By Robert Kahne, RP Staff, on Wed Sep 21, 2011 at 8:30 AM ET
Lars Von Trier, director of the upcoming film Melancholia (which looks amazing), has un-apologized for his comments about sympathizing with Nazis. Probably not the best move. [/Film]
Clint Eastwood is directing a movie about J Edgar Hoover, which will star Leonardo DiCaprio as the head spook. There is a trailer for it now. [Guardian]
Netflix is splitting into two companies: Netflix, which will continue to manage their internet streaming service; and Qwikster, which will manage DVD rentals (and will add video game rentals). [Film Junk]
Ryan Gosling has made some great films recently, and is in two films this year which are sure to be hits: Drive and The Ides of March. But, he might hang it up for good after that. [IFC]
If you have never watched Arrested Development, you need to do that. Its a hilarious TV show, and has been floated as a movie for a long time. It looks like it might actually shoot next year. [Forces of Geek]
By Robert Kahne, RP Staff, on Tue Sep 20, 2011 at 3:30 PM ET
Conference alignment is the news of the week. Here is a great rundown about what the new conferences mean for college basketball. [Rush The Court]
Different coaches had different reactions to the realignment. Jim Boeheim, coach of Syracuse, gave Andy Katz a massive rant about the hypocrisy of such moves, saying: “there are two reasons we are doing this [moving to the ACC]: money and football.” Rick Pitino, coach of of Louisville, was much more introspective–preferring to compare this switch to The Godfather. [Pitino-Deadspin] [Boeheim-The Big Lead]
Mark Cuban, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, has always been one to voice his opinion. He has a new blog post about being Patriotic. His view: the most patriotic thing you can do is to get obnoxiously rich, then pay lots of taxes and hire people. [blog maverick]
The NBA lockout is still happening. Here is some news about it. [ESPN]
People have speculated that NBA Players don’t have the desire for the lockout to continue for very long, because they need to make more money. Billy Hunter, the NBAPA leader, disagrees. In addition to being well prepared for the lockout, Kobe Bryant has apparently offered to loan players money who need it. Good for him. [USA Today]
By Kristen Hamilton, RP Staff, on Tue Sep 20, 2011 at 10:00 AM ET
BREAKING NEWS: Kanye West will show at Paris Fashion Week! [Vogue UK]
The Fashion Weeks continue: New York last week, London this week! [Lucire]
What were your favorite Spring 2012 Collections from New York Fashion Week? Check out this top 10 list of favorites; agree or disagree? [Fashionista]
Gossip Girl took heed to the fact that millions of girls dreamed of dressing like Serena or Blair, prompting them to release their own fashion line. Check it out: [NY Mag]
It seems like Snooki frequently makes appearances on The RP, and I apologize for that. But in case you are need of a good laugh, check out her latest sunglasses line. [SHEfinds]
By Grant Smith, RP Staff, on Tue Sep 20, 2011 at 9:15 AM ET The Politics of Postage Stamps
President Obama endorses cutting one day of mail delivery to save the U.S. Postal Service. [Associated Press]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 3:00 PM ET The Politics of Pigskin
The Sunday night primetime game between the Eagles and Falcons was a fantastically exciting game. The Falcons came away with the win, but the Eagles have bigger worries – Michael Vick was knocked out of the game and was later diagnosed with a concussion. This will be a good opportunity for the NFL to show off its new concussion testing procedures. [ESPN]
This week on MMQB Peter King talks about the very cool story of Jesse Holley, the Cowboys receiver who caught the game-clinching pass on Sunday. Holley got a shot at playing in the NFL after winning a reality TV series put on by Michael Irvin and Jerry Jones. Follow the link for other goings-on around the league. [Sports Illustrated]
Here are your winners and loser for Week 2 in the NFL. [Y! Sports]
The talk of the NCAA football world is conference expansion. All signs are pointing to the Big East going under as two of its biggest draws: Pittsburgh and Syracuse have accepted invitations to join the ACC. [Fox Sports]
In reaction to conferences shuffling Florida State University has formed an exploratory committee to evaluate the school’s options. [International Business Times]
By Sandra Moon, RP Staff, on Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 1:30 PM ET
Has American society shifted from deep sectarianism to “liberal whateverism”? Sociologist Christian Smith argues that both should be rejected in favor of “authentic pluralism.” [Huffington Post]
In Mississippi, the state with the highest obesity rate, one pastor bans fried chicken from church events in an effort to live according to the gospel of healthy eating. [NPR]
Is God a Christian? Here’s a review of R. Kirby Godsey’s recently published book about “creating a community of conversation” around that question. [Patheos]
By Patrick Derocher, on Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 12:30 PM ET US Representative and Democratic Senate contender Tammy Baldwin is the most liberal congressperson in recent Wisconsin history, while her opponent Mark Neumann is the most conservative.
We start in Wisconsin today, where that state’s storied partisan divide is likely only to be exacerbated by the current candidates for Senate. On the Republican side, we have Mark Neumann, who represented Rep. Paul Ryan’s suburban Chicago and Milwaukee district in the 1990’s, while the only declared Democrat is Tammy Baldwin, a 7th term congresswoman from the left-wing bastion of Madison. A comparison of their voting records shows Neumann to be the most conservative Wisconsin congressperson in years and Baldwin the most liberal. [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]
The Legislature isn’t even in session and New York State Senators are already debating the implementation of that state’s federally-mandated healthcare exchange. One of the few loose ends left at the end of the most recent legislative session, the exchange has only been approved in the Assembly, where a plan favored by Senate Republicans was passed. [Albany Times Union]
At a speech in San Francisco, California Governor Jerry Brown assailed Republicans for an “unconstitutional delegation of power,” saying that they have ceded governing to anti-tax groups, namely the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association. Reeling from the defeat of his bipartisan tax plan the previous week, Brown accused Assembly Republicans of extreme fealty to absolutist anti-tax agencies. [Sacramento Bee]
Florida governor Rick Scott has been drawing criticism over his plans to model that state’s public universities after those in Texas, including changes in professor pay and tenure policies. His critics point out that Texas’s public education system is among the weakest in the nation, an assertion that has become more common (and indeed more loaded) since Texas Governor Rick Perry entered the Presidential race last month. [The Buzz]
Ohio Republicans have released their proposed Congressional district map, and it is already receiving criticism, especially from the left. Following the 2010 Census, Ohio will be losing two seats, and, as expected, the Republican-controlled state government has crafted a map that is disadvantageous to Democrats. [Columbus Dispatch]
In Los Angeles for its fall convention, the California Republican Party rejected a more moderate platform that de-emphasized socially conservative policies, a move that supporters said would emphasize the fiscal aspects of the platform while attracting more voters. The plan’s detractors, who got it killed in committee, refused to compromise on any level and accused the moderate forces of trying to win the platform through money. [Sacramento Bee]
Following an FBI raid of one of his aide’s homes, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker claims to know nothing about the matter. The raid on Cynthia Archer’s Milwaukee County home was the result of longstanding accusations that Walker aides had used taxpayer money and government time to stump for the current governor while he was the Milwaukee County Executive. [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]
Taking Wisconsin’s teacher union fight to the Southeast, the Florida Education Association has filed a suit in Leon County, home to the state capital of Tallahassee, alleging that a bill currently in the State Senate is unconstitutional by Florida law. They claim a provision tying teacher pay to performance, and more specifically test scores, is an abrogation of a constitutional right to collective bargaining rights. [The Buzz]
Troublingly, the New York State General Fund is some $0.7 million lower than anticipated on weak tax revenues which, while $3.3 billion ahead of where they were last year, are substantially lower than expected. Additionally, New York State Controller Thomas DiNapoli has warned that much of this relative surplus has resulted from large settlements that are unlikely to be repeated over the remainder of the fiscal year. [NY Daily News]
By RP Staff, on Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 10:00 AM ET Last week, the RP began a new “Weekly Web Gem,” The Politics of Beauty. While we may occasionally opine on the relative attractiveness of certain current Republican candidates (declared and undeclared, male and female) for the presidency, the primary focus will be on the politics of art, literature, music and culture. Really, anything is game. As always, we welcome your feedback!
Check out this (quick) story from COLORS Magazine about a British bloke’s political memorabilia collection. Martin Parr always “hated Mrs. Thatcher and couldn’t believe anyone would collect things about her, so [he] did.” The RP loves the Saddam Hussein watch collection. COLORS Magazine consistently challenges notions of beauty, politics, art and culture. Check it out here.
Ordinary Israelis, ordinary Palestinians. Two photo booths and a roaming photo truck. 7,000 individual portraits. The large black-and-white portraits have been appearing in Bethlehem and Ramallah as part of an international project to allow people to make art and/or political statements. Learn more and view some of the photographs from The Washington Post.
If there are any of you left out there that still eat Freedom Fries and refuse to say “rendezvous,” “ménage à trois”or “café au lait,” the incomparable David McCullough’s latest book, The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris, is for you. The American experiment owes more to France and the French than most Americans even remotely understand. In fact, we would not, McCullough argues, even “have a country without the French, who have permanently and profoundly shaped us.” Read the review from The New York Times. Of course, you could just read the new, um, “non-fiction” reflections of Dick Cheney instead.
By Stephanie Doctrow, RP Staff, on Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 9:15 AM ET Why do foreign languages sound like they are being spoken a million miles per hour to untrained ears? New research has the answer. [Time]
By Grant Smith, RP Staff, on Fri Sep 16, 2011 at 3:00 PM ET
How Texas Governor Rick Perry supplemented his wealth with profitable (and perhaps political) deals. [Associated Press]
Business news highlights for this week. [New York Times]
Fortune Magazine releases their list of the 100 fastest growing companies. [Fortune]
This blackberry is starting to taste sour: RIM’s quarterly profits turn out to be even lower than analysts’ paltry predictions thought. [Forbes]
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