Snookie arrested! Yes, you read right! The reality star was picked up for alleged public intoxication.
MTV is currently filming season 3 of the Jersey Shore, so we will probably see it go down when that premiers. Something to look forward to next season. I love Snooki, she absolutely made the show what it is!
A source told People, “She didn’t hurt anyone or get in a fight. She just needs to be in a drunk tank for two hours…J-WOWW was spotted trying to talk Snooki into going back into the house. But Snooki was out of control and seemed drunk.”
Snooki was at the beach drinking out of a beer bong, but it only contained Coca Cola. They also have video of her attempting to mount a bike, and that did not work out so well. That is posted below. Poor girl!
She has reportedly been charged with disorderly conduct and has been released from custody.
I am sure Snooki’s Twitter will be updated soon with her side of what went down. Also in popular searches this evening everything Snookie! Snooki’s height, her boyfriend and who punched her. The Chilean beauty is 4’9”. Well Brad Ferro is the douche who punched the poor girl last season. You can get the details here. And she is currently single, she just broke up with her boyfriend, Emilio Masella.
'Jersey Shore' star Snooki did an amazing faceplant mere moments before being arrested. Snooki looked incredibly wobbly and drunk while trying to climb a bike.
When Snooki finally got on the bike, which by the way we don't if it was her bike, she fell off as cameras rolled. She landed on her side and face by the looks of it. Ouch!
Snooki was recently arrested at Seaside Heights today over charges of disorderly conduct. She was filming today for the third season of the "Jersey Shore".
So readers, will you watch to see Snooki arrested? Check out pictures and video below, and leave me your comments!!!
Saturday, 31 July 2010
Friday, 30 July 2010
Jersey Shore season 2 episode 1 Watch online
The cast of “Jersey Shore” has returned–but this time they’re leaving the Garden State and heading to Florida.
On a quest to get the best room the cast raced from the wintry northeast down to South Beach because as Pauly D pointed out “you can’t get tan in this weather, you can’t creep in this weather, you can’t do anything. Girls don’t come out in this weather.”
Before heading to Miami we meet Snooki’s boyfriend Emilio whom she doesn’t want to cheat on while off in the fun and sun of Miami. And, as any good boyfriend would do, her new beau happily helps her get her skin tan from a can. “I don’t go tanning because Obama put a 10% of taxing on it and I feel like he did that intentionally to us…. Obama doesn’t have that problem, obviously,” says Snooki.
Enough about tanning. The cast is racing South to get their pick of the litter when it comes to rooms. On the way, Pauly D and The Situation –who are riding in the same car together– get stuck in the mud but no worries says Pauly D, “I got AAA. I’m a gold member.” When the first truck arrives, AAA gets stuck in the mud, too, leading The Situation to ponder “Who Does AAA call when AAA gets stuck?”
Meanwhile, Snooki and JWoWW are on the road together and make a pit stop at an empty bar, but before long a customer strolls along to show them his dance movies. Snooki, the cast member known for combining third grade acrobats with rhythm-less gyrates, is not impressed, calling his moves more akin to an exorcism.
Which may be what Ronnie and Sammi need to get over each other now that they’re broken up. “Whatever you do? Don’t fall in love,” Ronnie is warned by a buddy on his way to Florida.
New city, same cast. The Situation and Pauly D arrive in Miami followed by Angelina who decides to share a room with the two bachelors. When the ladies arrive they choose to ignore Angelina preferring to act like she’s a fly on the wall. Following an accident that sullied Sammi’s clothing the ladies of the shore are forced to rinse clothes in the sink and place them in a trash bag, which is a lot like the pilgrims we learn.
It’s off to party. The guys take one cab and the girls take the other. What happens? On the way to the club the ladies have a yelling match because Angelina’s not getting enough attention or forgiveness. This leads the always feisty JWoWW to threaten Angelina with violence. Par for the course. “I’m trying to be classy right now,” says Angelina. And, classy they remain as they head to the club walking in the middle of the street.
At the club the ladies of the shore are upset and there’s a lot of tension. Naturally, Ronnie and Sammi are fighting just like 2009 at the Jersey Shore. It seems to take Ronnie a lot of effort not to cry. When the cast leaves the club Ronnie and Sammi find themselves at each others throats before the men separate to party away from the women, except for Angelina.
While JWoWW is putting Vaseline on her face to prepare for a potential fight with Angelina, Ronnie is at the club hooking up with what The Situation calls grenades, meaning “a bigger ugly chick.” To let loose, Ronnie continues river dancing and making out with landmines and grenades as Pauly D, Vinny and The Situation look own in awe. They’re back. And a change of scenery seems to have helped their luck with the ladies.
What did you think of tonight’s episode?
Justin Bieber dead or live ?
There’s always a good Justin Bieber rumor to keep everyone on their toes. Tonight’s big rumor is that Justin Bieber has been smoking weed. The rumor has circulated through the Internet and comes close to topping the number one Justin Bieber rumor, ‘Is Justin Bieber dead?” Justin Bieber has made headlines recently for several things. He is starring in the season premier of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation in September and he has been targeted by the anti-gay pseudo church Westboro Baptist.
Rest assured, Justin Bieber is still holding fast to his image and hasn’t done anything to rock the boat. Apparently, the most scandalous thing Justin has really done is flirt with Tina Fey during an SNL skit and skipped through the waters of the Caribbean while holding Kim Kardashian’s hand.
Justin Bieber Latest Song BABY
Thursday, 29 July 2010
Bleach Episode 414 Video
Japanese shōnen manga series Bleach is very popular among fans and they eagerly wait for the release of next chapter. So good news is Bleach Chapter 414 has been released and it’s available online. As the new chapter release fans start searching for it on internet and in few minutes this word makes trends. Last week when the chapter 413 released in few minutes it was among the hot searches on internet.
It’s illustrated and written by Tite Kubo and it’s about the adventures of Ichigo Kurosaki. It covers how Ichigo Kurosaki performs his duties after obtaining Soul Reaper’s powers. His abilities force him to fulfill his duties and save human beings from the evil spirits and guide them.
Bleach has been publishing in Japanese manga anthology Weekly Shōnen Jump since 2001. It has become one of the most popular mangas. Due to its popularity it has been adopted as animated television series. Not only this it was also spawned three animated feature films, two original video animations and seven rock musicals.
Bleach is also being released in English-language and Viz Media licensed it. Till now its 31 volumes have been released and Viz Media also gained its video distribution rights. On September 9, 2006,Bleach first time aired on Cartoon Network as Adult Swim block. In Japan its more than 50 million copies have been sold and its popularity graph is still increasing. It has reached on the top in the Manga sales in United States. In 2005,Bleach received Shogakukan Manga Award.
Wednesday, 28 July 2010
The 157th Ohio State Fair will celebrate Finally
The 157th Ohio State Fair will celebrate Opening Day on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 with great savings. Experience all the traditional Fair favorites along with plenty of new attractions and exhibits.
"We are always excited to see friends and families come out to the Fair for opening day," said Virgil Strickler, general manager. Annually the Fair begins with an Opening Day Ceremony to kick off the start of another Ohio State Fair.
The 2010 Opening Day Ceremony will take place at 9 am in front of the Cardinal Gate. Gov. Ted Strickland will participate in a ribbon-cutting ceremony to commemorate the official opening of the 157th Ohio State Fair. The All-Ohio State Fair Band & Youth Choir will also perform.
A ceremony will be held at 11:30 am on Opening Day at which the Coliseum will be dedicated to former Ohio Gov. Bob Taft.
Value is a key component of this year's Fair and fairgoers can enjoy admission for only $3 until 3 pm on WBNS 10 TV & ONN Opening Day and Ohio Lottery Day. Be the first to enjoy the attractions, exhibits, rides and food the Fair has to offer.
Visitors can also take advantage of even more values throughout the Fair, including other specially sponsored days and discount coupons. Discount coupons can be printed at OhioStateFair.com.
"We are always excited to see friends and families come out to the Fair for opening day," said Virgil Strickler, general manager. Annually the Fair begins with an Opening Day Ceremony to kick off the start of another Ohio State Fair.
The 2010 Opening Day Ceremony will take place at 9 am in front of the Cardinal Gate. Gov. Ted Strickland will participate in a ribbon-cutting ceremony to commemorate the official opening of the 157th Ohio State Fair. The All-Ohio State Fair Band & Youth Choir will also perform.
A ceremony will be held at 11:30 am on Opening Day at which the Coliseum will be dedicated to former Ohio Gov. Bob Taft.
Value is a key component of this year's Fair and fairgoers can enjoy admission for only $3 until 3 pm on WBNS 10 TV & ONN Opening Day and Ohio Lottery Day. Be the first to enjoy the attractions, exhibits, rides and food the Fair has to offer.
Visitors can also take advantage of even more values throughout the Fair, including other specially sponsored days and discount coupons. Discount coupons can be printed at OhioStateFair.com.
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
'Real Housewives of New Jersey' recap: Bankrupt Teresa Giudice wants diamonds
Jillian's debut: Danielle's friend Cynthia comes over to plan Christine's sweet 16. Christine is not into the party, but then, she says, "I came up with the idea of donating the money I earned at the sweet 16 to a charity" Pray tell, how does one earn money at their own party? Getting, yes. Earning? Maybe her mother can answer that question. Kidding. Nice gesture. Jillian writes songs, and Danielle wants her to perform one at Christine's party. She starts to sing one, and I can't bring myself to critique it. She's 11 and has Danielle Staub for a mother. She has enough crosses to bear. Jillian stops singing after a couple of lines and starts crying. "She was just in a mood," Danielle says. "Artists get into moods. Whatever she's feeling is just going to make her performance that much stronger." Jillian is an artist like Gia is an actress. Just sayin'.
The "Real Housewives of New Jersey", and one Real Offspring in particular, continue to astound with a toxic mixture of obliviousness, self-righteousness and massive entitlement. Two cases in point: Teresa Giudice making a play for diamonds for her tenth anniversary mere weeks after filing for bankruptcy, and Ashley Holmes pitching a fit because her parents won't like, get over the fact that she assaulted Danielle Staub. I mean, it was just her hair extensions! It wasn't, like, her actual hair!
Can Kim G. be trusted?: Jacqueline Laurita tells Caroline Manzo about her run-in with Kim Granatell. "I don't hate her. I don't think she's evil. I just think she's a people-pleaser." Caroline counsels Jacqueline to keep her distance from Kim G. so Danielle doesn't get wind of anything that she can use against Ashley in the upcoming court proceedings. They rail about Danielle, and why she can't any empathy for Ashley when Danielle did stupid things when she was a kid, and blah blah blah, we've heard this all before. Caroline and Jacqueline also talk about the fact that Danielle doesn't know that Kim G. is friends with Jacqueline, which is sure to send her over the edge ... just in time for next week's episode.
It's the economy, stupid: The Giudices are playing Monopoly -- oh, the irony! -- and we learn that Teresa and Joe are celebrating their tenth anniversary. Teresa's question is not, how are we going to celebrate honey? but, so what are you doing for me? Jacqueline and husband Chris head over to the Giudice's house, where they enjoy some wine in the kitchen. Hey, nice stove! Where can I get one of those? Joe takes Chris aside and says that Teresa wants diamonds for her anniversary. Back in the kitchen, Teresa too brings up diamonds, and Jacqueline wants more details -- the Crown Jewel? "No, not the Crown Jewel," Teresa scoffs. "What do you think I am, Arabic or something ... Or wait, is that Indian?" Joe: "Guess every 10 years you gotta splurge a little, right? I've been trying to like, not go that route, but ... especially in these times, you know what I mean? The money isn't flowing like it used to. Now it's just trickling." We interrupt this recap for some righteous indignation. How can Joe and Teresa sit there in their $4 million home, sipping wine and laughing and talking about buying diamonds just weeks after filing bankruptcy papers in which they seek relief from $11 million in debt? After the bankruptcy filing become public, Teresa claimed she and Joe would learn from their mistakes? When will that happen? How does the earth not just open up and swallow them whole? Breathe. On their anniversary night, and Joe (or maybe Bravo) rents a helicopter for a ride over Manhattan. "I want to do this, like, once a month," Teresa says. "Then it's on the Westin Jersey City for room service. Dessert is chocolate cake, topped with a big diamond ring. Then we see Teresa straddling Joe on the bed. My eyes!
Learning from your mistakes (not): Jacqueline drives Ashley to the post office to pick up her summons to appear in court over pulling Danielle's hair at the fashion show. Ashley continues to be quite pissy and put out about the whole thing. Jacqueline says she hopes that going to court will scare a little sense into Ashley. She asks Ashley how should would have handled the situation differently. "I don't know. Obviously not hit her, I guess." Ashley says that on one hand, she regrets pulling Danielle's hair, but on the other hand, boy, did it feel good. (Why is girl-on-girl violence okay? If the guy who punched Snooki off her bar stool on "Jersey Shore" had said, "It felt really good to get all that anger off my chest," he would have been strung up.) According to the summons, Danielle says that after Ashley pulled her hair, Ashley screamed, "I got her, I'll get her, I'll kill you." We've seen the footage, and that appears to be an embellishment. Ashley says she plans to plead guilty to assault but not to harassment. She starts to mock Danielle, and Jacqueline says in voiceover, "Ashley was giggling and stuff. I don't know if it's a nervous laugh or she's just being a smartass." Psst, it's the latter, minus the smart. Chris counsels Ashley to stay away from Danielle, and Ashley has it in her pretty little head that after the court case is over, she's going to sue Danielle "for everything she did." Chris says Danielle has nothing, so what is she going to sue her for? The more pertinent question is, what exactly did Danielle do to Ashley? Ashley storms out. Chris says she needs to learn a lesson. Oh, like last season, when she learned that acting obnoxious will get her a brand new SUV?
Happy birhtday: It's Christine's sweet 16. More than 300 people are expected to attend, including Danielle's ex, Tom, and his new wife. The guests start to arrive and walk the red carpet. Danielle says it's a benefit (though we never hear where the money Christine "earns" is going to), and Danielle got everything donated. Kim G. is there, and Tom Staub shows up with his new wife. There's a nice little reunion. Christine makes her entrance, bizarrely enough, on the shoulders of a professional bodybuilder. Jillian makes her singing debut. No comment. A good time is had by all.
Noel Ashman's 40th Birthday party
Monday, 26 July 2010
True blood season 3 episode 6
Watch True Blood Season 3 Episode 6 Streaming Online Free. True Blood Season 3 Episode 6 free online - A new episode has just aired. Let’s now look at the next episode of True Blood.
True Blood Season 3 Episode 6 is titled I Got a Right to Sing the Blues. It will be aired on this site. Full episode synopsis below will tell you a little bit about the latest episode.
True Blood Season 3 Episode 6 is titled I Got a Right to Sing the Blues. It will be aired on this site. Full episode synopsis below will tell you a little bit about the latest episode.
Next week the site will be looking forward to see you there to watch another episode. Stay tune on the site to watch the latest episode of this series. If you try to watch this episode online for free. Just fill a dumb 30s survey,
Thor Movie Trailer Video | Sneak Peek Of Kenneth Branagh Film Adaptation For Marvel
The Thor movie trailer is currently in great demand around the Web after a new teaser trailer was shown at Comic-Con 2010.
This isn’t the Thor movie trailer shown at Comic-Con, unfortunately. That was apparently shown in 3D and thus any footage recorded by someone in attendance would looking shockingly bad.
However, this will surely do, as it’s a trailer for Thor which shows some of the action and all the actors in their respective roles.
I must admit I’m not impressed so far. It looks as though it’s trying too hard, with romance, Lord of The Rings battle scenes, and all kinds of other crap thrown in for good measure.
Let’s hope it’s improved before release in May 2011.
This isn’t the Thor movie trailer shown at Comic-Con, unfortunately. That was apparently shown in 3D and thus any footage recorded by someone in attendance would looking shockingly bad.
However, this will surely do, as it’s a trailer for Thor which shows some of the action and all the actors in their respective roles.
I must admit I’m not impressed so far. It looks as though it’s trying too hard, with romance, Lord of The Rings battle scenes, and all kinds of other crap thrown in for good measure.
Let’s hope it’s improved before release in May 2011.
Watch Street Fighter X Tekken
For gamers who grew up on the likes of the old school Street Fighter II and Tekken II on the PS1, Capcom’s latest announcement is a dream come true. Street Fighter X Tekken might be a few years away from release, but we want to know what characters you want to see in the game.
With the sheer amount of fighters available in Street Fighter and Tekken combined, it is clear that Capcom will not have space for everyone – which means that some of your favorite characters will be included, and some will not.
Which ones would you like to see the most? It’s pretty obvious that the main ones from both games will be included – Ryu, Ken, Chun Li, Jin, Kazuya, Heihachi etc. We imagine that a storyline will be taking place around these characters, but I still hope that Capcom is thinking of catering for everyone.
Then again, they could just choose the most popular characters from each game, and include the rest via DLC – everyone else seems to be doing it. Since we have already had a good look at Street Fighter characters via SSFIV, I’d just like to see Charlie added to the Street Fighter roster.
As for Tekken, I hope King and Armor King make an appearance, and also Hwoarang and Baek Doo San. Marshall Law would be a nice treat too.
With the sheer amount of fighters available in Street Fighter and Tekken combined, it is clear that Capcom will not have space for everyone – which means that some of your favorite characters will be included, and some will not.
Which ones would you like to see the most? It’s pretty obvious that the main ones from both games will be included – Ryu, Ken, Chun Li, Jin, Kazuya, Heihachi etc. We imagine that a storyline will be taking place around these characters, but I still hope that Capcom is thinking of catering for everyone.
Then again, they could just choose the most popular characters from each game, and include the rest via DLC – everyone else seems to be doing it. Since we have already had a good look at Street Fighter characters via SSFIV, I’d just like to see Charlie added to the Street Fighter roster.
As for Tekken, I hope King and Armor King make an appearance, and also Hwoarang and Baek Doo San. Marshall Law would be a nice treat too.
Sunday, 25 July 2010
Comic-Con 2010: Thor trailer unveiled
Marvel Studios released a sneak peek in 3D from Kenneth Branagh's big screen adaptation of Thor at the event in San Diego.
The trailer shows God of Thunder Thor (Chris Hemsworth) as his reckless behaviour causes him to be cast down to earth from Asgard to live among the humans, according to UGO.com.
Hemsworth told MTV: "The very first audition I had was one of those things in amongst several other auditions you get."
"You know nothing about it, there's no script or anything — it's very secretive. You might quickly rip through a couple of comic books, but it's also based on instinct."
Hemsworth appeared at Comic-Con alongside Thor co-star Natalie Portman.
The "Thor" footage was shown as part of the Marvel weekend triple header: "Captain America: The First Avenger," "Thor" and "The Avengers." By all reports, Marvel owned the 2010 Comic-Con.
With "Captain America," fans saw a glance at Chris Evans and a flying shield and Hugo Weaving before his transformation into Red Skull.
Marvel's Kevin Feige then introduced "Thor." Directed by Brit Branagh, the reaction to the dramatic trailer about the God of Thunder was so great it was shown twice due to the insanely loud ovation. It was replayed at the end of the panel. Can you blame the fan boys who were already drooling over the posters? They got to see Thor get it on with Natalie Portman, for the gods' sake!
Next came a teaser for "The Avengers" and Feige introduced Samuel Jackson, who introduced Clark Gregg, Scarlett Johansson, Kat Dennings, Chris Hemsworth, (who plays Thor) Chris Evans and Robert Downey, Jr. Then Downey confirmed the Comic-Con rumors and industry buzz about Jeremy Renner and Mark Ruffalo joining the film's cast.
The final touch: Director Joss Whedon came out onstage. Oh man, you so had to be there. The bad part? We have to wait until May 2011 to see the finished film.
Watch One Piece Episode 460 Preview
Watch One Piece Episode 460 Preview Online. Here we are with the latest look on One piece, as we have the latest out tonight, This is going to be an interesting episode from One piece, Because this is going to be showing another added vigor from the group, Find out what we will be expecting here as we check on the One Piece Episode 460 Preview Online.
While we are counting the days that will pass for the next One Piece chapter 594 to come out, what about reading the previous chapter of One Piece 594 scans.
One Piece Ep 460 has been delayed until next week July 31st; Below is the One Piece 460 HD Preview video,
Join us again for another episode full of action as One Piece 460 comes out next week dated July 25, 2010. Believe me, this episode will be full of surprises as the great war is about to commence. The marines are now formed their strongest line-up of soldiers ready to fight in case the group of White Beard comes to rescue Ace. Everyone in the nearby villages were evacuated due to the big threat on the safety of all civilians.
Saturday, 17 July 2010
Jessi slaughter given pcp by her father
Jessi Slaughter is just eleven years old but if you hear her talking, you can’t tell whether it’s an 11 year old girl verbalizing or a fully grown up, bad-mouthed female who is raving. Jessi Slaughter has her own video channel on Youtube and she places many videos by the name of kerligirl13. These video recordings are created unsupervised and in Jessi’s own room.
Jessi slaughter given pcp by her father – Jessi Slaughter is an eleven year old girl who’s constructing the top rounds on the internet for her video channel on Youtube on which she uses a really bad language.
Apparently Jessi Slaughter also has many haters who post minus comments about her and in her late video she broke down in front of the camera and even her father turned up in the video to diss all her haters.
While such videos are shown on the online web with such young girls placing bad stuff unsupervised over the internet, then one does wonder what the cosmos is coming to; awesome story from Jessi slaughter given pcp by her father; kerligirl13.
Fantasy Basketball Breaking News
Miami, FL, United States (AHN) – Anfernee “Penny” Hardaway, who last played in the NBA in 2007 with the Heat, recently told a media outlet he wants to return to Miami in a small role next season.
The 38-year-old four-time All Star wants to join recently-signed superstars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in their quest for a championship.
“I didn’t get a chance to finish my career the way I wanted,” Hardaway said on Bottom Line Sports Show, an online radio program he co-hosts.
Hardaway averaged 15.2 points per game during his 13-year career and claims to be in shape, hitting the gym and playing basketball five days a week.
Heat President Pat Riley has yet to reach out to Hardaway however, and many other players may be ahead of Penny for a spot on the roster.
The Heat recently added free agents Mike Miller and Zydrunas Ilgauskas and re-signed Udonis Haslem and Joel Anthony.
By sifting between fact and fiction.
Fiction apparently is Penny Hardaway's bid to revive his career after being out of the league since being cut by the Heat in December 2007.
Hardaway, 39, who has a home in South Florida and has been playing pickup games in the area with current NBA players, tried to state his case Friday on ESPN.
"I'm just throwing my name in the hat," Hardaway said on the network's "Outside The Lines" program. "I'm just one to put my name out there and say, 'Hey, I would love to be one of the guys to be on that team.' "
The Heat declined comment on Hardaway, with Heat President Pat Riley apparently unaware of the interest.
Among others in legitimate contention for the team's few remaining roster spots are 2009-10 Heat players Carlos Arroyo and James Jones. Others from outside the organization linked to interest are Tracy McGrady, Jerry Stackhouse, Eddie House, Keyon Dooling, Jason Williams, Kwame Brown, Jawad Williams and Rasual Butler.
In addition, Orlando Magic free-agent forward Matt Barnes has expressed possible interest in the Heat.
Barnes had been expected to make a decision Friday, but instead posted on his Twitter account, "Couple new teams just jumped n2 the game, so I'm sorry 2 say ima have 2 get back 2 you. Ill let yall know something with in the nxt few days."
The 38-year-old four-time All Star wants to join recently-signed superstars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in their quest for a championship.
“I didn’t get a chance to finish my career the way I wanted,” Hardaway said on Bottom Line Sports Show, an online radio program he co-hosts.
Hardaway averaged 15.2 points per game during his 13-year career and claims to be in shape, hitting the gym and playing basketball five days a week.
Heat President Pat Riley has yet to reach out to Hardaway however, and many other players may be ahead of Penny for a spot on the roster.
The Heat recently added free agents Mike Miller and Zydrunas Ilgauskas and re-signed Udonis Haslem and Joel Anthony.
By sifting between fact and fiction.
Fiction apparently is Penny Hardaway's bid to revive his career after being out of the league since being cut by the Heat in December 2007.
Hardaway, 39, who has a home in South Florida and has been playing pickup games in the area with current NBA players, tried to state his case Friday on ESPN.
"I'm just throwing my name in the hat," Hardaway said on the network's "Outside The Lines" program. "I'm just one to put my name out there and say, 'Hey, I would love to be one of the guys to be on that team.' "
The Heat declined comment on Hardaway, with Heat President Pat Riley apparently unaware of the interest.
Among others in legitimate contention for the team's few remaining roster spots are 2009-10 Heat players Carlos Arroyo and James Jones. Others from outside the organization linked to interest are Tracy McGrady, Jerry Stackhouse, Eddie House, Keyon Dooling, Jason Williams, Kwame Brown, Jawad Williams and Rasual Butler.
In addition, Orlando Magic free-agent forward Matt Barnes has expressed possible interest in the Heat.
Barnes had been expected to make a decision Friday, but instead posted on his Twitter account, "Couple new teams just jumped n2 the game, so I'm sorry 2 say ima have 2 get back 2 you. Ill let yall know something with in the nxt few days."
Thursday, 15 July 2010
ESPY's 2010: Jimmy V award to George Karl and other winners
The ESPY Awards are fun and meant to award achievements in and around sports. However, there are loftier goals that are noted by the ESPY's. The Arthur Ashe Courage Award and the Jimmy V Comeback Award are given to people who personify the traits of the men for whom the awards are named.
This year's Ashe Award recipients are the family of Ed Thomas, the Iowa high school football coach who took a town on his back after an unthinkable tragedy. He ultimately was the victim of another.
Thomas' town of Pakersburg, Iowa was leveled by an EF-5 tornado in the summer of 2008. He lost his home and the high school at which he taught and coached looked like it wouldn't host another game, never mind be ready for the first game of the 2008 season.
He worked tirelessly to keep the town's 2000 citizens focused and together. On cue, the football team took the field and didn't just play the season, they went 11-1. It gave solace and solidarity to the town.
But one year later, he was shot to death by a former student who suffered from a mental illness. Thomas' sons and wife not only consoled each other but made certain to reach out to the parents of the boy who had taken Ed's life
They never even considered vilifying the troubled young man or his parents. It's a small town, you see and the word "neighbors" means something special in Parkersburg.
The Thomas family led the town's grieving as well as healing process and gave new meaning to "turn the other cheek".
2010 ESPY winners: Best Sports Moment, Breakthrough Athlete, Best Record Breaking Performance
This year's Jimmy V Comeback Award was given to Denver Nuggets' head coach, George Karl. He was stricken with cancer for the second time within a few years and it kicked his butt.
He had to bow out of leading his team through the end of the season as well as the 2010 playoffs. The Nuggets struggled without him and were bounced in the first round.
Karl had already beaten prostate cancer and lived through his son Coby's two surgeries for thyroid cancer. But the throat and neck cancer he contracted tested him like nothing else.
Forty rounds of radiation burned through his skin, took his voice and he thought the cure would kill him before the disease.
He appeared on stage in the shadow of the Jimmy V banners and talked of the support he has had as well as his hopes for how to find and fund a cure for the dread disease.
It's clear he's ready to return to the rat race that is the NBA season but he will forever be changed.
This year's Ashe Award recipients are the family of Ed Thomas, the Iowa high school football coach who took a town on his back after an unthinkable tragedy. He ultimately was the victim of another.
Thomas' town of Pakersburg, Iowa was leveled by an EF-5 tornado in the summer of 2008. He lost his home and the high school at which he taught and coached looked like it wouldn't host another game, never mind be ready for the first game of the 2008 season.
He worked tirelessly to keep the town's 2000 citizens focused and together. On cue, the football team took the field and didn't just play the season, they went 11-1. It gave solace and solidarity to the town.
But one year later, he was shot to death by a former student who suffered from a mental illness. Thomas' sons and wife not only consoled each other but made certain to reach out to the parents of the boy who had taken Ed's life
They never even considered vilifying the troubled young man or his parents. It's a small town, you see and the word "neighbors" means something special in Parkersburg.
The Thomas family led the town's grieving as well as healing process and gave new meaning to "turn the other cheek".
2010 ESPY winners: Best Sports Moment, Breakthrough Athlete, Best Record Breaking Performance
This year's Jimmy V Comeback Award was given to Denver Nuggets' head coach, George Karl. He was stricken with cancer for the second time within a few years and it kicked his butt.
He had to bow out of leading his team through the end of the season as well as the 2010 playoffs. The Nuggets struggled without him and were bounced in the first round.
Karl had already beaten prostate cancer and lived through his son Coby's two surgeries for thyroid cancer. But the throat and neck cancer he contracted tested him like nothing else.
Forty rounds of radiation burned through his skin, took his voice and he thought the cure would kill him before the disease.
He appeared on stage in the shadow of the Jimmy V banners and talked of the support he has had as well as his hopes for how to find and fund a cure for the dread disease.
It's clear he's ready to return to the rat race that is the NBA season but he will forever be changed.
ESPY presenters and winners
Wednesday, 14 July 2010
George Steinbrenner Biography
Mr. Steinbrenner, who was vice president of the United States Olympic Committee from 1989 to 1996, viewed himself as a patriot. He continued to have “God Bless America” played during the seventh-inning stretch at Yankee Stadium when other teams had dropped such touches, begun after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. But he opposed American involvement in the inaugural World Baseball Classic of 2006, fearing that his star players might be injured in it. He was pleased when his left fielder Hideki Matsui declined to join the Japanese team.
“He was a visionary and a giant in the world of sports. He took a great but struggling franchise and turned it into a champion again.”
Mr. Steinbrenner’s death came eight months after the Yankees won their first World Series title since 2000, clinching their six-game victory over the Philadelphia Phillies at his new Yankee Stadium, and two days after the team’s longtime public-address announcer Bob Sheppard died at age 99.
Mr. Steinbrenner had been in failing health for the past several years and rarely appeared in public. He attended the opening game at the new stadium in April 2009, sitting in his suite with his wife, Joan (pronounced Jo-ann). When he was introduced and received an ovation, his shoulders shook and he cried.
He next appeared at the Yankees’ new home for the first two games of the World Series, then made his final appearance at the 2010 home opener, when Manager Joe Girardi and shortstop Derek Jeter, the team captain, came to his suite to present him with his 2009 World Series championship ring.
Mr. Steinbrenner spoke for only 25 seconds at the stadium’s groundbreaking ceremony in August 2006.
The blustering owner long familiar to Yankees fans and foes briefly re-emerged in October 2007 in a newspaper interview, when he threatened to fire Manager Joe Torre if the team did not advance beyond the first round of the American League playoffs. The Yankees were eliminated by the Cleveland Indians in that round, and soon afterward Torre departed after rejecting a one-year contract extension with a cut in his guaranteed salary.
In the eyes of Yankees figures from Mr. Steinbrenner’s heyday, his aura endured despite his frailty.
“He’s arguably the most recognized owner in all of sports,” Jeter said after Mr. Steinbrenner was driven onto the field in a golf cart in a ceremony before the 2008 All-Star Game at the old stadium.
“To be able to deliver this to the Boss, to the stadium he created and the atmosphere he created around here, it’s very gratifying to all of us,” Girardi said after the Yankees’ World Series victory at the new stadium.
Mr. Steinbrenner, the Yankees’ principal owner and chairman, had ceded increasing authority to his sons, Hal and Hank, who became co-chairmen in May 2008. Hal Steinbrenner, the Yankees’ managing general partner as well, was given control of the team in November 2008 in a unanimous vote by the major league club owners, who acted on his father’s request.
Mr. Steinbrenner was the central figure in a syndicate that bought the Yankees from CBS for $10 million. When he arrived in New York on Jan. 3, 1973, he said he would not “be active in the day-to-day operations of the club at all.” Having made his money as head of the American Shipbuilding Company, based in Cleveland, he declared, “I’ll stick to building ships.”
But four months later, Michael Burke, who had been running the Yankees for CBS and had stayed on to help manage the franchise, departed after clashing with Mr. Steinbrenner. John McMullen, a minority owner in the syndicate, soon remarked that “nothing is as limited as being a limited partner of George’s.”
Mr. Steinbrenner emerged as one of the most powerful, influential and, in the eyes of many, notorious executives in sports. He was the senior club owner in baseball at his death, the man known as the Boss.
A pioneer of modern sports ownership, Mr. Steinbrenner started the wave of high spending for playing talent when free agency arrived in the mid-1970s, and he continued to spend freely through the Yankees’ revival in the late ’70s and early ’80s, the long stretch without a pennant and then renewed triumphs under Torre and General Manager Brian Cashman.
The Yankees’ approximately $210 million payroll in 2009 dwarfed all others in baseball, and the team paid out millions in baseball’s luxury tax and revenue-sharing with small-market teams.
In the frenetic ’70s and ’80s, when general managers, field managers and pitching coaches were sent spinning through Mr. Steinbrenner’s revolving personnel door (Billy Martin had five stints as manager), the franchise became known as the Bronx Zoo. In December 2002, Mr. Steinbrenner’s enterprise had grown so rich that the president of the Boston Red Sox, Larry Lucchino, frustrated over losing pitcher Jose Contreras to the Yankees, called them the “evil empire.”
But Mr. Steinbrenner and the Yankees thrived through all the arguments, all the turmoil, all the bombast. Having been without a pennant since 1964 when Mr. Steinbrenner bought them, enduring sagging attendance while the upstart Mets thrived, the Yankees once again became America’s marquee sporting franchise.
Yankee Stadium underwent a major renovation in the mid-1970s, but that did not satisfy Mr. Steinbrenner with the passing of years and the building of many new stadiums with luxury boxes catering to corporate America. He cast an eye toward New Jersey, pressed for a new stadium in Manhattan and ultimately got a $1.5 billion stadium built in the Bronx, alongside the original House That Ruth Built.
Mr. Steinbrenner found new revenue streams from cable television, first in a longtime deal with the Madison Square Garden network and then with the creation of the Yankees’ YES network. The franchise also engineered lucrative marketing deals, notably a 10-year, $95 million apparel agreement with Adidas.
In 2005, the Yankees became the second American League team to top the four million mark in home attendance (the Toronto Blue Jays did it from 1991 to 1993), drawing a league-record 4,090,696. Their home attendance rose during the next three years, reaching a league-record 4,298,655 in 2008. But attendance dipped to 3,719,358 in the first year at the new stadium, which had fewer seats and higher ticket prices.
Mr. Steinbrenner also appeared in a Visa commercial with Jeter, calling him into his office to admonish him. “You’re our starting shortstop,” Mr. Steinbrenner said. “How can you possibly afford to spend two nights dancing, two nights eating out and three nights just carousing with your friends?” Jeter responded by holding up a Visa card. Mr. Steinbrenner exclaimed “Oh!” and the scene shifted to Mr. Steinbrenner in a dance line with Jeter at a night spot.
Mr. Steinbrenner usually adored his players but at times insulted them. He called outfielder Paul O’Neill “the ultimate warrior.” (Steinbrenner idolized Generals MacArthur and Patton.) But he derided the star outfielder Dave Winfield, with whom he feuded, calling him Mr. May, pointedly contrasting him with Reggie Jackson, who had been known as Mr. October for his clutch hitting in the postseason. He denounced the portly pitcher Hideki Irabu as a fat toad when he was late covering first base in an exhibition game.
Mr. Steinbrenner feuded with his fellow club owners, baseball commissioners and umpires. He was twice barred from baseball, once after pleading guilty to making illegal political campaign contributions. By October 1995, when he was fined for complaining about the umpires in a playoff series with the Seattle Mariners, Mr. Steinbrenner had accumulated disciplinary costs of $645,000.
When he was not phoning his general managers and managers with complaints or advice, he meddled in the smallest matters of ballpark maintenance. He was often portrayed by the news media as a blowhard and a baseball know-nothing.
“George is a great guy, unless you have to work for him,” Lou Piniella, who managed the Yankees twice in the 1980s, told Sports Illustrated in 2004. Mr. Steinbrenner saw himself as sticking up for the everyday New Yorker, though the price of Yankees tickets kept rising.
“I care about New York dearly,” he told Sports Illustrated in 2004. “I like every cab driver, every guy that stops the car and honks, every truck driver. I feed on that.”
He helped many charities and individuals in need and as a board member was a major fund-raiser for the historically black Grambling State University in Louisiana.
George Michael Steinbrenner III, named for a grandfather, was born on July 4, 1930, the oldest of three children, and reared in the Cleveland suburb of Bay Village. His father, Henry Steinbrenner, graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a degree in naval architecture and engineering and starred as a collegiate hurdler before taking over the family’s maritime shipping business.
Young George tried to please his father by taking up hurdling and running a home-based business that raised chickens and sold their eggs.
“He was a tough taskmaster,” Mr. Steinbrenner once said of his father. “You know, if I ran four races in track, won three and lost one, he’d say, ‘Now go sit down and study that one race and see why you lost it.’ ”
His mother, Rita, offered a contrasting presence. “It was my mom who gave me compassion for the underdog and for people in need,” Mr. Steinbrenner was quoted saying by Bill Madden in “Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball” in an apparent reference to what would be his many charitable endeavors.
Mr. Steinbrenner attended Culver Military Academy in Indiana in the mid-1940s. His father, who idolized the Yankees’ Joe DiMaggio and Bill Dickey, took him to Cleveland to watch Indians games, especially when the Yankees came to town. “We were in awe of the Yankees,” Mr. Steinbrenner said.
Mr. Steinbrenner graduated from Williams College in Massachusetts with a degree in English, and he ran hurdles and played football, as a halfback. He served as an Air Force officer, coached high school football and basketball in Ohio, and was briefly an assistant football coach at Northwestern and Purdue.
He returned to Cleveland in 1957 to join the family’s longtime shipping firm, Kinsman Marine Transit, which carried Great Lakes cargo. He also operated the Cleveland Pipers, a professional basketball team.
In 1967, Mr. Steinbrenner began obtaining stock in the American Shipbuilding Company, based in Lorain, Ohio. He eventually took it over, merging it with Kinsman. By the time he gained control of the Yankees six years later, the company had greatly strengthened its operations.
Gabe Paul, a veteran baseball executive who helped arrange Mr. Steinbrenner’s purchase of the Yankees (shortly after a failed bid to buy the Indians) and became a limited partner in the team and then the Yankees president, and Lee MacPhail, the holdover general manager from the CBS years, were expected to make the personnel decisions when Mr. Steinbrenner arrived. But he quickly became immersed in baseball decisions and craved the celebrity aura that could never have come his way as a wealthy shipping executive. He began to spend large sums to end the long pennant drought, starting with the acquisition of the star pitcher Catfish Hunter.
Mr. Steinbrenner, meanwhile, ran into trouble in a matter far beyond the ball fields. In November 1974, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn suspended him for two years — a term later reduced to 15 months — after he pleaded guilty to two charges, one a felony and the other a misdemeanor: conspiring to make illegal corporate contributions to President Richard M. Nixon’s 1972 re-election campaign, and trying to “influence and intimidate employees” of his shipbuilding company to lie to a grand jury about the matter. He was fined $15,000 in the criminal case but given no jail time.
“Everybody has dents in his armor,” Mr. Steinbrenner told The New York Times in 1987. “That’s something I have to live with.” President Ronald Reagan pardoned him in January 1989, during his final days in office.
When free agency arrived as a result of an arbitrator’s decision in 1975 that nullified the reserve clause, which had bound players to their teams, Mr. Steinbrenner stepped up his spending.
The Yankees signed the slugger Reggie Jackson and the ace relief pitcher Goose Gossage, and they won the World Series in 1977 and 1978.
Mr. Steinbrenner changed managers and general managers with abandon, punctuated by the bizarre comings and goings of Martin. The oddest sequence began on July 24, 1978, when Martin resigned as manager, presumably a step ahead of being fired, after saying of Jackson and Mr. Steinbrenner: “The two of them deserve each other. One’s a born liar; the other’s convicted,” a reference to Mr. Steinbrenner’s guilty plea in the illegal-contributions case.
Only five days later, on Old-Timers’ Day at Yankee Stadium, Martin was introduced as the Yankees’ manager for 1980. Instead he returned in June 1979, replacing the fired Bob Lemon, only to be fired himself a month after that season ended.
Dick Howser was named manager in 1980 and led the Yankees to a division championship, but soon after the season concluded, Mr. Steinbrenner announced that Howser was leaving to pursue “an outstanding offer in real estate,” an opportunity that remained a mystery.
After the Yankees lost to the Dodgers in Game 5 of the 1981 World Series at Los Angeles, Mr. Steinbrenner broke his hand. He said he had punched two men who insulted him and the Yankees in a hotel elevator. But the supposed assailants were never identified.
Another furor arose in 1985, this one surrounding Yogi Berra, the Yankees’ Hall of Fame catcher, who had become the manager. After declaring that “Yogi will be the manager the entire season, win or lose,” Mr. Steinbrenner fired him with the team off to a 6-10 start and dispatched the Yankees executive Clyde King to give Berra the news. Berra, furious, refused to set foot inside Yankee Stadium until Steinbrenner apologized 14 years later.
The Yankees struck a major financial coup in 1988 with a 12-year, $486 million TV deal with the Madison Square Garden network. But the team had been without a pennant since 1981 — a split season because of a players’ strike — and free agents had been reluctant to enter Mr. Steinbrenner’s turbulent domain. By 1990, he had switched managers 18 times and hired 13 general managers.
Then came more trouble. In July 1990, Commissioner Fay Vincent ordered Mr. Steinbrenner to step aside as the Yankees’ managing partner for making a $40,000 payment to a confessed gambler named Howard Spira in return for Mr. Spira’s seeking damaging information about Winfield. Mr. Steinbrenner had been displeased with Winfield’s performance on the field, and the two had feuded over contributions Mr. Steinbrenner was to make to Winfield’s philanthropic foundation.
Mr. Steinbrenner resumed control of the Yankees in 1993, and three years later they were World Series champions again, beginning a long run of dominance.
By the 1990s, with free agents becoming ever more expensive, Mr. Steinbrenner acknowledged the need to develop the Yankees’ minor league system. The Yankees swept to championships with home-grown talent like Jeter, center fielder Bernie Williams, catcher Jorge Posada and pitchers Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera. But they also assumed more than $100 million in payments owed to Alex Rodriguez, who arrived in a trade with the Texas Rangers, and obtained the high-priced Jason Giambi, Roger Clemens and Randy Johnson.
In 2002, an investment group that included the Yankees formed the YES network to carry many games and broadcast Yankees-related programming. YES had $257 million in revenue in 2005, for the first time surpassing MSG as the country’s top regional sports network, according to Kagan Research.
The Yankees’ management achieved stability in the last decade as the team captured World Series championships in 1996 and every year from 1998 to 2000. But the Yankees faltered after that in their bid for another World Series title, and when they were knocked out of the playoffs by the upstart Detroit Tigers in 2006, speculation arose that Mr. Steinbrenner would fire Torre.
Torre, the manager since 1996, stayed on, and Mr. Cashman, the general manager since 1998 and a frequent object of Mr. Steinbrenner’s criticism, remained as well.
Even in his earliest days running the Yankees, Mr. Steinbrenner acknowledged that he seemed to rule through fear.
“Some guys can lead through real, genuine respect,” he told Cleveland magazine in 1974. “There are some guys who people would walk through a wall for, O.K., but I’m not that kind of a leader.” He likened himself to George Patton: “He was a gruff son of a bitch and he led through fear. I hope I don’t lead through fear, and I would hope it was more love and respect, but maybe it isn’t.”
Mr. Steinbrenner’s wrath often extended to the workers at Yankee Stadium. During an interview with The Times at his office in 1998, he called in two food-service employees and pushed a pretzel at them. “You call that fresh?” he said.
Always fastidious about his own grooming, he insisted that his players shun unruly hair and beards, displaying something of the disciplinarian he had been at home, with his children. He admitted he had been overbearing and even verbally abusive toward them. His daughter Jennifer said in 2004 that her brothers had absorbed the brunt. “Let’s put it this way: he had very high expectations of us,” she said.
In addition to his wife, Joan (pronounced Jo-ann), his sons Hal and Hank, and his daughter Jennifer Steinbrenner Swindal, Mr. Steinbrenner is survived by his daughter Jessica Steinbrenner; two sisters, Susan Norpell and Judy Kamm, and several grandchildren.
In his later years Mr. Steinbrenner spent most of his time in Tampa, with his own corps of Yankees advisers, an arrangement that created a rift with the New York hierarchy headed by Mr. Cashman. He had divested himself of most of his business interests. American Shipbuilding filed for bankruptcy in 1993, but he owned a stud farm in Ocala, Fla., and had entered six horses in the Kentucky Derby over the years.
In April 2010, Forbes magazine estimated the Yankees’ value at $1.6 billion. The Red Sox had the second-highest value among major league teams, according to Forbes, far behind the Yankees at $870 million, with the Mets third at $858 million.
In his last years, Mr. Steinbrenner seemed to mellow some, and he spoke of the deaths of many friends. He cried in public on several occasions, including the time he walked past a group of West Point cadets who cheered for him at the Yankees’ 2004 home opener. He cried again in a television interview that day.
“This is a very important thing that we hold the string to,” he said of the Yankees, his voice cracking. “This is the people’s team.”
In building it into a fabulously successful and exceedingly lucrative enterprise, he never lost sight of his credo. As he told The New York Times in 1998: “I hate to lose. Hate, hate, hate to lose.”
George Steinbrenner, who bought a declining Yankees team in 1973, promised to stay out of its daily affairs and then, in an often tumultuous reign, placed his formidable stamp on 7 World Series championship teams, 11 pennant winners and a sporting world powerhouse valued at perhaps $1.6 billion, died Tuesday morning. He was 80 and lived in Tampa, Fla. The Yankees announced the death without giving a cause.
“He was an incredible and charitable man,” the family said in a statement.“He was a visionary and a giant in the world of sports. He took a great but struggling franchise and turned it into a champion again.”
Mr. Steinbrenner’s death came eight months after the Yankees won their first World Series title since 2000, clinching their six-game victory over the Philadelphia Phillies at his new Yankee Stadium, and two days after the team’s longtime public-address announcer Bob Sheppard died at age 99.
Mr. Steinbrenner had been in failing health for the past several years and rarely appeared in public. He attended the opening game at the new stadium in April 2009, sitting in his suite with his wife, Joan (pronounced Jo-ann). When he was introduced and received an ovation, his shoulders shook and he cried.
He next appeared at the Yankees’ new home for the first two games of the World Series, then made his final appearance at the 2010 home opener, when Manager Joe Girardi and shortstop Derek Jeter, the team captain, came to his suite to present him with his 2009 World Series championship ring.
Mr. Steinbrenner spoke for only 25 seconds at the stadium’s groundbreaking ceremony in August 2006.
The blustering owner long familiar to Yankees fans and foes briefly re-emerged in October 2007 in a newspaper interview, when he threatened to fire Manager Joe Torre if the team did not advance beyond the first round of the American League playoffs. The Yankees were eliminated by the Cleveland Indians in that round, and soon afterward Torre departed after rejecting a one-year contract extension with a cut in his guaranteed salary.
In the eyes of Yankees figures from Mr. Steinbrenner’s heyday, his aura endured despite his frailty.
“He’s arguably the most recognized owner in all of sports,” Jeter said after Mr. Steinbrenner was driven onto the field in a golf cart in a ceremony before the 2008 All-Star Game at the old stadium.
“To be able to deliver this to the Boss, to the stadium he created and the atmosphere he created around here, it’s very gratifying to all of us,” Girardi said after the Yankees’ World Series victory at the new stadium.
Mr. Steinbrenner, the Yankees’ principal owner and chairman, had ceded increasing authority to his sons, Hal and Hank, who became co-chairmen in May 2008. Hal Steinbrenner, the Yankees’ managing general partner as well, was given control of the team in November 2008 in a unanimous vote by the major league club owners, who acted on his father’s request.
Mr. Steinbrenner was the central figure in a syndicate that bought the Yankees from CBS for $10 million. When he arrived in New York on Jan. 3, 1973, he said he would not “be active in the day-to-day operations of the club at all.” Having made his money as head of the American Shipbuilding Company, based in Cleveland, he declared, “I’ll stick to building ships.”
But four months later, Michael Burke, who had been running the Yankees for CBS and had stayed on to help manage the franchise, departed after clashing with Mr. Steinbrenner. John McMullen, a minority owner in the syndicate, soon remarked that “nothing is as limited as being a limited partner of George’s.”
Mr. Steinbrenner emerged as one of the most powerful, influential and, in the eyes of many, notorious executives in sports. He was the senior club owner in baseball at his death, the man known as the Boss.
A pioneer of modern sports ownership, Mr. Steinbrenner started the wave of high spending for playing talent when free agency arrived in the mid-1970s, and he continued to spend freely through the Yankees’ revival in the late ’70s and early ’80s, the long stretch without a pennant and then renewed triumphs under Torre and General Manager Brian Cashman.
The Yankees’ approximately $210 million payroll in 2009 dwarfed all others in baseball, and the team paid out millions in baseball’s luxury tax and revenue-sharing with small-market teams.
In the frenetic ’70s and ’80s, when general managers, field managers and pitching coaches were sent spinning through Mr. Steinbrenner’s revolving personnel door (Billy Martin had five stints as manager), the franchise became known as the Bronx Zoo. In December 2002, Mr. Steinbrenner’s enterprise had grown so rich that the president of the Boston Red Sox, Larry Lucchino, frustrated over losing pitcher Jose Contreras to the Yankees, called them the “evil empire.”
But Mr. Steinbrenner and the Yankees thrived through all the arguments, all the turmoil, all the bombast. Having been without a pennant since 1964 when Mr. Steinbrenner bought them, enduring sagging attendance while the upstart Mets thrived, the Yankees once again became America’s marquee sporting franchise.
Yankee Stadium underwent a major renovation in the mid-1970s, but that did not satisfy Mr. Steinbrenner with the passing of years and the building of many new stadiums with luxury boxes catering to corporate America. He cast an eye toward New Jersey, pressed for a new stadium in Manhattan and ultimately got a $1.5 billion stadium built in the Bronx, alongside the original House That Ruth Built.
Mr. Steinbrenner found new revenue streams from cable television, first in a longtime deal with the Madison Square Garden network and then with the creation of the Yankees’ YES network. The franchise also engineered lucrative marketing deals, notably a 10-year, $95 million apparel agreement with Adidas.
In 2005, the Yankees became the second American League team to top the four million mark in home attendance (the Toronto Blue Jays did it from 1991 to 1993), drawing a league-record 4,090,696. Their home attendance rose during the next three years, reaching a league-record 4,298,655 in 2008. But attendance dipped to 3,719,358 in the first year at the new stadium, which had fewer seats and higher ticket prices.
Mr. Steinbrenner also appeared in a Visa commercial with Jeter, calling him into his office to admonish him. “You’re our starting shortstop,” Mr. Steinbrenner said. “How can you possibly afford to spend two nights dancing, two nights eating out and three nights just carousing with your friends?” Jeter responded by holding up a Visa card. Mr. Steinbrenner exclaimed “Oh!” and the scene shifted to Mr. Steinbrenner in a dance line with Jeter at a night spot.
Mr. Steinbrenner usually adored his players but at times insulted them. He called outfielder Paul O’Neill “the ultimate warrior.” (Steinbrenner idolized Generals MacArthur and Patton.) But he derided the star outfielder Dave Winfield, with whom he feuded, calling him Mr. May, pointedly contrasting him with Reggie Jackson, who had been known as Mr. October for his clutch hitting in the postseason. He denounced the portly pitcher Hideki Irabu as a fat toad when he was late covering first base in an exhibition game.
Mr. Steinbrenner feuded with his fellow club owners, baseball commissioners and umpires. He was twice barred from baseball, once after pleading guilty to making illegal political campaign contributions. By October 1995, when he was fined for complaining about the umpires in a playoff series with the Seattle Mariners, Mr. Steinbrenner had accumulated disciplinary costs of $645,000.
When he was not phoning his general managers and managers with complaints or advice, he meddled in the smallest matters of ballpark maintenance. He was often portrayed by the news media as a blowhard and a baseball know-nothing.
“George is a great guy, unless you have to work for him,” Lou Piniella, who managed the Yankees twice in the 1980s, told Sports Illustrated in 2004. Mr. Steinbrenner saw himself as sticking up for the everyday New Yorker, though the price of Yankees tickets kept rising.
“I care about New York dearly,” he told Sports Illustrated in 2004. “I like every cab driver, every guy that stops the car and honks, every truck driver. I feed on that.”
He helped many charities and individuals in need and as a board member was a major fund-raiser for the historically black Grambling State University in Louisiana.
George Michael Steinbrenner III, named for a grandfather, was born on July 4, 1930, the oldest of three children, and reared in the Cleveland suburb of Bay Village. His father, Henry Steinbrenner, graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a degree in naval architecture and engineering and starred as a collegiate hurdler before taking over the family’s maritime shipping business.
Young George tried to please his father by taking up hurdling and running a home-based business that raised chickens and sold their eggs.
“He was a tough taskmaster,” Mr. Steinbrenner once said of his father. “You know, if I ran four races in track, won three and lost one, he’d say, ‘Now go sit down and study that one race and see why you lost it.’ ”
His mother, Rita, offered a contrasting presence. “It was my mom who gave me compassion for the underdog and for people in need,” Mr. Steinbrenner was quoted saying by Bill Madden in “Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball” in an apparent reference to what would be his many charitable endeavors.
Mr. Steinbrenner attended Culver Military Academy in Indiana in the mid-1940s. His father, who idolized the Yankees’ Joe DiMaggio and Bill Dickey, took him to Cleveland to watch Indians games, especially when the Yankees came to town. “We were in awe of the Yankees,” Mr. Steinbrenner said.
Mr. Steinbrenner graduated from Williams College in Massachusetts with a degree in English, and he ran hurdles and played football, as a halfback. He served as an Air Force officer, coached high school football and basketball in Ohio, and was briefly an assistant football coach at Northwestern and Purdue.
He returned to Cleveland in 1957 to join the family’s longtime shipping firm, Kinsman Marine Transit, which carried Great Lakes cargo. He also operated the Cleveland Pipers, a professional basketball team.
In 1967, Mr. Steinbrenner began obtaining stock in the American Shipbuilding Company, based in Lorain, Ohio. He eventually took it over, merging it with Kinsman. By the time he gained control of the Yankees six years later, the company had greatly strengthened its operations.
Gabe Paul, a veteran baseball executive who helped arrange Mr. Steinbrenner’s purchase of the Yankees (shortly after a failed bid to buy the Indians) and became a limited partner in the team and then the Yankees president, and Lee MacPhail, the holdover general manager from the CBS years, were expected to make the personnel decisions when Mr. Steinbrenner arrived. But he quickly became immersed in baseball decisions and craved the celebrity aura that could never have come his way as a wealthy shipping executive. He began to spend large sums to end the long pennant drought, starting with the acquisition of the star pitcher Catfish Hunter.
Mr. Steinbrenner, meanwhile, ran into trouble in a matter far beyond the ball fields. In November 1974, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn suspended him for two years — a term later reduced to 15 months — after he pleaded guilty to two charges, one a felony and the other a misdemeanor: conspiring to make illegal corporate contributions to President Richard M. Nixon’s 1972 re-election campaign, and trying to “influence and intimidate employees” of his shipbuilding company to lie to a grand jury about the matter. He was fined $15,000 in the criminal case but given no jail time.
“Everybody has dents in his armor,” Mr. Steinbrenner told The New York Times in 1987. “That’s something I have to live with.” President Ronald Reagan pardoned him in January 1989, during his final days in office.
When free agency arrived as a result of an arbitrator’s decision in 1975 that nullified the reserve clause, which had bound players to their teams, Mr. Steinbrenner stepped up his spending.
The Yankees signed the slugger Reggie Jackson and the ace relief pitcher Goose Gossage, and they won the World Series in 1977 and 1978.
Mr. Steinbrenner changed managers and general managers with abandon, punctuated by the bizarre comings and goings of Martin. The oddest sequence began on July 24, 1978, when Martin resigned as manager, presumably a step ahead of being fired, after saying of Jackson and Mr. Steinbrenner: “The two of them deserve each other. One’s a born liar; the other’s convicted,” a reference to Mr. Steinbrenner’s guilty plea in the illegal-contributions case.
Only five days later, on Old-Timers’ Day at Yankee Stadium, Martin was introduced as the Yankees’ manager for 1980. Instead he returned in June 1979, replacing the fired Bob Lemon, only to be fired himself a month after that season ended.
Dick Howser was named manager in 1980 and led the Yankees to a division championship, but soon after the season concluded, Mr. Steinbrenner announced that Howser was leaving to pursue “an outstanding offer in real estate,” an opportunity that remained a mystery.
After the Yankees lost to the Dodgers in Game 5 of the 1981 World Series at Los Angeles, Mr. Steinbrenner broke his hand. He said he had punched two men who insulted him and the Yankees in a hotel elevator. But the supposed assailants were never identified.
Another furor arose in 1985, this one surrounding Yogi Berra, the Yankees’ Hall of Fame catcher, who had become the manager. After declaring that “Yogi will be the manager the entire season, win or lose,” Mr. Steinbrenner fired him with the team off to a 6-10 start and dispatched the Yankees executive Clyde King to give Berra the news. Berra, furious, refused to set foot inside Yankee Stadium until Steinbrenner apologized 14 years later.
The Yankees struck a major financial coup in 1988 with a 12-year, $486 million TV deal with the Madison Square Garden network. But the team had been without a pennant since 1981 — a split season because of a players’ strike — and free agents had been reluctant to enter Mr. Steinbrenner’s turbulent domain. By 1990, he had switched managers 18 times and hired 13 general managers.
Then came more trouble. In July 1990, Commissioner Fay Vincent ordered Mr. Steinbrenner to step aside as the Yankees’ managing partner for making a $40,000 payment to a confessed gambler named Howard Spira in return for Mr. Spira’s seeking damaging information about Winfield. Mr. Steinbrenner had been displeased with Winfield’s performance on the field, and the two had feuded over contributions Mr. Steinbrenner was to make to Winfield’s philanthropic foundation.
Mr. Steinbrenner resumed control of the Yankees in 1993, and three years later they were World Series champions again, beginning a long run of dominance.
By the 1990s, with free agents becoming ever more expensive, Mr. Steinbrenner acknowledged the need to develop the Yankees’ minor league system. The Yankees swept to championships with home-grown talent like Jeter, center fielder Bernie Williams, catcher Jorge Posada and pitchers Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera. But they also assumed more than $100 million in payments owed to Alex Rodriguez, who arrived in a trade with the Texas Rangers, and obtained the high-priced Jason Giambi, Roger Clemens and Randy Johnson.
In 2002, an investment group that included the Yankees formed the YES network to carry many games and broadcast Yankees-related programming. YES had $257 million in revenue in 2005, for the first time surpassing MSG as the country’s top regional sports network, according to Kagan Research.
The Yankees’ management achieved stability in the last decade as the team captured World Series championships in 1996 and every year from 1998 to 2000. But the Yankees faltered after that in their bid for another World Series title, and when they were knocked out of the playoffs by the upstart Detroit Tigers in 2006, speculation arose that Mr. Steinbrenner would fire Torre.
Torre, the manager since 1996, stayed on, and Mr. Cashman, the general manager since 1998 and a frequent object of Mr. Steinbrenner’s criticism, remained as well.
Even in his earliest days running the Yankees, Mr. Steinbrenner acknowledged that he seemed to rule through fear.
“Some guys can lead through real, genuine respect,” he told Cleveland magazine in 1974. “There are some guys who people would walk through a wall for, O.K., but I’m not that kind of a leader.” He likened himself to George Patton: “He was a gruff son of a bitch and he led through fear. I hope I don’t lead through fear, and I would hope it was more love and respect, but maybe it isn’t.”
Mr. Steinbrenner’s wrath often extended to the workers at Yankee Stadium. During an interview with The Times at his office in 1998, he called in two food-service employees and pushed a pretzel at them. “You call that fresh?” he said.
Always fastidious about his own grooming, he insisted that his players shun unruly hair and beards, displaying something of the disciplinarian he had been at home, with his children. He admitted he had been overbearing and even verbally abusive toward them. His daughter Jennifer said in 2004 that her brothers had absorbed the brunt. “Let’s put it this way: he had very high expectations of us,” she said.
In addition to his wife, Joan (pronounced Jo-ann), his sons Hal and Hank, and his daughter Jennifer Steinbrenner Swindal, Mr. Steinbrenner is survived by his daughter Jessica Steinbrenner; two sisters, Susan Norpell and Judy Kamm, and several grandchildren.
In his later years Mr. Steinbrenner spent most of his time in Tampa, with his own corps of Yankees advisers, an arrangement that created a rift with the New York hierarchy headed by Mr. Cashman. He had divested himself of most of his business interests. American Shipbuilding filed for bankruptcy in 1993, but he owned a stud farm in Ocala, Fla., and had entered six horses in the Kentucky Derby over the years.
In April 2010, Forbes magazine estimated the Yankees’ value at $1.6 billion. The Red Sox had the second-highest value among major league teams, according to Forbes, far behind the Yankees at $870 million, with the Mets third at $858 million.
In his last years, Mr. Steinbrenner seemed to mellow some, and he spoke of the deaths of many friends. He cried in public on several occasions, including the time he walked past a group of West Point cadets who cheered for him at the Yankees’ 2004 home opener. He cried again in a television interview that day.
“This is a very important thing that we hold the string to,” he said of the Yankees, his voice cracking. “This is the people’s team.”
In building it into a fabulously successful and exceedingly lucrative enterprise, he never lost sight of his credo. As he told The New York Times in 1998: “I hate to lose. Hate, hate, hate to lose.”
George Steinbrenner Dies at 80
George Steinbrenner, best-known for his long, successful reign as owner of the New York Yankees but also a longtime owner and breeder of racehorses, died at age 80 on Tuesday in Tampa, Fla. His most notable horses included Majestic Warrior, who won the Hopeful Stakes in 2007, and Bellamy Road, the favorite in the 2005 Kentucky Derby.
Either on his own or in partnership, Steinbrenner had six runners in the Kentucky Derby. He suffered a crushing defeat with his final Derby starter, Bellamy Road, who was sent off the 5-2 favorite in the Derby following a runaway victory in the Wood Memorial. Despite high expectations, Bellamy Road faded after racing wide and pressing a hot pace. He finished seventh behind the victorious Giacomo.
Nick Zito, the trainer of Bellamy Road, trained for Steinbrenner for 15 years and is a passionate baseball fan. "It's a sad day today," Zito said. "I had a good relationship with him. He took me to a playoff game in 1995 and sat me next to Joe DiMaggio."
Majestic Warrior, trained by Bill Mott, was one of the top 2-year-olds of his generation, and was a third-generation success story for Steinbrenner. Majestic Warrior's dam, Dream Supreme, won the 2000 Ballerina for Steinbrenner. And her dam, Spinning Round, won the Ballerina in 1993, also for Steinbrenner.
"I considered George a real friend, a friendship that started with my dad," Robert N. Clay, owner of Three Chimneys Farm, said Tuesday in a statement. "I will never forget the pleasure of spending time with him driving around the farm, listening to his views on things, and realizing how dear a man he really was, given all of the publicity that surrounded him to the contrary.
"We raised several good horses for him over the years, Majestic Warrior among them. Not only will he be missed by the racing industry, he will be missed by everyone that loved sport of any kind."
Steinbrenner bred horses in Florida at his 750-acre Kinsman Stud, which was named for the street on which his ancestors first settled in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1840. His son, Hank, who has overseen the Yankees since his father's health declined, is a devotee of thoroughbred breeding and was once described by George as "a Tesio disciple." Hank is the eldest of Steinbrenner's four children.
Steinbrenner usually kept approximately 25 horses in training and had about 35 mares at Kinsman.
Steinbrenner's first top-class horse was Steve's Friend, who won the 1977 Hollywood Derby before finishing fifth behind Seattle Slew in that year's Kentucky Derby.
Other top horses owned by Steinbrenner included Eternal Prince, who won the Gotham and Wood Memorial in 1985; Concerto, who won the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes in 1996; and Acceptable, who gave Steinbrenner his best finish in a Breeders' Cup race when he finished second in the 1996 Juvenile.
Steinbrenner also spearheaded the group that in 1980 purchased Florida Downs, now known as Tampa Bay Downs. He sold his share of the track in 1986 but used the proceeds to take a partial ownership position in the harness tracks Balmoral and Maywood in the Chicago area.
Nick Zito, the trainer of Bellamy Road, trained for Steinbrenner for 15 years and is a passionate baseball fan. "It's a sad day today," Zito said. "I had a good relationship with him. He took me to a playoff game in 1995 and sat me next to Joe DiMaggio."
Majestic Warrior, trained by Bill Mott, was one of the top 2-year-olds of his generation, and was a third-generation success story for Steinbrenner. Majestic Warrior's dam, Dream Supreme, won the 2000 Ballerina for Steinbrenner. And her dam, Spinning Round, won the Ballerina in 1993, also for Steinbrenner.
"I considered George a real friend, a friendship that started with my dad," Robert N. Clay, owner of Three Chimneys Farm, said Tuesday in a statement. "I will never forget the pleasure of spending time with him driving around the farm, listening to his views on things, and realizing how dear a man he really was, given all of the publicity that surrounded him to the contrary.
"We raised several good horses for him over the years, Majestic Warrior among them. Not only will he be missed by the racing industry, he will be missed by everyone that loved sport of any kind."
Steinbrenner bred horses in Florida at his 750-acre Kinsman Stud, which was named for the street on which his ancestors first settled in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1840. His son, Hank, who has overseen the Yankees since his father's health declined, is a devotee of thoroughbred breeding and was once described by George as "a Tesio disciple." Hank is the eldest of Steinbrenner's four children.
Steinbrenner usually kept approximately 25 horses in training and had about 35 mares at Kinsman.
Steinbrenner's first top-class horse was Steve's Friend, who won the 1977 Hollywood Derby before finishing fifth behind Seattle Slew in that year's Kentucky Derby.
Other top horses owned by Steinbrenner included Eternal Prince, who won the Gotham and Wood Memorial in 1985; Concerto, who won the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes in 1996; and Acceptable, who gave Steinbrenner his best finish in a Breeders' Cup race when he finished second in the 1996 Juvenile.
Steinbrenner also spearheaded the group that in 1980 purchased Florida Downs, now known as Tampa Bay Downs. He sold his share of the track in 1986 but used the proceeds to take a partial ownership position in the harness tracks Balmoral and Maywood in the Chicago area.
Tuesday, 13 July 2010
Michigan mom, Aimee L. Sword, sent to prison after having sex with teen son
A Michigan mom who pleaded guilty to having sex with her 14-year-old biological son she gave up for adoption and later found on the Internet, will face at least nine years behind bars, according to the Detroit Free Press.
Aimee L. Sword, 36, of Waterford, apologized at her sentencing on Monday in Oakland County Circuit Court on Monday. The former Macy's makeup clerk could face up to 30 years in jail.
Sword tracked her teenage son, who is now 16, on Facebook in 2008 after she didn't receive an annual update from the boy's adoptive family in Grand Rapids.
"When she saw this boy, something just touched off in her—and it wasn't a mother-son relationship, it was a boyfriend-girlfriend relationship," Sword's attorney, Mitchell Ribitwer, said to the newspaper.
Sword said she only has sex with her son once. But authorities said there were several incidents, including at a Grand Rapids hotel and at her home.
At the time, Sword was married and lived with her husband and five children who ranged from toddlers to teens.
The boy's adoptive parents—not knowing about any sexual misconduct-- gave him permission to stay with Sword. He later alerted a counselor to the incident.
"Aimee's searching for a reason why this happened. She can't understand it," Ribitwer said.
It seems the George Steinbrenner, the owner of the New York Yankees baseball team, has died. That's according to a story
Aimee L. Sword tracked down the son she gave up for adoption on Facebook. She was 35 at the time. He was 14. Soon the two were having sex and now Sword, 36, is in prison for nine to 30 years. “When she saw this boy, it wasn’t a mother-son relationship, it was a boyfriend-girlfriend relationship,” her attorney told Detroit's Free Press. While Sword, who was married with five children, searches for answers to why the incident happened, there are concerns for the boy, who alerted authorities. A remains "concerned for this young boy and what it may have done to his psyche and his future."
If you've been following the messy and sad break up of Mel Gibson and his wife Oksana, RadarOnline has the scoop, including audio.
Hot hot is it in America today? Too hot in most cities across the nation. Sure, it's July. But is July supposed to be like this. By 2039 searing heat waves will be a regular summer event according to Stanford University researchers.
PONTIAC, Mich. — A Detroit-area woman who pleaded guilty to having sex with the biological son she gave up for adoption and later tracked down on the Internet has been sentenced nine years to 30 years in prison.
Thirty-six-year-old Aimee L. Sword of Waterford Township apologized at her sentencing Monday in Oakland County Circuit Court. She had pleaded guilty to one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct in a deal with prosecutors.
Police say Sword used Facebook in 2008 to find her son, who's now 16. She gave him up for adoption as an infant.
He testified they had sex in Waterford Township and Grand Rapids.
Waterford Township is 30 miles northwest of Detroit.
Monday, 12 July 2010
All-Star events have grown since slugger blasted onto scene
Especially right here at Angel Stadium, where the State Farm Home Run Derby now takes center stage Monday night amid a fabulous All-Star Week in Anaheim.
"I'm a fan of the Home Run Derby, because I like to watch the new guys. Most of the guys who are playing now, they weren't even teenagers then," he said Sunday night.
"Then" was 21 years earlier, exactly to the night. That was the night the legend of Bo was cemented even more. Remember? He crushed a first-inning homer for the American League and then went on to win the All-Star Game Most Valuable Player Award in the AL victory.
This time, Jackson was wearing the same powder-blue Royals cleats and had just crushed a Jennie Finch pitch far over a fence as well, leading the AL to a big victory in the annual Legends & Celebrities Softball Game.
2010 All-Stars
AL starters
C: J. Mauer, MIN
1B: J. Morneau, MIN
2B: R. Cano, NYY
SS: D. Jeter, NYY
3B: E. Longoria, TB
OF: J. Hamilton, TEX
OF: I. Suzuki, SEA
OF: C. Crawford, TB
DH: V. Guerrero, TEX
NL starters
C: Y. Molina, STL
1B: A. Pujols, STL
2B: C. Utley, PHI
SS: H. Ramirez, FLA
3B: D. Wright, NYM
OF: R. Braun, MIL
OF: A. Ethier, LA
OF: J. Heyward, ATL
Oh, would Bo Jackson ever love to have this Home Run Derby transported back to his glory days. It had to grow on its own over time, built up by Ken Griffey Jr. and Mark McGwire and Bobby Abreu and Josh Hamilton. With everyone watching back in 1989, what a show it could have been. What you probably don't remember is that he actually participated in one Home Run Derby, the day before those heroics, collecting a single homer as Eric Davis and Ruben Sierra won with a whopping three apiece.
"Of course I would. Of course I would," he repeated when asked if he wished this had been his stage. "I think they had the Home Run Derby back then. They had it. But it wasn't as big as then."
This is big, nearly as big as the 81st All-Star Game itself. The 2010 State Farm Home Run Derby is a largely untested field featuring Miguel Cabrera of the Tigers, Corey Hart of the Brewers, Matt Holliday of the Cardinals, David Ortiz of the Red Sox, Hanley Ramirez of the Marlins, Nick Swisher of the Yankees, Vernon Wells of the Blue Jays and Chris Young of the D-backs.
The Midsummer Classic looms ahead at 8 p.m. ET on Tuesday, another chance for the NL to beat the AL for the first time since 1996, and in the meantime you immerse yourself in this All-Star Week and you can gradually feel the excitement level rising. That is the way it always is, a passion play that grows in intensity with every single act, until the big finish.
It starts with FanFest that runs for five days, and then comes the Sunday docket featuring the XM All-Star Futures Game (a 9-1 U.S. shellacking of the World team) followed by the adorable softball fun. Then comes the bombardment of home runs, evoking more disbelief each year, and then finally the All-Star Game with unpredictable storylines and every Major League fan base represented.
"I just want to see people hit 'em really, really far," said Marlins first-base prospect Logan Morrison. "I don't care who it is. I just want to see how far they go."
Morrison had just made a nice impression as the U.S. first baseman on Sunday, and he said he is going to stay behind and can't wait for the Home Run Derby just like everyone else.
"I'll be staying here -- I might give JJ [Josh Johnson] a call and see if he can't get me down on the field," Morrison said. "He's got his kids, but maybe he or Hanley or somebody can get me down there. If not, no big deal, I think I can get some tickets."
We love home runs, and now it is time to celebrate them.
"Yeah. It'll be pretty cool," said Sean Garvey.
He is 11 years old, and he will be one of those kids shagging flies during this Home Run Derby. As he talked, fireworks exploded in the night sky overhead, and his father, Steve Garvey, smiled as his son spoke, knowing what it means to pass on the All-Star tradition.
"Major League Baseball has done a fabulous job in expanding the context of the All-Star Game," the Dodgers legend said. "From the beginning of FanFest to the Futures Game to the Legends & Celebrities Game and of course the Home Run Derby that's so popular and then the game itself -- nobody does it better than Major League Baseball. It's a celebration of our national pastime, and for those of us who were blessed to play the game, it's a time to honor and to give tribute to the best game in the world, really."
Monday is Gatorade Workout Day, giving fans a chance their first glimpse of the stars gathered together and enjoying their official All-Star respite after a long day-to-day run. They were selected by fans, and some were selected by managers, coaches, players and MLB. Then the focus is on eight sluggers, as the other All-Stars kick back in front of the dugouts with their families and everyone prepares for the inevitable feeling of awe as titanic blasts take flight. They will ricochet around the rocky waterfall out in center, and maybe they will reach those Hit It Here signs for a big payoff.
"I think it's always fun," Garvey said. "No matter who's in it, it's gonna be a great evening. I'm so very fortunate I've got my son shagging. I finally have two boys after five girls, so now my second one's going to shag in this one. It's a great memory for them. Ryan did it at Yankee Stadium [in 2008], and now to have Sean do it here at Angel Stadium and being a Southern Californian, I think that's pretty neat. "That's what the game is all about. It's about families, it's about fun, it's about the national pastime."
It was about the national pastime back in 1989, about sluggers then as well. What does Bo Jackson remember about that famous home run to dead center?
"You can't compare the two eras, because you have different players from then and now," he said. "The most important thing is that we're here to entertain the fans. If you can entertain the fans and have fun in the process, then you have been successful. I think we gave the fans a pretty good show.
"Now we get to watch the Derby. It's nice to sit up and watch the -- I can say 'younger guys' now -- go out and do things that we used to do 20-something years ago."
Asked if he has a pick, Jackson shrugged. "No I don't," he said. "A bunch of new kids. I predict somebody from the American League to win it."
He spoke while walking through the same clubhouse tunnel he walked through that night now seemingly so long ago, a different time indeed.
He heard a familiar voice: "Bo knows. Hey, Bo."
"Mrs. Autry."
It was Jackie Autry, the honorary AL president. Back then, her husband, the late Gene Autry, was owner of those All-Star host Angels.
Then Carter, the Hall of Fame catcher whose long run of NL All-Star success was hampered by Jackson that night, came out and saw him again and said, "Bo knows! Bo knows! Yes he does."
Baseball is memories, like Bo Jackson going deep, like Garvey and Carter leading the way for the NL, like the ever-growing Home Run Derby and Prince Fielder's moonshots to win it a year ago. Now it is time to put eight power hitters together again now, and see who steals the show in 2010.
"I'm a fan of the Home Run Derby, because I like to watch the new guys. Most of the guys who are playing now, they weren't even teenagers then," he said Sunday night.
"Then" was 21 years earlier, exactly to the night. That was the night the legend of Bo was cemented even more. Remember? He crushed a first-inning homer for the American League and then went on to win the All-Star Game Most Valuable Player Award in the AL victory.
This time, Jackson was wearing the same powder-blue Royals cleats and had just crushed a Jennie Finch pitch far over a fence as well, leading the AL to a big victory in the annual Legends & Celebrities Softball Game.
2010 All-Stars
AL starters
C: J. Mauer, MIN
1B: J. Morneau, MIN
2B: R. Cano, NYY
SS: D. Jeter, NYY
3B: E. Longoria, TB
OF: J. Hamilton, TEX
OF: I. Suzuki, SEA
OF: C. Crawford, TB
DH: V. Guerrero, TEX
NL starters
C: Y. Molina, STL
1B: A. Pujols, STL
2B: C. Utley, PHI
SS: H. Ramirez, FLA
3B: D. Wright, NYM
OF: R. Braun, MIL
OF: A. Ethier, LA
OF: J. Heyward, ATL
Oh, would Bo Jackson ever love to have this Home Run Derby transported back to his glory days. It had to grow on its own over time, built up by Ken Griffey Jr. and Mark McGwire and Bobby Abreu and Josh Hamilton. With everyone watching back in 1989, what a show it could have been. What you probably don't remember is that he actually participated in one Home Run Derby, the day before those heroics, collecting a single homer as Eric Davis and Ruben Sierra won with a whopping three apiece.
"Of course I would. Of course I would," he repeated when asked if he wished this had been his stage. "I think they had the Home Run Derby back then. They had it. But it wasn't as big as then."
This is big, nearly as big as the 81st All-Star Game itself. The 2010 State Farm Home Run Derby is a largely untested field featuring Miguel Cabrera of the Tigers, Corey Hart of the Brewers, Matt Holliday of the Cardinals, David Ortiz of the Red Sox, Hanley Ramirez of the Marlins, Nick Swisher of the Yankees, Vernon Wells of the Blue Jays and Chris Young of the D-backs.
The Midsummer Classic looms ahead at 8 p.m. ET on Tuesday, another chance for the NL to beat the AL for the first time since 1996, and in the meantime you immerse yourself in this All-Star Week and you can gradually feel the excitement level rising. That is the way it always is, a passion play that grows in intensity with every single act, until the big finish.
It starts with FanFest that runs for five days, and then comes the Sunday docket featuring the XM All-Star Futures Game (a 9-1 U.S. shellacking of the World team) followed by the adorable softball fun. Then comes the bombardment of home runs, evoking more disbelief each year, and then finally the All-Star Game with unpredictable storylines and every Major League fan base represented.
"I just want to see people hit 'em really, really far," said Marlins first-base prospect Logan Morrison. "I don't care who it is. I just want to see how far they go."
Morrison had just made a nice impression as the U.S. first baseman on Sunday, and he said he is going to stay behind and can't wait for the Home Run Derby just like everyone else.
"I'll be staying here -- I might give JJ [Josh Johnson] a call and see if he can't get me down on the field," Morrison said. "He's got his kids, but maybe he or Hanley or somebody can get me down there. If not, no big deal, I think I can get some tickets."
We love home runs, and now it is time to celebrate them.
"Yeah. It'll be pretty cool," said Sean Garvey.
He is 11 years old, and he will be one of those kids shagging flies during this Home Run Derby. As he talked, fireworks exploded in the night sky overhead, and his father, Steve Garvey, smiled as his son spoke, knowing what it means to pass on the All-Star tradition.
"Major League Baseball has done a fabulous job in expanding the context of the All-Star Game," the Dodgers legend said. "From the beginning of FanFest to the Futures Game to the Legends & Celebrities Game and of course the Home Run Derby that's so popular and then the game itself -- nobody does it better than Major League Baseball. It's a celebration of our national pastime, and for those of us who were blessed to play the game, it's a time to honor and to give tribute to the best game in the world, really."
Monday is Gatorade Workout Day, giving fans a chance their first glimpse of the stars gathered together and enjoying their official All-Star respite after a long day-to-day run. They were selected by fans, and some were selected by managers, coaches, players and MLB. Then the focus is on eight sluggers, as the other All-Stars kick back in front of the dugouts with their families and everyone prepares for the inevitable feeling of awe as titanic blasts take flight. They will ricochet around the rocky waterfall out in center, and maybe they will reach those Hit It Here signs for a big payoff.
"I think it's always fun," Garvey said. "No matter who's in it, it's gonna be a great evening. I'm so very fortunate I've got my son shagging. I finally have two boys after five girls, so now my second one's going to shag in this one. It's a great memory for them. Ryan did it at Yankee Stadium [in 2008], and now to have Sean do it here at Angel Stadium and being a Southern Californian, I think that's pretty neat. "That's what the game is all about. It's about families, it's about fun, it's about the national pastime."
It was about the national pastime back in 1989, about sluggers then as well. What does Bo Jackson remember about that famous home run to dead center?
"You can't compare the two eras, because you have different players from then and now," he said. "The most important thing is that we're here to entertain the fans. If you can entertain the fans and have fun in the process, then you have been successful. I think we gave the fans a pretty good show.
"Now we get to watch the Derby. It's nice to sit up and watch the -- I can say 'younger guys' now -- go out and do things that we used to do 20-something years ago."
Asked if he has a pick, Jackson shrugged. "No I don't," he said. "A bunch of new kids. I predict somebody from the American League to win it."
He spoke while walking through the same clubhouse tunnel he walked through that night now seemingly so long ago, a different time indeed.
He heard a familiar voice: "Bo knows. Hey, Bo."
"Mrs. Autry."
It was Jackie Autry, the honorary AL president. Back then, her husband, the late Gene Autry, was owner of those All-Star host Angels.
Then Carter, the Hall of Fame catcher whose long run of NL All-Star success was hampered by Jackson that night, came out and saw him again and said, "Bo knows! Bo knows! Yes he does."
Baseball is memories, like Bo Jackson going deep, like Garvey and Carter leading the way for the NL, like the ever-growing Home Run Derby and Prince Fielder's moonshots to win it a year ago. Now it is time to put eight power hitters together again now, and see who steals the show in 2010.
Home Run Derby 2010: 10 Guys Who Should Be in It
Every year the Home Run Derby is one of the most anticipated events of the baseball season. There is nothing boring about watching baseball's best hitters try their hardest to hit bombs 500 feet.
However, there is always some controversy surrounding each year's participants, and inevitably there will be someone who hits only one or two long balls.
Brandon Inge from the Tigers actually laid a goose egg in last year's contest.
This year, the National League will be represented by Corey Hart, Matt Holliday, Hanley Ramirez, and Chris Young.
The American League side will feature Miguel Cabrera, David Ortiz, Nick Swisher, and Vernon Wells.
Although all of these batters are very worthy participants, there are still many players who have equally strong cases for being on the big stage Monday evening.
Here are the top 10 snubs from this year's Home Run Derby.
However, there is always some controversy surrounding each year's participants, and inevitably there will be someone who hits only one or two long balls.
Brandon Inge from the Tigers actually laid a goose egg in last year's contest.
This year, the National League will be represented by Corey Hart, Matt Holliday, Hanley Ramirez, and Chris Young.
The American League side will feature Miguel Cabrera, David Ortiz, Nick Swisher, and Vernon Wells.
Although all of these batters are very worthy participants, there are still many players who have equally strong cases for being on the big stage Monday evening.
Here are the top 10 snubs from this year's Home Run Derby.
Watch The Glades TV Show Season 1 Episode 1 “Pilot” (Video) Live Online
“The Glades,” a cops drama, began filming in April, and is set to debut this Sunday on A&E. Creator and executive producer Clifton Campbell, known for his work on “White Collar,” “Profiler,” and “21 Jump Street,” grew up in Hialeah. He spoke to the Juice about South Florida’s unique charms.
The Glades Show Description: In “The Glades,” Passmore stars as Jim Longworth, an attractive, brilliant, yet hard to get along with homicide detective from Chicago who after being wrongfully accused of sleeping with his former Captain’s wife is forced into exile. Longworth relocates to the sleepy, middle of nowhere town of Palm Glade, Florida, where the sunshine and golf are plentiful and crime is seemingly at a minimum. Yet life in this sleepy town is not as beautiful as it may seem.
Tonight’s 10pm ET pilot premiere introduces Jim as he begins working with his new colleagues on the state police force during his first Florida case: a murder involving a beheaded woman found in/up (take your pick) a creek. Ouch!
Check out what The Glades is all about in the following series preview. As usual these days, basic cable’s latest looks pretty darn good. Who needs expensive premium cable?
Do not forget to watch ‘The Glades’ on DISH Network this Sunday and when Matt becomes your new TV heartthrob, do not forget that we told you.TV show: the Glades
Aired on: 10:00 PM on July 11th, 2010 – Sunday
Channel: A&E Channel
Episode Details: Season 1 Episode 1
Episode Name: Pilot
Sunday, 11 July 2010
Hooters Girls Compete in 14th Annual Pageant
ATLANTA – 100 Hooters girls have been selected from 455 Hooters’ franchised and company-owned restaurants to compete at the 14th Annual Hooters International Swimsuit Pageant in Fort Lauderdale, Florida on July 10. They were selected from over 17,000 Hooters Girls from Australia to Atlanta.
The pageant will be broadcast on Spike TV at 9 p.m. live from the Broward Center for the Performing Arts. It will be shown in Hooters restaurants across the country and streamed live at Hooters.com. From evening gowns to swimsuits, the contestants will be judged by a distinguished panel of celebrity judges and photographers.
The Hooters swimsuit preview will be broadcast online tonight from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. EST.
The first place contestant, Miss Hooters International 2010, will return home with the crown, title and the $50,000 first place prize. She will represent Hooters for the year and be featured in the Hooters Magazine, Hooters Calendar and appear in national TV commercials.
San Antonio girl vies for Hooters Girl International Swimsuit Contest tonight on Spike TV
A 20 year old San Antonio girl is competing with 99 girls from around the world in the 14th Annual Miss Hooters International Swimsuit Pageant on July 10th in Fort Lauderdale, FL
Alyssa Rodriguez, a 2009 graduate of McArthur High School, represents the Alamo by competing in a local swimsuit contest, just one of 17,000 Hooters Girls worldwide who presently work in one of the 455 stores in the restaurant chain.
The contestants compete for $150,000 in cash and prizes.
Fans can vote for her by texting 77000 (#86) starting at 2pm until the pageant is over online.
The week leading up to the pageant the Rodriguez participated in Hooters Magazine and Hooters Calendar photo shoots and supported charitable events.
On Monday, July 5th the Hooters Girls packed 20,000 meals for Stop Hunger Now, an international hunger relief agency that delivers meal packets throughout the world.
They also visited the Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital on Wednesday, July 7th.
The 14th Annual International Swimsuit Pageant will take place at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts and will be broadcast live on Spike TV at 8 PM (San Antonio) on July 10th, shown in Hooters restaurants across the country and streamed live at Hooters.com.
From evening gowns to swimsuits, the contestants will be judged by a distinguished panel of celebrity judges and photographers.
The first place contestant, Miss Hooters International 2010, will return home with the crown, title and the $50,000 first place prize. She will represent Hooters for the year and be featured in the Hooters Magazine, Hooters Calendar and appear in national TV commercials.
Alyssa Rodriguez, a 2009 graduate of McArthur High School, represents the Alamo by competing in a local swimsuit contest, just one of 17,000 Hooters Girls worldwide who presently work in one of the 455 stores in the restaurant chain.
The contestants compete for $150,000 in cash and prizes.
Fans can vote for her by texting 77000 (#86) starting at 2pm until the pageant is over online.
The week leading up to the pageant the Rodriguez participated in Hooters Magazine and Hooters Calendar photo shoots and supported charitable events.
On Monday, July 5th the Hooters Girls packed 20,000 meals for Stop Hunger Now, an international hunger relief agency that delivers meal packets throughout the world.
They also visited the Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital on Wednesday, July 7th.
The 14th Annual International Swimsuit Pageant will take place at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts and will be broadcast live on Spike TV at 8 PM (San Antonio) on July 10th, shown in Hooters restaurants across the country and streamed live at Hooters.com.
From evening gowns to swimsuits, the contestants will be judged by a distinguished panel of celebrity judges and photographers.
The first place contestant, Miss Hooters International 2010, will return home with the crown, title and the $50,000 first place prize. She will represent Hooters for the year and be featured in the Hooters Magazine, Hooters Calendar and appear in national TV commercials.
Saturday, 10 July 2010
Taste of Buffalo 2010 Complete Live Event Schedules
Taste of Buffalo 2010 Complete Live Event Schedules – For those of you who are searching for the complete schedule of the Taste of Buffalo 2010, everyone should know that the Taste of Buffalo 2010 will run from 11 am up to 9 pm of Saturday, July 10, 2010 until 11am up to 7 pm of Sunday July 11, 2010.
The Taste of Buffalo 2010 will be presented by the TOPS on the 2 biggest day event and as year’s passed by, more flavours were being introduced from Indian to Polish, Italian to Chinese, Caribbean to Irish, there is something to please every taste bud.
And now, here’s the actual live schedule for Taste of Buffalo 2010:
Saturday, July 10
11:00 AM – Taste of Buffalo begins
11:00 AM to 2:00 PM – Food judging takes place featuring local media representatives and political leaders
4:30-5:00 PM – Food awards presented to restaurants
9:00 PM – Taste of Buffalo finishes for the day
Sunday, July 11
11:00 AM – Taste of Buffalo begins
7:00 PM – Taste of Buffalo ends
Taste Of Buffalo 2010
The annual celebration in the city of Buffalo ” The Taste Of Buffalo ” 2010, is this weekend so be prepared in 10 and 11th July, each year, is the larget food festival The Taste Of Buffalo foods from all over the world.
There is cuisine for every taste, a several of restaurants will serve the food for all over the people, the taste of the food or the taste the various food of buffalo cuisine,this festival is support 20 local charities and scholarships. In this weekend is also the 5th Annual Buffalo Book Fair in downtown Buffalo, the event begins at 11:AM, Saturday and is expected to came people over 450.000 form all over the region.
There is cuisine for every taste, a several of restaurants will serve the food for all over the people, the taste of the food or the taste the various food of buffalo cuisine,this festival is support 20 local charities and scholarships. In this weekend is also the 5th Annual Buffalo Book Fair in downtown Buffalo, the event begins at 11:AM, Saturday and is expected to came people over 450.000 form all over the region.
Eureka Returns, Haven Premieres: Will You Watch?
Eureka returns tonight at 9pm ET followed by the premiere of Haven. Will you (or depending on when you read this, did you) watch?
I’ve noticed that Syfy shows that aren’t at least loosely based on some other series franchise don’t seem to generate nearly as much noise on the Internet.
Is it possible that even though its airing on a summer Friday that Haven will spur more viewing and yet less Internet discussion than either Caprica or Stargate Universe? Stay tuned.
Syfy’s description of Haven below:
I’ve noticed that Syfy shows that aren’t at least loosely based on some other series franchise don’t seem to generate nearly as much noise on the Internet.
Is it possible that even though its airing on a summer Friday that Haven will spur more viewing and yet less Internet discussion than either Caprica or Stargate Universe? Stay tuned.
Syfy’s description of Haven below:
Haven
Based on The Colorado Kid from renowned author Stephen King, Haven follows FBI agent Audrey Parker (Rose), who arrives in the small town of Haven, Maine to solve the murder of a local ex-con. Before long, her natural curiosity lands her in the epicenter of activity in this curious enclave, which turns out to be a longtime refuge for people with a remarkable range of supernatural abilities. Among the townspeople are local cop Nathan Wuornos (Lucas Bryant), who eventually becomes Audrey’s partner, and the mysterious and charming Duke Crocker (Eric Balfour).
The impressive creative team behind Haven includes showrunner Scott Shepherd (Tru Calling, The Dead Zone) who is joined by E1 Entertainment’s John Morayniss (Hung, Copper) Noreen Halpern (Hung, Copper), Laszlo Barna (The Bridge) and Michael Rosenberg (Hung, The Riches) as well as his partners, Executive Producers Lloyd Segan and Shawn Piller (The Dead Zone, Wildfire, Greek). The pilot is written by Sam Ernst (The Dead Zone) and Jim Dunn (The Dead Zone) who will also serve as executive producers on the series.
Haven, from E1 Entertainment in association with Pillar, Segan and Shepherd, will be the first property to be produced for Syfy in the US and Universal Networks International’s pay TV channels around the globe (excluding Canada and Scandinavia). The series has been co-commissioned by Syfy and Universal Networks International with Canwest Broadcasting (Canada), with Showcase serving as the Canadian broadcaster. International distribution is handled by E1. Haven will launch internationally in October 2010.
Syfy is a media destination for imagination-based entertainment. With year round acclaimed original series, events, blockbuster movies, classic science fiction and fantasy programming, a dynamic a portfolio of adjacent business (Syfy Ventures), Syfy is a passport to limitless possibilities. Originally launched in 1992 as SCI FI Channel, and currently in more than 96 million homes, Syfy is a network of NBC Universal, one of the world’s leading media and entertainment companies. (Syfy. Imagine greater.)
Universal Cable Productions creates quality content across multiple media platforms for USA, Syfy and other networks. A leader in innovative and critically acclaimed programming, UCP is the studio behind USA’s Royal Pains, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Psych, In Plain Sight, Covert Affairsand Facing Kate, as well as Syfy‘s Eureka, Warehouse 13 and Caprica. The studio also produced the long-running series MonkandBattlestar Galactica. UCP is a division of NBC Universal.
'Haven': Syfy Starts With Stephen King and Keeps Going ...
Here's the full text of this week's feature story on the Syfy series premiering tonight ...
Acclaimed novelist Stephen King is known for stories set in his nativeMaine that feature supernatural elements. , but had to have the supernatural elements added in - which might be a first.
Nova Scotia , Canada , stands in for Maine in "Haven." The two places are not that far apart geographically, but shooting in the beautiful but rustic location is proving a challenge.
Acclaimed novelist Stephen King is known for stories set in his native
On Friday, July 9, Syfy debuts "Haven," a new one-hour drama loosely based on a 2005 King novella called "The Colorado Kid," which dealt with the mystery of a body found on a small island off the coast of Maine .
In the TV show, Emily Rose (above, "John From Cincinnati," "Jericho ") stars as FBI Agent Audrey Parker, who arrives in little Haven, Maine , to solve the murder of a local ex-con.
Before long, she discovers the town is a refuge for people with supernatural abilities - and it may hold a clue to the orphaned Audrey's own mysterious past.
Lucas Bryant (center, in photo below) stars as local police officer Nathan Wuornos, who becomes Audrey's investigative partner; and Eric Balfour (at left in photo below) as charming local Duke Crocker.
A few years ago, longtime pals and writing partners Jim Dunn and Sam Ernst were handed "The Colorado Kid" by producers Shawn Piller, Lloyd Segan and Scott Shepherd, whose previous credits include the long-running USA series version of King's "The Dead Zone."
The original story is long on mystery but short on answers.
"With 'The Colorado Kid,'" says Dunn, "Stephen King set up a template for a place and a few characters in the novella. King really doesn't touch on the supernatural much, and everyone agreed that we needed to bring the supernatural element (to the TV adaptation), which is largely what Sam and I brought.
"It's one of the reasons we held our breath when we sent our stuff to Stephen King, because we were adding a major element to what he had put in place in the novella."
Recalls Ernst, "We sparked to the novella and came up with a bunch of ideas, and over time eventually sent them all to Stephen King in a big document of everything we wanted to do. Then we held our breath.
"He sent us an email back that said, 'Sounds like a blast.' That's a quote. We finally let go of our held breath and started writing."
"As we speak," says Rose, calling in from the "Haven" set, "I am standing under a blue rain tent in front of a propane heater, because I'm just so cold."
But the blond-haired, blue-eyed Rose is thrilled to not just be playing someone's girlfriend or wife, but a tough career woman.
"I was just really excited to be able to play an FBI agent," she says. "It's great to be able to play a real serious role, a cool, sassy, smart, independent, funny but really deep character. It's such a treat when it comes along - especially when they're written really well also."
King is known for creating complex characters, and it looks like Ernst and Dunn have done the same for Audrey.
"The detail about her that I absolutely love," Rose says, "is the fact that she's an orphan. She's been thrown around from place to place until she was 18. Now she's an FBI agent. By nature, she's definitely driven and aiming to be a good investigator, partially, I'm sure, because she can't figure out that mystery of herself.
"She's running along on her hamster wheel, with her little driven self and nature, and all of a sudden, somebody stops that wheel. (In Haven), she is thrown out of it for a second, because there's a clue that just lands right in her fact that says, 'You might be connected to this place.'
"For the first time in her life, she resonates with that and has to stop her life for a minute. I think how she's adjusting to Haven is, sometimes when people don't want to deal with things, they wind up digging right back into their work. I think Haven offers a lot of that, because there are so many mysteries and things that are happening around this quirky area that she has to look into.
"But she still does have that constant panging of, 'Am I connected here? Was my family from here? Was my mother from here?' There are all these looming identity questions that she has to face and deal with."
All of this also raises the question of just how Audrey wound up investigating in a place that may be linked to her past.
"But is it bad?" says Rose. "Is it people in the FBI or the town of Haven ? Has Haven drawn other characters to it? We don't know yet. She, for sure, doesn't know that yet."
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