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FuglyStick
Topic :   priorities, man, priorities

Man jailed after sending Iowa hostages for beer

FORT MADISON, Iowa - An Illinois man who police say held five people hostage in a motel in Fort Madison, Iowa, was arrested after he sent two of his hostages on a beer run.

Police say 33-year-old Jason Slagel of Moline is charged with five counts of false imprisonment and going armed with intent. They say Slagel pulled a knife during an argument Tuesday night with another man and told the people in the room that they wouldn't be allowed to leave.

One man was cut and Slagel had a cut on his hand, but police say the injuries weren't serious.

Police say Slagel eventually got thirsty and sent two hostages out for beer.
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After they left, they called police and Slagel was arrested without incident.



08/27/2008 17:27:23


FuglyStick
Re :   Strahan retires

August 25, 2008




Source: Talks underway with Strahan




The Giants have reached out to the recently retired Michael Strahan, and talks are currently underway to see if they can lure him back for a 16th NFL season, the Daily News has learned.


According to a source close to Strahan, the seven-time Pro Bowler received a call from a Giants official Monday to gauge his interest in coming back to replace the injured Osi Umenyiora. The Daily News reported earlier Monday that Strahan is willing to come back if the Giants make a “sincere effort” to woo him and make an offer of $8 million for the year.


It’s not immediately clear who in the organization called Strahan - who is on vacation in Greece and is currently planning to remain there until the end of the week - but several friends of his said Monday that he would definitely be interested in talking. A couple of those friends said he might ask the Giants for as much as $12 million, though another thought $8 million would be enough to lure the future Hall of Famer out of his brief retirement.


The Giants offered Strahan a deal worth $6.5 million with incentives back in the spring before he announced his retirement on June 9. Now that Umenyiora is out for the season with a torn lateral meniscus cartilage in his left knee, the Giants might be willing to up their offer.


For the moment, according to a Strahan friend, the Giants at least made the first step, by calling him to let them know that he was wanted and that they were serious about bringing him back. The talks are in the early stages, the source said, and it’s not clear when Strahan will talk with the Giants again.


Earlier Monday, Tom Coughlin made the announcement that he planned to fill the void left by Umenyiora by moving linebacker Mathias Kiwanuka back to defensive end, the position he was drafted at back in 2006. Coughlin said he hadn’t been involved in any internal discussions about Strahan, but he refused to close the door on Strahan’s return.


“We’re going to explore every option that’s available,” Coughlin said.


GM Jerry Reese indicated the same thing in a statement, which read in part “We’ll continue to research all of our options.”


Until they know for sure whether they can bring back the 37-year-old Strahan, it appears the Giants will continue to move forward with their plan to switch Kiwanuka back to end. Coughlin said he spoke to Kiwanuka Sunday and he was willing to make the move.


“Mathias accepted every job that we have offered and every task we have presented him with,” Coughlin said. “I talked with him yesterday and he was more than ready to do whatever we wanted him to do that was in the best interests of the team.”


Kiwanuka - at least for now - will move into Umenyiora’s spot at right defensive end, while Justin Tuck will hold onto Strahan’s old spot on the left. Danny Clark, a free-agent pickup in the offseason, will move from weakside linebacker to the strong side, meaning Gerris Wilkinson will likely start on the weak side.


The spotlight, though, will be on Kiwanuka, the 32nd overall pick of the 2006 draft out of Boston College, who had four sacks in 16 games as a defensive end in ‘06, and 4 1/2 sacks last year as a linebacker before breaking his leg in the 10th game of the season. He switched to linebacker because he was blocked at end last year by Strahan, Umenyiora and Tuck, and the Giants didn’t want him buried on the depth chart. He played linebacker on first and second downs, but often moved up to end in passing situations.


“It’s something that he



08/25/2008 17:23:03


FuglyStick
Re :   Minimum drinking age questioned

I am curious--does anyone else have an opinion one way or the other on this issue?


08/24/2008 16:00:55


FuglyStick
Topic :   How do you embed video?

I ain't got a freakin' clue.  Used to be you could go to HTML and paste the code; now that doesn't work, and I've yet to get the "Insert embedded media" button to work right.  Soon as I figure it out, I'll let ya know.


08/24/2008 15:29:20


FuglyStick
Topic :   Death to download jukes!

Download jukeboxes suck donkey dong.  Don't bar owners know that a good portion of their ambience is the music that's playing?  Damn near every place that has a jukebox has switched to the download format, and every place has the same sucky mainstream crap anymore.


08/23/2008 21:58:29


FuglyStick
Topic :   Obama picks Biden

It's official: Joe Biden is Barack Obama's pick as vice presidential running mate

Joe Biden would bring considerable foreign policy experience to the Democratic ticket.

By James Oliphant and Mike Dorning

Washington bureau

9:14 AM CDT, August 23, 2008

WASHINGTON

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Sen. Barack Obama has chosen Delaware Sen. Joe Biden as his running mate on the Democratic ticket in the race for the White House.

Obama announced the selection of Biden on his Web site early Saturday, and a text message went out shortly thereafter: "Barack has chosen Senator Joe Biden to be our VP nominee."

The new teammates were to make their first public appearance together later in the day at a rally at the Old State Capitol in Sp



08/23/2008 11:48:30


FuglyStick
Topic :   Upshaw's death leaves void in union

Upshaw's death leaves a void at the union

Shaun O'Hara had just arrived at Giants Stadium for practice Thursday morning when a teammate said he had seen an item about Gene Upshaw's death on television.

"I thought it had to be a hoax because it was all of a sudden," said the New York Giants center, who is also the team's union representative. "I tried to search online and find some more information. When I discovered it was true, it was very sad to hear."

It was the same for most of the 2,400 players on NFL rosters as well as for owners, coaches, league officials and team administrators. It wasn't just the fact of Upshaw's death but the shock of it. Until recently, when people began to notice he had lost weight, no one thought that the 63-year-old Hall of Fame guard was in anything but perfect health.

In fact, Upshaw himself didn't know he had pancreatic cancer until Sunday, three days before it took his life.

It was a loss that could create problems for both the NFL and its players for a long time.

Despite his tendency to sound menacing, especially to those who criticized him, the man who headed the NFL Players Association for the last quarter-century was in his heart a dove, proud of the fact that under his watch there had been labor peace for more than two decades

"He was very tough but also a good listener. He never lost sight of the interests of the game and the big picture," said former commissioner Paul Tagliabue, Upshaw's close friend and his collaborator in ensuring the NFL has continued without a work stoppage longer than any other major North American sports league.

Soon after news of Upshaw's death became public, the union's executive board made a quick move by appointing Richard Berthelsen, the NFLPA's chief counsel and Upshaw's top aide, to take his place on an interim basis. Kevin Mawae of the Tennessee Titans, the union's president, said it won't even begin to put together a committee to search for a new executive director until March 2009 or later.

That search could go anywhere, although history suggests a former player. The names most often mentioned are former Minnesota running back Robert Smith and two former union presidents: Trace Armstrong and Troy Vincent.

That almost surely means Berthelsen, who has been involved in NFLPA labor negotiations for 37 years, will spearhead the talks aimed at getting a new contract and avoiding a 2010 season without a salary cap. Upshaw had vowed all along if that happens, the cap will never come back, something that could make the NFL more like baseball, where rich teams (think Yankees, Red Sox and Mets) buy players at will, while poorer ones endure one losing season after another (think Pirates, Royals and Nationals).

Berthelsen, of course, wasn't even thinking about that Thursday. A close friend of Upshaw's, he spent the day grieving, his telephone mailbox full with condolence wishes or calls from stunned players. Even Doug Allen, the union's former assistant executive director, had trouble getting through to him.

"We've been playing phone tag all day," Allen said just as his phone rang — finally — with a return call from Berthelsen.

In fact, Berthelsen has been partly responsible for many of the union's gains over the last two decades, most often behind the scenes. The one thing he lacks is what made Upshaw such a draw to the union members: the fact Upshaw played and played well. A guard who spent his entire career with the Raide



08/22/2008 20:44:14


FuglyStick
Topic :   wireless juice

Intel Moves to Free Gadgets of Their Recharging Cords

SAN FRANCISCO — Intel has made progress in a technology that could lead to the wireless recharging of gadgets and the end of the power-cord spaghetti behind electronic devices.

It says it has increased the efficiency of a technique for wirelessly powering consumer gadgets and computers, a development that could allow a person to simply place a device on a desktop or countertop to power it. It could bring the consumer electronics industry a step closer to a world without wires.

On Thursday, the chip maker plans to demonstrate the use of a magnetic field to broadcast up to 60 watts of power two to three feet. It says it can do that losing only 25 percent of the power in transmission.

“Something like this technology could be embedded in tables and work surfaces,” said Justin Rattner, Intel’s chief technology officer, “so as soon as you put down an appropriately equipped device it would immediately begin drawing power.”

The presentation is part of the company’s Intel Developer Forum, a series of events here that the company uses to showcase new technologies in personal computing and related consumer technologies.

The research project, which is being led by Joshua R. Smith, an Intel researcher at a company laboratory in Seattle, builds on the work of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology physicist Marin Soljacic, who pioneered the idea of wirelessly transmitting power using resonant magnetic fields. The MIT group refers to the idea as WiTricity, a play on wireless and electricity. Both the M.I.T. group and the Intel researchers are exploring a phenomenon known as “resonant induction,” making it possible to transmit power several feet without wires.

Induction is already used to recharge electric toothbrushes, but that approach is limited by the need for the toothbrush to be placed in the base station.

The M.I.T. group has demonstrated efficiencies of 50 percent at ranges of several meters.

Intel is in the midst of an internal debate over whether the technology may also permit the shift to supercapacitors, which can be recharged far more quickly than today’s batteries. “In the future, your kitchen counters might do it,” Mr. Rattner said. “You’d just drop your espresso maker down on them and you would never have to plug it in.”

The Intel team describes its system as a “wireless resonant energy link,” and is experimenting with antennas less than two feet in diameter to remotely light a 60-watt light bulb.

In 2006, the M.I.T. researchers demonstrated that by sending electromagnetic waves around a waveguide it was possible to produce “evanescent” waves that could permit electricity to wirelessly tunnel to another w



08/22/2008 20:35:08


FuglyStick
Topic :   You can take your movie, and stick it in your AAASSSS

Everyone Hates Fred Durst and His Stupid Movie

2thumblongshots_poster_tn.jpg
For us, making fun of Fred Durst is like making "that's what she said" jokes. We're always on the lookout for a chance to do it, it makes us laugh more than other people, and afterward, we feel kind of embarrassed. And wouldn't you know it, that backward-hat and Dickies-wearing dipshit without an ounce of talent, credibility or personality, has a heart-warming family movie coming out today. The Longshots stars Durst's fellow bad boy-turned-lameass Ice Cube and is about a girl and football or something. Not important. What is important is that we're not the only one's who love hating Fred Durst. Movie reviewers are all about it as well:

"In the whatever-you-say department, Fred Durst of rock band Limp Bizkit directs the comedy The Longshots. (Come on, he can't even spell biscuit.)"—Wichita Eagle

"As far as we know, maybe Fred Durst did direct The Longshots all for the nookie. For the rest of us though—and after a decidedly nookie-free screening—I can only respectfully suggest the Limp Bizkit frontman should, to recall his own lyrical mastery, "stick it up his—yeah."—Winnipeg Sun

"The Longshots: Family-friendly football film directed by—drum roll, please—Fred Durst. That's right, Fred "Did it all for the nookie" Durst. Fred "Sex tape on the Internet" Durst. And, apparently these days, Fred "Wholesome family man" Durst."—San Diego City Beat

"Perhaps the most brilliant decision the producers of The Longshots made was to hold director Fred Durst's credit from reveal until the end of the film, to minimize assured slack-jawed disbelief."—Ohmy News

"Unfortunately, director Fred Durst blends all of these time-honored components with the same skill level that he brought to the stage with his crappy band Limp Bizkit."—Time Out NY

"Musician-turned-director Fred Durst and screenwriter Nick Santora pile on so many clichés, so many pandering side characters that only exist in the world of movies, and so much saccharine sweetness that the result is more likely to make the viewer feel sick from sugar overload."—TheMovieBoy.com

"The Longshots is corny and absurdly predictable.... It could be former Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst's generally uninspired direction. Or maybe it's the perverse power of the montage."—The Gazette (Colorado)

"The Longshots Ice Cube and Keke Palmer star in this family football comedy directed by Fred Durst. Wait, what?"—<



08/22/2008 20:28:29


FuglyStick
Topic :   Surreal, indeed

Rapper 'Da Brat' draws 3-year sentence

DECATUR, Ga., Aug. 22 (UPI) -- U.S. rap star Da Brat, real name Shawntae Harris, was sentenced to three years in prison Friday for hitting another woman in the head with a liquor bottle.

Presiding in an Decatur, Ga., courtroom, DeKalb County Superior Court Judge Gail Flake also sentenced Harris, 34, to seven years probation and 200 hours of community service, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.

"She feels a great deal of remorse for what she did," Harris's lawyer, Thomas Clegg, told the newspaper. "She is willing to accept responsibility for what she has done."

Flake also required Harris to get substance abuse treatment and a mental evaluation and attend anger management classes. She pleaded guilty to a felony aggravated assault charge stemming from an Oct. 31, 2007, incident during a private Halloween party at the Studio 72 nightclub in Atlanta, owned by rap entrepreneur Jermaine Dupri.

The Journal-Constitution said Harris attacked Atlanta Falcons football cheerleader Shayla Stevens with a nearly full liquor bottle, hitting her on the head and causing her to fall down some stairs to a cement floor and sustain a severe facial cut.


08/22/2008 20:20:32


Caffeind
Re :   Oh yeah, the Olympics...

  WTF ! I like to see the birth certificates of the chinese gymnastics team.. Its there country and the government has the power too change papers..other than that since i been in Japan the women do look younger than what they are but not like that .


08/21/2008 22:17:10


Caffeind
Re :   Er, encore?

  Imagine that ! knocked out by a beer !


08/21/2008 22:13:09


FuglyStick
Topic :   Oh yeah, the Olympics...

Ain't mentioned anything about the Olympics, there's just too much going on to keep up with it all.  Kudos to Michael Phelps.  Women's beach volleyball is as good as getting Cinemax.  Why is BMX racing an Olympic sport?  Swimmers shave all their body hair, but discus throwers are encouraged to grow as much back hair as possible.  Dara Torres has better abs than any 18 year old.  Chinese divers are awesome.  Chinese gymnasts are awesome too, and the "women" are only 12!  Does anyone miss the days when female athletes wore baggy shorts instead sports bras and bikini bottoms (turn in your man card)?  Basketball stills bores me to death.  US Softball will crush you.  "Sculling" is not as entertaining as it sounds.  Babies whine about a bronze medal.

And Shawn Johnson is more adorable than a box of kittens.  Seriously, it's a scientific fact.



08/20/2008 19:00:10


FuglyStick
Topic :   Er, encore?

Singer Pat Green asks for a cold one and gets knocked out cold

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Pat Green may think twice the next time before asking for a cold one.

The last time he did it, the Texas-born country singer-songwriter was knocked out cold.

Green performed Saturday night at the Michigan International Speedway after NASCAR's Carfax 250 race. He's best known for the 2003 hit "Wave on Wave."

The Jackson Citizen Patriot reports that late in his show, he shouted, "Anyone got a beer?"

A can of suds suddenly soared from the audience onto the stage. Then a second can from the crowd hit Green between the eyes, knocking him out.

Medical personnel treated him at the track.

A phone message seeking an update on Green's condition was left Tuesday at his publicist's office in Nashville, Tenn.



08/20/2008 18:26:09


FuglyStick
Topic :   Applegate beats cancer

EXCLUSIVE: Applegate Underwent Breast Removal to Stop Cancer

Actress Christina Applegate Had Double Mastectomy, Is Now 'Free' of Cancer

By BRIAN O'KEEFE and LEE FERRAN

Aug. 19, 2008 —

A month after being diagnosed with breast cancer, actress Christina Applegate, 36, is "100 percent" cancer-free, she told "Good Morning America's" Robin Roberts in an exclusive interview.

"I'm clear. Absolutely 100 percent clear and clean," the star of ABC TV's "Samantha Who?" said. "It did not spread -- they got everything out, so I'm definitely not going to die from breast cancer."

But the price she paid for that peace of mind was high.

To be sure the cancer would be completely excised, and that there would be a reduced chance of it returning despite Applegate testing positive for the BRCA1 breast cancer gene, the actress opted to have both her breasts removed in an operation known as a prophylactic double mastectomy, even though cancerous lumps were only found in one breast.

"My decision, after looking at all the treatment plans that were possibilities for me, the only one that seemed the most logical and the one that was going to work for me was to have a bilateral mastectomy," Applegate said.

Three weeks ago, she had the dramatic operation rather than undergoing other longer-term treatments like radiation or chemotherapy.

"I didn't want to go back to the doctors every four months for testing and squishing and everything. I just wanted to kind of get rid of this whole thing for me. This was the choice that I made and it was a tough one."

Though she will be undergoing breast reconstruction surgery over the next eight months, Applegate said the emotional toll has been heavy.

"Sometimes, you know, I cry. And sometimes I scream. And I get really angry. And I get really upset, you know, into wallowing in self-pity sometimes. And I think that it's all part of the healing," she said.

But Applegate is healthy and calm now, due to both her unflappible sense of humor -- "I'm going to have the best boobs in the nursing home" -- and the powerful inspiration she gained from her mother, Nancy Priddy, a repeat breast cancer survivor.

"She's been sort of this quiet warrior in the back and has been a great support, and just telling me that I was going to be OK. And I knew I was going to be OK. I've watched her," she said.

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Christina Applegate Fights Breast Cancer with Double Mastectomy

"I've watched her have a mastectomy, and then I've watched her go through two years of chemotherapy and eight surgeries and a hysterectomy. I've watched this woman survive both those things. So, for me, there was always that sense that I was going to be OK, no matter what."

Applegate is also going to be OK due to her own vigilance. She started getting mammograms six years ago, after she turned 30, and said the cancer was found through the second of two MRI tests as a follow-up from a biopsy she had last year.

"If this had been caught a year from now, or when I was 40, I probably wouldn't be able to live through this," Applegate said.

The MRI Applegate underwent, she said, is capable of seeing cells, meaning it can detect cancerous cells even before a tumor forms.

The problem for many other women, though, is that this type of MRI is expensive, and often health insurance does not cover it. So Applegate is starting a foundation to help high-risk women meet the costs.

"It's incredi



08/19/2008 19:47:45