Laura Ling has signed on to host a new series for entertainment-centric cable network E!, The Hollywood Reporter said Monday. The former journalist with Al Gore’s Current TV Network will host a new E! series — E! Investigates — set to premiere in December. In the Spring of 2009, Ling and her Current colleague Euna [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Al Gore’
Laura Ling Documentary Show “E! Investigates†Debuts In December
Evening Crunch Crumbs: “American Idol†Alum Tamyra Gray Welcomes First Child; Pregnant Man Thomas Beatie Welcomes Baby No. 3; DJ Jazzy Jeff Weds
-The co-creator of Hee-Haw has died…. -American Idol Season One alum Tamyra Gray has welcomed her first child — a girl…. -Al Gore has cleared of any wrongdoing in a far-reaching sex scandal that saw the former Vice-President accused of attacking a masseuse…. -Ugh! Another country music awards show? -The Devil may wear Prada, but the Virgin Mary wears [...]
Tipper Gore Doesn’t Believe All Dirty Allegations Concerning Her Husband’s Extramarital Affairs
All tabloids have spread different rumors concerning Al Gore’s extramarital affairs. It has been written that he cheated his wife with a cheerleader of Tennessee Titans, then with a Hollywood producer. The most recent allegation concerned Molly Hagerty, massage therapist, who claimed to be sexually abused by the politician in 2006. According to the friend [...]
Police Reopen Al Gore Sexual Assault Investigation: Did Gore Attack Masseuse Molly Haggerty?
Following a report in the July 12 issue of The National Enquirer, police in Portland, Oregon are reinvestigating allegations from a masseuse that she was sexually-assaulted by former Vice-President Al Gore.When the incident occured in 2006, the Portland police refused to file charges on grounds of lack of evidence. They’ve offered no explanation as to [...]
Police Reopen Al Gore Sexual Assault Investigation: Did Gore Attack Masseuse Mary Hagerty?
Following a report in the July 12 issue of The National Enquirer, police in Portland, Oregon are reinvestigating allegations from a masseuse that she was sexually-assaulted by former Vice-President Al Gore.When the incident occured in 2006, the Portland police refused to file charges on grounds of lack of evidence. They’ve offered no explanation as to [...]
Sexual Assault Charges Brought against Al Gore
According to the words of the Portland Oregonian, Al Gore sexually abused her after a massage session which lasted three hours. This happened in a high-end hotel in Portland in 2006. In 2009 the victim filed for Al Gore charging him with sexual abuse. After the incident the woman reported to the police about that [...]
Al Gore Rape Scandal — Did Gore Sexually Assault A Masseuse?
Al Gore has been accused of sexually attacking a masseuse in Portland, Oregon nearly four years ago. The National Enquirer has published a bombshell expose claiming that the former Vice-President’s 40-year union with wife Tipper ended last month after Mrs. Gore learned of an Oct. 2006 incident in which Al, 62, assaulted his massage therapist.
Laurie David and Al Gore
Producer Laurie David is vehemently denying a Star magazine report of an Al Gore affair with her that ruined his marriage.
Al and Tipper Gore announced earlier this month they were separating after 40 years of wedlock. Star magazine claims an affair between Al Gore and Laurie David caused the split.
In the new issue of Star [...]
Al Gore Had Affair With Laurie David – Larry David’s Ex
Al Gore and Laurie David, pictured with their respective exes Probably inevitably, details of the Al and Tipper Gore split have started emerging, and the first revelation is something of a doozy. Star Magazine is reporting that Al Gore was having an affair with Laurie David, the ex of Larry David, probably best known for “Curb [...]
Another Marriage Is on the Way of Break-up
Another truth about Al Gore’s family emerged. The eldest daughter of Al, the former vice president, and his wife, Tipper, broke up with her husband. The couple has been together for 12 years.
Such news emerged after it was announced by the winner of the Nobel Prize and his wife that they separated after living together [...]
BP’s unfolding PR disaster
I think we all know – deep down – that the relentless burning of hydrocarbons brings with it some occasionally troubling consequences. Most of the time we don’t give it too much thought when we fill the petrol tank with that invisible black liquid gold. You’d probably go a bit mad if you worried constantly about all the things that aren’t quite right with the world. It’s a long list.
And let’s face it, we are still living in an economy that depends on the burning of hydrocarbons. We can wean ourselves off them, step by small step, but the alternatives are still not quite there, whether we are talking about power generation for electricity or powertrains for mass-market vehicles.
The dark side of mining, trading and burning the liquid black stuff – along with associated interdependencies – was neatly summarised by Al Gore: “We’re borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the planet. Every bit of that’s got to change.” I’m not sure I agree with everything Al Gore says, but that is very well put.
The Persian Gulf part of the sentence alludes to the ‘energy security’ argument that plays well in the US. Dependence on the Middle East for oil is widely seen as A Bad Thing. The implication is that things that lessen that dependence are A Good Thing. That might mean consuming less oil, which is where hybrids and electric vehicles can make a contribution. But it might also mean developing more oil extraction locally. And for the US, the Gulf of Mexico is pretty local. They’re now going into deeper water to get the oil.
The disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has shown what can happen when things go wrong with offshore drilling. Clearly something went very wrong with the systems and checks that are meant to ensure that a catastrophic event like that doesn’t happen, or that if it does, effective remedial action can be quickly applied to limit the resultant harm.
Hopefully, the relevant authorities and regulators will get to the bottom of it and put in place any necessary changes to ensure that it cannot happen again.
There will always be some level of environmental risk with oil though, in both its extraction and transportation.
As far as BP is concerned, as well as the immediate challenge of dealing with the crisis itself, there is clearly a very big PR disaster unfolding in North America (and to some extent the world) that it will have to contend with for many years to come. A fat multinational corporation that makes supernormal profits and colludes with dodgy regimes in the Middle East to bring us hydrocarbons to burn is probably walking a thin line at the best of times. But if it’s not whiter than white on safety and on presenting its case for corporate social responsibility, there surely will be a longish queue of unsympathetic people only too happy to have a pop.
What’s happened in the Gulf of Mexico is a nightmare scenario for an oil company and manna from heaven for those with a natural antipathy to oil companies and what they represent.
And these days, you have to fight your PR battles in the blogosphere and in social networking forums. A fake BP Twitter page has illustrated how easy it can be for your digitally agile opponents to quickly gain visibility and help to shape public opinion. Well honed – or even crude (sorry) – satire is not easy to fight.
Example of tweet from @BPGlobalPR: “We are dedicated to helping the wildlife in the gulf. Any birds that need cleaning must report to 287 Quartemain St, Baton Rouge, LA 70801″
I wonder how long it will be before other companies – dare I say it, maybe some in the auto biz – find themselves targeted by similar campaigns?
Fine shades of green
Britain’s environmental politics are a bit dull
There are many thrilling aspects to the British election due to be held on May 6th. A hard-fought battle over environmental priorities is not one of them. Climate is the top environmental issue across the board, and the three major parties, Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats, broadly agree on the need for measures to cut carbon dioxide emissions steeply. So, for that matter, do the regional parties and most of the minor parties.
The most notable exception, out towards the fringe, is the UK Independence Party. UKIP speaks for those opposed to membership of the European Union, a group that has a lot of overlap with climate sceptics, and is the political home of Christopher Monckton, the highest-profile climate sceptic of the “it’s all an outright fraud” persuasion that Britain can boast. UKIP is proud of its own climate scepticism, and says it would repeal the 2008 Climate Change Act, remove Al Gore DVDs from schools, allow wind turbines only offshore, and so on. (Met Office funding in UKIP-land will be calculated on the basis of the accuracy of the organisation’s weather forecasts.) …
The celebrity effect
The magical effect of putting a famous face on a company’s board
IN MARCH 1998 the Coca-Cola Bottling Company announced the appointment of a most unlikely new director to its board: Evander Holyfield, a former heavyweight boxing champion (pictured above), best-known for having part of his ear bitten off in a bout by a fellow boxer, Mike Tyson. He was not the only top athlete at the time with a seat in the boardroom: Michael Jordan, a celebrated basketball player, was a director of Oakley, a sunglasses manufacturer. Other sports stars to try their hand at directing corporate America in the past 25 years include Billie Jean King, a tennis player appointed to the board of Altria (then called Philip Morris) in 1999 and Nancy Lopez, a golfer, who became a director of J.M. Smucker, a jam-maker, in 2006.
Boards have also recruited from the ranks of Hollywood. Disney appointed Sidney Poitier to its board in 1994, for example. Deepak Chopra, an author and lifestyle guru, was recruited to the board of Men’s Wearhouse, a suit retailer, in 2004. Stretching the definition of celebrity a bit, General “Stormin’” Norman Schwarzkopf was appointed a director by the Home Shopping Network in 1996. And you can take your pick from scores of politicians-turned-directors, including Al Gore, a former vice-president and a member of Apple’s board since 2003. …
March 19, 1979: House Proceedings Air Live on C-SPAN
1979: Tennessee congressman Al Gore stands before his colleagues on the floor of the House of Representatives and gives a speech about the democratic virtues of television: “The marriage of this medium and of our open debate have the potential, Mr. Speaker, to revitalize representative democracy.” Kicking off an otherwise business-as-usual congressional session, Gore becomes [...]
The second epistle of St Bill
Bill Gates worries about falling aid and poor teaching
“HELLO world,” tweeted Bill Gates on January 19th, announcing his entry to the world of Twitter. He has also just launched a blog, called the Gates Notes, and has been at the Sundance film festival, talking about his appearance in the latest film by the director of Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth.” Called “Waiting for Superman”, this tackles a topic close to Mr Gates’s heart, education reform in America—but, mercifully, it is not believed to feature the Microsoft founder-turned-philanthropist wearing a cape and red underpants.
Mr Gates will also be making various appearances this week, among the global great and good at the World Economic Forum in Davos. And for any of his fans still thirsting for more of the wisdom of St Bill, on January 25th he published the second of what he says will be annual letters on philanthropy. …
Climate change does not worry many Americans
Washington: An in Zogby interactive survey, the results showed that nearly half of Americans, or 49%, say they are only slightly or not at all concerned about climate change, while 35% are somewhat or highly concerned.
The survey’s results emerge as the United Nations climate change summit in Copenhagen heads into its final week, amid warnings [...]
Ask Al Gore
Nobel Laureate Al Gore has been part of the discussion about climate change for years. His visit to the Copenhagen Climate Summit this week coincides with the release of his new book, “Our Choice,†in which he lays out the green technologies he believes can reshape America and the world.
The former vice president will be live tomorrow in the 7 a.m. hour of American Morning, and we’d like to throw open the discussion to you. What would you like to ask him about global warming, the environment and green technology?
Record your question on video and please keep it to 30 seconds or less. American Morning will select the best questions and ask them during Wednesday’s broadcast.
- Deadline: 4 a.m. ET Dec 9
- File format: Video
‘Climategate’
I must admit to being something of an unhappy observer to the general row over ‘climate change’ and whether or not man is now contributing, in a potentially catastrophic manner, to a rapid acceleration of warming that will screw things up for future generations.
The whole subject area seems to have become highly politicised in recent years and that seems regrettable to me. The climate change crowd are increasingly portrayed by their opponents as a part of a liberal Left academic establishment in cahoots with liberal media and politicians (step forward Al Gore). And they, in turn, seem to paint their opponents – the so-called climate change sceptics – as ‘denialists’ or ‘flat earthers’. The sceptics seem to have become increasingly identified with the libertarian Right and people who generally want to keep government regulation at bay, protect business, keep things as they are etc.
Most of us would just like the scientific evidence to be made as intelligible as possible so that we can have a basic understanding of how clear things are, what the policy implications may be and where the risks are. But it’s a confusing picture, snippets of information coming into the mainstream media to suggest that there’s a problem – but, as some have pointed out, the way the media presents the information is often rather loaded, ‘climate change’ presented as a given.
How can we have the political debate about an appropriate response when there is still a lack of clarity on the extent of the problem and its consequences? Or have I got that wrong? Maybe it’s hugely complicated and mainly about risk assessment, uncertainties unable to be removed…(IPCC site)
But it’s not really for me to say that we’ve had ice ages and ‘mini ice ages’ before, that climate changes anyway, whatever we are doing. I’m a total layman in this respect and many scientists would argue that I’m missing the point, that despite what’s gone on before, the evidence suggests we have made a significant difference to warming over the last 100 years and we shouldn’t risk moving over a ‘tipping point’ that will make warming irreversible.
Fair enough perhaps, you’re the scientists, so please get on with doing the science. And I’d like to think that the scientific community is engaging in the research in a professional and non-partisan manner (perhaps that’s a little naïve, given the way academic funding works).
Anyway, there has been a leak of emails allegedly sent to each other by researchers at what is seen as a ‘pro-climate change’ group of academics in Britain. Arguably, according to the emails, they are stifling dissent from their self-derived ‘consensus’ viewpoint and not giving the sceptics a fair hearing. Hmm. Would you want to be judged on private emails you sent being selectively made public? Is this the whole picture? Are the allegations actually borne out?
The debate will run. And I suspect it will become increasingly politicised as the apparent stakes get higher. The rest of us will look on, slightly bemused, wondering where the fuzzy line between genuine scientific evidence and politicised selective treatment is exactly.
This website appears to be the work of a sceptic – you can see how he’s describing the emails – but you can read the emails themselves and some of them make for interesting, if voyeuristic, reading. One guy says he want to ‘beat the crap’ out of an academic opponent, which I guess testifies to how worked up some of them are getting.
Climate change and warfare: Cool heads or heated conflicts?
A lesson from history on how to prevent climate-induced wars
THE starkest views of climate change paint war as a looming threat. The idea that violence will erupt as drought and rising sea levels displace people from their homes is, in part, why the Nobel prize for peace was awarded in 2007 to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and Al Gore. Yet a newly published study analysing the historical connection between war and climate throws into question the assumption that rising temperatures and violence go hand in hand.
Aware that evidence for the link was lacking, Richard Tol of the Economic and Social Research Institute in Dublin, Ireland, and Sebastian Wagner of GKSS, a research institute near Hamburg, Germany, set out to collect data on climate and conflict in Europe over the past thousand years. Their results have just been published in Climatic Change. …



