বুধবার, ১৩ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Easily affordable Web Hosting Systems For Your Blog. - Hellofour.com

For that top 10 website hosting and also critiques regarding This year, it can be just a little first to see whom comes to an end passionately in case your tournament had been organised currently, here is how we expect the last roundup could appear. 15: HostUpon ( blank ) HostUpon is just about the inexpensive hosting intentions of the market industry that has a $7.89 selling price per 30 days having an included 25 percent using a special discount code.

is without doubt one of the ideal makes within the on the net sector. If you need to avoid impotent brands, then special store is your most effective bet. Check it out at domain hosting providers register a website

Even though there are many hosting offered, finding a terrific coordinator for a great value is often complicated. Simply by realizing exactly what to look out for in a website coordinator, you'll be able to be sure you have become essentially the most reward for the investment.

Explore The top Different You are able to Discover that at private domain registration domain name registrar

Web hosting service Discounts lets you select in addition to take advantage the very best web hosting service program during this very competitive current market. Frequently fresh online businesses are developing in the realm of business online. It's your choice which enables someone to obtain the best operating as well as in premiums.

On the internet Buying and selling is simple, offers you true experience of buying and safe and sound and practical method of shopping for on domain name register best hosting

For more info in regards to domain registering stop by www.goreanlifestyle.com/blog/view/7619/ten-pathways-web-hosting-packages

Source: http://www.hellofour.com/blog/99628/easily-affordable-web-hosting-systems-for-your-blog/

nicklas backstrom discovery shuttle allure jane goodall saturday night fever glamping forgetting sarah marshall

মঙ্গলবার, ১২ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Grid - Toward A Sustainable Philadelphia - Home - "Watermelon ...

There are few foods that better represent an American summer, youth and sharing than a sweet, crunchy, deep red watermelon. Rich Hoffmann, Philadelphia filmmaker and owner of Spring Garden Pictures, a nonprofit children?s film organization, weaves these themes together in his new film ?Watermelon Magic.? Now, he needs your help delivering this film to the public.

A fictional narrative with a documentary style, ?Watermelon Magic? chronicles six-year-old, sandy-haired Sylvie (Hoffmann?s daughter) as she grows watermelons from seed to fruit. When harvest time arrives, Sylvie must decide if she will share her precious watermelons with the world.

This isn?t Hoffman?s first time creating for the silver screen. He is known for his 2009 film ?Fridays at the Farm,? which chronicled his family?s experience joining a community supported organic farm. This time, Hoffman wanted to make something specifically for children. ?Healthy eating choices really start when we are young,? says Hoffmann in the film?s Kickstarter video. He hopes ?Watermelon Magic? will inspire kids to eat better and to learn about how their food grows.

Like in ?Fridays at the Farm,? Hoffman uses a unique film style to capture the magic of growing. High-resolution still photos, shutter-burst frame rates and time-lapse sequencing engage viewers with the dynamic life of our food. For instance, viewers can watch the months-long process of a flower on a vine developing into a round, heavy melon in less than 30 seconds.

Not unlike its sweet subject, Hoffman wants the film to be big. His hope is for ?Watermelon Magic? to be shown in museum IMAX theaters throughout the country. Surprisingly, IMAX has never featured a film on these themes of gardening, food production and healthy eating.

But to reach this goal, Hoffman needs your help. He has launched a Kickstarter campaign that ends on March 22. Donors will receive rewards like the acoustic guitar soundtrack or a screening and pizza party at Hillside Farm in Media, Pa. where the film was shot.

JULIANNE MESARIC is a food & farming writer and communications professional. She recently returned to Philadelphia after studying at Slow Food's University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, Italy.

?

Source: http://www.gridphilly.com/grid-magazine/2013/3/12/watermelon-magic-puts-young-viewers-under-a-gardening-spell.html

jaco san jose sharks humber perfect game ufc 145 fight card ufc145 chimpanzee chimpanzee

The dynamic of Spain's population follows the maximum entropy principle

The dynamic of Spain's population follows the maximum entropy principle [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Press Office
info@agenciasinc.es
34-914-251-820
FECYT - Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology

A team of Spanish and Argentinean researchers have verified that the distribution of the inhabitants in each Spanish province evolves in accordance with the maximum entropy principle in the field of physics. Therefore, this evolution is predictable. The results have allowed authors to put forward a 'socio-thermodynamic' theory that applies the laws of thermodynamics to collective human behaviour.

Spanish and Argentinean scientists have researched the way in which we as people group together on a large scale as a way of seeing whether there is any law or pattern that explains how we behave. Their findings? The maximum entropy principle. At least this is the case in the population distribution of Spain's provinces.

"We have verified that given province characteristics, which we specify as a value named 'q', population distribution over time does not arise by chance but rather by a certain way that adjusts to the maximum entropy principle," as explained to SINC by Alberto Hernando, researcher of the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne (Switzerland) and co-author of the study.

Once certain conditions are known, the population evolution of all municipalities in this case, the equilibrium distribution of the system for each one of the provinces is one that maximises the quantity of information or entropy, the latter being the physical magnitude describing how irreversible the system is.

"In this way, by observing how the population is distributed in each city or town of each province, we have found that on a collective level we obey mathematically predictable patterns," comments Hernando.

To carry out the study published in the 'Journal of the Royal Society Interface' they used the population data provided by Spain's National Statistics Institute (INE) on 8,116 municipalities spread over 50 provinces between 1996 and 2010. There were already more than 47 million people in Spain in 2010.

The 'q' value used by the researchers not only helped them to summarise the socioeconomic characteristics of each province but also to quantify how large population nuclei grow in relation to their smaller counterparts. Their typical value is 1 and reflects that the population increase of a municipality during the last year studied is proportional to its number of inhabitants the year before.

Nonetheless, when 'q' is greater than 1 this means that the large municipalities or cities of a province grow at a faster rhythm compared to small municipalities or towns. This is what the data shows in the case of Len, for example or Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Huesca.

This is the general tendency in the majority of provinces, which in turn reflects the progressive abandonment of the countryside in favour of the city. In fact, the average 'q' value within Spain is 1.2.

However, when the 'q' value is less than 1, the interpretation becomes more complex. It could reflect that towns of a province have grown at a greater rate than cities, as in the case of Guipzcoa, but the particular way in which municipalities with different tendencies group together also plays a role.

According to the data, in Madrid and Barcelona a mixture of the two phenomena is occurring. On the one hand the very small towns are being left whereas on the other hand the city is being saturated. Therefore, the medium sized nuclei are experiencing a relatively higher growth rhythm.

"We are obviously dealing with average figures and it could be the case that a town or city in particular does not fit the rule of its province, but this does not alter statistic properties," says Hernando, who developed this study during his time at the Paul Sabatier University of Toulouse in France.

Along with other colleagues from the University of Granada, the Institute of Interdisciplinary Physics and Complex Systems (CSIC-University of the Balearic Islands) and the National University of La Plata in Argentina have employed these results to formulate a theory called 'socio-thermodynamics', which is similar to thermodynamics used to describe the equilibrium state of gases, solids and liquids.

The maximum entropy principle is a formulation of the second thermodynamics principle that states that the entropy quantity of the universe tends to increase over time. In other words, a state with a certain order always leans towards a state with less order and the inverse process to this is impossible on a spontaneous level.

According to the researchers, its application to human society can help us to understand how social order always tends to deteriorate if active attempts are not made to avoid such an occurrence. "This without a doubt gives rise to many speculations and interpretations but only one single investigation based on observations and objective data can give us a clear answer," concludes the researcher.

In any case, the authors believe that the predictability provided by this theory could be useful for estimating certain aspects such as migratory flows, future city growth, and the popularity of mass consumer products or even the results of elections.

###

References:

A. Hernando, R. Hernando, A. Plastino, A. R. Plastino. "The workings of the maximum entropy principle in collective human behavior". Journal of the Royal Society Interface 10: 20120758, 2013. Doi:10.1098/rsif.2012.0758.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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


The dynamic of Spain's population follows the maximum entropy principle [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Press Office
info@agenciasinc.es
34-914-251-820
FECYT - Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology

A team of Spanish and Argentinean researchers have verified that the distribution of the inhabitants in each Spanish province evolves in accordance with the maximum entropy principle in the field of physics. Therefore, this evolution is predictable. The results have allowed authors to put forward a 'socio-thermodynamic' theory that applies the laws of thermodynamics to collective human behaviour.

Spanish and Argentinean scientists have researched the way in which we as people group together on a large scale as a way of seeing whether there is any law or pattern that explains how we behave. Their findings? The maximum entropy principle. At least this is the case in the population distribution of Spain's provinces.

"We have verified that given province characteristics, which we specify as a value named 'q', population distribution over time does not arise by chance but rather by a certain way that adjusts to the maximum entropy principle," as explained to SINC by Alberto Hernando, researcher of the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne (Switzerland) and co-author of the study.

Once certain conditions are known, the population evolution of all municipalities in this case, the equilibrium distribution of the system for each one of the provinces is one that maximises the quantity of information or entropy, the latter being the physical magnitude describing how irreversible the system is.

"In this way, by observing how the population is distributed in each city or town of each province, we have found that on a collective level we obey mathematically predictable patterns," comments Hernando.

To carry out the study published in the 'Journal of the Royal Society Interface' they used the population data provided by Spain's National Statistics Institute (INE) on 8,116 municipalities spread over 50 provinces between 1996 and 2010. There were already more than 47 million people in Spain in 2010.

The 'q' value used by the researchers not only helped them to summarise the socioeconomic characteristics of each province but also to quantify how large population nuclei grow in relation to their smaller counterparts. Their typical value is 1 and reflects that the population increase of a municipality during the last year studied is proportional to its number of inhabitants the year before.

Nonetheless, when 'q' is greater than 1 this means that the large municipalities or cities of a province grow at a faster rhythm compared to small municipalities or towns. This is what the data shows in the case of Len, for example or Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Huesca.

This is the general tendency in the majority of provinces, which in turn reflects the progressive abandonment of the countryside in favour of the city. In fact, the average 'q' value within Spain is 1.2.

However, when the 'q' value is less than 1, the interpretation becomes more complex. It could reflect that towns of a province have grown at a greater rate than cities, as in the case of Guipzcoa, but the particular way in which municipalities with different tendencies group together also plays a role.

According to the data, in Madrid and Barcelona a mixture of the two phenomena is occurring. On the one hand the very small towns are being left whereas on the other hand the city is being saturated. Therefore, the medium sized nuclei are experiencing a relatively higher growth rhythm.

"We are obviously dealing with average figures and it could be the case that a town or city in particular does not fit the rule of its province, but this does not alter statistic properties," says Hernando, who developed this study during his time at the Paul Sabatier University of Toulouse in France.

Along with other colleagues from the University of Granada, the Institute of Interdisciplinary Physics and Complex Systems (CSIC-University of the Balearic Islands) and the National University of La Plata in Argentina have employed these results to formulate a theory called 'socio-thermodynamics', which is similar to thermodynamics used to describe the equilibrium state of gases, solids and liquids.

The maximum entropy principle is a formulation of the second thermodynamics principle that states that the entropy quantity of the universe tends to increase over time. In other words, a state with a certain order always leans towards a state with less order and the inverse process to this is impossible on a spontaneous level.

According to the researchers, its application to human society can help us to understand how social order always tends to deteriorate if active attempts are not made to avoid such an occurrence. "This without a doubt gives rise to many speculations and interpretations but only one single investigation based on observations and objective data can give us a clear answer," concludes the researcher.

In any case, the authors believe that the predictability provided by this theory could be useful for estimating certain aspects such as migratory flows, future city growth, and the popularity of mass consumer products or even the results of elections.

###

References:

A. Hernando, R. Hernando, A. Plastino, A. R. Plastino. "The workings of the maximum entropy principle in collective human behavior". Journal of the Royal Society Interface 10: 20120758, 2013. Doi:10.1098/rsif.2012.0758.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/f-sf-tdo031113.php

meryl streep oscars school shooting ohio billy crystal oscar winners 2012 billy crystal oscars 2012 angelina jolie oscars chardon high school

সোমবার, ১১ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Angry Afghan villagers want US special forces out

Afghan National Civil Order Police check passengers at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Maidan Shahr, Wardak province, Afghanistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, infuriated by villager reports of forced detentions and mass arrests, gave U.S. Special Forces two weeks to vacate Wardak province, located barely 30 kilometers (24 miles) from the Afghan capital of Kabul. The deadline for their withdrawal expired midnight Sunday, March 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Afghan National Civil Order Police check passengers at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Maidan Shahr, Wardak province, Afghanistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, infuriated by villager reports of forced detentions and mass arrests, gave U.S. Special Forces two weeks to vacate Wardak province, located barely 30 kilometers (24 miles) from the Afghan capital of Kabul. The deadline for their withdrawal expired midnight Sunday, March 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Afghan villagers show a paper with pictures of relatives held in U.S. Special Forces custody in Maidan Shahr, Wardak province, Afghanistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, infuriated by villager reports of forced detentions and mass arrests, gave U.S. Special Forces two weeks to vacate Wardak province, located barely 30 kilometers (24 miles) from the Afghan capital of Kabul. The deadline for their withdrawal expired midnight Sunday, March 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Afghan man Naimatullah looks on as he speaks about how he was picked up several months ago by U.S. Special Forces along with his brothers, fingerprinted and the isometrics on his eyes done before being released in Maidan Shahr, Wardak province, Afghanistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. Both his brothers are still in custody though he has been unable to find out where they are being held.Afghan President Hamid Karzai, infuriated by villager reports of forced detentions and mass arrests, gave U.S. Special Forces two weeks to vacate Wardak province, located barely 30 kilometers (24 miles) from the Afghan capital of Kabul. The deadline for their withdrawal expired midnight Sunday, March 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Habib Noor, shows a plaster on his body, from two U.S. Special forces and their Afghan translator named Zikrya who beat him he said, in Maidan Shahr, Wardak province, Afghanistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, infuriated by villager reports of forced detentions and mass arrests, gave U.S. Special Forces two weeks to vacate Wardak province, located barely 30 kilometers (24 miles) from the Afghan capital of Kabul. The deadline for their withdrawal expired midnight Sunday, March 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Afghan carpenter Abdullah, right, wipes his tears away as he tells his story about an Afghan special forces solider who slammed the end of his rifle into Abdullah's neck causing a fracture in his vertebrae, in Maidan Shahr, Wardak province, Afghanistan, Sunday, March 10, 2013. Afghan President Hamid Karzai, infuriated by villager reports of forced detentions and mass arrests, gave U.S. Special Forces two weeks to vacate Wardak province, located barely 30 kilometers (24 miles) from the Afghan capital of Kabul. The deadline for their withdrawal expired midnight Sunday, March 10, 2013. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

MAIDAN SHAHR, Afghanistan (AP) ? An Afghan policeman gunned down two U.S. special forces on Monday in Wardak province, less than 24 hours after President Hamid Karzai's deadline expired for them to leave the area where residents have grown increasingly hostile toward the Americans.

Despite Karzai's orders, the American special operations forces remain in the province where dozens of villagers accuse them and their Afghan partners of intimidation through unprovoked beatings, mass arrests and forced detentions. The shootout, which also killed two Afghan policemen, only deepens the distrust.

The U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan says it has found no evidence to support the claims of abuse. But infuriated by the villagers' allegations, Karzai two weeks ago ordered U.S. special operations forces to withdraw by midnight Sunday from Wardak province, 45 kilometers (27 miles) south of the capital, Kabul.

Most international forces are scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of 2014. Wardak, like the rest of the country, is slated to be eventually handed over to Afghan forces, but U.S. Gen. Joseph Dunford, the top commander of U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanistan, indicated on Sunday that the troops were not leaving Wardak province just yet.

"The only issue is the timeline and the methodology, and we're still working on that," Dunford said.

Wardak has a stubborn insurgency on the doorstep of the capital Kabul and its location has led some U.S. military officials to warn that a premature withdrawal of U.S. special operations forces would open a "six-lane highway" into Kabul for the Taliban. But Afghan security forces disagree, saying they don't think insurgents can capture the provincial capital.

On Monday, an Afghan policeman stood up in the back of a pickup truck, grabbed a machine gun and started firing at U.S. special forces and other Afghan policemen at a police compound in Wardak's Jalrez district, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) east of Maidan Shahr, said the province's Deputy Police Chief Abdul Razaq Koraishi.

Two U.S. special operations forces and two Afghan policemen were killed and four others were wounded in the gunfight before the assailant was gunned down, Koraishi said.

A U.S. defense official in Washington and a coalition official in Afghanistan said 10 Americans ? both special operators and regular soldiers who worked in a combined team ? and at least 12 Afghans were wounded in the attack. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss details of the attack with reporters.

It is not known whether the assailant was targeting the Afghan policemen along with the U.S. special operations forces and whether they were killed by the assailant's bullets or during the crossfire. It's also unclear whether the incident was directly related to the simmering tensions between villagers in Wardak who are unhappy with the U.S. special operations forces and their Afghan partners.

Afghan police Sgt. Agha Mirza summed up the hostility toward U.S. special forces that others also expressed to The Associated Press during a series of interviews Sunday in the province.

"They are always disturbing the people," Mirza said, standing with his rifle slung over his shoulder at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Wardak's capital, Maidan Shahr. "If they disturb me, I have a gun."

Grizzled and gray, Mohammed Nabi told the AP that his eldest son was picked up by U.S. special operations forces more than three months ago. No one has told his family where he is or why he was arrested.

"If they don't go, we will go," Nabi said. "We will leave this place. I will set up a tent anywhere."

He said dozens of families have already moved out of his home village of Deh Afghanan because of alleged mistreatment by the special forces and their Afghan partners. He alleged that both "beat people and make our lives miserable."

"This is no life for us or for our children," he said.

Nabi said he and about 80 other Afghan men were detained two weeks ago following Friday prayers at the Kar Ka Mubarak mosque in Deh Afghanan, a few kilometers (miles) southeast of Maidan Shahr.

"For two hours, we stood in the snow," Nabi said. "One old man wanted to go the bathroom and they said: 'Go in your pants.'"

His brother nodded in agreement, and other men started shouting about their own experiences.

A carpenter sanding wood at a nearby workshop said he was stopped on his motorcycle as he was on his way to work in neighboring Dah Do village and detained for five hours.

"It was 3 p.m. They stopped me and said I was a spy for the Taliban," said Abdullah, who uses only one name.

He wiped away a few tears, calling them tears of "shame because I was beaten and couldn't do anything." Abdullah said an Afghan soldier with the U.S. special forces slammed the butt of his rifle into his neck, causing a hairline fracture of one of his vertebrae.

Tucked into the corner of a walled compound in Maidan Shahr, men from a half dozen nearby villages, including some from Jalrez district, gathered in a chilly room to recount a litany of allegations of abuses by U.S. special operations forces and the Afghan soldiers who accompany them.

An elderly Habib Noor lifted his long gray tunic to show bandages where he said he was beaten by two special forces and their Afghan translator, Zikrya. He spoke softly, his head bent toward the floor.

"I can't tell you the bad words he used against me," he said, referring to one of the U.S. soldiers. "I am too ashamed to tell you the words."

Noor leaned against a wall, wrapping his frail, lanky frame in a blanket against the icy wind that whistled through the cement block building. Inside the grimy room, several men showed letters they had written to Karzai. Their letters were endorsed by other villagers, police and even intelligence officials attesting to the innocence of the men whom they said had been picked up by U.S. special forces.

Last week, they showed the same documents to an Afghan and a U.S. general who listened to their stories and took the documents, they said. Neither the U.S. military nor the Afghan government answered the AP's request for an interview about the allegations.

Nabi's brother, Ishaq, who had been picked up along with Nabi's son, Mohammed Hassan, retrieved a tattered piece of paper from an inside pocket. He unfolded it carefully and pointed to signatures accompanied by their thumb prints and a government seal from local authorities.

On the other side, was a long letter addressed to Karzai. It told of his and Hassan's arrest in Deh Afghanan by Afghan and U.S. special operations forces. The letter, dated more than two months ago, asks Karzai to help locate Hassan, who worked for eight years as a gardener for the municipality.

"We aren't even asking that they release him. If he has done something, then let them put him on trial," Nabi said about his son. "But we just want to know where he is, to see him, and if he is dead, then give us his body so we can bury him."

Most of the men in the room were fathers and uncles with gray beards, but there was a sprinkling of younger men, brothers, including some who claimed that they too had been picked up and later released. They all showed pictures of missing relatives and recounted how they searched for them by going to local government officials, knocking on the doors of U.S. military compounds and petitioning the International Committee for the Red Cross.

The AP interviewed dozens of other people who told similar stories. Most, however, made a distinction between special forces and conventional American troops, with whom they said they had no quarrel.

Mullah Mohmmed Kadeem, a village councilor, warned that if the special forces stayed, there would be an "uprising" in Wardak.

"People won't accept it. We will protest until they leave," he said.

Naimatullah, who claimed his two brothers were in the custody of U.S. special forces, said the United States humiliated Karzai by ignoring his deadline for the troop withdrawal.

"If they don't go when the president tells them to go, it shows everything is with the Americans and Karzai is just like a child," he said. "He is the president of Afghanistan and if he can't tell them to leave, how can he help us find our family members? What can we do?"

___

Associated Press Writer Amir Shah in Kabul contributed to this report. Kathy Gannon is the AP's special regional correspondent for Afghanistan and Pakistan. She can be followed on www.twitter.com/kathygannon

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-11-Afghan-US-Friction/id-32f34caa843c4c58a612e5900dcb86b3

jim carrey san francisco chronicle kourtney kardashian pregnant kourtney kardashian pregnant billy cundiff super bowl tickets birmingham news

Judge sets aside sentence for Max Factor heir (Providence Journal)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/290649644?client_source=feed&format=rss

micron susan g komen kenyon martin kenyon martin big miracle slab city super bowl snacks

HTC One versus the iPhone 5

HTC One and iPhone 5.

Just the same, only different: The iPhone 5 and HTC One are worlds apart

"The HTC One looks just like the iPhone 5!" Those were the words out of many a mouth after HTC unveiled its new, all aluminum Android smartphone last month. Metallurgy aside -- and we're willing to bet either Apple or HTC could talk ad nauseam about the chemical makeup of their particular blend of aluminum -- that's where the similarities end. Both phones are made of metal and glass.

Get over it.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/XMvqLHsCHXw/story01.htm

malin akerman jeff carter chomp national enquirer kate gosselin helicopter crash matt jones

রবিবার, ১০ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Kenyan church moves past painful election history

A Kenyan woman walks through the African Inland Church in the Kibera Slum of Nairobi, Kenya, Sunday March 10, 2013, one day after Uhuru Kenyatta was declared winner in the Kenyan presidential elections. One morning in Jan. 2008, more than 200 young men armed with crude weapons stormed the Churchand seized a generator that they then set on fire. The explosion tore through the roof, creating one of the most visible scenes of post-election violence after Kenya?s disputed election of 2007. The roof is reflected through a glass lectern.(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

A Kenyan woman walks through the African Inland Church in the Kibera Slum of Nairobi, Kenya, Sunday March 10, 2013, one day after Uhuru Kenyatta was declared winner in the Kenyan presidential elections. One morning in Jan. 2008, more than 200 young men armed with crude weapons stormed the Churchand seized a generator that they then set on fire. The explosion tore through the roof, creating one of the most visible scenes of post-election violence after Kenya?s disputed election of 2007. The roof is reflected through a glass lectern.(AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Kenyan president-elect Uhuru Kenyatta waves at supporters after winning the elections in Nairobi, Kenya, Saturday, March 9, 2013. Kenya's election commission posted complete results early Saturday showing that Deputy Prime Minister Kenyatta prevailed in the country's presidential elections by the slimmest of margins, winning 50.03 percent of the vote. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

A graffiti artist paints a peace slogan on a road in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya Saturday, March 9, 2013. Uhuru Kenyatta - the son of Kenya's founding father and a man accused by an international court of helping orchestrate the vicious violence that marred the nation's last vote - was certified as the winner on Saturday of Kenya's presidential election by the slimmest majority - 50.07 percent. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

A police officer from the General Service Unit gestures to a crowd of people gathered to go home, as he stands next to a peace slogan painted on the road by a graffiti artist, in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya Saturday, March 9, 2013. Uhuru Kenyatta - the son of Kenya's founding father and a man accused by an international court of helping orchestrate the vicious violence that marred the nation's last vote - was certified as the winner on Saturday of Kenya's presidential election by the slimmest majority - 50.07 percent. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)

Kenyan presidential candidate Raila Odinga, who lost the presidential election, speaks to the media in Nairobi, Kenya Saturday, March 9, 2013. Odinga says he will not concede defeat and will contest the election result in court, saying that "democracy is on trial" after the country's election process experienced multiple failures. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? The Rev. Joshua Kimuyu pointed where his church floor is broken and black, a scar from an attack five years old. More than 200 young men armed with crude weapons stormed the Africa Inland Church in Nairobi's sprawling Kibera slum and set a generator on fire.

The explosion tore through the roof, creating one of the most visible scenes of postelection violence after Kenya's disputed election of 2007.

The dark spot is a constant reminder of the church's vulnerability during national elections. But for Kimuyu there was no question of keeping its doors shut this Sunday, the day after Kenya's election commission announced the winner of the East African country's fiercely contested presidential election. This time, Kimuyu said, there was nothing to fear after the two leading candidates ?winner Uhuru Kenyatta and loser Raila Odinga ?pleaded for calm and unity.

"When presidential candidates spoke to the media, they kind of fueled the steam in the people," he said, looking back on the disputed election of 2007, when more than 1,000 people died in tribe-on-tribe violence. But this time, although the election was hotly contested and close, the candidates urged Kenyans to respect authority, and that appears to have made a difference, said Kimuyu.

Sunday was a day of peace in Kenya. No violence was reported. Only the most minor of disturbances were reported late Saturday in the hours after Kenyatta was named the winner.

Odinga, who called the election "tainted," vowed to press a case of election irregularities with the Supreme Court. But he asked that Kenyans love one another and remain at peace.

The election commission said Kenyatta, the son of Kenya's founding father, won last Monday's vote with 50.07 percent of ballots. Kenyatta stands accused by the International Criminal Court of helping direct some of the 2007-08 postelection violence in which tribes attacked each other with machetes and bows and arrows and the police shot protesters.

Five years ago, President Mwai Kibaki was hurriedly sworn in for a second term, even as Odinga said the election had been stolen. His supporters took to the streets.

At the time, the Africa Inland Church was targeted because it was believed to be patronized by the Kamba tribesmen of Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka, whose willingness to serve in Kibaki's government was seen as a betrayal by the opposition.

In the wake of the 2007-08 violence Kenyans passed a new constitution. That document says that President-elect Kenyatta cannot be sworn in before the court rules on the petition Odinga says he will file. If the court rules that Kenyatta did not cross the 50 percent mark, then Kenyans will vote in a run-off election between the top two finishers.

For Kimuyu this is tremendous progress from five years ago, when Odinga called for mass action.

"I think this is one of the things that have changed since the last election," Kimuyu said. "Odinga is an advocate of the new constitution."

In the run-up to this election, clerics and activists held rallies that preached peace and unity no matter the election result. That investment seems to have paid off, with some of the most hardened Odinga supporters saying he should concede for the sake of the country.

In the Kibera slum, an Odinga stronghold that saw some of the worst violence after the 2007 election, residents went about their business on Sunday morning. Stalls were open, and some young men even seemed more animated by European football than by the outcome of the election. In Kimuyu's church a choir sang as he got ready to deliver a sermon that he said would focus on what it means to be a responsible, lawful citizen.

"We never talk politics here," said Ericson Munyao, a long-time member of the church who was among the first to witness the 2008 attack. "We just tell them to vote wisely, not who to vote for. We simply preach peace."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-10-Kenya-Election/id-80a2a682d2194c2e947c4d91ec889b0c

safehouse brown recluse brown recluse front door alyssa bustamante protandim weightless

How I Get Paid Every Month from off of My Website | Social Media ...

Saturday, March 9th, 2013 at 5:03 pm ?

Get Paid Every Month from off of My WebsiteThere are several different ways I personally get paid every month from off of my website, but in this article we?ll just focus on one concept and strategy for now.

When it comes to starting up a business (large or small), it?s essential to have a website right along with your business and brand as well. I am sure you already know this.

Offline stores need to have their business online. This is not a debate, up for questioning, but it?s a must! I?ll explain more below.? A lot of businesses do not believe this, but it?s true! Now-a-days, everything is web based and internet driven. Even if you?re in business for yourself, by yourself (i.e. Realtor agent, Consultant, Yoga Constructor, or even hair stylist etc) you need to be branding you, your business, and self online.

People feel like if you?re not ?online? then it?s like you?re not real or something and chances are, they will go next door to do business all because of a simple website.? Having a website represents not only just the business, but the team in a whole. Like it represents the owner and their creations, vision, their brand, and it?s kind of like getting to know them behind the scenes. We are more visual with everything. We want to ?see? it, right? When we see it, then we kind of get a feel for the business and their brand. then we?ll decide if we want to do business or not.

You will see big time fortune 500 companies doing business not just offline anymore but they are very much running those same operations online as well and making a killing off of it.

If you?re considering having a website for your business, already have one, or in the process of building one please make sure you?re doing this correctly,using the correct platform that?s going to not only bring you great traffic to your front end business, but you will want to make sure you?re also generating a back-end or ?side? stream of income from off of your website too. It doesn?t make sense in my honest opinion to have a website just for your business alone. You will want to use that side to generate additional income on the back end. And there are several ways you can do this!

I receive this question in my inbox quite frequently on ? how do I get paid every month from off of my website ?

Let?s first start with what type of website you?re going to need in order to do just that! Get the back-end side stream of revenue flowing in. Building up for you monthly. See my video below where I share a few simple strategies, tips, tools, and advice on how this too can benefit you!Press Play

?

Here are my quick steps I use in order to get paid every month from off of my website. You can take these? same steps here into action mood immediately!!!

  1. WordPress
  2. Hosting
  3. Theme

Download your wordpress.org once you?ve downloaded that. Then you?re next step will be to select a theme for your wordpress.org blog / website. There are tons of FREE themes? made available, but in my honest opinion, going ?FREE? is not always the best route. Especially if you?re trying to make this done right like I?ve share above. Your goal is to get your site done and set up the right way.

There are tons of paid themes and companies out there. Some are very expensive and others are dirt cheap. However based on my experience of being an online as a full time Social Media Manager / internet MOMpreneur and this also includes depending on the nature of your business, here are the best themes I recommend you should go with that will definitely keep traffic going, growing, and engaged on your site. Not to mention super affordable too.

  1. Themeforest.net - Get access to over 3,107,399 themes prices ranging as low as $8.00 ? beyond.
  2. FlexSqueeze 1.5 - For internet markets MLM, Direct sales, Network Marketing industry unlimited tools and themes for 2 membership price. This would depend on the network marketers needs and wants.
  3. Elegant Themes ? Get 100% complete access to elegant themes entire collection of 81 themes for only $39! Good ideal for boutiques, e-commerce, magazines and much more.
  • Hosting for your WordPress

There are hundreds of thousands of web hosts out there, the vast majority of which meet the WordPress minimum requirements, and choosing one from the crowd can be a chore. Just like flowers need the right environment to grow, WordPress works best when it?s in a rich hosting environment. So here at the TOP 2 hosting providers that will definitely get your wordpress blog / website cracken on the web easily, affordable, and best effectively.

  1. Hostgator - Designed for WordPress. Starting as low as $3.96/month. Just a ?1-click? easy set up. Unlimited Blogs to be hosted. Your best option here is definitely going with Hostgator.
  2. Godaddy ? Godaddy.com web hosting for as little as $7.64/month

As I?ve mentioned above, there are several different ways I personally get paid every month from off of my website but I wanted to know what are some of your ways too? Or you?re thinking about starting? Want to start but lost and clueless? Either way, I?d love the hear from yah, please comment below. I?m listening.

If you found this information helpful please like and share with anyone you feel can benefit from what you just discovered. Together we all can truly make a difference.

To your success!

Janelle McLeod

?

?

?

P.S. How I was able to really get paid from off of my website weekly / monthly I encourage you to click here and learn these 3 simple tricks that has taught me the power of leveraging the internet. Learn how to you can turn your passionate into profits by simply monetizing your site correctly to start generating a side revenue stream of income on the back-end and best, how I get this revenue 100% DAILY. http://www.SheRocksSocialMedia.com

?

Get Paid Every Month from off of My Website

Janelle McLeod is a Social Media Manager and very passionate about sharing information and helping others to boost their business, brand, and online presence to the next level. She is a top producer and a documented super sponsoring machine in the internet marketing and network marketing industry. She is known for her high standards, morality and his down-to-earth yet "no-nonsense" approach to making money online. She has worked with several hundreds of marketers, small business, and independent contractors & so forth and has coached countless people on the marketing skills and techniques required to generate real income online! If you have not already connected with Janelle, come out from under your rock and let her help you get your business off to a massive start ALL online NOW! Connect with me on Facebook and on Twitter .

Janelle M

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Share and Enjoy

Tagged with: get more twitter followers ? getting paid from my website ? how to I make money online ? how to make money with a blog ? janelle mcleod ? making money online ? more sales ? social media marketing

Filed under: Internet Marketing

Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!

Source: http://janellemcleod.com/how-i-get-paid-every-month-from-off-of-my-website

seattle weather skier sarah burke gingrich wife cheryl burke sarah burke mega upload santorum wins iowa

Film Threat - Napster Not Bad? Interview With ?downloaded ...

When the opportunity presented itself to interview filmmaker Alex Winter about his new documentary, Downloaded, it was a no-brainer to accept. Nevermind that Winter holds a special place in my, and many others?, heart for his portrayal of Bill S. Preston, Esq. in the Bill and Ted series, but he?s also a man whose appearance in the pages of Film Threat Magazine, and on one of the most memorable covers, was a big part of my appreciation of FT, long before I came to work with (and eventually own) the company. In other words, in my more formative years, when I was consuming any and everything about indie and underground films I could find, one touchstone to the memory of that time will forever be Alex Winter? and the face he made on the cover?

But I digress, and this isn?t really about my nostalgia or Alex Winter making goofy faces, it?s about Winter?s latest film, the documentary tale of Napster. It?s a story that we all probably thought we knew: two tech-savvy teenagers, Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker, create a way to share files between computers networked over the internet, specifically mp3s, call the service Napster, and users then use said service to trade copyright-infringing material, which pisses off music labels and artists like Metallica?s Lars Ulrich, who then go after Napster, and Napster users, in court. To quote a classic internet video at that time, ?Napster BAD!?

Only, of course, the story is more complex than that, the facts far more interesting and the human side more compelling. In Downloaded, Winter manages to establish the story of Napster from the mouths of those who were there, including Fanning and Parker. And not just by utilizing their recollections, but by juxtaposing interviews they did at the time with their thoughts of today. The result is a more complete picture, even if certain elements remain murky. It?s a wonderful documentary for a number of reasons, the least of which may be its historical significance in finally giving us the facts to explore beyond simply ?Napster BAD!? The landscape, and culture, of the internet was forever changed due to Napster, and the fallout, for better or worse, is still being reconciled (and likely will be for years to go). And with Downloaded?s premiere at the 2013 SXSW Film Festival coming up, Winter let me pick his brain about it all. Listen to the Spotify playlist the filmmakers put together of music relevant to the conversation, and read on?


First off, just want to compliment you on making a movie perfect for SXSW?
*Laughs* Right? It is music, tech and movies so? it ticks all their boxes. Not intentionally, but I?m not complaining.

down_poster27x40.inddI read that this was originally going to be a narrative feature. How early was that idea conceived?
2002. I was really into Napster, and not just because I was a gluttonous mp3 fanatic, which I was, but I was old enough to have been around before personal computers, period, and then I was very into personal computers, and then I got onto the net as soon as there was a net. I was into the BBS era, the newsgroup era. Internet communities were really fascinating to me. That was something I was a part of and Napster just hit me like a wet towel in the head. It was such a seismic leap forward, in terms of? now I had an internet community, now I could real-time chat, now I had the ability to talk to people all over the world and share stuff with them and common interests. It really was huge. It?s hard to convey the change, especially in the era of dial-up. It was something that mattered to me and I also saw the challenges that it had and I understood why it was such a massive headache for pre-existing businesses and cultures and governments. I got it. A lot of people did, but not as many as one would think.

So I met with Fanning and I pitched him a way to tell the story, and he was really interested, and I sold it to Paramount and wrote it as a movie there, did a ton of research and became friendly with him and Parker and record industry people; everybody involved, it was sort of like writing a big Rolling Stone piece. For a music tech geek, it was paradise, but it went into turnaround, which movies do, as you well know. And I was, ?Okay, that?s fine, screw it and keep moving,? which I did. So I just walked away. I stayed friendly with them but didn?t really think about making a Napster movie anymore.

Years went by and, frankly, about three years ago, way before the whole SOPA thing kicked off, it was hard to ignore how noisy the argument had become. I really had thought, in 2004 or so, when I put a movie down that, surely, with iTunes, now everybody, in my opinion, seemed to understand that this was here to stay and it does monetize and no, the public aren?t thieves, they just needed a better distribution model and now they have one and they?re using it but? no *laughs*

The players that I know are the ones who built this stuff and are still immersed in it, so it wasn?t just retro. But it seemed completely wrong to do it as a narrative. What we need is a chance for all these guys to get together under the umbrella of a doc and just say what they think about what happened and where we?re at. That?s why I decided to do it as a doc.

For my own context, I knew the broad strokes about the entire Napster thing but its infamous hey-day was in a period where I was hit-or-miss with internet, either because I was working on films or was stuck with dial-up. My years downloading were prior, when I was in college and we could use the network to share between our in-dorm computers. I only got the news footage and didn?t actively use Napster personally, which turned the story into basically Metallica versus these two kids. While watching Downloaded, I realized how ignorant I was about Napster, and I don?t think I?m alone in that ignorance. How challenging is it, when you?re making a documentary, when the main narrative has already been established in people?s minds due to the way the news reported on it at the time and, second part, as a documentarian, how hard is it to remain objective knowing that the other, strong narratives exist, whether they?re accurate or not?
To answer the first question, that part was easy because I felt that A) nobody really understood what actually happened and B) it had never been contextualized where? I wasn?t just going to come out and tell the Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker story. I really wanted to look at the labels, and their history, and just put all of that under one umbrella. I personally hadn?t seen it. I?d seen different stabs at it, but not under one umbrella and not now, not with all the context.

I honestly feel like I dodged a bullet; I?m really that glad that I didn?t make a narrative and I didn?t make it in 2004. I think it?s the wrong time and the wrong format. I felt very comfortable that now was the time to tell the story and, frankly, I don?t even feel like I was in a rush. I feel like you could tell this story in another 10 years? the history is unfolding.

To your second point, I would just say that the good thing about a documentary is that it?s not just my game; it isn?t just my voice. There are documentarians who do that, and who frankly do it well, but those aren?t even my favorite documentaries. I come from? I?m a really old fart so I like Don?t Look Back and Gimme Shelter, and I like a lot of stuff that Pennebaker did and the Maysles, and this notion of being an eye on the world. So it was totally liberating. My editor has a huge hand in crafting this story, my DP has a huge hand in crafting this story; everyone had opinions on this issue and they sure as Hell got more educated quickly once they got on board, because it?s fascinating. I was really open to it taking on that life of its own.

I did not want this to be just my opinion of the Napster debacle; it would?ve been very different. And that?s one of the first things I said to my editor, ?please continually tell me if I?m butting in with my opinion so that it doesn?t wind up becoming an essay.?

Alex Winter and Jacob Craycroft (editor). Courtesy of Trouper Productions

Alex Winter and Jacob Craycroft (editor). Courtesy of Trouper Productions

It?s an interesting point, as certain documentaries, while they don?t become propaganda pieces, they can become one-sided essays. This was very even-handed. I think it?s quite a good, and very complete, film, so if I praise the editing, I don?t want cinematography to feel ignored, but I really liked how the film weaved the footage of the subjects as young adults with them as older adults, so it didn?t become a talking heads experience so much as a dialogue between youth and? still youth?
*Laughs* Yeah. Goddamn those 30-year old billionaires! Yeah, that was absolutely one thing that occurred to me when I was writing the narrative and researching it, what a wealth of archival there was. I was using all that for research when I was writing, just to find their voice, so I have all this media of the guys as kids. So I knew that existed.

It was interesting because that was, if I had anything that was thematic to me on a personal level, it was exactly what you just said. I was very drawn on a personal level of then and now from their perspective. What does it feel like to be 31, 32, been through this trial by fire and, frankly, some very difficult years after that and then some successes after that and then looking back.

That?s the first thing Parker said when I did the South by panel last year; he?d never seen anything and he saw that clip and was like, ?Holy shit! We were so young!? It is kind of jarring, and that really interested me. What that did to their friendship, what it?s like as a human being to go through that. Whether you agree with them or not, on a purely compassionate level, it was a lot.

Because they weren?t bank robbers. They might?ve been naive; they might?ve had some misguided notions on copyright law, but they were not bank robbers. They wanted to create a global community. A lot of their motives were pretty egalitarian, so that really interested me from a human standpoint. If there?s anything thematic that I stuck to on my own, I do care a lot about both those guys. It doesn?t mean I have to completely agree with them, but I have compassion for them because I?ve known them since they were going through some really intense stuff.

It?s hard not to be empathetic, particularly with Fanning, when you see the juxtaposition between the earlier footage and now; he looks like he?s dealing with some post-traumatic stress concerns, which is hard to watch. He was sticking up for what he thought was correct, and to see how all that fighting wears on him, is challenging to watch from a human standpoint?
Yeah, I know. And life is life. Thankfully he?s a wonderful, centered guy. He?s a healthy person spiritually, but I do think there?s no doubt that having to re-live this entire experience was definitely an emotional thing for him. I don?t know if he?d admit that, but I think it?s certainly fairly evident, and of course it would be. Because it was trauma, and it was trauma that went on and on and on and on?

It was something I was trying to be mindful when making it, that I wasn?t just rubbing him and his family?s face in some grim stuff, but the reality of it is that he also invented something that changed the world and is pretty amazing. I think the Napster legacy, when the dust settles, again whether you agree with downloading or not, will still be pretty profound.

Do you have any expectations for the SXSW premiere screening, because it?s at such a crux of Interactive, Film and Music; what the experience will be like for you, but also for your two main subjects? They?ve been lionized and hated by various segments of those three groups over the years, so the environment could be anything?
I think that, because I?d done the South by thing last year, and I saw how well they handled themselves? it was not by any means a slavishly partisan audience; there were people asking them some tough questions. They?re pretty damn good at handling themselves. They?re both entrepreneurs, they both deal with vast amounts of money, they both have to sell big ideas to people asking them tough questions; I think they?re going to be fine.

And because the movie is not? the opposite of what I?m trying to achieve would be to create more contention and more divisiveness. It?s not like we?re going into this thing creating panels like ?Round One: Columbia Records vs. the Napster Guys.? *laughs* I think they?re going to be in a very safe environment, certainly one they can handle, however tough the questions are. Also, they have an elder statesmen? they?re not currently at the center of the SOPA debate, or what will now be the CISPA debate, that?s not who they are. In fact, in a way, like what happens with every revolutionary, they?re kind of establishment. Parker?s spending most of his time doing deals with labels everyday. Fanning has been entrenched in the gaming industry for years. They?re kind of establishment, which has its own implications.

Shawn Fanning, Sean Parker and Alex Winter. Courtesy VH1 Rock Docs

Shawn Fanning, Sean Parker and Alex Winter. Courtesy VH1 Rock Docs

Knowing the status of film distribution and and independent filmmaking in general, which is in constant flux, where do you come down as a filmmaker in this world? You just made a documentary film, you want to get it out there, you?re going to have a high-profile premiere, you?re with VH1 Rock Docs, which is a step-up but? coming from a filmmaking perspective, what is your idea of the landscape for distribution and what people can do to succeed right now? What is the technological impact on the success or failure?
My opinion on that may be too mundane to print, in the sense that I don?t see any correlative yet. ?Yet? being the operative, between the downloading revolution and the death of independent film. We know what happened; the majors bought out those companies and killed them. It wasn?t KaZaA.

For me, I think this is a Golden Age for documentaries. I think this is a Golden Age potentially for all kinds of independent cinema where you have the ability to distribute, depending on what type of movie you?re making? God knows there?s no lack of fantastic documentaries every year. There were so many [last] year I didn?t get to see all I wanted to see, and every one I saw blew my head off. People were like, ?What did you think of The Hobbit?? and it was like, ?I don?t know. I?m still nine documentaries back before I get to The Hobbit.?

It?s really hard to sit here and kvetch about the state of that stuff when it?s doing so well. You could certainly complain about independent cinema being almost impossible to make a living in, but that?s been a problem for years and, to me, it has nothing to do with the technological revolution. Also, I even would say to that, that?s cultural ebb and flow because I don?t really develop indie movies anymore, I develop TV shows. I?ve got a show at AMC I?m writing right now that would?ve been a movie five years ago. Instead I pitched it as a TV show. There?s great content, you just have to find it, but there?s great content on TV, there?s great documentaries, there?s great big popcorn movies. That?s the upside.

We absolutely live in a world that is in massive flux, and it?s not all getting monetized so, for me, sure I wonder about the fate of the music artists, sure I wonder about the fate of independent filmmaker who doesn?t want to be told, ?You either work in TV, or make docs, or put your stuff up for free or just go get a job teaching film at some university,? because that?s not how they tell stories. I think that?s sad, but I also think there?s a lot of reasons for that that don?t just fall on the shoulders of Kim.com.

I?m always curious; I talk with a lot of filmmakers at various levels, and some really embrace how things are now, such as putting their movie out there for free to build an audience, or selling VOD, so it?s always interesting to get the lay of the land. I think it?s reflected in your documentary that there?s always that older business model that, for whatever reason, people re-imagine the past as better than it was, as if the older independent film model always worked. And it didn?t. The pipe dream of the Sundance early-90s success story, for example. Yeah, it happened, but it didn?t happen every year?
Yeah, and nor did it happen to that many people. It was like winning the lottery. I have many, many friends who are independent filmmakers who never made a living through that hey-day doing their art, who make movies that you love, that are on Netflix. I?m not just talking about the fringes, I?m talking about stable, well-known filmmakers who did not have a pot to piss in during that period.

I think that? look, the reality of it is that, if you decide to make art for a living, it is a very bold choice. It always has been, and probably always will be, and I think the reality of it is, and this is something that I am concerned about, I think what we need to be watching out for now? I just wish some of the older paradigm industry weren?t so ignorant and just caught up a little better, so that we could be having more intelligent discussions about monetizing these industries instead of really stupid ones like ?how do we block these websites,? which make no sense. We should be having discussions about, ?okay, this stuff is here, how do we build an infrastructure that monetizes for us and doesn?t completely fuck the artist?? Because that?s what?s gonna happen, and that?s my biggest fear, that the new boss is going to be as bad as the old boss, and the artist is going to get screwed. That would be a shame.

Right, I remember watching the news when Metallica was getting after Napster about screwing them and other music artists and thinking, wait, isn?t that what the music industry does to you now?
We let Jon Stewart make that point in the movie. Come on, we?re talking about an industry that used to use the mob to break people?s knee-caps if they wouldn?t play singles.

Not quite a question but a digression based on observation, I couldn?t help but notice that almost every time Chris Phenner is onscreen talking about something, if there?s someone else in the frame, they?re either rolling their eyes or look like they?re trying to hold back the urge to punch him?
*Laughs* Phenner?s a really good friend of mine? it was like putting the Beatles back together. This was a band, and they loved and hated each other. That?s a whole other movie which I didn?t get into. The internal company politics was actually what my narrative was about, because it?s hilarious and dramatic and has its own stuff going on, but it had no place in a documentary.

I was watching, and I was like, ?There are stories here??
Oh yeah, and they?re still going. They?ll stop talking to each other, and this guy won?t talk to that guy and he said this and? it?s a comedy of errors dealing with these guys sometimes, but it?s like anything else.

Downloaded premieres at the 2013 SXSW Film Festival on Sunday, March 10, 2013.

Posted on March 9, 2013 in Interviews by Mark Bell



If you liked this article then you may also like the following Film Threat articles:
Popular Stories from Around the Web

Source: http://www.filmthreat.com/interviews/63193/

John Witherspoon george michael usain bolt Closing Ceremony London 2012 Tom Daley Leryn Franco The Campaign

শনিবার, ৯ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Woods tied for lead at Doral as McIlroy struggles

Tiger Woods waits to tee off on the ninth hole during the first round of the Cadillac Championship golf tournament, Thursday, March 7, 2013 in Doral, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Tiger Woods waits to tee off on the ninth hole during the first round of the Cadillac Championship golf tournament, Thursday, March 7, 2013 in Doral, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Tiger Woods, right, talks to Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, at the 10th tee during the first round play at the Cadillac Golf Championship, in Doral, Fla., Thursday March 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, hits off the second tee during the first round of the Cadillac Championship golf tournament, Thursday, March 7, 2013, in Doral, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, blasts out of the sand trap at the 10th hole during the first round play at the Cadillac Golf Championship, in Doral, Fla., Thursday March 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Tiger Woods acknowledges the fans after par on the 10th hole during the first round play at the Cadillac Golf Championship, in Doral, Fla., Thursday March 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

(AP) ? Tiger Woods was on his game, and so were most of the world best golfers Thursday in the Cadillac Championship.

Except for the world's No. 1 player.

Woods made nine birdies on the Blue Monster at Doral for a 6-under 66 that put him in a five-way share of the lead with Masters champion Bubba Watson, former U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell, Sergio Garcia and Freddie Jacobson.

This World Golf Championship lived up to its name with Phil Mickelson, Steve Stricker and Hunter Mahan among those one shot behind.

But it was another rough day for Rory McIlroy.

He hit only three fairways and made six bogeys that kept him at par or worse on a perfect day for scoring. Despite making a 15-foot eagle putt on the par-5 first hole, and lacing a 5-iron over the water for another eagle attempt on the par-5 eighth that narrowly missed, the best he could manage was a 73.

McIlroy has yet to break par this year.

"It was a bit of a struggle, to be honest," McIlroy said to Sky Sports. "Hit some good shots. Hit some not-so-good shots. As I've been saying all week, this is a work in progress and I'm working at it and I'm staying patient."

He declined to speak to reporters, grabbing a quick lunch and smiling at screaming fans who wanted his autograph as he headed to the practice range.

McIlroy played alongside Woods and Luke Donald ? Nos. 1, 2 and 3 in the world ? and while this essentially is a home game for Woods having won three times at Doral, the occasional shouts of "You're the real No. 1, Tiger" rang true.

Coming off a pedestrian performance a week ago at the Honda Classic, Woods looked sharp in most aspects of his game, except for a few lapses with his chipping. He wasted two early birdies with a three-putt bogey on the 13th hole and a delicate flop shot that he flubbed on the 14th, leading to another bogey. His chip up the slope on the third didn't reach the green for another bogey.

That's all that was wrong.

He holed two long birdie putts, including a sliding, slippery putt from about 40 feet on the par-3 fourth hole, and missed four reasonable chances inside 15 feet. His final birdie was on the par-5 eighth, when he had to lay up from a fairway bunker and hit a wedge that stopped 2 feet from the hole.

"It was certainly a day that could have been a little lower," said Woods, who was selected for random drug testing after his round.

Just about everyone could say that in these conditions.

Garcia and McDowell were in the same group. Not only did they have bogey-free rounds, both birdied the same four holes. Jacobson made two eagles in a span of three holes, both times hitting a 5-wood onto the green to just over 12 feet.

Watson played in the group with Mickelson and Stricker, and they were a collective 16-under par.

Stricker had a chance to tie for the lead except he missed a 4-foot birdie putt on the final hole. Mickelson, as usual, kept it entertaining. He pulled his tee shot on the 17th hole and his ball stopped rolling after it traveled some 450 yards. He purposely took a free drop on the cart path to avoid the rough, and chipped that to about 5 feet for birdie.

"You hit the ball in as much trouble as I do off the tee, you learn to hit those kinds of shots and have enough practice at it," he said. "I knew what was going to happen."

Woods atop the leaderboard is enough to create enough buzz to drown out the jetliners over Doral as they approach Miami International Airport. On this day, there was just as much curiosity about the 23-year-old McIlroy and the state of his game, not to mention what's going on inside his head.

The pressure of changing equipment and backing up a big year that made him No. 1 in the world got the best of him last week at the Honda Classic, when he walked off the course without finishing his ninth hole of the second round.

McIlroy apologized during a press conference Wednesday, said it would never happen again and wanted to get back to being happy on the golf course. There weren't many smiles, though he often chatted with Woods as they walked down the fairway.

He didn't hit a fairway on the front nine (he started on No. 10), though two of those shots were in the first cut and led to birdie. But as much time as he has spent trying to rediscover that easy, balanced swing, it was clear he has neglected his short game. On the second hole, he had an 80-foot putt that he left 20 feet short.

"It was nice to sneak in a couple birdies on the last three holes and make it look somewhat respectable, even though everyone seems to be going pretty low out there today," McIlroy said.

Woods played two rounds with him at Abu Dhabi to start the year, and they were frequent playing partners during the FedEx Cup playoffs last year. Woods said McIlroy looked "just a little bit defensive" with his swing.

"That happens, and we have all gone through stretches like this," Woods said. "It happens, and it happened to him last year in the middle of the year, and ended up all right at the end of the year. When you play golf for a very long time, you're going to have spells like this. You can't play well every week, even though you try. You're going to have ups and downs, and just got to battle through it."

For everyone else, it wasn't much of a battle in the opening round with a gentle breeze and warm sunshine. The fairways were firm and running fast, allowing the Blue Monster to play shorter. The average score was 70.8, and only 16 players in the 65-man field were over par.

"This course is playing pretty firm, so if you hit it in the fairway, it's not going to be a ton of long shots," Jacobson said. "Tough thing is if you're in the rough, you don't get any control on the ball from this grass. It makes it really difficult to stop the ball, and if you miss the green, it's pretty tricky around here."

.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-07-GLF-Cadillac-Championship/id-ab58745a26f94b71a0fe21eb4d93cf0b

Colorado Springs pga tour Nora Ephron mario balotelli mario balotelli espn3 kevin youkilis