Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.
Source: http://www.facebook.com/ynnaustin/posts/593726674005867
Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.
Source: http://www.facebook.com/ynnaustin/posts/593726674005867
If you're looking for a new smartphone, this is apparently the weekend to go shopping. Following Radio Shack's promise to chip in a $100 Google Play credit with purchase an HTC One and Walmart's deep iPhone discounts, AT&T has quietly tacked on a 50% discount to all smartphone purchases under $199. This puts devices like the HTC One, Samsung's Galaxy S4 (and the S4 Active), the Note II, both of BlackBerry's latest handsets and iPhone 5 at an enticing $100. Naturally, Ma Bell has attached the usual hooks: the deal necessitates a new 2-year agreement or contract renewal, and in-store purchases require a trade-in device to activate the discount. Not a bad deal if you're hankering for new hardware -- just make sure you don't walk away with buyer's remorse.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, AT&T
Via: TUAW
Source: AT&T
Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/IaHSY8xOKj8/
Maria Elena Fernandez TODAY
2 hours ago
The day before Lifetime began filming "Jodi Arias: Dirty Little Secret," its true crime movie about the Jodi Arias case, the now-convicted murderer shocked everyone by taking the stand at her trial. As Arias regaled the jury and public for 18 days with the minute details of her life and intimate relationship with Travis Alexander, the ex-boyfriend she killed, the movie's writers realized they could no longer end their story as they'd planned -- in a police interrogation room with Arias denying she'd even been at the scene.
As real life played out in a Mesa, Arizona, courtroom,it "was just too dramatic," to gloss over, said Arturo Interian, vice president of original movies for Lifetime Networks and A&E Networks. "To have [prosecutor] Juan Martinez suddenly becoming a hero in the public's eyes. And Jodi, now the villain of villains, going at it with Juan on the stand for multiple days?she was lying; he didn?t believe a word. He's nailing her and confronting her on her contradictions. You could not stop watching that. There's no way we could leave it out."
What to include and exclude in a true crime movie can be tricky business, especially when the case is not over. Legally, writers, producers and executives are bound by some of the facts as they reveal themselves in court but that doesn't mean that a movie has to wait to be made until all is said and done or that writers can't fill in the blanks. It depends on the point of the view the film is taking.
Lifetime's Arias film premieres Saturday at 8 p.m. -- the network began developing the movie 15 months ago, when no one expected the trial to last as long as it did or for the defendant to spend as much time trying to sell her self-defense claims. It put Jace Alexander, who was directing his first true crime movie, in the position of balancing artistic license with a story that was playing out in front of the world and simultaneously impacting real people. Her conviction meant that legally, producers could show her killing Alexander; without it, they would have had to focus on their rocky relationship and leave the conclusions to the audience.
"We are taking moments where no one knows or had access to the private closed-door moments of these people and imagining ourselves what happened," said Alexander who is not related to the victim. ?The minute that happens, we can't be held accountable for what other people think might be the truth. But there were a lot of facts we were privy to and we were faithful to those facts. Although I have nothing but the most respect for these people who have been living through this horrible tragedy, at the same time, we had to construct a narrative that may or may not sit well with them."
It was a first for Alexander but not for a network that built its brand when it seized on a gap left by the broadcast networks when they stopped making made-for-TV movies. Writer Teena Booth, who has written about 30 non-fiction movies, including Lifetime?s second biggest true crime hit, ?Drew Peterson: Untouchable,? says real life can get in the way of telling the story?even when the case is long over.
When she was writing a Lifetime movie that aired in 2008 about the murder of Las Vegas casino magnate Ted Binion, the court overturned the conviction of his girlfriend, Sandra Murphy, sending Booth into frantic re-write mode because she could no longer show Murphy killing Binion. Last year, as she wrote ?Fatal Honeymoon,? about Tina Watson, the newlywed wife who died while diving on her Australian honeymoon, the case against her husband was dismissed, though he had pleaded guilty to manslaughter in Australia.
?Those are real hair pullers,? Booth said. ?You can lose sleep. I am very committed to telling the truth as I understand it and what my research is showing. About 95% of the stories are pretty clear?you?re pretty sure that Jodi Arias did that. With Drew Peterson, I never had a doubt in my mind even though we were making the movie before he was convicted. But something like the Watson case is very ambiguous and there are many passionate conversations along the way with the network, producers and directors. Everyone wants to do the right thing and we also want to make a good movie.?
As a true crime writer, Booth researches her cases and follows a storytelling formula but her job is to dig beyond the facts and address a question that often is left answered in court?why? Trial watchers can surmise, for example, that Arias acted out in a jealous rage or that Peterson felt he owned his wife, but no one will ever know unless the murderers decide to reveal it. When preparing for a script, Booth reads whatever material she can find, but she also travels to where the crime occurred and interviews people who know the major players.
?My job is to understand the emotional content,? she said. ?I want to know who this person was. I feel a huge sense of responsibility toward the people I talk to because they?re sitting there telling me some of the most awful moments of their life, some of the most terrible things that have ever happened to them.?
Booth said she?s relieved not to have been charged with writing the Jodi Arias story because some stories ?are too upsetting too tackle.? When she wrote ?Amish Grace? for Lifetime about the 2006 Amish school shooting in Pennyslvania, Booth said she was on ?an emotional tear? for two months because it involved small children.
Michael Yarish / Lifetime
Rob Lowe starred in Lifetime's "Drew Peterson: Untouched," the network's second biggest true crime drama.
?Drew Peterson was a larger-than-life figure,? she said. ?You could keep a certain emotional distance from him because he?s like a clown. But Jodi Arias, there?s something more disturbing about her. She has this really dark side. It gives you a little bit of the creeps.?
At times, the horror of Arias' actions also got to Alexander who knew nothing about the case when he decided to direct his first Lifetime movie. The director opted to show the extreme violent nature of Arias? actions in spite of how difficult they are to even fathom because of what the horror reveals about the woman behind it.
?This man was brutally murdered and he shouldn?t have been and there are some deep emotions because of that,? Alexander said. ?There were 29 stab wounds and a gunshot and I felt it would be dishonest for me to just clip that and move forward. I want to show that it?s not OK. It?s hard for me to watch. I want people to watch this movie but you may need to cover your eyes a little bit.?
Those who followed the trial won?t be surprised by the gruesomeness of the murder, but critics have questioned whether Lifetime should be airing the movie so soon after the trial ended, especially because the sentencing portion has to be redone and the victim?s family will have to live through it again.
?When a story is as exposed in the public as this one, I feel like it?s open for people to interpret an artistic approach to these people because they are now in the public eye,? Alexander said. ?Whether that is fair or not, I?m still wrestling with. And believe me, I feel it. I?m not entirely comfortable with it at all.?
Booth said she?s never received a single complaint; in fact, often the families of the victims thank her for telling their story. ?I?ve never had a family come at me and say that it was horrible and they feel exploited,? she said. ?If that did happen, it would hurt. I would feel terrible.?
Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/filmmakers-scramble-make-made-tv-films-accurate-6C10374594
We're live from London's Earls Court exhibition center later today for Samsung Premiere 2013 -- the Korean manufacturer's big event where it's promising to show off new Galaxy (Android) and Windows (Ativ) devices. So we can certainly expect to see more of the Galaxy S4 Mini, Active and Zoom, as well as unannounced stuff like the Galaxy NX Android-powered mirrorless camera. On the Windows side, there's the possibility of more tablets and ultrabooks, and maybe some new Windows Phone devices too.
We'll be on the ground from 6pm local time, and the show kicks off at 7pm BST (2pm EDT, 11am PDT), so remember to bookmark this page for live coverage. You'll find our liveblog after the break!
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/DAIB6NAmZXA/story01.htm
For starters, my family threw us the baby shower of the century and I haven't even had time to blog about it. Several months back, my mom and sisters came to me attempting to find a date that would work for all of us to have a baby shower. ?After a lot of debating, we chose a date, and then several weeks later, changed the date in fear that it would be too close to traveling for our first trip. ?Little did we know that our first trip would come a lot sooner than we thought. ?We came home from Ethiopia on a Thursday and the baby shower of the century was two days later on a Saturday. ?While it was a crazy busy time, it couldn't have been more perfect timing to celebrate the news that we were officially Biruk's parents. ?That makes for some serious celebration.
If you know anything about my family, than you know no one does anything halfheartedly. ?When my mom and sisters started making plans for the shower, I knew that it would not be a simple task. ?For weeks leading up, whenever I talked with them on the phone, they reminded me that it was going to be awesome. ?They had every detail planned out, they had invited friends and family from out of town, and they wanted to make sure it was amazing.
Nate and I had decided to just go home to my parent's house as soon as we got in from Ethiopia. ?Since my sister was in town, Nate's family was coming, and we had friends coming, we thought we would spend a few days home. ?Friday morning, I woke up and was completely jet lagged and groggy. ?I headed downstairs and found some coffee my Dad had made and then he informed me that he needed me to come to the airport that night and translate (in Spanish) for a pastor coming to visit from Cuba who didn't speak any English. ?At that point, I was so tired, I was lucky I could speak English. ?Regardless, I agreed, and that night my Dad and I set out to the airport.
We arrived at BWI and began searching for this Cuban pastor. ?I was frantically trying to remember every Spanish phrase I could think of, while asking my Dad over and over again a series of questions as we waited..."What does he look like? ?Are you sure he doesn't speak any English? ?What gate is he coming from? ?Are you sure he doesn't speak any English?" ?Finally, after about 30 minutes of waiting, my Dad blurted out, "It's Amy Hanes!" ?I was like, "What's Amy Hanes?" ?He said, "Amy...she is coming to surprise you for your shower but I have no idea where she is. ?Do you have your her number in your cell?" ?Amy is one of my friends, who is a missionary in Honduras. ?She had come to surprise me for my shower. ?I turned around and saw her right away and then started freaking out. ?The weekend was already off to an amazing start.
Saturday morning, we headed to the church and I was completely blown away by what I saw. ?My mom and sisters had truly out done themselves. ?There were pennants that were hanging with maps of Ethiopia, little kid party favors with pencils with mini flags on them, several of Biruk's little shirts hanging up, cupcakes that had cake pops in the center of them, food that was amazing every where, the cutest mason jars with Biruk's picture attached and yummy chocolate covered oreos and pretzels inside (thanks to my sister, Heather), and pictures of our trip pinned all over.
Side ?note on the pictures...so my Dad went to CVS to get 5 sets of about 20 pictures of Biruk developed. ?The CVS girl came over to him and said, "This is a beautiful baby!" ?My Dad tried to reply, "That's my new grandson," but in Dad fashion, broke down in tears overwhelmed by the goodness of the whole thing. ?The girl put her arm around him and said, "Sir, are you going to be ok?" ?Oh my...I would have paid to see that.
Mom had placed plain burp cloths everywhere along with fabric markers. ?She asked everyone to decorate one (which by the way, there were over 65 people there to support us!). ?She also asked everyone to write Biruk blessings, which totally blew us away. ?I can't wait until he is old enough for us to read them some day. ?My sister Kristen gave us this awesome wall hanging of Africa with the lyrics to a powerful Steven Curtis Chapman song. ?It's already hanging in Biruk's room ?My sister Heather had this beautiful necklace made that had a bunch of charms that represented our journey. ?I have been wearing it like crazy! ?Nate's mom and sister even made it down...driving 6 hours to stay for a few hours. ?It meant the world to us.
I had always imagined what it would be like to have a baby shower someday, but I could have never dreamed up the amount of encouragement and love we felt that day. ?It wasn't about gifts that we got (although, we got more than enough gifts...people were incredibly generous). ?It wasn't about the decorations (although I am pretty sure that my mom and sisters could easily go into the business of baby showers...it was that amazing). ?It wasn't even about us. ?It was totally about God's grace and faithfulness in a story that we could have never written or imagined if we tried. ?It was about a community of friends and family members who have been praying like crazy for a child they have never even met. ?It was about the celebration of a baby whose name not only means "blessed," but whose whole story has been a blessing in ways we could have never dreamed of. ?It was about a God who never stops loving us and a God who is constantly weaving the threads of our lives to make something beautiful. ?That is what blows us away. ?That is what we are grateful for. ?That is what makes the journey incredible. ?Thanks be to God.
Source: http://nateandandrealifeunexpected.blogspot.com/2013/06/our-first-baby-shower.html
By HOWIE RUMBERG
AP Sports Writer
Associated Press Sports
updated 10:51 p.m. ET June 20, 2013
NEW YORK (AP) - Evan Longoria homered twice. Matt Moore pitched impressively into the seventh inning. From Desmond Jennings to Yunel Escobar, there were contributions throughout the Tampa Bay lineup.
That's how manager Joe Maddon imagined this pesky club would perform all year.
"That's the way it's supposed to look like," Maddon said after the Rays sent the New York Yankees to their seventh loss in nine game, 8-3 Thursday night.
Longoria reached 500 career RBIs with a sacrifice fly in the third inning. He connected against Andy Pettitte (5-5) leading off the sixth and again off Joba Chamberlain to open the eighth.
Escobar hit a two-run shot off Boone Logan later in the eighth as the Rays' won a second straight after losing six of seven.
"We've had some tough losses in the past week but the guys hung in there really well," Maddon said. "It's going to be the roller coaster AL East all summer."
Tampa Bay had 14 hits after amassing 15 in a 6-2 win over Boston on Wednesday night.
The 24-year-old Moore (9-3) snapped a three-start skid. The lefty opened the season 8-0 before yielding 20 runs over 12 1-3 innings in three starts this month. He blanked the Yankees until the sixth when two walks and a single loaded the bases with no outs.
A wild pitch scored one run, Robinson Cano had a sacrifice fly and Travis Hafner followed with an RBI grounder that pulled the Yankees to 4-3.
"Things were going well until the sixth inning," Moore said. "That was kind of the makey or breaky type of moment where it's either going to be a five-run inning with Robbie Cano up, bases loaded, no outs. Or you could keep the team in the game the way we were able to."
Moore then got an out in the seventh before being lifted following Lyle Overbay's ground-rule double to left field, only the fourth hit he allowed.
Jose Lobaton opened the scoring with a sacrifice fly in the second following a wild pitch by Pettitte. Ben Zobrist had an RBI single in the third in the Rays' first visit to the Bronx this year.
Jennings and Sean Rodriguez had consecutive two-out doubles in the seventh to chase Pettitte, making his first start as a 41-year-old - his birthday was Saturday.
"For me it's another frustrating night," Pettitte said. "We come back and score three runs and I go out there and give them right back. Joe (Girardi) trusts me to get out of the inning and I can't get Rodriguez out. I need to be able to shut these guys down."
Jennings put Pettitte in trouble on the first pitch of the game, hitting a double that landed on the left-field line for his first of his three hits.
The Rays started the third with three straight singles. Jennings led off with a single and went to second when the ball scooted under center fielder Brett Gardner's glove for an error. After Rodriguez singled, Zobrist, who came in 9 for 22 (.409) against Pettitte, drove in Jennings with a single.
Longoria's sacrifice fly made it 3-0 and gave the All-Star third baseman 500 RBIs in 710 games, eighth quickest to reach the mark in major league history.
"It's a pretty good amount of RBIs. It's something I'm pretty proud of," Longoria said. "Hopefully there'll be a ton more."
In 6 2-3 innings, Pettitte gave up five runs and nine hits. He has given up 14 runs in four starts since returning from the disabled list June 3.
Pitching coach "Larry (Rothschild) said for the first five innings he didn't make a lot of mistakes, but the ones he made they hit them," manager Joe Girardi said.
NOTES: Maddon said RHP Alex Colome will start Saturday. ... Tampa Bay played its 2,500th game in franchise history. The Rays, who started out as the Devil Rays in 1998, are 1,141-1,359 overall. Rothschild was Tampa Bay's first manager. Current Rays bench coach Dave Martinez singled for the team's first hit. ... Rays ace David Price (left triceps strain) is scheduled to make his first rehabilitation start Friday for Class A Charlotte. ... There was a moment of silence for actor and Yankees fan James Gandolfini, who died Wednesday. ... Yankees broadcaster and former catcher John Flaherty was in the Rays' first lineup. ... Yankees OF Vernon Wells went 0 for 3 and is 6 for 59 in June.
? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
advertisement
More news??HBT Daily: O's teammates Chris Davis and Manny Machado lead the early AL MVP race. Who does Craig Calcaterra favor for the award?
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Staring at a seven-run deficit with Seattle's Felix Hernandez on the mound Thursday night, the Los Angeles Angels could have been excused for starting to think about the weekend.
Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/52270549/ns/sports-baseball/
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Monday that Iran's election of a moderate as its next president is a sign that Iranians want to move in a different direction, but he was uncertain whether it would lead to a breakthrough over Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
In an interview with public television anchor Charlie Rose, Obama said the United States and its allies would be willing to hold talks with Iran over its nuclear program, as long as Tehran recognized that international sanctions would not be lifted unless Iran proved it is not building a nuclear weapon.
"As long as there's an understanding about the basis of the conversation, then I think there's no reason why we shouldn't proceed," Obama said.
The surprise victory by Iran's Hassan Rohani in weekend elections to succeed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president was seen by the United States as positive, at least at first glance.
"I think it says that the Iranian people want to move in a different direction," said Obama. "The Iranian people rebuffed the hardliners and the clerics in the election who were counseling no compromise on anything any time anywhere. Clearly you have a hunger within Iran to engage with the international community in a more positive way."
Obama noted, however, that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei remains Iran's supreme leader "so we're going to have to continue to see how this develops and how this evolves over the next several weeks, months, years."
"I do think that there's a possibility that they decide - the Iranians decide - to take us up on our offer to engage in a more serious substantive way," he said.
The interview was taped on Sunday and broadcast on Monday on the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
It touched on many of the international challenges Obama is facing, including the question of how to assist Syrian rebels militarily after Washington determined last week that the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad had used chemical weapons against the opposition.
Obama sounded skeptical about the idea of establishing a no-fly zone over Syria, which his administration has been considering. He said it is possible that a no-fly zone "may not be actually solving the problem."
Whatever assistance the United States provides should be done carefully because "it is very easy to slip-slide your way into deeper and deeper commitments," he said.
Obama, who had face-to-face talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping this month in California, said he believes the Chinese recognize the U.S. desire for China to play a positive role on the world stage, but Beijing has yet to fully take on that responsibility.
The president engaged in a blunt conversation with Xi about cyber hacking and what American officials believe has been the theft of U.S. trade secrets by China.
"I think what you're seeing inside of (the) Chinese leadership is the desire to maybe continue not to be responsible, not to be a full stakeholder, work the international system on something like trade or intellectual property rights, get as much as they can, and be free-riders and let the United States worry about the big hassles and the big problems," Obama said.
(Reporting By Steve Holland; editing by Christopher Wilson)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-sees-irans-election-moderate-hopeful-sign-030538159.html
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/zUiV_ArrHO0/
Authorities are searching for answers as to why a gunman went on a deadly rampage at Santa Monica Community College on Friday, NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.
By Richard Esposito and Daniel Arkin, NBC News
A fifth victim of the horrific shooting spree in Santa Monica, Calif., was confirmed dead Sunday as law enforcement officials revealed the name of the suspected gunman.
John Zawahri, 23, was identified by police as the heavily armed man who rampaged through a mile-long stretch of the coastal city Friday, dressed head to toe in black and carrying an AR-15 assault rifle as well as a duffel bag stuffed with as much as 1,800 rounds of ammunition, law enforcement officials said Sunday.
Zawahri is accused of gunning down five people near a community college campus, before being fatally shot himself by police.
The fifth victim, Marcela Dia Franco, 26 ? who along with her father, Carlos Navarro Franco, 68, was fatally shot by the suspect as he stormed Santa Monica College ?? was taken off life support at a West Los Angeles hospital Saturday night, the victim's family told NBC Los Angeles Sunday.
Law enforcement officials also confirmed that the two of the gunman's victims ?? a pair found dead in a burning house fewer than 20 blocks away from the campus where the shooting spree came to a bloody climax ? were Zawahri?s 55-year-old father, Samir, and 24-year-old brother, Christopher.
Zawahri, who was due to turn 24 on Saturday, allegedly murdered the two men before setting his father?s house ablaze just before 12 p.m. and fleeing the scene on foot, sources said.
As firefighters officials first arrived at the scene to extinguish the blaze, the gunman carjacked a vehicle being driven by an adult woman and threatened to murder her if she didn?t drive him to the nearby college campus, Santa Monica Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said Saturday.
Santa Monica Police Department / Getty Images
In this handout provided by the Santa Monica Police Department, the suspected gunman is seen entering the Santa Monica College library during his rampage.
The gunman demanded the woman stop at various points along the mile-long ride so he could fire indiscriminately at passing cars, police said.
He shot at a woman driving past the scene of the carjacking, wounding her, and later sprayed bullets at a public bus, shattering glass and injuring three people.
As they approached the SMC campus, the shooter fired at Carlos Navarro Franco while he sat behind the wheel of his SUV, which spun out of control and careened into a wall, according to Los Angeles County Coroner?s Office investigator Joyce Kato. Carlos, a groundskeeper at the school,?died instantly.
His passenger, daughter Marcela, was transported to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in West Los Angeles, where she passed away Saturday night.
With police officers in pursuit, the gunman abandoned the shaken motorist and darted toward the library, shooting randomly.
One bullet struck and killed an unidentified adult woman in her 50s outside the library building, police said.
Amid the hail of gunfire, students scattered and took shelter in a provisional safe room, barricading the door with any available objects to keep the gunman away.
Officers arrived at the library shortly after noon and exchanged a volley of bullets with the suspect before wounding him. The injured suspect was then taken outside, where he was pronounced dead around 12:05 p.m.
Law-enforcement sources said Sunday that ?open source postings? found online suggest that Zawahri suffered from emotional and psychological problems. They added, however, that there ?was nothing found through open source searches that would indicate that Zawahri had subscribed to any extremist ideologies.?
The police chief said Saturday that law enforcement officials had an unspecified brush with the man seven years ago, but Seabrooks did not comment on the 2006 incident because he was a juvenile at the time.
Authorities in California have named 23-year-old John Samir Zawahri as the suspected shooter at a Santa Monica college earlier this week. MSNBC's Richard Lui reports.
This story was originally published on Sun Jun 9, 2013 3:44 PM EDT
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) ? A gunfight between protesters and former rebels aligned with the military in Libya's eastern city of Benghazi left seven people dead on Saturday, a health official said, the latest episode of lawlessness to hit the North African country.
The clashes also left 37 people wounded, according to the doctor in the city's main hospital. A security official said the fighting broke out after protesters stormed a base belonging to Libya Shield, a grouping of pro-government militias tasked to maintain security. The protesters were demanding the militias to give up their weapons and submit to the full authority of Libya's security forces.
Libya is going through a rocky transition after its bloody 2011 civil war. The central government remains weak and has been challenged by powerful militia groups, initially formed of ex-rebels who fought dictator Moammar Gadhafi's forces during the war. Successive governments have relied on them to maintain security, but they have also been blamed for ongoing violence and the government has struggled to enforce its authority over them.
Security remains elusive in the country, still awash with weapons from the war and prone to violent escalations over private and political affairs.
Last week for example a personal feud sparked clashes between tribes of African and Arab origins in southern Libya, leaving five people dead. A security official said warring factions fired light weapons and rocket-propelled grenades at each other.
Benghazi was also the site of an attack last September that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
Both officials spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gunfight-libyas-eastern-city-leaves-7-dead-204442554.html
In mere days, the ESA will host the 18th annual Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles, a multimillion-dollar event that serves as a soapbox for industry leaders, game developers and peripheral manufacturers as well as a focal point for video game enthusiasts. The show is a driving force for the industry, dictating Christmas lists in early June and establishing what products will live, die and fade from the public mind. Retailers eye consumer reactions to help them finalize their holiday orders and fans devour coverage of the event as if it was manna from heaven. Since the show's 1995 launch, video games have grown from a niche category to a central facet of modern entertainment -- finding their own place in the music industry, our national museums and even organizations like the Boy Scouts of America. No other event celebrates and glorifies the industry so thoroughly.
Yes, it's a trade show at heart -- as well as the industry's best hype machine -- but it's also a very prominent part of gaming fandom. Following the news, scrutinizing announcements and arguing over who "won" the show is almost an annual tradition. Amid all of the event's excitement, it's easy to forget its strange origins. The industry's biggest spectacle wasn't born from a rational need to create a unifying trade show, but instead from a federally imposed stalemate in the console wars of the 1990s.
A minor yet amusing piece of news regarding the 21 Jump Street sequel has been announced.? Embedded in a press release that announced a remake of the French film A Prophet?produced by Neal Moritz, Sony has revealed that the title of the Jump Street sequel will be, appropriately enough, 22 Jump Street.? Not too much is known about the follow-up as of now, but directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller are expected to return, and the story will find Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill?s characters infiltrating a college campus.? Moreover, Moritz previously told us that Ice Cube will indeed be reprising his fantastic role as Captain Dickson.? 22 Jump Street will open in theaters on June 13, 2014.
Sponsored Content
Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927606/news/1927606/
Google's neat-freak overhaul of Gmail is now available for Android. Go get it.
Source: http://gizmodo.com/googles-neat-freak-overhaul-of-gmail-is-now-available-f-511175621
FILE - In this Oct. 22, 2012 file photo Singer Kanye West and girlfriend Kim Kardashian attend Gabrielle's Angel Foundation 2012 Angel Ball cancer research benefit at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Kanye West can pass down that leather skirt to his future child: He and Kim Kardashian are expecting a daughter. The big reveal of the baby's sex came Sunday night, June 2, 2013 on Kardashian's E! reality show, "Keeping Up With the Kardashians." (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)
FILE - In this Oct. 22, 2012 file photo Singer Kanye West and girlfriend Kim Kardashian attend Gabrielle's Angel Foundation 2012 Angel Ball cancer research benefit at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Kanye West can pass down that leather skirt to his future child: He and Kim Kardashian are expecting a daughter. The big reveal of the baby's sex came Sunday night, June 2, 2013 on Kardashian's E! reality show, "Keeping Up With the Kardashians." (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)
NEW YORK (AP) ? Kanye West can pass down that leather skirt to his future child: He and Kim Kardashian are expecting a daughter.
The big reveal of the baby's sex came Sunday night on Kardashian's E! reality show, "Keeping Up With the Kardashians."
Kardashian said she was excited to be having a girl and added, "Who doesn't want a girl?" She added that that's what Kanye wanted as well.
The couple didn't let on about what the baby would be before Sunday's show aired, with Kardashian saying that they were buying all-white clothes for the baby so people wouldn't guess the baby's gender.
Kardashian is due to give birth to the couple's first child sometime this summer.
Associated PressLink Information - Click to View
The Great White Whale Fight
Source: National Geographic News
Posted on:
Saturday, Jun 01, 2013, 9:05am
Views: 24
Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128457/The_Great_White_Whale_Fight
pollen count mexico city mexico earthquake aziz ansari aziz ansari katherine jenkins peyton manning broncos
By CHARLES ODUM
AP Sports Writer
Associated Press Sports
updated 10:02 p.m. ET May 30, 2013
ATLANTA (AP) - Fredi Gonzalez gave three struggling stars a chance to relax.
Fill-in starters Ramiro Pena, Jordan Schafer and Evan Gattis then showed the slumping regulars that hitting isn't so difficult.
Pena drove in four runs with three hits, including a run-scoring single in the sixth that gave Atlanta the lead, Mike Minor pitched seven strong innings and the Braves' makeshift lineup had a season-high 16 hits in an 11-3 win over R.A. Dickey and the Toronto Blue Jays on Thursday night.
Freddie Freeman and Reed Johnson homered, Gattis had three hits and Schafer had two hits, including a two-run single in the sixth.
"We are trying to do our job, you know," Pena said. "We want to play well also. I think we got great ABs and we produced."
Pena, Schafer and Gattis made the most of fill-in starts as Gonzalez rested three regulars hitting below .200: outfielders B.J. Upton and Jason Heyward and second baseman Dan Uggla.
Gonzalez wouldn't say after the game if he would hold out the regulars again when the Braves open a weekend series against the Washington Nationals on Friday night.
"We'll see," Gonzalez said. "The guys played well. One thing you always want to do is put your best team out there."
Minor (7-2) gave up six hits and three runs - two earned - with five strikeouts and no walks in winning his fourth straight decision.
Dickey (4-7) allowed 11 hits and six runs in six innings.
It was Dickey's fourth start allowing six or more runs this season, leaving his ERA at 5.18 one season after he won the NL Cy Young Award with the Mets.
Dickey said he gave up a lot of soft hits.
"I might have given up four hard-hit balls all night," Dickey said. "I mean, it was tough. It seemed like every ball off the bat would find a hole somewhere, or a little space in the outfield.
"This game's tough. It's hard. And you can't quit grinding it out, and you can't quit searching for the answers. I certainly won't. And I'll find it. I'll find it."
The Blue Jays scored three runs in the sixth to pull even at 3, but the Braves scored three runs off Dickey in the bottom of the inning. Pena's infield single drove in Gattis, who led off with a single. Schafer singled with two outs to drive in Chris Johnson, who reached on a fielder's choice grounder, and Pena.
Toronto manager John Gibbons said Dickey's velocity on his knuckleball is down.
"He's been battling that, trying to find it," Gibbons said. "He battles you out there. I know that's frustrating him."
One day after a 3-0 loss to the Blue Jays, the Braves made some lineup changes. Third baseman Juan Francisco, who was sharing time with Chris Johnson, was designated for assignment. Francisco was hitting .241 with five homers, 16 RBIs and 43 strikeouts in 108 at-bats.
The Braves have 10 days to trade, release or send Francisco outright to the minors.
Schafer, who hit leadoff and started in center field for Upton, had a first-inning double that bounced over third baseman Mark DeRosa. Schafer scored on Andrelton Simmons' single to left.
Gattis, starting in left field, led off the second by slapping a single to right field. Gattis scored on a single to left by Pena, who started for Uggla.
Heyward, pinch-hitting in the seventh, reached on catcher's interference when his bat hit J.P. Arencibia's glove.
Freeman pushed the lead to 3-0 in the third with his two-out homer off Dickey. The homer came on the night fans received Freeman bobblehead dolls.
Toronto pulled even in the sixth. Dickey led off with an infield single and moved to second when Simmons misplayed Jose Bautista's grounder for an error. Edwin Encarnacion drove in Dickey with a single to center field and DeRosa added a two-run double to right field.
Reed Johnson hit a pinch-hit, two-run homer off Todd Redmond in the eighth, capping the impressive show of depth on the Braves' roster.
"It's a deep team position-wise," Gonzalez said. "There are some days that the guys sitting on the bench may be better than the guys on the field and vice versa. You've got to take every opportunity and put guys out there."
Gonzalez remains confident in Upton, Uggla and Heyward.
"You've got to believe the back of the baseball cards, and they're good players," Gonzalez said. "It may not even be the end of June. It may be the middle of June or five days from now. Who knows? But those bench guys are playing well."
NOTES: The Braves selected the contract of LHP Alex Wood from Double-A Mississippi. Wood, a 2012 second-round pick from the University of Georgia, pitched the ninth, allowing one hit, in his major league debut. ... Atlanta improved to 22-3 when scoring first. ... The Braves open a series against NL East rival Washington on Friday night when Julio Teheran faces Nationals ace Stephen Strasburg. The Blue Jays' seven-game road trip continues at San Diego, when Chad Jenkins will face Padres RHP Jason Marquis.
? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
advertisement
More news??Cal Ripken Jr.?agrees that games take too long to complete but loves the development of bullpen strategy, which tends to extend games.
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Jeff Francoeur and Eric Hosmer combined for three RBIs in the ninth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals' bullpen and the Kansas City Royals spoiled Michael Wacha's almost spotless debut, snapping an eight-game losing streak with a soggy 4-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday night.
Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/52052523/ns/sports-baseball/