Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Groom Who Halted Own Wedding With Bomb Hoax Jailed


LONDON (AP) — A forgetful British bridegroom who made a hoax bomb threat rather than admit he'd neglected to book the venue for his wedding was sentenced Tuesday to a year in jail.


Neil McArdle called Liverpool's St. George's Hall from a phone booth on his scheduled wedding day in April, claiming a bomb was due to go off in 45 minutes.


His fiancee, Amy Williams, was left standing in the street in her wedding gown while the building was evacuated.


McArdle, 36, was arrested the same day and admitted that he made the call because he had forgotten to fill out the paperwork for the wedding.


"He did say several times how embarrassed and ashamed he was and how sorry he was," said prosecutor Derek Jones.


A judge at Liverpool Crown Court in northwest England sentenced McArdle to 12 months in jail.


Judge Norman Wright said that McArdle had frightened staff at the venue with his hoax —which came days after the Boston marathon bombings — and let down his fiancee.


"She was getting ready, expecting you were going to be man and wife and a very solemn public event in her life and you knew that was not going to take place," the judge said.


"You did not say 'We need to talk.' You tried to weasel your way out by creating a bomb hoax so the wedding would not take place."


Defense lawyer Charles Lander said McArdle and Williams are still together.


"The fact that she stands with him speaks volumes for her, and I hope volumes for him," Lander said.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=239616092&ft=1&f=
Related Topics: tom brady   North West  

Elle honors actresses age 21 to 89 at annual party


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hollywood may be cutthroat, but Elle's Women in Hollywood celebration is all about sisterhood.

The magazine honored Reese Witherspoon, Melissa McCarthy, Marion Cotillard, Naomie Harris, Shailene Woodley, Eva Marie Saint and director Nancy Meyers at its 20th annual event Monday at the Four Seasons hotel.

All were introduced by admiring colleagues, and each shared how women had helped them succeed. Chelsea Handler said Witherspoon helped her get a movie role. McCarthy was introduced by Kathy Bates, whom she cited as an inspiration. Meyers said studio heads Sherry Lansing and Amy Pascal supported her career, and it's up to women to everywhere to vote with their wallets to support projects helmed by and starring women.

She noted there are no Men in Hollywood events.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/elle-honors-actresses-age-21-89-annual-party-091641624.html
Related Topics: tom brady   harry potter   denver post   Disney Infinity   Gia Allemand  

Facebook Is Lifting Its Ban on Decapitation Videos (Updated)

Facebook Is Lifting Its Ban on Decapitation Videos (Updated)

Don't even think about posting cartoon nipples on Facebook. Decapitations, however? Go right ahead. Six months after establishing a ban on blatant, gruesome beheadings, Facebook has decided to (once again) keep videos of decapitations available to the masses.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ewTGNBcfzj0/facebook-is-lifting-its-ban-on-decapitation-videos-1449606221
Similar Articles: Jeff Daniels   grand theft auto 5   aapl   9/11 Memorial   lil kim  

Jerusalem mayor fights to hold seat in local vote


JERUSALEM (AP) — The mayor of Jerusalem is fighting for his political survival in a race that has become the centerpiece of Israel's municipal elections.

Secular Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat is running against Orthodox Jewish candidate Moshe Lion.

Lion is backed by two powerful politicians: Israel's former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman and the chairman of ultra-Orthodox political party Shas.

Tuesday's election results will impact the political future of Lieberman and Shas. Lieberman's party lost seats in the last national election, and Shas was once a kingmaker in Israeli politics but no longer sits in the ruling coalition.

Two leading ultra-Orthodox rabbis declined to endorse Lion. He was counting on votes from their followers.

In two other cities, two lawmakers are running to become Israel's first gay mayor and first female Arab mayor.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jerusalem-mayor-fights-hold-seat-local-vote-085704667.html
Related Topics: Bum Phillips   Bosses Day   hocus pocus   drew brees   marshawn lynch  

Comedian Dan St. Germain to Star in Fox Comedy From EPs Jake Johnson, Max Winkler (Exclusive)




Getty Images


Dan St. Germain



Comedian Dan St. Germain is headed to the small screen.



The creator/star of web series Kicking Dan Out is teaming with New Girl's Jake Johnson and Max Winkler for a comedy at Fox, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.


St. Germain will pen the script and star in the untitled comedy as Dustin, a guy who is a complete emotional wreck who after he gets dumped, moves back in with his ex and her current boyfriend to figure out what went wrong and learn how to stop being a man baby when it comes to love.


PHOTOS: Faces of Fall TV 2013


The comedian -- who has had his own Comedy Central special and has appeared on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, Best Week Ever and WTF With Marc Maron -- will executive produce alongside Johnson and Winkler via the duo's 20th Century Fox Television-based production company, The Walcott Co. Mary Lee will oversee for Walcott.


St. Germain, whose first upcoming album Bad at the Good Times will debut soon, is repped by UTA and Olivia Wingate Artists. He next appears in the animated web series In Security, which airs on Comedy Central Studios. His weekly podcast wit h Sean Donnelly -- My Dumb Friends -- will also be broadcast on Comedy central Sirius.


For Johnson and Winkler, the untitled St. Germain comedy marks their newly launched banner's second sale this development season. The duo also has a Matt Spicer dysfunctional family comedy set up at Fox. Winkler is at CAA and Management 360; Johnson is repped by UTA and 3 Arts.


Check out St. Germain in a (NSFW) holiday-themed bit, below.



E-mail: Lesley.Goldberg@THR.com
Twitter: @Snoodit



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/9nR2xqiJ6Mo/story01.htm
Tags: cory booker   WWE   houston texans   nfl scores   grandparents day  

Christie's Gay Marriage Decision Has Primary Consequences





Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie debates Democratic challenger Barbara Buono at Montclair University in Montclair, N.J., on Tuesday. Christie's decision not to fight gay marriage in the state takes away an issue Buono had been campaigning hard on.



Mel Evans/AP


Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie debates Democratic challenger Barbara Buono at Montclair University in Montclair, N.J., on Tuesday. Christie's decision not to fight gay marriage in the state takes away an issue Buono had been campaigning hard on.


Mel Evans/AP


Republican Chris Christie's decision Monday to drop his administration's legal challenge to same-sex marriage made perfect sense for the governor of New Jersey,


But for the potential 2016 presidential candidate, whose path would presumably start in Iowa — where the Republican Party is dominated by social conservatives — the calculation is a bit more complicated.


Bob Vander Plaats, Iowa's powerful evangelical conservative, put it bluntly Monday.


"Gov. Christie has basically backed away from one of the most fundamental social institutions — marriage, between one man and one woman," said Vander Plaats, who heads The Family Leader organization and is considering a U.S. Senate run.


"This is not going to play well for him if he chooses to enter the Republican primary for president of the United States," he said. "It will have tentacles way beyond Iowa."


Politicos in New Hampshire, which traditionally follows Iowa in the primary ramp up, disagree.


"In no way does this negatively affect Gov. Christie here," says James Pindell, who writes Political Scoop and is the on-air political analyst for New Hampshire's WMUR-Channel 9.


"We've had gay marriage here since 2009," Pindell says, noting that it was a Republican-dominated state Legislature that beat back the last attempt to repeal the law.


"The lay of the land is not Iowa," he says.


Now, let's back up.


In New Jersey, polls show that more than 60 percent of voters support legalizing gay marriage and that an overwhelming majority wanted Christie — who is running for re-election next month — to drop his appeal of a court decision legalizing same-sex marriage in the state.


The openly gay daughter of Christie's Democratic opponent in the race, state Sen. Barbara Buono, has also been using the governor's opposition to same-sex marriage — he vetoed the state gay marriage bill last year — to help raise money for her mom.


"For Christie, this takes away an issue that Barbara Buono had been hitting hard," says Bob Ingle, senior political columnist for Gannett New Jersey newspapers. "We're a blue state, and the surprise in this was that it took this long."


Christie, who as a politician has consistently opposed same-sex marriage, couched his announcement in familiar conservative "activist court" terms.


"Although the governor strongly disagrees with the court substituting its judgment for the constitutional process of the elected branches or a vote of the people," a statement from his office read, "the court has now spoken clearly as to their view of the New Jersey Constitution, and, therefore, same-sex marriage is the law."


Christie's decision to abandon a legal challenge came on the same day The Washington Post published a front-page article on efforts by some deep-pocketed Republican donors to "push the party toward a more welcoming middle ground."


That middle ground may ultimately be occupied by candidates who oppose same-sex marriage, the paper reported, but donors like hedge fund executive Paul Singer, whose son is gay, are encouraging rhetoric that is less hateful and supporting federal legislation barring workplace discrimination against gay Americans.


"It's important to remember that LGBT equality is more than just marriage," says Michael Cole-Schwartz of the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay rights advocacy group.


The campaign is working with Singer's American Unity Fund to promote the federal Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which would prohibit hiring and workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. The Senate, controlled by Democrats, is expected to consider it before year's end, Cole-Schwartz says.


Its prospects for seeing daylight in the GOP-controlled House, however, remain dim, at best.


"We do realize," Cole-Schwartz says, "that the House Republican leadership has not shown any appetite to bring these measures to a vote."


In Iowa, Vander Plaats dismissed the "middle ground" efforts as a rejection of what he characterized as "core value issues."


"If the party and party leaders walk away from core value issues, this wing will walk away from the party," he said. "The party needs a leader who is a full-spectrum conservative on social issues like marriage, on fiscal issues like Obamacare and the debt ceiling, and on liberty issues like the role of the courts."


Someone, he says, like Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.


Christie was already in the sights of social conservatives for opposing so-called gay-conversion therapy for minors, and nominating an openly gay judge to the state Supreme Court.


"I don't see outrage," Vander Plaats says about reaction to Christie among those in his wing of the party, "just confirmation of their suspicions."


Same-sex marriage became legal in Iowa in 2009 through a state Supreme Court decision. A recent poll showed that while a majority of the state's voters oppose a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriages, a majority of Republicans — including 61 percent of evangelical Christians — support such a prohibition.


Back in New Hampshire, Pindell says the state's motto of "Live Free or Die" still informs voters' ideology about social issues.


"Most Republicans when you ask them about abortion or same-sex marriage, their answer is, 'I don't care,' " he said. "This will set Chris Christie apart from what will likely be a crowded primary field, and in a way he could benefit."


Though Ingle, the New Jersey columnist and author of Chris Christie: The Inside Story of His Rise to Power, notes that the 2016 presidential race is still "so far away," it's never too soon to begin the political speculation, right?


Ted Cruz, after all, is heading to Iowa this week to give the keynote address at the state Republican Party's annual Reagan Dinner and to go hunting with Rep. Steve King, a social conservative and Tea Party Republican.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/10/21/239270300/christies-gay-marriage-decision-has-primary-consequences?ft=1&f=1001
Tags: Jack Nicholson   robin thicke   Laurie Forman   Kendrick Lamar Verse   Lauren Silverman  

Monday, October 21, 2013

Discovery of DNA "Biological Clock" Could Get Us Closer to Immortality

Discovery of DNA "Biological Clock" Could Get Us Closer to Immortality

The identification of the DNA markers associated with aging has brought us one step closer to the ever-elusive Fountain of Youth. UCLA geneticist Steve Horvath just published details about the discovery, and says that this could actually lead to drugs that reverse the process of aging.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/EZMW04joIhs/discovery-of-dna-biological-clock-could-get-us-closer-1449089144
Tags: will ferrell   blobfish   Sloane Stephens   made in america   Whitey Bulger