Monday, November 30, 2009
I Say This Every Time It Happens In Sports, And I'll Say It Again:
Labels: coaches, hiring/firing, New Jersey Nets
No Main Topic
- Yet another political football. Meanwhile...
- How did we go from "He crashed his car" to "It was his mistress' fault" so fast?
- Why I don't travel during flu season.
- News on the suspected Seattle cop-killer.
- Isn't it ironic?
Labels: No Main Topic
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Around the Internets
- About Psalms 109...
- They start out so young.
- First Twitter, now this.
- Next: on a very special "Saved By the Bell..."
- Howard Bryant on LeBron James' call to retire the #23.
- Sarah Palin's followers won't like this.
- And people said Pokemon weren't real.
- Michele Bachman wants to know why Democrats don't like her.
- Products any Simpsons fan would love to have.
Labels: Around the Internets
Thursday, November 26, 2009
One Reason Why The Hulk Movies Haven't Caught On
From Eisner Award-winning, Emmy Award-winning, New York Times best-selling scribe Jeph Loeb and legendary artist John Romita Jr, the man behind World War Hulk, comes one of the most important chapters in the Hulk mythos! FALL OF THE HULKS GAMMA brings Marvel's finest together to mourn a hero-but just who's dead? And why are they murdered in the opening pages of this landmark special? It's been building since World War Hulk and it's bigger than any Hulk story you've ever imagined! Who is the Red Hulk? Who is Red She-Hulk? What's the fate of Bruce Banner? The answers begin here!
I have no major qualms so far, but then...
This is the issue that changes everything-and you can't miss the shocking ending as an unholy union may spell the end of the Marvel Universe as it ignites the most incredible of wars! And if that wasn't enough, just which long thought dead characters-yeah, plural-are back? Loeb and Romita Jr rock, smash and rearrange your world in FALL OF THE HULKS GAMMA!
I hate these types of teases. We all know the Marvel Universe isn't going to end; sure the Ultimates killed so many characters you could almost hear Chris Claremont applauding, but that's because the writers (beside being rather morbid) knew that the mainstream version of those characters were going to live.
As for the return of "long though dead characters..." I just hope this is in the context of Hulk-related characters, because the storyline of any army of the dead rising up for war is already being used.
Labels: Marvel Comics, The Hulk
If You Want To Blame The National Debt On The Sitting President
Labels: Democratic Party, Economy, GOP
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Miley Cyrus: Twilight-Hater
What's she gonna do about the Percy Jackson movie (which looks promising so far) when that comes out?
Labels: celebrities, Miley Cyrus, movies
Quote of the Day
I despise the idea of the “everyman” politician, the idea that we want someone who resembles the normative American running the country. The problem is that most Americans, normative or otherwise, are as deeply uninformed as Palin. There’s just too much to digest in the work or crafting good policy.
We all have jobs to go to, kids to raise and lives to live. We simply don’t have the time to be experts. But, that’s what we need but never ask of our leaders. We need people who can become well informed on the issues on which they vote. This idea that any schmuck can be a leader results in us electing people who don’t care about policy.
-- Thomas, on Sadly, No!
No Main Topic
- Put Angelina Jolie in the "not a fan of Obama" camp.
- Abe Pollin: The man who revitalized D.C.'s sports (and social) scene.
- Some good news for Boston.
- Looking for Thanksgiving deals.
- A link between pregnancy and breast cancer.
Labels: No Main Topic
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
R.I.P., Abe Pollin
Labels: Abe Pollin, life and death, Washington Wizards
5 Completely Wasted Attempts To Make A New Brat Pack
However some cast members wasted the opportunity that a hip, trend-setting movie (or TV show) provided them, and I now I think we have as much chance of seeing Tom Cruise at Kirk Cameron's next Christmas Party then we'll see a new generation of the Brat Pack.
Now before you see one humble blogger's list, some rules:
- The movie/show in question must have been geared toward teens and preteens, so Frat Pack movies don't count.
- In true Brat Pack tradition, the cast has to be deep. So a movie centered around four characters won't cut it (which excludes the Freddie Prinze Jr / Ryan Phllippe / Sarah Michelle Gellar / Seth Green dynamic).
- You can't go retro, like "Hey, did you know that all of these now-cool actors were in this one movie/show that very few people watched/followed? In other words: did you know Seth Rogen better from Freaks and Geeks or Knocked Up? I thought so; that's why Freaks and Geeks isn't on the list.
The Faculty (1998)
The Cast: Jordana Brewster, Josh Harnett, Elijah Wood, Clea Duvall, Laura Harris
The Potential: You had one of the most electric directors and hippest screenwriters of that time. You had a story that not only reached teens, but the no-longer-teens but "I remember that!" crowd. There was some action, horror, drama and jokes both obvious and insider-ish. The teachers were all played by either known names or That Guys, and a young Wood was already a familiar face.)
The Waste: Very little advertising and two good actors (Brewster and Harnett) who seem to want to do one movie every three years. One thing that made TBP popular was constant exposure. I mean seriously, if Brewster was doing movies (and the magazine shots that accompany them) on a regular basis, people would be saying, "Megan who?" Oh yeah, and the movie didn't exactly rock the box office.
10 Things I Hate About You (1999)
The Cast: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Heath Ledger, Julia Stiles, Larisa Oleynik, Gabrielle Union, David Krumholtz
The Potential: You got to see Alex Mack as the "It" Girl and the nerd from Adams Family Values as...well, a nerd. There was a dance number, a prom and female lead who played against type. And the story was a modern take of a Shakespeare story, for God's sake.
The Waste: I blame the year; it's hard to be a good movie at the end of the decade. Why? because everything that comes out in ninth year of a decade feels played out, as if the last group of people who figured out what was cool decided to cash in. It wasn't really the case here, but the movie did scream "90's" which meant for an industry (and movie audience) looking for the year 2000 and beyond meant "meh." The Brat Pack didn't reflect the 80's, it defined it.
The TV series Popular (1999-2001)
The Cast: Leslie Bibb, Carly Pope, Sarah Rue, Tamara Mello, Leslie Grossman
The Potential: The question was simple: What Makes Someone Popular? Considering that 90% of the cast were lookers, "physical appearance" wasn't the right response, so viewers probably expected to be treated to a series worth of deep-yet-comical attempts by the character to find the answer.
The Waste: Notice something in the cast listing? Yep, all girls. It can't be a Pack if it excludes either gender.
American Pie (1999)
The Cast: Jason Biggs, Alyson Hannigan, Chris Klein, Shannon Elizabeth, Tara Reid, Sean William Scott, Mena Suvari
The Potential: It was pretty much a teen's There's Something About Mary: sex, relationships, crazy far-fetched plans and a guy having an inexplicable story involving his private parts.
The Waste: Formula-wise, it was perfect. Too bad Biggs never went on to do anything else of note, Reid ruined her body and Elizabeth was more remembered for being topless than being funny. Klein and Suvari still do stuff, but you'd have to look them up by name to find out what. That leaves Hannigan and Scott: the Band Camp Girl and the Sex-starved Jerk. 'Nuff said.
Scream (1996)
The Cast: Neve Campbell, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich, Jamie Kennedy, Matthew Lillard,
The Potential: You had a Johnny Depp look-alike, two choices for comic relief and a story that took on the slasher-film genre in a good way. The guy who wrote the Faculty? This was his first mainstream effort.
The Waste: Campbell (despite starring in two sequels) didn't want to be typecast. McGowan fell for Marilyn Manson (natch). Kennedy thought that playing white hip-hop lovers was the next big thing. Ulrich went to TV and Lillard ended up playing interesting characters in shows and movies most people (who, unlike me 'cause I watch everything) probably never saw. What sucks about this movie was that it was so fucking popular they brought it back to theaters for a second round.
Labels: lists, movies, snark, television
Maureen Dowd's Bottom Line
And if I could crap gold, I might have a chance to be richer than Bill Gates, Goldman Sachs and Jay-Z combined.
Labels: Bottom Line, pundits, Sarah Palin, Washington Post
No Main Topic
- Why we need a separation of Church and State.
- Welcome to the fight, iPhone.
- Store Wars!
- Should go without saying: the economy is hitting African-Americans hard.
Labels: No Main Topic
Monday, November 23, 2009
All I Need To Know About...Vinny Cerrato
This guy is Washington's GM. And apparently has no sense of irony.
Labels: Washington Post, Washington Redskins
No Main Topic
- Meanwhile, with the real Big Three...
- The Joker would be proud.
- Funny how with all the talk about some violent revolution in America that comes from some outlets, those same guys never talk about the real thing.
- Yuck.
- You don't say.
Labels: No Main Topic
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Around The Internets
- Everybody needs love, right?
- If you're like this at work, odds are you eat lunch alone.
- When your teams are struggling, you need something positive to look at. For me, it's the dancers/cheerleaders.
- Of course, it's always something the guys are doing wrong.
- American Gothic, as interpreted by the Internets.
- I have finally, finally, finally found a site to use when blind dates tell me their height/weight.
- Inventors don't always get the credit they deserve.
- Well played, David Fincher; well played.
- "Don't Tase Me...Mom?"
Labels: Around the Internets
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Friday, November 20, 2009
Cool Spider-Man Rumor
I have one small quibble, though:
Personally, she'd be a great fit. Stiles is an underrated actress and unlike [Rachel] McAdams (who's about to star in the upcoming Sherlock Holmes), hasn't had a leading lady role in a franchise film. Yeah, we saw her in Bourne, but playing Black Cat would get her out from behind a computer screen and bouncing across building tops!
First of all, has it been confirmed that Kirstin Dunst is fired? (Actually, the better question would be: if Dunst is still in the next film, will she have a media-melt-down like Gwenyth Paltrow did when it was revealed that Scarlett Johansson was going to be Black Widow for Iron Man 2?) Second of all: To be honest, there really aren't that many franchise movies out there, and most cater to a male audience anyway (read: not a lot of female characters outside "love interest"). Movies like, say, The Bourne Franchise. Nevertheless, Julia Stiles is no rookie when it comes to being the leading female.
Labels: movies, Spider-Man
Pick a Lineup, Any Lineup
No, the most significant change for the Wizards is their defensive potential. Consider the following lineups (going in order from PG to C, in in cases when more than one player can work, the preferred player goes first):
- Traditional Lineup: Crittenton/Arenas, Stevenson, Butler, Oberto, Haywood. Your standard NBA lineup...I say "standard" because as good and valuable as he is, Jamison is not a traditional power forward.
- You Want Small-ball? I Got Yer "Small-ball" Right Here: Boykins, Arenas/Foye, Stevenson, Jamison, Blatche/Oberto. There are still those teams (they usually have no reliable post players) that will try to go small. Let 'em.
- Let's Get Physical: Boykins, Stevenson, Butler, McGuire, Oberto. This is the closest we have to a rough-'em-up lineup; if the squad ever gets into a rock fight, I'd really like to see these five on the floor together.
- Stand Tall: Arenas/Stevenson, Miller/Butler, Butler/McGuire, Blatche/Oberto, Haywood/McGee. Sure, we could start Haywood and McGee, but i wanted to be somewhat realistic; neither has the offensive skills to play power forward for a significant length of time.
- The Best Defense Is A Good Offense: Arenas, Foye, Miller, Jamison, Blatche. If I ever hear an announcer say, "And the Wizards are on a 20-point run!" this is the squad I imagine seeing.
- All A-board: Miller, Butler, Jamison, Blatche, Haywood. So far, they are the team's best rebounders. If the coach wants a board, this is the group that can do it.
Labels: Washington Wizards
Obama Wants Children to Play
Labels: children, health, NFL, Obama Administration
Compare And Contrast
Eugene Robinson: The odds that Khalid Sheik Mohammed will be doing "Jihad Hero" during his trial, or even escape like a Batman villain out of Arkham Asylum is very unlikely.
Labels: Charles Krauthammer, Eugene Robinson, Khalid sheik Mohammed, New Jersey (state), politics, Trials, Washington Post
One (Of Many) Reasons I Don't Watch Chick Flicks
Labels: Cracked.com, movies, women
Free Man
I never thought I'd say this though: The Wizards don't need him. Actually it's cool that I can say that.
Labels: Allen Iverson, NBA
No Main Topic
- I'd do this too to avoid a coaching change.
- Health Care wasn't the only thing being stalled.
- Death by trash compactor. 'Nuff said.
- Still trying to cut some costs.
- Tell me again why stem cell research is so controversial?
Labels: No Main Topic
Cue the Right-Wing Freakout
But for some reason the townsfolk don't seem to be too bothered.
Saleem said he was nervous about being accepted, and hired a white assistant manager to ease local concerns when he opened his bar in 2000."I was kind of scared, you know," he says.
But he was embraced virtually from the start.
"That tells you how good and great of a community Granite Falls is," he says with a slight accent. "They didn't care ... I am who I am, and people love me for that, and I just love people. People know that I am smart, I am a businessman. In the big scheme of things, all these qualities have made me, got me to where I am today."
So if a small town in America can (for the most part) embrace someone who's of a different religion, why can't the party who claims to speak for small town America do the same?
Labels: elections, mayors, politics, religion, Small Town America
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Sarah Palin Destroyed Oprah
Coincidence? I think not.
Seriously, though: how weird would it be if Palin gets into the talk show game, and became the new Oprah?
Labels: Oprah Winfrey, Sarah Palin, television
My Silly Wizards/Zelda Analogy

Wisdom: That's Jamison. He's the "old warhorse;" the cranky old man who been there/seen that.
Power: That's Arenas. He's got the star power, the charisma, and the attention of the opposing team's defense.
Courage: That's Butler. He's not called "Tuff Juice" for nothing.
I think last night's game showed that all three are key to victory, particularly in regards to the postseason/upper echelon element. Last year with just Jamison and Butler we saw a squad that lacked the special treatment that a team's best player receives, both from the opposition and the referees. Early on this season we saw a sullen star and his tough-yet-inconsistent teammate trade quips via the media instead of keeping that talk in the locker room. And while we haven't seen much of a Arenas/Jamison duo here, I'm sure it would be just as incomplete a product.
I guess the bottom line here is this: to call Arenas, Butler and Jamison the Big Three is not really accurate because that implies that any one of these guys can take over a game and have a Franchise Player-type performance. Between injuries, age and a new coach/supporting cast that's just not the case now (if it ever was). In all honesty, the team has one really good Second Banana and two better-than-average Third Bananas who, by default and design, have been labeled as something that's just as good individually as combined.
Nope. They are more or less the Tri-Force; three unique, specific pieces that are most effective together. Which means that once one of these guys goes away permanently (either by trade, injury of retirement) an entirely new core will be needed. According to Comcast Sportsnet, Jamison is outta here in two seasons...so the clock's ticking.
Labels: Antawn Jamison, Caron Butler, Gilbert Arenas, Washington Wizards
No Main Topic
- Nice to have an AG who's willing to talk to the people, especially the families of the 9/11 victims.
- The Senate tries to get healthy...and Reid marks an invisible line in the sand.
- Fighting for the right to bare laundry.
- The President wants answers.
Labels: No Main Topic
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Satire and Reality Are Too Close Together
Quote Of The Day
"It don't put me in an awkward situation at all because I think I'll put myself up against anybody in the NFL [on] any day of the week. I think Ladell is a great guy, I think he's a great player, I think he's a great teammate for what he gives on the field. You never hear anything from him, he just goes out and [plays] hard and gives you everything he's got, so he deserves an opportunity. But at the same time, I don't think that takes away because he's playing good. I mean, we've been both capable of making plays. I think to be able to use us together would be even better. You know, I'm not a selfish guy, I'm not being selfish---oh, give me the ball, give me the ball, give me the ball. If Ladell is gonna help us win, it don't matter to me man, I'm all for it. But as far as me losing my starting position, I doubt that."
-- Clinton Portis, reacting to the team's vastly improved running game during his absence.
Labels: Clinton Portis, quotes, Washington Redskins
No Main Topic
- Well, this answers the question, "Are there homeless sex offenders?"
- Pirates never really go away.
- Expected reaction to the new mammogram guidelines.
- At least these guys are hiring.
- For Obama's second trip there, China was less than receptive.
- Optimism's a good thing, especially for a guy like Harry Reid.
Labels: No Main Topic
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Fear Not KSM, Or a Terrorist Trial In NY...
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Law & Order: KSM | ||||
| ||||
Labels: terrorism, The Daily Show, Trials
Military PR: You're Doing It Wrong
Even though both conflicts started under Bush, Obama had a chance to truly turn a leaf by going after reports of abuse and definitively addressing Gitmo (as in: closing it down). He hasn't done either to the point where these types of stories have gone away, and I suspect that now he's CIC they'll be a lot more stories coming out of the woodwork...and he'll get all the blame.
Labels: Bush Administration, military, Obama Administration
No Main Topic
- Of course this has nothing to do with Belichick's ego; why would anyone think that?
- Stuck in the middle with you.
- Wrong Answer.
- Ravens pull through, continue beef with Browns.
- Boatload of actors + 79 CDs = one expensive-sounding audio Bible.
- Happy motoring.
Labels: No Main Topic
What's In A (Sports) Name?
Labels: US Supreme Court, Washington Post, Washington Redskins
Monday, November 16, 2009
Eating Is Half The Battle
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Chalk up another national-security threat -- this one looming with each excess pound, failing grade and drug bust affecting young adults.
An alarming 75% of Americans ages 17 to 24 would not qualify for military service today because they are physically unfit, failed to finish high school or have criminal records. So says a new report from an organization of education and military leaders calling for immediate action on the early-education front.
While some experts voiced doubt that obesity and other societal ills would keep three out of four young adults out of the ranks, the report titled "Ready, Willing and Unable to Serve" was endorsed by U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan, former NATO commander Gen. Wesley Clark and top retired admirals and generals.
Gee, if there was only some way to, I don't know universally give this age group some kind of care to be healthy and fit enough for service (should they want to go that route).
Labels: Michael Moore, military
Note To Self: Start A "Cheerleading Insurance" Company.
Published as a series of four separate articles on cheerleading-related injuries in the November issue of the Journal of Athletic Training, the study focused on general cheerleading-related injuries, cheerleading stunt-related injuries, cheerleading fall-related injuries and surfaces used by cheerleaders. Data from the study showed that nearly all (96 percent) of the reported concussions and closed-head injuries were preceded by the cheerleader performing a stunt.
Labels: College, high school
Sunday, November 15, 2009
And Now For Sports
- Dan Snyder comes to his senses on the sign ban.
- Rookie baller threatens Wilt Chamberlain's record.
Around the Internets

- These foods can help you stay young...
- ...because young is good.
- Either test your drinking knowledge or relive your college years.
- Why most guys join Facebook.
- WTF, Google?
- Be frugal, not cheap.
Labels: Around the Internets
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Oleksiy Pecherov's Doing Just Fine
Labels: NBA
Only Obama Could Go To China
This kinda sums up the story:
Chen Juan, 27, a secretary in an English training school in Beijing, regularly uses skin-whitening products and carries an umbrella on summer days. "For me, the whiter, the better. Being white means pretty," she said. "If someone looks too black, I feel they look countrified and like a farmer. . . . Being white is prettier than being black."
"In my impression, black people, especially Africans, are not clean enough," Chen continued. "To be frank, I just feel black people are too black. Definitely, I wouldn't consider having a black guy as my boyfriend even if he were rich."
Labels: American foreign relations, Barack Obama, China, race
Caron Butler's More Clutch Than Gilbert Arenas?
Labels: Caron Butler, Gilbert Arenas, NBA, statistics
If Recent Congressional Amendments Are To Be Believed
Labels: abortion, GOP, health care, military, politics, rape, US Congress
Sarah Palin's Book
P.S.: Yes; the best (and quickest) way to fact check a book is to split it up amongst different reporters, not force one person to read the whole thing.
Labels: books, politics, Sarah Palin
Not Exactly "The Wire," But Still Entertaining
Really, Politico? "Spending Binge?"
What constitutes said "spending binge?"
Even if Obama succeeds - and that’s a big if - it will be tough for many Democrats to sell themselves as deeply concerned about spending after voting for the stimulus, the bailouts, the health care legislation and a plan to address global warming, four enormous government programs.
Hmm... let's briefly review each of these "binges:"
- The stimulus was done to keep half the country from being evicted from their homes and selling our bodies for a Big Mack and fries. However, because the GOP bitched and moaned, Congress ended up passing a relatively small package that only kept us afloat, rather than put us over the top. Oh yeah: it was the crappy economy Bush left that necessitated this move anyway.
- The bailouts started under Bush; he punted to Obama, who was forced to finish this unsavory deal. It didn't help that he was peer-pressured into making a Wall Street guy in charge of the whole mess.
- Obama ran on Health Care Reform. Because both the stimulus and the bailouts were not part of his plans for the Administration, this is really the only initiative he can be blamed for. Then again, the majority of Americans want Health Care Reform.
- "His Plan for Global Warming?" As in: "he hasn't done it yet?" So how should this count as a "binge?"
Labels: bailouts, environment, health care, Obama Administration, Politico.com, scams/tricks, stimulus package
Friday, November 13, 2009
Ft. Hood Gets The Jessica Lynch Treatment
Shortly after last week's Ft. Hood shooting massacre, Sgt. Kimberly Munley of the Killeen, TX, police department was widely credited as the heroic cop who brought Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan's rampage to an end by shooting him four times while being wounded by gunfire herself. A Ft. Hood official told the media that the diminutive Munley, who was shot in both legs and one of her wrists, fired on Hasan twice, which then drew his attention to her, and then fired again while she was on the ground. But now it appears as though that account was inaccurate and that another Killeen police officer, Sgt. Mark Todd, was actually the person who fired the shots that brought down Hasan.
P.S.: I don't blame Jessica Lynch for what the military and the media did with her story, she's a brave woman and we're a better country for her; but nonetheless her name has become synonomous with "hero propaganda."
Labels: Ft. Hood, Jessica Lynch, journalism, Media, shooting
Why Does FoxNews Want Ft. Hood To Be Classified As "Terrorism?"
If Ft. Hood is terrorism, than we've had a our first terrorist strike on U.S. since 9/11 (ignoring the fact that our embassies are technically US turf). And if that is true, and it happened during Obama's presidency, he can be blamed for anything from negligence to "not keeping us safe like President Bush."
UPDATE: C&L has their own take, which also makes sense.
Labels: FoxNews, Obama Administration, scams/tricks, terrorism
The New Game: Palin or Prejean?
Play the game here.
Labels: Carrie Prejean, Jon Perr, quotes, Sarah Palin
New York State of Mind
Labels: hip-hop, Jay-Z, music, New York (the state)
Sometimes You Just Can't Recreate The Magic
That being said, Firefly and Dollhouse were just not meant to be. Whedon relied too much on the TV cred he earned at the WB and though it would carry over to FOX. And as for Dollhouse specifically, I can't be the only one who saw an episode and thought, "How did Faith lose her memory, and why does Fred have a slashed face?"
Of course, in true fashion it's not Whedon's fault.
Labels: Joss Whedon, television
LeBron James Is All Heart
Labels: LeBron James, Michael Jordan, NBA
Apocalyptic Math...
I really need to find some "The kids are alright" stories.
Stephen Colbert, From The Clan Colbert
| The Colbert Report | Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
| Stephen Claims Lou Dobbs' Audience | ||||
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Labels: Lou Dobbs, politics, Stephen Colbert, television
No Main Topic
- A true giver and contributor to his community.
- J. C. Penny's still exists?
- And here I was thinking, "If we make an addictive substance $60.00 a box, the people who are addicted to it will stop buying it."
- If you have any doubts about Sarah Palin planning on running for President...
- Lou Dobbs' replacement.
- You can't fight cancer if you don't take the medicine.
Labels: No Main Topic
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Shocked, I Tells Ya!
Labels: GOP, health care, Hypocrisy, Think Progress
It's Hard Out There For An Ex-CEO
Paul Joegriner hasn't worked since March 2008, when he was laid off from his $200,000-a-year job as chief executive officer of a small bank. But you wouldn't know it by appearances.
His wife, Marzena, shuttles their two young children to private school every morning. The family recently vacationed in Virginia Beach, Va., and likes to dine on Porterhouse steaks. Since losing his job, Mr. Joegriner, 44 years old, has had several offers. He's turned each down in hopes of landing a position comparable to what he held before.
The family's lifestyle over the past year and a half has been propped up by a $200,000 severance package and another $100,000 in savings -- funds the family has burned through rapidly. By Mr. Joegriner's own calculations, the family will be out of money in six months if he doesn't find work.
"It will be D-Day," he says. "But on the outside, no one has any idea that we're in trouble."
Mr. Joegriner is a member of what might be called the severance economy -- unemployed Americans who use severance pay and savings to maintain their lifestyles. Many lost their jobs in 2007 and 2008, and thought they'd soon find work. Now, they're getting desperate. Last week, lawmakers passed a bill extending unemployment benefits up to 20 weeks. Unemployment benefits, which typically last about 26 weeks, were expected to run out for 1.3 million people by the end of the year, according to the National Employment Law Project.
It's too bad that when other people who aren't CEOs get the axe, they can't live their accustomed lifestyle for at least a year.
Labels: Big Business, Economy
NBA Stuff
- If you're a fan of any Washington team, than you should know 26 is not really your friend.
- Byron Scott has been fired by the Hornets.
- The Wiz can't afford to start feeling sorry for themselves.
Labels: NBA, Washington Wizards
They Call It "EBF3"
Labels: science
If You Have Kids...
Labels: children, Cracked.com, family
About the Next Generation...
A third of deaths in children under five in those countries are linked to poor diet, a report by Unicef suggests.
It also reveals 195m children - one in three - have stunted growth, even though rates have fallen since 1990.
Unicef said the number of underweight children also remained high, with many countries struggling to hit official targets to halve the figures.
An estimated 129m children are underweight.
No Main Topic
- In other words, "If we're going to be the party representing the working class, we shouldn't be depending on rich candidates and funding from wealthy donors."
- Kudos to Taylor Swift.
- US ambassador: only fools rush in.
- Considering who his successor was, this was a bold move for Medvedev.
- Bostocalypse returns.
- Porn on a plane...and the bus...and the metro...
- Lucy Liu's new movie and good cause.
Labels: No Main Topic
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
No Main Topic
- Blackwater, again.
- A pretty significant miscalculation.
- As if men don't have enough problems.
Labels: No Main Topic
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Fox News Corrects Fox News
Labels: FoxNews, Think Progress
Back In My Day Teachers Just Slapped Your Hand
Labels: Odd, teachers, thesmokinggun.com
Sunday, November 08, 2009
Around The Internets
- Mike Prada has some suggestions for Caron.
- Dave preaches patience.
- Let's talk about sex.
- Michael Moore's action plan.
Labels: Around the Internets
Thursday, November 05, 2009
Quote of the Day
I'm beginning to wonder if he could win a game of rock-paper-scissors against an actual rock.
-- vysotsky, after observing Glenn Beck's inability to understand the game Connect Four or use it to make a proper analogy.
Labels: Glenn Beck, Media Matters
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Sunday School Sure Has Changed Since I Went There
OCTOBER 28--A Texas middle school teacher used a fictional "secret society" to lure teenage girls in to having sex with him, according to an arrest warrant. Robert rosseau, 37, was arrested Monday by San Antonio cops and charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child. Rosseau, pictured in the mug shot at right, taught "Science, Keyboarding and Bible" at the Christian Academy of San Antonio, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.
Labels: churches, crime, high school, sex, teens, thesmokinggun.com
Sunday, November 01, 2009
Around the Internets

- Try getting the remote now!
- Cats & Dogs merging together; mass hysteria!
- How rude.
- If anyone would know how to fix Wall Street, he's one of them.
- This "Bob Marley" guy doesn't seem too trustworthy.
- Say what you want about other countries, but they can do anti-smoking ads.
- Places I won't be going to for my vacation.
- Holiday jobs.
Labels: Around the Internets




