trans Kris Humphries Auctions Off Kim Kardashians 16 Carat Engagement Ring!


Kris Humphries is washing his hands of ex-wife Kim Kardashian and sold her massive engagement ring at an auction for $749,000.


The NBA player sold the 16-carat engagement ring he proposed to Kim with at Christie’s house auction in their “Magnificent Jewels” category.



A spokesperson for the auction house released a statement, saying the Lorraine Schwartz emerald-cut bauble “saw active participation in the room, on the phone banks, and from Christie’s LIVE. This impressive diamond ring was sought out by two bidders in the back of the room, one online bidder, and was ultimately won by a bidder on the phone.”


Kris Humphries, who now plays for the Boston Celtics, married the reality star on August 20th 2011 and they infamously split just 72 days later. Of course, their divorce wasn’t finalized until June 2013 when she was already pregnant with Kanye West’s baby.


1x1.trans Kris Humphries Auctions Off Kim Kardashians 16 Carat Engagement Ring!


Kris’ rep said in a statement, “Kris is very pleased with the final result.”


Kris will give a portion of the money to a charity, according to his lawyer.


He adds, “I’m not sure if the ring or its sale helps with the process of moving on. I think he moved on long before the ring was even put into the auction. Kris, being an athlete, is getting ready for an upcoming seasons and ready for life’s lessons as they come along. This whole process was humbling but maturing.”


Kim Kardashian has definitely moved on and welcomed daughter North West with Kanye on June 15, 2013.


Click thumbnails for larger pictures



Images: wenn.com


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/stupidcelebrities/~3/srKoSqQpn7M/
Category: NFL Network   vince young   twerk   vanessa hudgens   antigua  

Costly cigarettes and smoke-free homes

Costly cigarettes and smoke-free homes


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

17-Oct-2013



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Contact: Scott LaFee
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619-543-6163
University of California - San Diego



Researchers find both effectively reduce tobacco consumption among low-income smokers



Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine say high-priced cigarettes and smoke-free homes effectively reduce smoking behaviors among low-income individuals a demographic in which tobacco use has remained comparatively high.


Writing in the October 17, 2013 issue of the American Journal of Public Health, principal investigator John P. Pierce, PhD, professor and director of population sciences at UC San Diego School of Medicine, and colleagues found that expensive cigarettes $4.50 or more per pack were associated with lower consumption across all levels.


"Living in a state where the average price paid for cigarettes is low ($3.20 or less per pack) means that all smokers, regardless of income, will smoke a lot more than those who live in a state with higher prices," said Pierce. "This is the case for those living below the federal poverty level as well as for the wealthy."


When smokers agreed to a smoke-free home, not only were they more likely to reduce their smoking but, in addition, if they quit, they were less likely to relapse.


"Price is a deterrent to smoking," said Pierce, "but successful quitting (90 or more days) was associated in this study only with a smoke-free home."


The challenge to anti-smoking groups is that low-income smokers are less likely to adopt a smoke-free home environment. Pierce offered several possible explanations: "First, there's a higher prevalence of smoking in people with lower incomes, which means that there will be more spouses who smoke as well. When both adults smoke, there is much lower motivation to introduce a smoke-free home. Also, social norms against smoking have historically been lower in those with lower incomes.


"No one is mandating a smoke-free home," Pierce continued. "We are telling people that if they really want to quit, then introducing a smoke-free home will help them be successful. This study supports the current policy of increasing (cigarette) prices and building social norms that protect against secondhand smoke. These policies will reduce consumption among all smokers reducing potential harm and the ensuing smoke-free homes will help smokers quit successfully."


The findings are derived from the 2006-2007 Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey, a monthly nationally representative cross-sectional survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. The researchers analyzed three sets of supplement data containing responses from more than 150,000 participants aged 18 and older who self-reported both income and smoking habits.


Maya Vijayaraghavan, MD, assistant clinical professor in the Department of Family and Preventive medicine and the study's first author, said one potential avenue for intervention was to increase regulation of secondhand smoke in public housing.


"This may change norms around smoking among low-income populations living in public housing," Vijayaraghavan said. "What is important is that clinicians need to emphasize social norms concerning tobacco use and should encourage and discuss strategies for adopting smoke-free homes among all smokers. Additionally, there is a lot of interest in raising cigarette price to reduce smoking. While we have evidence that moderate increases reduce smoking behavior in all income groups, it is important to match such a policy with support to help lower income smokers to quit successfully."


###

Study co-authors include Karen Messer and Martha M. White, both at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.


Funding support for this study came, in part, from UC Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program grants 18CA-0134 and 21RT-0135.



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Costly cigarettes and smoke-free homes


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

17-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Scott LaFee
slafee@ucsd.edu
619-543-6163
University of California - San Diego



Researchers find both effectively reduce tobacco consumption among low-income smokers



Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine say high-priced cigarettes and smoke-free homes effectively reduce smoking behaviors among low-income individuals a demographic in which tobacco use has remained comparatively high.


Writing in the October 17, 2013 issue of the American Journal of Public Health, principal investigator John P. Pierce, PhD, professor and director of population sciences at UC San Diego School of Medicine, and colleagues found that expensive cigarettes $4.50 or more per pack were associated with lower consumption across all levels.


"Living in a state where the average price paid for cigarettes is low ($3.20 or less per pack) means that all smokers, regardless of income, will smoke a lot more than those who live in a state with higher prices," said Pierce. "This is the case for those living below the federal poverty level as well as for the wealthy."


When smokers agreed to a smoke-free home, not only were they more likely to reduce their smoking but, in addition, if they quit, they were less likely to relapse.


"Price is a deterrent to smoking," said Pierce, "but successful quitting (90 or more days) was associated in this study only with a smoke-free home."


The challenge to anti-smoking groups is that low-income smokers are less likely to adopt a smoke-free home environment. Pierce offered several possible explanations: "First, there's a higher prevalence of smoking in people with lower incomes, which means that there will be more spouses who smoke as well. When both adults smoke, there is much lower motivation to introduce a smoke-free home. Also, social norms against smoking have historically been lower in those with lower incomes.


"No one is mandating a smoke-free home," Pierce continued. "We are telling people that if they really want to quit, then introducing a smoke-free home will help them be successful. This study supports the current policy of increasing (cigarette) prices and building social norms that protect against secondhand smoke. These policies will reduce consumption among all smokers reducing potential harm and the ensuing smoke-free homes will help smokers quit successfully."


The findings are derived from the 2006-2007 Tobacco Use Supplement to the Current Population Survey, a monthly nationally representative cross-sectional survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. The researchers analyzed three sets of supplement data containing responses from more than 150,000 participants aged 18 and older who self-reported both income and smoking habits.


Maya Vijayaraghavan, MD, assistant clinical professor in the Department of Family and Preventive medicine and the study's first author, said one potential avenue for intervention was to increase regulation of secondhand smoke in public housing.


"This may change norms around smoking among low-income populations living in public housing," Vijayaraghavan said. "What is important is that clinicians need to emphasize social norms concerning tobacco use and should encourage and discuss strategies for adopting smoke-free homes among all smokers. Additionally, there is a lot of interest in raising cigarette price to reduce smoking. While we have evidence that moderate increases reduce smoking behavior in all income groups, it is important to match such a policy with support to help lower income smokers to quit successfully."


###

Study co-authors include Karen Messer and Martha M. White, both at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.


Funding support for this study came, in part, from UC Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program grants 18CA-0134 and 21RT-0135.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoc--cca101513.php
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Kendall and Kylie Jenner -- Someone's a Liar


Kendall and Kylie Jenner
Someone's a Liar



Exclusive


1017-kylie-kendall-car-ability2
Kendall and Kylie Jenner NEVER flashed phony IDs at the doorman for the 21-and-over club they partied at Tuesday night ... so claim Jenner family sources.

This squarely contradicts the manager of Vignette lounge, who says the girls -- ages 16 and 17 -- ABSOLUTELY presented fake IDs at the door. 

The Jenner sources say the doorman recognized the 2 girls ... he knew exactly who they were ... and let them in without asking anything about proof of age.

The Jenner sources also say the girls had no idea the club was 21 and older.  The sources could not explain how Scott Disick and Khloe Kardashian -- who escorted Kendall and Kylie into the club -- could possibly have no idea the girls weren't old enough to legally get in.







NOTE: Poll results are not scientific and reflect the opinions of only those users who chose to participate. Poll results are not reflected in real time.


Back to Poll Results






The sources were also mum on the photo of Kendall and Kylie -- looking wasted as they sat in the back seat of their SUV as they left the club just before 2 AM.

So we gotta ask ...

1017_jenner_sisters_footer





Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/10/17/kendall-and-kylie-jenner-underage-nightclub-vignette-lounge-fake-ids/
Category: Texas A&m   christina milian   national coffee day   9/11   cote de pablo  

The First Pink Is The New Blog Baby Has Been Born



The TV Guide





At last! Our very own Shannon FINALLY gave birth to the baby she’s been carrying around in her adorable baby bump, bringing into the world the very first Pink is the new Blog baby! Shannon texted me early this morning to share the good news and authorized me to pass along the info with all y’all. Her baby was born earlier today happily and healthily. As you may recall, Shannon informed us from the start that she did not want to know the sex of her baby until she gave birth. Click below to find out if Shannon had a baby girl or a baby boy.





Yep, it’s a boy. I know there were a lot of folks out there hoping that Shannon would have a baby girl but all I wanted was for Shannon to give birth to a healthy baby of either sex. I guess our girl is destined to be surrounded by adorable little men ;) Thus far, we don’t know what she decided to name her baby boy but I’m sure she will let us all know when she’s ready. I hope you’ll join me in sending all of our LURVE and congrats to Shannon today. Hopefully she is sleeping right now (and NOT reading PITNB). Pink is the new Baby Boy — can you believe it?!

:)




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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pinkisthenewblog/~3/kH7LsdwIRvo/the-first-pink-is-the-new-blog-baby-has-been-born
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Jackie Chan Supports Documentary Exposing Illegal Wildlife Trade



Vern Evans Photography for WildAid


Jackie Chan



TORONTO – Hong Kong action superstar Jackie Chan has joined the fight against the slaughter of elephants for ivory products by throwing his support behind the Canada-Germany co-production Gambling on Extinction.



The documentary, from Real to Reel Productions and German partner a&o buero filmproduktion, investigates the illegal trade of wildlife products, including ivory, rhino horn and tiger parts.


PHOTOS: From Bill Clinton to Ryan Seacrest: 17 of Hollywood's Biggest Philanthropists


"Everyone should dispel the myths that ivory jewelry and carvings are made from tusks that have fallen off the elephant or from elephants that have died of natural causes," Chan said in a statement issued on Friday by the film's producers.


"This is simply not true. Elephants are being hunted and killed for their tusks. The only way to stop the slaughter is to cut the demand. We are all consumers, so we can all make a difference," he added.


“I know Jackie supports many worthy causes, and we, along with our German partners at a&o buero, couldn't be happier about his support for our film and this international wildlife crisis," said Real to Reel producer Anne Pick in her own statement.


Gambling on Extinction sees German filmmaker Jakob Kneser travel across Africa and Southeast Asia to jungles and trading hubs to expose the major players feeding and opposing the illegal wildlife products business.


Pick and Tristan Chytroschek are producing.


Gambling on Extinction has already been sold to ZDF in Germany, W5 and Animal Planet in Canada, France's ARTE, SBS in Australia and Sweden's SVT.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/international/~3/er3ZQn4IA88/story01.htm
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

This charming man? Morrissey book climbs charts

LONDON (AP) — The new book by British singer Morrissey is a classic. It says so right on the cover.


The memoir from the former frontman of The Smiths — titled simply "Autobiography" — is the first rock bio published under the venerable Penguin Classics imprint, home to Aeschylus, Jane Austen and Oscar Wilde. Morrissey has said he insisted on the "classic" label as a condition of signing with Penguin.


That has horrified some people in the publishing industry, but not the singer's many fans, who drove the book to the top of Amazon's U.K. chart the day after it was published Thursday.


Jon Howells, spokesman for the Waterstones book store chain, said Friday that the book is destined to be a Christmas-season best-seller.


"In Britain, he is one of our icons," Howells said. "His is the great untold story from the '80s generation of music heroes."


The Smiths and their enigmatic, gladioli-waving singer had a huge impact in 1980s Britain with alternately giddy and melancholy songs such as "How Soon is Now" and "This Charming Man." They weren't quite so popular in the United States, where "Autobiography" does not yet have a publisher.


The quartet broke up in 1987, and Morrissey has used up some of his fans' goodwill with increasingly curmudgeonly pronouncements during his solo career.


"Autobiography" opens with a vivid, verbose evocation of Steven Patrick Morrissey's childhood as part of a sprawling Irish family in the damp, industrial northern English city of Manchester, and his awakening to the bright joys of pop music.


Fans will find mordant wit and evocative turns of phrase, while critics will see boundless self-indulgence and the absence of an editor's trimming hand in the 457-page, single-chapter volume.


Reviewers have been sharply divided. Rock critic Neil McCormack gave the book a five-star review in the Daily Telegraph, calling it "the best-written musical autobiography since Bob Dylan's 'Chronicles.'" But the Independent's literary editor, Boyd Tonkin, tired of Morrissey's "droning narcissism" and "puerile litany of grievances."


Fans though, will likely lap up the personal insights from a musician, now 54, who has long avoided talking about his private life. Morrissey has had periods of depression; he had his first serious relationship in his 30s, with a man he memorably describes as "an ex-schoolboy sadist with a flair for complicity"; he later discussed becoming a parent with a close female friend.


"Tina and I discuss the unthinkable act of producing a mewling miniature monster," writes Morrissey, ever the romantic.


There are encounters — often awkward — with other famous people, moments of drama, including a 2007 kidnapping attempt in Mexico, and episodes of the absurd. Morrissey says he was once invited to appear on the sitcom "Friends," where "I am requested to sing 'in a really depressing voice.'"


And there is the inevitable score-settling. The Smiths' former record label, Rough Trade, comes in for vitriol. So do the band's bassist and drummer, with whom Morrissey and guitarist Johnny Marr fought a bitter royalties battle, recounted at length.


A Smiths reunion seems unlikely. Morrissey reveals that Marr once suggested reforming the band. But the singer said no.


"Surviving The Smiths is not something that should be attempted twice," he writes.


___


Jill Lawless can be reached at http://Twitter.com/JillLawless


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/charming-man-morrissey-book-climbs-charts-122108963.html
Category: glee   iTunes   yom kippur   Blackboard   Lauren Silverman  

Google hints at Chromecast expansion as its apps go international


Google hints at Chromecast expansion with iOS and Android


With all of the focus on the imminent unveiling of a certain next-generation Nexus smartphone, another of Google's bestselling products could soon be set for a wider launch of its own. The company has begun lifting restrictions on the official Chromecast apps and is now allowing iOS and Android users outside of the US to download them for the first time. We've successfully installed the apps on our devices in the UK and Canada, while additional reports lend credibility to complete international rollout. The Chromecast still finds itself geographically challenged, but those who jumped on Amazon's offer of international shipping will welcome Google's decision to extend the availability of the apps. While we're expecting to see the Nexus 5 and Android 4.4 KitKat launch before the end of the month, we wouldn't be surprised if Google has a Chromecast surprise up its sleeve too.


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/19/google-chromecast-ios-android-app-expansion/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Apple's iPhone trade-in program hits UK retail stores from today


iPhone 5s review


Apple has offered online trade-ins for the last few years, and now it's bringing its in-store version across the pond to the UK. The fruity phone flinger is letting customers wander into one of the company's retail outlets, drop off their elderly hardware and walk out with credit for a replacement. Apple released the following statement, which should sound familiar to anyone who had already read the US version -- after all, all someone did was add the phrase "in the UK" to the text.



"iPhones hold great value. So, Apple Retail Stores in the UK are launching a new program to assist customers who wish to bring in their previous-generation iPhone for reuse or recycling. In addition to helping support the environment, customers will be able to receive a credit for their returned phone that they can use toward the purchase of a new iPhone."



Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/14/apple-iphone-trade-in-program-uk-reuse-recycle-store-retail/?ncid=rss_truncated
Category: 9/11   Ezra Is A   Jana Lutteropp   bradley manning   Chromecast  

Watch: Britney Spears Gets Animated With Alan Carr On ‘Chatty Man’







Britney Gets 'Chatty' With Alan Carr






Britney Spears, who spent a couple of days in London this week doing promo for her new album Britney Jean and her upcoming Las Vegas residency Piece of Me, is already back home in the US but last night she appeared on British TV in an interview she taped with Alan Carr on his brilliant talk show Chatty Man. For the most part, Britney was cute and endearing in the interview with only a few places where she got a bit awkward … but hey, it’s been a long time since she’s made herself available for these kinds of interviews so I can forgive her for being a bit rusty. Chatty Man is such a great show, I wish we were able to watch it here in the US (and NO, I’m not interested in an American version of the show … I want Austin Powers Alan Carr or nothing at all). Click the embed above to watch part 1 of Britney‘s interview with Alan on Chatty Man then click below to watch the rest of the interview segments. If you watch anything at all, it MUST be part 3 of this interview below. WORK BITCH!





Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pinkisthenewblog/~3/4KBY6RcUj_E/watch-britney-spears-gets-animated-with-alan-carr-on-chatty-man
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The Psychology of Barack Obama


In 1972, Duke University professor James David Barber brought out a book that immediately was heralded as a seminal study of presidential character. Titled The Presidential Character: Predicting Performance in the White House, the book looked at qualities of temperament and personality in assessing how the country’s chief executives approached the presidency—and how that in turn contributed to their success or failure in the office.






Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/16/the_psychology_of_barack_obama_317996.html
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'Captain Phillips' And The Terrible Excitement Of Real Action





Tom Hanks and Barkhad Abdirahman share close quarters in Captain Phillips.



Columbia Pictures


Tom Hanks and Barkhad Abdirahman share close quarters in Captain Phillips.


Columbia Pictures


Captain Phillips, Paul Greengrass' tense movie about the April 2009 hijacking of the freighter Maersk Alabama by four Somali pirates, is a love song to the patience-through-overwhelming-fire-superiority of the U.S. military.


Unless, of course, it's a Dog Day Afternoon-style chronicle of the final days of a few sympathetically inept criminals who want money, not blood, but who end up dead anyway. What's empirical is that the film spends more screen time on the hapless, teenage pirates than on any of its other characters, save for Richard Phillips himself — played by America's everydad, Tom Hanks, whose next role will be that of Walt Disney.


Like last year's Zero Dark Thirty, Greengrass' new movie is Based On A True Story and climaxes with a successful operation by Navy SEALs, those precision instruments that we rightly revere. And while Captain Phillips tells a far simpler story, covering days rather than years, both films strike me as Rorschach blots onto which anyone can project individual beliefs about how and when America swings its big stick.


Except­ — and I'll label this paragraph as a spoiler, mostly because Dana Stevens considered it as such in her Slate review — Captain Phillips doesn't quite end with the SEALs grimly/awesomely taking care of business. It takes an extra few minutes, after the Navy has rescued Phillips from his captors, to show us see how exhausted, frightened, and sickened he is by the ordeal — and no one is likely to mistake that response for ingratitude. Maybe those tears Jessica Chastain shed in the last shot of Zero Dark Thirty were for our national soul (I doubt it), but I don't think this pair of scenes, wherein Phillips is too drained to speak, walk unassisted or do anything other than howl and weep is intended as a metaphor for anything.


Unlike the concurrent Gravity, which brilliantly sustains tension by never cutting away from its protagonist, Captain Phillips lets us in on the turning of wheels to which neither Phillips nor his opponent/captor, the pirate leader Abdulwali Abdukhad Muse (Barkhad Abdi, giving a performance at least as persuasive as Hanks'), are privy. That lower left-hand corner of the screen keeps flashing datelines. Interchangeable Naval personnel give and receive orders via radio. We see the SEALs board their plane in Virginia to fly halfway around the world and skydive into the Indian Ocean, where three naval warships have converged to block the pirates from escaping to Somalia with Phillips as their hostage. (The SEAL team leader is played by Max Martini, whose freakishly right-angular jaw has damned him to be cast only as soldiers or cops. It's a weird problem for a guy whose name literally means "peak capacity fancy cocktails" to have.)


The SEALs' arrival by parachute is as it happened in real life. Still, it must be expensive to film a parachuting sequence, and this one is brief and unspectacular — so why is it in the movie? Is Greengrass trying to underline the vast expense the U.S. will accept to send the message that if you mess with one 55-year-old Merchant Marine seaman from Vermont, you mess with us all? Or, more likely, that disruption of the shipping lanes will not be tolerated? This incident was the first (briefly) successful hijacking of an American ship in 200 years. Few that get taken have the benefit of such a response, a fact the film seems to acknowledge with a single line, conveyed via radio from an Admiral whose face we never see.


When the eroding hostage negotiation is suddenly resolved by three snipers' bullets in three pirates' heads, Greengrass presents it as a moment of horror, not of triumph. It plays like a moral counterweight to news reports like this one, which celebrated the SEALs' marksmanship as a feat of athleticism — which, let's not kid ourselves, it was. (The lifeboat Phillips was taken captive in is on display at the Navy SEAL museum in Fort Pierce, Florida.)


Nothing about Captain Phillips smacks of exploitation. By casting Hanks as the curt but honorable captain, Greengrass has spared us any further intervention to make the "character" more "likeable." Still, I'm never sure how much I'm supposed to enjoy depictions of recent tragedies, even ones as seriously and well-made as this.


Greengrass has earned the freedom to do more or less what he wants, having made the second and third films in the have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too Bourne series — high-end popcorn movies that at once condemn and delight in mayhem. (As the soulfully amnesiac super-assassin Jason Bourne, Matt Damon never looks like he's enjoying all that kneecap shattering and windpipe punching, which makes us feel better about enjoying it.) He started his career as a documentarian, and he continues to make documentary-ish films like this one.


I doubt this can be said of Greengrass' United 93 — despite its sterling critical reputation, I've never been able to bring myself to watch it — but Captain Phillips offers substantial entertainment value. I don't recall any jokes, but there are a couple of expertly staged action scenes. A sequence wherein the crew of the Maersk Alabama uses fire hoses and evasive maneuvers to try to prevent the pirates from affixing a ladder to the hull and climbing aboard, is, with apologies to John Woo and my beloved James Bond franchise, the only exciting boat chase in any movie, ever. Surely it's okay to feel caught up in moments like these.


Ridley Scott's film Black Hawk Down was the first film I can recall to trigger this queasiness. Based on Mark Bowden's superb nonfiction book about the a botched 1993 attempt to capture a Somali warlord—resulting in an all-night firefight that left 18 U.S. soldiers and hundreds of Somalis dead — the movie was made before, but released soon after, 9/11. Like the book, the film expresses awe at the talents of U.S. Special Forces operators (the Army's Delta Force in this case, not the SEALs), even as it depicts a failed mission. The film retains some of Bowden's observations about the workplace culture of the elite sections of the Army, and a little bit of his geopolitical analysis. But it's overwhelmingly a war movie, an action movie. In translating Bowden's 486-page prose account to the most visceral story medium, Scott can't help but trivialize the event somehow.


Captain Phillips doesn't do that. There's something appealingly 1970s-like in its refusal to editorialize. It can afford its humanism because Phillips lived to write a book. It has patience, albeit through overwhelming fire superiority.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2013/10/15/234676998/captain-phillips-and-the-terrible-excitement-of-real-action?ft=1&f=1008
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