Thursday, June 30, 2011

Connecticut Library Encourages Kids to Believe in the Supernatural

I'm an atheist - so I don't believe in God or the Devil. Nor do I believe in witchcarft, yet witchcraft is quite popular these days, with young girls trying to get young boys to fall in love with them by various encantations and spells.

You doubt me? That's the same reason why vampire novels are so popular these days...vampires being sexual creatures who have the power to enslave the people they bite to be their servants forever...unable to betray them, etc.. Exchange "servant" for "boyfriend" and there you have it.

Now we have a library in Connecticut holding an overnight camp for kids about ghosthunting. Ghost hunting!

The Middletown Press: Ghosthunting workshop offers spookiness at Deep River Library
DEEP RIVER – With a few screams and a lot of panting, a group of kids and teens rushed out of the dark reaches of the library basement and into the comparative safety of a meeting room.

“Holy crap-a-moley,” said Alexis Hartman, 11, of Deep River, recounting her experiences in the basement. “That was like… I had a big experience with that.”

Hartman and several of her friends were participating in a ghost hunting workshop at the Deep River Public Library on Saturday evening, and before they fled, had been listening for ghosts in the basement with an adapted radio. The ghost hunters at Haunted New England Paranormal Research hosted the workshop for kids and teens to show how they search for spirits. The kids had a chance to see the ghost-hunting equipment – cameras, digital voice recorders, and electric meters – and then hunt for ghosts inside the library.



So is the building haunted? HNEP founder Mike Krause and his colleagues think so. He said they’ve visited numerous times, and they’ve captured multiple voices, belonging to men, women and children. The library building, built in 1881, was once the home of Richard Spencer, his wife, Julia, and their children.

Over multiple visits, Krause’s team has also captured a picture of what looks like a woman in a purple dress, which they think might be Julia and a face that looks like Richard coming out of a wall.

“Whatever’s here likes it here,” said Rodney Wilson, one of Krause’s colleagues. “If they’re attached to a place, they’re gonna come back to the place.”

After demonstrating the equipment, Krause, Wilson and coworker Tina Listro broke the audience up to teams and took them to different parts of the building. In the attic, Listro tried to speak to the Spencers, particularly the children. On a previous visit, she explained, she left flour on the floor of an unused room to see if the flour was disturbed by any ghostly presences.

In the pitch-black, dusty basement, things got spookier. Using a device created from a radio, which scans through different frequencies for a split-second at a time, Listro and the audience thought they heard a voice responding to their questions. The voice, which might have been one of the Spencer children, identified himself as “Nick.”

“I’m interested in ghosts,” said Grace Martorelli, 11, of Deep River. “I wanted to know if they’re really with us. I’ve seen a lot of ghost shows and know what they look like.

Old Lyme resident Zach Welch, 12, said he enjoys watching shows like ‘Ghost Hunters.’

“I watch those shows a lot,” he said. ‘It kinda seems real. It makes you want to feel it and see what it’s like.”

“It’s validating some of the things I’ve seen or heard,” added Zach’s mom, Lisa, who went to the attic and basement to look for ghosts. But, she added, “I’m still a little skeptical.”

Krause said he got into ghost hunting as a teenager, when his family moved into a Victorian house in Manchester.

“From day one of being in that house, I had an uneasy feeling,” he said. Sometimes, he said, he was awoken at night by a shadow moving back and forth in his bedroom. When the shadow was there, he said, he couldn’t turn on the lights or open the door. If he started yelling, the shadow would leave, and the lights would come on.

Spooked by the experiences, Krause moved out within months to stay with a friend, and his parents moved out within two years. After moving out, Krause did some research on the house, and became intrigued with ghost hunting. He officially started his business in 1992, and it’s expanded to have a team of eight ghost hunters, including Listro and Wilson. The researchers don’t charge money to investigate a possible haunting, so all of them are involved because they’re genuinely interested in the paranormal.

In the last five years, Krause said, the percentage of hunts that have turned up paranormal activity has increased, which he thinks is because of his team’s increased knowledge.

“Once the bug catches you, you can’t get rid of it,” said Wilson.

Listro said that while she sometimes got nervous with her early ghost experiences, she’s gotten used to it. The job, she said, “is like anything else.”

“I don’t believe that there are things out there that really want to hurt you,” she said.

Still, some of the people who participated Saturday said they were intrigued, but despite assurances from the researchers, a little nervous.

“I think I was just totally interested in it,” said Deep River resident Mary Beth Kiely, one of the adults who tagged along on the tour. “I’ve always been interested, but a big chicken.”

“I might get a little freaked out and sleep with the lights on,” she added.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Newsweek Plumbs the Depths of Bad Taste


Not quite as stupid as OJ Simpson writing a book called, If I'd Done It, Here's How I Would Have Done It (or whatever that abomination was called) and not quite as in poor taste as those fools who were actually going to publish that OJ book, but right up there.

Diana returns from grave in shocking Newsweek cover
Princess Diana has returned from the grave on the front cover of Newsweek in a picture that imagines her, and her life, as it might have been had she lived to mark her 50th birthday on Friday.


But the picture and story - which speculates that Diana would have twice remarried, used Botox, and been slightly jealous of new daughter-in-law Kate Middleton -- provoked mostly howls of disgust as they arrived on U.S. newsstands the same week that Prince William and his new bride begin an official visit to North America.


"Shocking, brilliant or just plain cheap?" asked the Los Angeles Times. News blog Mediaite.com called it "disrespectful on so many levels", while The Atlantic Wire ran the headline "How Creepy is Princess Diana's Ghost?".


Newsweek editor-in-chief Tina Brown, a Briton who wrote a gossipy 2007 biography about the late princess, imagines that if Diana had not died in a 1997 Paris car crash, she would have moved to New York, remained "great-looking," been friends with her ex-husband Prince Charles and his new wife (and Diana's old nemesis) Camilla, and have 10 million followers on Twitter.


But it's the digitally-enhanced front page photo of Diana -- imagining her as still slim and chic, if a little wrinkled -- that has caused the biggest outrage. Diana is shown walking alongside a smiling, and admiring, Kate Middleton.


"This is beyond tacky", commented one writer on the New York Magazine website.


"Ugh this is SO tasteless . . . let the poor woman RIP . . . if i were any of her family members i'd be so offended and upset by this," wrote a woman on the Newsweek comments page. Some others said they were canceling their subscriptions to the U.S. weekly news magazine.


The Newsweek feature also fantasizes about Diana's Facebook page, imagining her "liking" the movie "The King's Speech" and TV series "The Real Housewives of New York", hanging out with David and Victoria Beckham, and sending supportive messages to spiritual physician Deepak Chopra and Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei.


But it is her supposed relationship with the new bride of her eldest son, Prince William, where Brown is perhaps most controversial.


"The rising public adoration of Kate would have afforded Diana some tricky moments. Pleased, yes. But . . . .Diana would have had to adjust to a broadening of the limelight," Brown writes.


She also speculates that Diana would have been a defender against royal snobbery of Middleton's non-aristocratic upbringing "and ostentatiously made Carole Middleton, Kate's dynamic mother, her new BFF."


Prince William and Kate Middleton, now formally known as the Duchess of Cambridge, arrive in Canada on Thursday for their first official visit overseas as a married couple.


They will also visit southern California from July 8-10.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Bristol Palin: Sarah Palin "Definitely Knows" What She'll Do in 2012

Bristol Palin is nobody, but an unwed mother. But she has the fortune to be the daughter of Sarah Palin...so although Bristol isn't a politician, isn't anybody, she gets a book deal, she gets to be on dancing with the stars, she gets a multi-million house of her own.
International Business Times: Bristol Palin: Sarah Palin "Definitely Knows" What She'll Do in 2012
Bristol Palin said today that Sarah Palin "definitely knows" whether she will run for president next year -- but she's not sharing what those plans are.

"She definitely knows. We've talked about it before. But some things just need to stay in the family," the younger Palin said in an appearance on "FOX & Friends," where she was plugging her book, "Not Afraid of Life: My Journey So Far."

In her memoir, the 20-year-old takes shots at the family of Arizona Senator John McCain -- whose choice to make Sarah Palin his 2008 running mate catapulted her to political stardom -- and reveals how she drunkenly lost her virginity to Levi Johnston.

She also writes about being in the media spotlight when she was pregnant during the 2008 campaign, saying, "For some reason, I didn't realize the ripples my pregnancy would cause throughout the nation."

"Not Afraid of Life," written with Nancy French, was published last week by HarperCollins (272 pages, $25.99).

After a bevy of television and radio appearances today, Bristol Palin will have her first book signing tomorrow at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota -- with her mom, who will be signing her latest book, "America By Heart."

Sarah Palin has called her daughter's book "shocking, refreshing, honest, inspiring, and perfect." In a new statement, Sarah Palin said she is "so proud" of Bristol Palin and "thrilled to be joining her to kick off her book tour," according to the Associated Press.

Bristol Palin will then promote "Not Afraid of Life" at a Books-A-Million in Birmingham, Alabama next Tuesday, followed by what is sure to be a gabfest on "The View" on Thursday, July 7, according to HarperCollins.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Ryan Dunn Death: Is the Jackass star car crash news the biggest hoax ever?

This just goes to show the dangers of perpetrating hoaxes on other people - when you finally do die - in a way that should show your fans that you're an idiot - they just think its a hoax. "No consequences for your actions" is the message delivered by Jackass, unfortunately.

International Business Times: Ryan Dunn Death: Is the Jackass star car crash news the biggest hoax ever?
Jackass star Ryan Dunn died in a fatal car crash on Monday but many people believe that the prankster is pulling his most elaborate prank ever, possibly to promote his next movie 'Living Will'.

Although reports are flooding the Internet that the 34-year-old is really dead after crashing his Porsche 911 GT3 into a patch of trees at a speed of nearly 140 mph, yet many of Dunn's fans believe that the Jackass star is playing an elaborate hoax on them.

A private funeral service was held on Wednesday but Dunn's fans think the car crash is a joke (and possibly the most elaborate one so far). They think Dunn has played the prank to promote his next movie 'Living Will,' where he is supposed to come back from dead as a "ghost" to hang out with his friends.

The doubt is understandable, considering how Dunn lived his entire career life, performing ridiculous, crude and dangerous pranks in Jackass, Viva La Bam, Homewrecker, and Proving Ground.

Some media have fueled the rumor as well.

According to Jalopnik.com, Fox News even published an article headlined: 'Jackass' Star Ryan Dunn Killed in Car Crash, Found To Be a Joke! Fox News allegedly said TMZ ran the story, reporting that 'Jackass' star Ryan Dunn "has not really died in a car crash in pennsylvania early this morning."

According to the report, April, mother of Dunn's friend and Jackass co-star Bam Margera, played a major role in the gag.

Fox even quoted Dunn as saying, "I'm not sorry for making everyone think I was dead. I actually thought it was pretty funny."

The story later was taken off the Internet.

A thread group was also started in MTV.com by a user with the ID 'Harley Colbert,' which was titled, "BREAKING NEWS RYAN DUNN IS NOT DEAD!!! READ THIS!!"

Another user with the ID 'aporter17,' who claimed to have worked in law enforcement wrote in the threaded discussion, "Unless you were there or seen the body it’s hard to believe!"

"It's ******** saying if the news says it happened it's true!!! That's not the case, I have worked in law enforcement and been a firefighter for awhile, and one thing I know the news will make up or play along with anything!!!! Unless you were there or seen the body it's hard to believe!!! Maybe he really is dead which is pretty sad, but maybe it was a joke which is pretty messed up. But these guys are known to do some crazy ****, and look back in a lot of their movies, they pay people and places to play along. So no one knows at this point until he shows himself confessing it was a joke or him really being dead!!!!" 'aporter17' said.

Users on cloakanddagger.org have also raised doubts whether Dunn is really dead, asking "Is this another celebrity stunt for publicity?" and "Is Dunn making a JACKASS out of the American people?"

Is Ryan Dunn really dead, or is this another of his elaborate prank? When Michael Jackson died, nobody believed he was dead. Will people believe that Ryan Dunn is really dead? Or is this his most elaborate prank ever?

It does beg the question - if this jackass did fake his death, and does come back to life, what will the consequences be? Will he be fined megabucks for wasting the police's time? Will he have to explain where he got the two bodies incinerated in the crash. Will his family and friends forgive him for putting them through the hell of thinking he'd died?

And how many teenagers today are even now plotting their own deaths in order to escape from home, or just as a prank?

Devolution media at its finest.

Supreme Court lifts limits on sale of violent video games to minors

One can only hope parents will take it upon themselves to not let their kids play these games. That is a vain hope, however, and so America's descent into coarseness continues unabated.

Los Angeles Times: Supreme Court lifts limits on sale of violent video games to minors
WASHINGTON— The Supreme Court on Monday struck down a California law that limited the sale of violent video games to minors, ruling the restriction violated the free-speech principles in the 1st Amendment.

"Like books, plays and movies, video games communicate ideas," said Justice Antonin Scalia. "The most basic principle of 1st Amendment law is that government has no power to restrict expression because of its content."

The ruling came on a 7-2 vote.

Scalia spoke for five members of the court who ruled that under no circumstances could the government be allowed to protect children by limiting violence in the media.

"There is no tradition in this country of specially restricting children's access to depictions of violence," Scalia said in the courtroom. "Certainly, the books we give children to read -- or read to them when they are younger -- have no shortage of gore. Grimm's Fairy Tales, for example, are grim indeed." Justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan joined his opinion.

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., joined by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., applauded California's effort to deal with a "serious social problem: the effect of exceptionally violent video games on impressionable minors." But they too voted to strike down the state's law because it did not spell out clearly enough the limits that the gaming industry must follow.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Stephen G. Breyer filed separate dissents. Thomas said minors had no free-speech rights. Breyer said he thought the law was constitutional as is.

The decision comes as a relief to the entertainment industry, which worried a decision upholding the California law could trigger similar measures across the country.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Immigrants and Illegal Immigrants are not the same


For more than a decade, the "mainstream media" has worked to blur the line between legal immigrants, and illegal aliens (not immigrants).

Republicans are painted with a broad brush as being against immigration, when what they are against is illegal aliens pouring over our borders, taking American jobs, and getting American welfare after day one.

(And of course it can't all be blamed on the illegals. Because of welfare, Americans will not do certain jobs. As the President of Mexico said some months ago, illegal aliens do jobs that "even black people won't do." There are American businesses that want to pay very low wages, and illegals will take those jobs. Meantime, Americans have no intention of working for such low wages, nor do they need to, since welfare pays them just fine, thank you.)

Anyway, the headline frm 9News.com says it all. "McCain under fire for blaming blazes on immigrants." The body of the article gets it right - he's talking about illegals.
"It's his constant refrain for everything that ails mankind," said Roberto Reveles, the founding president and a current member of the Phoenix-based Hispanic civil rights group Somos America. "It just seems like we have an epidemic of, `Blame it all on the illegal aliens, blame it all on the Mexicans.' It's amazing that the public doesn't rebel against this type of scapegoating."

The Hispanic and Latino communities are divided - though I dont' know what the proportion is, admittedly. There are those who want to continue to let illegals pour in because the more illegals here, the more chance for amnesty, and all of a sudden they're a power voting block and can get what they want.

Then there are those Hispanics and Latinos who know full well that the reason that they - actual citizens and legal immigrants - don't get any respect is because of all the illegals that have poured in, so that percentage wise, when you see Hispanics or Latinos on the street - one or more of them is going to be an illegal.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Anthony Weiner

Anthony Weiner, a New York member of the House of Representatives, sexted at least 6 and probably many more women of various ages - using his official Twitter account.

That's kind of disgusting for a start.

When he accidently sent a photo of his boxer shorts (and its contents) to his home page instead of privately to a woman, he deleted it and then posted that his Facebook account had been attacked. That was lie number one.

Andrew Breitbart posted a different photo Weiner had sent some other woman, claiming Weiner had sent it himself (which he had done). Weiner called him a liar and accused him of being the hacker. That's lying again, and accusing someone of a crime because whatever the penalty is for hacking a private citizen's account, hacking a politician's account is definitely illegal.

In any event, after many more lies, Weiner finally admitted that yes, he had sent the photos himself, but that he wasn't going to resign.

And many people didn't want him to. Apparently apart from this sexting business, and the cover up business, many people thought he was doing an excellent job as their representative. Women have actually been writing articles saying he didn't do anything so bad that he should resign over it! How sad is that?

So, Weiner has resigned. But of course, his career is by no means over. He will recieve a pension of over $100,000 a year, and he has already been offered many very lucrative contracts - rewarding him for his behavior.

Anthony Weiner Offered 'Entourage' Role, Penthouse Job
Washington, DC always embraces a good sex scandal, but the end result is generally a ticket out of town. Hollywood, on the other hand, is often much kinder to its illicit drama participants.

Now-former Congressman Anthony Weiner, who resigned on Thursday weeks after an accidentally-tweeted crotch shot began a run of revelations that introduced the term sexting to the mainstream, has already gotten a major job offer to turn his scandal into a sort of meta comedy.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Doug Ellin, executive producer of "Entourage," has offered Weiner a guest star spot on the show, in which he'd play himself. As of yet, there's been no response from the embattled former New York representative, Ellin said.

If it's the camera that Weiner is suddenly worried about, he has another potential job opportunity. In a letter published on The Huffington Post, Hustler founder Larry Flynt is offering Weiner a job in the company's internet group.

"I cannot emphasize enough the genuineness of this offer. We are a serious corporation which, as you know, has been heavily involved in the political environment of this country for over thirty-five years," Flynt wrote to Weiner. "Our key missions have consistently included the crucial fight of battling hypocrisy within the federal and state governments. Flynt Management Group, LLC and Hustler Magazine have been dedicated to decades of serious political commentary. Just as we do not undertake insincere political crusades, we do not make insincere job offers."

Friday, June 10, 2011

Who Knew Tattoos Were Copyrightable

At the IMDB today:
Warner Bros. reveals plans to erase 'Hangover' tattoo for video
Warner Bros. filed court papers on Monday indicating they intend to digitally erase the tattoo on Ed Helms’ character’s face when The Hangover Part II is released on home video, according to court documents. Tattoo artist S. Victor Whitmill, who gave Mike Tyson the Maori-style tattoo that the film references, sued the company for copyright infringement. In their most recent filing to prevent Whitmill’s request for an expedited trial, lawyers for Warner Bros. said, “If the parties are unable to resolve their dispute, Warner Bros. does not intend to make any use of the allegedly infringing tattoo after... »

Meantime, the Hangover Part II, dumbing down everyone who sees it, is still 2nd at the box office, earning $31.4 mil last week. Sad, sad, sad.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

The Whole Zombie Meme

This doesn't really have anything to do with the media per se, but it is just such a sick story that I thought I'd share it.

Whatever you think of Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin - or indeed of any politician, is it really necessary to stage a demonstration against him when he is honoring Special Olympics athletes? Athletes who are getting one of their very few days in the sun and who will doubtless not understand why there are people dressed as very ugly individuals in front of them?

It's on a par with those idiots who stage anti-gay demonstrations in front of the funerals of dead soldiers and their grieving relatives.

(As my Kindle subscribers can't see the video, I'll describe it. As Scott Walker is introduced, and as all the Special Olympians in the audience expand their chest with pride, about 10 individuals dressed as Zombies come in and stand right in front of them, facing them, blocking their view of the governor.

With zombie makeup on their faces, I wonder what these Special Olympians thought was happening...how it effected their special day?

Youtube video:

Friday, June 3, 2011

The Current Crop of Movies (spoilers for On Stranger Tides)

I went to see Pirates of the Carribean: On Stranger Tides today. It was okay...but totally, totally predictable. There were no surprises

I enjoyed the first Pirates. Barbossa was a villain, a charming villain but a villain for all that, and he got his comeuppance in the end. So popular was his character, however, that he was brought back for the next two movies, and of course he's in On Stranger Tides.

All of the characters are villains, really, pirates - and the pirate life is made to look quite attractive. So much so that in the end, Barbossa tears up his letter of marque from the crown to become a pirate again.

So villainy is rewarded and this man, who stood by while his entire crew - albeit of British sailors, not pirates - were killed by bloodthirsty mermaids - gets another ship, and if there is another sequel, he'll be in it again.

Before the movie started, there were 5 or 6 previews of films...and my heart just sank as I watched them, and the utter blandness and pandering to the common denominator - they they are going to make a little more common - they were.

First there was Zookeeper, which appears to be a remake of Night at the Musuem, even including titles and music! Now I liked the two Nights at the Museum movies (although the first one was superior to the second one) but this one, starrng the obese Kevin James (but of course obesity is just fine in male actors) will just be ridiculous.

Then there was some kids movie, Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer. The whole plot is told in the trailer (which seems to be the norm these days). Judy's parents go off for the summer, and the "quirky aunt" (is there any other kind?) comes to stay and helps Judy and her annoying brother have a fun summer. Of course the aunt can't drive, so there's lots of property damage, but of course no one gets killed.

Then there was an update of the movie Switch. Two men, one happily married, the other single but apparently living the good life with sex every single night, urinate into a public fountain while at the same time wishing that they were the other guy. So, wish granted, and of course each one discovers that the other's life isn't all its cracked up to be.

What is it with men and public urination, anyway?

Suffice it to say that Hangover II is tops at the box office for another straight week, doing twice the business of On Stranger Tides, and that is just .... so sad. I predict we'll see a lot more idiots with facial tattoos shortly.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Reporting the Party of Scandal-Hit Politicians



I was a bit late on this to begin with...

Anthony Weiter, a Democrat, is in trouble because someone - either him or someone who hacked his twitter account - sent a photo of him in boxer shorts to someone. The view is only of the shorts, not of the face.

A similar incident happened with a Republican a few months ago, except in his case, the Republican sent a shot of his bare chest and his face. He resigned.

So when I checked google news today, the first article was from Reuters - a British news outlet, admittedly, that said "Republican Weiter" in trouble.

I knew he was a Democrat, but unfortunately did not take a screencap of the article at that time.

Now the headline of the article has been fixed, but the original article is still available - as you can see in the attached screencap, circled.

Where did the confusion lie. Well,, Weiner is a Representative, which is abbreviated Rep.

And Republicans are sometimes abbreviated, Rep.

So it may be that whoever Reuter's headline writer was, simply saw "Rep." in front of Weiter's name and assumed Republican, and gleefully spelled out Republican.

On the other hand, as Republicans will say, whenever a Democrat gets into trouble, his (or her) party is never given by the liberal newspapers.