Thursday, October 14, 2010

Christine O'Donnell, Chris Coons spar in Delaware debate

NEWARK, Del. - Republican Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell, the tea-party sensation, questioned Democratic opponent Chris Coons' patriotism in a nationally televised debate Wednesday evening, calling him a Marxist who would "rubber-stamp" the spendthrift policies of the Obama administration and congressional leaders.

Coons, the New Castle County executive, argued that O'Donnell was bereft of any concrete ideas, with "experience delivering slogans but not solutions."

The two clashed during a 90-minute debate in Mitchell Hall at the University of Delaware, televised live on CNN and WHYY TV12, a highly anticipated media event since O'Donnell upset longtime Rep. Michael Castle, a former governor, in the Republican primary Sept. 14.

She surged with an infusion of cash from the national Tea Party Express, and her victory quickly came to be seen as a test of the power of the populist, limited-government movement.

In the debate, O'Donnell was feisty and on offense, quickly seizing on Coons' self-description in his now-famous 1985 college essay "The Makings of a Bearded Marxist."

"You learned your beliefs from an articulate, intelligent Marxist professor . . . that should send chills up the spine of every Delaware voter," O'Donnell said.

Coons said that the title of the essay was a joke, based on his Republican roommates teasing him for registering as a Democrat. "I am not now, nor have I ever been, anything but a clean-shaven capitalist," the balding Coons said, drawing laughter from the audience in the hall.

O'Donnell is still missing in action on the campaign trail, her events (if any) not publicized; she refuses to talk to the state's major daily newspaper at all, has released no policy proposals, and she is getting crushed in the polls, trailing by up to 19 percentage points. Experts in Delaware politics say it would be difficult for her to win in a largely moderate state.

But the international media fascination with all things Christine continues, and university officials issued more than 200 press credentials. The campaign has revolved around controversial statements she made in the 1990s as a conservative cable provocateur, on Bill Maher's Politically Incorrect and other shows – most famously, when she admitted she had "dabbled into witchcraft" as an adolescent.

Her first television ad of the general election campaign began with O'Donnell saying into the camera, "I am not a witch." She said she was a common person who got fed up with Washington. "I am you," she said.

O'Donnell tried to steer the debate away from her old remarks. "This election cycle should not be about comments I made on a comedy show a decade and a half ago," she said. But O'Donnell's past as frequent candidate for Senate and her financial problems, including foreclosure and debt, came up anyway.

At one point, O'Donnell referred to multiple skits on Saturday Night Live, spoofing her as a witch. "You're just jealous you weren't on Saturday Night Live," she said to Coons. "I'm dying to know who will play me, Christine," he said.

She said that a tax lien was a result of an IRS computer error. "Leadership doesn't count on whether you fall, it counts on whether you get up," O'Donnell said.

Coons declined to attack O'Donnell on her finances, calling them a "distraction."

In the middle of the debate, moderator Wolf Blitzer asked O'Donnell whether she still believed that evolution was a "myth," as she said in 1998.

"What I believe is irrelevant," O'Donnell said. She said that local communities should be able to decide whether to teach creationism on an equal footing with evolution.

Nancy Karibjanian, of Delaware First Media, was co-moderator with CNN's Blitzer.

Pressed to name specific Supreme Court decisions with which she disagreed, O'Donnell stumbled. She said she was against judges "legislating from the bench," but could not name a case. "I know there are a lot," O'Donnell said, pausing, bringing to mind Sarah Palin's inability to say what newspapers she read in a CBS interview.

"I'm very sorry, right off the top of my head I can't remember one, but I'll put them on my website, I promise," she said.

At times, Coons seemed puzzled at how to respond to his opponent. "It took a couple of minutes to figure out what she was talking about," he said at one point. "There's so much there I don't even know where to start," Coons said, after O'Donnell argued that it was wrong to force candidates to publicly disclose their campaign donations because, she said, supporters who gave to her had been harassed.

The latest poll, a CNN/Time/Opinion Research survey released Wednesday, found Coons leading O'Donnell 57 percent to 38 percent among likely voters. Coons had the backing of 17 percent of Republicans, the poll showed. The survey's overall margin of error is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

Castle said Wednesday that he would not endorse in the Senate race, and would not indicate how he might vote Nov. 2.

"There were some personal issues and other aspects of my primary campaign that were very disquieting," Castle said on National Public Radio. "And for that reason I think [it] best just to leave it alone."

During the campaign, O'Donnell said Castle should "put on his man pants" and debate her, and her campaign insinuated that the married former governor was having a homosexual affair.

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south park jersey shore

"South Park" took on the hit MTV show "Jersey Shore"  in its latest episode, which aired Wednesday night (Oct. 13) on Comedy Central. In this clip, Randy Marsh informs us that New Jersey has expanded to engulf a good 2/3 of the United States, including "the Gulf of Jersey Mexico." Heee.

Cartman declares that he won't live in Jersey. As the Jerseyites spill into Colorado and approach South Park, Randy and the boys stand strong against the onslaught, proclaiming, "F*** New Jersey!"

What did you think of the "South Park" take on the "Jersey Shore" phenomenon? One thing's for sure -- the Jerseyites aren't going away anytime soon.

Read more about south park jersey shore.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

terry kennedy

terry kennedy: If you’ve run into Terry Kennedy recently, you’ve probably seen him with a gang of cameras and a much larger entourage all in preparation for his upcoming reality show on BET Being Terry Kennedy. The show is getting a big push from the network, premiering tonight at 10pm EST right after their top rated show, the BET Hip Hop Awards. For his part, Terry is going in hard too, even reuniting with his long last dad in front of the cameras. It will be interesting to see if the BET audience is ready for TK Society.

inspectah deck

Jason Hunter (born July 6, 1970), better known by his stage name Inspectah Deck, American rapper, record producer  and member of the Wu-Tang Clan. Although he did not receive the same level of the main successes in his solo career, as some of his Wu-Tang colleagues (eg, Ghostface Killah and Method Man), he gained critical praise for his complex lyricism, and his poems on many of the most revered songs.
Born July 6, 1970, Hunter regularly mentions Park Hill Projects in Clifton, Staten Island, where he grew up, going to school with the future of Method Man, Raekwon and Ghostface Killah.  From a musical family, his father died when he was six years old, and seeing his mother support the family contributed to his laid-back, calm mentality that led to his stage name, he decided to play low-key contrast antics Method Man, Ol ‘Dirty Bastard, and RZA. It also refers to the method of Man at the end of the track “Can it be so simple? On the debut album Wu-Tang Enter Wu-Tang (36 Chambers):
“Inspectah Deck, he’s still that guy that will sit idly by and watch you play yourself and all that right? And look, you sit there and know that you are lying, and he will take you to court after For he Inspectah. ”

Despite this inconspicuous person, Inspectah Deck supported by relatively high profile since he was second on the grounds of a member on the album, and provided highly acclaimed poems for the single “Cream”, “Protect Ya Neck”, “Wu-Tang Clan Ain ‘T Nuthing that Fuck Wit “and” Da Mystery Chessboxin “. In subsequent years, Hunter will appear on the projects of several members of the Wu “solo, including Tical Method Man’s (1994), Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx … (1995), Swords GZA in liquid (1995), and Ironman Ghostface Killah’s (1996). On the second album, Wu-Tang, Wu-Tang Forever (1997), Deck produced the track “Visionz” and contributed a solo track “The City.” He will also manufacture for some of his cohorts Woo, including “Elements “and” Spazzola “for Method Man’s Tical 2000: Judgement Day (1998),” Kiss of the Black Widow “for the RZA RZA as Bobby Digital in Stereo (1998), and the title track for GZA beneath the surface (1999).