truesee's Blog

Palin gave $87,500 to candidates

FEC filing shows Palin gave $87,500 to candidates

FILE - In this June 29, 2010 file photo, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin speaks to the crowd at the P.U.R.E. Ministries in Duluth, Ga. Palin has put her money where her mouth is, contributing at least $87,500 to candidates she's endorsed in the last few months. (AP Photo/Erik S. Lesser, File) FILE - In this June 29, 2010 file photo, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin speaks to the crowd at the P.U.R.E. Ministries in Duluth, Ga. Palin has put her money where her mouth is, contributing at least $87,500 to candidates she's endorsed in the last few months. (AP Photo/Erik S. Lesser, File) (Erik S. Lesser - AP)
   

 

 
 
BECKY BOHRER       
The Associated Press
Sunday, July 11, 2010; 9:12 PM

 

 

JUNEAU, Alaska -- Sarah Palin's political action committee contributed at least $87,500 to candidates she's endorsed in the last few months, according to a report filed Sunday with the Federal Elections Commission.

But SarahPAC's financial disclosure also shows Palin spending more than $210,000 on consulting.

Candidates receiving money from Palin for the period covering April 1 to June 30 include former Gov. Terry Branstad, who won last month's Republican gubernatorial primary in Iowa, and Joe Miller, who's challenging Alaska U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski in the August GOP primary. Each received $5,000.

Among Palin's other high-profile endorsements, Republican Carly Fiorina, who's running for the U.S. Senate from California, received $2,500.

Sharron Angle, who's challenging U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in Nevada, also got $2,500. Nikki Haley, who's running for governor in South Carolina and for whom Palin personally campaigned, got no money, according to the filings.

Palin entered the reporting period with more than $916,000 on hand. She received more than $865,800 in contributions, and ended the period with more than $1 million on hand, according to the filings.

That leaves her with more than $1 million to help campaigns this year, PAC treasurer Tim Crawford said.

"We're going to really help a lot of Republican candidates get a chance to win," he said. "And I'm glad we have the resources there for the governor to use."

Palin, the 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee, has been mentioned as a possible contender for the 2012 presidential nomination. She hasn't ruled out a bid but aides have maintained her focus is on this year's elections and on getting conservative candidates elected.

While Palin has supported tea party favorites like Angle across the country, her endorsement of the more mainstream Branstad was seen as a pragmatic pick.

If Branstad wins this fall, he'll be a highly sought-after political ally among 2012 Republican presidential hopefuls, given Iowa's historical role in hosting the leadoff caucuses in the nomination process.

It's been a whirlwind year for Palin. Last July, she resigned midway through her first term as Alaska governor amid a barrage of ethics complaints and media scrutiny that followed her home after the 2008 election. Most of the complaints ultimately were dismissed.

In announcing her resignation, she said she'd take the unconventional route in advocating for less government, individual rights and energy independence. Palin also said she'd support like-minded candidates, and she's become a political phenomenon whose support - and celebrity - are actively sought by candidates.

Sunday's FEC report included consulting fees for grassroots and communication, media, national and foreign affairs, and coalitions consulting.

Additional spending went toward air travel, car rentals and lodging, postage and mailings, and cell phones.

Entry #2,669

Black voters still support Obama but are ambivalent about midterm elections

Black voters still support Obama but are ambivalent about midterm elections

                                                                                                                      Nia-Malika Henderson and Perry Bacon Jr.

Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, July 11, 2010

 

 

KANSAS CITY, MO. -- Curtis Adams, who owns Curtis A's barbershop here and who is also the establishment's senior political analyst, is a close observer of President Obama. This is something of a full-time job itself at Curtis A's, a gathering place in a black neighborhood five miles from downtown. All day every day, men (and occasionally women) come for a trim and wind up lingering to argue about jobs and the oil spill and the war in Iraq.

But mostly jobs. "If Obama was in this chair right here, I would tell him to give me a job. That's what I would ask for," said customer E.J. Jones one recent afternoon. Jones has worked off and on since he was let go from an Army ammunition plant in 2008.

The recession was especially rough on Kansas City's black community, where unemployment is 15 percent, nearly three times the rate for whites. Adams pointed to the empty chairs in his shop. He's down 75 customers a week. Of Obama, he said: "That man has a hell of a workload, and Bush left a hell of a mess. I like what he's doing. But I can't feel it."

Despite his frustration with the slow pace of the recovery, Adams, who has portraits of the first family on the walls of his shop, doesn't think Obama bears the blame for his troubles. And neither do most black Americans. Just the opposite: Polls show that 90 percent of African Americans believe Obama is doing a good job, far higher than the president's overall 46 percent approval rating. Obama's popularity has dropped among nearly every segment of the population -- old, young, Republican, Democrat, white, Latino. Yet blacks still overwhelmingly support him, even though they are among those who have lost the most since he was elected.

"We understand the difficulty of being a black man in his position, because of our close proximity to race and how it affects our lives, so we are willing to give him the benefit of the doubt," said Rodney Knott, who runs a fatherhood initiative and blogs on local issues. "Black folks are taking this personal because we identify with him so much. It's like somebody in our family. I can talk about them, but you better not."

Airick Leonard West, who heads the Kansas City School Board, agrees. "Maybe other people thought he had a magic wand and went to Hogwarts and thought, 'Oh, he's black so he's going to help all the black people,' " he said. "If that's what you're looking for, that ain't coming."

The political potential to be found in devotion this deep is very much on the minds of a president and a Democratic Party anxious about losing control of the House or Senate in the fall. When Obama administration and Democratic officials travel here this week to address the annual convention of the NAACP, they will be looking for ways to turn black enthusiasm for the president into votes for his party.

That is no simple thing. The loyalty many blacks feel to Obama does not always spill over to other Democratic candidates.

Take Missouri, where blacks make up about 12 percent of the population. Obama narrowly lost the state in 2008, although blacks turned out in record numbers. This year, Missouri's secretary of state, Democrat Robin Carnahan, is running to replace retiring Republican Sen. Christopher S. Bond. Carnahan is unlikely to win, however, unless black voters once again rush out to the polls. Without Obama on the ballot, Democratic strategists are having a difficult time generating much interest among blacks. Last week, the president held a rally for Carnahan and attended a fundraiser for her campaign. But in conversations with several African Americans here, support for Carnahan seemed lukewarm at best.

"I am just starting to tune in" to the campaign, said Jamekia Kendrix, 31, who has seen several homes foreclosed on her block. She had more to say about Obama. She said she voted for him and still strongly supports him, though she wishes he would spend more on education and reviving the economy and less on war. "He is doing the best he can," she said. "He's not always going to do what I think he should."

Cornell Belcher, a Democratic pollster, warned that not even politically engaged black voters like Kendrix are necessarily going to turn out for Democrats in the fall. "These are Obama voters. These are not Democratic voters," he said. "They are leaning toward Democrats in their views, but these surge voters are not a part of the traditional Democratic voting bloc. That's the big X factor here. We can't turn surge voters out by two weeks of black radio."

To that end, the Democratic National Committee has launched a $50 million nationwide effort to try to lure these "surge voters" back to the polls in November.

As the Democrats worry about this fall, Obama's strategists are looking to 2012.

Prominent black public figures such as commentator Tavis Smiley and scholar Michael Eric Dyson have accused Obama of not doing enough to create jobs in black communities. And some black academics are looking more critically at Obama's reluctance to talk about race.

"I'm not saying he should say, 'Here's the black agenda.' That would be political suicide," said John Powell, executive director of the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at Ohio State University. "But I think he needs to help people understand to be mindful of these things. His strategy seems to be, 'Let's be colorblind, let's ignore it.' "

Andra Gillespie, a political scientist at Emory University, said that the intellectual elite will probably grow more critical of Obama and that support among working-class blacks could falter.

"People are contrasting Obama to the prior administration, so they are inclined to support him even if they disagree with him," Gillespie said. "But if they think they haven't seen enough in terms of jobs, or reducing inequality, that's where fair criticism might come in and support could start to decline."

Here in Kansas City, Knott isn't so sure. No matter how bad the economy is, or how many people can't find work, he believes most African Americans will stick with Obama. Before blacks reject the president, he said, "he would have to reject us first."

Bacon reported from Washington. Polling analyst Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.

Entry #2,668

Man loses drinking bet agrees to have leg set on...

Naked man hospitalized after drinking game leads to prosthetic leg being set aflame

 

(5 p.m.)

Sun-News report


Las Cruces Sun-News

Posted:07/09/2010 04:55:12 PM MDT

 

LAS CRUCES - A 47-year-old Dona Ana County man is in a Texas burn center after a drinking game left him nude on the side of the highway with his prosthetic leg in flames.

Sheriff's deputies learned that the victim and friends were drinking Monday and had made a bet that whoever drank the least would be set on fire, according to a news release.

The victim told investigators that since he drank only six beers, the least amount, he agreed to let his friends set him on fire.

The victim, who has a prosthetic left leg made of plastic, said his friends set his leg on fire, which spread to his buttocks and lower back area, causing severe burns.

Not being able to stand the pain, the victim disrobed. His friends then decided to take him to the hospital but became "nervous and dropped the victim off" on U.S. 70, the release said.

Witnesses reported seeing an individual walking on a U.S. 70 bridge with his leg on fire. Another witness reported that the victim was naked, while other witnesses reported that the victim was struck by two cars and even attempted to jump into passing vehicles as well into the path of an oncoming tractor-trailer.

When questioned by deputies if he had asked his friends to stop at any point in time while setting him on fire, he stated "no, he lost the bet" and therefore did not attempt to stop them.

The man was taken from MountainView Regional Hospital to a Texas burn treatment center.

Read Saturday's Las Cruces Sun-News in print and online for more on this story.

Entry #2,666

Liberals analyze their Obama 'despair'

 

Liberals analyze their Obama 'despair'
Abby Phillip
July 10, 2010 05:38 PM EDT

 

Barack Obama is pictured. | AP Photo
Many liberals are disappointed with President Barack Obama’s ability to deliver on his campaign promises. AP

 

 

For many liberals, it is the summer of their discontent.

Already disappointed with President Barack Obama’s ability to deliver on campaign promises, they now contemplate a slowing economic recovery and a good chance of Republican gains in November. Such developments would make enacting Obama’s agenda even more difficult.

Two recent essays framed the debate raging within the progressive community over why the promise of Obama’s candidacy has not lived up to their expectations — and how liberals should proceed in what they fear will be difficult months ahead.

In a 17,000-plus word piece published in The Nation on Thursday, journalist Eric Alterman calls the Obama presidency “a big disappointment” for progressives and blamed a broken system in Washington that he says allows the minority party to rule with impunity, and special interests and big money to dictate legislative policy.

“Face it,” he concludes, “the system is rigged, and it’s rigged against us.” His essay is subtitled: “Why a progressive presidency is impossible for now.”

But writing in Democracy: A Journal of Ideas, Michael Tomasky, the editor, counsels patience, arguing that American history has shown that change always takes time and continued effort against entrenched conservative opposition.

“The changes we want to see won’t happen in 18 months, or in two years, or four, or probably even eight,” he concludes in his article, “Against Despair.”

The essays suggest it is a time of reckoning for a liberal community whose relationship with Obama has had a series of ups and downs since the climactic moment of hope and expectation when he claimed the presidency in Chicago’s Grant Park on Nov. 4th, 2008.

“It’s not just really about Obama, it’s about the state of our country. Every day, you have a sense that people are wondering where this country is headed,” says Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher of The Nation.

The elation of that night in 2008 quickly gave way to the realization that the Number One issue, the economy, and the ensuing fight over an $800 billion stimulus bill, would make Obama's agenda different from the one he had described in his campaign.

From the beginning, the stimulus bill was viewed as containing too many compromises in a futile attempt to garner Republican support. Economist and columnist Paul Krugman led the charge, arguing that the bill was not ambitious enough, containing too many tax cuts and not enough funding for infrastructure projects.

But the bill’s $800 billion price tag created a toxic environment for congressional Democrats when they began the long debate over health care, and many liberals viewed Obama’s compromises on the legislation as a betrayal. The low point may have been after the special election victory of Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) in January, when the possibility of any health care legislation seemed lost.

“It’s open season on Obama, whom so many hoped would lead us out of the neo-liberal wilderness,” Firedoglake blogger Les Leopold declared not long afterward. “He once was a community organizer and ought to know how working people have suffered through a generation of tax breaks for the rich, Wall Street deregulation and unfair competition. When the economy crashed, he was in the perfect position to limit the unjustified pay levels on Wall Street...”

“Instead, we got a multitrillion dollar bailout for Wall Street, no health care reform, no serious financial reforms whatsoever, record unemployment and political gridlock that will be with us for years to come.”

 

The bill’s passage was viewed as a major victory for the White House, but the reaction among progressives was mixed, at best. Only 10 days after the House bill passed, Tomasky writes, “things on the liberal side were more or less back to the dour normal.”

“It simply took too long to pass health care,” The Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. said. “What should have been seen as an important progressive victory didn’t feel like it was as much of a victory because it just took so long.”

But the worst seems yet to come.

“The bad economy creates a mood in which everything looks a bit more bleak than it did before,” Dionne said. “The economy helps to create the less-than-wonderful poll numbers for Democrats, and it conditions the national mood — and all of that affects the way that progressives feel.”

The list of grievances includes a slew of agenda items yet to be meaningfully addressed: a climate change bill, immigration reform, “don’t ask, don’t tell,” and the Employer Free Choice Act, not to mention a war in Afghanistan that many liberals oppose.

Yet, some of the blame that once was put squarely on Obama and his White House staff has now shifted to a broken system where congressional Republicans have exerted power that does not rightfully belong to them.

“Whatever the motivation, it has become easier and easier for a determined minority to throw sand in the gears of the legislative process,” Alterman writes. “It is therefore no coincidence that the 40 Republican senators with the ability to bottle up almost anything in the Senate represent barely a third of the U.S. population.”

Tomasky sees this shift as an inevitable one that will eventually bring liberals around to the realization that the great periods of change — Roosevelt’s New Deal and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society — took place after years of effort and many setbacks along the way.

Slower to come around to this view, Tomasky acknowledges, have been the vanguards of the liberal blogosphere: the Huffington Post, Firedoglake and, to an arguably lesser extent, The Daily Kos.

 

“People have to work through stages like that before they get to the point where they say that ‘this is not exactly what we thought it would be, but let’s just deal with it,’” Tomasky said in an interview with POLITICO. “I don’t know that the progressive community is at that stage yet, but people are getting there.”

Ironically, given the generally more pessimistic tone of his essay, Alterman sees a more immediate time of possibility than Tomasky — Obama’s second term, assuming there is one.

“This would be consistent with FDR’s strategy during his second term and makes a kind of sense when one considers the nature of the opposition he faces today and the likelihood that it will discredit itself following a takeover of one or both houses in 2010,” Alterman writes in his piece.

Still, others are wary of putting too much stock in the promise of 2012.

“I think that depends on what we build,” says Bob Borosage, president of the liberal Institute for America’s Future.

Borosage says that over the past 18 months, progressives have learned the hard way that they need to be more independent of the White House to realize the change that they are seeking.

The remedy for the problems that progressives face, Borosage says, lies in the need to create an equal and opposite force that can rival the enthusiasm of the tea party movement.

“If there is a progressive movement that is demanding change, driving the debate, challenging conservative Democrats and Republicans and challenging the White House, you might see a bolder agenda,” he says. “But it’s equally possible that this reform moment … that we miss it and conservatives come back with the same ideas they had when they drove us off a cliff.”

“It was always naive to expect a president to start a movement,” says Michael Kazin, a Georgetown University history professor and co-editor of the liberal magazine, Dissent. “It’s a little bit like expecting a chief executive to start a union.”

LINKS

17,000-plus word piece published in The Nation

http://www.thenation.com/print/article/37165/kabuki-democracy-why-progressive-presidency-impossible-now

 

Democracy: A Journal of Ideas

http://democracyjournal.org/article.php?ID=6760

Entry #2,665

Woman jailed for making threats ... to herself

July 9, 2010
3:00 p.m.

Woman jailed for making threats ... to herself

LARRY WELBORN

THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

SANTA ANA – A 25-year-old Santa Ana woman was sentenced to a year in jail Friday for sending hundreds of threatening text messages – to herself.

Jeanne Mundango Manunga's criminal problem was that she blamed the harassing text messages on an ex-boyfriend and his sister-in-law, and reported them to the police.

 

Article Tab : Jeanne Manunga

                                       Jeanne Manunga

 

 

They were arrested on false charges of making criminal threats and required to post thousands of dollars in bail. The sister-in-law was arrested three times, and spent some time in custody before she could gather enough funds to pay the bail on her third arrest.

A jury convicted Manunga of three felony counts of false imprisonment by fraud or deceit and two misdemeanor counts of making a false police report in May.

On Friday, Superior Court Judge Patrick H. Donahue sentenced Manunga to a year in jail, placed her on three years probation, told her to stay away from her ex-boyfriend and his sister-in-law, and ordered her to repay the victims about $50,000 in restitution.

Deputy District Attorney Mena Guirguis said that after Manunga and her former boyfriend stopped dating in 2008, she took out a pre-paid cell phone in his sister-in-law's name, and started sending the threatening text messages to her regular cell phone.

Manunga then went to three different police departments on at least 19 occasions and claimed that the ex-boyfriend and the sister-in-law were behind the threats.

Her scheme was uncovered when the victims went to the phone store, talked with the salesman and learned that Manunga had bought the pre-paid phone under the sister-in-law's name, Guirguis said.

They reported that information to a Costa Mesa police detective, but by then a third arrest warrant had been issued for the sister-in-law.

During a follow-up investigation, the detective discovered that most of the threatening text messages were sent when the pre-paid cell phone was in close proximity to Manjunga's home or work, Guirguis said.

At the sentencing hearing Friday, the two victims said they were devastated about being arrested on false charges, and worried about clearing their names.

Entry #2,664

2010 midterms most expensive with $1 billion already spent

2010 midterms will be most expensive in history with more than $1 billion in play

Sean J. Miller
07/09/10
08:02 PM ET

More than $1 billion has already been spent on the 2010 battle for Congress, which is expected to be the most expensive midterm election in history.

Interest groups riled up by the Obama administration's far-reaching legislative agenda of healthcare and Wall Street reform are pledging massive expenditures. Democratic strategists have been circulating a four-page memo that chronicles how Republican-leaning independent groups are set to spent $301.5 million this cycle.

Rich candidates are also fueling the political spending spree. Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina (R) has already funneled $5.5 million from her personal fortune into her Senate campaign and in Florida billionaire Jeff Greene (D) is expected to do the same in his race for the Democratic Senate nomination.

“We fully expect this will be the most expensive midterm election ever in U.S. history,” said Dave Levinthal, a spokesman for the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP). “Not only do we expect it to exceed the high water mark set in 2006, but this could very well obliterate that number when all is said and done.”

The 2006 midterms, which gave Democrats back control of the House and Senate, cost more than $2.8 billion, according to CRP estimates.

More than $1 billion has been spent on campaigning so far and the group estimates the 2010 elections will cost some $3.7 billion. Their estimate includes spending by Senate and House candidates, political parties, so-called 527 groups and independent expenditures on advertising and get-out-the-vote efforts by political action committees. And that number could climb.

“We wouldn’t be surprised at all if this is a $4 billion-plus election, particularly because of the Citizens United decision in January,” Levinthal said, citing the Supreme Court ruling that reversed the ban on independent expenditures by corporations and unions.

“Nobody has any good idea at this point come September, October, how much money companies and trade associations and unions are going to be pouring into television advertisements or radio advertisements now that they are allowed to spend unlimited sums directly from their treasury to advocate for or against any particular candidate,” he said.

The House recently has passed the Disclose Act, which could again restrict corporate and union spending, but it’s not clear if it will become law before the November vote.

This increase in political spending is more notable, Levinthal added, because it comes at a time when the country is reeling from a bad economy and rampant unemployment. “Comparatively, the 2006 election cycle was a time of economic milk and honey,” he said, noting there’s been a 30 percent increase in spending in the last four years. “There’s really no recession in politics.”

Much of the money is being driven by Congress's ambitious agenda. In the last 18 months, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) have tackled Wall Street reform, healthcare reform, energy policy and even campaign finance.

“Congress has been very ambitious,” Levinthal said. “The fact of the matter is there are a lot of folks out there who want to put dollars and sense behind their influence efforts and are doing just that.”

The largest expenditure from a Republican-leaning group is expected to be made by the Chamber of Commerce. 

The influential business group will spend some $75 million this cycle, according to the CRP. A spokesman for the Chamber would not confirm that figure, but noted that this Congress has addressed issues important to its membership.

“We have had some of the most important business issues come through this Congress and the Chamber will let voters know where their lawmakers stood on these issues,” said J.P. Fielder, a spokesman for the Chamber.

Political spending increases aren’t confined to one industry or one side of the political spectrum. “It’s across the board, from the very ideological special interest groups to the big industries in finance or energy or healthcare,” said Levinthal. “You’ve got to keep up with the Joneses in politics. And if one side is just bringing to bear every resource that they can, the other side, if they don’t do the same, does so at its own peril.”

Unions and progressive groups are also going to spend big this cycle. The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and the AFL-CIO plan to spend close to $100 million on the 2010 election, with most of those funds going to protect incumbents. EMILY’s List, which support pro-abortion-rights female candidates, will spend close to $43 million. In comparison, the Susan B. Anthony List (SBA), an anti-abortion-rights group that supports primarily female candidates, will spent close to $10 million.

Entry #2,663

Miami's image gets marketing sizzle with LeBron James

Miami's image gets marketing sizzle with LeBron James
E-mail | Save | Print | Reprints & Permissions | Subscribe to stories like this

Steve Mitchell

US Presswire

July 10, 2010 

 

The decision by LeBron James to join the Miami Heat has boosted the city's cultural profile.
The decision by LeBron James to join the Miami Heat has boosted the city's cultural profile.

Larry Busacca, Getty Images

 

LeBron James announced Thursday that he will play for the Miami Heat next season at the Boys & Girls Club of America in Greenwich, Conn.
LeBron James announced Thursday that he will play for the Miami Heat next season at the Boys & Girls Club of America in Greenwich, Conn.

Bruce Horovitz

USA TODAY

If Miami is the hot place now for marketers to embrace, LeBron James is the central heat source.But he's not all that's sizzling in Miami.

Miami's got South Beach chic. It's got Cuban cuisine. It's got celebs. It's got 23 miles of beaches. And while — with its real estate market still struggling — it's not back to its Miami Vice super cool days, Miami is increasingly a backdrop again for TV shows and movies. 

"Miami is on a very bullish, upward swing in American cultural consciousness," says Robert Thompson, professor of pop culture at Syracuse University. "But it's always competing with that stereotype as that place where your grandparents go to drive slow with their left turn signal on."

 Leading the cultural charge: 

• LeBron's leap. "Symbolically, LeBron has moved Miami onto a new stage," says Paul Swangard, managing director of the Warsaw Sports Marketing Center at University of Oregon. 

The former Cleveland Cavalier superstar's decision to spurn Cleveland for Miami has placed the tourist Mecca at the vortex of pop cultural chatter. James and Miami both ranked among the most popular Google searches and Twitter tweets the day after his announcement. 

The big stages for major sports figures have been New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, says Swangard. Now, he says, the addition of Miami to the mix "is reflective of the changing culture of the USA." 

• South Beach chic. James announced Thursday that he planned to "take my talents to South Beach." William Talbert, president of the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau says, "I could not have written that phrase better as a destination marker." The decision, he says, is worth "millions and millions" to the Greater Miami area." 

• Cuban cuisine. The popularity of the food now common in Miami — with an African, Spanish and Caribbean influence — has gone mainstream. Ingredients often include fresh fruits, veggies and seafood. "The food isn't overworked," says Andrew Wild, chef tournant at the Culinary Institute of America. "People like the bright, fresh ingredients — and the feeling that it's always summer." 

• Hollywood East. With LeBron's entrance — and local film incentives recently put in place — Miami Dade County expects filmmakers to spend a record $125 million in the county next year, estimates Jeff Peel, the county's film commissioner.

The hit TV shows CSI Miami and Burn Notice both are filmed there. Also, now that James will live in Miami, Peel expects the star's upcoming film project, Fantasy Basketball Camp, to be filmed there. 

• Celeb central. LeBron's got celeb company in Miami. It's home to Matt Damon, Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony and Gloria and Emilio Estefan. 

The celeb hotspot is LIV nightclub at the renovated Fontainebleau Resort hotel where Lady Gaga, Paris Hilton and Chris Brown have been spotted.

Entry #2,662

Getting fired is a good thing for some journalists

Christopher Buckley, David Weigel and Mike Barnicle are shown in this composite.
In a new media world, getting fired can turn out to be a good thing for some journalists.

The Politico

Losing a job to get ahead
Keach Hagey and Daniel Strauss
July 9, 2010 05:22 PM EDT

 

 

Two weeks almost to the minute after he resigned from his job blogging about the conservative movement for the Washington Post, David Weigel was back on the Washington Post Company payroll Friday morning, writing about the tea party for Slate

In the interim, Weigel himself noted in a piece in Esquire Thursday, more than 500 articles were written about him, his downfall after the leak of his emails disparaging some conservative leaders, and what it all means for journalism.

Whatever conclusions were drawn from these musings, the digital mob turned into a kind of digital mosh pit that carried a crowd-surfing Weigel on to his next destination. MSNBC immediately snapped him up as a contributor. Poynter brought Weigel together for a live web chat with Jay Rosen Friday afternoon. He’s writing a piece for Columbia Journalism Review, and guest blogging for Andrew Sullivan next week.

Which all begs the question: Did this whole thing actually help him? Is spectacular firing – or in this case, embattled resignation – possibly the best way to advance your journalism career in the digital age?

A string of recent comebacks by writers suggests this may be the case.

Take the case of Spencer Ackerman. In 2006, while at The New Republic, Ackerman wrote a blog on the side called Too Hot For TNR which used to sometimes criticize the magazine. According to Michael Calderone, then writing in the New York Observer, Ackerman once wrote “TNR’s webdesign software, very appropriately, is called Coma” and “all the cool kids hate TNR.” The New Republic’s editor, Franklin Foer, had clashed with Ackerman in the past, and after reading the comments set up meeting where he fired him on the spot.

Less than a day later, Ackerman was hired by the American Prospect as a senior correspondent, and the trajectory has been upward ever since. He’s had a blog at the Center for American Progress and FireDogLake, was a national security reporter for Talking Points Memo and the Washington Independent, and was recently hired for Wired’s Danger Room.

Or how about Christopher Buckley? The son of National Review founder William F. Buckley and the author of numerous books including “Thank You For Smoking,” Buckley wrote a column for the National Review until he wrote a piece for the Daily Beast titled, “Sorry, Dad, I’m Voting For Obama.”  Soon after the piece was published National Review received a flurry of criticism and Buckley was forced out as damage control. Buckley continued writing books and at the Daily Beast, his credentials, with liberals at least, greatly enhanced.

David Frum provides one of the most recent examples. After serving as editorial page editor at the Wall Street Journal and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, as well as a frequent contributor to National Public Radio, Frum became a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. While at AEI he founded NewMajority.com –now FrumForum.com – a site “dedicated to the modernization and renewal of the Republican party and the conservative movement” which includes political reporting and analysis.

 

During the healthcare reform debates, he wrote a post called “Waterloo” in which he criticized the Republican Party’s obstruction of passing a healthcare bill. The post garnered a lot of criticism from the right and soon after “Waterloo,” AEI fired Frum. Since then, FrumForum’s traffic has continued to grow and the site has increasingly become one of the primary destinations for conservative news and analysis.

And it’s not just writers. Cable news, the first venue to publicly scoop up Weigel after the Post debacle, has a long and storied history of rehabilitating careers. Where else could Mike Barnicle, who resigned from the Boston Globe amid plagiarism scandals, be reborn as a permanent fixture of the political American morning through his contributor position at MSNBC’s “Morning Joe”? Or could Eliot Spitzer, the former New York governor who resigned after being caught using prostitutes, become the co-anchor of CNN’s plum 8 p.m. hour?

Modern media is vicious, but sometimes also curiously forgiving.

Weigel, who is coy about where he’s headed for more permanent employment, is careful not to count his chickens just yet.

“I’m not doing a touchdown dance,” he told POLITICO. “I was much happier just keeping my head down, doing good work. But I’m lucky that people are coming to me, asking me to write stuff.”

Sometimes, as in the case of the Esquire piece, that stuff is about him, not his beat. Moments like these can make dizzyingly self-referential reading: “I had ceased to be a head-down reporter, I readied for my new life as a political football. This was Stage Two of a Media Firestorm,” he wrote in Esquire.

Stage Three, necessarily, involves a bit of over-sharing. But Weigel’s Stage 4 looks bright.

He admits he is enjoying his new life as “a Washington-based reporter and contributor for MSNBC,” as his Slate bio states, but adds, “It’s been tiresome having to talk about myself.”

 

Entry #2,660

The Tea Party Needs a Makeover

Building a more positive Tea Party?

David S. Broder
The Washington Post
Sunday, July 11, 2010

                                                                                                                    The Tea Party phenomenon is one of the significant puzzles of this year's politics -- exciting to some people and alarming to others. By placing it in the historical context of other populist movements, Henry Olsen of the American Enterprise Institute has helped define it -- and the important choice that Republicans now face.

This Story
  • A more positive Tea Party?
  • Dunking on the Tea Party
  • Tea Party time across the pond
  • The face of the Tea Party 

In an article in the summer issue of National Affairs and a follow-up interview, Olsen, who worked as a legislative staffer in California before joining three conservative think tanks, briefly reviews the checkered history of American populism.

Until the 1960s, it was mainly a phenomenon of the left -- led by such figures as Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, William Jennings Bryan and Franklin Roosevelt.

Conservative populism had an unsuccessful trial run in 1964 under Barry Goldwater but did not flourish until Ronald Reagan took on the Washington establishment in 1980. The differences between them were significant. Goldwater lost his presidential bid because "the tone and ideas of some of his extreme backers were viewed as odd and frightening by most voters, and the candidate's inability (or unwillingness) to disavow their words allowed [Lyndon] Johnson to paint Goldwater himself as odd and frightening," Olsen writes. "Instead of seeking to help honest folk restore the rights denied them by an adversary, too often Goldwater came across as wanting to lead victims in a violent battle against an implacable enemy."

Olsen, like many others, finds Reagan as his model. "Throughout his career, he minced no words when describing the threats to freedom and prosperity posed by unlimited, centralized government," Olsen says, "but when it came to his domestic opponents, Reagan avoided the classical-populist trap of vilifying his political adversaries as outright enemies."

"The populist spirit is back with a vengeance today," Olsen adds, fed partly by anger with Wall Street and partly by frustration with Washington. "Those who believe that the aggressive, angry pitch of the Tea Partiers' rhetoric will automatically alienate independent voters should think again. . . . Successful populist movements define adversaries in stark and often abrasive terms."

But this is not enough, he says, and it can be overdone. Bryan failed in part "because he made a majority afraid. Some libertarian populists, with their rejection of every facet of the modern welfare state, are likely to do the same -- because even this center-right nation does not want to see the welfare state dismantled." Republican Senate candidates in Kentucky and Nevada need to have those words imprinted on their brains.

The need for Republicans, then, is to do what Reagan did -- "to propose alternatives that offer a real change of direction without seeming too radical." He had an advantage that is too often overlooked. As the two-term governor of our most populous state, Reagan could answer those who viewed him as dangerous by pointing to the success he had achieved in managing California.

The new conservative populists, Olsen says, need their own positive vision, one that can "turn an intense but transient public sentiment into an enduring political force."

When I asked Olsen if the House Republican plan to draft a new version of the 1994 Contract With America met that need, he responded as I would: Let's see what their ideas are.

The drafters have postponed the moment of truth by conducting a series of grass-roots hearings and soliciting ideas from the voters -- and, it turns out, in private sessions with Washington lobbyists.

Building a majority coalition will require a strong, sensible platform. And a clear separation from the kooks and cranks who sank both Bryan and Goldwater.

Entry #2,659

9-7-0 is winning pick in Michigan's midday and evening drawings

Lucky numbers! 9-7-0 is winning pick in Michigan's midday, evening Daily 3 drawings

Associated Press

9:04 p.m. EDT, July 9, 2010

 

DETROIT (AP) — It was a lucky day in Michigan for the numbers nine, seven and zero. The Michigan State Lottery says nine, seven and zero were the winning numbers in Friday's Midday Daily 3 drawing. And the lottery says the same numbers drawn in the same order were the winning ones in Friday evening's Daily 3.

There was no immediate word of winnings related to the numbers.
Entry #2,658

Man crashes car into home with family inside during rage

Police: Boca man crashes car into home with family inside during jealous rage

Joseph Loprete

 

Joseph Loprete of Boca Raton (PBSO, courtesy / July 7, 2010)

 

 

Alexia Campbell

Sun Sentinel

7:25 p.m. EDT, July 7, 2010 

BOCA RATON 

A mix of alcohol and jealous rage led a Boca Raton man to smash an SUV into his home on July Fourth while his wife and children were inside, according to police. 

Police arrived in the 800 block of Southwest Ninth Avenue on Sunday night to find the home's front door, window and wall in pieces, according to an arrest report. A damaged silver Mercury SUV was parked haphazardly in the driveway. 

Inside, Joseph Loprete, 48, sat on the couch. His wife was in the bathroom crying hysterically.

"Put me in cuffs, take me to jail, let's go," Loprete allegedly told police, according to a police report. 

Loprete was arrested on charges of DUI property damage, aggravated assault and criminal mischief, records show. 

He reportedly told police he drove the SUV into the house because he was jealous and wanted to get back at his wife. No one was hurt. 

His wife, who is not being identified, told police her husband got angry at her when she was playing the guitar with two men at a party earlier that day. Loprete had been drinking at the party and began to fight with her. 

The couple was still arguing as he drove home with her and four of their children. Loprete stayed behind as his wife and children went inside. 

"I was with the kids and I heard a boom. Then I saw the car in the living room," his wife told police, the report said. 

Their two teenagers, a 4-year-old-son and a 2-year-old son were in a back room in the house. 

Officers at the scene said Loprete reeked of alcohol and was slurring his words. He refused a breath test and was arrested. 

Loprete was booked at the Palm Beach County jail and released on July 5 on $3,000 bail. 

He was charged with DUI and reckless driving in 2007, but the charges were dropped in December 2008, state records show. 

Loprete could not be reached for comment, despite an attempt by phone. 

His wife and children left the house Sunday night to stay with relatives because part of their house was boarded up. Boca Raton firefighters inspected the home and deactivated wires that became exposed in the living room after the crash. 

Staff researcher Barbara Hijek contributed to this report.

Entry #2,657

Man Tries To Steal Car With Fake Grenade

Jul 9, 2010 1:46 pm US/Eastern

Police: Man Tried To Steal Car With Fake Grenade

BOSTON (AP)

  Carlos Guzman

WBZ

 

Boston police have arrested a man they allege tried to steal a Mercedes Benz from a dealership by claiming he had a hand grenade.

Police say a man showed up at Expressway Toyota on Wednesday and asked to test drive the car. Staff, describing the man as "nervous and fidgety," insisted on accompanying him.

When they got back, the man produced what appeared to be a grenade from his pants pocket and told the sales person to "get back or I will blow this up."

He fled when he heard staff calling police and was caught a short time later with a fake grenade.

The suspect, 27-year-old Carlos Guzman, was ordered to undergo a 20-day mental health evaluation after pleading not guilty to attempted armed robbery at his arraignment Thursday.
Entry #2,655