Category Archives: Current Events

Who will win:Obama or Romney?

It is my view that President Obama’s path to victory is to steal Wisconsin, Virginia, Florida or Ohio from Romney. However, it will be a challenge to do so. Virginia only gave Obama 52.6% of the vote in 2008 and a lot of jobs have been lost since 2008. The same is true about Ohio with 51.5% of the vote for Obama in 2008 and Florida with 51%.

With such a bad jobs record it just doesn’t seem possible for Obama to steal any of those three states. His only chance may be Wisconsin which seems to always go Democratic but now with Paul Ryan on the ticket Wisconsin will also probably go Republican.

I just don’t see any other way to get over 262 electorial votes for Obama without these states. I also see problems for him in Pennsylvania too.

Below are the opinions of Dan Mitchell who I highly respect.

Three months ago, I predicted that Obama would win reelection with 297 electoral votes, 27 more than needed.

Back in July, I shifted Virginia to Romney’s column and predicted Obama would still win, but with 284 votes.

Last month, I predicted things were moving even farther in the GOP direction. By moving Colorado to the Republican side, I guessed the outcome would be 275-263 for Obama.

Romney partisans will be disappointed to learn, though, that their candidate has fallen a bit further behind in my new prediction for the 2012 election.

The big change is that I moved Florida to the “leaning Obama” category and those 29 electoral votes more than offset the impact of shifting Iowa and Wisconsin to the “leaning Romney” column.

Why these changes? Well, I suspect that the demagoguery on Social Security and Medicare will hurt in Florida, even though the GOP platform on entitlement reform is that people over age 55 are exempt.

I’m shifting Wisconsin because of Paul Ryan. As for Iowa, I’m going by nothing but gut instinct.

Howard Schnellenberger speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

I got to hear Howard Schnellenberger speak at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on Tuesday Sept 4, 2012. Schnellenberger was good at building programs.

Ex-coach enjoyed building programs

By Jeff Halpern

Posted: September 5, 2012 at 5:10 a.m.

Staton Breidenthal Howard Schnellenberger speaks Tuesday at the Little Rock Touchdown Club.

LITTLE ROCK — Howard Schnellenberger has taken pride in building football programs from the ground up.

He took over at Miami in 1979 when school officials were considering dropping to NCAA Division I-AA, and five years later led the Hurricanes to the national championship. At Louisville, he took over a program that had six consecutive losing seasons prior to his arrival in 1985, and five years later led it to a 34-7 victory over Alabama in the Fiesta Bowl.

But the building project he takes the most pride in is Florida Atlantic, which didn’t have a football program until 2001 and won two bowls under Schnellenberger.

“I know some people call me the father of Florida Atlantic football,” Schnellenberger, 78, said Tuesday at the Little Rock Touchdown Club’s weekly luncheon at Embassy Suites. “I remember they talked to me for two days and gave me blueprints. I had no office, had to raise money for my salary, had to raise money for my assistants’ and secretary’s salaries and the entire staff.

“It was like childbirth from your own flesh and blood, going from conception to birth to confirmation and then to a man. I took a lot of pride and joy in building that program.”

Schnellenberger took the Florida Atlantic job in 1999, coached his first game there in 2001 and took the Owls to the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision semifinals in 2003. After moving to the Bowl Championship Subdivision in 2004, Schnellenberger won the Sun Belt Conference title and defeated Memphis in the New Orleans Bowl in 2007. A year later, the Owls defeated Central Michigan 24-21 in the Motor City Bowl.

Schnellenberger, who was 54-78 at Florida Atlantic, said the bowl appearances helped the school raise the money to build the $70 million, 30,000-seat FAU Stadium that opened in 2011.

“When I took that job, my goal was for a start-up team to win a championship and follow what we did at Miami and Louisville,” said Schnellenberger, who is now an ambassador at large for the program and helps raise money with the goal that one day the school will join Conference USA. “I always told people that we’re on a collision course with a national championship and the only variable was time.”

At Miami, he took over a team that had seven losing seasons in the previous nine years. In five years his teams were 41-16, and his 1983 team defeated Nebraska 31-30 in the Orange Bowl for the national championship.

In that game, the Hurricanes batted away a pass on atwo-point conversion attempt with 48 seconds remaining when a tie could have given the Cornhuskers the national championship.

“I believe [Nebraska Coach] Tom Osborne knew that was the one decision he had to make,” Schnellenberger said. “To me, the game is more important than anything else. I remember we blocked a field goal in the first quarter, and I’m sure that weighed in. If they did score, we had Bernie Kosar ready to take us down the field with [48] seconds left.”

Schnellenberger acknowledges his overall career record of 158-151-3 might not get him into the College Football Hall of Fame, but he takes pride in programs he built.

“My character is not to stay for 20 years, but to develop programs, stay through the tough times and get them built.”

Sports, Pages 19 on 09/05/2012

Howard Schnellenberger speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

I got to hear Howard Schnellenberger talk on Sept 4, 2012 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. Schnellenberger said that Bear Bryant had the greatest ability to both instruct a player with criticism but then build him up also. He made a point of making sure he did both during a practice. Under Schnellenburger direction of offensive coordinator Alabama won several national titles and in 1972 Schnellenberger was the offensive coordinator for the Dolphins who were the last team to go undefeated in the NFL. He said he will be meeting in October in Miami to celebrate the 40th anniversary of that team.

Below is an article that talks about Schnellenberger’s accomplishments by ESPN:

BOCA RATON, Fla. — Howard Schnellenberger played for Bear Bryant, led the Miami Hurricanes to their first national championship, was the offensive coordinator for the Miami Dolphins’ perfect season and built a football program from scratch at Florida Atlantic.

That’s enough to make him feel satisfied.

The 77-year-old Schnellenberger announced Thursday that he’ll retire from coaching following the 2011 season at Florida Atlantic, his last stop on a journey that began more than 50 years ago and saw him be part of four college national championships and a Super Bowl victory.

Schnellenberger’s Dual Legacies

It’s rare when a college football coach can bring a school to national prominence. It’s even rarer when he does it twice, writes Andrea Adelson. Blog

“As Beverlee and I look at our tenure here, I can’t tell you how wonderful it’s been,” Schnellenberger said, referring to his wife, who was sitting to his right with about two dozen of his players.

Schnellenberger will become an ambassador for the university once this season ends. And his biggest accomplishment at FAU is yet to come: He will lead the Owls into a $70 million, 30,000-seat, on-campus football stadium for the first time on Oct. 15, a facility that would not have been built if it wasn’t for his constant pushing.

“Ever since we started planning for the stadium we always thought it would be important for Howard to run out the team in a new stadium,” FAU athletic director Craig Angelos said. “So I guess if we hadn’t had the stadium built he might continue to coach. But I think that was the plan of everybody, to have him coach up through that first season and lead the team out. I think that was only fitting for someone who started a program like that.”

Schnellenberger’s contract expires after the season and he had been asked repeatedly in recent weeks about his future. Normally, he would say a decision was coming after the season, but Thursday, he revealed that his decision was made several weeks ago.

“This was done now to make it as seamless as we could make it,” Schnellenberger said. “Let this season stand on its own … and do it in what I would call a civil way.”

FAU’s timetable, as of now, is to name a new coach in late November or early December. That could be accelerated, Angelos said.

Schnellenberger is 157-140-3 as a collegiate head coach. After this, there will be no next stop to coach, he insisted.

“You’re not going to see me anywhere but here or at the beach,” Schnellenberger said.

Best known perhaps for taking Miami to the 1983 national title, which started a run of five championships in 19 seasons for the Hurricanes, Schnellenberger is revered around much of South Florida. He founded FAU’s program in 1998, led them to what was then called the Division I-AA semifinals in 2003, won bowl games in 2007 and 2008 and then got the stadium built.

Howard Schnellenberger

Kim Klement/US PresswireHoward Schnellenberger has led Florida Atlantic to college football’s top tier and bowl wins.

Last week FAU officially turned on the lights in the stadium for the first time, letting the coach throw the switch as a tribute.

“Three university presidents were involved in this, but one coach,” FAU President Mary Jane Saunders said that night. “And it’s coach Schnellenberger that made this happen. The vision that this university that he came to after an incredibly illustrious career. We’re grateful to have him. He’s done a fabulous job.”

Schnellenberger played at Kentucky for Bryant, then began his coaching career in 1959 as an assistant at Kentucky, then Alabama — where he helped convince Joe Namath to play for the Crimson Tide — then jumping to the NFL with the Los Angeles Rams in 1966.

He was on Don Shula’s staff in Miami for the Dolphins’ perfect season in 1972, then became head coach of the Baltimore Colts. He returned to the Dolphins in 1975 and got the job leading the Hurricanes in 1979 — telling people at the time he thought Miami would win a national championship within five years.

And he delivered.

Schnellenberger went 41-16 at Miami, his last game there a 31-30 win over Nebraska on Jan. 1, 1984, for the national title.

“He’s more than responsible for the success of this program,” said Miami offensive line coach Art Kehoe, who was part of all five national-title teams. “He was a fierce, smart and great football coach that did an unbelievable job here at the University of Miami. I don’t know if this program would have ever gotten off the map like it did without Howard’s leadership. What he did for this place is unbelievable.”

Schnellenberger left Miami after that title season for an offer with the USFL, a deal that fell apart before he ever coached a game in that fledgling league, so he remained in the college game at Louisville in 1985.

He spent one year at Oklahoma in 1995, then soon started building FAU’s program. The school played its first game in 2001, and won bowl games in 2007 (along with the Sun Belt Conference title) and 2008, pushing Schnellenberger’s record to 6-0 in bowls as a head coach.

“He’s a legend for a reason,” FAU defensive back Marcus Bartels said.
Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

Open letter to President Obama (Part 135 B)

1,000 Days Without A Budget

Uploaded by on Jan 24, 2012

http://blog.heritage.org | Today marks the 1,000th day since the United States Senate has passed a budget. While the House has put forth (and passed) its own budget, the Senate has failed to do the same. To help illustrate how extraordinary this failure has been, our new video highlights a few of impressive feats in history that have been accomplished in less time.

________________

President Obama c/o The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President,

I know that you receive 20,000 letters a day and that you actually read 10 of them every day. I really do respect you for trying to get a pulse on what is going on out here.

It seems ironic to me that we have not had a budget passed by the Senate for over three years yet you are bragging to the G-8 audience that you made a lot of progress getting measures passed that have helped the U.S. economy. Don’t you think that the other world leaders can see through all of this bragging of yours?

Mike Brownfield

May 21, 2012 at 3:39 pm

Europe is in bad shape, there’s no doubt about it. The sovereign debt crisis continues to roil the continent, Greece may leave the euro, Spain may have to revise its budget deficit upward for the second time because of bad loans, and France has a new socialist president pledging more spending instead of austerity. So when the G8 leaders met last week, President Obama had some words of advice to offer — “Look at me and learn from my stellar example!”

OK, that’s a paraphrase, but his actual words aren’t all that much different. No joke, the president who has presided over a downgraded credit rating, three years without a budget, an exploding deficit, an entitlement system desperately in need of reform, and an unemployment rate still over 8 percent has painted himself as a model for others to follow.

Quite remarkably, the president bragged that he has worked to “bring down our deficits and debt over the longer term” while staying “focused on growing the economy and creating jobs in the immediate term.” Though he acknowledges that “Of course, we still have a lot of work to do,” he says that now there’s “room to take a balanced approach to reducing our deficit and debt, while preserving our investments in the drivers of growth and job creation over the long term — education, innovation, and infrastructure for the 21st century.”

In other words, because of his supposed successes, America can afford to spend even more money on stimulus.

It’s hard to say whether the president’s intended audience was the leaders of the G8 or the American electorate, but regardless of who it was, there’s not much for Obama to brag about.

In the past four years, unemployment has gone up, more people are unemployed longer, gas prices are higher, the cost of health care insurance has increased, the national debt is higher, federal spending has increased, more Americans are on food stamps, regulatory costs are higher, home values have declined, America’s economic recovery is historically slow, and while federal spending on education has increased, results remain flat. You can see for yourself just how bad America’s fiscal outlook is in Heritage’s 2012 edition of the Federal Budget in Pictures.

Though Europe needs solutions, they certainly shouldn’t be looking at President Obama for the answers.

__________

Thank you so much for your time. I know how valuable it is. I also appreciate the fine family that you have and your commitment as a father and a husband.

Sincerely,

Everette Hatcher III, 13900 Cottontail Lane, Alexander, AR 72002, ph 501-920-5733, lowcostsqueegees@yahoo.com

Arkansas born Bear Bryant had some wise words that USC’s Kiffin should heed

Southern California head coach Lane Kiffin gestures during NCAA college football practice in Los Angeles, Friday, Aug. 17, 2012.

Grant Hindsley, Associated Press

________________________

When I opened my newspaper recently I saw this headline, “USC brushes off sanctions to be No. 1 in AP Top 25.” My first thought was Kiffin has brushed off nothing yet. USC was able to recruit 15 players in 2012, but actually the Trojans were able to get two more in January since they only had 23 come in 2011. Everyone else was allowed to recruit 25 players in 2012 to USC’s 17. How does being short 8 freshman hurt USC in 2012?

Lane Kiffin knows full well that he deliberately had USC appeal the severe recruiting sanctions for two years which allowed him to put off the 15 recruiting limit for two years. However, now USC has to pay the piper in 2012, 2013 and 2014 with only 15 recruits per year. Furthermore, they are allowed  to have only 75 scholarship football players total during this three-year period. Since they finished last year with 80 players the Trojans should not have too much difficulty getting down to 75.

The real sanctions will kick in when USC’s 2012-2014 classes are the upper classmen on the football team. Watch for USC to start dropping off the map in 2014 at the earliest.

That brings me to my second point. Can Lane Kiffin learn anything from history? Listen to what he told the AP after hearing that USC was ranked #1 in the preseason college football poll. “To be handed down what they said could be a death penalty, could take USC 10 years to come back from, then to have this recognition and be preseason No. 1 is very exciting for our fans because a lot people thought two years ago that this would not be possible for USC.”

Did USC already win the national title in 2012? This reminds me of the time Kiffin said he was looking forward to singing “Rocky Top” after beating Florida in the upcoming game in 2009. Unfortunately, Florida pulled out that victory, and Kiffin was left saying that he was just trying to get attention to the Tennessee program with his comments. Arkansas native Bear Bryant once said, “I have tried to teach them to show class, to have pride, and to display character. I think football, winning games, takes care of itself if you do that.”

When I was growing up in Memphis I used to listen to Bear Bryant’s radio show and at the beginning of each year he would get lots of calls asking how good the team was going to be. Bear always answered the same way. He moaned and groaned about the whole team graduating the year before and only untested players were left.

The truth was very different. Bryant averaged playing 66 players per game at Alabama in the 197o’s, and he had lots of players with experience coming back almost every year. William F. Reed of Sports Illustrated noted in 1994, “Bryant didn’t invent poor-mouthing, but he elevated it to such an art that listeners would wink and smile at his dire pregame evaluations.”

Kiffin needs to take a page out of the Bear’s book and show some class and win the games on the field before you brag about your high preseason ranking.

___________

Picture of Bear Bryant below.

Bear Bryant Alabama Football Quotes Winning Losing

Howard Schnellenberger speaks at Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

I got to hear Howard Schnellenberger speak on 9-4-12 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. I enjoyed hearing his stories about Bear Bryant and what he learned from the Bear. Here is a story by Jim Harris that discusses these too things.

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9/4/2012 at 3:30pm

Howard Schnellenberger leaned on mentor Bear Bryant in building three college football programs.
Image by Florida Atlantic University

Howard Schnellenberger leaned on mentor Bear Bryant in building three college football programs.

Howard Schnellenberger, now enjoying retirement in Boca Raton, Fla., after his last college football building job ended last season, reveres Paul “Bear” Bryant. The respect is easy to detect simply by listening – the way he goes on, stops, and adds yet another tidbit about the legendary coach.

Bryant’s staff at Alabama included Schnellenberger in the rip-roaring 1960s, when Bryant returned Alabama to college football dominance. Schnellenberger was also recruited by Bryant to Kentucky in 1952, and he was among the 40 Wildcats to survive Millersburg — the precursor to “Junction” for Bryant’s first Texas A&M team. Schnellenberger says the legend of Junction’s toughness was “bull****”. Junction was eight days, he said, while Millersburg training camp lasted six weeks.

Either way, Bryant weeded out the guys who weren’t committed to winning, and obviously Schnellenberger was. So was a guy named Frank Namath, whose little brother Joe would be recruited to Alabama by Schnellenberger in 1961.

Bear Bryant took over struggling programs at Kentucky, Texas A&M and Alabama and made them champions.

Schellenberger didn’t have the same luxury of assuming programs with a strong booster base with high expectations of winning. Instead, he took over a Miami of Florida whose board was ready to give up big-time football aspirations in the late 1970s, or a Louisville football program in the late 1980s that lived in the shadow of a national basketball powerhouse, or a Florida Atlantic football team that didn’t exist until he arrived in 2002.

He leaned on what he’d learned from Bryant, as well as his time spent as offensive coordinator for Miami Dolphins Coach Don Shula, including one of his most cherished seasons in football: the undefeated 1972 Dolphins team.

Schnellenberger is 78 now, still working for FAU as it builds an athletic war chest to pay its way into a conference such as the Big East, and he’s out on the speaking circuit, which brought him here Tuesday for a Little Rock Touchdown Club luncheon.

He enlightened a few local members of the media afterward as to how he built the Miami, Louisville and FAU programs literally from scratch.

“You’ve got to have the dream. You’ve got to believe in that dream. You’ve got to first of all tell somebody and shout it from the mountaintop, and tell every writer that you can find what your dream is,” he said.

“Now, if you tell somebody, it becomes a goal. And if it’s a goal you can get everybody to buy in to that goal, then you’ve got a chance to win the national championship. If you don’t do those three things, you have no chance. There is nobody that ever won a championship that didn’t believe in it and work like hell to do it. But if it’s not your ultimate goal, then you’re cheating your employer, the university, the mothers and fathers of the players, and the players, the student body and everybody.

“And if you aren’t man enough to stand up and say you’re going to win the national championship in five years then you don’t have a right to coach.”

Heady stuff, but Schnellenberger did just that: promise a national championship at Miami in five years and pull it off with a team led by Bernie Kosar that knocked off Nebraska in the 1984 Orange Bowl 31-30.

Then, he followed a terrific recruiting class with another in 1984 — “nobody ever brought in 60 players over two years like those players,” he said Tuesday — before suddenly taking a job to coach in the fledgling United States Football League. Miami would continue its rise under Jimmy Johnson and then Dennis Erickson, winning five more national titles for a total of six in a 15-year period.

Of course, that was Bryant-like dominance — Alabama won six national titles from 1961-79.

Schnellenberger was enticed by part-ownership of a USFL franchise, but the league folded quickly. He wasn’t out of work long.

But, along with the successes at Louisville (which coincidentally gained national acclaim and major fan support after beating Alabama and Bryant disciple Gene Stallings 34-7 in a bowl game) and FAU, Schnellenberger made a couple of missteps. He lasted just one season at Oklahoma, and he reminded us he was fired on national TV by late Indianapolis Colts owner Bob Irsay too. In both cases, had he heeded Bear Bryant’s words, he wouldn’t have been in those situations, he said.

“I broke one of Coach Bryant’s cardinal rules,” Schnellenberger said. “Coach Bryant said, when you’re taking a job always make sure you’re hired by the highest man who can hire you or the professional owner.”

Then Colts general manager Jim Thomas hired Schnellenberger, rather than Irsay, who later wanted to tell the coach which quarterback to play in a game. Schnellenberger disagreed and lost his job that day. At OU, then Sooners athletic director Donnie Duncan hired Schnellenberger before the new OU president, former U.S. Sen. David Boren, had arrived. Schnellenberger soon realized Boren had someone else in mind to run the program.

That wasn’t the case at Miami, or Louisville, or FAU. And college football fans have heard about the programs chiefly through Schnellenberger’s almost fatherly love of raising a child into a young man and warrior.

Email: jharris@abpg.com. Also follow Jim on Twitter @jimharris360

 

“Woody Wednesday” Biography of Woody Allen

Here is a great link on Woody Allen.

With at least four distinct phases throughout his long career, writer-director-actor Woody Allen was one of the few American filmmakers rightly labeled an auteur. From the irreverent absurdity of his early satires like “Bananas” (1971) and “Sleepers” (1973) to his chronicles of neurotic New Yorkers in “Annie Hall” (1977), “Manhattan” (1979) and “Hannah and Her Sisters” (1986), Allen’s obsessions with beauty, psychiatry, intellect and relationships existed in all his work. Unique among filmmakers, Allen made highly personal films with mainstream money while managing to exert creative control over the product – all the while earning a high-level of critical respect and numerous Academy Awards. By keeping budgets low, the prolific filmmaker reached his mostly urban audience on a regular basis, churning out one movie practically each year. His creative fires never extinguished, as he directed dramas like “Interiors” (1978), morally ambiguous tragicomedies like “Crimes and Misdemeanors” (1989) and period comedies like “Bullets Over Broadway” (1994). Even when stepping outside of his comfort zone with “Everyone Says I Love You” (1996) and “Sweet and Lowdown” (1999), Allen had the creative acumen to pull it off. Though he suffered personal scandal over his romantic involvement with adopted daughter, Soon Yi Previn, as well as a professional nadir with “Small Time Crooks” (2000) and “The Curse of the Jade Scorpion” (2001), Allen regained his critical stature with “Match Point” (2005), “Vicky Christina Barcelona” (2008) and “Midnight In Paris” (2011), which cemented his place in cinema history as one of its finest directors.

Allen Stewart Konigsberg was born on Dec. 1, 1935, in Brooklyn, NY. He was the only son of Orthodox Jewish parents Nettie, a bookkeeper, and Martin, who held a series of odd jobs, including waiter and jewelry engraver. Growing up in the middle class neighborhood of Midwood, Allen spent his free time at the local movie theaters where he was drawn into the worlds of the Marx Brothers and Humphrey Bogart. In stark contrast to Allen’s screen persona as an awkward outsider, he was well-liked in school, playing on the baseball team and entertaining students with card tricks and jokes. When he was still a teenager, he began selling his jokes to newspaper columnists and officially adopted the pen name Woody Allen. He was contributing material to such programs as “The Colgate Comedy Hour” (NBC, 1950-55) and Sid Caesar’s “Your Show of Shows” (NBC, 1950-54) before he even graduated from Midwood High School in 1953. After a brief stint at New York University where he purportedly failed a film course, Allen wrote for Caesar’s “Caesar’s Hour” (NBC, 1954-57) while writing jokes for comics and nightclub performers including Carol Channing, Art Carney and Buddy Hackett. He eventually took the stage and became a stand-up comedian himself, honing the intellectual “schnook” persona that would become his trademark.

Allen’s stage act was uniquely New York – Jewish, intellectual, guilt-ridden and anxious, with an insecure, halting stammer. His monologues poked fun at everything from sex and marriage to religion and politics and his refreshing personal style proved popular in liberal Greenwich Village cabarets and on college campuses. During the early 1960s, Allen found more and more outlets for his imagination and humor, publishing short stories in the New Yorker, co-writing a musical comedy revue called “A to Z” and writing his first feature film, the farcical “What’s New, Pussycatfi” (1965), directed by Clive Donner. Allen also starred in the film that served as an introduction to career-long recurring themes of romantic complications and a reliance on psychotherapy. He married Broadway actress and singer Louise Lasser in 1966 (an earlier teenage marriage had ended in 1962) and debuted as a filmmaker of sorts when he re-dubbed a minor Japanese spy thriller with his own irreverent dialogue and plot, releasing it as “What’s Up Tiger Lilyfi” (1966). That, along with the James Bond spoof “Casino Royale” (1967), which he co-wrote and acted in, launched one of the most successful and unusual careers in American filmmaking history.

Following the production of two more stage plays – “Don’t Drink the Water,” about a New Jersey family spying in an Iron Curtain country, and “Play It Again, Sam” (1969) about a film critic who invokes the spirit of Humphrey Bogart to guide him through life – Allen wrote, directed and starred in “Take the Money and Run” (1969). The unceasingly funny parody of both gangster films and cinema verite documentaries starred Allen as an unlikely escaped convict. The loose structure, lack of technical polish, and indebtedness to his nightclub one-liners was also evident in “Bananas” (1971), a satire lambasting both politics and mass media that starred Lasser as an idealistic leftie with a groupie-like admiration for a South American rebel leader who turns out to be her ex-boyfriend (Allen) in disguise. Another madcap satire, “Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask)” (1972), consisted of a series of loosely related shorts debunking various sexual myths while poking fun at the era’s self-help craze. The already prolific filmmaker followed up with a screen adaptation of his stage production “Play it Again Sam” (1972), which established Allen’s indebtedness to classic films and began his long association with actress Diane Keaton. Allen’s marriage to Lasser had ended several years earlier and Keaton took over the role of Allen’s girlfriend, muse and star of his films.

As the 1970s progressed, Allen began to find his voice as a filmmaker, rounding out his “slapstick” period with “Sleeper” (1973), about a health food store owner cryogenically frozen and thawed out after 200 years. “Love and Death” (1975) marked a leap forward for Allen, raising philosophical questions and showcasing a love of great literature and arts with its spoof of Russian culture. Allen’s aspirations to be considered a “serious” moviemaker were acutely evident in “Annie Hall” (1977), the first of his films to achieve widespread critical and box office popularity. While still anchored in comedy, it clearly tackled themes that reflected his own concerns in life and he utilized sophisticated narrative devices such as breaking the fourth wall, and relied less on slapstick and sight gags. In the lead role as Alvy Singer, the writer-director-actor solidified his screen persona as the urban, Jewish intellectual outsider; this time pursuing the love of a quirky but ethereal WASPY beauty (Keaton). Often considered the quintessential Allen movie – personal and thoughtful yet satiric and entertaining – “Annie Hall” earned four Academy Awards including beating out “Star Wars” for Best Picture, Best Actress (Diane Keaton), Best Director (Allen) and Best Original Screenplay (Allen and Marshall Brickman).

As a surprising follow-up, Allen shifted to more dramatic material and focused on the starchy, repressed WASP milieu in “Interiors” (1978). Owing more than a passing debt to Ingmar Bergman, Shakespeare and Eugene O’Neill, “Interiors” probed the angst and petty betrayals of an upper-class family with three daughters. Many critics and audience members were confounded by the deadly earnest tone, but inarguably the film was beautifully shot by cinematographer Gordon Willis and strongly acted by a cast that included Geraldine Page, E.G. Marshall, Diane Keaton and Maureen Stapleton. “Interiors” earned a surprising five Oscar nominations, including nods to Allen for direction and writing. The following year, he re-teamed with Marshall Brickman to write his most profitable (and arguably best) film, “Manhattan” (1979). With its lush Gershwin score, gorgeous black-and-white photography (again by Willis) and brilliant ensemble cast, the film marked a return to comedy peppered with autobiographical and romantic elements. It was also notable as Allen’s last film with Diane Keaton for many years, as their off-screen relationship was ending around the same time. The film engendered mild controversy over Allen’s onscreen love interest, a teenaged Mariel Hemingway.

In “Stardust Memories” (1980), Allen’s character of a film director is exhorted to “make funny movies,” something the character is adamant about no longer doing. Allen was sorry that audiences largely interpreted this as autobiographical, though he did follow it up with a return to slapstick in “A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy” (1982), where he also found a new on- and off-screen leading lady in Mia Farrow. The period mockumentary “Zelig” (1983) melded Allen’s fascination with celebrity with his growing grasp of cinematic methods. A marvel of technical wizardry, Allen intercut and merged new footage with old to recreate vintage newsreels and sound recordings. “Broadway Danny Rose” (1984) was primarily dismissed by critics as a minor outing, yet it centered on a marvelous performance from Farrow who was virtually unrecognizable as the Brooklyn-accented former mistress of a gangster. Farrow gave another outstanding lead performance as the timid, Depression-era wife of an abusive husband who finds refuge at the movie theater in the “The Purple Rose of Cairo” (1985). Another technical tour de force, the delightful fantasy took a turn when a matinee idol (Jeff Daniels) stepped off the screen to woo the unhappy woman. Tying together several of Allen’s major themes – fame, romance, fantasy and art – the film earned Best Screenplay and Best Director Oscar nominations for Allen.

For much of the decade, Allen concentrated on drama with the exception of “Radio Days” (1987), a charming memoir of life in World War II Brooklyn, threaded together by a wonderful soundtrack of the era’s hits. He was nominated for a Best Screenplay Oscar, an award he had won the previous year for his Chekhovian “Hannah and Her Sisters” (1986), a chronicle of New York family relationships and a set of very different sisters. The bloodless “September” (1987) and the Bergman-esque “Another Woman” (1988), featuring a virtuoso leading turn from Gena Rowlands, were further examinations of the emotionally bereft worlds of WASPy New Yorkers. With the outstanding “Crimes and Misdemeanors” (1989), Allen closed the decade with a pessimistic examination of the morality of murder and earned more Oscar nominations for his screenplay and direction. In a lighter mode, 1990’s “Alice,” a riff on Lewis Carroll’s Alice and Wonderland, cast Farrow as a wealthy but shallow uptown woman who receives a new perspective on life thanks to a Chinatown herbalogist. Allen had a rare starring role in a film not of his own making, playing Bette Midler’s husband in Paul Mazursky’s seriocomic look at contemporary marriage, “Scenes from a Mall” (1991) – a film which tanked miserably. Back behind the camera, his critically reviled “Shadows and Fog” (1992) was an allegory about anti-Semitism that combined homages to 1930s German expressionism and 1950s European art films but was plagued by one-note characterizations.

Though not without humor, “Husbands and Wives” (1992) marked one of Allen’s most emotionally violent films. Highlighted by jittery, hand-held cinema verite camerawork and a pessimistic view of enduring love, the film was released early by its distributor in part to capitalize on its uncanny parallels with the real-life turmoil between Allen and Farrow. Their very public break-up, spurred by Allen’s romantic involvement with Farrow’s adopted daughter, Soon Yi, was followed by Farrow’s public accusations that Allen had molested their adopted daughter, Dylan (now Malone). In the midst of all the Sturm und Drang, Allen made the frothy but fun “Manhattan Murder Mystery” (1993), which reunited him with Marshall Brickman and ex-flame, Diane Keaton. The comic thriller attempted to recreate the banter and urbanity of such seminal films as “The Thin Man,” though it proved to be a financial disappointment, overshadowed by Allen’s personal troubles – which by this time, were monumental, when Soon Yi left her family to be with Allen. By the time “Bullets Over Broadway” was released in 1994, Allen was out of the headlines and audiences were ready to embrace his work anew. The hilarious period comedy about a 1930s New York playwright (John Cusack as Allen’s screen alter ego) banked on a lush, dramatic portrayal of the era’s theater world and benefited from an outstanding ensemble cast, including Oscar-winning performances from Dianne Wiest as a past-her-prime stage diva and a nomination for Chazz Palminteri as a thug-turned-ghost writer. Under it all, the film was a successful meditation on the definition of an artist.

Allen returned to TV to adapt, direct and co-star in a small screen remake of his 1968 stage play “Don’t Drink the Water” (ABC, 1994). On the big screen, “Mighty Aphrodite” (1995) was an uneven attempt that baldly proclaimed its indebtedness to Greek theater with the use of a chorus. Allen played a middle-aged sportswriter searching for the birth mother of his adopted child, who turns out not to be the cultured woman he imagined but a prostitute. With “Everyone Says I Love You” (1996), he combined frothy 1930s musical sensibilities with his familiar themes, resulting in a mixed response that divided audiences and critics. “Deconstructing Harry” (1997) was an Oscar-nominated screenplay – a scatological and complex look at a writer’s life employing black comedy and dramatizations of his works to comment on the function of the artist in society. “Celebrity” (1998) with Kenneth Branagh doing a mannered Allen impersonation in the leading role, was considered a misbegotten, poorly cast take on the contemporary obsession with fame. Paying his own price for fame, Allen was in the tabloids again for his 1997 marriage to Soon Yi Previn, 35 years his junior. The marriage reminded all of the sordid story from only six years prior, but the couple seemed in love. The following year, documentarian Barbara Kopple released “Wild Man Blues” (1998). Rather than focusing on Allen the filmmaker, Allen the amateur clarinet player was the central character, from the Monday evening club engagement he held for decades to a European tour.

Allen the filmmaker continued to put out one movie per year for the next five years. Still dabbling in different genres and new techniques, 1999’s clever mockumentary/dramedy hybrid “Sweet and Lowdown” cast Sean Penn in one of his finest performances as a fictional 1930s jazz guitarist and hothead. He followed up with the surprisingly mainstream but highly comic heist picture, “Small Time Crooks” (2000) and the disappointing period faux noir “Curse of the Jade Scorpion” (2001). “Hollywood Ending” (2002), where Allen played a film director who goes blind, was poorly received. The target of much criticism for his series of disappointing films, Allen mined familiar territory in 2003 with “Anything Else,” which did little groundbreaking besides casting Jason Biggs in the Allen-esque lead as a young writer bedeviled by his torturous relationship with a neurotic actress (Christina Ricci), with Allen playing the role of Biggs’ conspiracy-minded mentor. He rebounded with the novel “Melinda and Melinda” (2005), which offered two parallel interpretations of the romantic troubles of a neurotic, self-destructive woman (Radha Mitchell); one tragic and one comic. The film’s intriguing structure and fresh cast, including Will Ferrell, Amanda Peet, Chl Sevigny, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Mitchell as two widely differing Melindas, made the film one of the more satisfying efforts from Allen in recent years.

Even better was his next project, “Match Point” (2005), an entirely serious, morality-minded effort featuring Jonathan Rhys Myers as a social climbing tennis pro who believes he would rather “be lucky than good,” who finds himself torn between his comfortable, practical, status-confirming union with a loving wife (Emily Mortimer) and his torrid affair with a sensual but ultimately demanding American actress (Scarlett Johansson). Allen did not appear as an actor in the film, and even more significantly, neither did New York City: the film was shot entirely in London. “Match Point” demonstrated that Allen still had considerable power as a filmmaker and fresh subject matter to explore as a screenwriter. His continued significance as a writer was validated with an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. “Scoop” (2006), a comedy about an American journalism student in London, and “Cassandra’s Dream” (2007), a morality tale about a pair of brothers also set in London, earned lukewarm reviews but his fourth European outing, “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” (2008) was a critical pick. An evocative new locale and a well-matched cast including Allen’s latest muse, Scarlett Johansson, as well as Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem, spelled a return to Allen’s strength with intelligent and thoughtful romantic comedies. The filmmaker’s next project was “Whatever Works” (2009), starring Larry David. After writing and directing his fourth London film, “You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger” (2010), Allen returned to prominence with “Midnight in Paris” (2011), an engrossing comedy-drama where a despondent Hollywood hack (Owen Wilson) dreams of writing his novel and is mysteriously transported to the past where he meets his artistic heroes Ernest Hemingway (Corey Stoll), F. Scott Fitzgerald (Tom Hiddleston) and Salvador Dali (Adrien Brody). The film received widespread acclaim – including a Golden Globe for Allen for Best Screenplay – and became his highest-grosser at the box office, surpassing “Hannah and Her Sisters.” Meanwhile, Allen earned his 22nd and 23rd career Academy Award nominations with nods for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay for “Midnight in Paris.”

midnight-in-paris-movie-image-slice-01

Great website discusses the influences on Woody Allen:

Andy Roddick retires at US Open “Tennis Tuesday”

Published on Aug 30, 2012 by

Andy Roddick holds press conference to announce his retirement from professional tennis at the age of 30.

Roddick is a former world #1 and won the 2003 US Open.

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Juan Carlos Ferrero vs Andy Roddick Final US Open 2003 Highlights Pt. 1

Andy has some impressive stats:

Serve records:

  • Fastest serve in Australian open: 148 mph .
  • Fastest serve in Dubai: 150 mph.
  • Fastest average in first serve: 134 mph.
  • Fastest serve in Beijing: 148 mph.
  • Fastest serve in San Jose: 150 mph.
  • Fastest serve in Madrid: 151 mph.
  • Fastest serve in Washington: 151 mph.
  • Fastest serve in Queens :153 mph.
  • Fastest serve in Lyon: 142 mph.
  • Fastest serve in Roland Garros: 144 mph (2006–2010).
  • Fastest serve in Wimbledon: 143 mph (2011)

[edit] Records and achievements

Tournament 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 SR W–L
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian Open A A 2R SF QF SF 4R SF 3R SF QF 4R 2R 0 / 11 38–11
French Open A 3R 1R 1R 2R 2R 1R 1R A 4R 3R A   0 / 9 9–9
Wimbledon A 3R 3R SF F F 3R QF 2R F 4R 3R   0 / 11 39–11
US Open 1R QF QF W QF 1R F QF QF 3R 2R QF   1 / 12 40–11
SR 0 / 1 0 / 3 0 / 4 1 / 4 0 / 4 0 / 4 0 / 4 0 / 4 0 / 3 0 / 4 0 / 4 0 / 3 0 / 1 1 / 43  
Win–Loss 0–1 8–3 7–4 17–3 15–4 12–4 11–4 13–4 7–3 16–4 10–4 9–3 1–1   126–42
  • These records were attained in Open Era of tennis.
Championship Years Record accomplished Player tied
Wimbledon 2009 39 games won in a Grand Slam final Stands alone
ATP World Tour 2000–12 176 tiebreaks lost[46] Stands alone
ATP World Tour 2000–12 469 tiebreaks played[46] Stands alone
ATP World Tour 2007 18 consecutive tie-breaks won Stands alone
US Open 2004 Fastest serve in a Grand Slam tournament (152 mph) Stands alone

[edit] Major finals

[edit] Grand Slam finals

[edit] Singles: 5 (1–4)

Outcome Year Championship Surface Opponent in the final Score in the final
Winner 2003 US Open Hard Spain Juan Carlos Ferrero 6–3, 7–6(7–2), 6–3
Runner-up 2004 Wimbledon Grass Switzerland Roger Federer 6–4, 5–7, 6–7(3–7), 4–6
Runner-up 2005 Wimbledon Grass Switzerland Roger Federer 2–6, 6–7(2–7), 4–6
Runner-up 2006 US Open Hard Switzerland Roger Federer 2–6, 6–4, 5–7, 1–6
Runner-up 2009 Wimbledon Grass Switzerland Roger Federer 7–5, 6–7(6–8), 6–7(5–7), 6–3, 14–16

[edit]

Tour around SEC from week one

North Carolina State linebacker Rickey Dowdy (34) is unable to stop Tennessee wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson (84) as he runs the ball for a touchdown during the Chick-Fil-A Kick Off Game at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Friday, Aug. 31, 2012. (AMY SMOTHERMAN BURGESS/NEWS SENTINEL STAFF)<br />

Photo by Amy Smotherman Burgess

North Carolina State linebacker Rickey Dowdy (34) is unable to stop Tennessee wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson (84) as he runs the ball for a touchdown during the Chick-Fil-A Kick Off Game at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Friday, Aug. 31, 2012. (AMY SMOTHERMAN BURGESS/NEWS SENTINEL STAFF)

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How did the SEC teams do in the first week of football in 2012?

Georgia             win –  Buffalo  45-23
Auburn            loss- Clemson 26 –  19
Florida              win-  Bowling Green 27-14
Alabama          win-  Michigan 41-14
LSU                      win-  North Texas 41-14
Vanderbilt      loss- South Carolina 17-14
Missouri           win- Southeastern Louisiana 62-10
Kentucky         no game
Miss St.             win- Jackson State  56-9
Ole Miss            win- Central Arkansas 27 – Ole Miss 49
Tennessee        win- North Carolina State 35-21
Texas A&M-   -postponed til Oct 13
So. Carolina   win- Vanderbilt 17-14
Arkansas         win- Jacksonville State 49-24

Arkansas had some question marks on defense and Davis did not impress going on 18 runs with less than 4 yards a carry. In the West the result is the same with Alabama still on top. Barrett Jones did a great job at center and looks to me like he may be heading to a Outland Trophy. Auburn played a good game against a tough Clemson team but came up short and there are lots of question marks about an Ole Miss team that trailed the University of Central Arkansas at halftime.

For a rundown of the SEC East here is an article by John Adams:

Let’s back up for a few paragraphs.

Let’s back up to Sept. 17 of last year. That’s when Tennessee lost star wide receiver Justin Hunter to a knee injury in the first quarter against Florida.

That’s also when the course of the season changed drastically for the worse from a UT perspective.

The statute of limitations has long since expired on excuses. And excuses are best dismissed anyway, particularly when you conduct yourfootball business in the SEC, where everyone loses players to injury. How well you replace them often determines your success or failure in this league.

But you couldn’t help but notice how different UT’s offense looked last Friday night in a 35-21 victory over North Carolina State when it had two big-play threats at wide receiver in Hunter and junior college transfer Cordarrelle Patterson.

Offensive playmakers are a big deal anywhere.

 

They’re a bigger deal in the SEC, because the defenses are so unyielding.

So I was looking for playmakers the first week of the college season, which included a challenging stretch of games from noon Saturday to 2 a.m. Sunday during which I suffered a right-thumb sprain while overworking my remote switch. My conclusion: UT might have more playmakers than any one else in the SEC East south of Missouri (the only team in the division I didn’t see).

No one else in the conference threw the ball better than UT quarterbackTyler Bray did against the Wolfpack. And it’s questionable whether anyone else outside of Southern California can match the pitch-and-catch combination of Bray to Hunter and Patterson.

South Carolina could use either one of them, as evidenced by its 17-13 victory over Vanderbilt last Thursday. In fact, it could have used Vanderbilt wide receiver Jordan Matthews, who had eight catches for 147 yards. South Carolina wide receivers had a grand total of three catches.

I’m already questioning my pick of the Gamecocks to win the East. They’re too reliant on the running of quarterback Connor Shaw, who couldn’t get through the first game without bruising his throwing shoulder. And there’s no semblance of an adequate backup behind him.

 

Running back Marcus Lattimore rushed for more than 100 yards and looked as good as he did last year when his season was cut short by a knee injury. But he didn’t consistently break tackles as he did as a freshman in 2010.

The running back headliner in the East had an Athens, Ga., dateline. Freshman Todd Gurley rushed for 100 yards on eight carries and returned a kickoff for one of his three touchdowns. He’s just what Georgia needed after dismissing Isaiah Crowell from the team in preseason. Crowell led the Bulldogs in rushing last season as a freshman but never turned heads the way Gurley did in a 45-23 victory over Buffalo.

Georgia quarterback Aaron Murray also was on his game in the season opener. He had three touchdown passes and no interceptions, the latter of which too often sullied his 2011 performances.

Murray doesn’t have Bray’s receivers, though. Tavarres King, who had six catches for 117 yards, has speed and experience but still drops too many passes.

Florida could live with a few drops if its receivers could get open. The Gators established their running game and little else in a 27-14 victory over Bowling Green.

Senior Mike Gillislee ran hard and showed more speed than expected in rushing for 148 yards. But other than Kentucky, whom else can Florida beat in the East without a more productive passing game?

The Gators just don’t have enough playmakers. And based on the first weekend, Georgia and South Carolina — the two highest ranked teams in the East — don’t have as many as the Vols.

John Adams is a senior columnist. He may be reached at 865-342-6284 or adamsj@knoxnews.com. Follow him at http://twitter.com/johnadamskns.

Music Monday:Religion and Chris Martin part 1

Coldplay-DALLAS-2012-“Opening, Mylo Xyloto, and Hurts like Heaven!”

Published on Jun 24, 2012 by

1:10 is where the concert starts! Sorry for the shaking and sound audio! It was really loud! AND AWESOME! 😀 Please THUMB UP and COMMENT if u went to this coldplay concert! And I also hope that this will get a few people in the mood if they are seeing one in the future! ENJOY!

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Chris Martin was brought up as an evangelical Christian but he left the faith once he left his childhood home. However, there are been some actions in his life in the last few years that demonstrate that he still is grappling with his childhood Chistian beliefs. This is the first part of a series I am starting on this subject.

On June 23, 2012 my son Wilson and I got to attend a Coldplay Concert in Dallas. It was great. Before the show I read the program in the interview of Chris Martin, he noted:

I always notice the crowd. Everywhere. The only thing that bothers me is when I think that some people can’t see and i I feel like the front row is full of corporate sponsors and no full of fans. But that doesn’t happen any more. We changed it. Since we started the Viva tour, at a certain point before the concer some of our crew go up and get people from the rafters who would rather be down at the front. And it adds an extra bit of energy.

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We noticed a group of people up close at the Dallas show that were very enthusiastic. Evidently what Chris had mentioned above happened at the Dallas Show.

Chris Martin has backed Obama for President in 2008 and one central theme of Obama’s campaign was fairness. By this term candidate Obama meant taking from the rich and giving to the poor by government action. Liberals consider this compassionate. However, it is the conservatives that are generous with their personal money more than liberals like Obama and Biden.

I salute Chris Martin and Coldplay for their generous actions at the Dallas Concert and giving many fans who couldn’t afford front row seats the opportunity to sit on the front  row. This is an example of private charity and not publically funded charity. There are several problems with public funding of welfare and the most glaring is that 70% of the money goes to the government workers who distribute the money. The second biggest problem is that it creates a welfare trap that people can not crawl out of without losing all their funding. Milton Friedman’s negative income tax idea confronts that problem. Lastly private charities can add a personal touch and get to know what exactly the poor people need to overcome their problems and not the generic approach that the Washington federal government worker takes.

Take a look at what happened at the Coldplay concert. Coldplay saw a problem with all the stiff corporate types just sitting there on the front row and decided to pay for someone less finacially blessed to have the opportunity to seat on the front row.

Unlike Obama and Biden who give little to charities, Coldplay has given lots to charities.

Why does Chris Martin give so much to charities? I want to make the case that it is deep seated in his Christian upbringing. (Later in this series I am going to demonstrate from Coldplay’s own lyrics how Martin really does cling to the biblical beliefs he had as a child.)

December 1, 2006

Conservative vs. Liberal Charity Donations

Filed under: Talking Points memo — talkingpoints @ 3:23 pm

A recently published book outlines the difference between Conservative and Liberals who donate to Charity – that’s the subject of today’s Talking Points memo.

So what are we to make of the fact that conservative Americans donate 30% more to charity than liberal Americans? A new book called “Who Really Cares” by Syracuse University professor Arthur Brooks is not going to please the Howard Dean crowd. The book states flat-out that religious Americans who vote Republican are far more likely to be generous to the downtrodden than secular-progressives.

The big question, of course, is why? Liberal philosophy is all about “nurturing” people who need help. The “tax the rich” crew can’t yell loud enough that more money needs to go to Americans in need. Just not their money.

That may be unfair, but probably is not. The cornerstone of liberal economic thought is “income redistribution;” that is, big government taking assets from the affluent through taxation and giving said assets to the less well-off through entitlements like subsidized health care, housing, educational scholarships and the like. The left is also big on imposed “economic justice,” things like guaranteed wages and lifetime job security.

But a funny thing happened on the way to liberalism. Americans who believe in “income redistribution” give 75% less to charity than Americans who do not, according to Dr. Brooks. That is a stunning differential.I believe this is a religious thing. Liberals believe in individual gratification, and that often takes money. Buying that jazzy new SUV and that vacation home can deplete disposable cash fast. If it’s all about you, then you are thinking about you, not about poor Dave down the street.

But devout Christians, Jews, and Muslims are compelled to help the poor by their beliefs. Personal gratification is not a big theme in scripture. Jesus was a huge “help your neighbor” guy. For Christians, it is all about Dave down the street, not the latest material possession.

The statistics say that religious Americans give four times as much money to charity each year than secular people, and are 23 times more likely to volunteer to help people than folks who never attend church. And here’s another crushing stat: If liberals donated blood at the rate conservatives do, the nation’s blood supply would rise 45%.

So in this season of giving, Christmas, a word some liberals don’t like to say, it might be worth pondering just who is really looking out for the have-nots. The leftist media often portrays conservatives as mean, sexist, racist, bigoted homophobes who are cruel and insensitive to the plight of the downtrodden.

But, as the tax returns of multi-millionaires Dick Cheney and Al Gore prove, the media image is false. The Vice President gives millions to charity, Mr. Gore very little.

So the next time you hear a big government liberal bloviate about helping the poor, please trot out the statistics mentioned Dr. Brooks book. And then tell that person that in America today, giving money to charity seems to be the right thing.

What’s left is – well, liberalism.

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It seems to me that Chris Martin is having a hard time shaking his childhood Christian faith. As the article above noted:

Personal gratification is not a big theme in scripture. Jesus was a huge “help your neighbor” guy. For Christians, it is all about Dave down the street, not the latest material possession.

The statistics say that religious Americans give four times as much money to charity each year than secular people, and are 23 times more likely to volunteer to help people than folks who never attend church.

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Coldplay – Charlie Brown (Live in Dallas)

Published on Jun 23, 2012 by

American Airlines Center (June 22, 2012)

Coldplay brought confetti, lights and thousands of fans to the American Airlines Center; see photos from their colorful show

 

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