‘Scandal’ Cast, Creator Offer 14 Things to Know About Season 3

By Lesley Goldberg

ScandalABC’s breakout hit Scandal won’t miss a beat when it returns for its third season in October. When Kerry Washington’s Olivia Pope goes back to work, only 22 minutes will have passed between the second-season finale and the start of the breakout hit’s third run, meaning the mystery of who outed D.C.’s best fixer as being President Fitzgerald Grant’s mistress will still be top of mind for everyone.

Additionally, look for Rowan (Joe Morton) to return as Olivia’s father as the Gladiators in Suits will now be tasked with “handling” their employer’s personal problems — a rarity for Olivia Pope & Associates.

The Hollywood Reporter catches up with showrunner Shonda Rhimes as well as stars Washington (Olivia), Tony Goldwyn (Fitz), Bellamy Young (Mellie), Darby Stanchfield (Abby), Katie Lowes (Quinn) and new series regular Scott Foley (Jake) to preview what’s to come when the fast-paced drama returns. “Season three begins with a tsunami, like this explosion that completely floods the White House,” Goldwyn warns. Offered below are 14 things to look forward to.

Read More ‘Scandal’ Cast, Creator Offer 14 Things to Know About Season 3.

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‘Fruitvale Station’ hits home for Damian Lillard

Damian Lillard

Damian Lillard (Photo credit: ye-wa)

By Marc J. Spears

The Portland Trail Blazers’ Damian Lillard and a cousin saw the biopic “Fruitvale Station” in an otherwise empty theater in Portland on Wednesday night. Considering that the NBA Rookie of the Year personally knew the man portrayed in the film, it probably was easier to watch it in the Pacific Northwest without many people around rather than in his hometown of Oakland, Calif.

“If I would have watched it at home I’m sure there would have been a lot of people out there crying,” Lillard told Yahoo! Sports on Thursday in a phone interview.

“Fruitvale Station” is based on the true story of Oscar Grant, a young African-American who, while handcuffed with his face to the ground, was shot in the back and killed by a transit police officer in the early morning of New Year’s Day 2009. Grant’s death sparked mass protests in Oakland.

Lillard says he became familiar with Grant through his older brother, Houston, who knew Grant well. Lillard learned of Grant’s death while attending Weber State University.

“He went to high school and played on the same football team as my brother,” Lillard said. “I used to always be around my brother at the high school and crossed paths with [Grant]. We were on the bus at the same time. We were always in the same areas.”

Read More  ‘Fruitvale Station’ hits home for Damian Lillard – Yahoo! Sports.

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Ender’s Game

MV5BMjIzNjExODYwMV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwNzA4MjAzOQ@@._V1_SX214_This looks to be a blockbuster aiming for our holiday wallets. Ender’s Game is the story of a brilliant boy who is chosen to become the ultimate weapon to save Earth. This film has an all-star cast that includes Harrison Ford, Viola Davis, Ben Kingsley, Abigail Breslin, Hailee Steinfeld, and  Asa Butterfield. Ender’s Game opens November 1, 2013.

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Harrison Ford In, Bruce Willis Out of ‘Expendables 3’

The Expendables (2010 film)

The Expendables (2010 film) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

By Rebecca Ford

Bruce Willis won’t appear in the third film, but Harrison Ford is joining the the threequel, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed.

Sylvester Stallone tweeted the news on Tuesday: “WILLIS OUT… HARRISON FORD IN  !!!!  GREAT NEWS !!!!!  Been waiting years for this!!!!”

A few minutes later, Stallone added: “GREEDY AND LAZY …… A SURE FORMULA FOR CAREER FAILURE”

Lionsgate has slated the Nu Image/Millennium Films action-adventure franchise film to open Aug. 15, 2014. Stallone returns as Barney Ross, who leads the group of mercenaries as it undertakes seemingly impossible missions. Jackie Chan and Nicolas Cage are to appear in the film.

The Expendables 2, starring Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Chuck Norris, Terry Crews and Willis, opened in the U.S. on Aug. 16, 2012, easily topping the box office that weekend with $28.6 million. The Lionsgate and Millennium Films project has earned $300.4 million worldwide.

Read More Harrison Ford In, Bruce Willis Out of ‘Expendables 3’.

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The Monsterization of Trayvon Martin

By Patricia J. Williams

imagesThere was a small, crystalline window of time, as I sat waiting for the verdict in the George Zimmerman trial, when it felt as though we were perched between two worlds of possibility. As I watched the media blare, there was a breathless, swooping, nearly operatic transport to the moment; pundits recapitulated all the reasons to be afraid, very afraid. Anticipating acquittal, they eagerly imagined crescendos of erupting terror, riot and civil collapse. Florida was under lockdown. Magical legions of hydra-headed Trayvon Martin–shaped “thug wannabes” were assembling at the edges of the badlands.

In this still-undecided, Schrödinger’s cat box of suspense, a lonely, against-the-odds voice inside me wondered what might happen if the jury were to find George Zimmerman guilty. Would the pundits and politicians fear armed uprisings in select white neighborhoods? Would rabid online purveyors of hatred toward Martin and Eric Holder and President Obama be construed as dangerous to public order? There were, after all, those fanatics who wanted to “impeach” or “impale” Judge Debra Nelson, a Republican appointee. An Ohio PAC called the Buckeye Firearms Foundation was raising money to supply Zimmerman “with the funds he needs to replace his firearm, holster, and other gear.” Bestselling novelist Brad Thor would offer to buy Zimmerman “all the ammo he wanted.”

But Zimmerman was found not guilty, and there were no riots, save the riot of hyperbole portraying peaceful protests as violent. Trayvon Martin remains in his grave, although many have tried to resurrect him as the active principal in his own death. And while the legal process rendered formal justice, there remain important, unresolved issues embedded in the widespread sense of delegitimacy, dissatisfaction and unfairness that lingers in the verdict’s wake.

Much of it comes down to an all-too-familiar double standard. Sociologist Troy Duster recently summarized the difficulty confronted by prosecutor Bernie de la Rionda when he asked the jury to reverse the circumstances and imagine that an armed 28-year-old black man followed an unarmed 17-year-old white teenager, shot him dead and then pleaded self-defense: “The problem with this invitation to speculate,” he said, “is that it asks that we break frame with ‘common sense.’” For all the legal language of the courtroom, racialized narratives will emerge and form along the very same lines that Gordon Allport and Leo Postman identified in their research more than sixty years ago: in the “retelling,” a razor will leap “from the white man’s hand to… a colored man’s hand.”

Read More  The Monsterization of Trayvon Martin | The Nation.

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The N-word & me

By Leonard Greene

Riley Cooper #14 of the Philadelphia Eagles

Riley Cooper #14 of the Philadelphia Eagles (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

A viral video of Philadelphia Eagles receiver Riley Cooper spewing the n-word at a country concert brought me back to the first time someone called me n—-r.

I was 7 or 8 years old, in rural West Virginia, where my big brother and I spent summers growing up in the early ’70s. We were running an errand in town for my grandmother, when some little white boys — and girls — started hurling the insult at us, along with some rocks that were heavy enough to break glass and leave bruises.

We did the only thing that made sense to a couple of boys from Brooklyn: We threw rocks back at them.

As for the insults, we couldn’t come up with anything as painful or poisonous. No one ever has.

We didn’t know what the word meant, and they probably didn’t either. But we knew it had something to do with hate and shame.

Anawalt, W.Va., near the Appalachian coal mines, was about as small as small towns get, so by the time we got home our grandmother had heard all about the little rock fight.

After we told her our side of the story, our biracial grandmother (who could pass for white, but never did) gave us a lesson about good and evil.

She also told us about right and wrong. Name-calling and rock-throwing were always wrong, no matter who did it, which was why the second lesson ended with a sore backside.

Still, as I recall, being called n—-r hurt more than the rocks or the switch Grandma made us get from the tree in front of the house.

Read More The N-word & me – NYPOST.com.

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Tim Wise – The Pathology of Privilege: Racism, White Denial & the Costs of Inequality

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No recovery for the middle class

By Anthony Mirhaydari

franklin-tn-great-american-main-street-cr-williamson-county-cvb_mrThe recovery is now officially in its fifth year. Sure, the stock market is back. And housing is getting off the floor. But for middle class Americans, the pressure is still on.

This has been an uneven recovery, with the benefits accumulating to the rich and the corporate sector while regular folks have largely been left behind amid stagnant wages, rising living costs, mediocre job gains and persistent long-term unemployment.

And none of this is new. The recession merely exacerbated trends that started in the late 1970s: lost manufacturing prowess, an important source of good-paying jobs; a shift to generally lower-paid service jobs; freer global trade, which deepens these employment problems; and increased reliance on finance, credit and debt as families try to hold on to the American dream.

Read More No recovery for the middle class – – MSN Money.

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FBI pressures Internet providers to install surveillance software

CyberspaceBy Declan McCullagh

The U.S. government is quietly pressuring telecommunications providers to install eavesdropping technology deep inside companies’ internal networks to facilitate surveillance efforts.

FBI officials have been sparring with carriers, a process that has on occasion included threats of contempt of court, in a bid to deploy government-provided software capable of intercepting and analyzing entire communications streams. The FBI’s legal position during these discussions is that the software’s real-time interception of metadata is authorized under the Patriot Act.

Attempts by the FBI to install what it internally refers to as “port reader” software, which have not been previously disclosed, were described to CNET in interviews over the last few weeks. One former government official said the software used to be known internally as the “harvesting program.”

Carriers are “extra-cautious” and are resisting installation of the FBI’s port reader software, an industry participant in the discussions said, in part because of the privacy and security risks of unknown surveillance technology operating on an sensitive internal network.

It’s “an interception device by definition,” said the industry participant, who spoke on condition of anonymity because court proceedings are sealed. “If magistrates knew more, they would approve less.” It’s unclear whether any carriers have installed port readers, and at least one is actively opposing the installation.

In a statement from a spokesman, the FBI said it has the legal authority to use alternate methods to collect Internet metadata, including source and destination IP addresses: “In circumstances where a provider is unable to comply with a court order utilizing its own technical solution(s), law enforcement may offer to provide technical assistance to meet the obligation of the court order.”

AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Comcast, and Sprint declined to comment. A government source familiar with the port reader software said it is not used on an industry-wide basis, and only in situations where carriers’ own wiretap compliance technology is insufficient to provide agents with what they are seeking.

Read More FBI pressures Internet providers to install surveillance software | Politics and Law – CNET News.

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8 Ways Privatization Has Brought Pain and Misery to American Life

By Paul Buchheit

Wall Street Protests Fort LauderdaleSome of America’s leading news analysts are beginning to recognize the fallacy of the “free market.” Said Ted Koppel, “We are privatizing ourselves into one disaster after another.” Fareed Zakaria admitted, “I am a big fan of the free market…But precisely because it is so powerful, in places where it doesn’t work well, it can cause huge distortions.” They’re right. A little analysis reveals that privatization doesn’t seem to work in any of the areas vital to the American public.

Health Care

Our private health care system is by far the most expensive system in the developed world. Forty-two percent of sick Americans skipped doctor’s visits and/or medication purchases in 2011 because of excessive costs. The price of common surgeries is anywhere from three to ten times higher in the U.S. than in Great Britain, Canada, France, or Germany. Some of the documented tales: a $15,000 charge for lab tests for which a Medicare patient would have paid a few hundred dollars; an $8,000 special stress test for which Medicare would have paid $554; and a $60,000 gall bladder operation, which was covered for $2,000 under a private policy.

As the examples begin to make clear, Medicare is more cost-effective. According to the  Council for Affordable Health Insurance, Medicare administrative costs are about one-third that of private health insurance. More importantly, our ageing population has been staying healthy. While as a nation we have a  shorter life expectancy than almost all other  developed countries, Americans covered by Medicare  INCREASED their life expectancy by 3.5 years from the 1960s to the turn of the century.

Read More 8 Ways Privatization Has Brought Pain and Misery to American Life | Alternet.

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