Thursday, September 23, 2010

Katy Perry's 'Sesame Street' controversy followed up by 'True Blood' parody, 'True Mud'

'True Blood' stars Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer are parodied in 'Sesame Street's' new promo, 'True Mud.' WATCH VIDEO below.





HBO;YouTube
'True Blood' stars Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer are parodied in 'Sesame Street's' new promo, 'True Mud.' WATCH VIDEO below.


"Sesame Steet" appears to be trading in the alphabet for the adult set.
On the heels of PBS' announcement that it would be pulling Katy Perry's cleavage-heavy "Hot N Cold" duet with Elmo from the 41st season, the series has released another adult oriented clip.
In "True Mud," the show riffs off "True Blood," HBO's hyper sexual vampire series starring Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer.
After opening with a song virtually identical to the opening track of the HBO show, an orange muppet with a coif like Bill Compton's enters a diner and asks a Sookie-stye waitress with blond hair for some True Mud.
"He must be one of them grouches! Grouches love mud!" some nearby patrons cry, imitating the townsfolk in "True Blood's" first season who gasped at Bill Compton's arrival in an otherwise human bar.
Muppet Sookie brings out some True Spud, by accident, and gives the young viewers a little rhyming lesson.
In the end, the customer jumps into a giant bath of mud.
The parody comes the same day that "Sesame Street" producers opted not to air a segment in its 41st season that features Katy Perry singing a duet with Elmo while dressed in a low-cut yellow-green heart-shaped dress, a sheer piece of material covering her ample cleavage.
"In light of the feedback we've received on the Katy Perry music video which was released on You Tube only, we have decided we will not air the segment on the television broadcast of Sesame Street, which is aimed at preschoolers," the show's producers said in a statement. "Katy Perry fans will still be able to view the video on You Tube."
In the video, which earned over 1 million views on YouTube Monday, Perry is seen bouncing after Elmo while singing a version of "Hot N Cold" that focuses on the puppet waffling over their play date instead of an up-and-down relationship.
"You can practically see her t---," one person commented, according to the website. "That's some wonderful children's programming."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dAZ1-nF3VI

Conservatives split on GOP's new 'Pledge To America,' unveiled by House Republicans


Thursday, September 23rd 2010, 3:01 PM
House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio is seen at a lumber company in Sterling, Va., Thursday, to announce the Republicans "Pledge to America" agenda.
Applewhite/AP
House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio is seen at a lumber company in Sterling, Va., Thursday, to announce the Republicans "Pledge to America" agenda.


Read more: 
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2010/09/23/2010-09-23_conservatives_split_on_gops_new_pledge_to_america_unveiled_by_house_republicans.html#ixzz10Nwz0iQk



Not everyone is as wild about the GOP's latest "Pledge to America" as House Minority Leader John Boehner. (Click through the next page to read the document in its entirety.)


While liberals have predictably slammed the Republicans' plan, unveiled Thursday, to fix the country, the pledge is getting mixed views from conservative pundits, some of whom argue the 21-page document is all bark and no bite. 


Conservative blogger Erick Erickson called the pledge the "most ridiculous thing to come out of Washington since George McClellan."


Erickson blasted the document for not providing specific, long-term solutions.


"Yes, yes, it is full of mom-tested, kid-approved pablum that will make certain hearts on the right sing in solidarity," he wrote on his blog, Redstate.com. "But like a diet full of sugar, it will actually do nothing but keep making Washington fatter before we crash from the sugar high."


The pledge gathers familiar talking points for Republicans, such as cutting taxes and slashing government spending. It comes at a time when the GOP is gearing up for the midterm elections and hoping to gain majorities in Congress.


The pledge is taking a page from the 1994 GOP playbook when the Republicans touted their "Contract with America," which offered a specific plan of action for a GOP Congress. That year the Republicans gained control of the House.


Similarly, the new pledge may counter the peception that the GOP has adopted a strategy of rejecting every Democratic bill without having solutions of their own.
Conservative commentator and former Bush speechwriter David Frum echoed Erickson's disapproval but said he's not surprised that the document offers nothing new.


"Did you seriously imagine that they would jeopardize the prospect of victory and chairmanships by issuing big, bold promises to do deadly, unpopular things?" asked Frum.
He also said the "Pledge to America" is a pledge to do nothing and even goes against  what the Tea Party stands for.


"Tea party activists have been claiming all year that there exists in the United States a potential voting majority for radically more limited government," Frum wrote. "The Republican ‘Pledge to America' declares: Sorry, we don't believe that."


Of course, not all conservatives outright decried the pledge. Some, like syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin, said they were cautiously optimistic.


"Sure, signing off on political pledges is a little like ordering X-ray glasses from a comic book -- you just know it's not going to be nearly as good as advertised -- but I like the GOP's effort so far," she wrote.


And Tony Perkins, president of the conservative, Christian lobbying organization, The Family Research Council, said the pledge is "not exceptional, but it is satisfactory."


"It does lay a foundation to build upon, and it moves congressional Republicans to a place of public acknowledgment that values issues are to be a part of the conservative way forward," he added.

Dustin Moskovitz the youngest billionaire on the Forbes rich list


Forbes have just released there annual USA rich list, with Dustin Moskovitz worth $1.4 billion how was Mark Zuckerberg’s Harvard room mate and Facebook’s third employee, he owns a 6% share of Facebook. He left the facebook organisation in 2008 to started Asana, a software company for individuals and small companies.
Dustin Moskovitz who at age 26 is the youngest billionaire on the Forbes rich list,
Mark Zuckerberg the co fonder of facebook is said to be worth more than $6.9 billion in August 2010.
Mark Zuckerberg and Dustin Moskovitz have some way to go if they want to get the the top of the list and no doubt that they look up to him, because Bill Gates is top of the pack with a estimated $54 billlon, mostly made from microsoft corporation, followed by Warren Buffett with a cool $45 billion, who is also Bill Gates bridge partner strangely enough.
Unfortunately for Steve Jobs (founder of Apple) is only worth $6.1 billion, hopefully he will create a lot of hype around the next few iphone launches and starts to catch them up, which shouldn’t be to hard if they go like the last one, which netted he with more than 3 million units sold since April.

Bishop Eddie Long Cancels Tom Joyner Radio Interview, Attorney Shows Up In His Place

Bishop Eddie Long | Radio interview, press conference canceled in wake of 3rd lawsuit



The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

8:42 a.m. Thursday, September 23, 2010
Mega-church leader Bishop Eddie Long has canceled a previously announced appearance on the Tom Joyner Morning Show Thursday after a third man filed a lawsuit accusing the prominent minister of using his pastoral influence to coerce him into a sexual relationship. In addition, Long's attorneys canceled plans for a press conference to address the growing scandal.
The syndicated radio show, heard locally on Kiss 104.1, had issued a press release saying he would discuss the allegations. However, the show's Roland Martin, who was scheduled to interview Long at 7:15 a.m., said on his Twitter account early Thursday that "the lawyers have made the decision that due to the third lawsuit that Bishop not to do interviews tomorrow."
Eddie Long (holding torch) and Bernice King at the start of a 2004 march against gay marriage and other issues at the Martin Luther King National Historic Site.Craig Gillen, an attorney for Long, was interviewed on the radio program instead. Gillen said there was "miscommunication" about a press conference today, and that there would not be one . On Wednesday a Long representative issued a release to media members that a press conference would be held Thursday.
A lawsuit filed Wednesday by Jamal Parris, 23, a former member of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, claims Long made Parrish call him “Daddy” and coerced him into sexual acts.
The suit, similar to two filed on Tuesday (Read a PDF of one of the earlier lawsuits), accuses Long of using his power to force the plaintiff into a sexual relationship. In exchange, Long placed Parris and the two other men on the church’s payroll, bought them cars and other gifts, and took them on lavish trips, according to the suits filed in DeKalb County Superior Court.
Stephen M. Brown, senior vice president of media strategy at MS & L’s Atlanta office, questioned the time it’s taken Long to make a personal statement about the allegations.
“Something definitive needs to be said, for sure,” he said. “I think he needs to explain what the relationship was between himself and the people making these allegations and detail any misunderstandings."
Parris' allegations are similar to claims made by Anthony Flagg, 21, and Maurice Robinson, 20, who filed suits Tuesday.
Robinson and Flagg say Long began having inappropriate relations with them when they were 16. They are seeking a trial by jury and unspecified damages.
“It is unfortunate that these young men have chosen to take this course of action,” Long's attorney, Craig Gillen, told the AJC Tuesday night.
Parris and his mother joined the church in 2001 when he was 14.
Within two weeks, Long gave Parris his personal cell phone number, the suit alleges.
Their relationship intensified during the 2004-05 school year, with Long often inviting Parris to his guesthouse on Snapfinger Road.
"Initially, Long engaged in sexual touching during their encounters and then escalated the activity to oral sodomy and other acts of sexual gratification," the suit reads. "Long would discuss the Holy Scripture to justify and support the sexual activity."
Parris claims he left the church in 2009 "disillusioned, confused and angry."
Attorney B.J. Bernstein, who is representing the three plaintiffs, has said they do not want to comment. Phone calls left with them and their relatives were not returned.
Meanwhile, gubernatorial candidate Roy Barnes has canceled a Friday morning fundraiser that Long was to co-host.
"While these allegations are troubling, we will refrain from commenting until all the facts are known,” Barnes spokesman Emil Runge said in a prepared statement.
Bernstein claims Long abused his pastoral relationship with the men and convinced them that the sexual relationships were a “healthy component of [their] spiritual lives.”
Parris’ suit claims that Long took him on trips on his private jet as far away as Trinidad and Honduras.
On some of the trips with Robinson and Flagg, Long would use the alias “Dick Tracy” when he checked into hotels. According to online service Accurint, a Dick Tracey Long lives in Lithonia at the same address as Eddie L. Long.
The three suits each allege 11 counts, including fraud and negligence, against Long, the 25,000-member church and the Longfellows Youth Academy.
The three plaintiffs were each members of the academy, which is aimed at helping men “love, live and lead.”
Two of the men have criminal records, including a recent arrest for a burglary at Long’s office.
In June, Robinson and Anthony Boyd were charged with using a secretary’s key to enter Long’s personal office at the Lithonia church. Robinson and Boyd, who were captured on surveillance cameras, took an iPod, iPad and jewelry, according to a police report.
The case is still pending, said a spokesman for the district attorney.
Bernstein said Robinson and Flagg, who was there the night of the burglary but not charged, were angry at Long and seeking retaliation after learning he was involved with other men.
Court records show Flagg was charged with simple assault in 2007 and sentenced to an anger management class. A warrant was issued after he failed to show up for court, court records show.
After that arrest, Long had Flagg move into a friend's house in Lithonia, the suit alleges. Flagg was still attending Miller Grove High School at the time, but his mother thought the move would be good for him, Bernstein said.
Instead, Long used that time to engage in sex acts with Flagg, the suit alleges.
Despite that, Flagg, and Robinson, both graduated from Miller Grove in 2008. They still live in DeKalb. Parris now lives in Colorado.
The sex acts occurred when the men were 16, which is the legal age of consent in Georgia, Bernstein said. But Bernstein said some of the acts which occurred at hotels in other states could be considered criminal, which is why she contacted the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Bernstein said.
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney said Justice Department policy prohibits him from confirming or denying any possible investigations.
DeKalb school board member Eugene Walker, who has known Long for more than 20 years, said he did not believe the allegations.
“Ever since I have known him, he has reached out and lifted up our young people,” Walker said. “These allegations are absolutely not true. They have accused me of a whole lot of wrong things and they, like this, weren’t true. He’s a great servant and I can’t say anything wrong about him.”
--Staff writers Jeremy Redmon and Shelia Poole contributed to this report

Abbott Laboratories: Similac Recall on Possible Bug Parts in Formula


Similac Baby Formula Recall
Abbott Recalls Similac Formula
Over the last few months there have certainly been a ton of recalls in the United States. This afternoon, we were made aware of yet another recall by Abbott Laboratories, on their Similac baby formula. Abbott Laboratories has initiated a recall on approximately 5 million boxes of the powdered baby formula called Similac because of the possibility that parts of beetles may be within the powder.
The official recall notice is as follows, “Abbott is recalling these products following an internal quality review, which detected the remote possibility of the presence of a small common beetle in the product produced in one production area in a single manufacturing facility.”
Officials with the company are urging consumers who have purchased Similac to check the official website of the company to see if their formula was produced at the plant in which the contamination occurred. The Food and Drug Administration has stated that even if an infant were to drink the contaminated formula, there are no major health risks involved besides a possible belly ache.
Abbott Laboratories is a pharmaceutical and medical product company with close to 90,000 employees, and markets it’s products to over 130 countries around the globe. The publicly traded company has it’s headquarters in Abbott Park, Illinois, and has been in operation for over 120 years. The Contaminated Similac has only been shipped within the US, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the caribbean.

Zuckerberg overtakes Jobs and Murdoch on Forbes rich list

Zuckerberg Jobs
Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg has overtaken Apple chief Steve Jobs on the Forbes magazine rich list. Photograph: Christian Alminana/WireImage.com/David Paul Morris/Getty

Mark Zuckerberg probably likes Forbes today: the magazine has named him the 35th richest – as in most valuable – person in the US, passingSteve Jobs (42nd) and Rupert Murdoch (38th) on the way.
The co-founder of Facebook, aged 26, is estimated to be worth $6.9bn (£4.4bn), based on his shareholding in the social networking site, which boasts 500 million members worldwide.
The value is calculated based on recent investments in his company by outside businesses in return for shares. That has tripled since last year – the largest relative increase on this year's Forbes US rich list.
The complete Forbes list of the 400 richest people in the US is topped, as it has been for years, by Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, who has since left it to carry out charitable work in the developing world. His shares in the company are valued at $54bn – up by $4bn from last year.
Zuckerberg is one of only eight members of the US list under 40. Two of the others are co-founders of Facebook – one of them, Dustin Moskovitz, is the youngest on the list, born just eight days after Zuckerberg, and worth $1.4bn. Two others of the under-40 set are the co-founders of Google, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, both worth $15bn and aged 37, making them equal 11th on the list.
The list shows the dominance of technology companies in creating value in the US. Out of the top 50, 13 are in technology companies. After Gates, the third most valuable is Larry Ellison, chief executive of the database company Oracle ($27bn); other technology companies including Microsoft, Amazon (Jeff Bezos, 18th with $12.6bn), Apple (Jobs is valued at $6.1bn from his shares in Apple and Disney Pixar), SAS Institute (which makes business analytics software), Google (Eric Schmidt, the chief executive, is 48th at $5.45bn), eBay (co-founder Pierre Omidyar is 47th with $5.5bn). Murdoch, the News Corp chairman and chief executive, is valued at $6.2bn.
The listing also shows that the stock market has been kind to the billionaires: where last year, a fortune of $950m was enough to get you into the top 400, the entry price has risen again to $1bn. In all, the 400 are worth a total of $1.37tn, compared with $1.27tn last year – an increase of nearly 8%, compared to the stock market's rise of just 1%.
Most benefited from growth in their companies: after a dismal 2009, when 314 out of the 400 saw a fall in their wealth in the wake of the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers and the banking crisis, the top 10 this year gained $24.9bn in value (after dropping $40bn in value last year), and 217 of the list are now worth more than a year ago. Only 84 have seen decreases in their calculated wealth

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

'American Idol' Judge Jennifer Lopez: Everything You Need To Know!

Next season, Jennifer Lopez will be the female face of the "American Idol"judges' panel. She picks up where Ellen DeGeneres, Kara DioGuardi and, yes, Paula Abdul left off. Lopez, of course, will be joined by sole original "Idol" judge Randy Jackson and fellow newbie Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler. But while Lopez will be new to the show, her career timeline begins nearly two decades ago.

In the early 1990's, the Bronx-born entertainer got a gig as a dancing "fly girl" on the groundbreaking comedy series "In Living Color." Lopez was really there to serve as background talent to would-be superstars like Jim Carrey, Jamie Foxx and the Wayans brothers, but Hollywood was soon calling on her. She starred first in 1995's "Money Train," before landing the lead role in the biopic "Selena." The film allowed Lopez to display her abilities not only as an actress, but as a singer. That same year, she starred in "Anaconda." A part opposite George Clooney in 1998's Steven Soderbergh-directed "Out of Sight" made it clear that Jennifer was climbing the ranks.
Little did anyone know, however, that Lopez was also plotting her musical path. She released her debut album, On the 6, in '99 and the record made her a certifiable pop star thanks to hits like "If You Had My Love" and "Waiting for Tonight." On the 6 also featured the duet "No Me Ames" with Marc Anthony, whom she later married in 2004.
But Lopez didn't abandon the movie business. After appearing in the 2000 psychological thriller "The Cell," she turned up in a string of romantic comedies, including "The Wedding Planner," "Maid in Manhattan" and "Monster-In-Law." In the '03 action flick "Gigli," Lopez mixed business with pleasure, co-starring with beau Ben Affleck. But the pair's high-profile engagement fared just as badly as the movie did at the box-office; "Bennifer" called it off that same year. (The duo appeared together again, at least onscreen, in Kevin Smith's "Jersey Girl," though Lopez only had a small role in it.)
Jennifer Lopez and Randy Jackson during Wednesday's "American Idol" press converenceWhen she wasn't busy with her A-List acting career, J.Lo managed to squeeze out several more albums: J.Lo (2001); This Is Me ... Then (2002);Rebirth (2005); and Como Ama una Mujer and Brave, both 2007. Those projects spawned massive hits like "Love Don't Cost a Thing" and "Jenny From the Block." Not content with chart- and box-office success, Lopez also conquered the fashion and fragrance industries, with her clothing lines and a series of top-selling perfumes eventually selling at major retailers.
Earlier this year, her rom-com "The Back-Up Plan" hit theaters, but she seemed to suffer a musical setback when her latest album, Love?, was indefinitely postponed. By summer 2010, though, Lopez was back in the headlines as one of a number of stars rumored to be replacing the departing "Idol" judges. While blogger Perez Hilton was critical of Lopez as a possible selection, her onetime "How I Met Your Mother" co-star, Neil Patrick Harris, was rooting for her.
"She's great. I have nothing bad to say about her. She's nice, crazy talented, super-gorgeous, has things to say about people," he raved. "[She has] good strong opinions so I think she'd be a great fit."
What do you think of Jennifer joining "AI" as a judge? Tell us your thoughts in the comments!