what. in. the. hell. filed under: misc and youtube | comments: 1 comment |
i know juno has effectively been backlashed against, but it made me laugh and cry and love life a little more. filed under: misc and music and youtube and movies | comments: 1 comment |
now THAT is what we needed. emphasize policy differences, but be civil. it was a really, really good debate, and made me hopeful once again after such a nasty stretch. — PS - “Less than two hours before the 2007 fourth quarter financial filings deadline, the Romney campaign announced it had raised over $27 million. But 18 of the $27 million was loaned by Mitt Romney to the campaign, meaning that just $9 million of it was raised.” …Hahahahahahaha. filed under: misc and politics | comments: none |
Oh my god, oh my god!! – (from Awards Daily): It has been rumor up to now but TheOneRing (thanks to Susan Thea for sending in the tip) has a video that confirms, albeit in a foreign language, that yes, he will be directing The Hobbit. Guillermo Del Toro is a god among men and directors, I have always believed, and thus, I can’t imagine the collective urlgasm the web is going to have with, not to mention cinema fans everywhere. TheOneRing writes: The following YouTube video confirms that Guillermo Del Toro will be directing ‘The Hobbit’ films. UPDATE We have an additional inside source which says that the deal is NOT signed yet, however it has a 99% probability of happening. The parties are agreed and we should expect an official announcement after the WGA (Writer’s Guild of America) Strike. Our source also mentions that Howard Shore was instrumental in making this arrangement. That means we can expect Howard Shore to compose the score. (yea!) filed under: misc and movies | comments: none |
I could have told you months ago that this would happen. What an embarrassment for him; his political strategy was idiotic. He’s about to endorse John McCain today. I’m really torn, because McCain is now predicted to win the nomination by pretty much everyone. This is good because I absolutely can not stand Mitt Romney–I can’t emphasize that enough–but bad because McCain is going to be much harder for a Democrat to beat because he’s a more moderate candidate. – For Giuliani, a Dizzying Free-Fall Perhaps he was living an illusion all along. Rudolph W. Giuliani’s campaign for the Republican nomination for president took impressive wing last year, as the former mayor wove the pain experienced by his city on Sept. 11, 2001, and his leadership that followed into national celebrity. Like a best-selling author, he basked in praise for his narrative and issued ominous and often-repeated warnings about the terrorist strike next time. Voters seemed to embrace a man so comfortable wielding power, and his poll numbers edged higher to where he held a broad lead over his opponents last summer. Just three months ago, Anthony V. Carbonetti, Mr. Giuliani’s affable senior policy adviser, surveyed that field and told The New York Observer: “I don’t believe this can be taken from us. Now that I have that locked up, I can go do battle elsewhere.” In fact, Mr. Giuliani’s campaign was about to begin a free fall so precipitous as to be breathtaking. Mr. Giuliani finished third in the Florida primary on Tuesday night; only a few months earlier, he had talked about the state as his leaping-off point to winning the nomination. As Mr. Giuliani ponders his political mortality, many advisers and political observers point to the hubris and strategic miscalculations that plagued his campaign. He allowed a tight coterie of New York aides, none with national political experience, to run much of his campaign. He accumulated a fat war chest — he had $16.6 million on hand at the end of September, more than Mitt Romney ($9.5 million) or Senator John McCain ($3.2 million) — but spent vast sums on direct mail instead of building strong organizations on the ground in South Carolina and New Hampshire. Indeed, his fourth-place finish in New Hampshire, a state where he was once considered competitive, provided an early indication of his vulnerability. And, curiously, this man with the pugnacious past declined to toss more than light punches at his Republican opponents. In interviews Tuesday, even before he gave a concession speech in which he spoke of his campaign in the past tense, Mr. Giuliani described his strategic mistakes, suggesting that his opponents had built up too much momentum in earlier primaries. But this is a rhetorical sleight of hand; he in fact competed hard in New Hampshire, to remarkably poor effect. Perhaps a simpler dynamic was at work: The more that Republican voters saw of him, the less they wanted to vote for him. filed under: misc and new york city and politics | comments: none |
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