Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Just SHOOT ME!

Some of you might have noticed I've been away for awhile... maybe some of you might have not even missed me, or simply very happy that I was not around. To all the newbies HI! and welcome!

As I finish moving, I have to admit I miss my view. The Atlantic Ocean is always calm during the winter. And while I complain about how nasty and "cold" the weather has become, Courtney always brings me back to reality... so 2007 looks busy with all the remodeling I'm planning for my house. At least that will take me away from watching the news.

So back at my Blog role, and using a new blogging software, I just have to comment on the things that got all twisted and crazy in just two weeks.

And I just missed the opportunity to rant about the Pope!

See you all later!

All in the name of dirty business

Here at FreakSpeakers we have always taken the gossip columns and sites with a grain of salt. Not that everything is false, but the button line is that sometimes it is intended to "blackmail" or force competitors into business, Newscorp owns both Fox News and the New York Post, both harsh critics of Anderson Cooper and CNN. We like to focus in the way business is made, and how those decisions affect the public perception of the news content and the media.



The CNN marketing department have kicked in the overdrive promoting AC as a brand. And it seems they have acknowledged the power of News Corp and gave in buying three simultaneous ads - a skyscraper and two banners - at New York Post's Page Six site. We can speculate all we want. But at the end it is just advertising dollars and your mind.





A Soldier's Perspective


Remember Anderson Cooper and the "360" gangs little trip to Afghanistan in September? Well apparently a serviceman who was stationed there has written about the events that unfolded on September 11 while at the base. From the Pocono Record, here is an excerpt about Cooper and CNN. Click the link to read the article in its entirety.

Later that same day, I received some interesting news that had me guessing whether it would turn out to be an unwelcome burden, or a much-needed diversion from the present grief. I discovered that somehow CNN had discovered the existence of our little outpost.

For whatever reason, the producers of Anderson Cooper's show had decided that our base would make an ideal site to from which to air a few stories on Afghanistan as the fifth anniversary of Sept. 11 neared. There was a combined feeling of curious excitement, and annoyance. It was amusing to me to see how some guys would openly criticize the press, and yet seemed genuinely interested in the prospect of appearing on CNN.

I had a sort behind the scenes look at what goes into television productions. A couple of military public affairs officers had showed up before the CNN crew showed up to help us prepare for the upcoming dog and pony show.

Through several meetings, the leadership at the base sorted out some key issues regarding the CNN broadcasts. We had to figure out things like where we would house the crew, how we ensure their safety in the event of an attack, and which soldiers were the most photogenic.

The public affairs officers needed to ensure that we would be sufficiently active to make some good stories, and asked about the details of our scheduled Sept. 11 memorial service. We had a Sept. 11 memorial service planned? Good thing the public affairs officers were there.

The CNN crew arrived, and all personnel on the base went into full Hollywood mode. Soldiers that I hadn't seen wearing a clean uniform in months donned their Sunday best. The dining facility, serving the same menu over and over again, was suddenly cooking like Emeril was in the back kicking it up a notch. For me, at least, CNN's presence was entertaining.

I got to live the outtakes of life. I was rousted from bed one morning so that we could shoot the howitzers. I headed to the fire direction center and was informed that we were waiting to de-conflict overhead airspace with some helicopters in the area.

As I stood there, I kept getting calls from the gun-line asking about the nature of the delay, and how much longer it would take. I didn't know at the time that we were shooting in part for CNN, that the broadcast was already live, and that

Anderson Cooper was desperately trying to cover the time with something interesting to say. Finally running out of verbiage, he was forced to cut to commercial. Eventually, we managed to get coordinated and CNN got the broadcast they were looking for.

The folks from CNN had been making a big deal about our Sept. 11 memorial.

As the entire base formed up for the service, we half-heartedly predicted that the bad-guys would take this opportunity to nail us all at once.

Sure enough, as predicted, just when the cameras went live, we heard the whistle and boom of a rocket striking near the base.

Anderson Cooper's broadcast consisted of an enormous gaggle of soldiers running for cover.

A second attempt at the broadcast later that night would be successful.

Finally, after a few days of excitement, CNN left, and life on the base returned to normal.

I soon returned to my routine, and was left to face the remainder of the deployment. How would I pass the next five months?

Monday, December 11, 2006

In Case You Missed It

Anderson Cooper on 60 Minutes last night:


and Part II:



I'm slightly disappointed I didn't hear him introduce himself at the beginning of the show, but maybe next time, huh?

Thanks, Marie!

Cal Perry Promoted to Bureau Chief

Nic Robertson has a new boss, and he's a hottie. Why do all the good ones end-up in Baghdad? Sheesh...

(CNN Press Release) – CNN has promoted Baghdad bureau director Cal Perry to bureau chief, it was announced today by Tony Maddox, senior vice president of international newsgathering operations. As bureau chief, Perry manages CNN’s coverage in Baghdad and throughout Iraq.

“The Baghdad bureau chief stands as one of the most important and challenging jobs in journalism today and is certainly a critical position within CNN’s international newsgathering efforts,” Maddox said. Cal has more than proven his mettle with our coverage from Iraq in recent months, and we’re eager to see his work from the region in the future.”

Perry joined the network in 2003 shortly after the initial coalition invasion in Iraq, working on the International Desk as an editor. Soon after, he was assigned as a Baghdad-based producer, a role which placed him as an embedded reporter among troops fighting in Mosul, Fallujah, Ramadi, Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq. In addition to his coverage in Iraq, Perry covered the death of Yasser Arafat and other stories involving the Israeli-Palestine conflict.

In 2006, Perry covered the war in Lebanon as both a producer and on-air correspondent. He and correspondent Karl Penhaul were the first journalists to arrive in Tyre, Lebanon, amid fighting there. Perry also created and produced the CNN Presents documentary Combat Hospital, which detailed the real-life drama inside the 10th Combat Support Hospital in Baghdad.

Perry earned his political science degree from Skidmore College.

CNN Worldwide, a division of Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., a Time Warner Company, is one of the world’s most respected and trusted sources for news and information. Its reach extends to nine cable and satellite television networks; one private place-based network; two radio networks; wireless devices around the world; four Web sites, including CNN.com, the first major news and information Web site; CNN Pipeline, an on-demand broadband video service; CNN Newsource, the world’s most extensively syndicated news service; and partnerships for four television networks and one Web site.

Seriously.

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Mel Gibson's bloody epic "Apocalypto" debuted as the No. 1 weekend movie, proving the filmmaker still can deliver a winner despite his drunken-driving arrest and anti-Semitic rant last summer.

Story highlights:
• "Apocalypto" debuts at No. 1 despite Mel Gibson's troubles
• $14.2 million haul modest compared to "Passion of the Christ"
• Sony romance "The Holiday" is No. 2 movie with $13.5 million

Unbelievable. I don't plan on ever seeing this move. Ick. Not my style at all.

Head On

So maybe these commercials don't make Anderson Cooper grumpy, but they irritate me! I think CNN alone is responsible for this product making tons of money. One day this past summer, I counted the commercial airing over 15 times just during the daytime broadcasts. The advertising technique is so popular now, that I've seen other commercials using the same annoying format. Head On, be gone!

(New York Daily News) – The commercials are everywhere and likely to give you a headache.

In rapid fire, a female voice instructs: "HeadOn, apply directly to the forehead!" A zombified woman does just that.

The maddening low-budget promo has been hypnotic: Americans have snapped up 6 million tubes of the dubious headache treatment in the past year, and that has doctors slapping their foreheads in frustration.

HeadOn is a concoction of homeopathic compounds and herbs - like goldenseal, Bryonia alba and blue flag - common to alternative medicine.

"I've never seen that for headache at all," Dr. Robert Duarte, a neurologist at Long Island Jewish Medical Center, said of HeadOn's ingredients. They have not been formally tested for headaches and migraines, added Dr. Fred Freitag of Chicago's Diamond Headache Clinic.

Other ingredients are menthol, often used as a cooling agent, potassium dichromate - a salt - and white bryony, an irritant that can be poisonous if ingested.

So far, the topical HeadOn appears to be safe, but it contains so little of its active ingredients that it's uncertain they'd have any effect, Freitag said.

The makers beg to differ.

HeadOn "creates a localized effect which stimulates the production of endorphins [feel-good hormones], which act on the nerve endings to reduce pain," said Dan Charron, vice president of sales at HeadOn maker Miralus Healthcare. The Plantation, Fla., firm hasn't published any scientific data about how the product works.

Dr. Richard Lipton, director of the Montefiore Headache Center in the Bronx, thinks HeadOn could help some migraine sufferers for a far more simplistic reason: It's mainly wax.

"If something coats the skin, it's not affecting what's fundamentally a brain process, but it may protect the skin from stimuli that would otherwise make the pain worse," Lipton said.

Charron insists there is no wax in HeadOn.

The ambiguity is such that in April, the Better Business Bureau recommended that Miralus tone down its claims.

The product has "insufficient evidence to support performance," the bureau ruled. So Miralus tweaked its ads - and sales jumped by another 30%.

The ads have sparked a series of parodies on the YouTube Internet site, including giggling teens rubbing irons and staplers on their heads.

Miralus took note of the mockery and recently made a new commercial that winks at how annoying its ads are: An exasperated HeadOn user interrupts the familiar mantra and declares, "I can't stand your commercial, but your product is amazing!"

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Pinochet dies at 91



Former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet died today at a Santiago hospital. Pinochet took power in 1973 after leading a coup which brought down the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende. What followed was years of systematic human rights abuses and the murder of thousands of civilians who opposed Pinochet's rule. These murders were carried out by death squads known as the "Caravans of Death." Victims of the death squads were buried in mass graves and to this day, many Chileans remain as "desaparecidos," or "disappeared."

Pinochet was never prosecuted for any of his actions because of his poor health. He did, however, remain under indictment due to the efforts of his political opponents and the relatives of those killed under his regime. His health had been on the decline since the early 1990s but worsened after a heart attack last week.

Anderson Cooper and Other News...

I can't believe it's Sunday again already! That means back to the grind tomorrow and I was just getting used to the weekend. All right...here we go...

Do you have plans for New Year's Eve? Well, I think we have a date with Anderson Cooper. Trust me, that's better than what I have to choose from around here, but that's another story. I pulled this from the "360" site:

"Keeping them honest" has been a 360° mission in 2006. For Anderson's New Year's Eve special we want to know how you're "Keeping them honest." If you or someone you know is trying to right a wrong in your community, tell us about it and we may feature your story on the New Year's Eve special.
Me, Anderson on television and a bottle of champagne on NYE. What makes this different from any other night? The champagne, of course ;)

Moving on...

Did you read about the Andersighting in D.C., this on Wonkette?
  • Anderson Cooper Sighting! That’s right. I was sitting next to the ambiguously gay and very sexy “360” reporter last night [12/6] in the Jury’s restaurant/bar in Dupont Circle. He appeared to be on a date with a rugged looking young man with a goatee. I believe the date heard me say as Anderson walked out, “Look! Anderson is so hot he walls like a sex machine”.
  • Anderson Cooper totally “360’d” a group of Democrat press folks (plus one Republican) at Biddy Mulligan’s just now [12/7]. He’s with an unidentified Spanish man.
Me thinks poor Cooper can't meet any member of the same sex for anything without speculation. Shame on you Wonkette. After all, it is the D.C. version of Gawker and we know they make up crap all the time.

And the love of Anderson Cooper extends around the world! Anderson has a fan in Japan, check out her site, Addicted to Anderson Cooper, and welcome her to the family.

Saturday, December 09, 2006

Anderson Cooper is Cool

Hello FreakSpeakers! Last night's "Anderson Cooper 360" was like a breath of fresh air! It was classic Cooper and Crew. It was obviously a Friday where everyone was feelin' good...and it made for a great show. Frankly, it was a flashback to the type of shows that made me sit-up and notice Cooper just a few years ago.

I'm going to take Betty Ann moment here...yesterday Cooper mentioned having his tonsils out as an adult and talked about how horrible it was. Well, you know what...the man doesn't lie. I had mine out two years ago and it was the most horrible, painful, miserable experience. I had to be off work for two weeks and didn't swallow right for weeks after that! Like Cooper, I'm no doctor, but yank them out of your youngsters...the earlier the better.

And here is my Lorie Ann moment...Anderson don't hate your laugh. People love you for your laugh. I have what I consider to be a rather annoying laugh myself. I sound just like Betty Rubble when I laugh. People say its cute, I say not so much.

For our international viewers tonight, I hear CNNI is pretty unreliable when it comes to broadcasting AC360, so I've included the best part of last night's show, essentially a Reporter's Notebook about his guest hosting job, and some caps, courtesy of Sheryn, so that you too can enjoy the one, the only, Anderson Cooper!

For the next time Anderson, don't blame the coffee. You don't like hot drinks, remember?

Have a rockin' Saturday friends :)

COOPER: Yes. That's right. I did a little moonlighting this morning, filling in for Regis Philbin on "Live with Regis and Kelly". Although, really, frankly, can anyone fill in for Regis? I don't think so.

Shall I stick to my night job? We'll take a look when 360 continues.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) STEVE WHITMIRE, VOICE OF KERMIT THE FROG: You know, I'm really glad to see that it's you, Anderson. I thought Regis had finally gone gray. Hard to tell on the monitor.


(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: I didn't understand that joke. Anyway, that was Kermit the Frog having a laugh at my expense. I'm sure I'll figure it out by tomorrow morning. That happened this morning on "Live with Regis and Kelly". Kermit is actually taller than he looks on television.

I was sitting, of course, in for Regis Philbin. It was my fourth time co-hosting. The question is, am I improving at all? Well, you decide. Take a look.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER (voice-over): This time around, things started off pretty well. The studio audience is always welcoming, and Kelly is great.

RIPA: You're here, and I'm excited about it.

COOPER (on camera): I'm very excited.

(voice-over) The first 15 minutes is still the toughest part. It's unscripted. But this time I brought props.

(on camera) This is me with Oscar the grouch.


(voice-over) Just in case things really went dry, I also brought a news scoop.

(on camera) Britney Spears, she made an announcement.

RIPA: And?

COOPER: She apologized.

RIPA: For?

COOPER: For showing her bits and pieces.

RIPA: Ohhh!

COOPER (voice-over): I was trying to be diplomatic with that word choice, but I can't begin to explain why I said this.

RIPA (on camera): I love that someone got the go-go dancer pregnant.



RIPA: Yes. Yes.

COOPER (voice-over): Did I really say that? Maybe it was something in the coffee.

The coffee mugs on the set actually gave me some trouble. Drinking while you're talking is harder than it looks. Watch my first attempt. About a minute into the show, I reach and pull back, mission scrubbed.

About five minutes later, I try again and get the mug all the way to my lips. But wait a sec. Not enough time. It's my turn to say something. Quick, put it down. Like I said, harder than it looks.

More than seven minutes into the show, I finally nailed it.

(on camera) It's going to be a long morning.

(voice-over) Actually, it went by pretty fast.

One thing I really wanted to get right this time was the kiss and hug, also much harder than it looks. Last time with Nicole Richie, I went in for a peck on the cheek, but then she started to reach out her hand. I went in for a brief kiss. How awkward was that?

This time with Diane Sawyer, it went much better.


(on camera) Please welcome Diane Sawyer.

(voice-over) A quick smooth hug and kiss, no hesitation. My handshake with Brian McKnight, also stumble free.

They say practice makes perfect. But it hasn't helped my laugh. This was me last time.

RIPA: Something like...

COOPER (on camera): (laughing)

(voice-over) What is that? It's like a laugh/snort/chortle. Sadly, not much better this time.

(on camera) (laughing)


RIPA: And then the next thing...

COOPER (voice-over): It's still as annoying as ever, which Kelly is kind enough to overlook.

I've always liked her, but we really bonded this time over a mutual fan and her unusual tattoos.

(on camera) So on one leg, she's got you and Regis?

RIPA: Yes.

COOPER: On the other leg, she's got me.

RIPA: To me the very interesting thing is what happens at night when it's cold and she cuddles up with herself and rubs her legs together?

COOPER: We make out. RIPA: Yes.

COOPER (voice-over): Kelly is the perfect co-host. She's smart. She's funny, really talented. And did I mention visionary?

RIPA: I think there should be an AC TV.

COOPER (on camera): Oh, yes? From your lips to God's ears.

RIPA: Anderson Cooper television. A 24-hour Anderson Cooper channel.

COOPER: We'll work on that.

(voice-over) In the meantime, I guess I can always work on my laugh.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

COOPER: Do I really laugh like that? It's so annoying. Is this how I laugh?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It's not annoying at all.

COOPER: Sure. Of course. Yes. Thank you. All right.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Ameren on the Hot Seat


NewsChannel 5 Exclusive: Ameren CEO Responds To Criticism

By Mike Bush

(KSDK) - Ameren CEO Gary Rainwater is in the eye of the storm.

"Obviously I'm on the hot seat," says Rainwater. "Obviously I'm responsible and I'm accountable."

But even as criticism rains down, Rainwater is giving his company high marks. In fact, he says, on a scale of one to 10, Ameren's storm response is a 10.

"We really are among the best in the industry at restoring power in these severe weather events," says Rainwater.

Rainwater says Don't blame Ameren; blame Mother Nature. He says there's only one thing that could have prevented the outages.

"We could bury the power lines. We could put them all underground and that would make them virtually weather-proof," says Rainwater. But he adds that would cost at least $20 billion over the next 25 years and for homeowners, that would mean electric rates at least three times higher than they are now.

Rainwater was asked if there was absolutely nothing Ameren could have done to prevent the massive power outages in both July and December.

"Absolutely nothing is a very strong term but we've been in this business for 100 years, we have done all of the things that can make a difference in minimizing the damage from these storms," says Rainwater.

From the reservoir collapse last December, to the storms in July, to the power outages of the last week, Rainwater calls this past year "challenging." But he says please don't call the company arrogant.

"Our company cares about our customers," says Rainwater. "We are doing everything possible to restore power to our customers."


AP/KSDK
****

I know some of you have already seen Tom Foreman's post about this on the 360 blog, but if you haven't read his post yet, I encourage you to head over there.

Also, I thought I'd share something I find rather amusing and disgusting at the same time. Yesterday, I got my electric bill from Ameren in the mail. Enclosed was a notice saying:

"AmerenUE has filed revised tarrif sheets with the Missouri Public Service Commission (PSC) which would increase the company's electric service revenues by approximately $360.7 million, and which would increase the company's natural gas service revenues by approximately $10.8 million. For the average residential customer the proposed increase would be approximately $6.00 per month for electric and $6.00 per month for natural gas.

...

Public comment hearings have been set before the PSC as follows..."

So, in other words, Ameren is now wanting to RAISE OUR RATES and is holding hearings next January with the PSC (same group our governor is hoping to have investigate Ameren via public hearings). Here's a bit from an AP article:

By JIM SUHR
Associated Press Writer

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Top leaders in Missouri and Illinois, where thousands of customers remain without power after last week's winter storm, sharply criticized a utility's response to the crisis Thursday.

Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt asked his state's Public Service Commission to hold public hearings and said he wants St. Louis-based Ameren Corp. to provide a clear plan for preventing a recurrence.

"Thousands of Missourians have been without power for nearly a week. This is unacceptable," Blunt said in a statement. "Missourians expect and should receive reliable service from their utility companies."

As of Thursday, about 50,000 Ameren customers still lacked power, most of them in Illinois. At the peak, more than 500,000 Ameren customers in both states were without power."

From Anderson and Kelly this morning...



Thanks to our friend bcfraggle, we have a couple of caps that feature the oh-so cute little guy and Kermit too ;)

Why Can't They Throw Bill O'Reilly in Jail?

In all seriousness, okay not so serious, jailed journalists. It happens, and quite frequently these days. Although in some of the countries Cooper visits, I think it might be better to be jailed versus kidnapped by terrorists, but either way it's no stroll on the Santa Barbara beach.

I vote to imprison Bill O'Reilly and Ann Coulter. I guess they fit the term of journalist, albeit very loosely.

Could you imagine Anderson Cooper behind bars? All those horrible prison movies come to mind...you know the kind I'm talking about. I wonder who Lifetime would cast to play the part of Cooper? And of course, you know the other question I'm dying to ask, but will refrain from asking here...my dirty little mind at work again. Ugh.


Jailed journalists worldwide hits record
By Michelle Nichols, Reuters

NEW YORK - The number of journalists jailed worldwide for their work rose for the second year with internet bloggers and online reporters now one third of those incarcerated, a US-based media watchdog said today.

A Committee to Protect Journalists census found that a record 134 journalists were in jail on Dec. 1 -- an increase of nine from the 2005 tally -- in 24 countries with China, Cuba, Eritrea and Ethiopia the top four nations to imprison media. While print reporters, editors and photographers again made up the largest number of jailed journalists -- with 67 cases -- there were 49 imprisoned internet journalists, making them the second biggest category, the New York-based committee said.

"We're at a crucial juncture in the fight for press freedom because authoritarian states have made the internet a major front in their effort to control information," Committee Executive Director Joel Simon said in a statement. "China is challenging the notion that the internet is impossible to control or censor, and if it succeeds there will be far-ranging implications, not only for the medium but for press freedom all over the world."

Among those jailed in China were Zheng Yichun, a Chinese freelance contributor to overseas online news sites who wrote a series of editorials criticizing the Communist Party. The census also found there were eight television journalists, eight radio reporters and two film/documentary makers in jail. Other countries where journalists were imprisoned were Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Burma, Burundi, Cambodia, Colombia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gambia, Iran, Maldives, Mexico, Russia, Sri Lanka, Tunisia, Turkey, United States, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said 84 journalists were jailed for "anti-state" allegations like subversion and divulging state secrets, with many of those imprisoned in China, Cuba and Ethiopia. The census also showed 20 imprisoned journalists were held without any charge or trial and that Eritrea accounted for more than half those cases.

The committee said the United States imprisoned two journalists without charge or trial -- Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein, now held for eight months in Iraq, and Al Jazeera cameraman Sami al-Haj, jailed for five years and now held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Joshua Wolf, a freelance blogger who refused to turn over video of a 2005 protest to a US federal grand jury, was also in jail. For the eighth year in a row, China led the way in jailing journalists with a total of 31 imprisoned on Dec. 1, the census found, followed by Cuba with 24 reporters behind bars, Eritrea with 23 in jail and Ethiopia with 18 journalists jailed.

I'm the string around your finger reminding you...

Anderson Cooper is co-hosting with Kelly "Perky" Ripa this morning on Regis and Kelly. Check your local listings! I woke-up at 3AM to go and set the TiVo because I forgot to do it last night. That's love Anderson...3AM....cold, hardwood floors, -3 degree wind chill making the apartment bitter cold...just remember that Cooper.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Holiday Lights



Holiday Lights
by Marie

This my family vacation home in AZ. It is almost
an exact replica of a home in TX. The one in TX has a
pink exterior and ours is tan. Also, ours have cactus.
The lights were put up by my brother and his friend.

After I finish putting up the lights at the home I am
at, I will post the picture.

There is no snow in this area of the country, but the
temps do hover around 55F (daytime) this time of the
year.

Does anyone else put up outdoor lights for the winter
holidays?

Prager Continued to Baselessly Attack Muslim Rep

Here's a follow up to the article I posted yesterday about Dennis Prager.

American Muslim News Briefs | Wednesday, December 06, 2006

ON MSNBC, PRAGER CONTINUED TO BASELESSLY ATTACK MUSLIM REP.-ELECT

On the December 4 edition of MSNBC's Tucker, conservative radio host and Townhall.com columnist Dennis Prager continued to accuse incoming Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN) of "imperil[ing]" America because of Ellison's reported intention to use a copy of the Quran during the ceremonial photo op on the day he is sworn in. Prager acknowledged, as the weblog Think Progress reported, that Ellison would use the Quran for "a photo op" and not the actual swearing-in, which is conducted in a large group. Ellison is the first Muslim ever elected to Congress.
****

And here's Dennis Prager's column, from Townhall.com:

America, Not Keith Ellison, decides what book a congressman takes his oath on

Keith Ellison, D-Minn., the first Muslim elected to the United States Congress, has announced that he will not take his oath of office on the Bible, but on the bible of Islam, the Koran.

He should not be allowed to do so -- not because of any American hostility to the Koran, but because the act undermines American civilization.

First, it is an act of hubris that perfectly exemplifies multiculturalist activism--my culture trumps America's culture. What Ellison and his Muslim and leftist supporters are saying is that it is of no consequence what America holds as its holiest book; all that matters is what any individual holds to be his holiest book.

Forgive me, but America should not give a hoot what Keith Ellison's favorite book is. Insofar as a member of Congress taking an oath to serve America and uphold its values is concerned, America is interested in only one book, the Bible. If you are incapable of taking an oath on that book, don't serve in Congress. In your personal life, we will fight for your right to prefer any other book. We will even fight for your right to publish cartoons mocking our Bible. But, Mr. Ellison, America, not you, decides on what book its public servants take their oath.

Devotees of multiculturalism and political correctness who do not see how damaging to the fabric of American civilization it is to allow Ellison to choose his own book need only imagine a racist elected to Congress. Would they allow him to choose Hitler's "Mein Kampf," the Nazis' bible, for his oath? And if not, why not? On what grounds will those defending Ellison's right to choose his favorite book deny that same right to a racist who is elected to public office?

Of course, Ellison's defenders argue that Ellison is merely being honest; since he believes in the Koran and not in the Bible, he should be allowed, even encouraged, to put his hand on the book he believes in. But for all of American history, Jews elected to public office have taken their oath on the Bible, even though they do not believe in the New Testament, and the many secular elected officials have not believed in the Old Testament either. Yet those secular officials did not demand to take their oaths of office on, say, the collected works of Voltaire or on a volume of New York Times editorials, writings far more significant to some liberal members of Congress than the Bible. Nor has one Mormon official demanded to put his hand on the Book of Mormon. And it is hard to imagine a scientologist being allowed to take his oath of office on a copy of "Dianetics" by L. Ron Hubbard.

So why are we allowing Keith Ellison to do what no other member of Congress has ever done -- choose his own most revered book for his oath?

The answer is obvious -- Ellison is a Muslim. And whoever decides these matters, not to mention virtually every editorial page in America, is not going to offend a Muslim. In fact, many of these people argue it will be a good thing because Muslims around the world will see what an open society America is and how much Americans honor Muslims and the Koran.

This argument appeals to all those who believe that one of the greatest goals of America is to be loved by the world, and especially by Muslims because then fewer Muslims will hate us (and therefore fewer will bomb us).

But these naive people do not appreciate that America will not change the attitude of a single American-hating Muslim by allowing Ellison to substitute the Koran for the Bible. In fact, the opposite is more likely: Ellison's doing so will embolden Islamic extremists and make new ones, as Islamists, rightly or wrongly, see the first sign of the realization of their greatest goal -- the Islamicization of America.

When all elected officials take their oaths of office with their hands on the very same book, they all affirm that some unifying value system underlies American civilization. If Keith Ellison is allowed to change that, he will be doing more damage to the unity of America and to the value system that has formed this country than the terrorists of 9-11. It is hard to believe that this is the legacy most Muslim Americans want to bequeath to America. But if it is, it is not only Europe that is in trouble.
****

Let's hear it, FreakSpeakers! I want to hear from you!

"Anderson Cooper 360" Wins Another Emmy

CBS, CNN, NBC and PBS divided up the spoils at the Emmys for business and financial reporting handed out by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Thursday.

CBS, CNN and NBC each received two awards and PBS received one. CBS recipients were 60 Minutes for "Oil Sands" and CBS News Sunday Morning for "Relics of Rock."

Anderson Cooper 360 won for "Black Market Infertility," and CNN Presents for "How to Rob a Bank."

NBC winners were Dateline's "Bitter Pills" and NBC Nightly News' "Congress's Private Air Force" and "Congress a la Carte."

PBS' Frontline won for its piece, "Can You Afford to Retire?"

The Password is...

Iraq.

That's what the whole sweepstakes-password-location-thingy reminded me of last night. Anderson Cooper must've dug it being that he was practically glued to the television as a child, and perhaps even as an adult I suspect.


I feel like I need to conduct my own "Keeping Them Honest" investigation. Who is Betty Ann and Lorie Ann? Are they real people with real thoughts or CNN plants? I can't believe he read her comment from the blog. I shook my head, I don't get it. Surely these names have to look familiar to people and not just those of us who read the blog. It's an interesting phenomena, once I wish I had time to chase down. But alas, I'm not a professional Anderson Cooper blogger, I just play one on television ;)

Which other journalists interest you? Which ones, good or bad, fire up your cup of ire? Let us know here at FreakSpeakers and we'll see that not only the good journalists, not just Anderson (don't worry, I still love your style), but journalists who need to be called out for the jerks that they are get some attention.


Thanks to bcfraggle for the great screencaps.

Anderson Cooper Takes the Field as a 'Minutes' Man

New York Daily News


Anderson Cooper, the face of CNN, makes his debut on CBS' "60 Minutes" Sunday, the first of multiple reports Anderson is scheduled to do for the famed newsmagazine.

Cooper fronted stories for the now-defunct "60 Minutes II," but the original show is still viewed as the pinnacle of TV journalism and could serve as a tryout of sorts.

"He brings a lot to the table," said "60 Minutes" executive producer Jeff Fager. "We're always looking for the next full-time correspondent who will eventually join us down that road. He's going to show what he can do in the next couple of years. We'll see how it goes. I'm optimistic."

Cooper will interview Abu Ghraib whistleblower Sgt. Joe Darby, who turned over the infamous photos of U.S. soldiers abusing prisoners there. Darby and his wife have not been able to return to their home and are still in hiding.

"He doesn't want anyone to know where he lives," said Cooper. "He and his wife are still kind of looking over their shoulders. The piece is about how that decision (to turn in the pictures) has completely changed his life, and changed it in many ways for the worse."

Cooper worked on the story with associate producer Casey Morgan and longtime "60 Minutes" producer Bob Anderson, who generated the story, said Fager.

"Anderson was seriously involved in the story," he said. "It's a collaboration between the producer and correspondent. We really believe in that process. Anderson is a serious reporter who really knows how to collaborate well. It's part of why he fits in so well here."

Cooper's "60 Minutes" stories will air on CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360" after they appear on CBS. CNN executives granted Cooper permission to appear on "60 Minutes" only if it didn't interfere with his day job, which means Cooper works on the pieces during weekends and vacations, he said.

"I don't really take vacation anyway, so it hasn't been too bad," he said.

But he views his work at "60 Minutes" as an "incredible opportunity to learn," he said. "The bar is pretty high over at '60 Minutes.'"

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

CAIR Wants Ellison Critic Removed from Holocaust Council

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Dennis Prager

This article was sent in by one of our readers. If you find any news-related articles you'd like to see posted and discussed here at FreakSpeakers, please email one of the blog admins and we'll post it!
*****

American Muslim News Briefs | Monday, December 04, 2006

ISLAMIC GROUP WANTS ELLISON CRITIC REMOVED FROM HOLOCAUST COUNCIL

WASHINGTON (AP) An Islamic civil rights group wants a columnist who criticized Rep.-elect Keith Ellison's decision to use the Quran during his ceremonial swearing-in next month removed from the United States Holocaust Memorial Council.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) said Monday that the comments by Dennis Prager, a columnist and conservative talk radio host, displayed an intolerance toward Islam that makes him an inappropriate person to serve on the memorial council.

Ellison, D-Minn., is the first Muslim elected to Congress.

In his column last week, Prager wrote: "Insofar as a member of Congress taking an oath to serve America and uphold its values is concerned, America is interested in only one book, the Bible. If you are incapable of taking an oath on that book, don't serve in Congress."

The Holocaust Memorial Council oversees the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.

"No one who holds such bigoted, intolerant and divisive views should be in a policy-making position at a taxpayer-funded institution that seeks to educate Americans about the destructive impact hatred has had, and continues to have, on every society," CAIR's executive director, Nihad Awad, wrote in a letter to the council's chairman, Fred Zeidman.

Messages left at the Holocaust Museum and at Zeidman's office were not returned Monday.

In a telephone interview Monday, Prager offered what he called "a solution to this that would satisfy me and the vast majority of Americans"--in other words, Ellison bringing a Bible with him along with his Quran.

"It's obviously up to Mr. Ellison to decide, but I don't think that forcing him to swear an oath on a book not of his faith is the answer," said [CAIR] spokesman, Ibrahim Hooper.

Hooper said that although his group supports free speech, "When you are appointed by the president to a council whose mission is to combat hatred and bigotry, and you hold views that promote hatred and bigotry, there's a problem there."

By tradition, all members of the House are sworn in together on the House floor. It's in the photo-op ceremony that a Bible is used--or in Ellison's case, the Quran.

Meanwhile, the Anti-Defamation League, which fights anti-Semitism and racism, issued a statement calling Prager's comments "intolerant, misinformed and downright un-American."
*****

Was Prager right in calling for Rep. elect Ellison to be sworn in with a Bible rather than the Quran? Or is CAIR correct in calling Prager to step down from his position at the Holocaust Council? Is America truly a "Christian" country, or should we continue to make room for all faiths and beliefs? And what about in your area--have you encountered any negative comments about Muslims or heard of any discrimination against Muslims?

Anderson Cooper's 60 Minutes Debut...

Thank God it's not Kenny Chesney!

(CBS) CNN anchor Anderson Cooper will report his first story for 60 Minutes, an interview with Joe Darby, the man who touched off one of the biggest news stories of the war in Iraq when he gave authorities pictures of U.S. soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison.

Cooper's report will be broadcast this Sunday, Dec. 10, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

His appearance is the result of a deal between CBS News and CNN announced last May that provides for the CNN anchor to report as many as five 60 Minutes stories.

Cooper, the anchor of CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360˚," first reported for CBS News on 60 Minutes II — the broadcast that first reported the Abu Ghraib story.

One of his two reports during the 2004-05 television season broke the story of a doctor who prescribed steroids and human growth hormone to several players on the NFL's Carolina Panthers. The doctor subsequently was indicted on multiple counts of distributing the drugs and recently pleaded guilty to some of the charges. Congress held hearings and the NFL strengthened some of its drug policies.

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Win Anderson Cooper! Oops...not quite, but close...

And I can't say that I'm really all that excited. For the next three Wednesdays, AC360 will be on the road, hence the location code that will appear, as part of the sweepstakes. Tonight he is in Washington D.C.

I wonder how many "dedicated" fans will be creating hundreds of new email addresses to better their chances of winning? I think there will be some very busy Anderfans today! In the end, Betty Ann or someone with the middle name of Ann will probably win anyway! Good luck to everyone who enters :)

And Anderson and David have both blogged today. I mock the blog because I love. And...okay....I find it a bit pathetic some of the responses that they post. CNN...wake up, smell the coffee, catch a clue.

Back to Cooper himself, have you seen the snazzy new commericals for 360? Wow. Talk about getting your senses worked up! That's a pretty hot advertisement for a news show...can't see Brian or Katie uttering those lines. Here are some caps of the new commercial, courtesy of liberation337. Thanks.







Damn Blogger...

I have a lovely post and pics ready to go, but there are technical problems this morning. Fan-freakin-tastic! Check back later in the day for those ;)

Oh yeah...Good Morning!

J.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

AC360: The Russian Spy Death Puzzle

Thanks to Stillife for the screencap.

Last night's show was top notch in my opinion! When Anderson Cooper is really interested in a subject, the show and the broadcast are really well done and last night was a great example of an interesting two-hour show. Of course, it helps that I think this story is completely fascinating as well.

Tonight's show will feature the latest developments in this whodunit. As Cooper likes to look at things from all angles, I've posted below a story from a Russian news agency. It's interesting to get their take on the story. I fear there are more reporters, government officials who may fear for their own lives if Putin is indeed behind this and other murders.


Is anyone else into this story or is is just Anderson, CNN and I?

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Vladimir Simonov) - The stories of crime and spy writers Arthur Conan Doyle, Georges Simenon and John le Carre pale before the intricate plot of Alexander Litvinenko's death puzzle.

Russian defector Litvinenko, an outspoken critic of President Vladimir Putin's administration and a close associate of exiled oligarch Boris Berezovsky, died in a London hospital November 23. His body was found to contain a lethal dose of polonium 210, a radioactive isotope.

On Monday, a group of nine detectives from Scotland Yard arrived in Moscow to interview several people who met with Litvinenko around the time of his alleged poisoning in early November. It is the first visit by U.K. policemen to Moscow since Scotland Yard signed a cooperation memorandum with Russia's Office of the Prosecutor General, and the first chance to join forces against crime.

The three witnesses are businessman and former KGB and FSB colleague Andrei Lugovoi, and businessmen Dmitry Kovtun and Vyacheslav Sokolov, who spent several hours with Litvinenko in London's Millennium Hotel on November 1.

Lugovoi seems like the most interesting witness.

In the last month before Litvinenko's death, his former KGB and FSB colleague had met with the deceased four times in London. Lugovoi seems to be suffering from memory problems, for he told Kommersant, a Russian business daily, that he was "absolutely clean" of radiation yet admitted to The Sunday Times that traces of polonium were found on him.

At the same time, memory is playing tricks with many people around the world.

Yuri Shvets, a former senior KGB officer, who now has political asylum in the United States, claims to have solved the mystery of Litvinenko's death.

"I happen to believe I know who is behind the death of my friend Sasha (Litvinenko) and the reason for his murder," Yuri Shvets said in an exclusive interview with the AP by telephone from the United States.

Mario Scaramella, an Italian contact of the dead ex-spy, and Russian girl Svetlana, who is living in London, also claim to have relevant information. Svetlana claims Litvinenko told her of plans to earn tens of thousands of pounds by blackmailing top brass in Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB). I wonder why he revealed his plans to Svetlana, for he was a trained spy and knew that sharing information led to sharing money.

The British police are fighting off the landslide effect, as more and more people who want their 15 minutes of fame are dancing on Litvinenko's open grave. They may get entangled in a net of versions the media in Moscow is producing like an out-of-control silkworm.

However, at least four of them are worthy of consideration.

Version One: Litvinenko somehow acquired smuggled polonium-210 and wanted to earn from the transaction. On November 1, he left traces of radiation everywhere he was, including the office of exiled Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky, a key wheeler and dealer of the Yeltsin era. None of the men he met that day has shown signs of illness.

Scaramella said his friend Litvinenko made a bit on the side by smuggling toxic isotopes. The future victim of polonium poisoning lived on Berezovsky's hand-me-downs and badly needed more money.

According to information leaked from the post-mortem examination, Litvinenko died from a dose that could cost 30 million euros. This seems a bit too rich for a murder.

Version Two: Litvinenko wanted to shake off Berezovsky and therefore posed a threat to the exiled oligarch, according to the popular daily Izvestia.

Shadows have been recently gathering over Berezovsky. The memorandum of cooperation, which Deputy Prosecutor General Alexander Zvyagintsev has signed with Scotland Yard, did not promise a bright future to the businessman. Besides, Litvinenko, who knew too much, probably lost his nerve and said something about his spiritual tossing and turning. Unfortunately, a dead acquaintance is better than a living friend who talks too much.

Version Three: Litvinenko was connected with an underground London laboratory where a dirty nuclear bomb was being made for Chechen terrorists. Russian nuclear experts put forth this version in a Sunday Evening with Vladimir Solovyov show on the NTV channel.

Two facts corroborate this version:

One of Litvinenko's close friends was Akhmed Zakayev, the former commander of Chechen fighters, whom Russian prosecutors want to see in Moscow in connection with cases of murders and torture in Chechnya.

About two years ago, Berezovsky told the world that Chechen separatists had acquired a portable nuclear bomb and lacked only one minor detail. That "minor detail" could be polonium-210, which can be used to detonate a dirty nuclear bomb, experts say.

Maybe Litvinenko was carrying the polonium to the lab, and paid with his life for the deadly substance?

Version Four: Litvinenko was "|punished" by one of his former FSB colleagues whom the defector turned over to the British secret service. There are many books and movies about such "avengers" from the ranks of former secret officers and other "offended" masters of the cloak and dagger.

However, there is an undeniable argument against this version: Litvinenko was a minuscule target, a fly compared to such defection giants as Oleg Gordievsky and Vladimir Rezun, who writes under the name of Viktor Suvorov.

Gordievsky was reputed to be deputy chief of station in London and exposed dozens of Russian KGB officers, while Rezun threw enough mud at dozens of military intelligence (GRU) officers in his book "Aquarium", which subsequently appeared in the United States as "Inside the Aquarium."

So, why start with Litvinenko, and use a method that rules out using it for "noble revenge" against other "sinners"?

The British police would do well to listen to their minister, who said the following about Version Five on the Kremlin's responsibility for Litvinenko's death.

"The worst thing we can do is speculate. We will end up with egg on our face," Secretary of State for the Home Office John Reid told Sky News' Sunday Live program.

On the Home Front (at least for me)

195,000 still in the dark in Illinois and Missouri

ST. LOUIS, Missouri (AP) -- After spending three days at a shelter in a converted recreation center, Angela Luster hitched a ride with the National Guard to check on her apartment.

"It's terrible. You just had to uproot your life," said Luster, 28. "We have to live by other people's rules and regulations. It's difficult being around people you don't know."

People slept in shelters during their search for warm surroundings as the region entered a sixth day Tuesday of a blackout caused by the first storm of the winter season.

The Missouri National Guard was sent to the St. Louis area after Thursday's snow and ice storm to make sure people were surviving without electric light and heat.

The same was happening in neighboring Illinois, where Gov. Rod Blagojevich ordered National Guard troops to begin checking on Decatur-area residents Tuesday.

The St. Louis-based utility Ameren Corp. was reporting nearly 195,000 outages in Illinois and Missouri on its Web site early Tuesday. The bulk of the outages were in the St. Louis area.

The utility said it would be several more days before power is fully restored.

"We've had some ice storms before. This one puts them to shame," said Ron Zdellar, vice president of energy for AmerenUE, who has worked for the company for 35 years.

Utility crews were working 18-hour shifts, especially in the biggest problem areas, where ice coated roads and utility poles. Workers from 14 states were helping.

The storm also caused widespread power outages elsewhere as it blew snow and ice from Texas to Michigan last week and battered parts of the Northeast with thunderstorms and high winds.

The number of deaths blamed on the storm rose Monday to at least 23, with three more deaths reported in Missouri and one more in Illinois. The causes included weather-related traffic accidents, fires, carbon monoxide poisoning and exposure, officials said.

The combination of low temperatures, downed power lines, ice-covered poles and brittle tree limbs hampered repair efforts.

"We knew when this thing hit, it would be far different from anything we've seen before," Zdellar said.

After a run of temperatures in the teens, the St. Louis area got a break Monday afternoon with thermometers showing almost 40.

The National Weather Service did not forecast any additional snow or ice in the affected region, but high temperatures this week were expected to stay in the 30s and low 40s.
*****

The thing this story doesn't mention is that this past summer, we had a major storm that knocked out power to the exact same areas. The problem then (and now) appears to be that AmerenUE is not trimming trees like they are supposed to, and the branches grow into power lines. Then when a storm comes or the branches get coated in ice like they did this past week, the branches knock down the power lines. Also, AmerenUE was supposed to update their power grids but hasn't in a long time, making it more difficult to restore power.

So that's what we're dealing with here in this area. Missouri Governor Matt Blunt (son of soon-to-be Minority Whip Rep. Roy Blunt) called up the National Guard and they're here helping out, which is good. But a lot of people are calling for some sort of investigation into AmerenUE--especially with the number of deaths that have been caused by this latest power outage.

Monday, December 04, 2006

CNN Bids Goodbye to "Warrior One"

from Marie



The CNN Hummer will be up for auction to the highest
bidder (no reserve) on January 20, 2007.

The auction will be at:

Barrett-Jackson Classic Car
3020 N. Scottsdale Rd
Scottsdale, AZ 85251
480) 421-6694

Thanks for the heads up, Marie!

Anderson Cooper 360 Sweepstakes


Check out this link for the AC360 Sweepstakes. I hope they screen the winner. Good luck!

12/05/06 UPDATE: Gawker, Jossip, TVNewser and a host of other sites have some downright funny comments about the site...if you like to read those type of things ;)

I Want Media Person of the Year....


The votes are in: Stephen Colbert, the host of the eponymously-pronounced "The Colbert Report," is the 2006 I Want Media Person of the Year as voted in the media site's annual online poll.

Colbert has been a can't miss commentator since day one — literally, because it was on Day One that he introduced his guiding concept of "truthiness," now an ingrained part of the vernacular. In April he struck a giant nerve at the White House Correspondent's dinner, skewering President Bush in a bitingly spot-on set before all of D.C.' s heavy hitters, and then, tellingly, everyone else via YouTube (but also giving the CSPAN site more hits than it could remember).

Colbert is also a pioneer for his skillful use of the web via the havoc he played with Wikipedia, his takeover of a bridge in Hungary, and of course his "Stephen Colbert Greenscreen Challenge". At this point I think it's interesting — and fair — to note the symbiotic role Colbert and Jon Stewart, and Comedy Central, played in each other's exploding reach this year. YouTube extended Colbert and Stewart's audience by millions every day as new clips were religiously posted, giving millions of viewers a reason to go to YouTube that they might otherwise not have had (this is one of the reasons it was such big news that Comedy Central started pulling clips earlier this year).

Contenders this year included — in order of votes — Rachael Ray, Chad Hurley, Dean Baquet, and Arianna Huffington. Also in the running were Katie Couric, Tom Freston, Rupert Murdoch, Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and NBC hitmaker and NBC 2.0 architect Jeff Zucker. I repeat, Racheal Ray came in SECOND. The comments from prominent media voters are definitely worth a read (and it's interesting to note that none of the feeatured commenters voted for Eric Schmidt). Bonnie Fuller picked Chad Hurley; Keith Kelly picked Dean Baquet — " the poster boy for all the stupid moronic things some major media companies are doing"; Tina Brown chose "queen of the blogosphere" (and ETP bosslady) Arianna Huffington; AdAge's Scott Donaton pisses off Toyota. Both Kurt Andersen and Ken Auletta mentioned Lou Dobbs as representing the trend in opinionated on-air punditry (Andersen called Dobbs and Colbert "the twin avatars of Cable News 3.0...both lacking all doubt concerning their versions of the truth...both glowing with self-regard, one a parody and one not"). Write-ins included Keith Olbermann, the higher-rated not-Courics Charlie Gibson and Brian Williams, YouTube star Judson Laipply (per Bob Garfield: "He's a motivational speaker from Ohio, and you have seen him dance"), and Page Six's Richard Johnson, modestly nominated by Page Six's Richard Johnson.

Last year's winner was CNN's Anderson Cooper and prior to that Jon Stewart was the winner in 2004. — Rachel Sklar

From Another One of My Favorite Journalists...

NBC's Engel Defends Iraq Correspondents

For those of you not familiar with Richard Engel, he is the bureau chief of NBC Beirut, but his real acclaim is spending more time on the ground than any other reporter in Baghdad. Check back for more to come on this, another amazing reporter and his stories. Thanks to TVNewser for the blurb:)

On Sunday's Reliable Sources, NBC News Middle East bureau chief Richard Engel said his network's decision to call Iraq a "civil war" was "very much driven by what the reports are coming from the ground." Later in the show, Howard Kurtz asked:


KURTZ: Richard Engel, top administration officials, as you well know, have repeatedly criticized correspondents like you for painting an unnecessarily negative picture of what's going on in Iraq, staying in the Green Zone, and all of that. Now that this -- even the private doubts and reservations of the White House and the Pentagon are coming out, do you feel vindicated?

ENGEL: No. It's been very frustrating all along to be at the receiving end of that criticism with acquisitions like we just spend all of our time in the Green Zone.

For the record, neither your reporters, Arwa Damon right now in Baghdad, or almost any of the reporters who cover Iraq do so from the Green Zone, but go out every day either with the U.S. military or driving around the city of Baghdad. And to say that we somehow have been just lazy and picking up bad reports to try to make the American mission in Iraq somehow seem like a failure is inaccurate. It's also, in some degree, dangerous.

I mean, I know reporters, colleagues of mine who have received so much criticism over the last three and a half, four years, that they felt they've had something to prove. And so they put themselves in extraordinarily dangerous situations. And I know one reporter who was kidnapped as a result of it.

So it's not a sense of vindication, but it is good that people are finally starting to finally see that the situation in Iraq is tremendously difficult, and it is not just reporters who are looking for bad -- bad news stories.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Murder Mystery Worthy of Dame Agatha

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Looks like an hour of Monday's 360 will be dedicated to the death of former spy Alexander Litvenenko. Here's a portion of David Doss's post from Friday, asking some questions about the case:

Any good murder mystery -- and this is a good one -- spends much time examining suspects and motives. But in this story, perhaps the strange murder weapon itself could prove to be the most fascinating angle. And that's what Sanjay, with his tremendous medical expertise, will examine. Consider some of the questions he'll explore:

1. Why use polonium as murder weapon? Clearly, there are many ways to poison or kill someone, most far less risky and perhaps even more effective, so the mystery is, why use it? Is it 100 percent effective? Does the agonizing nature of the death send a message?

2. Polonium (that concentration, anyway) is extremely rare, so perhaps they figured toxicology and pathology reports would not screen for it, would not find it?

3. How in the world did the docs figure out what it was? What kind of medical and toxicological screening would you need to ferret out the polonium?

4. What is the risk to the assassin? Today's news reports indicate there is a good chance the assassin got it on him or herself. What is the assassin's risk factor?


Great questions. I'd like to hear your thoughts.

Also, today a friend of Litvenenko's residing in the US came forward, claiming to know who is behind the death of the former spy.

Yuri Shvets, who had known Litvenenko for four years, says he spoke to Litvenenko on November 22, the day the former spy died in a London hospital. Shvets refused to name the possible suspect in an interview to the Associated Press, but stated that he did give the information to Scotland Yard.

Such an intriguing story, like something out of a Bond movie or an Agatha Christie book. Will anyone ever be charged with the death of Litvenenko? Who do you think is behind his death?

A Note from Cooper (The Blog Dog)

I just watched Part I of the Eukanuba
Tournament of Champions on Animal Planet. I saw a dog
that is the same breed as Molly and a dog that is the
same breed as me...neither of our breeds placed in the
Sporting Group Category.

Part II of the show will be on later today and I
invite you all over to my place to watch. Marie made
lots of gingerbread cookies and they are yummy! Marie
is serving hot cocoa, but she won't give me any since
chocolate is bad for dogs.

Hope to see you there!

~love
COOPER

Anderson Cooper to Co-host with Ripa this Week

Mark your calendars for Friday, December 8th as Anderson Cooper is scheduled to co-host Regis and Kelly! Let's hope it works out better for him than it did for Clay Aiken. Guests on the show include Jennifer Connelly, Brian McKnight and Kermit the Frog.

Aren't they a cute couple? I'd stop to check them out in Times Square.

To get us in the mood, here are a couple of photos I found on a blog from the May 2006 co-host appearance that Cooper made. Someone was lucky enough to be in the audience and snap a couple of photos...enjoy!



MANIFESTO

Don't think for me. Don't assume what I want to hear or read. Give me facts. Give me reasons. But not yours. Bring me debate. Enlighten me. Today, accountability is masked behind anonymity; bylines are hidden by zeros and ones. Everyone publishes; everyone is "in the know." Ethics are non-existent. Speculation is king. The truth is masked and a hostage. Empowered by our minds, WE ARE THE FREAKSPEAKERS!

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