Monday, October 21, 2013

BBM has an annoying persistent notification — but you might not want to turn it off

BBM notification settings

That persistent icon is there for a very good reason, and it's not going to get 'fixed' any time soon

One of the biggest gripes from people who tried BBM during the original failed launch was that you had to live with a persistent notification in your status bar. BlackBerry responded with a setting in the beta version — which found its way into today's actual launch — that allows you to turn off that nagging notification in your status bar.

But you probably want to leave it alone — if you actually want to get messages, that is.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ESESsd_l6vM/story01.htm
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Boxlight Boston X28NST


If you need an XGA (1,024-by-768) projector that can throw a large image in a tight space, the LCD-based Boxlight Boston X28NST is of obvious interest. In addition to the short-throw lens, which lets it project big images from close to the screen, it delivers a high-quality data image, watchable video (which is more than some data projectors can manage), and the promise of a long lamp life. The combination makes it a strong contender as a short-throw XGA projector for a small to mid-size conference room or classroom.



Short-throw projectors like the X28NST or the Editors' Choice NEC Display Solutions NP-M300WS are more expensive than equivalent models with a standard throw, because their lenses cost more. What justifies the price is the short throw. With the X28NST in particular, I measured a 78-inch wide (98-inch diagonal) image with the projector just 48 inches from the screen. That's less than half the distance a projector with a standard-throw lens would need.



There's little reason to spend extra money for a short-throw projector unless you actually need the short throw. But if you're looking to project a large image in a small room, or have a potential issue with shadows from anything that might get between a standard-throw projector and the screen, a short-throw projector can easily be worth the extra cost.


Basics and Setup
With its nine-pound weight, the X28NST is just heavy enough to make it most appropriate for permanent installation or mounting on a cart for moving it from room to room.


Setup is standard for a short-throw projector, with a manual focus and no zoom. Image inputs on the back panel include the usual VGA, HDMI, and composite video ports as well as an S-Video port, a USB A port for reading files directly from a USB memory key, and a mini-USB B port for direct USB display.


In addition, the projector offers a 1.5GB internal memory to let you show images without needing an external image source, and there's a LAN port you can use both to control the projector and to send images and audio over a network. Finally, Boxlight also sells an optional Wi-Fi dongle ($99 list) that will let you send images from PCs, Macs, and iOS and Android phones and tablets. In each case, there are apps available for the most recent versions of OSs.


Brightness and Image Quality
The X28NST's 2,800-lumen brightness rating is a touch lower than the more typical 3,000 lumens or so for recent models aimed at small to medium-size conference rooms and classrooms. However, that's not a big difference. As a point of reference, using SMPTE (Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers) recommendations, 3,000 lumens is bright enough in theater-dark lighting with a 1.0 gain screen for a 202- to 273-inch image measured diagonally. At 2,800 lumens, the recommended size drops to an overlapping 195 to 264 inches.


Because the X28NST is an LCD-based projector, it has the same color brightness as white brightness, which isn't necessarily true for DLP projectors. That means it maintains brightness for color images better than projectors with a lower color brightness than white brightness. (For more on color brightness, see Color Brightness: What It Is, and Why You Should Care.)


Data image quality is a strong point, with the X28NST scoring well on our standard suite of DisplayMate tests. Colors were fully saturated and vibrant in all modes and color balance was good, with acceptably neutral grays at all levels from black to white.


More important for most data images is that the image maintained fine detail across the entire screen, with both black text on white and white text on black crisp and highly readable at sizes as small at 6.8 points. The screen was also rock solid with an analog (VGA) connection, even with images that tend to cause pixel jitter or dynamic moire patterns. I didn't see any noticeably improvement when I switched to a digital (HDMI) connection.


As expected for a data projector, the X28NST didn't do as well with video as with data images. It handled shadow detail (details based on shading in dark areas) better than most data projectors, but I saw some posterization (shading changing suddenly where it should change gradually) and moderately obvious noise in solid areas, like an expanse of sky or a blank wall. Colors also had a washed out look that indicates a low contrast ratio.


That said, the video was good enough to watch a full-length movie comfortably, which makes the X28NST better for watching video than many data projectors. It also helps that as an LCD projector, it's guaranteed not to show the rainbow artifacts—in the form of flashes of red, green, and blue—that DLP projectors often show. On the other hand, because it's an LCD projector, it doesn't offer 3D support, which is all but standard in DLP projectors today.


Other Issues
One other plus that demands mention is the projector's long lamp life, with a rated 4,000 hours in Normal mode or 6,000 hours in Eco mode. Also note that Boxlight offers a Lamps for Life option ($299) that provides replacement lamps for the life of the projector. The only additional cost is for shipping, including for sending the old lamp back to Boxlight. Alternatively, you can buy replacement lamps as needed ($349 list).


A final minor issue is that despite a 10-watt mono speaker the audio system is barely loud enough to fill a small conference room. If you need higher volume or stereo, plan on plugging an external sound system into the projector's stereo audio output.


There's no reason to spend extra on a short throw projector unless you really need the short throw. If you need it, however, the Boxlight Boston X28NST offers a lot to like, including the excellent data image quality, acceptable video quality, and a long lamp life. If XGA is the resolution you need for a small to mid-size conference room or classroom, the Boxlight Boston X28NST can be a great fit.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/XF_xgzgjojU/0,2817,2425991,00.asp
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Revolt TV CEO on Sean Combs' Plan to Conquer Cable


Sean Combs is betting big on Revolt TV.



At 5 p.m. EST Monday, the all music channel goes live in the homes of about 22 million Comcast subscribers and 12 million Time Warner Cable customers, marking one of the biggest launches of a cable channel in years.


Revolt TV is the latest brainchild of Combs (aka Diddy, P. Diddy, Puff Daddy), a serial entrepreneur who has found success in music as an executive and hip hop artist as well as in fashion, liquor, marketing and more, helping him accumulate a fortune that Forbes estimated in 2012 at $550 million.


Now, seven years after he first conceived a new kind of all music channel, Combs is pouring tens of millions of that into launching a service aimed at 18 to 34 year olds – members of the Millennial generation – who consume more music than ever but not necessarily in traditional ways like listening to the radio or watching cable TV. In fact, they are the generation often described as “cord cutters,” because they haven’t rushed to subscribe to cable and often are more likely to view TV on a mobile phone or tablet computer than on the living room flat screen.


PHOTOS: 81 of Fall TV's Biggest Stars: THR's Exclusive Portraits


Combs has chosen Keith Clinkscales, who helped Quincy Jones launch Vibe magazine and spent years doing content development for ESPN, to be CEO of Revolt TV. He hired former MTV programming chief Andy Schuon as president. They have been working with a team of more than 100 other hires, mostly at Los Angeles headquarters and in New York City, to figure out how to make the all music formula work on TV.


Clinkscales says it's a good time to launch because music and digital consumption are both up.


"You have more and more bands and artists going across the whole eco system. Music is very healthy," Clinkscales tells The Hollywood Reporter. "To have a place that can be the center of that—we would like to earn that position by reaching our fans well. We have to have good access and engage with the artists and be able to go ahead and provide sponsors, advertisers, and record companies a place we can meet."


Two decades after he founded Bad Boy Records, Combs at 44 seems confident he can reach the younger generation and build a significant business by reaching his audience on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other social media as a way to lure them to watch his cable channel. He calls it the first launch in the era of social media.


His pitch is simple. It will be fresh, new and unlike what you have seen before. “I said it twice,” he recently tweeted, “and imma say it again. No Rules. Anything can happen. @RevoltTV.”


PHOTOS: 20 Best and Worst Music to Movie Crossovers


Combs has crisscrossed the country in the last year meeting with brands and advertisers, talking up his channel vision to advertisers, media and some private investors who have joined his latest venture as minority investors.


He seems confident even though there are lots of challenges for a music channel. Consider that MTV started with a business plan similar to what Combs has in mind – get lots of videos at little cost from record companies and artists, present them with exciting young personalities, fill in airtime with music oriented news and attract advertisers who are hip to the value of this audience.


What happened, however, was that over time MTV couldn’t generate high enough ratings with that formula. So it shifted its focus to individual shows, first with reality and then scripted, pushing the music to MTV 2, until that too became more series oriented.


There is also Fuse, a music channel owned by The Madison Square Garden Company, Mark Cuban’s AXS pay channel, and of course Viacom’s VH-1, which programs music and series but for a somewhat older crowd. All have struggled to build their own viewership to a significant level. 


PHOTOS: TV Showdown: Exclusive Portraits of 4 Top Executives


Revolt TV is one of about ten channels chosen by Comcast for carriage in fulfillment of a 2011 agreement when the big cable company bought NBCUniversal to provide more diversity across the dial. Combs was one of those who sought such carriage and he won that lottery; but now he has to prove his formula will really draw Millennials.


Clinkscales says that both Comcast and Time Warner Cable, which is also a charter carrier of Revolt TV, see this as a way to turn those cable cutters into cable consumers. The two cable giants are distributing but are not investors in Revolt TV.


“The leadership opportunity for them was to recognize what were trying to do is reach a new generation of people that are going to be watching cable in the future,” says Clinkscales. “When I came out of college getting cable was an extremely important thing in my life. For the generation currently coming out of college and going into the workforce that challenge is something cable operators have to address. We’re hoping to develop the kind of product that can help them meet that challenge.”


Clinkscales says that they believe the combination of social media, an online presence (but not a full stream of the channel) and smart programming carefully targeted at their Millennial audience will draw in viewers, who then will return because of the environment of music, culture, fashion and insider insights that they will create.


“This won’t be just a channel,” says Clinkscales. “The main thing were going to do is be a place where you can get news and information about music. We want to make sure when you come to Revolt, you’re getting a full picture of what is happing in the world of music.”


PHOTOS: 10 Highly Paid Entertainment CEOs


In September, Revolt TV hired Bruce Perlmutter, the former editor of E! News and E! Online, to head the news operation. Clinkscales says they will have reports not only about music newsmakers, but also behind the scenes at concerts, music festivals and related events.


The shows being planned are being designed both to attract Millennials and to interact with them. One called Power To The People is supposed to reflect content based on feedback from the audience.


Combs' presence suggests that music and the related news will be mostly urban, hip-hop and possibly R&B-related, but Combs has said (and Clinkscales is adamant) it will program beyond that.


“We are working hard from the launch to be not just an urban channel but a channel that covers all music from alternative to rock and roll to hip-hop and down the line.”


Even country? “If young people bang it,” promises Clinkscales, “we’ll cover it. If the target audience we are after likes electronic dance music, we’re going to be there.”


They don’t plan to sign a lot of artists to exclusive music and video breaks, at least not initially. And Clinkscales insist that it will be one of the few places to discover emerging artists – whom it plans to identify early on and bring to the market.


“We want artists to be more vulnerable & say what they really feel,” read a recent Revolt TV tweet, “even introduce us into their private lives. Don't be upset when they do.”


“We're out here on a mission,” read another tweet, “to use music as an influence to make your OWN rules. Get it ? No Rules.”


Revolt TV also has a movie division, Revolt Film, which to date has one picture and one documentary under its belt. The movie, Lawless, starring Shia LaBeouf and Jessica Chastain, was released in Aug. 2012 and grossed about $51 million worldwide. Revolt Film came on board Lawless as a financier after it's premiere at the Cannes International Film Festival.


So will Combs rule as he has in hip-hop, fashion and as a vodka salesman? He has said he is ready to do and spend what it takes for as long as it takes.


“You can feel music now bringing back the excitement and emotion of the timeless years,” read another Revolt TV tweet. “It's a marathon, not a sprint.”


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/music/~3/2tqq5I3X-oA/story01.htm
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NBC Entertainment Chairman Bob Greenblatt to Keynote Israel TV Conference



Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images


Bob Greenblatt



NBC Entertainment chairman Bob Greenblatt is lined up to deliver the keynote address of the second edition of the INTV conference, produced by Israel's Keshet Media Group.



Greenblatt's speech, focusing on the convergence of innovation and technology in the television industry, will be hosted by Keshet's CEO Avi Nir and Nir Barkat, the mayor of Jerusalem.


PHOTOS: 'Homeland': Portraits of the Emmy-Winning Cast and Creators


Nir said he is "delighted to welcome Bob to Israel, and we are thrilled to have him share his valuable insight at this year's conference."


Keshett, the company behind the Emmy-winning format Homeland/Prisoners of War, first hosted INTV last year in Israel.


Said Nir: "Bob, with his extraordinary track record in creating quality groundbreaking content and his keen eye toward emerging trends in the TV industry, embodies the spirit of innovation that we hope to cultivate at INTV. We cannot think of anyone more qualified to keynote the conference, especially during such an exciting period of industry transformation and globalization."


During his tenure as NBC Entertainment's chief executive, Greenblatt oversaw a turnaround in the network's primetime performance, leading NBC to a second place finish for the 2012-13 broadcast year in adults 18-49.


PHOTOS: 81 of Fall TV's Biggest Stars: THR's Exclusive Portraits


It marked the first time in 10 years that the network has topped Fox and ABC with no boost from the Olympics or the Super Bowl.


Gathering executives and industry leaders from around the world, INTV aims to address the sea change that has occurred within the global TV industry over the last few years.


With viewers taking center stage, new online outlets emerging, integrated social media becoming essential, and the growth of interactive services and new business models, industry leaders and disruptors will gather to confront modern TV's many questions and share their visions.


Keshet's confirmed speakers for the second edition include Hulu head of content acquisition Alex Kruglov, Lionsgate COO of television Sandra Stern and Caryn Mandabach (Nurse Jackie, That '70s Show, The Cosby Show), head of Caryn Mandabach Productions.


INTV runs Nov. 4-5 in Jerusalem.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/business/~3/SzQmAcPt_v0/story01.htm
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DHS selection suggests priority shift to security

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama's selection of a former top Pentagon lawyer to head the Homeland Security Department suggests the agency will be stepping back from its preoccupation with immigration to focus more on protecting the nation from attack.


Jeh C. Johnson, if confirmed by the Senate, would replace Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, who left the DHS last month to become president of the University of California system. Obama was expected to announce Johnson's nomination Friday.


Unlike Napolitano, Johnson has spent most of his career dealing with weighty national security issues as a top military lawyer. Issues he handled included ending the military's don't-ask-don't-tell policy for gay service members and changing military commissions to try terrorism suspects rather than using civilian courts. He also oversaw the escalation of the use of unmanned drone strikes during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as general counsel at the Defense Department.


Napolitano, who came to the DHS after serving as governor of Arizona, made clear that her top priority was immigration reform and routinely championed the issue in congressional testimony. During her first hearing on Capitol Hill, she did not mention terrorism. That is unlikely to be the case with Johnson, who left the Defense Department in 2012 and previously served as the general counsel of the Air Force under President Bill Clinton. Earlier in his career, he served as an assistant U.S. attorney in the Southern District of New York, where he handled public corruption cases.


Obama repeatedly has declared immigration reform a top priority, saying as recently as Thursday that he will push for a landmark overhaul bill this year. Based on Johnson's resume, which does not include immigration issues, that means the White House likely would lead the push for legal changes.


The Homeland Security Department's responsibilities include routine immigration issues, cybersecurity, protecting the president and keeping would-be terrorists off airplanes. The DHS also includes the Coast Guard.


Tom Ridge, the first DHS secretary and a former Pennsylvania governor, said this week that whoever takes over the department should be expert in a few of the department's missions, but not all. He said understanding national security is paramount.


"We need someone who appreciates that you can't secure the country from inside the Beltway," said Ridge, who has been critical of some of Obama's national security strategies.


Two previous secretaries, Napolitano and Michael Chertoff, were also one-time federal prosecutors. But Johnson's national security and military experience may eclipse both of them.


Johnson led a widespread crackdown on unauthorized leaks in the Defense Department, including warning former Navy SEAL Matt Bissonnette that by publishing a book on the SEALs' raid that killed bin Laden, he was in "material breach" of two nondisclosure agreements he signed earlier in his career. Johnson also was involved in the investigation of retired Marine Gen. John Allen and Tampa, Fla., socialite Jill Kelley.


Johnson sparked criticism when he said in a speech at Oxford University last November that the war on terror was not an endless conflict and that the U.S. was approaching a "tipping point" after which the military fight against al-Qaida would be replaced by a law enforcement and intelligence operation.


"War must be regarded as a finite, extraordinary and unnatural state of affairs," Johnson said. "In its 12th year, we must not accept the current conflict, and all that it entails, as the new normal."


Johnson would be the third black member of Obama's current Cabinet. He would join Attorney General Eric Holder and Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. The president was criticized earlier this year for not having more blacks in his Cabinet.


Johnson would take over an agency with numerous high-level vacancies, including the deputy secretary. When Napolitano left, one-third of the heads of key agencies and divisions were filled with acting officials or had been vacant for months. Obama has nominated several people to key positions, including general counsel. His pick to be the department's No. 2, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Alejandro Mayorkas, is the subject of an internal investigation, and his nomination has been stalled.


Lawmakers applauded the selection of Johnson.


"This nomination comes at a critical time for the agency and its mission because, for the past several months, the department has been operating without a Senate-confirmed secretary or deputy secretary, and also has numerous other high-level vacancies," said Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., who chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.


Johnson is a 1979 graduate of Morehouse College and a 1982 graduate of Columbia Law School. After leaving the administration in 2012, he returned to private practice. According to a bio on the website of his law firm, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, his civil and criminal clients have included Citigroup, Salomon Smith Barney, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Gillette.


Johnson earned more than $2.6 million from his partnership income at that law firm, according to 2009 government financial disclosure documents. During the 2008 presidential campaign, Johnson donated more than $33,000 to Obama's campaign, federal records show. He was also a supporter of Hillary Rodham Clinton, having contributed $2,300 to her presidential primary campaign in July 2008. He's also given $5,000 to the New Jersey Democratic Party and $1,000 to Democrats nationwide, as well as to several congressional candidates.


Obama's campaign website listed Johnson as a member of the then-candidate's national finance committee and an adviser to Obama's foreign policy team during the 2008 election.


___


Associated Press writers Nedra Pickler, Lolita C. Baldor and Jack Gillum contributed to this report.


___


Follow Alicia A. Caldwell on Twitter at www.twitter.com/acaldwellap


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dhs-selection-suggests-priority-shift-security-070536174--politics.html
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Experts Debate How Best To Remove Syria's Chemical Weapons


Secretary of State John Kerry says he's hoping Syria's chemical weapons stockpiles can be consolidated quickly and shipped out of the country. Experts say it is possible, but risky. International chemical weapons experts are still mapping out Syria's stockpiles to see what can be moved.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/17/235981350/experts-debate-how-best-to-remove-syrias-chemical-weapons?ft=1&f=1009
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Dana White says UFC offered Fedor Emelianenko so much money to fight Brock Lesnar ‘It made no sense’

HOUSTON -- In 2009, UFC president Dana White and CEO Lorenzo Fertitta flew to an island off Venezuela to meet all-time great heavyweight Fedor Emelianenko and his representatives with the intention to sign him to a contract.


The goal was to put Emelianenko into a bout with then-UFC champion Brock Lesnar that would have been held at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. It likely would have been the highest-selling pay-per-view in UFC history, had it happened.


Emelianenko is regarded by many as the greatest heavyweight in mixed martial arts history and by some as the greatest fighter in the sport's history.


A deal was never reached -- White said Thursday that Emelianenko's representatives laughed at the offer -- and Emelianenko retired without ever competing in the UFC.


Emelianenko was in the news this week because he told a Russian TV station he felt White hated him and pointed to that as a reason a deal was never completed. White chuckled at that thought.


White said the UFC made three runs at Emelianenko, twice with Fertitta alone doing the negotiating on the UFC's behalf and once with himself and Fertitta on the island in Venezuela.


He said that Emelianenko's representatives wanted the UFC to build an arena in Russia as a condition for Emelianenko fighting in the UFC.


"When I tell you we did everything, someday I'll tell the story of how much we offered that [expletive], too," White said. "People will [expletive] [expletive]. It made no sense [how much we offered]. It was one of those type of deals like, you know that these networks, the NFL does $9 billion in television revenue. It makes no sense for the networks. The network doesn't make a dime off that. But you have to have the NFL, right? The NFL pulls ratings like anything.


"This is one of those deals [we offered Emelianenko] where it's like, 'This makes no [expletive] sense whatsoever.' Literally, when we got onto the plane when we were flying back, we were like, 'Thank [expletive] God they turned that offer down.' We were like, 'Thank God they turned that down.' "


Junior dos Santos hoping to bring special Nike shoe to market next year


Nearly 30 years ago, Nike released the first Air Jordan sneakers, and the athletic shoe industry has never been the same. Since Michael Jordan and Nike hit gold with those high-priced shoes, dozens of athletes have come out with their own brand of shoes.


Heavyweight Junior dos Santos, who on Saturday meets champion Cain Velasquez in a rubber match that is the main event of UFC 166 at the Toyota Center, wore a pair of custom-designed Nike sneakers to an interview session with the media on Thursday.


He said he hopes the shoes can be brought to retail sometime by the middle part of next year.


"The colors and the style of the shoe, I worked with them on that," dos Santos said. The shoes are a rich blue with his initials in lime green on the front.


UFC president Dana White noted the fact that mainstream companies like Nike are working with mixed martial arts fighters on such products is a sign of the company's growth and move toward the mainstream.


There was a time not so long ago, one White remembers well, when the UFC had no sponsors and the ring mat was simply a blank canvas.


John Dodson plans to follow up when he lands


Flyweight John Dodson lost a title bid against Demetrius Johnson in January in a bout that many expected him to win. Dodson, who fights Darrell Montague Saturday, said he failed to take advantage of opportunities he had against Johnson.


It's the one thing he said he plans to change when he faces Montague, the talented UFC newcomer.


"It's simple: I have to make sure I go out there and not watch my handiwork," Dodson said. "I remember going on out there. I watched me hit him and I watched him fall. Then, I watched me winning my title shot slipping through my fingers. I can no longer allow that to happen. If I see something, I'm going to take the opportunity to jump on whatever's given me. If I knock him down, I'm going to take it. If I get an arm bar, I'm going to apply it."


White not buying Palhares' apology


Rousimar Palhares, who was cut by the UFC for holding a heel hook too long on Mike Pierce earlier this month in Brazil, has profusely apologized, but he's making no headway with White.


White said Thursday he had no plan to allow Palhares to return to the UFC.


"Anybody who knows anything about jiu-jitsu knows, that's the nastiest thing you can do to somebody," White said. "We don't even let guys trying out for 'The Ultimate Fighter' do leg locks. A lot of people don't allow leg locks in jiu-jitsu and when they're training and stuff. Anyone who is in jiu-jitsu and has done it knows what it feels like and knows what it means. Knee injuries, you need surgery. Look at [bantamweight champion] Dominick Cruz, he's been out two years [after surgery]. It can destroy a career. It can end a career.


"I didn't really physically actually write it in stone, but yeah, I'm pretty serious about it and I'm not interested in a guy like that."


Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/dana-white-says-ufc-offered-fedor-emelianenko-much-155652220--mma.html
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Antony Johnston Reveals the World of 'Umbral' (Exclusive)




Christopher Mitten/Image Comics



After successfully conquering the world of horror comics via Robert Kirkman and Charlie Adlard's The Walking Dead and bringing new humanity to science fiction comics with Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples' Saga, it looks like the fantasy genre is next for independent publisher Image Comics. November will bring the debut of Umbral, a new series from Antony Johnston and Chris Mitten that gives a new spin to familiar genre tropes.



"It's the story of Rascal, a young thief who breaks into the royal palace to steal a precious jewel -- but ends up witnessing the horrific murder of the king and queen in a dark magic ritual," Johnston tells The Hollywood Reporter. "Rascal has stumbled upon a stealth invasion by the Umbral, shadow creatures that everyone thought were just a legend. But the Umbral are very real, very dangerous ... and now Rascal holds the key to stopping them."


STORY: 'Velvet' Mixes 'Tinker Tailor,' 'James Bond' and 'Mission: Impossible'


Johnston describes Rascal as "independent, strong-willed, streetwise, and takes absolutely no shit from anyone," and "she has a wicked streak of sarcastic humor, which she'll need to get through the events that are about to unfold." She is just one of two main characters in Umbral, alongside "hirsute hobo" Dalone.


"Dalone is pretty much Rascal's opposite," according to Johnston. "Not only is he an adult, well-spoken, educated, and generally law abiding ... he's also destitute, living in the gutter. How on earth could someone like that be involved in all this? We don't know. But Rascal quickly figures out there's more to Dalone than meets the eye, and no doubt readers will, too."


As anyone who's read Wasteland (the post-apocalyptic previous collaboration between Johnston and Mitten) already knows, the setting for the series will be just as important as the characters. In Umbral's case, the setting is the Kingdom of Fendin, which Johnston says is "a dark fantasy land where terrible things with sharp teeth lurk in the shadows and anyone with a lick of sense stays well away from the forest at night. Not that the cities are much better, what with all the thieves, smugglers and assassins roaming about."


Fendrin has something that differentiates it from other fantasy kingdoms, however. "Magic and religion are both completely illegal," Johnston explains. "Centuries ago, the Fendish turned to science and education instead, led by their wise men, whom they call Profoss. It heralded an age of reason and learning -- which is all very well, until you find yourself invaded by shadow creatures."


Umbral #1 will be released November 13 digitally and in comic stores. If you're curious about what to expect, enjoy an exclusive preview of the first issue below.







Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/THRComicCon/~3/3OnOSThpsLo/story01.htm
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

'Walking Dead' inspires new convention in Atlanta


ATLANTA (AP) — Cable TV's "The Walking Dead" has inspired a new convention, a podcast, and a one-man play.

The podcast and Atlanta-based convention are the creations of Eric Nordhoff and James Frazier, also known as the "Walker Stalkers" because of a road trip they made last fall from Nashville, Tenn., to Georgia to see the AMC show being filmed.

The convention, Walker Stalker Con, is expected to draw 10,000 or more participants when it's held early next month, Nordhoff said.

"The Walking Dead" characters battle zombies known as "walkers" in the streets of downtown Atlanta and in forests, small towns and a prison south of the city.

The convention will feature appearances by some of the show's actors, including Norman Reedus, who slays walkers with a crossbow as Daryl Dixon; Andrew Lincoln, who plays Sheriff Rick Grimes, and Lauren Cohan, also known as Maggie Greene on the show.

The series returned for its fourth season this month with its biggest audience ever. The 16.1 million people who watched the Oct. 13 series premier shattered the show's previous record of 12.4 million, the Nielsen company said.

Nordhoff and Frazier are neighbors in suburban Nashville, and had gathered every Sunday in Frazier's basement to watch "The Walking Dead." They'd heard talk of a big day of filming in Senoia, the town south of Atlanta where much of the show is produced, so they got up before sunrise and made the trip to Georgia.

"It was our dream day," recalls Nordhoff, 42.

"We got to meet I think eight members of the cast," he recalls. "Somebody called us the 'Walker Stalkers' when we were there."

The two decided to develop a podcast that has become popular with fans of the show. The podcast features discussions of many aspects of the show's storyline and interviews with people behind the scenes, such as special effects makeup expert and show producer Greg Nicotero.

In April, Nordhoff and Frazier came up with the idea of holding the convention, which will take place Nov. 1-3.

The show has also inspired one of its actors to stage a one-man play.

Robert "IronE" Singleton, who played "T-Dog" in the first three seasons of the show, will portray 18 characters in "Blindsided by The Walking Dead," which tells the story of how he grew up in the Perry Homes housing project during Atlanta's crack cocaine epidemic before he found work as an actor.

A key scene of "The Walking Dead" was filmed on a downtown Atlanta rooftop just a few miles from the project, where violence was ever-present during Singleton's childhood and teenage years.

"Blindsided by The Walking Dead" is a work of drama, comedy, dance, spoken word and rap. Its characters include a thug, a crack addict, Richard III from Shakespeare, God and Singleton's deceased mother.

"I think it could inspire people and save lives," said the 38-year-old actor, who also will take part in a panel discussion during the convention.

"It's about embracing truth and love through everything you do."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/walking-dead-inspires-convention-atlanta-174915795.html
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Teen monsters, American Girl dolls power Mattel results


By Dhanya Skariachan


(Reuters) - Mattel Inc topped Wall Street's profit estimates for the third quarter, benefiting from strong demand for its chubby-faced American Girl dolls and its Monster High line depicting the teen descendants of famous monsters.


The toy company, the world's largest, also said on Wednesday that it would pay a cash dividend of 36 cents a share in the current quarter, bringing the total for the year up 16 percent from the 2012 payout. Its shares rose 5.7 percent to $43.90 in premarket trading.


The news comes as manufacturers and retailers gear up for the holiday season, the biggest selling period of the year. Rival Hasbro Inc is due to report its quarterly results next week.


"The upside performance gives us increased confidence going into the holiday season," said MKM Partners analyst Eric Handler, who called the company's holiday lineup "solid."


Mattel's toys for the big season include additions to the Thomas the Train, Sofia the First, Max Steel and Planes brands, along with a Barbie campaign centered on a new Dreamhouse.


Mattel, also home to brands such as Hot Wheels and Fisher-Price, said third-quarter net income rose to $422.8 million, or $1.21 a share, from $365.9 million, or $1.04 a share, a year earlier.


Analysts on average expected a profit of $1.12 a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.


Sales rose 6 percent to $2.21 billion, beating the analysts' average estimate of $2.17 billion.


Total Barbie shipments rose 11.1 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, according to figures that supply-chain data company Panjiva pulled for Reuters.


Barbie sales increased 3 percent, after posting declines in the previous four quarters. The iconic doll, which was launched more than 50 years ago, had been overshadowed by the Monster High dolls.


Sales were up 20 percent for American Girl and up 28 percent for Mattel's "other girls' brands," which include Monster High. Sales were flat for the Fisher-Price brand and fell 9 percent at the unit that includes Hot Wheels toy cars.


Mattel sells its toys through retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc , Toys R Us Inc , Target Corp and Amazon.com Inc as well as through its own catalog and website.


(Reporting by Dhanya Skariachan; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mattels-quarterly-profit-tops-analysts-estimates-102619559--finance.html
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As shutdown ends; repercussions begin (Reuters)

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Jamie Foxx & Katie Holmes: Are They or Aren't They?

In the span of one day, gossip columnists were buzzing with news of a new celebrity couple -- and then reporting the denials. Tuesday morning, In Touch broke the news: "Multiple Sources Confirm: Katie Holmes and Jamie Foxx Are Dating."   

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/jamie-foxx-denies-he-dating-katie-holmes/1-a-549809?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ajamie-foxx-denies-he-dating-katie-holmes-549809
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Mom: Family Cooperated In Mo. Rape Investigation


MARYVILLE, Mo. (AP) — A woman who says her family was forced to move from a northwest Missouri town after her 14-year-old daughter was plied with alcohol and sexually assaulted nearly two years ago disputed authorities' claims that she and her daughter stopped cooperating with investigators.


Melinda Coleman said Tuesday that justice was denied when Nodaway County's prosecutor dropped felony charges against two 17-year-old Maryville High School students in March 2012, two months after she found her daughter passed out on the family's front porch in below-freezing temperatures.


Nodaway County prosecutor Robert Rice issued a statement saying there wasn't enough evidence to pursue the charges because the accusers had stopped cooperating and asserted their Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination. In an interview, Sheriff Darren White backed up Rice's statement.


The case has drawn new attention since The Kansas City Star published the results Sunday of a seven-month investigation into the allegations. The Star's story described a town where many appeared to be closing ranks around the accused and suggesting the girls were somehow responsible for the incident. In April, after the family had moved, the family's home in Maryville was damaged in a fire, though a cause has not been determined.


Robert Sundell, an attorney who represented the teen accused of assaulting Daisy Coleman, said in a written statement that while many may find his former client's behavior "reprehensible," the legal issue is whether a crime occurred. He said the investigation raised questions about whether the 14-year-old was "incapacitated during the encounter." He also said the charges were dropped after the accusers' stories changed during depositions.


Sundell said his former client would not talk to the media.


Coleman says her 14-year-old daughter was given alcohol in January 2012 and raped by a 17-year-old acquaintance. The girl's 13-year-old friend says she was forced to have sex with a 15-year-old at the same house, while another 17-year-old allegedly recorded the incident on a cellphone.


The daughter acknowledged she and the friend left her house to meet the boys but said they gave her alcohol and she doesn't remember much of what happened next. The boys said the sex was consensual.


The two 17-year-old boys were charged as adults, but Rice dropped felony counts against them several months later. A misdemeanor count against the teen accused of assaulting Daisy was dropped subsequently. The prosecutor cited a lack of evidence and the Colemans' refusal to cooperate. The 15-year-old was charged in juvenile court.


The Associated Press does not generally name victims of sexual assault but is naming Coleman because she and her mother have been granting public interviews about the case. The AP is not naming the boys because there is no longer an active criminal case against them.


Coleman, a veterinarian who moved her family back to Albany, about 40 miles east of Maryville, because of backlash from the community over the girls' accusations, said suggestions that she and her daughter were uncooperative are lies.


"How do you think we didn't want to cooperate?" Coleman asked. "We went to get a rape kit done. I wrote a statement, and my daughter gave a statement to the police."


Coleman said that no depositions were conducted before the felony charges were dropped. She said she was asked but refused to invoke the Fifth Amendment before a planned May 31, 2012, deposition.


Sundell said his former client's accusers did invoke the Fifth Amendment right at the May hearing.


Rice has declined to discuss the case beyond a news release sent by his office Tuesday that noted that in Missouri, dismissed cases are sealed and he was not at liberty to discuss them.


White, the sheriff, said he never understood the Colemans' reasoning and that authorities weren't considering charges against the 14-year-old girl.


"They stonewalled the case all by themselves," he said.


Now that the family is saying they will cooperate, he wasn't sure whether that would make a difference.


"They wouldn't cooperate and then they said they would cooperate. And then they wouldn't cooperate. And then they went back and forth," White said. "I'm guessing, and this is just speculation, but I'm guessing that the prosecutor would be a little gun shy to believe that they would be willing to cooperate at this time."


He said authorities have had dealings with the suspects before and prosecuted them. Online court records show that the teen accused of assaulting Daisy had been on probation for a DWI.


"It's not that he's afraid of these boys and their families or anything like that. It's just that he was left with no alternatives," White said.


The case has drawn comparisons to one in Steubenville, Ohio, where two 17-year-old high school football players were convicted of raping a West Virginia girl after an alcohol-fueled party in 2012. The case was furiously debated online and led to allegations of a cover-up to protect the city's celebrated football team.


Missouri expanded its rape, sodomy and sexual abuse laws, effective Aug. 28, to cover cases of sexual contact when a person is incapacitated or incapable of giving consent. Those crimes previously had required "forcible compulsion." State Rep. Jay Barnes, R-Jefferson City, who had supported that change, said Tuesday that it was prompted at least partly by the Steubenville case.


Prominent Missouri Republicans have called on Attorney General Chris Koster, a Democrat, to intervene. However, a spokeswoman for Koster's office said Tuesday that it had no authority under state law to reopen the investigation on its own.


Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder called on Koster to ask that a grand jury be convened, and House Speaker Tim Jones said the attorney general should consider intervening. Jones disagreed with suggestions that Koster was prohibited from doing so.


___


Reporter Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=234885886&ft=1&f=
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Tickled Pink: Fresh, Young Ginger is a Sweet Break from Gnarled Roots





Fresh ginger is juicier, sweeter and pinker than the gnarled, older roots more commonly available.



Laura McCandlish for NPR


That pink pile of pickled ginger that comes with your sushi is probably from China or Japan. And unless the slices are beige, chances are this garnish, next to the green wasabi, contains food coloring. So it's refreshing when you first see that cream-colored fresh "baby" ginger is naturally, yet shockingly, pink at its tips from where green stems shoot forth. The nude pieces naturally blush a faint rose (a pink that can be further amped up with raw beet) when brined in rice vinegar, as the Japanese do with this tender young ginger to make their now-ubiquitous sushi condiment, gari.


What's less omnipresent is ginger that was actually grown in the U.S. That, however, is changing. Asian countries, such as India, China and Nepal, produce much of the world's ginger. Steamy Hawaii is the only American state with real commercial cultivation of this coveted culinary and medicinal crop, though a bacterial soil disease and extreme wet weather has caused a significant decline in the harvest there.


So small, mostly organic, farms around the country are stepping up to fill the void by offering this delicacy — the juicy, mild, swollen ginger instead of those old fibrous roots — that's early-harvested come fall, in temperate states, just before the real chill sets in. Still, the last place I expected to find this tropical rhizome was in Maine. Yet several intrepid farmers are tending this young ginger in heated greenhouses and plastic high tunnels, with pretty decent results.


Perhaps no New England farmer has more ginger cred than native Mainer Ted Sparrow, who is 81 but too active to retire. Sparrow first learned about ginger cultivation working as a sugarcane industry consultant in Hawaii more than 50 years ago. Last year, his Sparrow Farm in Pittston, Maine, started selling fresh ginger (and its more floral cousin, turmeric), a perfect complement for the fresh organic cranberries the farm is known for. His wife and business partner Karen plans to incorporate their ginger into the not-too-sweet jars of cranberry sauce she cans for market.


Continental U.S. farmers harvest young ginger from mid-September into early November, just as those cranberries come on. So act fast. Otherwise, try Asian markets (mostly in April and May) for these new hands of "spring ginger," actually a fall crop as it is here, just over-nighted from sub-equatorial regions. Still, you'll find much fresher, gossamer-skinned specimens at the farmers' market now. North Carolina-based East Branch Ginger distributes its organic ginger seed (pieces of the rhizome wintered over in a heated greenhouse until mature) to about 40 states and into Canada, scrambling to keep up with the demand.





Laura McCandlish is a Corvallis, Ore.-based radio producer and food writer. She reports for NPR member station KLCC in Eugene and hosts a monthly food show on Portland radio station KBOO. She contributes to Edible Portland and The Oregonian's FOODday section. She blogs at baltimoregon.com.




"Baby ginger can't be grown that far afield and shipped many miles without it damaging or growing mold," says East Branch's Susan Anderson, who first tested ginger for Johnny's Selected Seeds in Maine. "That's why you don't see baby ginger in the supermarket. It really has to be grown in a local radius to be marketed very soon after harvest."


This perishable ginger emerges about 6 months after planting, while grocery store ginger hardens in the ground for almost a year. Digging up a shock of rhizome growth branching off of an old "mother" root, Sparrow says growing ginger is similar to growing potatoes. They both grow from seed pieces of the mature crop, which


farmers pre-sprout before planting, then hill up with soil whenever fresh growth appears. Like new potatoes, young ginger has that almost translucent skin that rubs right off. It's less fiery and fibrous than gnarled roots—and easier to cook with—since no peeling is required. It's mild enough to even eat raw. The whole root freezes well, for grating into soups and stews throughout the winter.


The delicate flavor and texture is best for pickles, syrups (think cocktails) and quick stir-fries. Or preserved foods such as fermented gingered carrots and Korean kimchee. Gallit Sammon Cavendish, a Culinary Institute of America-trained chef who married an organic farmer in Maine, says she'd never seen young ginger before moving to the state, despite having cooked at the Waldorf Astoria and Café Daniel. She and her husband Chris just harvested their first ginger crop, which Gallit Cavendish is candying in a certified kitchen. Once the semi-perishable product passes inspection, the couple plans to sell their crystallized ginger at area markets.


Local, young ginger now graces Maine's finest restaurant menus and is even brewed into a line of kombucha. A mead — wine made with ginger's natural partner, honey — is in the works and will be released this winter by Maine Mead Works. The only barrier to culinary exploration is the $15 per pound cost of this labor-and-input-intensive, still rare but increasingly popular niche crop.



Japanese Pickled Ginger (gari)


The jar of organic, natural-colored ginger I bought is too cloying, tastes overcooked and is a product of China "where ginger began," the label says. It's more satisfying—and easy—to make your own. This recipe is adapted from pickled ginger recipes Linda Ziedrich developed for both her comprehensive The Joy of Pickling (Harvard Common Press, 2009) and a Fine Cooking article. Chris Churilla, an Oregon bartender, goes light on the salt when he pickles fresh ginger with apple cider vinegar and sugar. Jennifer Burns Levin, who blogs at Culinaria Eugenius, recommends adding a slice of raw beet to the brine to naturally color your pickles bright pink. My dad recently pan-seared some Maine-caught, sushi-grade yellowtail tuna steaks, the perfect vehicle for this ginger.





Japanese Pickled Giner (gari)



Laura McCandlish for NPR


Japanese Pickled Giner (gari)


Laura McCandlish for NPR


Makes about 1 cup


4 ounces fresh ginger (washed thoroughly but no need to peel if young and thin-skinned), sliced paper-thin with a mandoline or vegetable peeler


2 cups water


Several thin slices of raw beet (optional)


3/4 teaspoon salt, plus an extra sprinkle


1/2 cup rice vinegar (cider, white wine vinegar may be used)


2 tablespoons sugar (or more to taste)


Put the ginger slices into a bowl, barely cover them with cold water and let stand 30 minutes.


In a saucepan, bring the 2 cups water to a boil while you drain the ginger. Add the ginger and cook, stirring to soften, about 30 seconds. Drain the slices in a colander, tossing to make sure they don't retain water. (This blanching step can be skipped if young ginger is especially fresh and not fibrous).


Sprinkle the ginger (and the raw beet slices, if using) lightly with salt and put in a lidded jar, preferably first sterilized with boiling water. Add the vinegar to a non-reactive saucepan, and bring it to a boil, stirring in the sugar and salt until dissolved. Use a funnel to pour the hot liquid over the ginger, mixing well (it should completely cover the slices).


Tightly cover the jar, allow it to cool to room temperature and refrigerate. The pickled ginger, which is ready to eat after several hours, keeps well in the refrigerator for up to 6 months.


Fresh-Cut Corn with Young Ginger and Plums


Chef Aaron Park of Henry and Marty restaurant in Brunswick, Maine, created this appetizer (or side dish) out of early fall produce he spotted at the nearby Bath Farmers' Market. He grabbed sweet organic corn, young ginger and "red hot" plums. He created an end-of-season succotash with Asian flavors. The fish sauce and ume plum vinegar were my additions, but I think Park, whose food often reflects his Korean-American heritage, would approve. Red bell pepper or fresh tomato could be substituted for the fresh plums.





Laura McCandlish for NPR

Laura McCandlish for NPR



Serves 2 as an appetizer or side dish


3 tablespoons unsalted butter (Park used melted clarified butter)


2 tablespoons young baby ginger (washed well but no need to peel), minced


2 ears fresh corn, shucked and cut off cob (almost 2 cups raw kernels, can use frozen)


¾ cup fresh red plums, diced


1 tablespoon sake or Chinese Shaoxing rice wine


Asian fish sauce, to taste


Ume plum vinegar, to taste


Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste


2 to 3 cups baby kale or arugula (for garnish, optional)


Melt the butter in a sauté pan, cast iron skillet or wok over medium-high heat. Add the minced ginger and stir-fry 30 seconds. Add the corn and plums (if using bell pepper add before the corn) and stir-fry another minute. Deglaze the pan with sake and stir in a couple dashes of fish sauce and/or ume plum vinegar, to increase the dish's umami factor. Add salt (if needed) and freshly ground pepper to taste. Plate on a bed of baby kale before serving.


Crystallized Ginger (and Ginger Syrup)


I made jewel-like candied cranberries last year but had never attempted crystallized ginger. It's an easy treat that will wow guests and yield the added gift of ginger syrup for homemade soda and adult cocktails. At Ted Sparrow's Maine farm in October, ginger is dug up from humid greenhouses just as the cranberries are first being raked. That's how I decided to candy these two together. It gave the resulting syrup a nice blush, too. I gave some to a pregnant friend suffering from morning sickness, and have just been nibbling on them for dessert or as an afternoon pick-me-up. There's hardly a baked good that doesn't benefit from the addition of crystallized ginger. Candied Ginger-Cardamom Bars are a well-received favorite.





Laura McCandlish for NPR

Laura McCandlish for NPR



Makes about 1 pint, plus 1 cup reserved ginger syrup


1 pound young ginger (I subbed in almost 2 cups fresh cranberries and 1 knob fresh turmeric for some of the ginger)


Water


1 cup sugar, plus extra sugar for coating


1 cup honey (or just use 2 cups sugar total, but I wanted honey-ginger syrup)


Salt, a pinch


6 pods green cardamom (also in ginger family), optional


1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar (optional; only add if you want to preserve the ginger in syrup and keep it from crystallizing)


Scrub any dirt off the young ginger. Using a mandoline, vegetable peeler or very sharp knife, cut the ginger into 1/8-inch coins. Put the ginger in saucepan, cover with the water and bring to a boil. Cover and simmer at least 15 minutes, until tender. Remove the ginger with a mesh strainer or slotted spoon, reserving the water.


Add the sugar, honey and cream of tartar (if using) and pinch of salt to the reserved water, stirring over medium heat until the sugar is dissolved. Add ginger slices and cook over medium-high heat until the syrup's temperature approaches (but stays just under) 225 degrees F (about the consistency of thin honey). Add the cranberries (if using) and remove from the heat and let stand for at least an hour and up to overnight.


Transfer the ginger (and cranberries) with a slotted spoon to a wire rack or large mesh strainer set over a tray, letting them dry in a warm place until no longer that moist. Reserve the ginger syrup for use in drinks. Toss the dried fruit in granulated sugar, shaking off the excess sugar (which is now ginger-flavored and also worth reserving). Crystallized ginger can be stored in an air-tight container for several months, but you'll probably gobble it up and chop it up to mix into baked goods long before then. If pieces are still too moist, they can be further dried in a 170-degree oven before storing.


Harvest El Diablo


Oregon mixologist Chris Churilla combines fresh ginger juice with bourbon, dried fig purée, sweet vermouth and bitters and in another cocktail with gin, lychee, lemon and coconut foam. I decided to go a simpler route, opting for a vintage Trader Vic's margarita called an El Diablo. I adapted this recipe from a new classic cocktail menu bartender Brandon Wise devised for Paley's Place in Portland, Ore. Next time, I'll make my own ginger beer or even a wild-fermented ginger "bug." Rick and Deann Groen Bayless's Frontera: Margaritas, Guacamoles, and Snacks (W.W. Norton & Co., 2012) encouraged me to replace the cassis with other red fruity liquors and homemade ginger beer (just ginger syrup and seltzer).





Laura McCandlish for NPR

Laura McCandlish for NPR



Makes 1 drink



1 1/2 ounces blanco (silver) tequila



3/4 ounces fresh lime juice (reserving lime twist or wheel for garnish)


1 teaspoon freshly grated young ginger (or to taste, optional)


1/2-ounce creme de cassis (or substitute Campari)


1 ounce ginger syrup (reserved from crystallized ginger) plus 1 ounce sparkling water (or substitute 2 ounces ginger beer)


Dash of Angostura bitters (omit if using already bitter Campari)


Ice cubes, to taste


Add all ingredients except sparking water or ginger beer and ice to mixing tin. Shake and double strain into Collins glass, filled with ice, to taste. Top with ginger beer or seltzer. Garnish with a lime wheel or twist and a dash of Angostura bitters (optional).


Ginger Switchel


Vinegary drinks—kombucha, shrubs—are all the rage now. I first learned about switchel, the old-timey thirst-quencher of which Laura Ingalls Wilder writes, from a recipe printed in the Thymes, the monthly newspaper published by the food co-op I belonged to in Corvallis, Ore. Then I first tasted this bracing "American heritage beverage," sweetened only with Vermont maple syrup, at a Food Book Fair reception. The brew mixes well with whiskey and rum, or into a Switchel Stout & Stormy. It soothes an upset stomach or sore throat, and is long known to farmers as haymaker's punch. This recipe is adapted from the Sagadahoc MOFGA (Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association) chapter, which sells the nostalgic drink at the annual Common Ground Country Fair in September. Domenica Marchetti's post on American Food Roots also inspired me.



Makes about 1 average pitcher's worth


1 to 1 ½ quarts cold water


1/3 cup apple cider vinegar


1/2 cup maple syrup


1/4 cup blackstrap molasses (or if too strong for your taste, use more mild honey)


2 tablespoons ginger-honey syrup (reserved from crystallized ginger)


1 tablespoon grated young ginger


1/2 teaspoon dried ground ginger


1 lemon, freshly juiced, plus extra slices reserved for garnish


Pour all the ingredients into a pitcher or jug and stir or shake well until blended. Adjust water, acids, ginger or sweeteners, to taste. Serve over ice, with lemon slices or crystallized ginger as an optional garnish. Splash on a little sparkling water, if desired.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/234888648/tickled-pink-fresh-young-ginger-is-a-sweet-break-from-gnarled-roots?ft=1&f=1053
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Obama taps former Pentagon lawyer to lead DHS

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says the former Pentagon lawyer he's recalling to service to lead the Department of Homeland Security is an outstanding public servant whom he has known and trusted for years.


If confirmed by the Senate, Jeh (jay) Johnson would succeed Janet Napolitano, who is now president of the University of California system.


Obama says Johnson has a deep understanding of the threats and challenges facing the United States.


The 56-year-old Johnson was the Defense Department's top lawyer in Obama's first term. He returned to private practice last year.


At the Pentagon, Johnson oversaw the increased use of unmanned drone strikes, the revamping of military commission to try terrorism suspects and the repeal of the ban on gays in the military.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-taps-former-pentagon-lawyer-lead-dhs-181318140--politics.html
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U.S. Senate confirms Kennedy as ambassador to Japan (reuters)

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'Walking Dead' chews up huge premiere ratings

TV











10 hours ago

Image: "The Walking Dead"

Frank Ockenfels 3 / AMC

Andrew Lincoln as Rick Grimes on "The Walking Dead."

"The Walking Dead" kicked off its fourth season on Sunday night — continuing the AMC series' record-setting trend with more highs and blowing all non-sports competition out of the water.

PHOTOS: Inside 'The Walking Dead's' spooky season 4 premiere

Averaging 16.1 million viewers during its inaugural 9 p.m. broadcast, the series was up more than 5 million from last October's 10.9 million opener. Among adults 18-49, "The Walking Dead" averaged 10.4 million viewers. That's an 8.3 rating in the key demo, making it bigger than any broadcast series this fall and even stronger than last night's competition from "Sunday Night Football." With adults 25-54, "The Walking Dead" saw another high with 8.8 million viewers.

Compared to previous records set by the season-three finale, "The Walking Dead" was up 3.7 million viewers and 2.3 million adults 18-49.

This is the second huge ratings victory for AMC in just two weeks. The recent series finale of "Breaking Bad" smashed previous series records by jumping to 10.3 million viewers.

The return of the zombie drama, TV's top scripted performer for a year now, was already evident in Fast National ratings from Sunday's broadcast outings. Scripted competition in "The Good Wife" and "The Mentalist" hit their lowest ratings to date, while "Once Upon a Time" and "Revenge" sank to fall lows.

PHOTOS: 'The Walking Dead's' Most Shocking Deaths

"The Walking Dead" has been even more of a force after time-shifting is taken into account. Though the series remains formidable in its Live+Same Day returns, seven days of DVR gave the last season an average 7.2 rating among adults 18-49 and 13.8 million viewers.

Companion series "The Talking Dead" also saw records. An average 5.1 million viewers tuned in, 3.3 million of them adults 18-49 and 3 million of them adults 25-54.

The Walking Dead ratings timeline:

  • Season 3 finale, March 31: 12.4 million total viewers*, 8.1 million in 18-49*, 7 million in 25-54*
  • Season 3 midseason premiere, Feb. 10: 12.3 million total viewers*, 6.8 million in 18-49, 6.7 million in 25-54*
  • Season 3 midseason finale, Dec. 2: 10.5 million total viewers, 6.9 million in 18-49, 6 million in 25-54
  • Season 3 premiere, Oct. 14: 10.9 million total viewers, 7.3 million in 18-49, 6.1 million in 25-54*
  • Season 2 finale, March 18, 2012: 9 million total viewers, 6 million in 18-49, 5.3 million in 25-54*
  • Season 2 midseason premiere, Feb. 12, 2012: 8.1 million total, 5.4 million* in 18-49, 4.4 million* in 25-54
  • Season 2 premiere, Oct. 16, 2011: 7.3 million total, 4.8 million* in 18-49, 4.2 million* in 25-54
  • Season 2 midseason finale, Nov. 27, 2011: 6.6 million total, 4.5 million in 18-49, 3.9 million in 25-54
  • Season 1 finale, Dec. 5, 2010: 6 million total, 4 million in 18-49, 3.5 million in 25-54
  • Season 1 premiere, Oct. 31, 2010: 5.4 million total viewers, 2.7 million in 18-49

* Record at the time








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/walking-dead-returns-chews-competition-huge-ratings-8C11391270
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'12 Years A Slave' Cast Explain Why That Dancing Scene Is So Twisted


Michael Fassbender and Sarah Paulson talk to MTV News about the 'brutality' of their characters.


By Tami Katzoff








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1715863/12-years-a-slave-brutal-characters.jhtml

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Ramirez And Ethier To Play Against Cardinals


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hanley Ramirez will start for the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 3 of the NL championship series despite a broken left rib.


"I'd do anything for this team," he said.


Ramirez was down to bat third and play shortstop in Monday night's game against the St. Louis Cardinals, and Andre Ethier was slated to hit fifth and play center field.


Ramirez wore a lightweight flak jacket as he took swings during batting practice and fielded groundballs before the game. St. Louis entered with a 2-0 series lead.


"It's just for protection. They told me that if I want to play, I've got to wear it," Ramirez said. "They don't want anything worse to happen, so I'm just going to wear it."


The three-time All-Star said team medical director Stan Conte left it up to him whether to play.


"I'm not feeling 100 percent, but I feel good enough to go out there tonight and get our first win," Ramirez said. "I took some painkiller to make it feel batter."


Manager Don Mattingly said a CT scan revealed Ramirez has a hairline fracture of his ribcage.


"It's not dangerous if he tries to play," Mattingly said. "It's just a painful thing and it could be a week, it could be two weeks before this thing is gone."


Mattingly said it was a busy 48 hours trying to do everything possible to get Ramirez on the field, including talking to the NFL about using the kind of padded protective gear worn by running backs.


Ramirez said he couldn't sleep Sunday night.


"I know it's going to be a tough game," he said. "I'm going to keep everybody relaxed, and keep Mattingly relaxed. He needs to laugh."


Ramirez got hit by a pitch in Game 1, but stayed in for the entire 13 innings as the Dodgers lost 3-2. He batted .500 in the NL division series against Atlanta and tied the club's postseason record with six extra-base hits.


Ethier, put in the lineup following a batting practice evaluation, has neen bothered by shin splints and was limited to pinch hitting in the Dodgers' 1-0 loss in Game 2. Ethier has a .300 career batting average against Cardinals starter Adam Wainwright.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=234240998&ft=1&f=
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