Steven Spielberg will produce a big screen biopic about disco charttoppers The Bee Gees, according to The Mail on Sunday. Spielberg is will versed in nearly all genres — from horror, with the likes of 1975’s Jaws. to biopics in the upcoming Abraham Lincoln film –- but he’s never tackled a musical. The Bee Gees [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Abraham Lincoln’
15 Creative Celebrity Inventors
From pop stars to politicians, here is a list of celebrities whose creative talents include a knack for inventing something new. And frequently useless.
Daniel Day-Lewis Abe Lincoln Biopic
Two-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis will star as America’s 16th president Abraham Lincoln in the Steven Spielberg-directed flick Lincoln, we’ve learned. The announcement came Friday, the 147th anniversary of Lincoln’s famous Gettysburg Address. Based on Team of Rivals, the 2005 best-selling book from Doris Kearns Goodwin, Lincoln follows the historic leader — the first US [...]
Daniel Day-Lewis to play Abraham Lincoln in Spielberg film
Daniel Day Lewis is set to play Abraham Lincoln in an upcoming biopic to be directed by Steven Spielberg. Variety reported that the director, who first signed on for DreamWorks” “Lincoln” in 2001, has announced that Day-Lewis has signed on for the lead. Five years ago Spielberg seemed close to bringing the film in front [...]
Government Using Anti-Terrorism Laws to Crush Dissent
The following quotes all have something in common:”It is not the function of our government to keep the citizen from falling into error; it is the function of the citizen to keep the government from falling into error”– United States Supreme Court …
Kristen Bell Shape Magazine September 2010
“I leave stickies on my computer with quotes from Nelson Mandela and Abraham Lincoln to help me when I need a bit of motivation, but I always go back to Eleanor Roosevelt’s words: ‘It’s better to light a candle than to curse the darkness.’ That literally applies to every part of our lives, doesn’t it?” [...]
You can change the world, Michelle Obama tells Mexican youth
US first lady Michelle Obama told Mexican students here that “responsibility for meeting the defining challenges of our time will soon fall” to the world’s young people.
At an auditorium filled with nearly 3,000 invited high school and college students, she gave a motivating speech, similar to the ones given by her husband Barack Obama during [...]
Sarah Palin’s Greatest Fails of All Time
There are a few “greatest hits” compilation videos of her blunders floating around the Internet, but today, we’d like to bring some of the greatest moments together into a more formal gathering. They’re surely not the only ones, but here we present 15 of Sarah Palin’s greatest fails of all time.


“Behind Each Great Historical Phenomenon Lies A Financial Secret”
Leading economic historian Niall Ferguson writes:Behind each great historical phenomenon there lies a financial secret,Ferguson provides some examples:“It was Nathan RothÂschild as much as the Duke of Wellington who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo†…
Tech Presidents Day: George, Tom and Abe
Wired.com marks Presidents Day weekend with brief vignettes of three of our techiest presidents: Washington steered national policy toward an embrace of science, Jefferson made a significant contribution to paleontology, and Lincoln devised and patented a gimmick for lifting stranded boats.
Washington’s Advice
Jan. 8, 1790: During his first — and the nation’s first — State of [...]
Montgomery Burns For Mayor Of New York City
Mr. Burns Hearts New York! The Simpsons villain Charles Montgomery Burns scored the most write-in votes in the recent New York City mayoral election.
According to CNN, data released by the New York City Board of Elections reveals that the animated owner of the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant received 27 of the 299 write-in votes.
Other write-in [...]
Bringing in the Harvest

To all our American readers, I and the rest of the Lifehack team wish you the happiest of Thanksgivings today.
I wanted to avoid the typical, clichéd, count-your-blessings-what-are-you-thankful-for posts. You all know that. Grade school kids know that. Heck, the unborn already know that. So let’s take it as a given that you’re deeply considering your blessings and what you have to be thankful for today. At least during the commercials, if nobody’s yelling.
(Non-US’ers may not be aware of how we celebrate Thanksgiving here in the US. First, there’s enough food to feed a small country – weird food, though, food we don’t eat any other time of the year except maybe Christmas: turkey – deep-fried, roasted, or stuffed with a chicken that’s stuffed with a duck – stuffing, cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes, pumpkin pie, mashed potatoes, gravy, and something odd that an aunt or great-grandmother comes out of retirement once a year to cook. While that’s all getting magically cooked by our mothers, aunts, and grannies, the rest of the family either a) watches a big American football game, b) argues viciously, or c) alternates between “a†and “bâ€.)
But what’s got me thinking today is not so much the “thanksy†part of Thanksgiving, but the timing. Thanksgiving is, first and foremost, a harvest festival. That’s what the Pilgrims were supposedly giving thanks for – their first harvest in this new land. Every agricultural society in the world has a similar festival. After the crops are in and the hay laid up and the grain stored and the herds brought in and the work of the farm is done, there’s a festival, an opportunity to thank whatever god or gods a people consults on such matters and to celebrate the end of another year’s hard work and to prepare for the quiet months to come.
Ironically, Thanksgiving became a national holiday in the US just as the agrarian lifestyle it celebrates was entering its final decline. It was Abraham Lincoln who made Thanksgiving a national holiday in 1863, as the Civil War which gave the US’s industrial revolution its running start raged. After the Civil War, farming would be increasingly industrialized, and the vast bulk of America’s population would leave the farm and migrate to the city, to lives of factory and service work. Today, fewer than 2% of Americans work in agriculture.
Which is to say that the majority of us lead lives that are no longer defined by the annual cycle of planting and harvesting, summer bustle and winter quietude. Our harvests are no longer brought in every Autumn; instead, we sow and we reap throughout the year.
What strikes me about Thanksgiving, then, is that this is a holiday about finishing, about congratulating yourself and your community for a job well done. The Thanksgiving story with the Pilgrims and the Indians is a myth, of course, a story we tell ourselves to give ourselves some kind of grounding in the world, to explain who we are. But it’s a good myth – it tells of a people who looked at what they’d done and realized that they’d accomplished something. They were so excited about what they’d done that they couldn’t resist showing off a little, inviting their neighboring Indians to see (much like thousands of Americans will spend tonight giddy with excitement over the new widescreen television they’ve installed in the living room for tomorrow’s game, knowing that there friends and family will see that they’ve accomplished something).
It’s important to celebrate our accomplishments like that. It’s too bad that in today’s world of cool reserve and ironic detachment, too often we downplay our achievements, even to ourselves. We resist sharing our triumphs with others, for fear of being seen as bragging, boastful, “too big for our britchesâ€, a show-off.
This is unfortunate because the festival not only marked the end of the harvest, it gave farmers the energy and incentive they needed to slog though the dreadfully difficult work of tending and reaping their crops. We should allow ourselves the same benefit, but instead we sap away our motivation by downplaying the things that are most important to us.
I guess what I’m saying boils down to this: while we’re giving thanks tomorrow for a harvest that we didn’t bring in tomorrow, maybe we should be thinking of the harvest we did bring in. And maybe we should be giving ourselves permission to have a little Thanksgiving throughout the year, to learn from the Pilgrims and mark our achievements as they happen – and share the bounty with our families and neighbors. Count your blessings if you must, but be sure to count your successes in the list, the projects you’ve completed, the steps both large and small you’ve taken towards your goals, and yes, your own harvests.
Dustin M. Wax is a freelance writer and project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He is also the creator of The Writer’s Technology Companion, a site devoted to the tools of the writing trade. When he’s not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.
Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.
She’ll be back
Sarah Palin and the state of the Republican Party
EVER since Abraham Lincoln made a virtue of log cabins, crafting the right autobiography has been an essential task for anyone seeking high office in America. On Monday November 16th Sarah Palin, ex-governor of Alaska and failed vice-presidential candidate in 2008, made an eagerly awaited appearance on the Oprah Winfrey show, as part of the launch of her biography. That book, “Going Rogue”, is already topping the bestseller charts, as readers rush to read about gossip and infighting during last year’s presidential campaign and to size up Mrs Palin herself.
On television on Monday Mrs Palin talked about her time as John McCain’s running mate. She recalled an awkward series of unflattering television interviews with Katie Couric, in which Mrs Palin struggled to answer simple questions about international affairs, calling the occasion a “gotcha” moment. She added that the media had no understanding of ordinary people like her and her family. Mrs Palin has also given an acerbic narrative of how she was “mishandled” by Mr McCain’s advisers, whom she says tried to hide her away from the spotlight. Mr McCain has diplomatically called the book “a good account” of the campaign, but he has not responded to Mrs Palin’s claim that she was not repaid a $50,000 fee for vetting her background. …
Clutch:Strange Cousins From The West
By: Dennis Cook
There may be no more together hard rock band today than Clutch. While one’s personal taste may argue the supremacy of say Mastadon or Drunk Horse, in their basic constitution this is as pure, inventive and motherfuckin’ serious as rock ‘n’ roll comes. And like the best in their breed, Clutch, despite a passing resonance with their compatriots, deliver what is utterly there own, a vision rippling with muscle, covered in matted hair, howling like a wounded beast atop high vistas or snarling red-eyed in gullies. This is the animal that pounces on Strange Cousins From The West (released July 14 on Weathermaker Music), where the quartet continues their excavation of raspy blues with pummeling, brilliant efficiency.
Wandering a city of crooked alleys, Clutch emerges working the “Motherless Child” motif, but their version also paints themselves as wandering dogs and country-less men as well as orphan boys. This band seems mean when they’re cornered and there’s a pressed-upon intensity to Strange Cousins that’s punk as anything out there but swirled into jazz shift smart changes and a relentless tightness that grips one with mighty, calloused hands. Yelping about “anthrax, ham radio and liquor” one moment, they’re off into Armageddon and mythological mazes the next. And in between there’s the greatest rock salute to “Abraham Lincoln” ever (“The assassin, the coward, no grave for you/ The assassin, the actor, no applause for you!”) and lessons in “Freakonomics.” They’ve come some distance from their sandpaper raw early days, but everything’s still workingman ready musically but now with smarts enough to impress book learnin’ types, too.
This is the blessed merger of tuned-in cultural awareness and an unremitting commitment to heaviness. By turns funny and steering wheel pounding righteous, Strange Cousins, in every respect – including the Illuminati worthy, symbol rich packing – speaks to thick layers of strata they invite us to tunnel and claw through. By combining gut punch impact, the slur of blues tradition and deeper subtleties Clutch has forged one of their best outings to date and provided further evidence that doing things on one’s own terms can sometimes play out beautifully.
JamBase | Eviscerated
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Tim Giago: Walking in the Shoes of the Yellow Dog Democrats
By Tim Giago (Nanwica Kciji) © 2009 Native Sun News July 27, 2009 If you are an “Independent” in South Dakota you have to…




