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Jumat, 29 April 2011

The Middletons: Naughty uncle Gary cleans up his act

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Kate's younger brother James first to leave family's London hotel for Westminster Abbey



Suited and booted, Kate's wayward uncle Gary Goldsmith left his West London home for the wedding wearing a pink shirt with light-grey three-piece suit and a black top hat.
He made his way to Westminster Abbey in his £280,000 bright-blue Rolls Royce Phantom convertible.
Mr Goldsmith who who lives in a house in Spain called 'La Maison de Bang Bang' and was filmed in 2009 by an undercover reporter apparently taking cocaine and bragging about his royal connections.

Going for grey: Kate's uncle Gary Goldsmith wore a light grey three-piece suit with a pink shirt and black top hat







Going for grey: Kate's uncle Gary Goldsmith wore a light grey three-piece suit with a pink shirt and black top hat

Suited and booted: Kate's uncle Gary Goldsmith, wearing a light-grey three-piece suit with a pink shirt and black top hat, heads off for Westminster Abbey


Carole Middleton's outfit was finally revealed when she arrived at Westminster Abbey amid rumours of controversial last-minute changes

Carole Middleton's outfit was finally revealed when she arrived at Westminster Abbey amid rumours of controversial last-minute changes



Over that she wore a sky blue wool crepe coatdress with matching satin piping and passementerie - braid trimming - at the waist and cuff.
Mrs Middleton donned a hat by Berkshire-based Jane Corbett.
It was reported that Mrs Middleton ditched a specially-designed outfit by Lindka Cierach, as well as a £400 hat by milliner Jess Collett just weeks before the wedding.
Her son James, Kate's younger brother, was the first to leave the family's London hotel this morning ahead of his sister's wedding.
The 23-year-old, who runs a cake-making company, was dressed in a smart black tail coat, pinstriped trousers, an ivory waistcoat, blue-and-white shirt and maroon tie, perhaps giving a hint of what William will be wearing when he arrives at Westminster Abbey.
Mr Middleton was flanked by security as he left the Goring hotel and headed to the Abbey before the ceremony commences at 11am.
And he couldn't hide his nerves about his central role in the ceremony, as he will be delivering The Lesson to 1,900 people in the Abbey during the nuptials.
He will be reading from Romans 12: 1-2, 9-18, which says: 'Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds.
'Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good; love one another with mutual affection; outdo one another in showing honour.'
Explaining Kate and William's choice for the Bible reading, a St. James' Palace spokesman said at the time: 'It was their personal preference. It spoke to them.'
William's father the Prince of Wales his stepmother Camilla, Kate's parents Carole and Michael and her sister Pippa will all act as witnesses and sign the marriage registers during the ceremony.

Nervous? Kate Middleton's little brother James leaves his London hotel to head to Westminster Abbey
Nervous? Kate Middleton's younger brother James leaves his London hotel to head to Westminster Abbey


Smart: James wore a black suit jacket, pinstriped trousers, ivory waistcoat and maroon tie

Smart: James wore a black suit jacket, pinstriped trousers, ivory waistcoat and maroon tie

Smart: James wore a black suit jacket, pinstriped trousers, ivory waistcoat and maroon tie

The night before: London's exclusive Goring 
Hotel, where the Middleton family stayed the night before the wedding

The night before: London's exclusive Goring Hotel, where the Middleton family stayed the night before the wedding

UK police: 18 arrested around royal wedding

(Reuters) - British police arrested 18 people in London on Friday for a range of mostly minor offences as they mounted one of the biggest security operations ever seen in the capital around the royal wedding.


Around 5,000 officers were on duty to control the huge flag-waving crowds, alongside around 1,000 soldiers lining the route from Westminster Abbey to Queen Elizabeth's London residence, Buckingham Palace.







Specialist teams with sniffer dogs had patrolled the procession route searching for explosives, while helicopters buzzed overhead as part of the operation to protect Prince William and his new wife Kate Middleton.

By 1000 GMT, a Metropolitan Police spokesman said there had been 18 arrests, including one on suspicion of sexual assault, three for being drunk and three for theft.

Spectators who waited hours for a glimpse of the royal couple in their open-top, horse-drawn carriage said the mood was jubilant, despite the crowds and heavy police presence.

"Considering the number of people here, it's all very light hearted," said Becton Davis, 42, who lives in London but is originally from North Carolina. "The atmosphere's lovely."

REPUBLICAN PROTESTS

Police said they were aware of about 10 protesters in Soho Square, central London, from the "Right Royal Orgy Group" and they were monitoring them. There were also 70 demonstrators in Red Lion Square from the "Republican Tea Party" --- another anti-monarchy group -- and they too were being watched.

A handful of protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square, where crowds were watching the proceedings on a giant screen, and displayed a banner complaining about government cuts to public services and Britain's military role overseas.

"The point I am making is for a silent minority," said one of the protesters, who declined to give his name. "If people want to celebrate in the UK, do not do it at our expense."

Earlier, three people -- two men aged 45 and 68 and a woman of 60 -- were detained in southeast London on suspicion of conspiracy to cause a public nuisance and breach of the peace. They were suspected of planning to behead royal effigies.

A fourth person, described by police as "a well-known anarchist" was arrested in Cambridge, northeast of London.

Police were prepared for a wide range of possible threats, from Irish republican militants to Islamist groups, anarchists and stalkers.

The London force was criticised for its handling of student protests last year when demonstrators attacked a car carrying Prince Charles and his wife Camilla Duchess of Cornwall.

The huge operation to keep the crowds safe and to ensure that London's often unpredictable transport network runs well was seen as a test before the city hosts the Olympics next year.

"In many ways it is a good dry-run for the Olympics," said London Mayor Boris Johnson. "It is a good opportunity to test our systems." (Additional reporting by Olesya Dmitricova; writing by Peter Griffiths; editing by Keith Weir)

Queen Elizabeth gives official ‘consent’ to William, Kate marriage

BY MIRIAM DI NUNZIO

With the stroke of a pen and 43 words, Queen Elizabeth upheld her role as British sovereign and held fast to a centuries-old Windsor tradition officially granting permission for Prince William to marry his bonny Kate Middleton.









The formal “Instrument of Consent, as decreed by the Royal Marriages Act of 1772, is required for all descendants of King George II who wish to wed. (Under the same law, Prince William was also required to formally ask his grandmother’s permission to marry.) The consent document was officially signed on Feb. 9 but released to the public on April 21 (the occasion of the Queen’s 85th birthday). Without the document, the marriage would be invalid.

The “Consent” reads:

“Now Know Ye that We have consented and do by these Presents signify Our Consent to the contracting of Matrimony between our Most Dearly Beloved Grandson Prince William Arthur Philip Louis of Wales, K.G., and Our Trusty and Well-beloved Catherine Elizabeth Middleton.”

The ornate document bears the queen’s single-name signature, and is festooned with artwork that represents the lives of the bride and groom including:

— a gold cipher of their initials below the prince’s official coronet;

— a white lily representing St. Catherine of Sienna (her feast day is April 29 and Kate shares her first name);

— a Welsh leek encircled by the prince’s official “label” (a symbol/seal depicting three prongs, signifying him as second in line to the British throne;

— a red sea-shell from the Spencer family coat of arms (in honor of the late Princess Diana);

— a red dragon, the official symbol of the house of Wales; the United Kingdom’s official flower emblems: a rose, thistle and shamrock; the prince’s blue and gold Order of the Garter belt; and a large gold “E” for Elizabeth.

The couple will receive the document after the wedding ceremony.

Senin, 25 April 2011

Royal weddings like Princess Diana pre-Twitter, pre-live TV, radio were still peppered with intrigue Read more: http://www.pidie27.blogspot.com

BY LARRY MCSHANE
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Sunday, April 24th 2011, 4:00 AM



When Prince William and Kate Middleton tie the knot, they will be history in the making.

When Prince William and Kate Middleton tie the knot, they will be history in the making

Once upon a time, the fairy tale weddings of Britain's princes and princesses were celebrated without streaming video and satellite radio, live TV and Twitter.

Given the media madness surrounding Prince William's impending marriage to Kate Middleton, it's a quaint scenario that's hard to imagine.

Yet it wasn't until after World War I that the royal family's trips down the aisle became an international obsession.

Even back then, there was a certain sense of English decorum: The archbishop of Canterbury turned thumbs-down on radio coverage of Prince Albert's 1923 wedding.

The prelate was worried men would listen to the wedding in pubs — while wearing their hats.

The last royal wedding to generate this kind of attention came in 1981, with the ultimately doomed union of Prince William's parents, Diana Spencer and Prince Charles.

Diana's wedding dress of ivory taffeta and antique lace, covered in 10,000 pearls and sequins and boasting a 25-foot train, became the most copied gown in history.








Their vows were exchanged on live television, and beamed around the world — both royal wedding firsts. The global audience was pegged at a staggering 750 million.




Prince William's parents, Princess Diana and Prince Charles, wed to a global audience of 750 million. (AP)

The pair wed at the London landmark St. Paul's Cathedral, a place William and Kate opted to avoid given the marriage's disastrous history.

Instead, they chose Westminster Abbey, where several other members of the prince's family have exchanged vows. The queen's sister, Princess Margaret, walked down the aisle there in 1960.

His aunt, Princess Anne, did the same in 1973. His uncle, Prince Andrew, wed Sarah Ferguson in the abbey in 1986.

Each of those marriages ended in divorce, but there's some positive news in the family's marital past at Westminster: William's paternal grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, was married there, as was her mother.

William's private secretary, Jamie Lowell-Pinkerton, said Westminster got the nod because of "its staggering beauty, its 1,000 years of royal history and its relative intimacy despite its size."

William also has a Westminster history: His mother's September 1997 funeral was held there, with the then-15-year-old prince walking behind her casket.

Of course, royal marriages generated attention before the electronic age. Back in 1840, when Prince Albert became engaged to Queen Victoria, every church bell in London rang out.

The 1947 marriage of Queen Elizabeth II to Prince Philip was another landmark event, raising the bar for royal weddings.

Sorry Harry, the beer's orf: Prince William and Kate ban pints from Wedding reception as Palace reveals seating plan and full guest list Read more: http://www.pidie27.blogspot.com

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 6:05 PM on 23rd April 2011


The best man won't be best pleased - it has emerged that Prince William and Kate Middleton have banned beer from their Wedding reception as the final seating arrangements and guest list are announced.
It is thought that guests knocking back pints of ale was considered rather unseemly for such a regal affair attended by royals and heads of state from around the world.
Rather Prince Harry, who is often spotted enjoying rugby matches or nights on the town with a pint, will have to make do with the champagne and canapes being offered to the other 600 guests.

Teetotallers: Prince William and Kate Middleton will enjoy their wedding festivities sober

Partial to a pint: Prince Harry looks a little bleary-eyed at the World Darts Championship in Alexandra Palace earlier this year







A source told the Daily Mirror: 'Let's face it, it isn't really an appropriate drink to be serving in the Queen's presence at such an occasion.
'And while the younger royals enjoy a pint from time to time, neither Kate nor William is a big beer drinker so they decided to leave it off the menu.

'It was always their intention to give their guests a sophisticated experience and they have chosen the food and drink with this in mind.'
Neither bride nor groom will be drinking on their wedding day as they want to make the most of it.
It is well-known that Miss Middleton has never particularly enjoyed drinking - preferring to sip one small glass of wine.
However her soon to be brother-in-law Harry is known for his partying.
Just a few weeks ago he was spotted stumbling out of controversial London burlesque club The Box looking a little worse for wear.
Almost every detail of the wedding is now complete and Royal chefs have hinted at what guests will be tucking into on William and Kate's big day.
The team of caterers has prepared 15,000 canapes for when guests arrive at the Palace at 12.40pm including quail's eggs with celery salt, mini Yorkshire puddings with roast beef and mini sausage rolls.
A select 300 people will then sit down to a three-course evening meal using the best of British ingredients.
William and Kate have chosen Fiona Cairns from Leicester to create their wedding cake - a multi-tiered traditional fruit cake decorated with cream and white icing.

Precision planning: The final seating plan for the Royal Wedding

Clarence House has refused to comment on details of the reception because it is a private matter. However the public have been treated to a full list of those who will be rubbing shoulders at the reception.
Many of the 1,900 invitees are already known, such as David and Victoria Beckham, Elton John and director Guy Ritchie.
It has now emerged that soul singer Joss Stone and comedian Rowan Atkinson - a close friend of William's father Prince Charles - will be in attendance.
It was also confirmed that Bahrain's Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa will be attending - despite British concerns about the treatment of activists there.
Bahrain's royal family ordered a wide-ranging brutal crackdown against pro-democracy demonstrators that started in mid-February. At least 30 people have died, including four in custody, and many well-known activists and lawyers have been imprisoned.
About 40 other foreign royals from countries including Denmark, Norway, Spain, Thailand and Morocco will be in attendance.
Other guests include Government and defense officials, British soldiers who fought in Afghanistan and people who work for William's charities.
Palace officials said that only crowned heads of states are traditionally invited to royal weddings, and that political leaders who are not from the 54-member Commonwealth of nations, such as President Barack Obama or French President Nicolas Sarkozy, were not sent invitations.
The seating plan for the ceremony at Westminster Abbey revealed the select few who will witness the ceremony up close. About 1,000 people will sit in the section of the abbey where views of the altar are restricted.
The Queen and other senior Royals will sit in the front row across the aisle from the Middleton family. They will be closest to the abbey's sanctuary, where William and Kate will stand.
The Middletons will sit with the couple's friends and the Spencers.

Friends in high places: Prince William shares a joke with David Beckham and the Prime Minister - both of whom are attending his wedding

Friends in high places: Prince William shares a joke with David Beckham and the Prime Minister - both of whom are attending his wedding

Review: 'Treme' - 'Accentuate the Positive': Home and away

BY ALAN SEPINWALL


"Treme" is back for a new season. I offered a general review of the new season back on Wednesday, and now I have some thoughts on the season two premiere coming up just as soon as I use the word "minstrel"...

"Fourteen months and it ought to be getting better here. Fourteen months and it ought to be getting easier. It ought to be getting fixed. You feel me? Well it isn't. It gets harder every day." -Sofia







Like the title of the episode, "Treme" wants to accentuate the positive in its season premiere, but not without ignoring the realities that this city, and these characters, are still facing 14 months after the storm (and 7 months after the end of the first season).

The opening sequence deftly blends both sadness and optimism. It's a gorgeous fall day, and though we spend much of it in the cemetery, it's not a draining experience. LaDonna, her mother are far removed enough from Daymo's death that they can focus more on their love of him than their grief. Ditto Antoine serenading his mentor's grave. Ditto Toni and Sofia getting to eat at Creighton's favorite lemon ice place (which he discussed with Janette back in the series premiere); Sofia wishes her daddy was there with them, but at least they can keep this part of him with them. Albert visits his late wife, and does what he knows how to do best by fixing the crypt up a bit.

All throughout the premiere, we go back and forth between the good and the bad, showing that while things are still hard for many, for others - contrary to what Sofia says above - it IS getting a little bit better. And that balance is exemplified by our two new regular characters.

On one side is newcomer Nelson Hidalgo, cousin to Sonny's bouncer-turned-contractor pal Arnie. He has money, he has contacts, and he has an eye on making a lot of money rebuilding this city - and, what's more, he seems to genuinely enjoy the place. Jon Seda is an actor I've often found problematic - his character's introduction on "Homicide" was roughly the point at which I gave up on that show being consistently great again - but I thought he was great in "The Pacific" last year, and I found myself surprisingly enjoying him here. Nelson's a slick operator who knows how to work a room, but there seems something genuine underneath the hustler. He talks up his Catholic background to bond with the big local developer, but he likes the guy. He dives into the local cuisine in a way Arnie has never bothered to, and starts dancing to the jukebox at LaDonna's place just because he digs the music. (And also, I suppose, because it never hurts to ingratiate yourself with a local barkeep.) So far, Nelson represents the possibilities for the city, the chance to clear away the storm's wreckage and start building something.

On the other side is Lt. Colson, who appeared briefly late last season. In addition to his ongoing professional friendship with Toni, Colson is here to give us a window on the explosion of crime that began not long after the events depicted last season. One of the few things the city had going for it in the months immediately after the storm is that the criminals were either scattered elsewhere, or too beaten up by Katrina to bother doing anything major. At this point in time, though, things are getting ugly, and it's all Colson can do just to put a good face on the crime wave when the New York Times keeps calling for juicy new anecdotes.

And in between those two extremes are our returning characters.

Things are very good for Annie and Davis, who have managed to bring out the best in each other: Annie's more confident in herself and her performing abilities, Davis considerate enough for someone's feelings that he actually bothers to clean up before she comes back from her tour with the subdudes. (He and Janette were never exactly boyfriend and girlfriend, but still, you get the sense that he never cleaned for her.)

Things seem at least promising for Antoine and Desiree, who are exploring the idea of getting a house in the city after so much time exiled on the outskirts. (They're also talking marriage, though Desiree's unsurprisingly much more gung-ho on that topic than Antoine.)

dead aren't forgotten, but they're now not the only thing on everyone's mind... contrary to what Sofia says in her Creighton-esque YouTube video , for some people (if not the city itself), it IS getting better...

Antoine and Desiree are talking about ways to get a house and move back into the city (and about getting married, though Desiree's much more enthusiastic about it than Antoine). Annie has finally found her performing confidence away from Sonny - and is able to perform on stage with him at The Spotted Cat without freaking out - and comes back from a successful tour with The Subdudes to what

Delmond has a new album out and is back in New York, and Janette remains there, learning the ropes of the local restaurant scene and adjusting to both the changed atmosphere and to being a little fish in a big pond. And old man Poke finally returns to reclaim his bar, not even bothering to acknowledge all the free repair work Albert did (love that his first line to him was actually "Where the fuck's my sign?"), and sending Albert back to the ruined house he's barely even touched since he returned to the city.

And Toni and Sofia? They're just getting through the day. Toni has an assistant, finally, and Sofia has the outlet of following in her dad's footsteps on YouTube, but it's a struggle for them, individually and together.

Unsurprisingly - for both a David Simon show in general and this show in particular - not much happens plot-wise in this premiere. It's all about catching up with where everyone is seven months later, and getting to know the new guys, and laying some of the groundwork for what this year will be about. Like Robert, the novice trumpet player whose appearance bookends the episode, the show is still warming up, still figuring out how to make this work. But it's going to start cooking soon, and the meantime, it's still very nice to be back in "Treme."

Some other thoughts:

• It goes without saying that the music is great: John Boutte's voice, Lucia Micarelli's violin solos, all of it. And for those of you who feel the performance scenes are too short, this year the show is going to release one extended performance video per episode on iTunes, starting with "From the Corner to the Block" by Galactic and the Dirty Dozen Brass Band with Juvenile. I've seen that video and a few others (all of them with intros by Davis and his fellow DJs); they're awesome.

• You'll note that Eric Overmyer, who wrote the script, shared a story credit with celebrity chef/foodie/wit Bourdain. Overmyer and Simon have actually placed Bourdain in charge of writing most of the material about Janette's experience cooking in those big restaurants. I asked Simon if Bourdain was just contributing notes and anecdotes that the other writers shape into script material, and Simon said no, Bourdain is actually writing a lot of this stuff. The material about the scary but talented head chef at Janette's restaurant felt very much like something out of Bourdain's "Kitchen Confidential." I also love the look of that kitchen: so big and gleaming and bright, looks so unlike any of the places we've seen in the New Orleans restaurants.

• Janette's expat storyline also means she has to get some new friends to interact with, at work and at home, and gives Simon an excuse to again employ James Ransone (Ziggy on "The Wire," Cpl. Person in "Generation Kill") as one of her pot-smoking roommates.

• Also starting off the season in New York (as he did last year) is Delmond, but it's a Delmond who's been transformed by his experiences with his father in season one, and who finds himself passionately defending New Orleans traditions when he gets trapped in conversational hell with a pair of pretentious New York music fans. Some of that's just the insider-vs-outsider thing - "I get to say that! They don't!" - but I don't know that he'd have gotten so heated up a year before.

• Some things in "Treme" change, and some stay very much the same, like LaDonna and Larry still arguing about Baton Rouge, the bar, etc.

• As always, if you want to know more about all the local details, identities of the musicians, etc., I cannot recommend Dave Walker's weekly annotations at his NOLA blog highly enough. Dave's the man on the scene, and if you didn't bookmark him last season, time to rectify that. Here's the direct link to tonight's explainer.

What did everybody else think?

Blackhawks Force Game 7 After Trailing Series, 3-0

The Chicago Blackhawks, who backed into the playoffs in the final moments of the regular season, will play a Game 7 against the Vancouver Canucks, the top team in the regular season, after trailing by 3-0 in the series.










The Blackhawks, the defending Stanley Cup champions, won Game 6 in overtime, 4-3, on Sunday night when the rookie forward Ben Smith scored on a rebound at 15 minutes 30 seconds of overtime.

The visiting Canucks, with the N.H.L.’s best record during the regular season, have lost three straight after it appeared they were in control of the series. Game 7 is Tuesday in Vancouver.

Smith, who had one goal in six regular-season games, followed in a long, hard shot from the point by teammate Niklas Hjalmarsson that bounced off goalie Roberto Luongo.

Luongo did not start the game but was called upon in the third period after Cory Schneider was injured as he tried to stop Michael Frolik’s penalty shot, which tied the score at 3-3.

PREDATORS 4, DUCKS 2 Nick Spaling’s first two playoff goals earned him a footnote in Predators history as Nashville defeated Anaheim to win its first series in the 13 years of the franchise.

Spaling, a 22-year-old forward who had eight goals in the regular season, scored his second goal of the game at 4:53 of the third period. It proved to be the winner as Nashville beat the Ducks at home and advanced to the Western Conference semifinals against a still-undetermined opponent.

FLYERS 5, SABRES 4 Goalie Brian Boucher got his second chance, and thanks to Ville Leino, the visiting Philadelphia Flyers made this comeback stick against the Buffalo Sabres.

On the brink of elimination, and with the Flyers enduring the latest in a string of goalie shuffles, Boucher stopped 24 shots in yet another relief effort and Leino capped Philadelphia’s two-goal comeback by scoring 4:43 into overtime to force Game 7 in the first-round playoff series.

The deciding game is at Philadelphia on Tuesday.

Michael Leighton became the third Flyers goalie to start a game this series, before proceeding to become the third Flyers goalie to be pulled after allowing three goals on the first seven shots he faced.

Enter Boucher, who made up for his dreadful performance in a 4-3 overtime loss on Friday.

Behind-the-scenes travelogue to holy Mt. Athos

Producer Michael Karzis takes you on a high-stakes adventure: shooting a "60 Minutes" story in one of the holiest places on Earth

"60 Minutes" producer Michael Karzis is the perfect tour guide to take you behind the scenes on the show's Mt. Athos story. Karzis is the son of Greek immigrants and speaks Greek. Those things surely helped as he and fellow producer Harry Radliffe tried to get permission to film a "60 Minutes" story on the otherworldly Mt. Athos, a self-governed peninsula in Greece that's home to 20 monasteries and some 2,000 monks.







But getting permission was no easy task. "The parliament that exists there, the holy community, is the only parliament on the face of the Earth that has been continually in session since the 10th century," says Karzis. "And these are the guys we were looking to get permission from to shoot on Mount Athos."

The Holy Community turned down requests from "60 Minutes." "They said, 'Thank you very much but, get in line,' Karzis recalls. "I mean, the BBC's been knocking on the door for 40 years, the French, the Germans, they've all wanted to come."

They then appealed to the powerful abbots who run individual monasteries on Mt. Athos and finally had a breakthrough.

Watch part one and part two of Bob Simon's report.

"We just built trust," says Karzis. "And they understood that we would do our best to distill the essence of monastic life, the beauty of the place, and what makes Mt. Athos unique in this world."

Once Karzis and Radliffe got their invitation, many more challenges were to come, as you'll learn in this "60 Minutes Overtime" travelogue. It's located in Europe, but Mt. Athos is remarkably difficult to access. The peninsula is only reachable by boat and the surrounding seas can be rough. It's believed that the Virgin Mary herself was shipwrecked there, which is just one of the many things that makes Mt. Athos so sacred to the monks and the thousands of pilgrims who visit each year.

The "60 Minutes" team was also stranded on Mt. Athos when heavy seas hit after the two-week shoot ended. Now back in New York, Karzis and Radliffe still seem moved by their time on the stunning mountain. If you're interested in visiting Mt. Athos as a pilgrim, these "60 Minutes" videos are arguably the best visual record ever created and the best place to start your research.

If you're a woman, these videos may be the only way you'll ever see Mt. Athos. No women allowed.

Minggu, 24 April 2011

Papa John's Catches Royal Wedding Fever, Makes Creepy Portrait Pizza

By Laura Northrup on April 22, 2011 10:30 AM

Here at Consumerist Global Headquarters, we were so preoccupied with the final rounds of the Worst Company in America tournament last week that we missed what is arguably the biggest chain-pizzeria news of the entire month. Papa John's commissioned a food artist to design a celebratory wedding portrait. It's in honor of the upcoming marriage of two charming young rich people named William Windsor and Catherine Middleton. You may have heard of them.







One lucky pizza lover in the U.K. will be able to win this beautiful pie-then presumably varnish it and put it on the wall. Or eat it.

"Like our original crust pizza, our royal portrait is made from 100 percent fresh dough and quality ingredients, so it tastes as good as it looks," the company's chief marketing officer said in a statement.

That's probably true. After it's baked, it's going to look terrible.

pizza.jpg

Jumat, 22 April 2011

Carole King is the 'American Idol' Top 6 theme

carole-king-getty.jpg

The theme for the "American Idol" Top 6 contestants was announced Thursday night (April 21) at the end of the results show - it's Carole King, which should prove interesting.







King is a Grammy-winning singer/songwriter and we are big fans of her music. "Tapestry" is really her watershed effort - the 1971 album was named No. 36 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest Albums of All Time.

But we aren't sure how the Idols are going to handle her music. Katelyn Epperly covered "I Feel the Earth" move in Season 9 and got pans from the judges, then was sent packing. Brooke White took on "You've Got a Friend" in Season 7 and did very well, but Carole King is right in Brooke White's wheelhouse. King's songs are quietly great and kind of niche - this year's Idols are going to have to really make them their own or it's going to be a long night.

If you're wondering where you've heard the Carole King that is non-music related, she had a recurring guest role on "Gilmore Girls" as Sophie Bloom the music store owner and also sang the opening title song for the show

2011 New York: Mitsubishi i electric vehicle priced at $27,990 before incentives Joe Lorio on April 21 2011 12:31 PM

2012 Mitsubishi i








The Mitsubishi i electric vehicle will be priced at $27,990, for the base ES, and $29,990 for the SE. Deliveries will start in January, but the company is happy to take your order—and $299 (refundable) deposit—starting tomorrow, for those dedicated environmentalists who want to celebrate Earth Day by pre-ordering an electric car.
Potential customers may be glad to know that the above prices do NOT include a $7500 federal incentive, which can lower the tab to $20,490—less than that of the Nissan Leaf or the Chevrolet Volt.

Buyers who spring for the SE version get a more potent audio system, fog lights, 15-inch alloy wheels, and various interior upgrades. Additionally, a $2790 premium package is available; it includes navigation, steering-wheel-mounted audio controls, a USB port, a backup camera (which hardly seems necessary for the tiny i), and a quick-charging port that allows an 80% recharge in only 30 minutes.

The i is part of Mitsubishi’s plan to remake itself into a green carmaker. As Yoichi Yokozawa, the new president and CEO of Mitsubishi North America, put it at the New York auto show: “Going forward, we will focus on smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles, with an emphasis on EVs.” He went on to announce that Mitsubishi will introduce eight new EVs and/or plug-in hybrids by 2015. The company also will concentrate on the Lancer, Outlander, Outlander Sport, and its new global small car; it is expected to drop the Galant and Endeavor. Also, to the consternation of enthusiasts, Mitsubishi has stated that the current Evo will be the last.

2012 Mitsubishi i


2012 Mitsubishi i


2012 Mitsubishi i

Above All Else, Monkey Bread

By ALICE GABRIEL
Published: April 15, 2011


At Loaf, a new bakery and cafe, an assortment of breads — ciabatta, dill, whole wheat, raisin, foccacia and rye — line a high wooden shelf, their crusty good looks set off by a vibrant backdrop of buttercup-yellow paint. But the golden-brown monkey bread ($7), a pull-apart bread baked in a cake pan, and still warm from the oven, handily upstaged the others.







“My son is addicted to it,” said Caryn Stabinsky, the baker. “When we were getting ready to open, I wasn’t baking it, and he’d say, ‘Where’s my monkey bread?’ ” Made with a touch of brown sugar and fragrant with yeast, the puzzlelike bread — fun to say and fun to eat — will undoubtedly stir the same emotions in other neighborhood children.

Ms. Stabinsky, who owns Loaf with her husband, Geoffrey Fischer (the two met while working at WD-50, in Manhattan), favors an old-fashioned American repertoire of cakes and cookies, which includes a dreamy coconut cake ($5.25 a slice); assorted husky cookies ($2.75 each); classic brownies ($3 each); and a charming square confection called pretzel-covered chocolate ($4.25), a fudgy brownie bristling with pretzel pieces — a sort of inside-out chocolate-covered pretzel.

On the savory side, Loaf offers soups, sandwiches and salads, plus galettes and tortas. Customers have already indicated a couple of favorites, among them a lovely grilled tuna, asparagus and avocado salad ($9) with two dressings — one a spicy mayonnaise, the other a bright lemon vinaigrette — and a torta made with spinach, goat cheese and shallot confit ($4 per slice).

Also bound to prove popular as the days warm up are ginger iced tea, made with fresh ginger syrup, and watermelon lemonade, made on the premises from fresh fruit. (Both are $2.75 for 16 ounces.)

UPDATE 3-Outerwear sales boost Hanesbrands results; shares rise

Q1 EPS $0.49 vs est $0.33

* Q1 sales $1.04 bln vs est $1.01 bln

* Sees FY EPS $2.70-$2.90 ve prev $2.60-$2.80

* Shares rise 11 pct to their highest in 3 years (Adds analyst comment, details on cotton costs, updates share movement)

By Mihir Dalal

BANGALORE, April 20 (Reuters) - Strong sales of outerwear products such as sport shirts and jackets helped Hanesbrands Inc , better known for its underwear brands, post strong quarterly results and raise its outlook for the year.







Shares of the company, whose brands include Hanes, Champion and Wonderbra, rose 11 percent to their highest in nearly three years.

Hanesbrands -- founded by brothers John Wesley Hanes and Pleasant Hanes in 1901 as a maker of men's underwear -- has been expanding its casual wear business and acquired GearCo, which sells logoed T-shirts and sportswear to college students, last August.

"By delivering the right quality product to retailers and backing it up by significant marketing dollars, the company increasingly opened more avenues for sales," Sterne Agee & Leach analyst Kenneth Stumphauzer said.

Sales from the company's outerwear products rose 23 percent to $330.7 million and operating profit was up nearly five-fold to $25.5 million. Sales at the innerwear segment -- its biggest -- were flat and profit fell 23 percent.

Stumphauzer expects the company's outerwear sales to continue growing strongly in 2011 before moderating next year.

Hanesbrands, which was spun off from Sara Lee Corp in 2006, has been raising prices to offset rising cotton costs.

The company said it had locked in its cotton costs for the year and expected to raise prices further.

Shares of the Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based company were up 10 percent at $31.97 on Wednesday morning. They have risen 15 percent this year through Tuesday.

The company posted a first-quarter profit of $48.1 million, or 49 cents a share, compared with $36.5 million or 37 cents a share, a year ago.

Net sales increased 12 percent to $1.04 billion.

Analysts were expecting earnings of 33 cents a share, before special items, on revenue of $1.01 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. (Reporting by Mihir Dalal in Bangalore; Editing by Joyjeet Das and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

PlayStation Network Down For a Day (or Two)

Sony is currently investigating the cause of a network outage

By Jared Newman, Technologizer Apr 22, 2011 4:59 am


Sony's Playstation Network is down, and it may not come back up for a couple of days, according to the official Playstation Blog.






"While we are investigating the cause of the Network outage, we wanted to alert you that it may be a full day or two before we're able to get the service completely back up and running," Sony spokesman Patrick Seybold wrote.

Europe's Playstation blog previously said the company was investigating "the possibility of targeted behavior by an outside party," but that message has since been removed. Hacking group Anonymous, which attacked Sony's servers earlier this month, claims no involvement.

Talk about terrible timing. This week saw the launch of Mortal Kombat, Portal 2 and SOCOM 4, all of which have an online component. SOCOM 4 is a Playstation 3 exclusive geared mainly towards online play, and includes big incentives to buy the game new. In addition to disabling online play, the PSN outage affects the Qriocity music service, Netflix, MLB.tv and any other service requiring a PSN login.

Still, this isn't quite as severe as the PSN problems that occurred in March 2010, when a leap year issue caused some users to lose data just by turning on their consoles. Sony didn't relay that message to its customers until 16 hours after the first reports emerged.

David Cook returns to 'American Idol,' performs 'The Last Goodbye'

By Tierney Bricker April 21, 2011 8:33 PM ET



American Idol's" Season 7 champ David Cook finally returned home on Thursday, Apr. 21, for the Top 7 results show. The appearance kick-started promotion for his sophmore album
"This Loud Morning," which will be released on June 28.







Cook performed the first single off the new album "The Last Goodbye," which we think is going to be a huge hit on the radio. The single is now available for download on iTunes and Amazon. Cook looked great in his all-back suit and perfectly coiffed hair (yes, we're that vain) and he sounded great.

"It's great to be back!," Cook said after his performance, but was kind of drowned out by the crazy loud audience, which rivals the audience reaction Adam Lambert received when he returned to "Idol." Cook's mom also came... but just because she wanted to meet Steven Tyler. Too. Cute.

May 1, Cook will be participating in the 14th annual Race For Hope in Washington, D.C., which is a 5K run/walk that helps fund a cure for brain tumors and brain cancer. This is Cook's third year participating in the event and you can find more information on how you can participate and help on his official website.

It's good to have David Cook back, no? Were you excited about Cook's return to the "Idol" stage? What did you think of his new single "The Last Goodbye"?

Rabu, 20 April 2011

420 History: The Story Behind April 20 Becoming 'Weed Day' First Posted: 04/19/11 04:08 PM ET Updated: 04/19/11 04:08 PM ET

This piece was first published two years ago on 4/20.

Warren Haynes, the Allman Brothers Band guitarist, routinely plays with the surviving members of the Grateful Dead, now touring as The Dead. He's just finished a Dead show in Washington, D.C. and gets a pop quiz from the Huffington Post.

Where does 420 come from?

He pauses and thinks, hands on his side. "I don't know the real origin. I know myths and rumors," he says. "I'm really confused about the first time I heard it. It was like a police code for smoking in progress or something. What's the real story?"





Depending on who you ask, or their state of inebriation, there are as many varieties of answers as strains of medical bud in California. It's the number of active chemicals in marijuana. It's teatime in Holland. It has something to do with Hitler's birthday. It's those numbers in that Bob Dylan song multiplied.

The origin of the term 420, celebrated around the world by pot smokers every April 20th, has long been obscured by the clouded memories of the folks who made it a phenomenon.

The Huffington Post chased the term back to its roots and was able to find it in a lost patch of cannabis in a Point Reyes, California forest. Just as interesting as its origin, it turns out, is how it spread.

It starts with the Dead.

It was Christmas week in Oakland, 1990. Steven Bloom was wandering through The Lot - that timeless gathering of hippies that springs up in the parking lot before every Grateful Dead concert - when a Deadhead handed him a yellow flyer.

"We are going to meet at 4:20 on 4/20 for 420-ing in Marin County at the Bolinas Ridge sunset spot on Mt. Tamalpais," reads the message, which Bloom dug up and forwarded to the Huffington Post. Bloom, then a reporter for High Times magazine and now the publisher of CelebStoner.com and co-author of Pot Culture, had never heard of "420-ing" before.

The flyer came complete with a 420 back story: "420 started somewhere in San Rafael, California in the late '70s. It started as the police code for Marijuana Smoking in Progress. After local heads heard of the police call, they started using the expression 420 when referring to herb - Let's Go 420, dude!"

Bloom reported his find in the May 1991 issue of High Times, which the magazine found in its archives and provided to the Huffington Post. The story, though, was only partially right.

It had nothing to do with a police code -- though the San Rafael part was dead on. Indeed, a group of five San Rafael High School friends known as the Waldos - by virtue of their chosen hang-out spot, a wall outside the school - coined the term in 1971. The Huffington Post spoke with Waldo Steve, Waldo Dave and Dave's older brother, Patrick, and confirmed their full names and identities, which they asked to keep secret for professional reasons. (Pot is still, after all, illegal.)

The Waldos never envisioned that pot smokers the world over would celebrate each April 20th as a result of their foray into the Point Reyes forest. The day has managed to become something of a national holiday in the face of official condemnation. This year's celebration will be no different. Officials at the University of Colorado at Boulder and University of California, Santa Cruz, which boast two of the biggest smoke outs, are pushing back. "As another April 20 approaches, we are faced with concerns from students, parents, alumni, Regents, and community members about a repeat of last year's 4/20 'event,'" wrote Boulder's chancellor in a letter to students. "On April 20, 2009, we hope that you will choose not to participate in unlawful activity that debases the reputation of your University and degree, and will encourage your fellow Buffs to act with pride and remember who they really are."

But the Cheshire cat is out of the bag. Students and locals will show up at round four, light up at 4:20 and be gone shortly thereafter. No bands, no speakers, no chants. Just a bunch of people getting together and getting stoned.

The code often creeps into popular culture and mainstream settings. All of the clocks in Pulp Fiction, for instance, are set to 4:20. In 2003, when the California legislature codified the medical marijuana law voters had approved, the bill was named SB420.

"We think it was a staffer working for [lead Assembly sponsor Mark] Leno, but no one has ever fessed up," says Steph Sherer, head of Americans for Safe Access, which lobbied on behalf of the bill. California legislative staffers spoken to for this story say that the 420 designation remains a mystery, but that both Leno and the lead Senate sponsor, John Vasconcellos, are hip enough that they must have known what it meant. (If you were involved with SB420 and know the story, email me.)

The code pops up in Craig's List postings when fellow smokers search for "420 friendly" roommates. "It's just a vaguer way of saying it and it kind of makes it kind of cool," says Bloom. "Like, you know you're in the know, but that does show you how it's in the mainstream."

The Waldos do have proof, however, that they used the term in the early '70s in the form of an old 420 flag and numerous letters with 420 references and early '70s post marks. They also have a story.

It goes like this: One day in the Fall of 1971 - harvest time - the Waldos got word of a Coast Guard service member who could no longer tend his plot of marijuana plants near the Point Reyes Peninsula Coast Guard station. A treasure map in hand, the Waldos decided to pluck some of this free bud.

The Waldos were all athletes and agreed to meet at the statue of Loius Pasteur outside the school at 4:20, after practice, to begin the hunt.

"We would remind each other in the hallways we were supposed to meet up at 4:20. It originally started out 4:20-Louis and we eventually dropped the Louis," Waldo Steve tells the Huffington Post.

The first forays out were unsuccessful, but the group kept looking for the hidden crop. "We'd meet at 4:20 and get in my old '66 Chevy Impala and, of course, we'd smoke instantly and smoke all the way out to Pt. Reyes and smoke the entire time we were out there. We did it week after week," says Steve. "We never actually found the patch."

But they did find a useful codeword. "I could say to one of my friends, I'd go, 420, and it was telepathic. He would know if I was saying, 'Hey, do you wanna go smoke some?' Or, 'Do you have any?' Or, 'Are you stoned right now?' It was kind of telepathic just from the way you said it," Steve says. "Our teachers didn't know what we were talking about. Our parents didn't know what we were talking about."

It's one thing to identify the origin of the term. Indeed, Wikipedia and Urban Dictionary already include references to the Waldos. The bigger question: How did 420 spread from a circle of California stoners across the globe?

As fortune would have it, the collapse of San Francisco's hippie utopia in the late '60s set the stage. As speed freaks, thugs and con artists took over The Haight, the Grateful Dead picked up and moved to the Marin County hills - just blocks from San Rafael High School.

"Marin Country was kind of ground zero for the counter culture," says Steve.

The Waldos had more than just a geographic connection to the Dead. Mark Waldo's father took care of real estate for the Dead. And Waldo Dave's older brother, Patrick, managed a Dead sideband and was good friends with bassist Phil Lesh. Patrick tells the Huffington Post that he smoked with Lesh on numerous occasions. He couldn't recall if he used the term 420 around him, but guessed that he must have.

The Dead, recalls Waldo Steve, "had this rehearsal hall on Front Street, San Rafael, California, and they used to practice there. So we used to go hang out and listen to them play music and get high while they're practicing for gigs. But I think it's possible my brother Patrick might have spread it through Phil Lesh. And me, too, because I was hanging out with Lesh and his band when they were doing a summer tour my brother was managing."

The band that Patrick managed was called Too Loose To Truck and featured not only Lesh but rock legend David Crosby and acclaimed guitarist Terry Haggerty.

The Waldos also had open access to Dead parties and rehearsals. "We'd go with [Mark's] dad, who was a hip dad from the '60s," says Steve. "There was a place called Winterland and we'd always be backstage running around or onstage and, of course, we're using those phrases. When somebody passes a joint or something, 'Hey, 420.' So it started spreading through that community."

Lesh, walking off the stage after a recent Dead concert, confirmed that Patrick is a friend and said he "wouldn't be surprised" if the Waldos had coined 420. He wasn't sure, he said, when the first time he heard it was. "I do not remember. I'm very sorry. I wish I could help," he said.

Wavy-Gravy is a hippie icon with his own ice cream flavor and has been hanging out with the Dead for decades. HuffPost spotted him outside the concert. Asked about the origin of 420, he suggested it began "somewhere in the foggy mists of time. What time is it now? I say to you: eternity now."

As the Grateful Dead toured the globe through the '70s and '80s, playing hundreds of shows a year - the term spread though the Dead underground. Once High Times got hip to it, the magazine helped take it global.

"I started incorporating it into everything we were doing," High Times editor Steve Hager told the Huffington Post. "I started doing all these big events - the World Hemp Expo Extravaganza and the Cannabis Cup - and we built everything around 420. The publicity that High Times gave it is what made it an international thing. Until then, it was relatively confined to the Grateful Dead subculture. But we blew it out into an international phenomenon."

Sometime in the early '90s, High Times wisely purchased the web domain 420.com.

Bloom, the reporter who first stumbled on it, gives High Times less credit. "We posted that flyer and then we started to see little references to it. It wasn't really much of High Times doing," he says. "We weren't really pushing it that hard, just kind of referencing the phrase."

The Waldos say that within a few years the term had spread throughout San Rafael and was cropping up elsewhere in the state. By the early '90s, it had penetrated deep enough that Dave and Steve started hearing people use it in unexpected places - Ohio, Florida, Canada - and spotted it painted on signs and etched into park benches.

In 1997, the Waldos decided to set the record straight and got in touch with High Times.

"They said, 'The fact is, there is no 420 [police] code in California. You guys ever look it up?'" Blooms recalls. He had to admit that no, he had never looked it up. Hager flew out to San Rafael, met the Waldos, examined their evidence, spoke with others in town, and concluded they were telling the truth.

Hager still believes them. "No one's ever been able to come up with any use of 420 that predates the 1971 usage, which they had established. So unless somebody can come up with something that predates them, then I don't think anybody's going to get credit for it other than them," he says.

"We never made a dime on the thing," says Dave, half boasting, half lamenting.

He does take pride in his role, though. "I still have a lot of friends who tell their friends that they know one of the guys that started the 420 thing. So it's kind of like a cult celebrity thing. Two years ago I went to the Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam. High Times magazine flew me out," says Dave.

Dave is now a credit analyst and works for Steve, who owns a specialty lending institution and lost money to the con artist Bernie Madoff. He spends more time today, he says, composing angry letters to the SEC than he does getting high.

The other three Waldos have also been successful, Steve says. One is head of marketing for a Napa Valley winery. Another is in printing and graphics. A third works for a roofing and gutter company. "He's like, head of their gutter division," says Steve, who keeps in close touch with them all.

"I've got to run a business. I've got to stay sharp," says Steve, explaining why he rarely smokes pot anymore. "Seems like everybody I know who smokes daily, or many times in a week, it seems like there's always something going wrong with their life, professionally, or in their relationships, or financially or something. It's a lot of fun, but it seems like if someone does it too much, there's some karmic cost to it."

"I never endorsed the use of marijuana. But hey, it worked for me," says Waldo Dave. "I'm sure on my headstone it'll say: 'One of the 420 guys.'"

Baseball-Tossing Robot Set for Big League Debut




How fitting that on Self-Aware Day — the day in Terminator canon that Skynet officially went online, setting in motion the chain of events that led to a craptastic reboot-sequel starring Christian Bale — that we get word of robots wanting to muscle in on the business of big-league baseball pitching.




Indeed, that’s what’ll be happening before Wednesday afternoon’s game at Citizens Bank Park, when the Phillies host the Milwaukee Brewers. It’s part of a larger promotion the Phillies are putting on for Science Day at the Ballpark. And yeah, Phillies co-ace Cliff Lee will be taking the mound eventually, but the real attraction will be PhillieBot, which will throw out the ceremonial first pitch before Lee steps up to do his thing.

It took only six weeks or so for engineers at the University of Pennsylvania’s General Robotics, Automation, Sensing and Perception Laboratory to cobble together the necessary parts and write enough code to get PhillieBot season-ready — its own “spring training,” if you will — but everything came together in time for one final test yesterday. Tom Avril of the Philadelphia Inquirer described it:

At the touch of a button, the robot’s silvery jointed arm reared back and then moved steadily toward home plate. At the top of its delivery — somewhat sooner than a human pitcher would do — the robot shot the ball homeward with a flick of its mechanical wrist….

The robot’s computer brain can be infinitely tweaked to change pitch velocity and trajectory, and its arm is a sleek, programmable instrument that also can be used in surgical and manufacturing applications. Moreover, PhillieBot can move.

The engineers started with a Segway, one of those motorized, two-wheeled vehicles sometimes used by tourists and police patrols. They lopped off the top handlebar portion and replaced it with the robotic arm, made by Barrett Technology Inc. of Cambridge, Mass. They added a third wheel for stability.

As you might guess, PhillieBot’s velocity won’t nearly approach Lee’s low-90s fastball, as no one wants to see anyone get hurt before game time. Instead, PhillieBot will toss the ball at a very comfortable (and very catchable) 30 to 40 mph.

Kara DioGuardi Reveals Past Sex Abuse in New Memoir Kara DioGuardi Writes About Being Date Raped, Sexually Harassed by Music Personalities

BY SHEILA MARIKAR
April 19, 2011



Kara DioGuardi's path to stardom was far from smooth.In her upcoming memoir, "A Helluva High Note," the songwriter and former "American Idol" judge reveals that she was molested as a child, date raped by a famous record producer and sexually harassed by a "hugely successful artist."

DioGuardi first endured sexual abuse at age 11 at the hands of a male family friend.

"On one particular day, he took me into the back shed of his house and put his hands all over my breasts and vagina," she writes, according to a book excerpt obtained by E! News. "I remember freezing and not knowing what to do."





In 2000, she found herself in a similar situation with a "fairly known producer." After sharing what she thought was a friendly dinner, DioGuardi describes how he forced himself on her.

"Within a few hours, he was on top of me, pumping, sweating and speaking to me in Spanish, not a word of which I could understand," she writes.

According to E!, DioGuardi repeatedly told him to stop but didn't physically fight him because she feared he'd turn violent. She stayed silent about the incident until now because she was afraid it would destroy her career.

A few years later, DioGuardi said she was sexually harassed by a "hugely successful artist" during a three-day songwriting trip. Instead of working on music, she writes that "the trip's activities consisted of watching Russian porn, scavenging around the kitchen for food [and] leering at two strippers ... as they performed sex acts in the living room."

Still, DioGuardi continued to work with the artist. She writes, "I wasn't gonna let this bastard deter me from doing the job." Eventually, though, she cut off ties with him after he "chased her around the basement of his suburban home and forced her hand on his privates," according to E!

Intel Posts Record 1Q On Strength Across All Segments

By Shara Tibken
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES



NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Intel Corp. (INTC) reported record quarterly results and provided better-than-expected second-quarter guidance, benefiting from strong growth in all of its product segments and bucking worries about weakening personal computer sales.

The Santa Clara, Calif., giant has posted record results in recent quarters, but worries have emerged about slowing PC demand as consumers increasingly buy tablets like the Apple Inc. (AAPL) iPad. While Intel has seen some signs of consumer weakness, its exposure to business spending--especially on servers--has helped buffer its results.

"What we saw was very strong growth this quarter in terms of all markets, all segments, all geographies," President and Chief Executive Paul Otellini said in an interview.

He added that the results position Intel well to post revenue growth of more than 20% for the full year, with much strength coming from Intel's data center group.






"Investors have clearly underestimated the potential length and magnitude of the current corporate refresh cycle and Intel's prominent spot within that cycle," Edward Jones analyst Bill Kreher said. He added that the biggest driver of Intel's results is servers, which should continue through the year.

Intel forecast current-quarter revenue of $12.3 billion to $13.3 billion. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expected $11.87 billion.

Intel shares, down 17% over the past 12 months through Tuesday's close, jumped 4.9% to $20.84 after hours as results and guidance blew past estimates. The stock has been sluggish in recent months, with worries about Intel's struggles penetrating the mobile market.

Intel is considered an early indicator of technology demand because its chips serve as calculating engines in about 80% of the world's computers. It has benefited from surging sales over the past several years of laptop PCs, including a variety called netbooks, but it has had problems gaining traction in the fast-growing mobile market dominated by chips based on ARM Holdings PLC (ARMH) architecture.

In addition, demand for tablets and smartphones has been undercutting sales growth for PCs of late, with global computer shipments declining in the first quarter for the first time since the end of the recent recession, data trackers Gartner and IDC said last week.

Otellini said strong consumer demand in emerging markets offset weakness in the U.S. and Western Europe, though some people in developed nations likely bought tablets instead of refreshing their notebooks.

"That perhaps is some of the reason behind consumer softness in the U.S. and Europe," he said. "But we don't see it globally. ... I think [tablets and PCs] are very complementary devices."

Otellini also reiterated that he expects the company to be a "strong participant" in smartphones and tablets.

In addition, he said the laptop market was "very good," with industry still going through the early phases of an enterprise upgrade cycle. As a result, Otellini forecast 2011 PC industry growth in the low double digits, tweaked slightly from expectations in January of low- to mid-teens growth.

Intel recently released its second-generation Core processors--code-named Sandy Bridge--that combine graphics and computing on a single piece of silicon, and the company sees demand for the new processors helping drive results.

The company in January disclosed a design issue in its support chip that works with the Core processor, saying that in some cases, several of the connection ports within those chipsets may degrade over time, potentially interrupting the flow of data from devices like disk drives and DVD drives. The flaw caused the company to lower its forecast for the first quarter, estimating the cost at about $1 billion in repairs and reduced revenue.

The data center unit was particularly strong, with revenue up 32% in the quarter, which Otellini said is due to servers, as well as a "healthy" cloud business, storage and network. Demand for cloud computing, which allows customers to access data remotely using the Internet or internal networks, has soared and has helped drive strong results across the tech industry. Otellini expects server strength to be a major growth drivers for "many years to come."

Overall, Intel reported a profit of $3.16 billion, or 56 cents a share, up from $2.44 billion, or 43 cents, a year earlier. Excluding items, such as write-downs and amortization of acquisition-related intangibles, per-share earnings rose to 59 cents from 43 cents. Revenue jumped 25% to $12.85 billion.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had forecast earnings of 46 cents a share. The company had expected revenue ranging from $10.8 billion to $11.6 billion, factoring in the $300 million impact from the chip-design issue.

Gross margin fell to 61.4% from 63.4%.

The latest results include contributions from Intel's acquisitions of security-software provider McAfee and Infineon Technologies AG (IFNNY), which closed in the first quarter.

Oklahoma City bombing: 16 years ago ‘on the edge of abyss’

By Melissa Bell


Sixteen years ago, a bomb exploded outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, ripping the guts out of it and tearing off the north wall. It killed 168 people, 19 of them children. Timothy Mc­Veigh and Terry Nichols set off the bomb in what is still the worst homegrown terrorist attack to take place on U.S. soil. Reprinted below are excerpts from two stories from The Washington Post archives that ran the day after the bombing:

A story of despair, by Thomas Heath, April 19, 1995:

As he walked the halls of St. Anthony's Hospital here, the Rev. George Young tried to explain to 4-year-old Katie, cradled in his arms in a bloody jumper, why her little sister died under a pile of rubble.







“She was very introspective about it all,” Young said.
Katie was one of the lucky ones who survived the explosion that rocked the federal building today. She was in the building because it was home not just to federal agencies such as the Social Security Administration and the DEA, but also to a day-care center serving children of federal workers and families from the community. The powerful bomb that went off this morning exploded in a car parked just yards away from the second-floor room where the 30 or so children believed to be at the center were about to eat breakfast.

Authorities tonight said they had found 12 bodies of children from the day-care center but held out little hope of finding many survivors, given the location of the bomb.

If the bomb had gone off a little later, during the playtime, the story might have been different. Many children might have survived because the playground is on the opposite side of the building, where it was shielded from the bomb's blast.

Instead, the bomb literally wiped out “America's Kids,” as the center was known. Rescue workers who searched for victims reported a horrific scene of mangled and decapitated bodies and toys scattered in the rubble. At another day-care center at a YMCA across the street, many children were injured but there were no known fatalities.

“This is your nightmare come true,” said Ron Phelps, chaplain at Children's Hospital, where about a dozen of the injured children were taken.
A story of survival, by Guy Gugliotta, April 19, 1995:

First the ceiling collapsed. Then the wires fell. Next the pipes sagged, broke and crashed down, crunching jagged shards of broken glass that covered every surface. A fog of white dust hung in the air.

“I've got to get out of here,” thought Brian Espe, hunkered down beneath a massive conference table on the fifth floor of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building moments after a car bomb ripped its guts out and peeled off the north wall. “But I've got to be very careful.”

Espe, 57, an Agriculture Department veterinarian, picked himself up gingerly from the rubble and looked around. He noticed that some USDA offices, like his conference room, had been turned upside down as if by a cyclone, but most of the fifth floor was simply obliterated: “the north side of the building disappeared,” Espe said. “I could walk through a wall and step into space.” Fortunately, he was on the south side, far from the explosion but still teetering on the edge of oblivion.

Hours after Espe had climbed down an aerial ladder to safety, he was still “on an adrenaline high,” incredulous to be alive and still numb to the realization that among perhaps a dozen USDA employees working in the Murrah Building, it appeared that “only three of us walked out ... It hasn’t sunk in yet.”

The Murrah Building is a nine-story reinforced concrete shell with light, soundproofed ceiling material and offices separated by drywall partitions, Espe said. The explosion carved a gigantic hole in the north side of the building as if a giant hand had clawed it apart from the bottom up. For Espe, perched on the edge of the abyss, there was little immediate danger of being crushed as many people apparently were in the pancaked debris below him.

Espe reacted to the emergency as if to an earthquake, sliding from his seat to crouch beneath the conference table. Glass, furniture, pipes wires, fixtures and furnishings rained down.

Close by, in what remained of the south side of the building, he saw two colleagues, a man and a woman, moving around. Both were covered in drywall dust. The woman had cuts on her legs, and the man a single, slight gash on his forehead. Espe, thanks to his conference table, was untouched.

“The only place where we could see anything was the south side, and when emergency personnel started to show up, we signaled that there were three of us and that we were fine," Espe said. “They told us to just wait and they would get us down.”

It took 45 minutes before the top of an aerial ladder appeared over the edge of the fifth floor on the building's shattered north side: “I don't like heights,” Espe acknowledged. “But I also decided I didn’t want to stay there any longer.”

The rest, he said, was a blur. He kept asking people whether they had a cellular phone. Finally someone did.

I'm all right, he told his wife. Yes, she replied, I know. His escape, it turned out, had been televised, and daughters-in-law in New York, Texas and Maine had called to tell her to tune in.

Selasa, 19 April 2011

No stone unturned: The massive operation to protect Prince William and Kate along the royal wedding route

By RICHARD HARTLEY-PARKINSON
Last updated at 8:50 AM on 19th April 2011


Every nook and cranny along the route that Prince William and Kate Middleton will take on their wedding day is being searched by police.
As Union Jack bunting goes up on Regent Street and flags are raised across central London, elsewhere the focus is on more sinister stuff in the form of a huge anti-terrorism operation.
Police have launched one of the biggest security operations the country has ever seen - estimated to cost £20 million - to protect William and Kate and world leaders.
Drains have been lifted, the insides of lampposts scoured and even the fronts of the boxes on pedestrian crossing buttons have been removed as every inch of the wedding route is searched for explosives.







Fingertip search: Drains have been lifted along the Mall, leading up to Buckingham Palace, as police search for explosives


Traffic light being inspected


Lamppost being searched

Even the inner workings of a pedestrian crossing button could contain a bomb


All around Westminster Abbey, along Whitehall, across Horse Guards Parade and down the Mall specialist officers have taken apart street furniture looking for any suspicious items.
The operation will continue right up to the last minute when the focus of attention will then turn on the people that have turned out to cheer the newly weds.
With so many members of the Royal Family, senior members of the Government, A-list celebrities and 50 heads of state in attendance, the wedding is believed to be a prime target for terrorists.


Metropolitan Police officers have been looking under manhole covers and broke security seals on the Mall, looking for any suspicious items, as part of an operation that will continue until the big day.
With a worldwide television audience of up to two billion, senior officers will want to avoid an incident like the attack on the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall's Rolls-Royce during the tuition fees protests last year.
It is expected that there will be snipers on the lookout on roofs along the route, poised to react should the worst happen and someone tries to approach anyone in the wedding convoy.

With senior royals, 50 heads of state and A-list celebrities the royal wedding is a prime target for terrorists

The massive police operation is expected to cost around £20 million by the end of the celebrations

The search for devices has concentrated on The Mall, Horse Guards Parade, Whitehall and around Parliament Square which are all on the wedding route

Final checks: The search for bombs will continue right up to the wedding day when the focus will turn to the people at the wedding


Insp Ian Fairman, in charge of the search teams, said: 'Officers are trained to be vigilant and check areas where items may have been hidden.
'Officers will be checking vulnerable areas all along the route of the procession.'
William, accompanied by his brother Prince Harry, will leave for Westminster Abbey from Clarence House and Miss Middleton, with her father, Michael, will make the journey from the Goring Hotel.
The newly-married couple will travel in a procession to Buckingham Palace following the ceremony.
The royal family, best man, maid of honour, bridesmaids and the Middletons will all be part of the parade, and the Metropolitan Police expect the road to be lined with thousands of well-wishers.
Yesterday it was revealed that stalkers and royal fanatics would be monitored ahead of the wedding. Scotland Yard is working with mental health teams and detectives from the Fixated Threat Assessment Centre that was looking at the possibility of sectioning potential troublemakers.


Royal Wedding route map

British pride: Union Jacks are hung up along Regent Street ahead of the celebrations that are set to grip the world

Bunting


Hanging


Kate and her father will travel in the car in which Prince Charles and The Duchess of Cornwall came under attack during the student demonstrations.
It is believed that Miss Middleton chose a car rather than horse and carriage because of an allergy to horses, although she will return from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace in such a carriage.
Police are also considering the use of stop-and-search powers to prevent troublemakers disrupting the Royal Wedding.
This will be done to prevent anarchists carrying out acts of violence or disorder such as those seen during the TUC's recent march in London and the November student protests.

Police will be keen to avoid any attacks on the newlyweds or any of the other dignitaries like that seen on Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall in the car that will take Kate to the wedding

Threat: Snipers will be ready to prevent attacks like that which sas police and a guardsman tackle pro-Tibetan activist Guy Edwards as he runs towards the Queen's carriage in 1999

Radicals want to bring forward anti-capitalist demonstrations which have become a feature of the May Day holiday in cities across Europe and North America.
The royals have not escaped attempts to breach security in the past. In 1999 the Queen was targeted by pro-Tibetan activist Guy Edwards who ran towards her carriage on the Mall but was stopped by an 18-year-old guardsman, Ian Pragnall.
The most serious breach came in March 1982 when Michael Fagan broke into the Queen's bedroom at Buckingham Palace. She woke to find him sitting on her bed. The pair allegedly chatted for half an hour. Fagan, who was 30 at the time, was later jailed.
Every year Buckingham Palace receives approximately 10,000 letters from people with mental health problems. A quarter of them are 'seeking intimacy' and half are resentful but most are thought to be harmless

The big screen's royal role models Hollywood can offer sensible marital advice for Prince William and his bride-to-be

BY JAY STONE, POSTMEDIA NEWS


The Oscar-winning movie The King's Speech comes out on DVD today, just in time for William and Kate to have a quick look before the wedding. They've probably been pretty busy, registering at Marks & Spencer and choosing china patterns and so on, but it would be a worthwhile exercise to pick up a copy of the film -there's got to be a Blockbuster somewhere near the palace -to see how previous generations of royalty got along.







The King's Speech is about how George VI, played by Colin Firth, overcame his paralyzing stutter, but in the background there are several finely etched portraits of royal relationships that are worth studying. George -great-grandfather to you, William -has the good luck to be married to Helena Bonham Carter, who gives Queen Elizabeth the perfect blend of aristocracy and irony: unlike Queen Victoria, she is amused, and her gracious sense of noblesse oblige isn't a bad attitude to take on in these fraught days.

The relationship to beware of is that of Edward VIII, played by Guy Pearce, and Wallis Simpson (Eve Best). This is the type of pairing that may account for some of the difficulties of the modern British crown -Wallis is the very model of the vulgar commoner taking on an air of unearned hauteur -and it would be a good one for Kate to memorize as a negative role model. "Apparently she has certain skills, acquired at an establishment in Shanghai," Queen Elizabeth speculates, which isn't the sort of thing one hopes to hear from one's sister-in-law. Edward and Wallis remind us that one has a responsibility to certain codes, even if it is simply the good taste to keep one's tolerance for Nazis to oneself.

Another good rental would be The Queen (2006), in which Helen Mirren portrays Elizabeth II in the days just after the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. This is another story about adjusting to modern times, and the marriage here is one that you, William, must be intimately acquainted with: the royal couple as Windsor Inc. The Queen is essentially a film about crisis management, and it reminds us that the modern monarch must be flexible to the will of the people. Mirren's Queen displays this, while Philip (James Cromwell) is less sympathetic: "A chorus line of soap stars and homosexuals," he calls the guest list for Diana's funeral. (Reminder: double-check the wedding seating arrangements.)

But what are we thinking? You are about to be newlyweds, and it's love that engages you now. The Young Victoria (2009) is a touching romance that shows us how, even in the formality of aristocracy, an innocent queen (played by Emily Blunt) can surrender to her yearning for a handsome German prince (Rupert Friend). There is a constitutional crisis to deal with -one of the perennial pitfalls of the Royal Family business -but they solve it with devotion. You might want to watch this one on a double-bill with Mrs. Brown (1997), with Judi Dench as the older Victoria, still mourning the dead Albert but forming an emotionally fulfilling relationship with her servant (Billy Connolly). The lesson here is that one can lead many lives, even in the public eye.

Perhaps it would be a good idea to skip some of the films in the royal festival -those Henry VIII movies are disagreeable reminders that royal marriages can be as fragile as royal necks, although The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933) with Charles Laughton does serve as a reminder to maintain that health club membership. Yet love is a resilient thing. Let's watch The Lion In Winter (1968) to see Henry II, played by Peter O'Toole, talking to his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine (Katharine Hepburn), whom he has had locked away for supporting her son Richard -a young Anthony Hopkins -against him. There is much intrigue, which is something you're going to have to get used to, and much regal banter.

Henry: I marvel at you after all these years. Still like a democratic drawbridge: going down for everybody.

Eleanor: At my age there's not much traffic any more.

Naughty, yes, but more elegant than more recent examples of princes caught on cellphones professing their love to extramarital companions. We're counting on you to be regal, William and Kate. Just stop and consider the movie they'll be making about you.

Senin, 18 April 2011

Carmelo Anthony misses last-second shot, Knicks blow 12-point halftime lead vs. Ray Allen & Celtics

BY FRANK ISOLA
DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER


Carmelo Anthony misses a would-be game-winner in the final seconds in Boston moments after Ray Allen (inset) drains the go-ahead three to give the Celtics a win.




BOSTON - For more than 47 minutes the Knicks were the better team and had the Boston Celtics exactly where they wanted them. But in the last 37.8 seconds, everything that could go wrong went horribly wrong.

Rajon Rondo nearly records a triple-double against the Knicks, going for 10 points, nine rebounds and nine assists.



Ray Allen, the NBA's all-time leading 3-point shooter, hit a three with 11.6 seconds remaining provided the winning margin and Carmelo Anthony, who had an awful second half, missed the potential game-winning three with two seconds left as Boston rallied for an emotional 87-85 Game 1 victory.

Allen's shot capped a wild comeback for Boston, which trailed by 12 at halftime, and looked very much like the oldest team in the NBA. But after Toney Douglas' 3-pointer gave the Knicks an 85-82 lead with 37.8 seconds to play the Knicks suffered a brutal defensive meltdown.

Rajon Rondo's half court inbound pass to Kevin Garnett resulted in a dunk and after Anthony was called for an offensive foul, Allen hit a three over Douglas to give the Celtics the win in the best-of-seven series.

Allen finished with 24 points and Garnett added 15 points and 13 rebounds. Paul Pierce added 18 for Boston, which has beaten the Knicks five straight times this season.

Anthony was 1-for-11 in the second half and finished with 15 points on 5-for-18 shooting. Stoudemire carried the Knicks in the fourth quarter, scoring 12 of his 28 in the quarter including a vicious dunk over Garnett. But on the Knicks final two possessions, they ran plays for Anthony.

Chauncey Billups scored 10 points but sat the final 1:12 after re-injuring his left knee. Douglas added 8 points and starting center Ronny Turiaf added 9 points and five rebounds.

Anthony lasted less than a minute-and-a-half before heading to the bench with two fouls and that stunning turn of events turned out to be a lucky break for the Knicks. Bill Walker replaced Melo and immediately hit a 3-pointer. He scored seven points in the period and the despite Anthony sitting the last 10 minutes of the quarter the Knicks only trailed 24-23.

When Anthony returned, his took out his frustrations on the Celtics. He scored 12 points in the period as the Knicks outscored Boston 28-15 in the second quarter.

While the Knicks played with confidence and a bounce to their step, the Celtics looked unsure of themselves. They had a tendency to overpass, resulting in a couple of shot clock violations and three-second calls.

But mostly, the Celtics were betrayed by their bread-and-butter: defense. The Knicks shot 54 percent in the opening half with Anthony and Stoudemire combining to shoot 9-for-15.

Pau Gasol largely responsible for Lakers' 109-100 Game 1 loss to New Orleans Hornets

April 17, 2011 | 7:10 pm


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Walking toward the exit of the Lakers' locker room, a team official paced nervously.





"Where ... is Pau Gasol?" the official said to himself. The locker room just opened to the media at 11 a.m. Sunday, 90 minutes before the Lakers' Game 1 matchup with New Orleans and Gasol remained nowhere in sight. That prompted some concerns since this coincided with the team's rule that players arrive at least 90 minutes for tipoff. Moments later, Lakers forwards Lamar Odom and Ron Artest slipped into the locker room and quickly dressed, hoping to avoid getting caught by assistant coach Frank Hamblen, who's in charge of monitoring such things. Meanwhile, Lakers forward Luke Walton sat by his locker, laughed at his teammates' tactics in avoiding detection and remarked the team has set up a standings race on who collected the most "silly fines," infractions such as arriving late to a game or a cell phone going off that ultimately costs a player at least $50 and goes into a pot for team dinners.

"There's no way to tell who's winning," Walton said. "There's so much going on. It changes every week and someone takes over the lead."

That ongoing change perfectly epitomizes what plagued the Lakers in their 109-100 loss Sunday to New Orleans in Game 1 of their Western Conference playoff series, a game that featured little team chemistry and a split in playoff readiness. No one represented that better than Gasol, whose eight points on two-of-nine shooting, six rebounds, zero offensive rebounds and poor defense on pick-and-roll plays contributed to the defeat. Adding injury to insult, he sustained a cut below his left eye during a collision with New Orleans center, and former teammate DJ Mbenga.

"I wasn't very sharp," Gasol said. "I couldn't get into a good rhythm. I didn't get myself going at all. It's up to me and get some energy out there and be aggressive and find ways to get that rhythm."

It's not fair to pin the loss entirely on Gasol. Odom's 10 points on three-of-six shooting featured six of those points coming in the last minute of the game when the outcome determined and pointed to his failure to lead a bench unit that already lacked Steve Blake (chicken pox) and a limited Matt Barnes (zero points on zero-of-two shooting in eight minutes in his first appearance since missing the last two games because of soreness in his surgically repaired right knee). Lakers center Andrew Bynum returned in his first game since suffering a bone bruise last week with the same amount of fouls as field goals (four), showing he could've finished with more than nine rebounds and two blocks had he played smarter and kept his emotions in check. And the Lakers' 13 turnovers featured five from Bryant, thanks to pesky former teammate in Trevor Ariza and speedy guard Chris Paul adding some stain to Bryant's 34 points on 13-of-26 shooting.

But no one epitomized everything that went wrong for the Lakers in opening the 2011 NBA playoffs more than Gasol. As Bryant said, "Pau's our guy. He's the next in line and the pressure and responsibility comes along with that." It's easy to call it a lack of urgency, but do you characterize that stereotype to Bryant, who carried the offense by making seemingly impossible shots, largely slicing a 55-47 halftime deficit to 73-72 after hurting his neck after he fell into an empty courtside chair next to AEG chief Tim Leiweke? It's convenient to describe the Lakers as still uninterested in these games, but do you apply that to Artest, who scored 16 points on four-of-eight shooting, kept Bynum calm during frustrating play, filled in Gasol's rebounding spot with 11 boards and prompted Jackson to call him "the best player in the game." It's a knee-jerk reaction to pinpoint Paul's 33 points on 11-of-18 shooting to an aging Derek Fisher, who was unable to keep up with him on screen-and-roll plays. But mostly it was Fisher who held his own and then called out for help in pointing out rotations, only to find Gasol proved too slow and too passive to react.

Fisher's never the type to call out Gasol publicly, but he's right in disputing the charge that the Lakers lacked urgency. Only certain players did, namely Gasol. "I can't speak for everybody in terms of our mentality collectively as a group," he said. "I didn't get a sense that we didn't take this seriously and thought we could show up and win. They showed up and played better than us today." But Bryant was someone who was willing to speak candidly on that, even though he acknowledged neither of them spoke afterward. "He's not naturally aggressive," Bryant said of Gasol. "Even when I'm tired, I'm naturally aggressive. You have to rev him up a little bit to get him going. I think this game here, he's going to use it as motivation and come back in Game 2 and be ready to go. I have no doubt about it.

But he didn't in Game 1, a problem considering Jackson had largely stressed how the team's key in putting away New Orleans pointed to why they swept them 4-0 in the regular season: each time the Lakers overwhelmingly dominated with inside production against an undersized center Emeka Okafor and solid but less talented as well as undersized power forward Carl Landry. To make the draw even easier for the Lakers, the Hornets entered this series without power forward David West, who suffered a season-ending aneterior cruciate ligament injury with nine games left in the season. The fact Gasol couldn't replicate the 22.2 points on 70.5% shooting in four games this season goes beyond comprehension. But there he was at Staples Center failing to get a base, threw up flat shots and communicated on defense so ineffectively that he guarded Paul one on one in two consecutive possessions only to get burned both times.

"We played bad basketball," said Bynum, who described his right knee as fine. "That's what happened. That's really it. That's what it is. Bad basketball, everybody except Kobe and Ron. I was in foul trouble early and I only played 25 minutes. The way we were playing, you're going to lose the game. Defensively we did a horrible job. We walked through the stuff the day before and it's not translating through the game."

Gasol's struggles pointed to problems that connected to the entire team. His passiveness spurred Bryant to rightfully take over the game, a strategy that proved an unwinnable option after going three-of-nine shooting in the fourth quarter. Gasol's passiveness exposed the Lakers without a frontline identity as he didn't do anything to make up for the production lost with Bynum's foul trouble. And passiveness on defense created a trickle effect, causing everyone to move out of their own rotations and contradict everything they went over in Saturday's practice.

The Lakers' loss shouldn't be too surprising if you consider their five-game losing streak that followed a 17-1 mark after the All-Star break, Jackson's observation that the team lacked focus this week in practice and the Lakers drawing a first-round opponent some privately acknowledged to me would prove to be the easiest. It turns out the Lakers were wrong, as is Odom's cliched contention of the value in being humbled. There's no need for the Lakers to draw any motivation because the 16 wins needed for another Larry O'Brien Trophy should prove motivating enough. Gasol's effort fulfilled that description the most and even led one fan at Staples Center to yell, "Are you going to show up in Game 2?"

He better, and that includes showing up to Staples Center on time.