Wednesday, 18 May 2011

5/19 The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com

     
    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com    
   
Zombie Apocalypse? The CDC Describes How To Be Prepared
May 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM
 

The U.S. government wants to make sure that in the event of a zombie invasion, you know what to do.

That's right. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shocked us all with their post on how to prepare for the zombie apocalypse.

The CDC post, "Preparedness 101: Zombie Apocalypse," came out Monday and has been gaining media traction since -- the link has been down for much of the day, presumingly due to over-traffic.


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Michael Conniff: Con Games: Hereafter Ever After
May 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM
 
The prevailing myth encompassing death is that the final moment somehow outweighs all others, as if that blink between alive and dead defines the life just lived.
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Arnold Schwarzenegger Scandal: Will It Affect His Hollywood Comeback?
May 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM
 

-- Arnold Schwarzenegger's return to showbiz has succeeded in one way: He's a hit in late-night.

The former California governor has been preparing a return to Hollywood, but becoming a punch line wasn't on the agenda. Yet that's exactly what's happened since Schwarzenegger acknowledged Tuesday that he had fathered a child of a longtime household staff member more than a decade ago. The revelation followed last week's separation of Schwarzenegger and his wife of 25 years, Maria Shriver.


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Chantal Sicile-Kira: Dear Governor Brown: Is There a Future for the Disabled -- Including Adults With Autism -- In the Golden State?
May 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM
 
The looming budget cuts remind me of the old Prop 13 days. The state of California is getting ready to cut the civil rights of the disabled and no one seems to notice.
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Alan Grayson: 10 Reasons Why Sarah Palin Will Never Be President
May 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM
 
I'm not saying that Sarah Palin is dumb. But I'm not saying that she's not.
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Joanne Bamberger: The GOP Is ISO, But Is It SOL?
May 18, 2011 at 6:52 PM
 
I'm sure the GOP and "Tea Party" faithful have their own list of deal breakers. But the way things are going these days -- 17 months before the next presidential election -- those on the political right are quickly running out of viable contenders.
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Arnold Schwarzenegger Love Child Revelation Sparks Media Frenzy
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. — The revelation that Arnold Schwarzenegger has an out-of-wedlock child with a former employee turned into a tabloid frenzy Wednesday as scores of reporters and photographers swarmed a quiet suburban cul-de-sac in the middle of California farm country amid unconfirmed reports it was the home of the child's mother.

The woman was not at the Bakersfield home when the flash mob showed up, its satellite TV trucks filling her quiet Bakersfield street and spilling onto another one. The media descended after the woman's name surfaced in several Internet reports.


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Henry Melcher: A Commencement Speech to My Fellow 2011 Graduates
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 
Next year people will claim the class of 2012 is the future, but how can we possibly predict the future? Well, if we are making it, it's pretty simple. So I say to you 2012, get out. This is our future. Bill Clinton said so.
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ProPublica: When Powerful Men Cross Lines: Schwarzenegger & DSK
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 

By Tracy Weber, ProPublica

The week's news about the sexual conduct of politically powerful men gives me a queasy feeling of déjà vu.

As the French agonize over whether Dominique Strauss-Kahn's star power quashed past allegations, I can respond cynically: Yes, that probably happened. But we should not automatically assume that timelier reporting about Strauss-Kahn's sexually aggressive behavior (including an alleged violent incident in 2002) would have slowed the 62-year old Socialist's march towards the French presidency.

I speak from experience.

Eight years ago I was dragged scowling and complaining into an investigation of allegations that Arnold Schwarzenegger -- the leading candidate for governor of California -- had sexually harassed and molested women, including those who worked on his movies.

A team of reporters for The Los Angeles Times, where I then worked, had been pursuing the story for weeks and were about to publish a first piece. With the election days away, I was pulled in. At the time I was deep into an investigative project about a troubled Los Angeles hospital that had a history of harming or even killing its patients. Digging into The Terminator's salacious back story seemed a tawdry detour.

But the orders came from on high. They needed someone adept at persuading reluctant sources to share traumatic or humiliating experiences. So out I went crisscrossing Southern California in search of women groped by the Republican candidate for governor. Some declined to speak. Others brusquely said nothing had ever happened.

But several reluctantly began to describe behavior that appeared to cross every imaginable line. As I interviewed these women, I came to believe in the importance of the story. They were strong, professional, independent people, women like me: competent and assertive.

Their experiences with Schwarzenegger were double humiliations. First they suffered through the acts themselves: demeaning - often public - groping, unwanted, invasive kisses, crude, belittling comments.

Far worse, they felt forced by circumstance to let Schwarzenegger behave badly -- like an over-indulged toddler, as one woman put it. A complaint against the bigger-than-life moneymaker could tank their careers. Not a single woman felt anyone would have taken their side or chastised the star.

The abuse of power -- and the judgments underlying it -- were relevant facts for Californians preparing to cast a historic vote. (As was Hollywood's repeated willingness to look the other way, but that is another story).

So in urging women to go public with their accounts, I was arguing something I truly believed, which was that their stories would be of use to voters.

I went to the door of a woman in Orange County who supposedly had conceived a child with Schwarzenegger. She became teary-eyed the moment I identified myself as a reporter, repeatedly and emphatically denying that Schwarzenegger had fathered her son. Soon after, a British tabloid published her name and said she had a "love child" with the actor. We were never able to confirm this. (The 2003 story resurfaced this week when Schwarzenegger admitted he had fathered a child with a member of his household staff more than 10 years ago. The LA Times, which broke the story, described the mother as a staff member who recently retired. This does not appear to be the woman I interviewed, a former flight attendant on a charter plane.)

Ultimately, several women agreed to recount their experiences with Schwarzenegger, courageously diving into the maw of a nasty political campaign.

Three days before the election, Linnea Harwell, who had become the manager of an Atlanta art museum, described how Schwarzenegger regularly stripped naked in front of her on the 1988 Santa Fe, N.M. set of the movie "Twins."

Once, Harwell recalled, he pulled her down on a bed while he was wearing only underwear and let her go only when someone called her on her walkie talkie. "He was laughing like it was all a big joke," she said then. "Well it wasn't. It was scary."

Unless his wife, Maria Shriver, was on the set, Harwell said, Schwarzenegger made rude comments without caring who heard. She recalled wondering "Why does he think he could get away with it? But he could."

Carla Baron, a stand-in on the same movie set, said the actor and his buddy had sandwiched her between them, then forced his tongue down her throat. Another woman haltingly told me how Schwarzenegger pinned her against him and spanked her.

Schwarzenegger denied that the alleged events on the "Twins" set had occurred, but issued a general apology. "I have done things that were not right, which I thought then was playful," he said. His wife stood by him.

Election Day arrived and Schwarzenegger was elected by a wide margin. The Los Angeles Times was castigated for smearing Schwarzenegger close to the election. Ten thousand readers cancelled their subscriptions. I received a string of vicious calls and emails. The women were branded as liars desperate for a share of fame.

One of the women called me in tears. I'd cajoled her into revealing her humiliations -- and here was yet another. The voters, like Hollywood, ignored the star's troubling behavior. I was devastated and angry too -- and guilty for wasting their courage.

If the press had simply investigated and reported on the past allegations against Strauss-Kahn, would it have mattered?

Or did it take an arrest to change the course of French politics?

Follow on Twitter: @tracyweber [1]


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John Gascot: Black Eskimo: Something New
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 
It seems almost obligatory that I should open with a few words on Ingrid Chavez's collaborations with ultra-famous rockers Prince and Lenny Kravitz. But if you are only familiar with those facets of Ingrid's career, you are missing out.
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'Saveur' Names The 2011 Best Food Blog Award Winners
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 
When we opened nominations for this year's Best Food Blog Awards, we had no idea we'd find ourselves deluged with over 40,000 individual plugs for websites. Narrowing them down to six finalists in seventeen categories was no easy task -- but an even harder job fell to the thousands of you who voted, picking just one blog above all others in its category.

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Maria Shriver Appears On Oprah Winfrey's Farewell Show, Doesn't Discuss Scandal
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 
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Catherine Tate: 'The Office' New Boss? Producers Want British Star
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 

The new boss at Dunder Mifflin may be the season finale guest star with whom Americans are least familiar.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the show's producers want British star Catherine Tate to be Steve Carell/Michael Scott's longterm replacement -- he just left the show after seven seasons. Tate is one of a number of major guest stars set for Thursday night's season finale, which will see a laundry list of candidates hoping to take the reigns now that Will Ferrell/Deangelo Vickers' brief arc and Dwight Schrute's even briefer reign have ended.

According to a tweet from the star/writer Mindy Kaling, Tate will play a character named Nellie Bertrum. She's a well known comedic force in Britain; she has her own sketch series, "The Catherine Tate Show," and has appeared in "Doctor Who."


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Jerry Chautin: Veterans Get a Raw Deal -- Again
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 

Veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are consistently plagued by higher unemployment rates than the civilian community. Ted Daywalt, a retired Navy Captain (O-6), and chief executive officer of VetJobs.com, explains why the dichotomy exists.

2011-05-18-TedDaywaltcroppedforHP51911.jpg"Many human resource managers and hiring managers have no idea what a military person brings to the job," he e-mailed me. He says that recruiters do not understand the skills perfected in the armed forces because military service has declined from one in ten Americans in 1970 to one in 270 today. He blames the end of the draft.

"Too many employers think all the OEF/OIF veterans have PTSD," he wrote, referring to post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from participation in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom.


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Karen Rubin: First-Ever Gold Coast International Film Festival Brings Luminaries to Long Island
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 
Between June 1-5, some 25,000 people are expected in the various venues in the town of North Hempstead to experience an extraordinary program of some 40 films including premieres.
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Secret Service Twitter Misstep Followed By Apology From Agency
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 

The U.S. Secret Service issued an apology on Wednesday after an eyebrow-raising tweet went out on the agency's official Twitter account (@SecretService), which was just activated last week.

The tweet, which stirred buzz despite swiftly being taken down, read: "Had to monitor Fox for a story. Can't. Deal. With. The. Blathering."

According to CNN, the Secret Service released a statement addressing the social media misstep.


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Mitt Romney Defends The Boston Herald, Longtime Press Nemesis (VIDEO)
May 18, 2011 at 6:44 PM
 

WASHINGTON -- Throughout most of his career, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has had what can best be described as a testy relationship with the Boston Herald.

The conservative-leaning tabloid, the Boston Globe's counter-balance of sorts, has long treated the former Massachusetts Governor as an ideological chameleon. Recent headlines from both its news and editorial side range from "Just one more reminder that Mitt Romney can’t win," to "Mitt Romney has it all â€" except GOP stalwart support," to "Health-care jabs bloody up Mitt Romney."

One GOP operative described the rapport between the paper and the former governor as "horrific."


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HUFFPOST HILL - White House Talks Tough About Debt Ceiling
May 18, 2011 at 6:37 PM
 

Newt Gingrich spent the day searching for the world's most powerful lint roller. His spokesman drafted statements that read like they were dictated by Marlon Brando's character in Apocalypse Now. Lawmakers in Congress spent the bulk of their day devising strategies to annoy each other. And Jon Huntsman positioned himself to be the first presidential candidate to accept campaign contributions in Disney Dollars. Out of the billowing smoke and dust of tweets and trivia emerged HUFFPOST HILL for Wednesday, May 18th, 2011, once again ready to lead those who won't be intimated by the political elite and are ready to take on the challenges America faces:

WHITE HOUSE REFUSES TO BUDGE ON DEBT CEILING REALITY - The White House this afternoon said that there is no "Plan B" to raising the debt ceiling, which was hit on Monday. "There is no alternative to raising the debt limit. It has to be raised," a White House official told reporters. "There's really no way around it." Elise Foley: "The White House is pushing back against a few Republicans -- including Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) -- who hinted this week the government could default on its debts for a short time in pursuit of a broader deal to cut the deficit. Republicans have overall agreed that the debt ceiling needs to be raised but have said they will not vote to raise the ceiling unless it is paired with major spending cuts and long-term debt reduction. But some fear that talks to reach that deal, which are being facilitated by Vice President Joe Biden, will last beyond the Aug. 2 deadline for increasing the debt limit." [HuffPost]

The Secret Service could probably stand to be a bit more secretive.


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Marc A. Palatucci: Matthew Palladino at Fredericks and Freiser
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 
May welcomes artist Matthew Palladino to the New York gallery circuit. The opening of his solo show at Fredericks and Freiser gallery in Chelsea now gives New Yorkers the opportunity to view Palladino's art in all its eerie splendor.
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Paula B. Mays: The Strauss-Khan Case Raises Interesting Issues
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 
The arrest of the IMF head on assault charges brings to light some very interesting issues. First, the maid was apparently black, and just yesterday a psychologist from the London School of Economics said black women were not attractive.
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Tom Matlack: The Rebirth of Newspapers
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 
Why do we hate newspapers? Because they are right wing (Rupert Murdoch) or because they are left wing (most of the major metros on the East Coast according to Murdoch)? No it's because they aspire to keep us, as a society, honest.
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Diane Dimond: Our Bloated National Sex Registry
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 
I propose we forget the one-size-fits-all category of "sex offender." Let's give those who have gone on to live law abiding lives for a set number of years the hope -- the goal -- of getting their names expunged.
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Mildred Patricia Baena Revealed As Schwarzenegger's Other Woman (VIDEO)
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 



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NBA Mock Draft 2011: Version 1.0
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 

Redemption and karma may exist after all: Cleveland has won the NBA Draft lottery. (I'm just happy because I predicted this correctly -- such skill, I know!)

The NBA pre-draft combine in Chicago, Reebok Eurocamp and team workouts have yet to take place, so much of this mock draft is still just speculation. But with the lottery order now set, we can begin to better understand who and what teams are looking for. So, without further ado...

Let the guessing begin!


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Regina Weinreich: Trust Buck
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 
Buck, the movie, has been circulating the festivals, touted as a crowd pleaser for its depiction of Buck and his unusual way with horses. But what gets you when Buck shakes your hand is the intensity of his gaze.
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Jeffrey Russell Hall Murder: Son Was 'Tired Of His Dad Hitting Him'
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 

A neo-Nazi allegedly killed by his 10-year-old son was accused by the boy and his stepmother of beating them and the couple's other children, according to a court declaration released Wednesday.


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Matthew Filipowicz: Rick Santorum's Sexy New Radio Ad
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 
I was shocked to find out that Rick Santorum just might be embracing the Spreading Santorum image. Don't believe me. Take a listen to Santorum's new radio ad.
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Elizabeth Warren Launches Morgage Forms Regulatory Overhaul
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau advanced its overhaul of annoying, incomprehensible mortgage forms on Wednesday in its first regulatory maneuver since the agency was created by last year's financial reform bill.

The CFPB rolled out two prototypes for a single, streamlined form to replace two complex and overlapping forms used by consumers to help gauge the real costs of their mortgage. The new regulator, which hopes to have a final form ready by September, is asking consumers to provide feedback on the forms online and is conducting in-person tests and interviews about the forms in six cities.

Consumer advocates and both community and Wall Street banks have lobbied for the change for years. Banks complain that it makes no sense for them to have to deal with two forms that carry the same basic information, while consumer advocates bemoan the fact that the forms aren't actually very helpful to consumers.


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Don Gorske Eats 25,000 Big Macs In 39 Years (VIDEO)
May 18, 2011 at 6:15 PM
 



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Sen. Mark Udall: Make the Kids to Parks Day Pledge
May 18, 2011 at 6:14 PM
 
Some of the best times I've spent in Colorado have been in the backcountry with my mom and siblings, and more recently, with my own kids. That is why I'm concerned to see today's kids spending more time browsing the Internet than exploring nature.
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Last Shot: 'I Said Pizza HAT' (PHOTO)
May 18, 2011 at 6:14 PM
 

Thanks for the awesome caption, Scott!

Photo Via Buzzfeed


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Robert Teitelman: The Economist Joins the Tech Bubble Herd
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
The closest thing to a bubble in tech these days may be the rush to declare it a bubble in the media. Even if it turns out to be the case, it would be more luck than prescience.
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Dr. Yvonne K. Fulbright: Can Language Influence Your Sex Personality?
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
In speaking multiple languages, you could potentially have "multiple personalities" in the sack, exponentially increasing the passion potential in your boudoir as you keep things fresh and exciting in Swedish, German, Spanish, Italian...
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Patrick Sauer: Hybrids, Not Just for Eco-Nerds Anymore
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
There is one area where going green is going gangbusters, but it involves a much larger investment than say two extra quarters for some eco-friendly counter wipes. After all this time, we have an answer. Yes, hybrid cars are here to stay.
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Sen. Mark Udall: Make the Kids to Parks Day Pledge
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 

Make the Kids to Parks PledgeToday, I launched my initiative to encourage kids to get outdoors by introducing a resolution to honor the inaugural National Kids to Parks Day on Saturday, May 21. This resolution officially begins my comprehensive summer campaign to get kids out to the parks throughout the state of Colorado and across the country.

I want to thank those of you who responded to my April 27 newsletter by submitting ideas to help shape my initiative to get kids more involved in our national parks. It should not come as a surprise that many Coloradans have already put their fingers on the problem and are working to find solutions. I was inspired by the diversity of ideas and the variety of programs that already exist in Colorado to get kids outdoors.

Here are a few of your ideas:

"The Colorado Division of Wildlife has a wonderful program that takes kids out in the field and teaches them about nature. Get the kids involved in these programs." - kherfurt, Evergreen

"The National Parks Junior Ranger Program is a wonderful, interactive learning experience for kids under 12 years of age. Our sons were so motivated to collect the Junior Ranger badges that we visited 40+ parks, monuments and historic sites." - braveskimom, Grand Junction

"National Parks could start noting which trails are good to take children on, and at what ages. Noting which trails are for kids promotes the idea that kids should be hiking and makes sure kids have fun on hikes and want to come back." - alchemistofmoriar

Click here to view more ideas, add your own and vote for your favorites.

Some of the best times I've spent in Colorado have been in the backcountry with my mom and siblings, and more recently, with my own kids. That is why I'm concerned to see today's kids spending more time browsing the Internet than exploring nature. Our parks can connect kids not just to our natural resources, but also to past events that have shaped our state and country's culture and history. My campaign to get kids to our parks aims to get them excited about being active and healthy outdoors, while inspiring the next generation of American stewards to enjoy and protect our nation's special places.

Colorado has some of the most spectacular national parks in the country and, with 300 days of sunshine, we have plenty of opportunities to enjoy them. Mark this National Kids to Parks Day by making the pledge to take your kids or a group of kids to a park and I will send you periodic updates throughout the summer on great opportunities to get outdoors.


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Mara Gibbs: Everybody Eats Where? In New York City, Nica Trattoria and Il Posto Accanto
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
Nica Trattoria and Il Posto Accanto are warm and happy places with good homemade Italian food and with chef-owners who add to the atmosphere with personalities that are larger than life.
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Jonathan Kim: ReThink Review: The People vs. George Lucas -- This Is the Film You're Looking For
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
For those of you who feel betrayed, disappointed, infuriated or traumatized by George Lucas, there's finally a movie for you -- the fascinating, excellent documentary, The People vs. George Lucas.
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Una LaMarche: Pregnant in Heels Ep. 7: The Marriage Ref
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 

Sigh. I could tell from last week's promos that this episode was going to be depressing. It's even titled "Couples Therapy," and it's all about people fighting over things only tangentially related to their future offspring. Which isn't anything that hasn't happened before on this show, but gah. I want to watch rich pregnant women with outlandish, narcissistic demands, not marital woes. Give me someone who wants to fit her baby boy with a toupee because she hates baldness. Give me someone who wants a life-sized bronze sculpture made of her 38-week uterus. Give me someone so vain that she wants to bleach her linea negra. I don't care, Pope, just give me someone with superficial problems. I don't want to see real pain. If I wanted to see that I'd be watching 16 and Pregnant, or that horrific Biography series, I Survived (Have you seen that show? It's like MTV True Life: Saw. Someone actually had a knife hammered into her head.)

Anyway.

Rosie's first clients this week are Diana, a southern blond, and Ashley, an Englishman, who live in a two-bedroom on the Upper West Side with their daughter, Khloe (what hath the Kardashians wrought?!?) Diana is convinced that they need to move into a bigger apartment; Ashley wants to stay put. Somehow this debate fills 20 minutes of airtime. Since securing a new residence does not fall under the Pope purview, Rosie hires a real estate agent (I swear, instead of "maternity guru," she should just call herself "expensive yet useless third party." I'm waiting--WAITING--for the episode in which a pregnant homemaker wants to have a water birth but can't because her bathtub drain is clogged, necessitating a Pope-approved plumber). She also brings in an interior decorator who says he can transform Khloe's room to accommodate the new baby while still maintaining each child's individuality. The big suspense is supposed to be who will win out--space-hungry Diana (haha, that just made me picture her floating around in space, eating asteroids like Pac-Man!) or stay-put Ashley, and because I hate spoilers I won't ruin it for you.


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Sarah Granger: White House Unveils Global Cyberspace and Cybersecurity Policies
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
The next Osama bin Laden may not be one bearded man hiding in a walled fortress but instead a group of highly skilled, faceless men behind computers. Cyberterrorism, while still largely science fiction, lurks around the corner.
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Robert Gates On Pakistan: 'Somebody Knew' Osama Bin Laden Was Hiding There
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 

WASHINGTON -- "Somebody" in Pakistan knew Osama bin Laden was hiding there, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday. But he said he's seen evidence that the country's senior leadership was unaware the terror leader was in a compound a short distance from a Pakistani military facility.

Both Gates and Joint Chiefs chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, however, said the U.S. must continue to work with and provide aid to Pakistan. But, amid rising anger and distrust of Pakistan across America and on Capitol Hill, both men acknowledged that Islamabad must take concrete action to eliminate the safe havens where militants are hiding along the border with Afghanistan.


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Karin Badt: Cecile De France on Clint Eastwood and the Dardenne Brothers
May 18, 2011 at 5:34 PM
 
"I need three criteria to make a film," de France said with a full smile. "To like the character, to work with great directors, and to love the story. When Dardenne or Eastwood call you, of course you say yes."
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Terry Keefe: Hilary Duff Goes Indie: A Conversation About Her New Film, Bloodworth
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 
Hilary Duff likes a good challenge. The number of former child and teen stars who manage to sustain success into their twenties, as Duff undeniably has, are few, but even rarer are those who then develop into serious adult actors.
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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 'Slighted' By Lakers Without Statue At Staples Center
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

But for all of Abdul-Jabbar's influence, for all of his accomplishments, the man feels "slighted" by the Lakers organization, as he explains in a six-page interview in the magazine.

Why? There are multiple reasons---and we're not going to spoil all the goods here---but one of them has to do with the statues that have been erected outside Staples Center.


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Severe Storm Warning In Adams County, Commerce City, Broomfield, Thornton And Bar Lake
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

The National Weather Service issued what started as a tornado warning for Adams County in Northeast Colorado as well as Bar Lake, Thornton and Commerce City, but just downgraded to a severe thunderstorm warning.

The tornado warning issued for Adams County was in effect until 3 PM. The updated severe thunderstorm warning is in effect until 3:30 PM and also includes Weld County and Broomfield County.

The updated warning states that severe thunderstorms can produce tornadoes with little or no advance warning.


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AlaskaDispatch.com: Alaska Gasline Failure Disappointing, but No Surprise
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Backers of Alaska's Denali natural gas pipeline project had barely thrown in the economic towel, when some state lawmakers began calling for TransCanada and the administration of Gov. Sean Parnell to prove the controversial state-sanctioned gas line project is economically viable.

At stake with the Alaska Gasline Inducement Act is several hundred million dollars in public money the Legislature agreed to give the project as well as the state's ability to move forward with a larger-sized, in-state gas pipeline.

And the announcement Tuesday morning by the Denali project's backers that they were giving up on building a $35 billion, 1,700-mile pipeline from the North Slope to Alberta, Canada, was also immediately viewed as yet another sign that a decades-long major economic dream for Alaska is once again slipping away.


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Iran Al Qaeda Role Growing Post-Bin Laden?
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

WASHINGTON — The death of Osama bin Laden has put a new focus on what role Iran might play in al-Qaida's future, as intelligence officials around the world analyzed reports that Saif al-Adel had taken over as al-Qaida's interim leader. Al-Adel was last known to be under house arrest outside Tehran.

The terrorist resume of al-Adel, one of al-Qaida's founders, includes helping orchestrate the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Africa. But he had sharp disagreements with bin Laden's leadership and opposed the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. He accurately predicted that inciting the wrath of the U.S. would hurt al-Qaida's worldwide efforts.


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Rashida Jones Talks Playing A Lesbian, Kissing Zooey Deschanel In 'Our Idiot Brother'
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

Paul Rudd grew a shaggy beard and long hair for his new indie comedy, "Our Idiot Brother," but it was Rashida Jones who made the major transformation for the film.

Jones plays the lesbian girlfriend of Zooey Deschanel, one of Rudd's three big screen sisters who do their best to help him out after his happy-go-lucky character gets busted for generously selling drugs to a cop. Jones, who recently co-hosted the GLAAD Awards with "Parks and Recreation" co-star Amy Poehler, was excited to take on the part, and spoke to the magazine The Advocate about her style, inspirations... and kissing.

To nail down her conservative lawyer/lesbian look, Jones relied on costume designer Chris Peterson, who himself is gay.


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Kathy Kemper: U.S. Leadership and the Future of the Internet: the New U.S. International Cyber Strategy
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 
Many of the innovations in computing have had two sides: great promise and great danger. Today, the stakes are higher than ever -- but with a framework to guide our engagement online, the U.S. is on the right track.
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Picking Botox Over Preventative Care?
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

Americans are starting to see the doctor again, but more often for cosmetic procedures, such as Botox treatments, rather than cancer screening and other potentially life-saving preventive care.

Healthcare company executives attending the Reuters Health Summit this week painted a sobering picture of healthcare use among U.S. patients who are still struggling to afford medical care.


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Osama Bin Laden Dead: Robert Gates Says Somebody In Pakistan Knew Al Qaeda Leader Was Hiding There
May 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM
 

WASHINGTON — "Somebody" in Pakistan knew Osama bin Laden was hiding there, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Wednesday. But he said he's seen evidence that the country's senior leadership was unaware the terror leader was in a compound a short distance from a Pakistani military facility.

Both Gates and Joint Chiefs chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, however, said the U.S. must continue to work with and provide aid to Pakistan. But, amid rising anger and distrust of Pakistan across America and on Capitol Hill, both men acknowledged that Islamabad must take concrete action to eliminate the safe havens where militants are hiding along the border with Afghanistan.


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