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  • Celebrity Apprenctice Winner 2010: After All Sacrifices Everything Comes To An End

    celebrity apprentice winner 2010

    Holly Robinson Peete and Bret Michaels are the final two contestants battling for the title of Celebrity Apprentice 2010. The Seasons Finale will be held on the 23rd of May in New York. The final challenge for them is to create a new Snapple or also known as a famous brand of softdrink flavor. After creating one, they will have to market their product for real money, as everything in the Apprentice is about money.

    Bret Michaels is also known for his Type 1 Diabetes created together with his two teammates a Daryl Strawberry Drink that absolutly contains no sugar. Competitiors Curtis Stone, Holly Robinson and Maria Kanellis had put into action a Passion Fruit Drink despite of the fact that this particular drink is not so famous during these times.

    The last thing we saw on The Celebrity Apprentice 2010 was Holly Robinson editing the commercial for her team and Bret Michaels doing nothing.

    So, who do you think will become The Celebrity Apprentice 2010?

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  • Files reveal Britain’s secret biological weapons trials in second world war

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Owen Bowcott and Rob Evans
    London Guardian
    May 17, 2010

    British scientists experimented with ways of spreading foot-and-mouth disease, and lethal infections such as dysentery, cholera and typhoid in secret biological warfare trials during the second world war.

    An extensive list of the contagious agents and plagues that could be turned into weapons of mass destruction is revealed in files from a War Cabinet committee released to the National Archives.

    The government was known to have produced 5m anthrax-filled cakes to infect cattle in Germany during the war, but the latest documents show research was carried out into a far larger variety of diseases, mostly in Porton Down, near Salisbury, and Pirbright in Surrey.

    Experts reported to the War Cabinet’s Porton experiments sub-committee, which acknowledged that “bacteriological warfare” was outlawed by the 1925 Geneva protocol. The minutes, only now released, are labelled “secret” and “to be kept under lock and key”. One session on “Toxin X” – thought to be botulinum – was so sensitive the minute records: “Not circulated.”

    An interim report in January 1941 said: “The diseases considered most likely to be effective in bacteriological warfare are:

    • Human diseases: enteric group (typhoid and para-typhoid), dysentery and cholera.

    • Animal diseases: anthrax, foot-and-mouth disease, rinderpest, glanders, and swine fever. (Anthrax and glanders also affect human beings under conditions favourable for infection).”

    Full article here

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  • Nuke Rebuke: Iran Vows More Enrichment

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    Reuters
    May 17, 2010

    Iran will continue its uranium enrichment activities, including production of 20 percent enriched uranium, even after signing a nuclear fuel swap deal with Turkey and Brazil on Monday, a senior official told Reuters.

    “There is no relation between the swap deal and our enrichment activities … We will continue our 20 percent uranium enrichment work,” said Ali Akbar Salehi, head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation.

    Nuke Rebuke: Iran Vows More Enrichment 150410banner1

  • Krugman discovers humans are not rational

    Paul Krugman is a fan of behavioral economics. He’s also fabulously well read, he must have read some anthropology, history, and political science at some point in his life. At heart though, Krugman is an economist. It’s hard for an economist to escape the prejudice that humans are fundamentally rational self-interest optimizers. It’s baked into their culture.

    Alas, humans are only partly rational part of the time*. Obama, like every politician, knows this in a deep way. That’s why he ignores Krugman’s political advice.

    Krugman can learn though. I’ve read him religiously since he became a byte-stained wretch, and he’s changing. He’s learning politics (emphases mine) …

    Krugman – The G.O.P. – Going to Extreme – NYTimes.com

    … Right-wing extremism may be the same as it ever was, but it clearly has more adherents now than it did a couple of years ago. Why? It may have a lot to do with a troubled economy.

    True, that’s not how it was supposed to work. When the economy plunged into crisis, many observers — myself included — expected a political shift to the left. After all, the crisis made nonsense of the right’s markets-know-best, regulation-is-always-bad dogma. In retrospect, however, this was naïve: voters tend to react with their guts, not in response to analytical arguments — and in bad times, the gut reaction of many voters is to move right.

    That’s the message of a recent paper by the economists Markus Brückner and Hans Peter Grüner, who find a striking correlation between economic performance and political extremism in advanced nations: in both America and Europe, periods of low economic growth tend to be associated with a rising vote for right-wing and nationalist political parties. The rise of the Tea Party, in other words, was exactly what we should have expected in the wake of the economic crisis…

    Better late than never. The new Krugman will be even more interesting than the old one was.

    * I suspect on average, over time, the system in which we are embedded is more rational than it seems, but that’s another post. (Yes, sounds like “psychohistory”, and, yes, Krugman, like me, grew up on Asimov.)

  • Israel plays wargame assuming Iran has nuclear bomb

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    Dan Williams
    Reuters
    May 17, 2010

    A nuclear-armed Iran would blunt Israel’s military autonomy, a wargame involving former Israeli generals and diplomats has concluded, though some players predicted Tehran would also exercise restraint.

    Sunday’s event at a campus north of Tel Aviv followed other high-profile Iran simulations in Israel and the United States in recent months. But it broke new ground by assuming the existence of what both countries have pledged to prevent: an Iranian bomb.

    “Iranian deterrence proved dizzyingly effective,” Eitan Ben-Eliahu, a retired air force commander who played the Israeli defence minister, said in his summary of the 20-team meeting.

    Though the wargame saw Iran declaring itself a nuclear power in 2011, the ensuing confrontations were by proxy, in Lebanon. In one, emboldened Hezbollah guerrillas fired missiles at the Defence Ministry in Tel Aviv. That was followed by U.S. and Israeli intelligence findings that Iran had slipped radioactive materials to its Lebanese cohort, to assemble a crude device.

    Neither move drew Israeli attacks, though Ben-Eliahu said his delegation had received discreet encouragement from Arab rivals of Iran to “go all the way” in retaliating.

    Full article here

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  • Broken-Hearted? Throw a Divorce Party!

    divorce party

    (Note: the following is an excerpt from my new OPRAH article – which you can read in its entirety by clicking here!)

    The word shiva has two different meanings—in two entirely different cultures—yet the meanings share the same underlying message. In Hinduism, Shiva is a deity who represents transformation. Through destruction and restoration, Shiva reminds us that endings are beginnings, and that our world is constantly undergoing a cycle of birth, death and rebirth.

    In Judaism, shiva is the post-funeral ceremony when family and friends gather to share happy memories of the departed. Shiva is an uplifting time, reminding the living to appreciate the abundance in this world, and to seize the day (and kugel!) while you can.

    I appreciate how both versions of shiva remind us there’s a beneficial—even beautiful—alchemy of emotions that occur when you’re faced with an ending. A healthful shiva perspective can help you view what seems like the worst of times as an opportunity for better times. For example, the death of an unsatisfying love relationship can be viewed as a chance to begin a highly fulfilling love relationship—one that will thrive, thanks to all your freshly gained wisdom.

    Keeping both these shiva perspectives in mind, how about celebrating the death of a marriage or any relationship breakup by holding a ritualistic breakup ceremony!

    Click here to find out how people all around the world are presently throwing themselves divorce parties to bounce back happier than ever  – in my new OPRAH article!

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  • FinReg Vote Could Come on Wednesday

    Damian Paletta at The Wall Street Journal reports that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is “likely” to file cloture on Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) financial regulatory reform bill today. That means the Senate could vote on the bill as soon as Wednesday.

    I think this assessment is slightly rosy, though the final vote should come soon. If Reid files for cloture today, my guess is that he might not have 60 votes to end debate, as too many amendments are pending and too many senators have pet issues they want to see resolved. Additionally, if Reid files for cloture and the motion does pass, the Senate can debate the bill for only 30 hours more and no new amendments can be filed. That means no new compromise amendments on issues such as the Volcker rule, possibly meaning Reid might delay for another day or two.

    A number of major amendments remain pending and should come up for a vote today or tomorrow. Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) expect a vote on their amendment reinstating parts of the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act, a law rescinded in 1999 that barred financial firms from offering commercial and investment banking under the same roof. (If passed, Cantwell and McCain’s amendment would require banks like J.P. Morgan Chase to break up.)

    Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kans.) expects a vote on his contentious amendment barring the Consumer Financial Protection Agency from enforcing rules against auto dealers. And Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Carl Levin (D-Mich.) have an important amendment to ban proprietary trading at federally insured banks.

  • We will die rather than give in, say Red Shirts

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    CNN
    May 17, 2010

    About 5,000 protesters remained on the streets in downtown Bangkok in defiance of a government deadline to evacuate the area on another day of violent unrest in the Thai capital.

    At least 35 people have died since Thursday, including a key anti-government leader who was critically wounded by a sniper’s bullet last week.

    Maj. Gen. Khattiya Sawasdipol — a renegade general better known as Seh Daeng, which means Red Commander — died at 9:20 a.m. Monday (10:20 p.m. Sunday ET), Vachira Hospital officials told CNN.

    An airplane circling the demonstration area and a televised warning broadcast multiple times Monday ordered protesters to vacate the streets immediately.

    The announcement said those who did not leave by 3 p.m. (4 a.m. ET) would face a maximum sentence of two year’s imprisonment for violating the order. But government officials have not said what they plan to do now that the deadline has passed.

    Full article here

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  • Monetary Dictatorship

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Jacob Hornberger
    Campaign For Liberty
    May 17, 2010

    If you’re an American taxpayer, you should expect to receive a thank-you note from dole recipients in Greece fairly soon. The reason is that Barack Obama, working with his cohorts at the Federal Reserve, is using your money to bail out the Greek welfare state, thereby enabling dole recipients in Greece to continue receiving their dole.

    The problem is that for decades the Greek government has been doing what the U.S. government and many other regimes have been doing: borrowing to the hilt to fund dole payments to welfare recipients. In the hope that Euro officials would not discover how bad things were in Greece, Greek officials were falsifying their financial reports. Unlike the U.S. government which has a Federal Reserve central bank, the Greek government couldn’t simply print up the money to pay off its debts. That’s because it’s part of the Euro zone, where German officials have traditionally opposed such a policy.

    But finally, the welfare-state chickens came home to roost. The Greek government lacked the money to pay its ever-growing debts. Euro officials discovered that Greek officials had been lying about their financial condition. Fearing a default, investors were refusing to invest in Greek debt instruments.

    So, the most likely scenario would have been a default, one in which investors in Greek bonds took a “haircut” ‘ that is, in which they got paid, say, 10 percent of their debt.

    But that’s not what’s happened, thanks, in part, to the intervention of the U.S. government, which has promised to help guarantee, at least indirectly, not only the welfare-state debts of Greece but also those of Spain, Portugal, and others.

    First of all, the European central banks are now going to be purchasing Greek debt instruments, thereby getting the Greek government off the hook. That effectively means that they’re printing the money to pay off the debts. In other words, inflation of the Euro money supply, which means rising prices across the board for Europeans.

    To ease strains on the European central banks, the Federal Reserve has opened up a line of credit by which European central banks can borrow money from the United States. It’s not clear how much money is involved but it will surely be in the billions of dollars.

    Monetary Dictatorship 100210banner1

    Meanwhile, the IMF is playing a role in the one-trillion dollar European bailout, agreeing to lend billions of dollars to Greece on top of already-exiting IMF conditions. As this article from the Wall Street Journal points out, it is impossible to calculate the exact amount that American taxpayers will be on the hook for, owing to the complexities of how the IMF operates in conjunction with its member partners. But one thing is clear: U.S. taxpayers are now on the hook to help bail out European welfare states, and the bill is certain to be in the billions of dollars.

    Did you see Congress debating whether the American people should be bailing out the welfare states of Europe? Did you see congressional debates over whether to extend the infamous TARP program to that part of the world? Even German Chancellor Angela Merkel had to secure permission of the German parliament before she could commit German taxpayers to the deal.

    But you didn’t see Obama and his Federal Reserve doing that. They have made that call entirely on their own, without any congressional vote on the matter.

    When officials in the executive branch of the federal government have so rigged the system that they’re able to commit vast sums of U.S. taxpayer money, either directly in funds or indirectly in the form of loan guarantees, to subsidize foreign welfare states without going to Congress for specific permission to do so, that’s the time Americans should be questioning what type of political-economic system under which they live. After all, what other label can one put on such action than dictatorship?

    Of course, what is also so amazing about all this is that the U.S. government is doing all this donating and lending when its financial situation is no different, in principle, than that of Greece. Everybody knows that U.S. federal spending continues to soar out of control, along with federal debt, and that the Federal Reserve is now cranking up the inflation printing presses to monetize its debt. Not only does the U.S. government have the same type of welfare-state commitments that Greece does (e.g., Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, welfare, education grants, corporate subsides, bank bailouts, mortgage guarantees, etc.), it also has its vast warfare-state empire to fund, including the occupations of two foreign countries and the operation of imperial bases all over the world. Notwithstanding all that, the U.S. government is now committing our country to underwrite the welfare states of Europe.

    Thanks to Obama and his merry band of foreign-aid grantors at the Federal Reserve, American taxpayers are now bailing out European welfare recipients. The question is: When our day of reckoning arrives, who will bail out American taxpayers when the U.S. government is faced with default on its bonds?

  • Sprint launches BlackBerry Bold 9650 a week early

    BlackBerry Bold 9650

    Looks like this ‘Berry couldn’t wait to get out of the gate, as it’s live on Sprint’s website, a week earlier than the scheduled May 23rd launch.  Features include OS 5.0, RIM’s new trackpad, a slightly revamped keyboard, and Wi-Fi, all wrapped in Bold branding.  If you remember back to the good ol’ Tour days, Sprint and Verizon launched the device at the exact same time.  Looks like Sprint will be getting the initial glory this time around.

    The $199.99 (after mail-in rebate) pricing is exactly the same as the upcoming HTC EVO 4G, which (in my mind, at least) casts a bit of doubt on high sales numbers.  Then again, maybe that’s why Sprint decided to jump the gun and throw it up on the website a week early.  Anyone planning on picking up the 9650 today?

    Via Engadget


  • How Do You Poop In Space: The Movie [Space]

    Here’s an exclusive video from NASA, which reveals the darkest secret of the space program, one that involves docking and alignment: How do you poop in space? Truly fascinating, but some of the comments in the movie shrivels my testis. More »










    NASATechnologySpaceEducationSpace Shuttle Atlantis

  • Meanwhile, In a Chinese Supervillian’s Lair [Architecture]

    Not many meeting rooms are as cool as Saatchi & Saatchi‘s meeting room in their Beijing office. Not only the desk is a giant heart surrounded by Eero Saarinen tulip chairs, but the huge half dome covering it rotates: More »










    SaatchisBusiness and EconomyTravel and TourismAdvertising agencyNew Zealand

  • Forget the wolf pack – the ongoing euro crisis was caused by EMU

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
    London Telegraph
    May 17, 2010

    Jean-Claude Trichet tells us the world faced a second Lehman crash in the days and hours before EU leaders launched their €720bn (£612bn) defence fund. If the European Central Bank’s president is correct, we are in trouble. The EU-IMF package is already unravelling. What will the West do for its next trick?

    Mr Trichet was ash-white at the Brussels summit a week ago. He distributed charts of credit stress to every eurozone leader. By the time he had finished his hair-raising discourse, everybody round the table finally understood what they faced.

    “The markets had ceased to function,” he told Der Spiegel. “There is still a risk of contagion. It can happen extremely fast, sometimes within hours.”

    The spreads on Greek, Iberian, and Irish bonds have, of course, dropped since the ECB stepped in with direct purchases. But the euro rally fizzled fast, to be followed by a fresh plunge to a 18-month low of $1.24 against the dollar. European bank stocks have buckled again. Spain’s IBEX index fell 6.6pc in capitulation fever on Friday.

    Geneva professor Charles Wyplosz said EU leaders made the error of overselling up their “shock and awe” package before establishing any political mechanism to mobilise such sums. “The fund is an empty shell,” he wrote at Vox EU. “Worse still, crucial principles have been sacrificed for the sake of unconvincing announcements.”

    Full article here

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  • The MPAA Now Targets US Soldiers for Piracy

    The Oscar winning movie “The Hurt Locker” didn’t only portray the Iraq war in a dark mood and as a place where death hangs around any corner. One of the subtlest clues shows the story of a US soldier trying to rescue the life of a little boy which he befriended while buying pirated DVDs.

    That isn’t very far from the truth. Decla… (read more)

  • Chinese Partner In Controversial U.S. Wind Project In Search of Good Will

    A-Power Systems, the Chinese wind turbine supplier that is partnering with other Chinese and U.S. companies to build a 600 megawatts wind farm in West Texas, is traveling to Dallas next week for the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) annual conference.

    A-Power Systems and its project partners, which include the Shenyang Power Group and U.S. private equity firm United States Renewable Energy Group have been on the radar screen of some powerful U.S. senators, from the moment they announced plans to build their Texas wind farm, the first Chinese-backed U.S. wind project.

    Leading the charge is Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who doesn’t like that the  $1.5 billion facility, which is seeking U.S. government funding, will end up creating some 300, mostly temporary, jobs in the U.S. but more than 2,000 high-paying manufacturing jobs in China. His stance has put him on a collision course with the Obama administration, including Matt Rogers’s the DOE’s man in charge of disbursing the billion in stimulus money, who earlier this year told G.E.R. that Schumer’s concerns were a “none-issue.”

    The Obama administration is walking a fine line. It’s a taker for any green dollars that will help make the “green economy” a reality, but at the same time wants as much of that “new, new economy” to stay in the U.S.-made and not be outsourced to China or India.

    On attending the AWEA conference A-Power Systems said: “The windpower Conference Program offers a platform to discuss perspectives, methods and strategies for maintaining and increasing profitability of wind energy businesses.”   A-Power is looking for backers and the AWEA conference is the place for them to forge alliances that could be helpful crucial as it moves ahead and develops the project.

    Besides cheap, Chinese-made turbines, another advantage for A-Power, are its relationships with Chinese banks, which these days, unlike their Western counterparts are flush with cash and eager to lend.

    On Schumer’s concern A-Power and its U.S. partners have said that a minimum of 70 percent of each turbine powering the project would be U.S.-made.

    Image: Istockphoto

  • You can now watch UFC on your Roku box

    UFC President Dana White believes the Internet is the future of television, so this Roku deal makes all kinds of sense. Beginning with next week’s pay-per-view, UFC 114, Roku owners will be able to stream live UFC events right to their TV. It’s in HD, too. Nothing but the best for you guys!

    In addition to being able to stream pay-per-view events, Roku owners will also be given access to the UFC Vault, an on-demand network where you can find more fights than you’d probably ever want to see.

    As stated, the deal goes into effect starting with UFC 114, the May 29 pay-per-view event headlined by Rampage Jackson v. Rashad Evans. You’ll recall that these two guys were the trainers on The Ultimate Fighter 10 last fall. They don’t like each other, if we’re to believe the Spike TV specials that have been airing.

    “What’s Roku?” I’m glad you asked. It’s a tiny box, a little smaller than your average cable box, that you plug into your network to stream video content over the Internet. Prices start at $79. There’s no PC required, so don’t worry about having to dive into your Registry just to be able to turn the damn thing on. You’ll need a broadband connection, of course, and the company recommends 3.0 mbps (or higher) downstream to stream video effectively. In addition to UFC, you can use Roku to stream Netflix, Amazon Videos on Demand, and MLB.TV.

    Not bad, no.


  • Brabus T65 RS: Versão ainda mais potente da Mercedes SL 65 AMG Black

    Brabus T65 RS

    O que você acha de um esportivo que conta com uma potência original de 661 cavalos, capaz de fazer de 0 a 100 km/h em 3,6 segundos? Com certeza a maioria dos seres humanos se espantariam com tal potência. Contudo, não podemos falar o mesmo da Brabus, que preparou uma versão mais apimentada do Mercedes SL 65 AMG Black, o veiculo mais potente produzido em serie pela Mercedes-Benz.

    Chamado de T65 RS, o superesportivo cupê possui uma potencia de 788 cavalos disponíveis a 5.500 rpm e um descomunal torque de 144,8 kgfm a 2.100 rpm, que foi reduzido eletronicamente para 112,2 kgfm, para que o mesmo não “destruísse” componentes do carro, devido a sua força fora do comum. Com isso, o T65 RS pode fazer de 0 a 200 km/h em 9,8 segundos e atingir a velocidade máxima de 330 km/h, limitada eletronicamente.

    O acréscimo de sua potencia veio através de um sistema de sobrealimentação no motor, composto de duas turbinas de alto desempenho, escapamento totalmente redimensionado e confeccionado pela Brabus, sistema de refrigeração com quatro intercoolers e uma reprogramação em seu sistema de injeção eletrônica. Além disso, de acordo com a Brabus, o superesportivo T65 RS esta de acordo com as ultimas exigência dos limites de emissão de poluentes Euro IV.

    Por fora, o Mercedes-Benz anabolizado recebeu algumas modificações como um novo capô e sua pintura personalizada em preto fosco, mostrando sua personalidade “bad boy”. Enquanto isso, seu interior tambvem oferece mais requinte com novo acabamento em couro Alcântara em seus bancos e revestimentos, costurados em linha vermelha, além de um painel de instrumento exclusivo.

    Brabus T65 RS
    Brabus T65 RSBrabus T65 RSBrabus T65 RSBrabus T65 RS

    Brabus T65 RSBrabus T65 RSBrabus T65 RSBrabus T65 RS

    Fonte: PistonHeads


  • NY Area Manufacturing Falls in May, But Remains Strong

    Anyone who hoped manufacturing would be the key to the jobs recovery won’t be pleased with today’s news. The New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State Index of manufacturing for May was 19.1. That’s a significant decline in activity from April, when it stood at 31.9. But this isn’t as bad as it looks: any measure above zero means additional gains in manufacturing for the New York area. Still, that’s a pretty steep drop.

    First, here’s a chart from the Fed showing the index since 2003:

    empire state 2010-05.gif

    Even though this index only measures manufacturing in one region it’s generally believed to serve as an early indicator for broader U.S. manufacturing. As you can see, during the recession the manufacturing industry got battered. But it also recovered far more steeply than it fell. It has remained above zero for 10 consecutive months.

    There’s no doubt that more manufacturing is helping the labor market. The report’s index for employees rose for the fifth straight month, to the highest mark since 2004. But May’s big drop comes as a disappointment. Economists expected it to barely fall, to 30.

    At this point, the index is not that far from its average since 2001 of 10.6. As it nears that mark, job growth in manufacturing will slow to normal levels, instead of the steep job growth that could help make a more significant dent in unemployment, which remains near 10%. If the index’s downward trend continues, then manufacturing isn’t likely the answer to the labor market problems.





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  • Shia LaBeouf Disses “Indiana Jones 4″

    Did you walk away from the last Indiana Jones feature feeling a bit underwhelmed? You’re not alone — the movie also gets a big fat thumbs down from Indy 4 star Shia LaBeouf. And you’ll never guess who the chatty curly-topped star is calling out for directing the disappointing stinker — legendary lensman Steven Spielberg!

    “I feel like I dropped the ball on the legacy that people loved and cherished… You can blame it on the writer and you can blame it on Steven (Spielberg). But the actor’s job is to make it come alive and make it work, and I couldn’t do it,” he explains.

    The former Disney star joined the cast as Indy’s adult son when Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Harrison Ford brought the beloved adventurer back to the big screen for a fourth installment in 2008’s Indiana Jones and The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Released 19 years after the last movie hit cinemas in 1989, the box office hit was a blockbuster across the globe, but still failed to measure up to the expectations of critics and fans.

    Shia was disappointed too, the star tells The Los Angeles Times. LaBeouf says his high opinion of the film turned to mush the moment he saw the finished product — and he believes everyone involved with the feature, namely director Steven Spielberg, should apologize for botching the effort.

    “I think the audience is pretty intelligent. I think they know when you’ve made (a bad film)… And I think if you don’t acknowledge it, then why do they trust you the next time you’re promoting a movie…..”

    LaBeouf claims Indy 4 was a dreadful piece of movie that even Harrison Ford hated.

    “We (Ford and LaBeouf) had major discussions. He wasn’t happy with it either. Look, the movie could have been updated. There was a reason it wasn’t universally accepted,” Shia says matter-of factly.

    And the Transformers actor has no qualms about spilling the tea on the feature, although his candid comments could land him in hot water with Hollywood heavyweight Spielberg.

    “I’ll probably get a call. But he needs to hear this. I love him. I love Steven. I have a relationship with Steven that supersedes our business work. And believe me, I talk to him often enough to know that I’m not out of line. And I would never disrespect the man. I think he’s a genius, and he’s given me my whole life. He’s done so much great work that there’s no need for him to feel vulnerable about one film. But when you drop the ball you drop the ball.”


  • Jerome Ringo: BP disaster demands national shift – “It will be even more tragic if we … refuse to adopt new energy policies that will increase public health and safety while creating a new generation of clean energy jobs.”

    Guest blogger Jerome Ringo has worked as chairman of the National Wildlife Federation and President of the Apollo Alliance. Prior to that he spent 22 years in the petrochemical industry.  This is a repost.

    As someone who worked for more than 20 years in Louisiana’s oil fields and petrochemical industry, I am sad to say I was not surprised by the catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

    During my youth, I saw bayous contaminated by toxic chemicals that destroyed the fish and other wildlife that should have been living there.

    As an adult, I saw the health of my fellow workers and community members jeopardized by polluted air and water.

    Now, as more than 200,000 gallons of crude oil pour into the Gulf of Mexico each day, I see the jobs that will be lost, the families and communities that will suffer and the impending devastation of our $2 billion seafood industry.

    Think about the fishermen, the truck drivers, the restaurant owners and so many others who depend on this industry. Think also about the fish, birds, sea turtles and other marine life whose ecosystem has just been turned on its head.

    There is a better way: clean energy.

    While many countries have already embraced clean energy and adopted national policies to increase energy efficiency and the use of renewables, the United States continues to suffer from a reactive, outdated energy strategy. It’s been nearly a year since the U.S. House of Representatives passed its energy and climate bill (the American Clean Energy and Security Act), but the Senate has yet to begin serious debate on its own legislation.

    Our policymakers are fiddling while Rome burns – or rather, while oil rigs burn and pollute our oceans and coasts.

    Not only is America’s refusal to embrace clean energy endangering human health and wildlife, it is also costing us jobs, which are precious commodities in this time of economic hardship. Several energy companies, including GE and BP Solar, recently announced plans to invest millions of dollars to develop and expand clean energy facilities – not in the United States, where such investments and the jobs they bring are desperately needed – but in Europe and China. We need incentives for green energy jobs here at home.

    Now is the time for the Senate to act. With photos of the oil spill on the front pages of newspapers across the country, Americans are starting to grasp the dangers of our country’s dependence on oil and other dirty sources of energy, and this awareness is being transformed into support for a new energy direction for our country.

    What is happening in the Gulf of Mexico is a tragedy, plain and simple. But it will be even more tragic if we fail to learn from the oil spill and if we refuse to adopt new energy policies that will increase public health and safety while creating a new generation of clean energy jobs.

    Let’s not wait for the death of another oil worker or the image of one more oil-drenched bird or the announcement of one more business shutting its doors before we commit to making the United States a clean energy leader.

    Jerome Ringo, former president and current board member of the Apollo Alliance, is senior executive for global strategies for Green Port, a private company that focuses on establishing sustainable green ports around the world. He wrote this for Progressive Media Project.