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Michael Jackson – They Don’t Care About Us
Posted in Soul Brother's Music Videos
Tagged Michael Jackson, music, New York, pop, r&b, soul, video
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Can ‘Glee’ Survive Without Cory Monteith?
By Kevin Fallon
Actor Cory Monteith’s tragic death at age 31 is a gutting loss for countless reasons. And while the fallout for his show Glee is practically inconsequential compared to the pain his family and friends now face, it’s inevitable that Fox’s writers must at some point address the dilemma.
Deadline reports that the first two episodes of season five of the series have already been written, and shooting was set to begin as early as next month. A number of TV series have had to deal with an actor’s death in the midst of a run before—just this past year, TNT’s Dallas reboot was forced to write the death of Larry Hagman into the show. But with scripts already written and production about to begin, Glee is facing an unenviable time crunch, making the question of how Monteith’s death will affect the show an especially pressing one.
It is, as tragic as seems, the typical response for TV series to kill off the character when an actor dies in the middle of a show’s run. When John Spencer died of a heart attack in 2005, his character, Leo McGarry, met the same fate on seventh season of The West Wing. When John Ritter died in September 2003, 8 Simple Rules took a two month hiatus before returning with an episode that began with Ritter’s character succumbing to an off-screen heart-attack. When Suddenly Susan actor David Strickland killed himself in 1999, the character died on the show, too.
The Sopranos and the Dallas reboot both turned to computer trickery to create a few final scenes with its departed actors—Nancy Marchand in The Sopranos and Hagman in Dallas—before having the characters die on the show, too.
Read More Can ‘Glee’ Survive Without Cory Monteith? – The Daily Beast.
Whitney Houston — Tombstone Now Etched with Her Most Famous Song Lyrics
When you think of Whitney Houston you think … “I Will Always Love You” — and now you always will, because it’s engraved on her tombstone.
Whitney’s grave at Fairview Cemetery in Westfield, New Jersey was finally given a headstone last week, after sitting vacant since her death in 2012.
The epitaph on the new heart-shaped marker reads: “Whitney E. Houston Aug. 9, 1963 — Feb. 11 2012 … THE VOICE … ‘I Will Always Love You’.”
Interestingly, while Whitney made “I Will Always Love You” famous in “The Bodyguard” — it was written, and originally performed, by Dolly Parton.
If you’re thinking they should’ve gone with lyrics from “Greatest Love of All” … “Saving All My Love for You” … or “I’m Every Woman” — yeah, she didn’t write those either.
Whitney is buried next to her father … per her wishes.
Read More Whitney Houston — Tombstone Now Etched with Her Most Famous Song Lyrics | TMZ.com.
The Walking Dead Bosses Tease Season 4’s New Threats, New Characters and Old Foes
By Natalie Abrams
When The Walking Dead returns this fall, Rick (Andrew Lincoln) & Co. will still be residing in the prison — but that doesn’t mean we’re in for a lull while the group learns how to be a community again. After all, there’s still the ever-present danger of The Governor (David Morrissey), who abandoned Woodbury and left his former residents to be taken in by Rick. But how is Rick dealing in a world where nearly everyone he’s gotten close to has died and his son is on a precarious path to becoming a monster? TVGuide.com turned to executive producer and comic book creator Robert Kirkman and new showrunner Scott Gimple to get the scoop on the new season and which elements of the comics will be introduced this year.
How does it feel going into Comic-Con not only celebrating the AMC show, but 10 years of the comic?
Robert Kirkman: It’s bizarre. We are heading to the 10-year anniversary and it doesn’t feel like 10 years. It certainly is a very strange feeling.
Because you’re so far ahead in the comics, do you ever considering introducing storylines much earlier, like bringing in ultimate villain Negan?
Kirkman: That’s definitely a real temptation when you are adapting a show. It’s sometimes a struggle because I feel like there are very cool things that are waiting in the wings in the comics that we could do earlier in the show. But those things only work the way they work because of everything that came before them. We have to build up to them properly. Negan isn’t going to be as cool if we don’t set up this, this, this, and this. We do want to do Negan, and it seems likes everyone on the show does want to do Negan, but we are going to have to do all these other things first.
Scott Gimple: Reading the book now and reading Negan as a character, I’m like, “Damn, there’s so much to do before we get to him!” One of my favorite issues with him recently was the Carl/Negan issue. I think it’d be such an amazing episode of TV, but we have a lot to do before we get there.
The Culture of Armstronging
English: One 23.5 ounce can of the Four Loko alcoholic energy drink. 12% ABV. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
By James Joiner
As hundreds of spandex superhero suited cyclists get ready to start the Tour de France this weekend, seven-time ex-victor and scorned Texan Lance Armstrong has decided to take a stand, telling France’s Le Monde newspaper that cycling’s most prestigious and grueling race is “impossible to win without doping.”
Armstrong, who has famously had his Tour victories erased from the annals of cycling history, wants to point out that doping is so widespread in the sport that he “just took part in the system.”
This may or may not be true.
What is true is that we now live in a culture that not only expects doping, but encourages it, even in day-to-day life.
So-called performance enhancing beverages featuring high-tech cocktails of potent (and often spurious) ingredients are the dominant space holder in convenience store coolers. The granddaddy of them all, Red Bull, has such a hold on action sport cultures like skateboarding and BMX they own their own magazine. You can get over-the-counter energy boosts in almost any form — from taurine-infused M&M knockoffs to Aeroshot caffeine mist to the Turbo Snort, a caffeinated nasal spray that provides up to “400 hours of energy” (?!). Let’s not forget the fun that is Four Loko, a caffeinated malt beverage the media vilified until bath salts came along and stole the “crazy over-the-counter substance” title. 5 Hour Energy, once viewed with the same sidelong looks as trucker speed, is now so ubiquitous that they sell it at some college bookstores.
We’re all Armstronging our way through the day.
via Lance Armstrong Le Monde – Lance Armstrong Tour de France Doping – Esquire.
Posted in News from the Soul Brother
Tagged 5-hour Energy, Cycling, Four Loko, France, Lance Armstrong, Le Monde, Over-the-counter drug, Tour de France
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Stand-alone emergency rooms popping up
By Phil Galewitz
When Lisa Boncler gashed the side of her head on the gate to her front yard, she immediately called her neighbor for a ride to the emergency room.
In this fast-growing Houston suburb, six ERs are just a short drive away. She chose Texas Emergency Care Center, a facility that feels like a Western lodge with its earth-toned brick walls, leather chairs and coffee bar. The eight-bed ER that opened last year has almost everything — except, that is, an attached hospital.
“This is so convenient,” says a smiling Boncler, 40, as a doctor prepared to close her wound with medical staples less than an hour after her accident. “I’ve been here before. It’s always fast.”
The speedier care offered at such facilities, which are springing up in many states, including Texas, Florida and North Carolina, comes at a steep cost, however. Stand-alone ERs, which are often located near high-end shopping centers and target consumers with private insurance, bill like regular emergency rooms. Those prices, which can top $1,000 for a single visit, are spurring worries that the rapid growth of the facilities will lead to higher insurance premiums.
Read More Stand-alone emergency rooms popping up.
Posted in News from the Soul Brother
Tagged Emergency department, ER, Florida, health, Houston, medicine, North Carolina
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Hoodies Up
Posted in Soul Brother Presents
Tagged Civil disobedience, Hoodies Up, justice, Martin Luther King Jr., Trayvon Martin
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Shame on Walmart!
By Ralph Nader
When one considers Walmart’s company slogan — “Save money. Live better.” — it almost seems as if they are referring to their corporation’s big shareholders — the super-rich Walton family — rather than their employees or the communities they squeeze. After all, Walmart is the same company that has recently made headlines for firing workers for verbally protesting against unfair wages and lack of health care benefits. This situation forces Walmart employees to work second jobs or rely on government assistance to make ends meet.
According to a recent report from the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce, the low wages provided by a single Walmart store costs taxpayers upwards of $1 million in governmental support for those workers and their dependents. “The report finds that a single 300-employee Wal-Mart Supercenter in Wisconsin may cost taxpayers anywhere from $904,542 to nearly $1.75 million per year, or about $5,815 per employee. Wisconsin has 100 Wal-Mart stores, 75 that are Wal-Mart Supercenters.”
Walmart’s most recent attempt to advance their bullying brand of profit-over-people hit a snag this week when the District of Columbia City Council voted to approve and send to the mayor a “living wage bill” which mandates that billion-dollar big box retailers must provide a $12.50 “living wage” in the District. According to a background briefing from the council, the cost of living in the District is 42 percent higher than the national average — meaning fairer salaries are a necessity for workers in the District just to meet their basic expenses.
Read More Shame on Walmart! | Ralph Nader.
How The Zimmerman Mindset Rigged The Justice System Against Black Men
By Judd Legum
George Zimmerman killed one boy, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. Although a Florida jury found Zimmerman not guilty, his attitude — that a young black male is an object suspicion and contempt — not only cost Martin his life but has infected the entire United States criminal justice system.
Law Professor Michelle Alexander makes the point powerfully:
It is the Zimmerman mindset that must be found guilty – far more than the man himself. It is a mindset that views black men and boys as nothing but a threat, good for nothing, up to no good no matter who they are or what they are doing. It is the Zimmerman mindset that has birthed a penal system unprecedented in world history, and relegated millions to a permanent undercaste.
The statistics back up Alexander’s point. Minorities, especially the six million young black men in America, get much worse outcomes from the criminal justice system for the same conduct:
1. A black male born in 2001 has a 32% chance of spending some portion of his life in prison. A white male born the same year has just a 6% chance. [Sentencing Project]
2. In major American cities, as many as 80% of young African-American men have criminal records. [Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow]
3. African-Americans who use drugs are more than four times as likely to be incarcerated than whites who use drugs. African Americans constitute 14% of the population and 14% of monthly drug users. But African-Americans respresent 34% of those arrested for a drug offense and 53% of those sentenced to prison for a drug offense. [American Bar Association]
4. In seven states, African Americans constitute 80% or more of all drug offenders sent to prison. [Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow]
5. Black students are three and a half times as likely to be suspended or expelled than their white peers. One in five black boys recieve an out-of-school suspension. Education Secretary Arne Duncan who commissioned the study, said “The undeniable truth is that the everyday education experience for too many students of color violates the principle of equity at the heart of the American promise.” [New York Times]
6. Black youth who are referred to juvenile court are much more likely to be detained, referred to adult court or end up in adult prison than their white counterparts. Blacks represented 28% of juvenile arrests, 30% of referrals to juvenile court, 37% of the detained population, 35% of youth judicially waived to criminal court and 58% of youth admitted to state adult prison. [National Council on Crime And Deliquency]
7. The United States imprisons a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid. [Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow]
In 2004, the Amerian Bar Association created a commission which produced recommendation to address “racial and ethnic bias in the criminal justice system.” Thus far, their recommendations have been largely ignored in much of the country.
via How The Zimmerman Mindset Rigged The Justice System Against Black Men.

