By Kristen Hamilton, RP Staff, on Tue Nov 15, 2011 at 10:00 AM ET
BREAKING NEWS: Two days ago, Gwen Stefani’s Harajuku Mini Collection debuted at Target. Check out the whimsical commercial that will be sure to have your kids wanting to rock Target’s latest collection: [Racked]
In case you are in need of a good laugh, check out this video of Snooki debuting her goodies on HSN – you know you want to! [The Cut]
While some may say that repeating an outfit is a fashion faux pas, especially if one is in the public eye, First Lady Michelle Obama does so anyway (flawlessly, might I add)! [The Cut]
Did you miss Versace and H&M’s runway show or the Victoria Secret Angel’s show? Check out FabSugar’s fashion recap! [FabSugar]
Walmart may have to forego the store’s fashion endeavors, because frankly, it just ain’t working. [Daily Finance]
By Grant Smith, RP Staff, on Tue Nov 15, 2011 at 9:15 AM ET
The Supreme Court will take up the Obama Administration’s health care law this term. [CNBC]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Mon Nov 14, 2011 at 3:00 PM ET
In this week’s MMQB Peter King breaks down the weekend’s action including the Broncos and Tim Tebow, Mike Smith’s decision on 4th down, and Penn State. [Sports Illustrated]
Speaking of Penn State, here is an update to the goings-on in the case. [ABC]
Yup, we can now say that the 2011 version of the Philadelphia Eagles, dubbed the Dream Team by Vince Young, is done. [ESPN]
Here are some of the winners and losers from Sunday’s NFL games. [Yahoo! Sports]
The wonderful statisticians at Football Outsiders have a metric they call DVOA that measures team value. Check out the updated numbers after Sunday’s results. [Football Outsiders]
Finally, here is an update on what the draft stock is doing for some of the big names in the college game. [NFLs Future]
By Sandra Moon, RP Staff, on Mon Nov 14, 2011 at 1:30 PM ET
Former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair offers 10 do’s and don’ts for religion and democracy. [CNN Belief Blog]
Christians and other religious minorities from the Middle East find refuge here in the U.S. from war and religious persecution. [The Tennesseean]
In the wake of Penn State’s sex abuse scandal, comparisons have been made to the scandals in the Catholic Church. One writer examines the similarities and differences of sexual abuse in these two institutuions. [Washington Post]
By Patrick Derocher, on Mon Nov 14, 2011 at 12:30 PM ET This is the message that greets visitors to California's newly-defunct transparency website.
Earlier this month, California Governor Jerry Brown (D) shut down a transparency website that his Republican predecessor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, had established. The site, transparency.ca.gov, was lauded as a centralized point from which Californians could access the complete array of official documents and spending reports publicly released by their state government, though a spokeswoman for Brown said that all records will be available at other sites or by request. The latter group includes trip and spending reports, which the Brown Administration maintains are fare lower than those of the Schwarzenegger Administration. [Sacramento Bee]
A federal court indicated that Texas’s Republican-drawn Congressional map will almost certainly be thrown out in favor of a court-drawn map, at least temporarily. Because of a history of racial discrimination, Texas, along with several other Southern states, is required to have its Congressional maps approved by the federal government, which in this case will be drawing a map considerably less favorable to Republicans, affording Democrats further opportunities to capture the United States House of Representatives in 2012. [The Hill]
In New York, Democrats failed to obtain a veto-proof State Assembly when Republican Raymond Walter bested Craig Bucki, his Democratic opponent, in a Buffalo-area special election to replace retiring Assemblyman James Hayes. Unexpectedly, this outcome is considered a win for Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo, as it strongly reduces the possibility of his party overriding vetos on issues where they are considerably to the left of the governor, namely property tax and budget cuts. [NY Daily News]
An attempt by Ohio Republicans to reach a Congressional map compromise with black lawmakers and avoid a Democratic-backed referendum is being met with further criticism, as it only significantly changes the borders of one district, which makes it only slightly less Republican. Moreover, There are now actually fewer competitive districts than in earlier maps, all of which lean Republican, giving the party a strong shot at winning 12 of the 16 Congressional seats Ohio will have beginning in 2013. According to Jim Slagle of the Campaign for Accountable Redistricting, the current map scores lower for competitiveness than all 53 submitted in a statewide competition that the Campaign held. [Columbus Dispatch]
Wisconsin’s fall legislative session continues, but lawmaking appears to have stopped, with key economic initiativs and plans left in the lurch. Although the state legislature would normally have several more weeks of floor debate and votes, a new round of recall votes is expected to slow or stop progress for the next several weeks, and highly-involved economic bills have been left unattended to, with simpler legislation like a bill providing legal protection to people who shoot home invaders has passed with no difficulty. This is, in many ways, a repeat of this past summer, when a suite of recall elections stopped Wisconsin lawmaking in its tracks for weeks. [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]
By Stephanie Doctrow, RP Staff, on Mon Nov 14, 2011 at 9:15 AM ET Remember shock rocker Bob Forrest? These days he’s known as the “Addict Whisperer,” using his own life experience to help Hollywood’s most troubled. [CNN]
By Grant Smith, RP Staff, on Fri Nov 11, 2011 at 3:00 PM ET
Thanksgiving Dinner will be 13% more expensive this year. [CNBC]
The ten worst pieces of “good” career advice. [Forbes]
Blackberry’s business problem. [CNN Money]
More secret Nixon tapes are released: his testimony before a grand jury. [New York Times]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Fri Nov 11, 2011 at 9:15 AM ET The Board of Trustees has let go of Joe Paterno. Legal proceedings are most likely already in motion and will continue for the foreseeable future. Individuals and families have been scarred by the events at Penn St. With that said, where does the historic Penn St. football program go from here? Much of that is up to Tom Bradley. [ESPN]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Thu Nov 10, 2011 at 3:00 PM ET
IBM recently named Virginia Rometty as its new CEO, making her the first female CEO in the company’s history. [NY Times]
Check out this incredibly touching video that shows science and technology allowing a 29-year-old woman who was born deaf to hear for the first time in her life. [YouTube]
Do you remember the Women’s World Cup this past Summer? The U.S. women’s team had a thrilling run making it to the finals before losing to Japan. Did you know that the finals game broke the record on Twitter for most tweets per second? It generated more than the announcement of the death of Osama bin Laden. [Huffington Post]
While women have made strides in Silicon Valley and the tech world, there is still progress to be made. [Washington Post]
“Scholarship Sponsorships for Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing Announced by the Anita Borg Institute” [The Wall Street Journal]
By Grant Smith, RP Staff, on Thu Nov 10, 2011 at 1:30 PM ET
Gender, race and ideology in modern politics. [New York Times]
Another GOP debate takes place tonight, and Herman Cain will be in attendance. [CNBC]
Two of Herman Cain’s accusers are planning a joint news conference. [Washington Post]
The Oscar Awards appear to be in crisis with Eddie Murphy’s resignation as host. [Deadline.com]
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