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Archive for August, 2008

The Sarah Palin Way

In Broadcatch on Friday, August 29, 2008 at 7:31 pm

ALASKA MAGAZINE

Palin’s Way

Written by Melissa DeVaughn

February 2008

She has attracted attention for everything from her appearance to being a maverick Republican, but Sarah Palin says she just wants to straighten out Alaska politics.

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin stands in her kitchen wearing a black skirt and silver-sequined sweater, dressed for the gala she is about to attend. In front of her are a BlackBerry and a cell phone, devices that rarely leave her side. It’s her favorite room in the large but unpretentious home her husband, Todd, designed and built five years ago. In the kitchen, 6-year-old daughter Piper’s artwork dominates the décor in an otherwise modern, black-counter-topped room that opens into the rest of the living space.

“I wanted to be able to see everyone, to talk to them from here,” Palin says, glancing at her BlackBerry while leaning on the countertop. She quickly pushes a few buttons on the device. It is a rainy Saturday afternoon, but the work of the state’s first female governor never stops.

Palin straightens up and walks over to a tall table, taking in the expansive view of Lake Lucille through the wall of windows along the front of the living room. Todd’s floatplane is docked just a hundred yards away, at the edge of the neatly mowed lawn. Three grebes float by, and a duck loiters at the edge of the grass.

Across the room, the front door bursts open and Bristol, 17 and the second-oldest of the Palins’ four children, rushes in. She’s a younger version of her mother, with the same striking, dark eyes and hair that have earned Palin a reputation as “the hottest governor in the country.”

It’s a moniker that Palin shrugs off. Although poised and confident on camera, she is nonchalant when it comes to the comments on her appearance.

When a reporter and photographers from Vogue magazine came to Alaska in December to do a story on her, Palin was sure she disappointed them. “In the interview you could tell that the writer was trying to get me to focus on the gender and appearance issues, but I kept talking about energy and national security, and not relying on foreign sources of energy,” Palin said. “Finally, she stopped me and said, ‘I know that’s what you want to talk about, but this is a women’s fashion magazine.’ I don’t know about fashion. It’s bunny boots and fleece and The North Face. So I tried to talk about that, but it’s just not the way I’m wired.”

Palin’s father, Chuck Heath, said that’s simply the way his daughter is. “She’s not phony. She never has been,” said Heath, who moved his wife, Sally, and four children from Idaho to Skagway in 1964, when Sarah was just three months old.

Since his daughter took office last December, Heath has received several T-shirts proclaiming his daughter the best-looking political figure around. “One says, ‘My governor is hotter than your governor,’ and the other one says ‘Alaska: the coldest state with the hottest governor,’ ” Heath said, laughing.

And she has gained notoriety online as well. Wonkette.com, a political blog, seems obsessed with Palin, admiring not only her appearance (she’s a Tina Fey look-alike, the blog claims) but appreciating the simple fact that she is not, as it reports, “one of those creepy old men” in politics. Another blog, Palinforvp.blogspot.com, likes her so much it has started a grass-roots campaign to get her elected as the nation’s next vice president. Read the rest of this entry »

John McCain Picks Sarah Palin for Vice President

In Broadcatch on Friday, August 29, 2008 at 10:35 am
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin Is McCain’s VP Pick: Source
By John Harwood

CNBC.com
| 29 Aug 2008 | 09:24 AM ET

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, a self-styled “hockey mom” who has only been governor for a little over a year, is GOP Presidential candidate John McCain’s choice for Vice President, CNBC has learned.

According to a Republican strategist, Palin is the nominee, though McCain’s campaign has not comfirmed this.

With an announcement scheduled in Dayton, Ohio, an associate of Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty said the governor had been informed he is not McCain’s pick.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for Pawlenty, who had all but ruled himself out.

“I’m not going to be there. I plan to be at the state fair. You can draw your conclusion from that,” Pawlenty said on his weekly call-in radio show on WCCO-AM in Minneapolis.

He also called it “a fair assumption” that he will not be McCain’s running mate.

Associates close to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney were saying the same thing, telling The Associated Press that the former presidential candidate had not been offered the job by McCain.

  • Video: Palin discusses energy policy in July appearance on CNBC
  • Video: Palin talks about oil drilling in June appearnce on CNBC.
  • Palin is a first-term governor credited with reforms of her out-of-the-way state.

    Newly minted Democratic nominee Barack Obama is making an aggressive play for the traditional GOP stronghold and its three electoral votes, and polls show the race close.

    At 44, Palin is younger than Obama and, like McCain, she calls herself a maverick.

    A Gulfstream IV from Anchorage, Alaska, flew into Middletown Regional Airport in Butler County near Cincinnati about 10:15 p.m. Thursday, said Rich Bevis, airport manager.

    He said several people came off the plane, including a woman and two teens, but there was no confirmation of who was aboard.

    “They were pretty much hustled off. They came right down the ramp, jumped in some vans here and off they went,” Bevis said. “It was all hush, hush.”

    Among the other possible running mates: former Pennsylvania Gov.Tom Ridge, Democrat-turned-independent Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut and former Rep. Rob Portman of Ohio.

    The Arizona senator decided on his choice for vice president early Thursday, but the campaign has given no hint on the selection that will be announced on his 72nd birthday.

    The speculation sent a buzz throughout Denver, where Obama accepted his party’s nomination and put Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware on his ticket.

    Jill Hazelbaker, McCain’s communications director, gave nothing away during an interview on CBS’ “The Early Show.”

    “John McCain is going to make the choice from his heart. He’s going to choose someone who can be a partner in governing. He’s going to choose someone who brings character and principle to the table and who shares his priorities. And I’m confident that he’s going to make a great pick,” Hazelbaker said.

    Republicans kick off their national nominating convention next week in St. Paul, Minn., and McCain’s campaign hopes the announcement of his running mate will stunt any momentum Obama might get from the just-concluded Democratic National Convention.

    McCain was mum on the subject Thursday as he and his wife, Cindy, boarded a plane in Phoenix bound for Dayton.

    —AP contributed to this report

    URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/26454655/

    Hillary Clinton Seals the Deal for Obama’s Nomination; Richard Cohen Wets his Pants

    In Broadcatch on Wednesday, August 27, 2008 at 7:51 pm

    The Venerable DETROIT FEEE PRESS

    Here’s Cohen’s Dreck about Hillary’s speech last night

    DENVER – His former rival moving for his nomination by acclimation as her friends and supporters chanted her name, Barack Obama became the Democrats’ official nominee this evening, with nary a suggestion of disunity in the house.

    The traditional roll call of states proceeded, with each in its turn announcing the votes of its delegates, with California and then Illinois – Obama’s home state – passing. Then, as it got to New Mexico, with Obama well ahead of Hillary Clinton in the call, that state passed to Illinois, which then passed to New York.

    Clinton – New York’s junior senator – was led into the hall, and, smiling, she called for Obama – who she fought a sometimes bitter primary battle against – to be nominated for the presidency by acclimation.

    “Let’s declare together in once voiced, right here, right now, that Barack Obama is our candidate and he will be our president,” she said, as applause boomed through the Pepsi Center.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi – overseeing the proceedings – asked for yeas and nays. The former thundered through the hall, and, knowing something about calling voice votes, Pelosi seemed to gloss quickly past any scattering nay votes which may have resonated in the venue.

    It didn’t matter. Obama was going to be the nominee, having secured it by beating Clinton during the primary season and winning the support of superdelegates to the convention even though it was she who was once considered the overwhelming front runner in the race for the Democratic nod to the White House.

    Dennis Kucinich Rocks The House; Pleads With Americans to “Wake Up”

    In Broadcatch on Wednesday, August 27, 2008 at 10:13 am

    From John Amato’s Singular Crooks and Liars

    video_wmv DownloadPlay video_mov DownloadPlay

    Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich spoke at the Democratic National Convention today and there is little doubt his was the most enthusiastic and hard hitting speech thus far. Dennis always comes armed with truth and facts, and today was no exception.

    From illegal wiretapping, Iraq and high gas prices to playing the fear card, he blazed through the laundry list of Bush hackery and crimes and pounded the message home — Americans to wake up and vote for Barack Obama.

    “…Wake up America! The insurance companies took over health care. Wake up America! The pharmaceutical companies took over drug pricing. Wake up America! The speculators took over Wall Street. Wake up America, they want your Social Security. Wake up America, multi-national corporations took over our trade policies, factories are closing, good paying jobs are being lost, wake up America!”

    Now that’s the spirit! We need to hear more of this during the convention. The American electorate needs a good dose of reality. If this speech doesn’t get you fired up, nothing will.

    Barack Obama Picks Joe Biden as Vice President

    In Broadcatch on Saturday, August 23, 2008 at 1:55 am

    The New York Times, CNN confirm:

    CNN

    WASHINGTON POST

    Wall Street Journal

    Chicago Tribune

    Google News

    Breaking: Obama selects Joe Biden as his VP running mate
    Los Angeles Times, CA - 41 minutes ago
    So the recent events in Georgia involving Russian troops sent shock waves all the way down Chicago’s Michigan Avenue to Obama headquarters.
    Biden emerges as Obama’s likely choice for veep
    Kansas City Star, MO - 1 hour ago
    By LIZ SIDOTI and NEDRA PICKLER AP Writers Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., leaves his home in Washington, Friday, Aug. 22, 2008. The Indiana senator is thought to
    VP update: AP, quoting Dem sources, says choice is not Kaine or Bayh
    Dallas Morning News, TX - 2 hours ago
    “Virginia Gov. Tom Kaine spread word he had been ruled out and Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana was told he was not Obama’s choice, according to party officials.
    Veepstakes: Process of Elimination
    Washington Post, United States - 2 hours ago
    Slowly but surely the identity of Barack Obama’s vice presidential nominee is coming into focus. That is, we may not know who the pick is but we know who it
    NBC: Bayh, Kaine won’t be Obama’s VP
    Seattle Post Intelligencer - 1 hour ago
    NBC News is reporting that Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh and Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine will not be chosen by Obama, which leaves Delaware Sen.
    Biden emerges as Obama’s likely choice for veep
    guardian.co.uk, UK - 1 hour ago
    AP foreign By LIZ SIDOTI and NEDRA PICKLER AP Writers WASHINGTON (AP) – Delaware Sen. Joe Biden emerged as Barack Obama’s likely choice for vice
    US Secret Service on Way to Biden’s House; Kaine and Bayh Told
    ABC News - 3 hours ago
    The United States Secret Service has dispatched a protective detail to assume the immediate protection of Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., a source tells ABC News
    Associated Press reports Barack Obama picks Joe Biden for veep
    The Canadian Press, WASHINGTON - 27 minutes ago
    WASHINGTON — Barack Obama selected Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware late Friday night to be his vice presidential running mate, according to a Democratic official
    Obama poised to announce running mate
    U.S. Daily, ca - 45 minutes ago
    By Caren Bohan Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) is seen through the window of his vehicle as he leaves a hotel in Chicago,
    CNN: Obama taps Biden for ticket
    United Press International - 40 minutes ago
    Presumptive Democratic Presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-IL, speaks during a Town Hall event at John Tyler Community College on August 21,
    AP: Biden Is Obama’s Choice
    KWTX, TX - 27 minutes ago
    (August 23, 2008)—The Associated Press reported late Friday night that Barack Obama selected Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware to be his vice presidential running
    Biden speaks _ and speaks _ his own mind
    The Associated Press - 51 minutes ago
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Barack Obama told everyone he wanted a running mate who will challenge his thinking, and now he’s got one. Joe Biden’s tendency to speak
    Obama VP intro to be Saturday; Kaine, Bayh are out
    The Associated Press - 2 hours ago
    WASHINGTON (AP) — On a day and night of political suspense, Delaware Sen. Joe Biden emerged as a leading contender Friday to become Barack Obama’s vice
    BULLETIN: CNN Confirms it’s Biden
    Dallas Morning News, TX - 52 minutes ago
    CNN’s John King said early Saturday morning that he has confirmed from two good sources that Barack Obama has chosen Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware as his
    Obama’s Silence Inspires a Frantic Waiting Game
    New York Times, United States - 3 hours ago
    By CARL HULSE WASHINGTON — Senator Barack Obama began informing prospective running mates late Friday that they would not be joining him on the ticket as
    Watch at Biden residence continues
    The News Journal, DE - 1 hour ago
    Reporters continued to keep watch at Sen. Joe Biden’s home in Greenville late into the night, hoping the senator would come outside and say something
    Joe Biden’s Bio
    MyFox Kansas City, MO - 37 minutes ago
    Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., listens to testimony during a Senate Committee on Foreign Relations hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington in this Sept.
    Obama picks Biden, not Sebelius
    Topeka Capital Journal, KS - 25 minutes ago
    Barack Obama chose Delaware Sen. Joe Biden as his running mate in the race for the White House, Democratic officials told The Associated Press late Friday.
    Biden is Obama’s choice for vice president, source says
    PennLive.com, PA - 43 minutes ago
    by AP The Associated PressSen. Joe Biden of Delaware is Barack Obama’s pick as vice presidential running mate, according to an official who spoke to The
    Reports: Del. Sen. Joseph Biden to be Obama’s pick for VP
    MarketWatch - 39 minutes ago
    By Anne Stanley LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) — News reports said late Friday that veteran Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden will be the running mate of Sen.
    Obama Chooses Biden For VP
    kypost.com, KY - 24 minutes ago
    Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joseph Biden (D-DE) spoke in May on foreign policy at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC.

    All of Cable News Geeks Out About Obama’s VP Pick on a Friday in August

    In Barack Obama, Broadcatch, CNN, Evan Bayh, Fox, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, MSNBC, Nagourney, Politics, Punditry, Television, Wingnuts, Wolf Blitzer on Friday, August 22, 2008 at 11:37 pm

    It was ….horrible

    Oakland Raiders Star Turned Union Rep Gene Upshaw is Dead at Age 63

    In Broadcatch on Thursday, August 21, 2008 at 11:24 am

    NEW YORK (AP) — Gene Upshaw, the Hall of Fame guard who during a quarter century as union head helped get NFL players free agency and the riches that came with it, has died. He was 63.

    Upshaw died Wednesday night at his home in Lake Tahoe, Calif., of pancreatic cancer, which was diagnosed only last Sunday, the NFL Players Association said Thursday. His wife Terri and sons Eugene Jr., Justin and Daniel were by his side.

    “Gene Upshaw did everything with great dignity, pride, and conviction,” NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said.

    “He was the rare individual who earned his place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame both for his accomplishments on the field and for his leadership of the players off the field. He fought hard for the players and always kept his focus on what was best for the game. His leadership played a crucial role in taking the NFL and its players to new heights.”

    News of Upshaw’s death first came through a Clear Channel Online report that appeared on several radio Web sites.

    Upshaw died only two days after the union announced he would hold a briefing on labor negotiations before the Sept. 4 season opener between Washington and the New York Giants.

    His outstanding 15-season playing career was entirely with the Oakland Raiders and included two Super Bowl wins and seven Pro Bowl appearances. Upshaw’s biography was posted on the front page of the Hall of Fame Web site Thursday along with his enshrinement speech from 1987.

    In 1983, he became executive director of the players’ association and guided it through the 1987 strike that led to replacement football. By 1989, the players had a limited form of freedom, called Plan B, and in 1993, free agency and a salary cap were instituted.

    Since then, the players have prospered so much that NFL owners recently opted out of the latest labor contract, which was negotiated two years ago by Upshaw and then-commissioner Paul Tagliabue.

    Upshaw was criticized by some for not being tough enough in talks with Tagliabue, a close friend of the union head. He also was blamed by many older veterans for not dealing sufficiently with their health concerns.

    But the salary cap for this season is $116 million and the players are making close to 60 percent of the 32 teams’ total revenues, as specified in the 2006 agreement. In all, the players will be paid $4.5 billion this year, according to owners.

    Upshaw recently became more aggressive in his dealings with the owners and Tagliabue’s successor, Roger Goodell. Owners opted out of the collective bargaining agreement, which means a season without a salary cap in 2010. Upshaw declared the cap would disappear for good should there be no new deal by March 2010.

    “I’m not going to sell the players on a cap again,” Upshaw said. “Once we go through the cap, why should we agree to it again?”

    NFL officials claimed players are getting a disproportionate amount of the revenue. Upshaw’s supporters said management’s viewpoint indicates he did his job well.

    The players called a strike in 1987 — leading to games with replacements — and it wasn’t until 1993 that labor peace was reached with a breakthrough seven-year contract. It included free agency and a salary cap. Almost ever since, player salaries have spiraled up along with revenue from television and marketing deals made by the league.

    The NFLPA also has its own marketing arm, Players Inc., established in 1994, that has grown into a multimillion dollar operation.

    Upshaw also negotiated the first-ever union agreement for Arena Football League players.

    “He was a tough negotiator but always reasonable and respectful with the ultimate goal of growing the game,” said the league’s acting commissioner, Ed Policy.

    Frequently listed as one of the most powerful men in U.S. sports, Upshaw was drafted in the first round by Oakland in 1967 out of Texas A&I — hardly a football factory. He was an NAIA All-American at center, tackle and end, but was switched to left guard by the Raiders.

    And that’s where he stayed through a magnificent career that included 10 conference championship games as well as the Super Bowl victories.

    AP Football Writer Barry Wilner contributed to this repo

    Nascar Suspends Seven Members of Joe Gibbs Racing

    In Broadcatch on Wednesday, August 20, 2008 at 5:17 pm
    August 20, 2008

    By Reid Spencer
    Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service

    As anticipated, the penalties announced to Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 18 and No. 20 Nationwide Series teams Wednesday by NASCAR were severe indeed.

    Finding that the two JGR teams had attempted to manipulate chassis dynamometer horsepower readings after Saturday’s Carfax 250 Nationwide Series race at Michigan International Speedway, NASCAR suspended seven members of the Gibbs organization indefinitely, including Dave Rogers, crew chief of the No. 20 Toyota driven by Tony Stewart, and Jason Ratcliff, crew chief of the No. 18 Toyota driven by Joey Logano.

    Stewart and Logano were docked 150 Nationwide driver championship points each — a moot penalty, because neither is competing for the series championship — but Stewart and Logano were placed on probation through the end of the season. Joe Gibbs, who owns both cars, was docked 150 car owner points for each entry.

    NASCAR slapped Rogers and Ratcliff each with $50,000 fines and imposed indefinite suspensions on car chiefs Dorian Thorsen (No. 18) and Richard Bray (No. 20), engine tuners Michael Johnson (No. 18) and Dan Bajek (No. 20) and crew member Toby Bigelow (No. 18). Both teams will remain on probation through Dec. 31.

    During dyno testing after Saturday’s race, NASCAR discovered magnetic shims placed behind the throttle pedals of both Gibbs cars, a move designed to prevent the pedals from being fully depressed and thereby reducing the peak horsepower readings from the two engines.

    In late July, NASCAR had instituted an engine rule change designed to bring Toyota’s power more in line with that of other manufacturers’. Before the rule change was made, Toyota’s horsepower had measured consistently higher than that of the other car makes during prior dyno testing.

    After the shims were removed at Michigan, the peak number of the Gibbs’ Toyotas (640 horsepower) was still higher than that of the Chevrolets (636), Fords (634) and Dodges (632).

    In a statement released Wednesday, Gibbs apologized profusely for the violations and said he would add to the penalties imposed by NASCAR.

    “In 17 years we have never had any representative of Joe Gibbs Racing knowingly act outside of NASCAR’s rules, and that is something we consider essential to how we operate on a daily basis,” Gibbs said. “What we have determined is that these individuals involved used extremely poor judgment in attempting to alter the results of NASCAR’s dyno test following Saturday’s Nationwide Series race in Michigan. Although in no way was anything done that might have altered the race outcome, these JGR employees attempted to circumvent the NASCAR rule book and that is unacceptable.

    “We take full responsibility and accept the penalties NASCAR has levied against us today. We had come to the conclusion that we would add to any NASCAR imposed penalties with the minimum being suspension for the remainder of the season for those involved, including our two Nationwide Series crew chiefs. There will also be an additional monetary fine beyond the amount announced by NASCAR earlier today, which will be the responsibility of those involved.

    “We are, however, disappointed that NASCAR chose to place our drivers on probation, as they had no knowledge or involvement of this incident.”

    Though Chevrolet driver Brad Keselowski admitted he might have been tempted to do what the Gibbs teams did under similar circumstances, he viewed their actions as far worse than trying to cheat in a single race.

    “They attempted to cheat in the next two seasons by doing what they did in that dyno test,” Keselowski said Tuesday. “It’s worse than cheating in that one race. They attempted to cheat for the next whatever session that was going to be before the next dyno session, before NASCAR could prove it.

    “I almost wish they were just cheating in that one race, because I would have felt better about it. But what they attempted to do was cheat us for the rest of the season, all the way up to probably Atlanta of next year, before another dyno test was done. That’s what makes it even worse.”

    The owner-point penalty to the No. 20 car, which tops the Nationwide standings, reduced its lead from 318 points to 168 over the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet driven by Clint Bowyer. Stewart, Logano, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin have combined to win nine races in the No. 20, and Gibbs cars have won 14 of 25 Nationwide races this year.

    Note: NASCAR also announced a Sprint Cup Series penalty Wednesday: a $25,000 fine levied against Donnie Wingo, crew chief of the No. 41 Chip Ganassi Racing Dodge driven by Reed Sorenson, for improperly attached weight. The violation was discovered after Sunday’s 3M Performance 400 at Michigan.

    Jackson Browne sues John McCain

    In Broadcatch on Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 10:41 am

    REUTERS

    Sat Aug 16, 2008 2:43am EDT

    By Steve Gorman

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Rock star Jackson Browne has sued U.S. presidential candidate John McCain for copyright infringement, accusing the presumptive Republican nominee of using the singer’s 1977 hit “Running on Empty” in a campaign ad without permission.

    The suit, filed on Thursday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, also names the Republican National Committee and the Ohio Republican Party as defendants. It seeks a permanent injunction against further use of Browne’s music and at least $75,000 in damages.

    The campaign spot mocks McCain’s Democratic rival for the White House, Barack Obama, for suggesting the nation conserve gasoline through proper tire inflation, with Browne’s most famous song, “Running on Empty,” playing in the background.

    The suit claims use of the song without Browne’s permission is a copyright violation and a breach of the U.S. Lanham Act by falsely implying Browne is associated with and endorses McCain’s bid for president.

    It also says use of Browne’s voice in the ad violates the performer’s so-called right of publicity under California law.

    Browne’s lawyer, Lawrence Iser, said his client is “a well-known, lifelong liberal activist and supporter of Democratic candidates, and use of his song and his voice in a commercial bashing Barack Obama is anathema to Jackson.”

    A spokesman for McCain’s campaign, Brian Rogers, said the Arizona senator was wrongly singled out as a target of the lawsuit because the ad in question was the sole work of the Ohio Republican Party.

    “We had nothing to do with the creation or distribution of this ad whatsoever,” Rogers told Reuters. “Mr. McCain’s name should quite simply be removed from this lawsuit immediately.”

    But Iser said the Republican Party of Ohio, a key battleground state in the presidential race, “acted as an agent and in concert with Sen. McCain and the Republican National Committee.”

    “It certainly looks and smells like a McCain campaign piece,” he added. “We’ll let a jury decide.

    There was no immediate comment from the RNC or Ohio Republican Party representatives.

    Iser said the ad, which he said he believed was aired on television in Ohio and Pennsylvania, was removed from the Internet last week by the Ohio Republican Party in response to a cease-and-desist demand from Browne.

    (Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Cynthia Osterman)

    Get Back To Where You Once Belonged

    In Broadcatch on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 4:33 pm

    Hey, That John Edwards Thing Sure is Turning Out to Not Be a Freakshow/Distraction/GOP Wet Dream

    In Broadcatch on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 9:00 am

    Which reminds me- Hey, that John Edwards thing sure is turning out to not be a freakshow/distraction/GOP wet dream (think: his ambulance-chasing/haircut/dying wife thingy talk)

    Almost….

    UPDATE: Gail Collins hands/rips Mr.Edwards New Rear End:

    Weighs in….

    The Mad Dog Leaves Mike and Heads to Satellite Radio

    In Broadcatch on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 8:06 am

    FROM THE BEST PAPER IN LONG ISLAND NEW YORK:NEWSDAY

    After 19 years, Russo leaves “Mike and the Mad Dog”

    BY NEIL BEST

    neil.best@newsday.com

    8:31 AM EDT, August 15, 2008

    “Mike and the Mad Dog,” a New York sports talk radio institution for nearly two decades, has been disconnected.

    WFAN abruptly ended the 19-year-old show late yesterday afternoon when it announced to the media that co-host Chris Russo has left the station, leaving Mike Francesa to carry on without him.

    Russo had hoped to do a farewell show, but WFAN opted to part ways immediately after releasing him from a contract that would have run through next spring.

    The announcement was made after Francesa left the air yesterday, but he said he will answer all questions about it on today’s show.

    The news did not come as a surprise; Newsday first reported June 22 that the show likely would end before Labor Day. But it still was an emotional moment for the longtime duo.

    “It’s kind of a sad day,” Russo said last night. “It’s a very strange day in my life.”

    Said Francesa: “I think it has to sink in. It’ll be very different when I finally get back in the fall.”

    He will be on solo today as scheduled; Russo is on vacation.

    The reasons for the breakup are multi-faceted, and somewhat murky.

    Operations manager Mark Chernoff said all parties agreed “the show has kind of run its course.” But Russo said that was true only to a point.

    He said he could have carried on but was motivated to explore other opportunities.

    “Basically, I’m looking for a different challenge in my life,” Russo said. “I’m 48 years of age. This might be the last chance I’m going to get for a challenge if I want to take it.”

    Russo swore on his children’s lives that he has no firm agreement or contract, but industry sources say he is likely to land at Sirius Satellite Radio for a lucrative deal worth up to $15 million over five years.

    “I have four or five options,” he said. “Sirius would be one of them … Obviously, I’m not stupid. I’m not going to leave FAN unless I have something relatively secure.”

    Because there will be no farewell show, their final joint appearance was an Aug. 5 remote at Giants camp in Albany. Other than that day, they had not spoken for weeks until Wednesday.

    “I told him if I don’t re-sign [with WFAN], it has nothing to do with him and I,” Russo said.

    Francesa said the two agreed to talk again when Russo cleans out his office next week.

    The hosts’ relationship has been strained in recent months, and at least to some extent, they apparently were ready to move on from each other as well as the show.

    “I think the relationship was part of this,” Francesa said, “but I think in the end this was probably more of a different vision about what the future may hold.”

    At the same time the station announced that Russo was leaving, it announced a new contract for Francesa, whose deal was believed to be expiring around the end of the year.

    Francesa said he will have control over the new-look show, which will unfold in the coming weeks. He will not have a co-host, but he will not sit alone for 5½ hours a day.

    “I expect nothing less than to be successful, but I understand it’s a great challenge,” Francesa said. “It won’t be a co-hosting situation. It will be my show, but I want to have personalities and other opinions and other voices.”

    Francesa and Russo were the undisputed stars of WFAN after Don Imus was fired last year. Chernoff tried his best to keep them together.

    He sat them down in May and again in July before the All-Star Game, the latter time “to see if things were OK. I thought they were, but obviously, there were things that made it tough.”

    He said he is confident that Francesa can succeed without Russo.

    “Mike’s a strong personality who brings an awful lot to the table,” Chernoff said.

    Said Russo: “I’m going to miss the station, the heartbeat, the day-in-and-day-out buzz of New York sports.”

    Said Francesa: “I would expect as we get distance from it, we’ll be very proud of what we built and accomplished. But I do also look forward to this [new show].”

    Lower East Side Shul Board Sells Out To Developers; Historians Cry Foul

    In Broadcatch on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 7:51 am

    FROM THE NY TIMES

    CITY ROOM BLOG

    This much can be agreed on: An Orthodox congregation established by Eastern European Jews in 1888 occupies a lovely but crumbling neo-Classical building with a two-story Victorian Gothic interior at 415 East Sixth Street, between First Avenue and Avenue A, on the Lower East Side — a neighborhood where real estate prices have been soaring, placing pressure on owners of old buildings to sell their property to developers for retail and commercial uses.

    Everything else — including even the question of how to correctly render the name of the synagogue — is contentious in a bitter dispute that has erupted in recent weeks over the fate of the building.

    This afternoon, the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, the Lower East Side Conservancy and several other nonprofit groups held a news conference outside the synagogue, to draw attention to a plan by the synagogue’s board to enter a partnership with a developer, which would demolish the structure and replace it with a mixed-use building that would contain apartments, as well as a new synagogue. In a letter [pdf] to the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission, the society has called for the synagogue to be designated a landmark, which would prevent it from being demolished.

    The congregation has filed demolition plans with the city’s Department of Buildings, but insists that it wants to preserve the character of the congregation and that the current structure is in desperate disrepair. The demolition plans were reported by The Villager, a weekly newspaper, late last month. The synagogue’s board voted on July 7 to approve a deal with the Kushner Companies, which would build a new six-story building on the site, with a synagogue on the first two floors and 10 apartments on the top four stories.

    It is not quite clear when the building at 415 East Sixth Street was constructed, but twoarticles in The Times from November 1903 refer to the building as a “four-story dwelling,” and a January 1911 article said the building had been the home of “wholesale confectioners.”

    In any event, the Adas Yisroel Anshe Mezritch, or Congregation Mezritch, which was founded in 1888, drastically renovated the building and began using it as a synagogue in 1910. The society said in a statement:

    The handsome neo-Classical building (which has an even more impressive interior) was one of the Lower East Side’s many “tenement synagogues,” so named because they filled narrow lots sandwiched between tenements and served the poor immigrants who populated the surrounding buildings. While a few such tenement synagogue buildings remain in the East Village, including the former Beth Hamedrash Hagadol Anshe Ungarn Synagogue at 242 East Seventh Street, which was recently landmarked by the city, Congregation Mezritch Synagogue appears to be the sole remaining operating tenement synagogue in the East Village, and thus is an important link to what was once perhaps the most significant Jewish community in America.

    Andrew Berman, executive director of the historic preservation society, said that “buildings like this — at once humble and grand — really speak to the profound aspirations of the generations of immigrants who came through the Lower East Side, and the impact they had and continue to have upon our city and country.”

    In a statement, Shelley Ackerman, whose father, Pesach Ackerman, has been the synagogue’s rabbi for more than 40 years, defended the board’s plans. She said:

    Our synagogue is not and never has been for sale. The pending proposal (if in fact it moves forward) would help to preserve Anshe Meseritz and provide a much more comfortable, welcoming, and accessible space for our beloved congregants. We are acting along these lines to guarantee the securing and survival of this synagogue.

    Those who instigate these activities are fueled by a romantic notion of preserving an old structure, one in desperate need of renovation. And without that renovation is likely to fall. Some are motivated by ignorance, others by greed.

    Dozens of other beautiful similar (landmark-worthy) synagogues in much better or worse shape than this one on the Lower East Side have been sold and/or destroyed in the last 20 years. These sales were motivated by the greed of a few parties who benefited. In almost every case, the synagogue in question did not. This case is completely different. There is no sale pending, only air rights to build apartments that will provide needed income to sustain the synagogue and congregation going forward.

    In a phone interview, Ms. Ackerman said the synagogue was in an advanced state of disrepair. The exterior steps are so steep as to be unusable during inclement weather, she said. Parts of the interior are crumbling. There are inadequate bathrooms, poor climate control and no kitchen, she added.

    The hubbub has become personal — and divided the 40 or so members of the congregation.

    “Anyone who is familiar with Rabbi Ackerman’s role in the synagogue for the last 40 years knows that despite no wages, he has been present seven days a week and has done everything within his power to make sure that the synagogue survives,” his daughter said in the statement. “He is devoted to the preservation of his temple and would never do anything to endanger the future of the synagogue.”

    Several former or current members of the congregation have weighed in on the side of the preservationists, including Joel Kaplan, executive director of United Jewish Council of the East Side, and William E. Rapfogel, chief executive of the Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty.

    Freda Fried, whose father was active in the synagogue for decades and whose mother was on its board, said the board’s vote in July was held on a Monday morning after the July 4 holiday weekend. “It provided little information about the sale in its mailing, so members could do any due diligence or even consider it important to give a proxy to anyone else,” she said. “If there was a real process and search for a development partner, little or no information was provided about any other choices.”

    Gerard Wolfe, a retired art historian credited with “rediscovery” of the Eldridge Street Synagogue, called the Mezeritz synagogue “a jewel,” and added, in a statement, “Its demolition would be an irretrievable, unforgivable loss.”

    Andrew S. Dolkart, a professor of historic preservation at Columbia who is not involved in the dispute, said the East Sixth Street building was an outstanding example of vernacular architecture and reflected the neo-Classical influence of the 1897 synagogue built by Congregation Shearith Israel, also known as the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue.

    “It wasn’t designed by a sophisticated architect,” Professor Dolkart said. “It wasn’t a pioneering building. It was an architect who was looking at what sophisticated designers were doing and then adapting it in an inexpensive and not so sophisticated manner, to create a kind of folk classicism, almost.”

    In a phone interview, Professor Dolkart said he favored preserving the Lower East Side structure, because cities should preserve “architecture that not only reflects the lives and history of the rich, but also the incredibly history of common people in New York.”

    Tommy Chong’s Basketball Jones

    In Broadcatch on Sunday, August 17, 2008 at 8:29 pm

    The New York Yankees Finally Find Their Soul in the Middle of the Dog Days of Summer

    In Broadcatch on Sunday, August 17, 2008 at 5:37 pm
    August 18, 2008
    Yankees 15, Royals 6

    Yankee Home Runs Help Mussina Overcome a Shaky Start

    Yankees Manager Joe Girardi
    frequently refers to himself as an optimist. That posture has been
    tested the last three weeks, as the Yankees floundered while nearly
    playing themselves out of the wild-card race.

    Girardi hoped that the Yankees’ untidy 13-inning victory on Saturday
    might be the start of something. The Yankees often have not measured up
    to Girardi’s positive outlook, and things certainly did not look good
    Sunday when the Royals scored three runs off Mike Mussina in the top of the first inning.

    But Alex Rodriguez and Xavier Nady homered in a six-run first, and Jason Giambi
    added a grand slam in the second — all off Kansas City starter Brian
    Bannister — as the Yankees rolled, 15-6, for their first series victory
    since taking two of three at Boston on July 25-27.

    Four Yankees homers overcame a shaky beginning by Mussina, who gave
    up hits to four of his first five hitters to trail, 3-0. Billy Butler’s
    broken-bat double drove in two runs. But Mussina allowed only two more
    hits, and no more runs, in his six-inning stint to improve to 16-7.

    Rodriguez, who finished with five runs batted in, homered to the
    entrance of Monument Park to tie the game. With two out, the next four
    Yankees combined for the cycle to produce three more runs.

    Nady sliced a home run off the right-field foul screen. Robinson Canó
    singled and, by running hard on contact (something he does not always
    do), scored on José Molina’s double to left. While Canó slumped in the
    dugout gasping for breath, Brett Gardner — who delivered the
    game-winning single in the 13th inning on Saturday — hit a run-scoring
    triple to right center. Both Canó and Gardner slid in ahead of
    off-target throws, Gardner headfirst.

    The first inning took 35 minutes. And so did the second inning, exactly, though the Royals did not score.

    Derek Jeter, who had four hits, opened the Yankee second with a single. Bannister walked Bobby Abreu
    and Rodriguez before Giambi homered into the bleachers in right-center.
    Bannister gave up two more singles, to Nady and Canó, before Kansas
    City Manager Trey Hillman pulled him.

    Rodriguez tacked on run-scoring singles in the third and the seventh.

    Royals reliever Jeff Fulchino drilled Jeter in the upper left arm
    with a 1-2 fastball in the seventh. Jeter, in pain, walked to first,
    but stayed in the game and scored on Abreu’s double. Cody Ransom,
    pinch-hitting for Giambi, added a two-run homer in his first at-bat as
    a Yankee.

    Comedian Bernie Mack is Dead at Age 50

    In Broadcatch on Saturday, August 9, 2008 at 9:58 am
    August 9, 2008

    Bernie Mac Is Dead, Publicist Says

    Filed at 9:28 a.m. ET

    CHICAGO (AP) — A publicist says Emmy and Golden Globe nominated actor and comedian Bernie Mac has died at age 50.

    Publicist Danica Smith says Bernie Mac died early Saturday at a hospital in the Chicago area of complications due to pneumonia.

    The comedian suffered from sarcoidosis, an inflammatory lung disease that produces tiny lumps of cells in the body’s organs, but he had said the condition went into remission in 2005. He recently had been hospitalized and treated for pneumonia.

    Mac had starring roles in “Ocean’s Eleven,” “Bad Santa,” “Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle” and “Transformers.”

    The comedian drew critical and popular acclaim with his Fox television series “The Bernie Mac Show,” which aired more than 100 episodes from 2001 to 2006.

    Citicorp and Merrill Lynch Buy Back $17 Billion in Bunk Securities

    In Broadcatch on Friday, August 8, 2008 at 1:00 am
    August 7, 2008

    2 Banks Will Buy Back $17 Billion in Securities

    Two Wall Street giants agreed on Thursday to buy back more than $17 billion of auction-rate securities that were improperly sold to retail customers, likely paving the way for other banks and brokerage firms to take similar actions.

    Citigroup reached a settlement Thursday morning with state and federal regulators, agreeing to buy back about $7.3 billion of auction-rate securities that it sold to retail customers and pay a $100 million fine for its conduct.

    Merrill Lynch said it would buy back about $10 billion in auction-rate investments that it sold to retail investors, a move that gets ahead of regulators investigating the company.

    Neither firm agreed to reimburse institutional investors, though both said they were trying to resolve similar problems with those customers.

    Regulators have been investigating at least a dozen Wall Street firms for their role in the sales and marketing of so-called auction-rate investments, and analysts expect a wave of settlements in the next few months.

    Bank of America, the largest retail bank, said Thursday that it had also received subpoenas from federal and state regulators related to sales of auction-rate securities. The investments are preferred shares or debt instruments with rates that reset regularly, usually every week, in auctions overseen by the brokerage firms that originally sold them.

    The $300 billion market for the investments collapsed in February, trapping investors who had been told that the securities were safe and easy to cash in.

    Citigroup’s settlement with state and federal regulators included a fine of as much as $100 million.

    In a statement, the New York attorney general Andrew Cuomo said that Citigroup would buy back, by Nov. 5. auction-rate securities from individual investors, charities and small- and mid-sized businesses. These customers, about 40,000 nationwide, have been unable to sell their securities since Feb. 12, the statement said.

    In a similar case in Massachusetts, Morgan Stanley reached an agreement with the attorney’s general office on Thursday to reimburse the cities of New Bedford and Hopkinton $1.5 million for the investments in the securities, the Massachusetts attorney general Martha Coakley said in a statement.

    As part of the settlement, Citigroup agreed to a public arbitration process to resolve claims of consequential damages suffered by retail investors.

    The bank, one of Wall Street’s biggest auction-rate securities dealers, will pay the $100 million to the New York attorney general’s office and a task force of 12 state regulators, led by the Texas State Securities Board. Each group would exact a $50 million penalty.

    The federal Securities and Exchange Commission also participated in the settlement talks but elected not to exact a penalty, pending its own investigation.

    The settlement follows several days of meetings between Citigroup and the state and federal regulators, and reflects Citigroup’s desire to put its auction-rate securities troubles behind it.

    Thursday’s settlement has implications for other Wall Street firms, with the Citigroup deal serving as a benchmark for the industry. Two other banks, UBS and Merrill Lynch, are under investigation by several groups of regulators. But unlike Citigroup, UBS faces additional accusations that at least one of its executives engaged in insider trading.

    Citigroup shares were down about 3.5 percent Thursday; Morgan Stanley shares were down less than one percent.

    Jenny Anderson contributed reporting.

    Hail To The Redskins at the Pro Football Hall Of Fame

    In Broadcatch, Washington Redskins on Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 11:38 pm

    “Hail To The Redskins- Hail Victory….

    Braves On The Warpath- Fight For Old D.C.!

    A Class Reunion in Canton

    Partisan Crowd Cheers Monk, Green On Induction Day

    By Mike Wise
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Sunday, August 3, 2008; D01

    CANTON, Ohio, Aug. 2 — They came from the District and beyond to see them. Way beyond. Some of the pilgrimages began in Orange County, Calif., and others in Murphy, N.C., where a white-haired couple began driving through the Blue Ridge Mountains some nine hours earlier.

    “After all the memories, we had to see them go in,” Bill Garrod said as his wife, Nancy, nodded in agreement, hours before Art Monk and Darrell Green were to be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday.

    And the moment the last Class of 2008 inductee took the stage, their patience was rewarded for those $4 gallons of gas and hours on sweltering freeways — just as Monk’s patience the past eight years was rewarded.

    For 4 minutes 4 seconds before Monk spoke — an applause lasting nearly three times as long as that for any other honoree — the steadiest and most reliable wide receiver to play pro football in Washington took in the chants, smiles and unconditional love heaped upon him.

    “Thank you, thank you,” Monk kept saying, happily unable to quiet the applause from the announced crowd of 16,654 at Fawcett Stadium, about 15,000 of whom wore burgundy and gold.

    Green had spoken nearly an hour earlier, drawing a monstrous ovation as fireworks cascaded behind him. He was the third inductee to be honored and the first Redskin introduced.

    Bill Garrod wore one of those Super Bowl T-shirts with the caricatured mugs of Redskins players from another era. There was Charles Mann, Earnest Byner, Ricky Sanders and, of course, the ebullient and grinning Green. Bill spoke of seeing Eddie LeBaron play at Griffith Stadium in the 1950s the way others spoke of the magic and majesty of RFK in the 1980s and early 1990s.

    They overwhelmed this lush, northeastern Ohio town about an hour south of Cleveland with numbers and passion, thousands of fans clad in burgundy and gold hats, jerseys, assorted paraphernalia and, yes, Halloween masks. They dwarfed other Hall of Fame inductees’ fans, transforming Canton into a rollicking yet respectful RFK tailgate.

    Soon after the national anthem, 2007 inductee Michael Irvin took the podium and was booed long and lustily, as if the former Dallas Cowboys wideout were still standing across the line of scrimmage from Green. According to NFL broadcaster and former coach Steve Mariucci, the crowd was “95 percent Washington Redskin jerseys!”

    The fans’ journey to the cradle of professional football to pay homage to Monk and Green began less in a place than a time, when the Redskins were frequently atop the NFL, led by groups of men nicknamed the Fun Bunch and the Hogs. Among the most skilled were Green, the loquacious, lightning-quick cornerback who played longer for the Redskins than any player, and Monk, the sure-handed wide receiver who let his solid play speak for him.

    Monk and Green were enshrined with former New England Patriots linebacker Andre Tippett; Gary Zimmerman, an offensive lineman for the Minnesota Vikings and Denver Broncos; Fred Dean, the pass-rushing demon of the San Diego Chargers and San Francisco 49ers; and Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Emmitt Thomas, who also mentored Green and Monk for eight seasons as a Redskins assistant.

    Monk’s selection in February to Canton was the culmination of a rejection process that went on for almost a decade, as other, more showy wide receivers and less-accomplished players received enough votes for enshrinement. Monk resigned himself to being known as the durable yet often unspectacular pro, the guy who did not have enough go-long highlights to impress a suddenly pass-happy league.

    Never mind Monk held the NFL’s career record for receptions for two years, had five seasons with more than 1,000 receiving yards and that he caught seven passes for 113 yards in Super Bowl XXVI. For seven years, it didn’t matter.

    “I think the first year was probably the worst, because there was so much anticipation from my community, all the fans, just saying, ‘Oh, you’ve got it made, you’re a shoo-in,’ ” Monk said Friday during an interview session. “And when you start hearing that and you start believing it and when it didn’t happen, it was a disappointment.”

    “It’s taken eight years,” Monk added. “But regardless of how long it’s taken, it’s good to be here.”

    Green’s induction came almost as quickly as the blinding speed of the player four times named the NFL’s fastest man. He was enshrined the first year he was eligible.

    Before every split time was news at an NFL combine and every team had an army of strength and speed coaches, Green once ran a 40-yard dash in an unheard-of time of 4.17 seconds.

    He played 20 years with the Redskins, an NFL record for years spent with one team equaled only by former Rams offensive lineman Jackie Slater. Monk’s 295 games with Washington remains a milestone for a player with one team in one city. His seven Pro Bowl selections were buttressed by 54 career interceptions.

    The fans who invaded Canton this weekend all had their favorite Green and Monk moments, ranging from Green’s spectacular punt return against the Chicago Bears in a 1988 playoff game — he winced in pain from a rib injury as he crossed the goal line — to Monk’s record-setting reception against the Denver Broncos at RFK Stadium on “Monday Night Football” in 1992, after which Monk’s teammates interrupted the game to carry him on their shoulders.

    “So I guess that would be the most memorable for me,” Monk said.

    A Los Angeles Rams fan, standing near Redskins fans, volunteered he had never imagined Eric Dickerson being caught from behind by any player in his prime, but that he remembered Green tracking down the tailback and dragging him to the ground.

    Dan Bee, who came from Orange County, Calif., with his wife, Stephanie, said the play that sticks in his mind is Green knocking away a pass against the Minnesota Vikings on fourth down near the goal line at the end of a playoff game, sending the Redskins to Super Bowl XXII in 1988.

    Keith McCoy and David Sutherland, both 24 and best friends growing up in Northern Virginia, simply remember attending Monk’s camp four straight summers, how gracious the three-time Pro Bowl wide receiver was to impressionable youths like themselves. “He signed autographs, took pictures, talked to us, everything,” McCoy said.

    Monk was presented by his son, James Arthur Monk Jr. Green’s presenter was also his son, Jared, whom he and his wife were going to name Darrell Green Jr. before changing their minds a month before he was born.

    “I’m so grateful because he’s his own man,” Green said. “I’m more proud of my son being my son than I am being in the Hall of Fame.”

    Inside the Hall of Fame, through the maze of exhibits and grainy NFL Films, thousands more burgundy-and-gold-clad people made their way to the bronzed-bust room, where they snapped photos of Joe Gibbs’s likeness. This, too, was part of the journey to pro football’s Mecca. For this day, they wouldn’t be anywhere else.

    Woman Goes to Manhattan Nightclub to Present Lil’ Kim Flowers and Ends Up Dead

    In Broadway, Crime, Lil Kim, Manhattan, Nightclub, Rap on Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 10:47 pm
    FANTASTIC REPORTING BY THE NEW YORK TIMES
    About a Tragic Sunday Night In Manhattan:
    August 8, 2008

    A Night Out at a Superstar’s Party, Then a Deadly Turn

    Ingrid Rivera idolized the rap artist Lil’ Kim. So after she learned that the star would appear at a Manhattan nightclub on Sunday night, Ms. Rivera, 24, put on a party dress and high heels and bought a large bouquet of flowers to present to her.

    But the bouquet never made it to Lil’ Kim. The party at the Spotlight Live club, held in honor of the rapper’s birthday, was packed, the flowers were cumbersome and, at some point, the authorities said, Ms. Rivera and a friend handed them to a bar employee for safekeeping. On Thursday, the police said, that employee, Syed Rahman, 24, was arrested and confessed to killing Ms. Rivera. He faces a second-degree murder charge, the police said on Thursday night.

    About 9:30 p.m on Thursday, the police escorted Mr. Rahman from the 18th Precinct station house on West 54th Street to take him to Central Booking downtown. He did not acknowledge reporters’ questions and kept his head down as he was put in an unmarked police car.

    One of Mr. Rahman’s neighbors, Annie Jackson, 65, who lives across the hall from his family on West 115th Street in Manhattan, said she did not know them well but that the man who she believed was Mr. Rahman was “quiet and friendly.”

    “I pray to God he is innocent,” Ms. Jackson said.

    The body of Ms. Rivera was found late Wednesday afternoon in a utility shed on the rooftop of the club, on Broadway near 49th Street.

    At a news conference on Thursday, the police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, said she had been hit in the back of the head with a two-and-a-half-foot-long metal pipe. The cause of death was blunt impact, according to Ellen S. Borakove, a spokeswoman for the city medical examiner.

    During the conference, Mr. Kelly said that Mr. Rahman had at first lured Ms. Rivera’s friend, and then Ms. Rivera herself, to the rooftop. He said that Mr. Rahman had a confrontation with Ms. Rivera on the roof but would not discuss the motive for the killing.

    When Ingrid Estrada, Ms. Rivera’s mother, learned of her death, “we heard her screams — that’s how we found out they had told her,” said Lizbeth Estrada, a cousin of Ms. Rivera.

    Later, the dead woman’s mother described her only daughter as “my life, my happiness,” according to The Associated Press.

    A statement released by the club’s management on Thursday said that the club was “shocked” by the tragedy and was cooperating with the police. Ms. Rivera’s killing was the second time this year that the upscale karaoke club has been the scene of a murder. In January, a 20-year old Newark man was stabbed to death after a shoving match that started near the club’s coat check and spilled into the street.

    A spokesman for Lil’ Kim, Ronn Torossian, said that the entertainer “mourns the death of Ms. Rivera. She knew nothing of this incident until she heard media reports.”

    Mr. Torossian did not respond to further e-mailed questions, and it was unclear whether Ms. Rivera had succeeded in introducing herself to Lil’ Kim.

    Sunday night began as an apparently routine outing for a young woman keen on getting close to a celebrity she had admired from afar. She had completed her shift at British Airways at Kennedy International Airport and reached the club, at 1604 Broadway, sometime after 9:30, the police said.

    There were about 500 people at the party, Mr. Kelly said.

    Ms. Rivera and her friend, whose name the police did not release, met Mr. Rahman, who was working as a “bar back,” stocking the bar, the police said. At some point, the police said, the friends asked him to put the flowers aside for them, which he did.

    Ms. Rivera and her friend were drinking. “She was pretty tipsy that night,” said Ms. Estrada, the victim’s cousin, who learned of the night’s events from friends.

    Sometime after 2 a.m. on Monday, Ms. Rivera apparently went looking for the flowers, ended up in a men’s bathroom and was kicked out of the club, the police said.

    Security guards, meanwhile, prevented others from leaving because of an unrelated dispute outside, a police spokesman said. Ms. Rivera’s friend went looking for her, but was not allowed to leave, the police said. They said that Mr. Rahman approached the friend and lied, telling her that Ms. Rivera was in a penthouse.

    The two went to the fifth floor, where Ms. Rivera’s friend later told investigators that she rebuffed sexual advances by Mr. Rahman and managed to get away.

    Mr. Rahman then went downstairs, found Ms. Rivera outside and told her he could get her back in, Mr. Kelly said. He took Ms. Rivera through an employee entrance on 49th Street and into a freight elevator to the roof.

    Mr. Rahman had keys to a utility shed there, Mr. Kelly said. After a struggle, Mr. Rahman bludgeoned her with the pipe, Mr. Kelly said. That took place about 2:45, the police said. Mr. Rahman then left the club about 3 a.m., according to the police, two hours before his shift was scheduled to end. Mr. Kelly said that Mr. Rahman told colleagues he had a personal emergency.

    On Tuesday, Ms. Rivera’s mother reported her daughter missing, Mr. Kelly said. Fliers were still posted on Thursday, taped to a light post near the club, with pictures of the young woman and when she was last seen.

    The flier read in part: “Reward! Please help us! $5,000.

    Detectives visited the club on Wednesday afternoon, and they searched the five-story building but found nothing, Mr. Kelly said. Mr. Kelly also said that the video surveillance was not working at the club.

    Later that day, an air-conditioning repairman discovered Ms. Rivera’s body in the shed, he said.

    Mr. Kelly said Mr. Rahman raised investigators’ suspicions because he had left the club early and because of the account Ms. Rivera’s friend gave of their interaction with him.

    Reporting was contributed by Al Baker, Jason Grant, Angela Macropoulos, Jennifer Mascia, Andrew Tangel and Mathew R. Warren.

    I Don’t Think You’re Acting Right You Don’t Think It’s Showing…

    In Broadcatch on Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 8:18 pm

    I don’t think you’re acting right

    You don’t think it’s showing…

    Joseph Walsh Kicking Rear-End

    Was Gene Rodenberry On Drugs?

    In Gene Rodenberry, George Takai, Howard Stern, Leonard Nimoy, Star Trek, William Shatner on Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 1:19 pm

    Broadway Brett Favre Becomes a New York Jet

    In Brett Favre, Broadcatching, Favre_Jets, Green Bay Packers, NFL, New York Herald Sun, New York Jets, Tullycasts, Wasington Redskins on Thursday, August 7, 2008 at 10:51 am
    August 7, 2008

    The Jets, once the team of one of football’s most charismatic quarterbacks, now have another one. They acquired Brett Favre from the Green Bay Packers in a deal late Wednesday night that the Jets hope will ignite excitement for a team that struggles to remain in the headlines in the same city with the Giants and struggles for competitiveness in the same division as the New England Patriots.

    “We just felt this was an opportunity to go get somebody of Brett’s stature and what he’s accomplished,” said Jets General Manager Mike Tannenbaum.

    The terms of the trade were not announced, although it was believed to be for a fourth-round pick that, depending on Favre’s performance and the team’s results, could increase in value, all the way up to a first-round selection. The trade was first reported Wednesday night by FoxSports.com.

    Quarterback Chad Pennington, a former first round draft pick, is loved and respected in the Jets’ locker room, but Tannenbaum said early Thursday morning that the Jets will part ways with him now that Favre is on board.

    “It’s a bittersweet moment for us,” Tannenbaum said. “I have all the respect in the world for Chad as a person and as a player. He gave his heart and soul to this organization for a long, long time.”

    Tannenbaum said that Favre had to be convinced to consider the Jets and that Favre talked directly to the Jets only in the last two days. Favre and his family favored the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, where Favre knew Coach Jon Gruden and his offense, all the way up to the moment when the Jets made the deal. The extent of Favre’s commitment to the Jets remains a question.

    “We’re going to take things one year at a time,” Tannenbaum said. “We’re excited to have Brett on the team for this year. This was a situation we were monitoring, and when we felt there was an opportunity, we felt it was the right thing to do to go after Brett.”

    “Obviously there were some concerns,” Tannenbaum said. “He’s coming to a new city, he’s been in one system for 16 years, there’s not a lot of connection with Brett and our coaching staff. We were able to talk through moving to the northeast. We felt really good about it, and we’re excited that he’s with us.”

    For Favre, the trade ends a protracted divorce from the Packers that captivated the N.F.L. and set Favre free from the team that he led to a Super Bowl title and for whom he had become an icon. Favre also won three Most Valuable Player awards in Green Bay, but when the Packers did not welcome him back after he reversed course on his retirement, Favre became the unexpected object of the Jets’ ardor. For weeks, the Jets were on the periphery of trade talks as Favre’s drama droned on. But Favre changes the image of a team that is often overlooked, bringing with him a glamour that has been absent from the franchise at least since Bill Parcells left after the 2000 season and star power that has not been present since Joe Namath took his fur coats and bad knees and went to Los Angeles in 1977 to finish his career. The Jets’ meeting against the Patriots in Week 2 instantly becomes more interesting.

    “Brett has had a long and storied career in Green Bay, and the Packers owe him a tremendous debt of gratitude for everything he accomplished on the field and for the impact he made in the state,” Ted Thompson, the Packers’ general manager, and Mark Murphy, the team’s president, said in a joint statement. “It is with some sadness that we make this announcement, but also with the desire for certainty that will allow us to move the team and organization forward in the most positive way possible.”

    The Jets underwent a $100 million makeover during the off-season, augmenting their offensive line and remaking their defense. But they had been conducting a quarterback competition in training camp between Pennington and Kellen Clemens, two options that last season produced just four victories.

    But the appeal of Favre is obvious: he had a turn-back-the-clock season last year, completing 66 percent of his passes and leading the Packers to the National Football Conference Championship game. With his arrival he likely makes the Jets a viable American Football Conference wild-card team. Even at 38, he is remarkably durable, having started 253 consecutive games, and he holds almost every major N.F.L. career passing record. And his marketing potential in New York is enormous, which was surely part of the Jets’ pitch to Favre.

    He will be a huge draw for the Jets, who will move to their new training complex in New Jersey at the end of training camp, and he gives the franchise a famous face as they begin a campaign centered around the 2010 opening of the stadium they will share with the Giants. Favre has no previous relationship with Coach Eric Mangini and the offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer, and he will be forced to learn an unfamiliar offense on the fly. Favre’s style has always had a seat-of-his-pants element, and that has led to a striking propensity to throw interceptions. That problem could hamper him with the Jets, particularly early in the season as he tries to find his comfort zone with new receivers. But as he left Green Bay Wednesday morning, Favre expressed weariness at his predicament — the falling out with the Packers had taken a toll on him and his family — and a desire to merely join a team.

    “It’s in everyone’s best interest to do it quicker than later,” Favre told The Hattiesburg American. “I won’t say we’re running out of time, but I need to get into a camp somewhere.”

    And now, surprisingly, he will be in camp for the Jets, a quick flirtation turning into a franchise-changing decision in just 24 hours.

    “My gut feeling for a long time was I just didn’t think this would come to fruition,” Tannenbaum said. “We had a cursory monitoring situation going on for a number of days. We put an oar in the water and things heated up at the end.”

    Pat Borzi contributed reporting from Green Bay, Wis.

    Yankee Slugger Bobby Murcer’s Life Celebrated in Oklahoma

    In Broadcatch on Wednesday, August 6, 2008 at 6:38 pm

    EDMOND – “Celebrating the Life of Bobby Murcer,” a memorial service for the late New York Yankees slugger from Oklahoma City, was a celebration of one man’s goodness, graciousness and kindness. And a little bit about what a ballplayer he was as well.

    The service at the Memorial Road Church of Christ, subtitled “Yankee for Life, Oklahoman at Heart,” flew by in what seemed like a lot less than the actual one hour and 45 minutes.

    The Yankees chartered a flight to Oklahoma City from the Dallas area, where they are playing a series with the Texas Rangers. Among the some 2,000 attending Wednesday’s memorial were Reggie Jackson, Derek Jeter, Andy Pettitte and Yankees manager Joe Girardi.

    “I can see my father right now, up in heaven, in his rocking chair, shaking his head in amazement that we are all here today just for him,” Todd Murcer said.

    With his voice beginning to break, Todd Murcer later added: “My father understood what was important. He often told me, ‘Treat people with respect, encourage those around you, make the most of every day.’ Watching him live by those words proved to be the greatest lesson of all.”

    Kent Allen, former minister at Memorial Road, pointed out that Wednesday’s memorial was 29 years ago, to the day, since Murcer gave a eulogy at Thurman Munson’s funeral. And that night Murcer had a three-run home run and, in the bottom of the ninth, a two-run single, driving in all of the Yankees’ runs in a 5-4 win against Baltimore.

    “What a game, what a life, what a man,” Allen said, adding that Munson’s widow, Diana, was at Wednesday’s service.

    Former Yankees publicist Marty Appel apologized for unfairly plugging Murcer as the next Mickey Mantle when he replaced The Mick in center field.

    “He connected with the fans from day one,” Appel said. “He had an easy, Oklahoma politeness and a modesty that isn’t normally associated with elite athletes. He was a fans’ player and he was a players’ player.

    “He was just terrific kid who was handed an oversized assignment and he handled it with grace and honesty and dignity, as he did everything until the very end… He made you a better person just to know him. No man ever wore the New York Yankee uniform better, and in this measure he is, in fact, right there with Babe and Lou and Joe and Mickey. He had Yankee DNA. A Yankee for life. The most beloved Yankee of his time.”

    Murcer’s former pastor at Quail Springs Church of Christ, Ronnie White, noted that today is the 25th anniversary of Bobby Murcer Day at Yankee Stadium. The minister also noted how important family was to the Yankees star.

    “If you didn’t know Bobby very well you would think that baseball was it for Bobby,” White said. “Not even close. Family was it for Bobby. He was a family man from start to finish…. Baseball was what Bobby did, but it wasn’t who he was.”

    A NASA astronaut, Army Col. Doug Wheelock, traveled all the way from Russia to speak at the Murcer memorial. He had traveled much further with one of Murcer’s Yankee jerseys – about 6.24 million miles – while aboard the Discovery space shuttle in October and November of last year, and on a Mount Everest trek last May. Murcer was Wheelock’s boyhood idol, and they became friends last year.

    “The way he lived his life was just magical,” said Wheelock, who presented Kay Murcer with the jersey that went into space, and baseball cards he had also taken along to the Murcer’s children, Todd and Tori.

    Michael Kay, who was Murcer’s broadcast partner, said he grew up as a Yankees fan, and especially a Murcer fan.

    “If I could draw up a prototype of what I wanted my idol to be,” Kay said, “Bobby Murcer lived up to being that person… Bobby Murcer was the most genuine famous person that I have ever met.”

    Aaron Gaberman, a 13-year-old Yankees fan who met Murcer as both were being treated for brain cancer, said he continues to play and love baseball.

    “But now I have a greater purpose in playing baseball,” Gaberman said. “I’m playing for Bobby now… Bobby is now my guardian angel.”

    Murcer’s agent, Steve Lefkowitz, mentioned one time when the slugger stopped to sign some autographs — after police had kept some kids from getting signatures.

    “About a block from the stadium a car stopped and out stepped Bobby Murcer,” Lefkowitz said. “He said, ‘Hey, guys, want an autograph?’

    “Bobby knew his place on earth was special, because that’s the way he carried himself. Not a trace of arrogance, just enjoying what he did and trying to make people feel as good as he did all the time.”

    Artie Lange Checks Into “Intensive” Rehab

    In Artie Lange, Eric the Midget, Fred Norris, Gary Dell'Abate, Greg Fitzsimmons, Howard Stern, Nick DePaulo, Robin Quivers, Ronnie the Limo Driver, Sal Governale, Scott Baio, Tim Sabean on Wednesday, August 6, 2008 at 6:02 pm

    Page Six

    Howard Stern’s sidekick is finally in rehab. Artie Lange, who’s long overindulged with drugs and drink, was scheduled to attend close pal Bob Saget’s Comedy Central roast on Sunday night, but never made it to LA. Instead, he checked himself into an intensive outpatient rehab program. A source said Lange “felt awful for not being there for Bob, but needed to make his health a priority.” Lange also canceled his stand-up shows this weekend, but plans to return to his regular gig on Stern’s Sirius radio show when it returns from hiatus. Lange’s rep, Lewis Kay, confirmed the news.

    Get well buddy; we all love you-JT

    Greyhound Scraps Ads After Canada Bus Beheading

    In Broadcatch on Wednesday, August 6, 2008 at 4:13 pm

    By ROB GILLIES

    Associated Press Writer

    TORONTO (AP) – Greyhound has scrapped an ad campaign that extolled the relaxing upside of bus travel after one of its passengers was accused of beheading and cannibalizing another traveler.

    The ad’s tag line was “There’s a reason you’ve never heard of ‘bus rage.”’

    Greyhound spokeswoman Abby Wambaugh said Wednesday a billboard and some tunnel posters near a bus terminal in Toronto are still up and would be removed later in the day.

    “Greyhound knows how important it is to get these removed and we are doing everything possible,” Wambaugh said. “This is something that we immediately asked to be done last week, realizing that these could be offensive.”

    Vince Weiguang Li, who immigrated to Canada from China in 2004, is charged with second-degree murder in the death of 22-year-old carnival worker Tim McLean. He has yet to enter a plea.

    Thirty-seven passengers were aboard the Greyhound from Edmonton, Alberta, to Winnipeg, Manitoba, as it traveled at night along a desolate stretch of the TransCanada Highway about 12 miles from Portage La Prairie, Manitoba. Witnesses said Li attacked McLean unprovoked, stabbing him dozens of times.

    As horrified passengers fled the bus, Li severed McLean’s head, displaying it to some of the passengers outside the bus, witnesses said.

    A police officer at the scene reported seeing the attacker hacking off pieces of the victim’s body and eating them, according to a police report.

    Wambaugh said the ads only appeared in Canada and that some in Ontario and western Canada have already been removed. About 20,000 inserts of the Greyhound ads were scheduled to be put into an Alberta Summer Games handbook but they stopped the presses.

    Karl Rove’s Media Birds Chirp About Obama’s ‘Arrogance’

    In Dana Milbank, David Ignatitus, Eric Alterman, Karl Rove, McCain, Obama, The New York Times on Friday, August 1, 2008 at 5:05 am

    Glenn Greenwald

    Displaying the startling prescience and unconventional insights that have long been the hallmark of his magazine, The New Republic’s Jonathan Chait wrote on June 30:

    The best aspect of a McCain presidency is that, while it would probably follow the policies of George W. Bush, it would put an end to the politics of Karl Rove . . . . In Bush’s Washington, critics are enemies to be dismissed rather than engaged. A McCain presidency would promise to dismantle the whole Rovian method that has torn open such a deep wound in the national psyche.

    From The New York Times Editorial Page, yesterday:

    On July 3, news reports said Senator John McCain, worried that he might lose the election before it truly started, opened his doors to disciples of Karl Rove from the 2004 campaign and the Bush White House. Less than a month later, the results are on full display. The candidate who started out talking about high-minded, civil debate has wholeheartedly adopted Mr. Rove’s low-minded and uncivil playbook.

    From The New York Times today:

    After spending much of the summer searching for an effective line of attack against Senator Barack Obama, Senator John McCain is beginning a newly aggressive campaign to define Mr. Obama as arrogant, out of touch and unprepared for the presidency. . . .
    Mr. McCain’s campaign is now under the leadership of members of President Bush’s re-election campaign, including Steve Schmidt, the czar of the Bush war room that relentlessly painted his opponent, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, as effete, elite, and equivocal through a daily blitz of sound bites and Web videos that were carefully coordinated with Mr. Bush’s television advertisements.

    The run of attacks against Mr. Obama over the last couple of weeks have been strikingly reminiscent of that drive, including the Bush team’s tactics of seeking to make campaigns referendums on its opponents — not a choice between two candidates — and attacking the opponent’s perceived strengths head-on.

    There’s obviously nothing surprising about the McCain campaign’s reliance on the standard, personality-based attacks that the GOP uses every election year. It’s long been obvious to everyone outside of The TNR Circle that McCain’s only prospect for winning would be to move the election away from debates over issues (where his positions are widely rejected by the public) and instead demonize Barack Obama as an effete, elitist, effeminate, far Leftist, terrorist-loving radical, and it was equally obvious that McCain — “drooling for power like a fruit bat with rabies,” as Matt Taibbi put it in November, 2006 — would eagerly employ those Rovian tactics. That may be a surprise to long-time Beltway McCain worshipers such as Chait and The Washington Post’s David Ignatitus (who today longed for McCain’s “healing gift,” “this fiercely independent man,” and “not the heroism but the humility”), but not to anyone else.
    What is far more notable than McCain’s now almost-complete reliance on Rovian demonization themes is how obediently the establishment media has been spouting and disseminating them. Five weeks ago, on June 23, Karl Rove appeared at a breakfast with Republican insiders at the Capitol Hill Club, mocked Obama
    cooly arrogant.” Ever since, that Obama is “arrogant” — and the related sin: “presumptuous” — has become standard, mandated media script. as “the guy at the country club with the beautiful date, holding a martini and a cigarette that stands against the wall and makes snide comments about everyone who passes by,” and labeled him “

    It’s now literally difficult to find a discussion of Obama in the establishment press that isn’t based on this personality-based theme — with media stars either expressing the opinion themselves or repeating it as a McCain talking point. Last night, CNN’s Campbell Brown, hosting Anderson Cooper’s show, framed the show this way:

    But is Obama vulnerable? Is he arrogant? . . . David, the McCain campaign, Republicans, they are consistently playing up this notion that Obama is presumptuous, arrogant. Can they stick him with this label?

    Here’s the front page of Politico today:


    This is exactly what happens every single election cycle. The Right spews some petty, personality-based attack, and the chirping media birds then mindlessly repeat it until it’s lodged into our discourse as accepted fact. That’s the media strategy on which the Right is relying to win the election this year again — dictating the songs sung by the vapid, chirping press birds — even as they petulantly and incessantly complain that the same media stars who serve this strategy are stacked against them. Yesterday’s, National Review’s Rich Lowry posted what he called “musings from a shrewd friend” about a Dana Milbank column in yesterday’s Washington Post that repeated every last “Obama-is-arrogant” cliché (”there are signs that the Obama campaign’s arrogance has begun to anger reporters”). Lowry’s “shrewd” friend:

    [Obama’s] showing hubris and contempt for the rest of us in how he considers America fundamentally broken and he’s the solution. Messianism is usually a quality you don’t want in a president. This was always the soft underbelly of his candidacy. They’ve gotten too caught up in their own story. What always does in a celebrity? Overexposure. The question now is whether Dana Milbank is the bird leaving the wire and every other bird in the press follows him or not. If this narrative sets in, Obama might have to move up his VP announcement to change the story.

    Read the rest of this entry »

    The War Between the United States and Iran Has Already Begun

    In Broadcatch on Friday, August 1, 2008 at 4:49 am

    America Is Already Committing Acts of War Against Iran
    By Scott Ritter, Truthdig
    July 30, 2008,

    The war between the United States and Iran is on. American taxpayer dollars are being used, with the permission of Congress, to fund activities that result in Iranians being killed and wounded, and Iranian property destroyed.

    This wanton violation of a nation’s sovereignty would not be tolerated if the tables were turned and Americans were being subjected to Iranian-funded covert actions that took the lives of Americans, on American soil, and destroyed American property and livelihood. Many Americans remain unaware of what is transpiring abroad in their name.

    Many of those who are cognizant of these activities are supportive of them, an outgrowth of misguided sentiment which holds Iran accountable for a list of grievances used by the U.S. government to justify the ongoing global war on terror. Iran, we are told, is not just a nation pursuing nuclear weapons, but is the largest state sponsor of terror in the world today.

    Much of the information behind this is being promulgated by Israel, which has a vested interest in seeing Iran neutralized as a potential threat. But Israel is joined by another source, even more puzzling in terms of its broad-based acceptance in the world of American journalism: the Mujahadeen-e Khalk, or MEK, an Iranian opposition group sworn to overthrow the theocracy in Tehran. The CIA today provides material support to the actions of the MEK inside Iran. The recent spate of explosions in Iran, including a particularly devastating “accident” involving a military convoy transporting ammunition in downtown Tehran, appears to be linked to an MEK operation; its agents working inside munitions manufacturing plants deliberately are committing acts of sabotage which lead to such explosions. If CIA money and planning support are behind these actions, the agency’s backing constitutes nothing less than an act of war on the part of the United States against Iran. Read the rest of this entry »

    Another Record Profit for Exxon

    In Broadcatch on Friday, August 1, 2008 at 4:26 am

    Oil giant Exxon Mobil made a profit of $11.68bn between April and June, breaking its own record for the highest quarterly profit by a US company.

    The 14% rise in profit was thanks to the surge in crude oil prices, which were almost double the price they were in the same period a year earlier.

    But profits disappointed investors, who sent Exxon’s share price down 3%.

    Profit growth was dented by declines in production, reduced demand for petrol and lower margins on refining.

    Sales of petrol and related products fell from the year before because of lower demand, the firm said.

    Production disruption

    Crude production declined 8% in the quarter, partly due to disruption in Venezuela and Nigeria.

    “They are spending $25bn a year on exploration4, and they are not even breaking even now in terms of production growth,” said Gene Pisasale of PNC Capital Advisors.

    During the quarter, Exxon also took a charge of $290m related to a penalty imposed on the firm for its role in Exxon Valdez oil spill disaster.

    Last month, the US Supreme Court ruled that the $2.5bn (£1.25bn) fine initially imposed would be cut to $500m.

    Exxon Mobil won the right to appeal against the damages bill for the 1989 Alaskan oil spill after arguing the initial penalty was excessive.

    Manny Ramirez and Joe Torre Spotted in Venice Beach Drinking Wheatgrass Shots at Herer’s Hemp Stand

    In Boston Red Sox, Joe Torre, Los Angeles Dodgers, Manny Ramirez on Friday, August 1, 2008 at 4:15 am

    Manny Ramirez brings bat and baggage to Los Angeles Dodgers

    In the biggest late-season acquisition in club history, the Dodgers acquire power-hitting left fielder from the Boston Red Sox. They’re counting on him to carry them into October.

    Bill Plaschke

    LOS ANGELES TIMES

    August 1, 2008

    He will arrive at Dodger Stadium today lugging 510 career home runs inside 510 pounds of baggage.

    He will take his place in the middle of the Dodger batting order tonight as one of baseball’s biggest hitters and most baffling headaches.

    In the biggest late-season acquisition in club history, the Dodgers acquired left fielder Manny Ramirez on Thursday from the Boston Red Sox and Mars.

    They are counting on him to carry them into October and beyond.

    Just as soon as they can find him.

    Three hours after the trade, Ned Colletti, Dodger general manager, was asked whether he had spoken to Ramirez.

    “I left him a message,” said Colletti.

    Four hours after the trade, Dodger Manager Joe Torre was asked whether he had spoken to Ramirez.

    “I left him a message,” said Torre.

    Days after the Angels grabbed the national sports spotlight by trading for quiet slugger Mark Teixeira, the Dodgers have thrown a massive counterpunch by acquiring a guy who is part Hollywood and part Dagwood.

    A guy who occasionally swings like Babe Ruth and is consistently as nutty as a Baby Ruth.

    The only thing that flops around more than his trademark dreadlocks are his moods.

    Nobody in baseball history has hit more postseason homers — 24 — yet when the 2007 world champion Red Sox visited the White House, Ramirez didn’t show up.

    “I guess his grandmother died again,” President Bush said at the time. “Just kidding.”

    Perhaps nobody in baseball history has performed better in a more pressure-filled World Series, as he was the MVP of the 2004 Series that broke the Red Sox’s 86-year title drought.

    Yet a couple of weeks ago, during a sixth-inning pitching change at Fenway Park, he momentarily departed left field to make a cellphone call.

    The Red Sox have long shrugged off such behavior as “Manny being Manny.”

    But recently, with Ramirez ripping club executives in preparation for his probable departure as a free agent this winter, the Red Sox finally decided Manny could be Manny somewhere else.

    Officially, the Dodgers acquired Ramirez in a three-team trade that cost them third-base prospect Andy LaRoche and pitcher Bryan Morris, who worked in class-A.

    Unofficially, it doesn’t take a Laker fan to understand that they were given a gift the size of Pau Gasol.

    Neither Dodger kid was considered a top prospect,

    and the Red Sox agreed to pay the remainder of Ramirez’s $21-million annual salary, about $7 million.

    “It’s crazy,” said Torre. “This is a huge ‘get’ for us.”

    It is actually two “gets” for the price of none.

    They do not have to pay someone who immediately becomes their best hitter. And, because of his impending free agency, they are not obligated to tolerate his nutty behavior beyond this season.

    He is probably here only for two months, but with a swing that is as unshakable as his smile, he is capable of carrying the Dodgers every day of those two months.

    “Three months,” corrected Dodger owner Frank McCourt, adding a month for the playoffs and World Series. “We’re going to have a great three months of baseball.”

    It was Boston native McCourt who pushed for this deal Thursday morning, just hours before the trading deadline, when he realized that the Red Sox were truly serious about dealing their recurring headache.

    In the weak National League West, one hitter could elevate his pitching-rich team to the top. And amid the inexperienced National League teams that will make the playoffs, one hitter could provide the postseason difference.

    Ramirez, even at age 36, is still clearly that hitter, leading the Red Sox with 20 home runs and ranking second with 68 RBIs at the time of the trade.

    “This team has hung in there all season with all these injuries. This is about giving them a chance to go for it,” said McCourt. “This is about paying back our loyal fans and rewarding our hard-working team.”

    The fans will get it, and were already loudly cheering just the scoreboard announcement of the trade Thursday night.

    The clubhouse may be a more difficult sell, particularly because Ramirez not only creates distractions, but a total of five potential starting outfielders.

    “This is why we have a guy like Joe Torre as manager,” said McCourt.

    Indeed, other than the Red Sox’s Terry Francona, probably the only other current major league manager who can handle Ramirez is Torre, who constantly dealt with wacky late-season acquisitions with the New York Yankees.

    Torre, who was constantly haunted by Ramirez during the Yankee-Red Sox rivalry, said, “It’s funny, but I did everything I could not to have to see him again, and all of a sudden he’s showing up in the uniform I’m wearing.”

    He smiled. “It’s pretty special.”

    Pretty strange. Pretty, yeah, pretty special.

    Bill Plaschke can be reached at bill.plaschke@latimes.com. To read previous columns by Plaschke, go to latimes.com/plaschke.