Saturday, May 31, 2008

Proficiency Exam Practice

Proficiency students: here's a great link you can use to practice for the ECPE. Download everything!!!!

No Easy Walk (1961-1963)

"No Easy Walk (1961-1963) The civil rights movement discovers the power of mass demonstrations as the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. emerges as its most visible leader. Some demonstrations succeed; others fail. But the triumphant March on Washington, D.C., under King's leadership, shows a mounting national support for civil rights. President John F. Kennedy proposes the Civil Rights Act."



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Friday, May 30, 2008

Exclusive: Tony Blair interviewed

May 30: TODAY's Matt Lauer talks to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair about presidential politics, his relationship with President Bush and his new initiative to bring faiths together.

Proficiency Exam Materials!!!!!!

Here's another one of Elisabet Seuba's contributions for those of you taking the Proficiency exam:

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Thanks Elisabet!!!!

Ain't Scared of Your Jails (1960-1961)

Ain't Scared of Your Jails (1960-1961) Black college students take a leadership role in the civil rights movement as lunch counter sit-ins spread across the South. "Freedom Riders" also try to desegregate interstate buses, but they are brutally attacked as they travel.



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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Sarah Jessica Parker on 'Sex'

May 29: TODAY's Meredith Vieira talks to actress Sarah Jessica Parker about her roles as Carrie Bradshaw and producer on the new "Sex and the City" film.

PBS Frontline - The War Behind Closed Doors

Fighting Back (1957-1962)

States' rights loyalists and federal authorities collide in the 1957 battle to integrate Little Rock's Central High School, and again in James Meredith's 1962 challenge to segregation at the University of Mississippi. Both times, a Southern governor squares off with a U.S. president, violence erupts -- and integration is carried out.



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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Clinton, you invoked a nightmare

In a Countdown Special Comment, Keith Olbermann reviews how many times Hillary Clinton has referenced Robert F. Kennedy in her campaign – and how the most recent mention of him and his assassination was inexcusable.

Awakenings (1954-1956)

Eyes on the Prize is an award-winning 14-hour television series produced by Blackside and narrated by Julian Bond. Through contemporary interviews and historical footage, the series covers all of the major events of the civil rights movement from 1954-1985.

Series topics range from the Montgomery bus boycott in 1954 to the Voting Rights Act in 1965; from community power in schools to "Black Power" in the streets; from early acts of individual courage through to the flowering of a mass movement and its eventual split into factions.

When Eyes on the Prize premiered in 1987, The Los Angeles Times called it "an exhaustive documentary that shouldn't be missed." The series went on to win six Emmys and numerous other awards, including an Academy Award nomination, the George Foster Peabody Award, and the top duPont-Columbia award for excellence in broadcast journalism.

Eyes on the Prize was created and executive produced by Henry Hampton (1940-1998), one of the most influential documentary filmmakers in the 20th century. His work chronicled America's great political and social movements and set new standards for broadcast quality. Blackside, the independent film and television company he founded in 1968, completed 60 major films and media projects that amplified the voices of the poor and disenfranchised. His enduring legacy continues to influence the field in the 21st century.


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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Monday, May 26, 2008

TEENS HOOKED ON PORN

"This film examines the disturbing reality of teenagers who have become hooked on internet pornography. One 16 year old from Bristol has looked at porn online since the age of 13 and it has almost overtaken his life. We follow his progress as he seeks therapy and tries to overcome his addiction. We also meet other younger children who look at porn, some brazenly and others for whom it's a secret obsession."

THE DOOMSDAY CODE

Tony Robinson travels to America, the Middle East, the Mediterranean and Africa to gather evidence that might uncover the realities behind the prophecies contained within the Book of Revelation. He interviews people who believe millions will be spirited up to Heaven, Israel will fight a nuclear war, that the Secretary General of the UN will be unmasked as the Anti-Christ and the world will end after the Battle of Armageddon."

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Golf tees up a community's rebirth

MSNBC.com


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Golf transforms a blighted neighborhood
An unlikely savior helps rebuild Atlanta's East Lake housing project
By David C. Lewis
CNBC
updated 7:29 a.m. ET April 22, 2008
ATLANTA - For years, the East Lake housing project here was one of the worst places in America — crumbling and crime-ridden. Today, it has been transformed by a businessman who brought his passion, his money and, of all things, his love for the game of golf.

Eva Davis moved into the East Lake Meadows housing project in 1971. It wasn’t long before murder and mayhem became a way of life.

“Two guys got in a fight right across in front of my house,” she said. “I saw one peep his head around the corner. Pow, pow, pow. It was just like you was in a Western movie.

"He ran right by my car and blood was just shooting out of his body. That guy shot him and he fell dead right before my face.“

The 650-unit housing project was never a great place to live. But when drugs took over and gangs claimed turf, it went from bad to horrible in a hurry.

“They would shoot and cut and stab and kill each other,” she said. “That's what they did."

By 1995, the crime rate was 18 times the national average. Shirley Franklin, now Atlanta’s mayor, remembers the old East Lake well.

“I would never go into East Lake Meadows alone,” she said. “The statistics suggested it was just awful — that it was a completely dysfunctional community.”

And then, in the early '90s, an unlikely savior came seemingly from out of nowhere: Tom Cousins, an Atlanta philanthropist and developer from the other side of town who was worth more than $300 million.

Cousins is a soft-spoken, self-effacing Atlanta business legend, who says that while he knows how much square footage he’s built, he’s lost track of how much money he’s given away. His skyscrapers dot the downtown skyline; he brought pro basketball and hockey to town, and he built the tallest building in the U.S. outside New York and Chicago.

But the broken-down housing project in East Lake Meadows was like nothing he’d ever encountered.


“It was almost beyond description,” he said. “It was just trash everywhere. Windows broken out of the apartments. Crime was rampant. ... (There was) no attempt to hide the drug dealing and drug selling on the streets.”

Cousins' interest in East Lake began when he read a 1993 newspaper article that described how 70 percent of New York state prisoners came from just eight neighborhoods. Atlanta’s police chief told him there were even fewer Georgia neighborhoods mass-producing criminals. The worst by far: East Lake Meadows.

“I drove out there; I could not believe it,” he said. “Hundreds of kids out on the streets. And I thought to myself, had I been born there, I'd probably be one of those people in jail if they could have caught me.”


The employment rate at the housing project — not the unemployment rate — was just 14 percent.

“Can we believe that in America this sort of thing goes on?” said Cousins.

Cousins and his wife Ann decided their family had to dive in. He created the East Lake Foundation and began to woo housing project residents like Eva Davis, the famously strong-willed head of the residents association.

“I was kind of nervous,” said Davis. “Here’s this big rich man with all this money. And he willing to come over here messing with us. And ain't nobody else been wanting to be bothered with us."

Long before she was mayor, Franklin was part of Cousins’ East Lake team.

“I was like a lot of other people; I thought he was crazy,” she said. “I thought he was overreaching. But he was taking on something that frankly the rest of us felt helpless to do."

Cousins says he didn’t know whether his plan would work.

“But I knew we were going to try,” he said.

When a faltering golf club bordering the housing project came up for sale, Cousins and his family put up $25 million and used the club as the cornerstone of one of the most audacious redevelopment plans ever conceived.

The urban nightmare that was the East Lake Meadows housing project was literally just a chip shot away from the fourth hole at East Lake Golf Club. Founded in 1904, this historic, very private club had itself fallen into disrepair from neglect and was on the brink of bankruptcy.

Incredibly, when a plan was developed to transform the housing project, the game of golf —traditionally exclusive, traditionally white — become the driving force to help turn around the neighborhood. It was golf, of all things — privileged, pristine, genteel golf — that helped save East Lake.


East Lake wasn’t just any golf course down on its luck. It was the home course of perhaps the greatest golfer ever: Bobby Jones, the only sportsman Wall Street would throw two ticker-tape parades for.

Cousins and his team came up with a unique strategy to leverage the legendary golf club: Only 100 new corporate members would be allowed to join the existing members. And each would fork over a “suggested” $200,000 — bringing in a total of $20 million. That money would literally go across the street to help rebuild East Lake.

Raising money was one thing; winning trust with residents was another. Cousins had to persuade hundreds of them to move out of the housing project and have faith they’d be able to return.


“We didn't get (that trust) very quickly,” he said. “I think they'd been promised so many things, they did not believe that we would do what we said we were going to do.”

Davis admits she was suspicious of Cousins.

“I had some high officials to tell me say: ‘You better watch him because he's sneaky,’” she said. “I was not happy. Because I didn't understand the golf course.”

But the refurbished world-class golf club kick-started the redevelopment of East Lake: It brought public attention, commerce and jobs. After 10 years, the housing project had been torn down, completely rebuilt and utterly transformed into a clean, safe, family-friendly place to live.

“It's heaven,” said Davis.

In the new neighborhood, half of the 542 units are reserved for families on public assistance, the rest for middle-income working families who pay market rates.

There’s a brand-new YMCA. And the Drew charter school, the first in Atlanta, opened here in 2001 for children from kindergarten through eighth grade.

The educational progress is nothing short of astonishing. In 1995, just 5 percent of neighborhood fifth graders met state math standards. Today, it’s 78 percent at Drew.

Drew graduates like Jeffrey Johnson are living proof that Cousins’ vision has changed lives. He’s now at a prestigious private school on an academic scholarship — a world away from the life he might have led.

“I'm taking American literature now,” he said. “I take pre-calculus, and that’s a really tough math class. I'm the piano player in the jazz ensemble. I just got into chorus.”

The remade neighborhood of East Lake is wrapped around a spectacular new public golf course, which became the setting for another one of Cousins' dreams: a free mentoring program that teaches golf lessons and life lessons.

“One of the better things is (that golf) teaches integrity,” he said. “In other sports, basketball, football, you break the rules and there's a penalty. But there's no moral issue there. But in golf, it's all on your personal integrity. You don't improve the ball in the rough. You don't change the position.”

Cousins hopes kids can learn the cherished values of the game he loves. Phys-ed classes at the Drew charter school are taught on the golf course, and the school may be the only inner-city school in America with a golf section in its library.

Brandon Bradley and Shelton Davis were two of the first to take part in Cousins’ golf mentoring program. Today they attend Grambling State University — on golf scholarships.

It’s just one example of how Cousins reached out to a community and turned it around. The “before and after” statistics are compelling: Violent crime is down 95 percent, the number of welfare recipients fell from 58 percent to 5 percent and the employment rate for people on public assistance rose from 14 percent to 71 percent.


Rebuilding East Lake wasn’t cheap. It took $128 million — from government, corporate donors and foundation grants. About a quarter of the total came from the Cousins family.

The vision was accomplished despite the doubts of friends who thought Cousins was nuts, and the rancorous battles with people who thought he was sneaky. You'd be hard-pressed to find two people who would be stranger bedfellows than Eva Davis and Tom Cousins.

“I don't know that Tom had ever known anyone quite like Eva, but the same was true in the reverse,” said Franklin. “And once they understood that they really wanted the same dreams for this community, it was just a matter of time that they would work together successfully.”

Working Magic off the basketball court

Working Magic off the basketball court
NBA star Johnson follows hoops career with a string of business successes
By Ian P. Paisley
CNBC
updated 10:05 a.m. ET May 6, 2008
LOS ANGELES - He may not be the star of the Los Angeles Lakers anymore, but take a trip back to the hallowed hardwood with Magic Johnson, and the glory days come rushing back.

“Just like when I walked out here, it took me back from when I was coming down on the fast break and doing my thing,” said Johnson on a recent visit to the Lakers' home court at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. “I don't want to go back or be in the NBA or be in basketball. But it's nice to reflect.”

Standing with Johnson courtside, it’s obvious that 12 years and 30 pounds haven’t erased his signature moves, including his famous “no look” pass.

“That never goes away,” he said. “I can come down here now, and I know I'll always know how to run a team.”

For the past decade he’s run a new team — Magic Johnson Enterprises — an empire estimated to be worth more than $700 million. He’s built his business by opening upscale stores in a place corporate America had all but ignored: the inner city.

Today, he has 116 Starbucks, 31 Burger Kings, a dozen 24 Hour Fitness Gyms, and a T.G.I. Fridays. He says other companies considered similar moves but were afraid to move into the neighborhoods Johnson has invested in.

“No question about it; they were all scared,” he said. “Scared they were going to lose money. They didn’t know how to do business in these communities so they just said, ‘We don’t need the headache.’ And they went elsewhere.”

But Johnson saw an opportunity and in 1995 scored a deal with Sony, opening movie theaters in South Central Los Angeles and Harlem. Johnson says the business community initially looked at him “as a joke” — wondering what a basketball player knew about running a business.

It turned out he knew plenty. He convinced Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz to do something he’d never done before or since — take on a partner.

“Howard Schultz took a chance,” said Johnson. “Not only with his company but with his brand. And he put it in my hand and said, ‘Look, I’m trusting you with this brand and I hope you know what you’re doing.’ ”

Johnson said his goal was to give minority consumers options that they never had before.

“If they don’t want to pay four bucks for a cup of coffee at Starbucks that’s okay,” he said. “But as long as they know it’s sitting there.”

Johnson’s impact was evident on a recent trip to LA’s Ladera Heights, where he opened his first Starbucks and T.G.I. Fridays 10 years ago. Before he arrived, the only restaurants in the neighborhood served fast food or soul food. Now, the Ladera Shopping Center is booming as other retailers have followed Magic’s lead.

In this community, he’s every bit the star he was on the court — approachable and gracious to a fault, whether the cameras were rolling or not.

“I’m a part of the fabric of the community,” he said. “And they know that I invested in them. I didn’t talk about it, I was a man about it.”

His latest venture has the business world buzzing; Canyon Johnson Funds has raised $2 billion to finance real estate projects in cities across the country.

“Now they’re saying, ‘OK, let’s get together now,’ ” he said with a laugh. “I had to bang down doors. I had to really show them that I was a serious business man. Then, the track record had to come.”

As a mogul, Magic Johnson may be bigger now than he was in the NBA, which is why some of today’s star athletes, like Alex Rodriguez, have turned to him for advice.


“He is probably one of the top three greatest basketball players to ever lace them up and to say that perhaps he’s had a better business career,” said Rodriguez. “It is quite remarkable.”

With a $275 million contract, A-Rod is the highest paid player in baseball, yet he’s already talking to Magic about life after the big leagues.

“He’s done so much, and he’s just really been a university of knowledge and example for all of us that are playing today,” said Rodriguez. “He has great common sense. If you talk to him about business, he doesn’t over complicate it. He likes looking outside the building, looking at a business and within four or five minutes — kind of like Warren Buffet — Does it make sense, or it doesn’t make sense?”


Johnson’s company does business in 85 cities and 21 states, and he runs it all from an office tower in the heart of Beverly Hills. Not bad for a kid who grew up one of 10 children in Lansing, Mich. He says he got his work ethic from his parents.

“Because my dad worked two jobs — General Motors as well as he had a trash hauling service,” said Johnson. “My mother worked for the local school in the cafeteria.”

As a teenager, “Earvin” Johnson was a stand-out on his high school team, and worked part-time cleaning offices.

“And I would always stop to the 7th floor of my favorite office and I would bust in the door like I was already the CEO,” he said.

But his biggest dream was to be a successful basketball player. He won a National Championship at Michigan State, five NBA titles over 13 seasons and three Most Valuable Player awards. With countless magazine covers and lucrative endorsements, Johnson had an appeal that transcended the NBA.

But while he was lighting it up with the Lakers, he was also thinking about making a fast break from basketball to the boardroom. Along the way, he took networking to a whole new level, trying to meet with CEOs on road trips and saying hello to them courtside before the games started.

Johnson also worked the floor at the Forum where Lakers games were the hottest ticket in town. There, he rubbed shoulders with Hollywood heavyweights sitting courtside. That’s how he met super-agent, Michael Ovitz, one of the most connected men in town.

“The man walks in and he's just got this infectious and contagious smile,” Ovitz recalled recently. “And he's also about 15 feet tall compared to an agent. So after we talked, at some length, it was very clear that he wanted to learn… And at the end of the conversation, I explained to him that we weren't involved in representing athletes and that I didn't think that there was any way we could work together.”

Johnson recalls Ovitz as being “very direct” at their first meeting.

“I went in six-nine, and I think I came out five-nine,” he said.

Realizing that Johnson wasn’t just a jock looking to cash-in on his name, Ovitz ultimately agreed to take him on.

“‘He said — ‘What part of the newspaper do you read first?’ Johnson recalled. “And I said, ‘Well, of course, the sports.’ He said, ‘Wrong. That's the wrong answer.’ He said, ‘If you want to be a business man, you’ve got to read the business section.’ ”

It wasn’t long before Ovitz raised the stakes. Pepsi was looking for a partner in a distributorship, and Ovitz pitched Johnson for the role at New York’s famed 21 Club.

“It was like watching a basketball game at a dining table,” said Ovitz. “Earvin came in and he took control of that room. And he got asked some pretty tough questions, and he gave really smart answers.”

Pepsi was so impressed, they picked Johnson, and he became the largest minority owner of a distributorship. Magic was at the top of his game both on and off the court. But in 1991, his magical ride would come to shocking halt. In an emotional press conference, he told his fans he was retiring from the Lakers because he was infected with HIV.

“I said the hardest thing I thought I was going to do was play against Michael Jordan and Larry Bird,” he said “But that wasn’t the hardest thing. It was driving home telling my wife I have HIV. That was the hardest thing I ever had to do in my life. And then wondering whether she’s going to stay with me. What would that mean for her and the baby? Wow… If she had left, you and I wouldn’t be sitting here.”

Today, Johnson is healthy. His HIV is controlled by medications and rigorous exercise — an hour on the bike followed by weightlifting, five days a week. He also runs a foundation dedicated to stopping the spread of HIV (www.magicjohnson.org). And he’s formed partnerships with Aetna Life Insurance and Abbott Pharmaceuticals.


Between his foundation and his company, Johnson is on the road more than 150 days a year, constantly looking for that next deal. On a recent visit to Minneapolis at Best Buy headquarters, he was celebrating his latest score. It was classic Johnson, his trademark smile lighting up the room.

It’s been 12 years since Magic Johnson played in the NBA, but he’s still winning titles, including the one he’s coveted the most.

“Now it not Magic, it’s not Earvin, it’s Mr. Johnson,” he said. “That’s what I wanted to get to… And that day has arrived.”

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Hacking Democracy

Electronic voting machines count about 87% of the votes cast in America today. But are they reliable? Are they safe from tampering? From a current congressional hearing to persistent media reports that suggest misuse of data and even outright fraud, concerns over the integrity of electronic voting are growing by the day. And if the voting process is not secure, neither is America's democracy. The timely, cautionary documentary HACKING DEMOCRACY exposes gaping holes in the security of America's electronic voting system.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Jesus Camp

"Jesus Camp follows several young children as they prepare to attend a summer camp where the kids will get their daily dose of evangelical Christianity. Becky Fischer works at the camp, which is named Kids on Fire. Through interviews with Fischer, the children, and others, Jesus Camp illustrates the unswerving belief of the faithful. A housewife and homeschooling mother tells her son that creationism has all the answers. Footage from inside the camp shows young children weeping and wailing as they promise to stop their sinning. Child after child is driven to tears. Juxtapose these scenes with clips from a more moderate Christian radio host (who is appalled by such tactics), and Jesus Camp seems to pose a clear question: are these children being brainwashed? "

KATT WILLIAMS - THE PIMP CHRONICLES PART 1

"Comedian Katt Williams (aka Money Mike) showcases his laugh out loud comedic talents in his first ever HBO stand-up comedy DVD taped in front of a live audience. A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Williams worked his way up the comedy club ladder before landing key television and film roles that displayed his flashy, sassy, streetwise style. In this hilarious 60-minute performance filmed at The Atlanta Civic Center on April 15th, 2006, Williams draws on his own personal experiences and his edgy take on life to bring the house down with laughter! With his unique personality, pimp-esque charisma, and endless supply of original jokes, Williams scores in this hilarious debut!"

Wonderland: Virtual Adultery and Cyberspace Love

"Carolyn is a 37 year-old mother of four in the midst of a passionate affair that is tearing her family apart. She's spending up to 18 hours a day with her lover, and her husband is in despair. But the extraordinary thing about this affair is that Carolyn's lover is man she has never met. Because he's not a human being. He's an avatar (or computer generated figure), who exists only in the virtual world of Second Life. And their relationship exists only in cyberspace."

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Edward Kennedy

Senator Ted Kennedy Diagnosed with Malignant Brain Tumor:

Cyber War! FRONTLINE

Cyber War In the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, as most U.S. intelligence shifted to finding Al Qaeda cells around the world, one group at the White House decided to investigate a new threat -- attacks from cyberspace. "In the past, you would count the number of bombers and the number of tanks your enemy had. In the case of cyber war, you really can't tell whether the enemy has good weapons until the enemy uses them," says Richard Clarke, former chairman of the White House Critical Infrastructure Protection Board. In "Cyber War!" Clarke and other insiders talk about a new set of warriors fighting on the new battlefield of cyberspace, and they evaluate just how vulnerable the Internet may be to both virtual and physical attack.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Horizon - Total Isolation

For the first time in 40 years Horizon re-creates a controversial sensory deprivation experiment. Six ordinary people are taken to a nuclear bunker and left alone for 48 hours. Three subjects are left alone in dark, sound-proofed rooms, while the other three are given goggles and foam cuffs, while white noise is piped into their ears.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Black college embraces white valedictorian

At historically black Morehouse College in Atlanta, Joshua Packwood changed history by becoming the school's first white valedictorian. NBC's Martin Savidge reports.

Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA), political roundtable

Exclusive! Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA) joins us to talk about Democratic politics and the state of the Iraq war. Plus a political roundtable with Harold Ford, Jr., Mike Huckabee, Mike Murphy and Bob Shrum.

The Iceman Confessions Of A Mafia Hitman PT 2

Monday, May 19, 2008

Chess keeps students' grades in check

How teaching chess to elementary students is impacting their lives outside the classroom. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

Mary J. Blige sets her sights

Mary J. Blige updates TODAY's Matt Lauer on her life and career, and performs "Stay Down," a track off her new CD, "Growing Pains," as part of the TODAY Concert Series.

The man with the incredible memory

May 19: TODAY'S Natalie Morales and Al Roker talk to Rick Baron, a man who can remember virtually everything in his life.

English Connectors - Thanks to Elisabet Seuba for the upgrade!!!

Here's a nice list of English connectors with their translation in Spanish. Originally taken from the list at heptagrama.com and adapted by Elisabet Seuba http://www.elisabetseuba.com/


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The Iceman Confessions Of A Mafia Hitman PT 1

Up Close and Personal with a Killer When I was finally admitted into the bowels of Trenton State Prison in New Jersey’s capital to interview multiple murderer Richard Kuklinski, a.k.a. “the Iceman,” it wasn’t at all what I had expected. My assumption was that it would be like the movies. We’d be separated by a shatter-proof glass barrier. We’d communicate through telephone handsets. There would be guards all around watching our every move. But I couldn’t have been more wrong. Clarice Starling had more protection when she visited Dr. Hannibal “the Cannibal” Lector in The Silence of the Lambs. At least she had bars. And frankly, as a killer, Lector was downright crude compared to the stealth and skullduggery of the Iceman. Lector liked to bite; Kuklinski preferred a cyanide solution administered from a nasal spray bottle. A surprise spritz to the face usually produced a shocked inhalation from the victim, who as a result would die in under a minute. And unless the body was found right away and a savvy medical examiner knew what to look for, the poison would go undetected because cyanide naturally dissipates in the body after two hours. But cyanide was only one of the things I was thinking about on the morning of January 16, 1992, when I arrived for my date with the Iceman.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Steve Jobs' Commencement Address at Stanford

This is the famous Steve Jobs Stanford University commencement address. If you want the tapescript, click here:
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Horizon: How Does Your Memory Work?

Aired: March 25, 2008 on BBC2 You might think that your memory is there to help you remember facts, such as birthdays or shopping lists. If so, you would be very wrong. The ability to travel back in time in your mind is, perhaps, your most remarkable ability, and develops over your lifespan. Horizon takes viewers on an extraordinary journey into the human memory. From the woman who is having her most traumatic memories wiped by a pill, to the man with no memory, this film reveals how these remarkable human stories are transforming our understanding of this unique human ability. The findings reveal the startling truth that everyone is little more than their own memory.

Saturday, May 17, 2008

In Lies We Trust: The CIA, Hollywood and Bioterrorism

This feature length documentary about medical madness, cloaked in bioterrorism preparedness, will awaken the brain dead. It exposes health officials, directed by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), for conducting a “War of Terror” that is killing millions of unwitting Americans. This urgent life-saving DVD comes without copyright restrictions. Every viewer is encouraged to reproduce and distribute copies to others. Donations to Tetrahedron Films to cover costs and produce more films like this are greatly appreciated online at http://www.inlieswetrust.com or by calling toll free 1-888-508-4787. You can screen the film on behalf of local charities. It was produced by award-winning humanitarian, Dr. Leonard G. Horowitz (http://www.DrLenHorowitz.com), a world-renowned authority in public health education, covert intelligence agency operations, and emerging diseases investigations. He is the author of three American bestsellers, including Emerging Viruses: AIDS & Ebola—Nature, Accident or Intentional? and Healing Codes for the Biological Apocalypse. (Tetrahedron Press; 1-888-508-4787) This monumental film exposes the agents and agencies behind: Hollywood films and the media creating a profitable culture of bioterror; the “War on Terrorism” used to control populations; the most lucrative war in history—the “War on Cancer;” the onslaught of dozens of new immunological diseases and deadly flus; the “War on AIDS” triggered by contaminated vaccines; the anthrax mailings resulting in restricted freedoms, and sales of toxic drugs, deadly vaccines, and more. Documents displayed in film may be viewed online at http://inlieswetrust.com For over 400 of the top Critically important videos see http://netctr.com/media -- Much more at the site. Wake up, get involved, Save the Republic - Your kids, grand kids and your life will depend on what you do from now on. Key words: propaganda, war, terrorism, vaccinations, immunizations, cancer, biological warfare, weapons of mass destruction, pharmaceuticals, AIDS, anthrax, healthcare, Hollywood, CIA, CDC, and FDA.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Man loses 518 pounds!

"The World's Heaviest Man" once weighed more than a thousand pounds, but he has lost almost half that weight in only 2 years. Willie Geist has the secret to his success.

The Wii workout

May 16: Weekend TODAY's Amy Robach tries the new game from Nintendo that will help you break a sweat and get in shape for summer.

The Hidden Story of Jesus

Aired: December 25, 2007 on Channel 4 Duration: 1:40:53 Info: Theologian Dr Robert Beckford investigates amazing parallels to the Christ story in other faiths, some of them predating Christianity by thousands of years. The Hindu god, Krishna, was conceived by a virgin and his birth was attended by angels, wise men and shepherds. Buddha was also the result of a miraculous birth and visited by wise men bearing gifts. Beckford attempts to unravel the mystery of why there are so many versions of the Christ story across the world and asks which is the real one.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Angelina twins due in August

May 15: At the Cannes Film Festival with "Kung Fu Panda" co-star Jack Black, Angelina Jolie reveals all about her pregnancy to TODAY's Natalie Morales.

Calif. overturns gay marriage ban

May 15: In a 4 to 3 decision, the California Supreme Court overturns a ban on gay marriage. NBC's Pete Williams has the details.

A great place to download documentaries

Here's a great place to download documentaries. You'll find lots of BBC and PBS productions here: http://forums.mvgroup.org/index.php?act=Reg&CODE=00

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Jenna Bush married in Texas

May 12: George W. Bush's daughter Jenna marries her longtime beau Henry Hager at the president's Crawford ranch. MSNBC's Amy Robach reports.

Slater sounds off on new show

May 12: TODAY's Ann Curry chats with Christian Slater about his career, kids and his new upcoming NBC prime-time show, "My Own Worst Enemy."

Sen. Chris Dodd, Terry McAuliffe, political roundtable

May 11: Two former DNC Chairmen: Obama supporter Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Clinton campaign Chairman Terry McAuliffe weigh in on Clinton's continuing candidacy and what it means for the Democratic Party. Plus, a political roundtable with Chris Cillizza, John Harwood, Michele Norris and Jerry Seib.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

TODAY Wednesday full first hour

May 7: NBC Nightly News Wednesday broadcast

PBS FRONTLINE - Inside The Teenage Brain

the new york times julie salmon

"You could get insight into your sullen teenager's view of life by re-reading 'The Catcher in the Rye.' Or you could pop her head inside an M.R.I. machine. Either way, what you learn won't stop her mood swings, but it might make you feel better about them -- or not. ...

This FRONTLINE report ... [connects] snarly teenage forgetfulness and wariness to a growth spurt in the brain similar to the rapid changes of earliest childhood. So now when your 14-year-old acts like a reckless idiot, you'll understand that his prefrontal cortex hasn't adjusted to the onslaught of new cells.

The program's images of unruly teenage brains galloping out of control may instigate apprehension. Is 'Catcher' about to morph into 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'? Will a lobotomy stop that teenage boy from belching at the breakfast table?

Don't worry. This deadpan Frontline report is aimed at soothing wounded parents reeling from the transformation of their sweet pups into sour curs. Just as they've been telling you, the poor dears can't help themselves. ..."

PBS FRONTLINE - A Dangerous Business

Los Angeles Times Mark Sachs

"The figure seems preposterous at first glance, surely a mistake, or perhaps based upon a report from some Third World country, not the preeminent power in the world.

"But tonight on 'Frontline: A Dangerous Business', you will learn some of the reasons why 6,000 Americans die each year on the job, and what is being done, or not being done, to address the situation.

"The program narrows its focus to what it claims is one of the most dangerous firms in the United States, the McWane Corp., a giant pipe-manufacturing concern with iron foundries in 10 states and Canada. ...

"'Frontline' warns viewers up front of the 'disturbing images' they are about to see, and it's not hyperbole. But after seeing the photos of bloodied, crushed bodies and interviews with maimed survivors of industrial accidents, you might look at your own workplace a little differently."

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

PBS FRONTLINE - Bigger Then Enron

"A Frontline investigation indicates that the Enron scandal is only the tip of an iceberg. ...

...[A]s Frontline demonstrates, the relationship between big accounting firms and the companies they monitor got dangerously cozy in the 1990s as consulting -- on taxes, partnerships, finance -- became a major source of revenue for the supposedly independent auditors.

'They clearly had a conflict of interest, and some of them abused the public they were supposed to serve,' says Arthur Levitt, a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. In 2000, Levitt proposed barring auditors from doing major consulting jobs for their clients. The accounting industry reacted like a dog protecting a meaty bone, pouring millions of dollars into lobbying -- and contributing to -- members of Congress.

Levitt shows Smith a letter from the congressional committee that controls the SEC's funding -- and thus, its existence -- warning him to ease up. He also has a letter from Enron's then-CEO, Kenneth Lay, urging him to cool it because Arthur Andersen's consulting was extremely important to his conglomerate's well-being. ...

It's such a gutsy, provocative public-service documentary, you wonder if PBS' president will get the sort of threatening letter Levitt got."

PBS FRONTLINE - The Missile Wars

Houston Chronicle Ann Hodges

"... It's beginning to be redundant to say it so often, but here PBS' Frontline is again -- out front and timely -- with a must-see program. ...

Missile Wars supplies the history of and a progress report on the missile defense initiative. Its critics call it Star Wars, and it's been a hot political potato for 20 years. As the experts quoted here make plain, it still is. ...

... Then came Sept. 11 ... and missile defense is now a vital crash program.

... But it's the president, Frontline reminds, who faces the most difficult questions. 'When he contemplates U.S. military action against a foe that might threaten nuclear blackmail, can he rely on an unproven missile defense?'

Frontline isn't answering questions here, but it's surely asking hard ones."

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

TODAY Tuesday full first hour

PBS Frontline - Bad Voodoo's War

FRONTLINE goes to war in Iraq with a band of California-based National Guard soldiers who call themselves the "Bad Voodoo Platoon" to tell their very personal story in Bad Voodoo's War. To record their war, from private reflections to real-time footage of improvised explosive device (IED) attacks on the ground, director Deborah Scranton (The War Tapes) creates a "virtual embed," supplying cameras to the soldiers of the Bad Voodoo Platoon and working with them to shape an intimate portrait that reveals the hard grind of their war. Says Scranton: "What compels me is telling a story from the inside out, to crawl inside their world with them to see what it looks like, feels like and smells like. It's really important to give soldiers the chance to press their own record button on this war." Through their daily experiences, acting platoon leader Sgt. 1st Class Toby Nunn, originally from British Columbia and the father of three, and Spc. Jason Shaw, a 23-year-old from Texas, give us a firsthand look at the impact of the U.S. military's policy of multiple deployments to Iraq and how the Army's role has changed on the ground. Spc. Shaw is on his third deployment to Iraq. After the invasion in 2003, he was awarded the Silver Star for valor during the battle for the Baghdad airport. Shaw volunteered for his third tour in Iraq, but is haunted by the loss of so many comrades during his earlier deployments. "I've had six of my good friends die," he explains. "When I lost all of my buddies, I just kind of lost hope. I used to be religious. My last deployment totally made me think otherwise. You know, you pray all the time to keep everybody safe, and then something happens."«