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  • TV Premieres, Finales & Specials This Week 04/18/2010

    Each week GeekTonic covers the TV scene with a complete listing of premieres, finales and specials for the week.  This week brings us a few more premieres & returns as well as a few finales.

    Dhani Tackles the Globe

       Dhani Tackles the Globe returns to Travel Channel Monday

    NOTE: All Times are Listed for EST

    Sunday, April 18

    The Emeril Lagasse Show (8pm on ION) – New Series Premiere

    The 45th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards (8pm on CBS – Available in HD) – Reba McEntire hosts the Country Music Awards

    On the Case with Paula Zahn (10pm on Investigation Discovery) – Season 2 premiere

     

     

    Monday, April 19

    The Newlywed Game (6pm on GSN) – season 3 premiere

    Baggage (6:30pm on GSN) – New series

    Romantically Challenged (9:30pm on ABC – Available in HD) – New sitcom for ABC with Alyssa Milano.  The show starts like this:  An aspiring writer is torn between his new girlfriend and his high maintenance best friend.

    Dhani Tackles the Globe (11pm on Travel – Available in HD) – Season 2 premiere of the Travel Channel series hosted by NFL linebacker Dhani Jones of the Cincinnati Bengals.  The series follows Jones around the globe as he learns how to play international sports and simultaneously explores the culture of each location.

     

    Tuesday, April 20

    The Lazy Environmentalist (8pm on Sundance – Available in HD) – Season 2 premiere

    Ancient Aliens (8pm on History – Available in HD) – A special that goes in search of proof that aliens where here on Earth in the past.

    Cities on Speed (8:30pm on Sundance – Available in HD) – New series

    Deadliest Warrior (10pm on Spike) – Season 2 premiere

     

    Wednesday, April 21

    Accidentally on Purpose (8:30pm on CBS – Available in HD) – Season 1 finale

    The Locator (10pm on WEtv) – Season 4 finale

     

    Thursday, April 22

    Project Runway (10pm on Lifetime) – Season 7 finale

    Models of the Runway (11pm on Lifetime) – Season 2 finale

     

    Friday, April 23

    Say Yes to the Dress (9pm on TLC – Available in HD) – Season 5 premiere

    Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution (9pm on ABC – Available in HD) – Season 1 finale

    Party Down (10pm on Starz – Available in HD) – Season 2 premiere

    Gravity (10:30pm on Starz – Available in HD) – New series on Stars that attempts to find comedy in dying.  The series follows members of a support group for those who have attempted suicide.

    Saturday, April 24

    You Don’t Know Jack (9pm on HBO – Available in HD) – A made-for-TV movie with Al Pacino portraying assisted-suicide advocate, Dr. Jack Kevorkian.

    Spice and Easy (9:30am on Food) – New series

    The Wanda Sykes Show (11pm on Fox – Available in HD) – Season 1 finale

    If you follow GeekTonic for the TV Premieres and news, you’ll want to click here if you would like to get a regular e-mail for GeekTonic TV Premieres & News


  • The Vatican’s (and the Pope’s) Immunity from Legal Action in the UK

    by Julian Ku

    Dapo Akande over at EJIL Talk! has a pretty persuasive argument in favor of the Vatican’s status as a state under international law, and therefore, the Pope’s right to head of state immunity.  Moreover, in the UK, the courts (like in the US) are bound to accept the determination of the foreign ministry as to individuals entitled to head of state immunity.  So maybe the lawyers in the UK threatening legal action are just blowing smoke. It certainly sounds like they will be blown right out of court.

  • How to Check Your Tax Refund Online

    Despite how antiquated some of our tax laws seem to be, the IRS itself has truly embraced the internet and provided a great tool for you to check the status of your refund. You can use this tool to track your return 72 hours after you’ve e-filed (which is a good reason to e-file!) or three to four weeks if you filed a paper return. Unfortunately, if you amended your return, you will not be able to use this system.

    It’s very easy to check the status of your tax refund online, collect these three pieces of information:

    • Your social security number (if filed jointly, either social security number will work)
    • Your filing status
    • Your refund amount, to the whole dollar amount

    Then, visit this Refund Status page (Spanish version), enter your information, and you will be provided the status of your refund.

    Even if you don’t care when your refund will arrive, check anyway because this is one of the few times you will be able to get an answer from a government agency in under 5 hours of waiting.

    Jim writes about personal finance at Bargaineering.com.

  • The first book review of “Straight Up” – Solar Today: “Climate Progress blogger says: Deploy without delay”

    Buried on page 95, midway through his chapter titled “The Clean Energy Solution,” Joe Romm summarizes the only workable strategy for saving the planet from catastrophic climate change. That strategy focuses on rapid commercialization of existing renewable energy technologies. Our plan, he says, must be “Deployment, deployment, deployment, R&D, deployment, deployment, deployment.”

    That’s a powerful message for wind, solar and geothermal businesses to run with.

    Seth Masia, Deputy Editor of Solar Today, has a review of my new book Straight Up (click here to buy).

    There’ll be a lot of reviews in the next couple of weeks, and I won’t print them all.  But since the book cuts through the crap on a broad set of subjects, I’m most interested in the different takeaways people have.  Here’s more from Masia:

    Straight Up is a collection of short articles from Romm’s blog ClimateProgress.org. If you read that blog, you’re probably a passionate fan. If you don’t, you should know that Romm, an MIT Ph.D. in physics, ran a number of renewable energy programs at the Department of Energy from 1993 to 1998. Since then, he has consulted with a number of major corporations on energy issues, written several books and joined the Center for American Progress as a senior fellow. He has consistently beaten the drum for fast commercialization of concentrating solar power (CSP), wind, photovoltaics (PV) and geothermal energy sources. These are mature, scalable technologies that must overcome policy barriers, not technical hurdles.

    Straight Up, however, is not mainly a book advocating policy and tax code changes. It’s a collection of spirited and readable critiques of the delaying forces — the corporations and institutions who want to see no changes in national policies and tax codes that now work to make them rich. In particular, Romm eviscerates the American news establishment for ignoring climate catastrophe issues, even while journalists around the world have made climate the story of the century….

    Romm notes that a favorite delaying tactic is to call for research breakthroughs before carbon-neutral energy sources can be competitive. He summarizes critical data proving that mature and scalable renewable sources are at grid parity now and can be profitably commercialized wherever utilities have incentive to use them.

    Straight Up probably won’t convert true believers in a fossil fuel future, but it may stiffen the spines of some renewable energy advocates. It’s full of solid fact-based arguments, properly referenced within the text (no footnotes!), along with a lot of low-carbon fire and brimstone.

    The book’s release date is April 19, in time for Earth Day, but it can be ordered at Amazon.com now at a pre-publication price of $19.75.

    This is my first book without an extensive set of notes.  The point of notes is to allow readers to go to original sources to check the accuracy of what is written (or to follow up on a subject of interest).  It seemed like a waste of paper in an age when people can use Google to look up a fact or quote and when I have active links in all the original blog posts on which the book is based.  It seemed redundant to reprint the references in the book in a less useful form.

    So I decided to put the references either in the text or refer people to posts here.  I will try to do a post in the coming week with links to some of the key references to the book.

    Related Post:

  • Next-gen Hyundai Accent caught totally undisguised

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 Hyundai Accent spy shots – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Looks like we were spot on in our assessment of what we happened to catch out testing near Disneyland in California. As we suspected, the car in question is the next-generation Hyundai Accent, a fact you can clearly discern by comparing our spy shots and an earlier Korean “naked” shot with the two images in our gallery below from auto.ifeng.com.

    As you can see, the next-gen Accent takes on a mini-Sonata look, with a heavily-rounded, arcing greenhouse, a prominent chrome-topped grille, and deeply-sculpted sheetmetal everywhere in between. Note also the absolutely massive headlights situated above squared-off fog lamps.

    Still second-guessing what you may be gazing at? Take a closer look at the decklid. From what we can tell, the badge on the right reads Verna – that’s the Accent’s moniker in some foreign markets (including South Korea). See for yourself in our image gallery below. Thanks for the tip, Rudy!

    [Source: auto.ifeng.com via GenCoupe Forums]

    Next-gen Hyundai Accent caught totally undisguised originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 17 Apr 2010 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Curse You Europe! 2011 Alfa Romeo Giulietta

    No, we can’t have it in the U.S. Unless the Large Hadron Collider opens a rift into a parallel universe where Alfa Romeo never left the States. Anyway, we can dream and gaze upon it, mouthes agape, minds frazzled by its pure beauty. Lucky bastard Europeans will get to chose among four engines—two 1.4-liter turbo fours with 120 or 170 horsepower and two turbo-diesel mills with 105 or 170 hp. Alfa will later unleash a cloverleaf-badged monster with a direct-injection 1.8 liter turbo four that puts out 235 hp. Right now a six-speed manual is available with all engine choices and a dual-clutch transmission is on the way. Sigh. Hit the jump for more teasing.


  • Google Spends a Bundle on Ads — But Why?

    Three years ago, a survey found Google to be the world’s best-known brand, topping Microsoft, GE and others. It was an impressive achievement not just because Google wasn’t even a decade old but because it did so little advertising. So why has Google been spending nearly $2 billion over the past year to strengthen its brand?

    Google, the company that has redefined advertising in the 21st century, is itself becoming a major advertiser in traditional media. Remember the “Parisian Love” ad that ran during the Super Bowl (a $3 million piece of TV real estate)? Or how Eric Schmidt, in tweeting about the ad spot, joked that “hell has frozen over”? Then there was the Chrome ad on the NYTimes.com, as well as other print ads in magazines and newspapers around the world.

    But when hell freezes over, you have to wonder why. Yes, Google launched new products like the Nexus One (to disappointing sales); and yes, its brand takes a hit with every perceived violation of its don’t-be-evil ethic. It also wants to let people know about new twists on search ads like remarketing. But does a company with a two-thirds share of the search market really need to beef up its marketing budget?

    Google’s marketing costs have long been around 8 percent of its revenue. Last year, sales and marketing (excluding stock-based compensation) totaled $1.8 billion. Yet in the first quarter of this year, it spent another $553 million, a 47 percent increase over the same period a year ago. Granted, the beginning of 2009 was a bad time to be spending on anything, but that 47 percent rise is more than twice Google’s revenue growth rate.

    The question of why Google is buying so many ads was on the minds of analysts during the company’s earnings call this week. When a Bank of America analyst asked about it, a Google executive responded that it was driven by return on investment. Which is a silly answer: All advertising is directed at a return on investment. That’s like saying you’re going into business to make a profit.

    What’s more, marketing an ad-driven company has an absurd Ponzi scheme logic to it, a kind of media usury where ad revenue is spun out of ad revenue. Just stop and think about Schmidt’s Super Bowl ad tweet: Here was the CEO of an online ad giant advertising a TV advertisement. If it gets any more meta than that, our heads could explode.

    But, as another analyst pointed out on the call, Google is facing long-term threats from social sites like Facebook, where major advertisers like eBay are spending more of their own ad budgets. Jeff Huber, a SVP of engineering, responded by saying that online advertising is growing so fast it’s not a zero-sum game. That’s true for now, but it won’t be for long. Google, of course, has had a number of failed initiatives in social media. And mobile search is not only a clear priority for Google, it’s a fledgling market up for grabs, perhaps by Google’s newest rival in web advertising, Apple.

    Google’s sudden interest in buying expensive ads in visible advertising spots may suggest that the company is bracing for a period when its core market matures and growth slows. Coded into those rising marketing numbers is a slight but growing concern about what life will be like in middle age.

    Still, at the end of the day, I doubt there can be much return on investment for Google to advertise its search engine and its ad model. Does anyone with web access need to know what Google is, or what it does? If so, I suggest they Google “Google.” Ow — once again, my head hurts.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Why the FTC Should Approve the Google-AdMob Deal

  • How To: Access Your Entire Computer From an iPad [How To]

    I don’t buy into the iPad as a laptop replacement—not quite. But it is fantastic at tapping into your computers to access video and audio, documents, and even your full desktop, remotely. Here’s how. More »







  • Larry King Divorce Off? King & Southwick Agree To Marriage Counseling

    Larry King and his estranged wife Shawn Southwick are considering calling off their pending divorce.

    According to reports, the 76-year-old newsman and the former country singer have also agreed to undergo counseling and therapy in order to address the issues plaguing their 13 year marriage in a bid to save it. On Wednesday, both parties filed for divorce or the grounds of irreconcilable differences after Shawn — King’s seventh wife — accused Larry and having an affair with her sister, Shannon Engemann.

    The couple appeared to have patched up its differences on Thursday when the stars attended their son’s baseball game in Beverly Hills together, hugging and chatting throughout the game. The couple has two sons together, 11-year-old Chance and nine-year-old Cannon. In his divorce petition, Larry is seeking joint custody of the kids, while Shawn is asking for primary physical custody of the children, as well as spousal and child support.

    The pair do not have a prenup, which would entitled Southwick to half off all income amassed by King during their union.


  • Could The Charges Against Goldman Sachs Have A Volcanic Impact On The Energy Market?

    Oil prices plunged on Friday after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged Goldman Sachs with fraud in its marketing of certain subprime mortgage securities, amid a general sell-off in financial and commodity markets.

     The allegations against one of the biggest market makers in virtually every markets dampened speculation heading into the weekend. Much like the volcanic eruption in Iceland spewed a cloud of dust over northern Europe that grounded all air travel, the SEC charge cast a pall over financial markets.

     The May contract for West Texas Intermediate, which expires next week, settled down $2.27 or 2.7% at $83.24 after briefly dipping below $83 in the wake of the SEC announcement. The benchmark contract settled at $84.92 a week earlier.

     Goldman Sachs had no immediate comment. Prices had been drifting lower in equities and other markets prior to the announcement, but fell sharply afterwards, led by a plunge of more than 10% in Goldman shares.

    Some analysts speculated that prices could rebound on Monday once the dust has settled, but market participants remained uncertain about the long-term impact of the SEC charge on Goldman’s business and on that of other major banks.

     In the past, Goldman has rejected charges of misleading investors when it sold securities that it subsequently shorted in its own trading, asserting that that is the role of a market maker. Goldman is one of the biggest participants in the energy futures markets.

     Oil prices started the week soft, but firmed up after Wednesday’s inventory report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, which showed a small decline in crude inventories after 10 successive weeks of increases.

    An unexpected decline in April consumer sentiment reported on Friday, however, led to new doubts about the strength of the economic recovery and depressed prices. The market had been expecting a reading of 75 after 73.6 in the previous month, but instead the index came in at 69.5.

     The inventory report on Wednesday pushed oil prices up 2.1%, to $85.84. But the monthly outlook from OPEC released the same day actually revised its forecast for 2010 demand for OPEC oil downward by 135,000 barrels a day from the previous month, to 28.8 million barrels a day. The group’s expectation for the overall growth in oil consumption also trails that of other analysts.

    By. Darrell Delamaide for Oilprice.com who offer detailed analysis on Crude oil, Geopolitics, Gold and most other Commodities. They also provide free political and economic intelligence to help investors gain a greater understanding of world events and the impact they have on certain regions and sectors. Visit: http://www.oilprice.com

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Rumor: Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 to add Multi-Touch, 2.1

    Docomo Xperia

    Don’t start holding your breath just yet but it seems like the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 might get a much-needed boost later this year.  Two of the biggest gripes about the handset, Android 1.6 and lack of multi-touch, could be addressed by updates in the second half of 2010.  These two enhancements could put the phone back on a more level ground with the likes of the Nexus One.

    They’ll have to act fast though; The super phone race is on with the recently announced HTC Incredible, HTC EVO 4G, and Samsung Galaxy S slated to arrive within a matter of months.  If Sony Ericsson doesn’t do something fast, they’ll be lost in the dust.

    Might We Suggest…


  • Motorola Devour slated for maintenance update next week

    Verizon Motorola Devour update

    Word on the street is that Verizon’s Motorola Devour is in line for a maintenance upgrade on Monday. No, it’s not Android 2.1 or anything as sexy as that (the 2.1 update is still "under evaluation"). But here’s what you are getting:

    • Improved response time when menu, home and back keys are pressed.
    • Adjustments to improve the accuracy of signal strength indicators on the display.
    • Stability improvements made to browser, contacts and VCAST Music apps.
    • Improved incoming call performance.
    • Volume keys now work when you’re in the mobile IM app.
    • Fix for picture orientation on upload.
    • Fix to make it easier to delete POP3 e-mail accounts.
    • Changed display on the e-mail account setup.
    • Change to Exchange calendar agenda view to show meeting titles
    • Verizon.net e-mail accounts now auto-configure.
    • Improvements to ringer, voice dialing and multimedia audio when using a headset.
    • Update Google apps.

    So, look for the update — version CALAND_X_01.15.08P, if you’re keeping track — next week. And be sure to let us know if it makes your life any easier. Thanks, anon!

  • 5 Questions for the Woman Who Tracks Our DNA Footprints

    On the eve of revolution in 1978, Pardis Sabeti’s (video interviews here) family fled Iran for the United States. Sabeti has embraced change ever since. A crucial pivot came when, en route to medical school, she instead took a Rhodes Scholarship, studying evolutionary genetics (and learning to relax by playing guitar). “I thought I was just passing time on the way to my real life,” she says. But today she blends her interests in health and evolution, tracking mutations in pathogens and their human hosts.

    Your career started with a stumble, didn’t it?

    I flunked my qualifying exam in the early phase of my Ph.D. The professors said I had no business in science. But I embrace failure. It sharpens your focus…

  • Why China’s “Document Number 10” Will Cause A Brutal Monday In Stocks And Real Estate

    Shanghai(This guest post previously appeared at the author’s blog)

    Phoenix News is reporting that China’s State Council has issued a new circular outlining new policies and regulations designed to cool off the property markets (State Council Document Number 10).

    Of all the rules discussed in the “Document Number 10″, the one that may have the biggest short-term impact is that non-residents of a city can no longer obtain mortgages to buy property in that city unless they can prove that they have paid taxes in that city for at least one year. At a minimum this may slow down the Wenzhou buying cliques, though to really stop them the government would need to crack down hard on the underground banking system.

    This is very smart, and likely more effective than a property tax. We may still see a property tax at some point, but I am skeptical such a tax will get past the “research” stage anytime soon. There are too many complications around a property tax, including but not limited to the complexities of the technical implementation; asset disclosures that would be required of all the officials who own property that they could never afford on their salaries; objections from powerful interest groups, and resistance from already burdened middle class homeowners.

    “Document Number 10″ also outlines measures to increase the housing supply and build more affordable housing, all things you would expect from a Socialist government. As I wrote yesterday about Wen Jiabao’s essay reminiscing about Hu Yaobang: “Harkening back to Hu Yaobang may be a signal that more substantive and muscular policies are coming that will lead China to act a bit more like a Socialist country.” Perhaps they are all related.

    I have reprinted below a comment I made last December (before I started this blog) to China Goes Wrong Way on Property Taxes. I questioned the efficacy of a possible property tax and suggested other policies to rein in housing. At least two–limits on foreign buying and SOE participation in the real estate market–have been enacted. The full comment:

    I think that a property tax would certainly not encourage more real estate speculation, and would have some (at least to “socialists”) appealing potential wealth redistribution effects, but I don’t think an annual property tax would have a material impact on the growing real estate bubble here, for the following reasons:

    1. Owners in China already pay property management fees on those vacant properties, at an annual rate of somewhere between 0.1 and 0.5% what they paid. So they are already bearing annual, cash carrying costs for these vacant properties, and an additional 0.5-1.0% in property tax (the numbers I have heard bandied about but I am not sure anyone knows what the likely number really might be) is unlikely to be meaningful to many of the owners;

    2. My assumption is that most of the places that are vacant, with no real attempts to rent them, were either purchased in cash and/or the owner is rich enough that they can handle an incremental 25-75k rmb a year in property taxes, on top of the property management fees they are already paying. It would be helpful if you have any data on the composition of ownership, from net worth to mortgage size to percentage that paid in cash; I have not been able to find that data, but based on my personal experiences in Beijing a property tax for most of the owners of these vacant properties would be a nuisance but not much more;

    3. The Chinese I know in Beijing and Shanghai with multiple properties bought them either because they had too much cash and no good place to invest it other than real estate, they assume that even if prices are high now in 10 years in world class cities like Beijing and Shanghai they will be even higher, and/or they are buying as an inflation hedge. I think Chinese people culturally have been conditioned to see real estate as an inflation hedge and a savings vehicle, much more so than in the US (our houses were seen as consumption vehicles for the most part);

    4. I think that reintroducing limits on buying by foreigners, especially Hong Kongers, could have a meaningful impact on at least the high end of the market. There has been a Hong Kong buying frenzy in Beijing (and I assume Shanghai) fueled by cheap and easy money in Hong Kong (thanks to the peg and the Fed) and real concern about a dollar collapse and inflation, coupled with the fact that Beijing and Shanghai still look pretty cheap compared to Hong Kong. One anecdote, the Beijing Four Seasons residences (soon to open next to the Lufthansa Center) were only sold in Hong Kong. Day 1 they were priced at 70,000 RMB/sq m; demand was so high that in a matter of days the price was raised to 100k, and they are now all sold out. They were never marketed in China, other than to insiders (friends of the developer could buy for 35,000 RMB sq m in May). Curbing this kind of speculation from overseas, much of trying to play a long RMB/ short USD (you can get very cheap USD mortgages in HK and through Bank of East Asia in Beijing) as well as hedging against inflation and playing the long term geopolitical and urbanization trends, would probably much more popular than a property tax, and for good reason. So long as the currency is not convertible, there is an argument to be made that if you are not a PRC citizen and you want to buy a property in the PRC you should have to live in it;

    5. Whatever effect a property tax might have on speculation, I think it would be at the margins at best and would not address the core, structural factors that have been driving price appreciation. In this interview posted today on 21st Century Herald with economist Lang Xianping he points out that the real causes of the growing real estate are extremely loose monetary policy/excess liquidity, overcapacity and structural problems that lead to misallocation of capital with massive corporate/SOE participation in real estate and equity markets using borrowed money [how many of these vacant apartments may actually be owned by companies? How many SOEs are bidding on urban with basically free government money?]

    6. I have had several Beijing friends who have started buying the US. They don’t see the property tax as a reason not to buy, they just see it as one of the costs associated with the transaction and factor for it accordingly.

    And of course, The US has had property taxes for years and they did nothing to prevent one of the greatest housing bubbles in history.

    Regardless, expect Monday to be a brutal day for real estate-related stocks in the Chinese and Hong Kong Stock markets.

    Please tell me what you think in the comments.

    Read more Chinese economic comment at Sinocism.com >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Fiat 500C by Diesel

    090622_f_500c_063.jpg
    Los italianos son únicos en diseño para hacer cosas bonitas, eso es innegable. Cuando era niño se decía que los Alfa Romeo eran latosos, que se averiaban con facilidad y que Fiat no era una marca tan de fiar. Hoy esos problemas han pasado a la historia, pero los diseños bonitos y exclusivos de las marcas italianas siguen evolucionando.

    Ahora Fiat presenta su modelo 500C en colaboración con Diesel, la prestigiosa marca de ropa y estilo de vida. Este descapotable pequeño y manejable estará disponible desde la nada despreciable cantidad de 18.000 €, y ya se han vendido más de 6.500 unidades en todo el mundo. Incluimos una galería fotográfica extensa.

    Se distingue por diversas modificaciones estéticas hechas al exterior, como las llantas de 16″, calipers amarillos, toma de aire de imitación o una línea cromada exterior. Diesel se deja notar más en el interior, con unos asientos y un tapizado con tela tipo denim y otras modificaciones, estando disponible en diversos colores.

    Tendrá 2 motores gasolina, un 1.2 de 69 caballos y un 1.4 de 100, acompañados de un 1.3 de 75 caballos diésel y un 1.3 de 95 caballos Multijet II, que con un sistema Start&Stop le permite emitir sólo 104 g/km. Habrá caja de cambios de 5 o 6 velocidades y tres colores distintos: verde con techo negro, negro con techo negro o rojo o el original Índigo de media noche con techo color marfil.

    Fuente | FIAT



  • California Unemployment Hasn’t Peaked Yet

    arnold schwarzenegger knife

    Despite the fact that California’s economy created net new jobs In March, the unemployment rate continued to rise. That’s because those who had completely lost hope and dropped out of the unemployment figures (they weren’t actively looking for work), are now coming back to sniff around for jobs.

    L.A. Times:

    Despite hints of an economic turnaround, some of the 2.3 million unemployed in the state found March the toughest month yet. That’s because tens of thousands have been out of work so long that their unemployment checks will be cut off within the next few weeks. They’re not helped by the $18-billion measure signed Thursday by President Obama that extends jobless benefits for many Americans through June 2.

    The Employment Development Department estimates that about 100,000 Californians will have exhausted their benefits by this weekend.

    “Jobs have not been quickly multiplying, so there’s a lot of people who are still in need of assistance,” said Loree Levy, a spokeswoman with the Employment Development Department.

    California payrolls increased by 4,200 nonfarm jobs in March, primarily in the sectors of manufacturing, educational and health services, and leisure and hospitality. Still, the unemployment rate rose as many who had been discouraged by the job hunt resumed their search.

    This is why if we talk about unemployment in the strict sense of the government figures (which are perversely affected by people either giving up their job search or starting to look around), unemployment will take a long time to come down. Not only must news jobs created for those still looking for work, but new jobs must also be created for all the people who dropped out of the labor force entirely yet would come back if they saw hope again.

    Now don’t miss: 20 cities that have missed the recession >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Arkansas judge strikes down gay adoption ban

    [JURIST] An Arkansas judge ruled Friday that a state law prohibiting all unmarried couples from adopting or fostering children violates the Arkansas Constitution. Critics claimed that the Arkansas Adoption and Foster Care Act of 2008, or Initiated Act I, was discriminatory because it prohibited all gay couples from adopting or fostering children as Arkansas does not recognize gay marriage. Judge Christopher Piazza of the Pulaski County Circuit Court agreed and said that while the the law, passed via ballot initiative, was valid under the federal Constitution, it violates the Arkansas state constitution:
    Initiated Act 1 prohibits cohabiting same-sex couples and heterosexual couples from becoming foster or adoptive parents. It does not prohibit them from becoming foster or adoptive parents if they do not cohabitate. However, the act significantly burdens non-marital relationships and acts of sexual intimacy between adults and forces them to choose between becoming a parent and having any type of meaningful intimate relationship outside of the marriage. This infringes upon the fundamental right to privacy guaranteed to all citizens of Arkansas.The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which brought the challenge against Initiated Act I, welcomed the ruling, saying it would allow more children in Arkansas to be adopted or fostered.The ballot measure was approved in November 2008 after being certified the previous August. The measure followed a 2006 Arkansas Supreme Court decision that struck down an administrative regulation specifically prohibiting homosexuals from rearing foster children. Reacting to that decision, then-governor Mike Huckabee suggested that such a ban be implemented through legislation. Arkansas, like many states, has amended its constitution to prohibit the recognition of same-sex marriages.

  • Soccer Stars Sleeping In Altitude Tents To Prep For World Cup [Athletics]

    Outside of the U.S., soccer is taken quite seriously. So seriously, it turns out, that members of England’s national team will soon sleep in oxygen-deprivation tents to prepare for their high-altitude matches at the upcoming World Cup in South Africa. More »







  • Talkin’ Palm – Edition 36

    Looks like everyone is off and running with the Bloomberg story stating that Palm is seeking bids for the company as early as this week. The news was attributed to "three people familiar with the situation."

    That set the stock on fire… relatively speaking. After busting through the $6 mark, by close of business on Tuesday, it had eased back to $5.16.

    read more

  • Up Close and Personal With Iceland’s Volcanic Eruption | Visual Science

    Eyjafjallajökull, Iceland

    This is a steam cloud that formed as the lava from the recent volcanic eruption in Iceland flows into steep canyons partly filled with deep snow and ice. Occasional explosions also occur as steam gets trapped under hardened lava, and can make things pretty hairy for anyone nearby, as the Icelandic photographer Örvar Atli Þorgeirsson found out first hand as he and friends spent 10 hours on the scene.

    Þorgeirsson: “To photograph a volcano has always been a dream. The first part of this eruption was a dream come true. The small scale of the first eruption allowed me to get very close to the crater and the lava flow. Even if it was small, being this close to it was thrilling. The heat, the loud noise, the smell, the contrast between the ice and fire was an experience I will never forget.”

    Photograph by Örvar Atli Þorgeirsson