Most Americans haven’t heard of him, but Eric Cantona is a huge international soccer star known throughout Europe and much of the world.Cantona is calling for Europeans to pull their money out of banks on December 7th:I don’t think we can be entirely h…
Posts Tagged ‘Michael Jordan’
International Soccer Star: Reclaim Your Power By Pulling Your Money Out of Your Bank on December 7th
Pure maths
From the esteemed halls of Nissan comes a new range of clothing to, well, “celebrate the power, heritage and style” of its sports car collection.
The official blurb says the T-shirts “echo the performance and passion of Nissan’s muscle-bound 370Z and flagship GT-R models plus its historic motorsport pedigree.”
Well, up to a point Lord Copper. I’m not sure how much the lady in the picture would appreciate being associated with “muscle-bound” but I suppose she is sporting the “Performance” logo. And the “We are traitors” barrel logo is interesting.
And it turns out Nissan – unlike so many clothing manufacturers – hasn’t just needlessly sprayed a load of numbers on its T-shirts for any old reason.
Indeed not. The number 23 is apparently the Japanese pronunciation for two and three – ‘Ni’ and ‘San’ which the company also has on the sides of its motorsport cars.
But are there deeper forces at work? The number 23 was the number worn by David Beckham – replete with yet another ludicrous hairstyle – during his time with Real Madrid – as well as being Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls number.
And it turns out squadrons of mathematicians – a breed I studiously avoid normally given my almost complete ineptitude at the subject – have been avidly poring over the number 23 and why Beckham, Jordan and indeed Nissan have plumped for it.
Well, 2 and 3 are prime numbers, which even given my amoeba-like grasp of maths, means they can only be divided by one or themselves.
One hall of maths buffs in India – the mind boggles – recently pondered the 23 phenomenon and noted the aforementioned Real Madrid also had 7, 11 and 13 as shirt prime numbers – but didn’t appear to come to any conclusion.
A maths Professors present – who had the good grace to acknowledge most people shied away in horror when told his profession – could only guess Real Madrid had a fascination with prime numbers – who knew footballers were so cerebral?
So Professor, why did Nissan or ’2, 3,’ start off being called that at all?
Shyamalan convinced he’d never be able to please his critics
Filmmaker M. Night Shyamalan is convinced that he’d never be able to meet his critics’ expectations. The moviemaker rose to fame with 1999 hit thriller ‘The Sixth Sense’ but his more recent projects have been met with disappointing reviews. Shyamalan has now compared his career to that of basketball legend Michael Jordan, who sometimes struggled [...]
15 More Celebrities Who Got Away With It
It’s no secret that celebrities get special treatment. Stars are notorious for getting a wink and a smile from police offers for offenses which would earn the rest of us a baton to the back of the head.
Lady Gaga banned from Yankee clubhouse over bra-revealing antics
Pop singer, Lady Gaga has been banned from Yankee Stadium”s clubhouse after she visited the baseball team”s headquarters following a loss to the New York Mets. According to New York Post, Yankees co-chairman Hal Steinbrenner was upset with the singer”s antics and permanently barred her from the locker room. But the team dismissed the claim [...]
“Skankee†Lady Gaga Banned From Yankees Clubhouse?
It’s no secret that Lady Gaga loves nothing more than taking in an afternoon of baseball — while downing a vodka tonic in her undies — but has her boozy misbehavior finally gotten the controversial star banned from her favorite baseball team’s clubhouse?Gaga attended the Yankees vs. Mets Subway Series matchup on Friday night dressed [...]
Jazz Fest After Dark | 04.29-05.02 | New Orleans
Words by: B. Getz | Images by: Casey Flanigan
Jazz Fest Night Shows :: 04.29.10-05.02.10 :: New Orleans, LA
The wise superhero SuperDee once told me, “Judge your Jazz Fest not by what you saw, but what you were forced to miss.”
Those who have been to Jazz Fest know that it’s extremely difficult to decide what shows to see. Head-to-head, there is simply so much incredible music, and rare treats, to indulge in over the course of ten days. Therefore, there will be plenty of fantastic music NOT covered in these dusk til’ dawn highlight. This is simply one boy’s second weekend journey to the musical Mecca that is Jazz Fest… After Dark.
Thursday, April 29
KDTU :: 04.29 :: Tipitina’s |
No better way to start Fest then Dauphine and Lesseps in the Bywater, Thursday night at Vaughn’s. Though we arrived too late for his BBQ, Kermit Ruffins & the Barbecue Swingers welcomed us to town like only they can. A joyful mixture of brassy jazz, sultry R&B swagger and modern day braggadocio, Ruffins’ band mixed The Isley Brothers with Gnarls Barkley, with some Mystikal to boot.
Backbeat Foundation hosted another HBO star/brass band alum session at the Blue Nile, where Trombone Shorty & Orleans Ave seized their star turn, tearing down the Quarter for nearly three hours of nonstop NOLA stomp. His crack band, expanded for the occasion, more than ably laid a local foundation for Troy Andrews to delve deep into the Treme, unleashing blistering cuts from new album Backatown. Shorty cooked up a jambalaya of choice local brass anthems with a crunk-rock edge; a mammoth Marvin Gaye cover brought the house down.
Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe‘s Thursday late night show is always the place to be at Fest. The first in five years (and only KDTU Jazz Fest booking) was no different. Playing Tipitina’s Uptown until sunrise, Denson reminded us all of why he remains the King of Late Night Jazz Fest. The Tiny Universe dropped mammoth sets, balancing older favorites “Family Tree,” “Make it a Cosmopolitan” and “Because of Her Beauty” with blazing new joints like the blaxploitation banger “Brother’s Keeper Pt..II,” a lengthy dub-drenched take on “Mighty Rebel,” and an otherworldly keyboard battle between Robert Walter on Hammond B3 and Marco Benevento on Fender Rhodes.
Howlin Wolf held a benefit for the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic, a huge post-Panic party with keyboardist Jojo’s Mardi Gras Band as the hosts. “Down on the Bayou II” included WSP bandmates Sunny Ortiz and John Bell (highlighted by a brief Panic set). Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann and NOLA monarchs George Porter Jr., Anders Osborne, John “Papa” Gros, Papa Mali, Jon Cleary, Big Chief Bo Dollis, and Alfred “Uganda” Roberts all lent their skills. Gov’t Mule‘s Warren Haynes, Jorgen Carlsson and Danny Louis joined hard hitting local skinman Russell Batiste Jr. for an exciting short set.
Friday, April 30
Pretty Lights :: 04.30 :: Republic |
The new frontier of live electronic music was on display throughout Friday night, a tribute to both the evolution of the genre and the breadth of the Jazz Fest palette. With respect to the Rusko/Big Gigantic party that went late the night before, for this writer, Friday was about pulsating beats. With a new take on dubstep delivered Live PA style, Uprise Dub kicked things off with proper wobble at Dragon’s Den; dark drum & bass deep in the Quarter. A progressive minded dubstep swagger with Bukem-informed jazzy jungle, Paul Knight is a breakout waiting to happen. Big t’ings in store for this rumbling conglomerate.
Pretty Lights set it off substantially at Republic. With the sold out massive getting crazier by the song, kids were crowd surfing and bouncing off walls; absolute bedlam as dancing spilled into the street. Mixing bombastic originals with seriously dirty reinterpretations, Derek Vincent Smith knows how to rock a crowd. “More Important than Michael Jordan” ignited the fuse, but the set closing “Rumpshaker” remix was a five alarm fire.
Both Friday and Saturday nights, Bear Creek Presents hosted Break Science at One Eyed Jacks to teeming late revelers. Both shows kicked off at the ungodly hour of 4 a.m. Drummer wunderkind Adam Deitch knows no boundaries, and clearly the Rusko set had inspired him; Friday night’s set leaned heavily on dubstep wobble and thunderous bottom end. Saturday saw a more diverse assortment, with Borahm Lee unleashing a ridiculous array of skills amidst mountains of keyboards, samplers and laptops. Highlight: choice tribute to the late Guru, in the form of a punishing take on Gang Starr‘s “DWYCK,” demolishing of Public Enemy’s seminal “Bring the Noise” in a way that would make Hank Shocklee proud.
Saturday, May 1
Superfly Presents always provides a quintessential NOLA experience on the Creole Queen Boat Cruise; and this year’s Greyboy Allstars hoedown was the ideal soundtrack. While Kirk Joseph’s 504 Brass Band held down the deck with typical Crescent City flair, a newly recharged GBA came correct indoors. Incorporating new rare groove styles amidst a sea of classic West Coast boogaloo, the Allstars were back on their mojo. A spooky, enchanting version of “Nautilus” was the highlight for this writer.
Bear Creek Presents delivered another stellar gig at One Eyed Jacks with Dr. Klaw, a malicious conglomerate of NYC meets NOLA crunk. Nick Daniels led the boys into battle, welcoming local cats Andrew Block, Maurice ‘Mo Betta’ Brown and Clarence ‘Trixzey’ Slaughter to the fold. Eric Krasno (MVP?) wailed above the gumbo funk with reckless abandon, with Deitch and Nigel Hall grinning feverishly as they pushed the grooves along.
Backbeat Foundation hosted two killer Saturday shows at Tipitina’s French Quarter. Bonerama killed the raucous room with a smattering of funky brass and rock energy. Joined by Scott McCaughey (guitar), David Silverman (sousaphone), and R.E.M.‘s Mike Mills (bass) the troupe tore thru an Alex Chilton tribute, and spirited takes on “Cabbage Alley” and “Lovelight.” Later, the eclectic grouping Some Cat From Japan interpreted the works of Jimi Hendrix with a fresh take, and a lot of mojo. Led by Will Bernard and Nigel Hall, and ably assisted by Scott Metzger, Ron Johnson and Bonerama drummer Eric Bolivar, the spirit of Jimi was on full display with unique new vision.
Sunday, May 2
A sisterhood of cities was on display at Howlin Wolf for The Royal Family Ball. George Porter and his Running Partners, Zigaboo’s Funk Revue and Break Science held things down early for the vicious combination of Soulive and Lettuce. Soulive delivered one of the final slamming Jazz Fest performance, ripping as a trio or when rolling augmented. But quite frankly, the finest hour belonged to a reinvigorated Lettuce, whose only performance of the weekend was a rage to remember. Welcoming back Boston OG’s Adam ‘Shmeans’ Smirnoff and E.D. ‘Jesus’ Coomes, the boys tore the roof off the Wolf. As if they didn’t already have enough ammo, Ian Neville, Maurice Brown and Khris Royal joined the fray, as did Skerik for the final banger. Lettuce had conquered Jazz Fest once again, sending off the masses with relentless, colossal funk jams.
Like a whirlwind, it was over just as suddenly as it started. Jazz Fest will do that to ya. Once again, it was an epic adventure of giant proportions. Special thanks to Paulina Trujillo and the Backbeat Foundation, Megan Sabella at Newsom Management, Paul Peck and Superfly Productions, Paul Levine and Bear Creek, as well as all the venues and promoters that join together to provide these rich experiences. Most of all, a heartfelt thank you to the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the City of New Orleans, without whom none of this would be possible.
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Shayne Lamas Married Blogger Nik Richie?
Shayne and her brother AJ…. In a mess ripped straight from the script of a Lifetime Original Movie, former Bachelor: London Calling winner Shayne Lamas reportedly married a Hollywood blogger she’s known for less than a week. TMZ.com has posted a photo, which the site claims features Shayne standing at the altar of the Little White [...]
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. …
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Charlie Sheen Hanes Ads Pulled
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“We suspended [...]
Abe Pollin, Washington Wizards Owner, Dies
A sad overcast has descended upon Washington: The man who brought major league hockey and basketball teams to the Nation’s Capital in the 1970s — and once famously fired basketball legend Michael Jordan — died Tuesday.
View more news videos at: http://www.nbcwashington.com/video.
Washington Wizards owner, Abe Pollin, passed away at his home in the Washington suburb of [...]
Hiromi’s Sonicbloom | 11.14 | Tel Aviv
Words by: Kevin
Schwartzbach
Hiromi’s Sonicbloom :: 11.14.09 :: Hangar 11 :: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hiromi Ueharaby Muga Miyahara |
As if there aren’t enough things being exported out of Japan these days. It’s no surprise, of course, given that the
Japanese have a habit of taking things invented by Americans and making them smaller, better, and more efficient.
First it was cars, then electronics, and now jazz. Hiromi Uehara certainly is small (standing at no more than five feet), certainly is
efficient, and certainly is better than just about any contemporary American jazz pianist. In a genre increasingly
dominated by aging titans, the youthful Hiromi, with her ingenious compositions and astounding virtuosity, is at the
outer limits of what jazz fusion is capable of. Leave it to the Japanese to take the only true American art form and
bring it to a whole other level.
Japanese exports, of course, can be found all over the world, and Hiromi is no exception. Currently in the midst of a
world tour, Hiromi made her lone stop in the Middle East en route to her homeland. Putting all political and
ideological persuasions aside, Israel can actually be quite a fun place. In only a few short decades Israel has become
a bustling economic and cultural center, with Tel Aviv at its heart. The perilous war-zone that the media often
makes it out to be is hardly the reality for most Israelis, especially in Tel Aviv, the city with the country’s most
exciting nightlife. It’s no wonder then that this would make for Hiromi’s third trip here.
Inside Hangar 11, one of the few
venues that regularly draws international artists, they had just finished wiping the blood off the floor from the
previous week’s Opeth concert to
replace the mosh pit with rows of chairs for the more ‘formal’ jazz exhibition that was about to take place. A futile
gesture given that most of the show found the audience incapable of staying seated. When this cute little morsel of
a human being first took the stage, dressed like a doll in her brightly colored dress with a black flower obscured in
her hair, smile unremittingly plastered to her face, it was hard to imagine the onslaught of notes and sheer energy
that we were about to be drenched in.
Hiromi’sSonicbloom :: 11.14 :: Israel from hiromiuehara.com/blog |
A humorous Gershwin-esque improvisation from the solitary Hiromi started off the show before the rest of the band
joined in on the fusion-y goodness. Englishman Tony Grey (bass) was quick to steal the spotlight,
plucking out a lush solo on his five-string while his bandleader buttressed him with colorful chords. Hiromi’s
current group, Sonicbloom,
proved a perfect compliment for the pianist, with her set largely comprised of songs from their latest release,
Beyond Standard. As a single unit the quartet moved with effortless rapidity from old-school swinging jazz
beats to raucous rock beats to Latin grooves to spacey drifting to intricate melodic lines played in unison. Hiromi’s
Sonicbloom can really bloom into just about anything it wants to at any given moment. Much like her mentor Chick Corea, her compositions are a
fusion of not just straight ahead jazz, but also of rock, electronic, progressive, and even classical music. At times
the quartet sounded an awful lot like Corea’s Return to Forever (which is familiar ground for Hiromi, fresh off a brief stint playing with that
band’s rhythm section in the Stanley Clarke
Trio). It’s not just her compositions but also her playing that Corea has palpably influenced. Both Corea’s
fusion of acoustic piano and synthesizer (an instrument he practically introduced to the jazz world) and his highly
virtuosic style of flying through a flash of improvised notes at remarkable speeds have been absorbed in Hiromi’s
playing.
It’s more than just her speed though that makes Hiromi such an amazing musician, it’s her expressive abilities that
really make her unique. Her deranged, dissonant improvisations still maintained a high degree of melodic form,
giving her playing a kind of thematic aura. In her own arrangement of the Rogers & Hammerstein classic “My
Favorite Things,” she filled in the silent abysses that buffered torrents of notes with just one or two delicately placed
notes that seem to convey as much if not more than the innumerable notes surrounding them. “My Favorite Things”
was also a display of Hiromi’s arrangement skills, as the song evolved from its show tune roots to an upbeat fusion
piece with an impetuous drum solo from Brazilian Mauricio Zottarelli.
Hiromi’sSonicbloom :: 11.14 :: Israel from hiromiuehara.com/blog |
Hiromi’s take on Jeff Beck‘s “Led
Boots” might very well have been the highlight of the evening. Taking Beck’s funked-up ditty and re-harmonizing
the melody to give it a much jazzier feel built on top of a much faster tempo, this arrangement was hardly
reminiscent of the original, particularly during the extended jams. Hiromi’s cybertronic synthetic madness shrouded
the familiar melody taken by John Shannon‘s guitar. In unison her hands dashed across two different
keyboards. While Hiromi made minced-meat of the original keyboard solo by Max Middleton (who actually
composed the song) Shannon’s guitar work hardly touched that of Beck’s. Not that that’s any insult to Shannon;
that’s kind of like scoring 40 points in a basketball game and then saying Michael Jordan could have done better.
Hiromi continued shredding across all three of her synths at impossible speeds over all different types of time
signature and chord changes until the song erupted into a virtually exact replica of Beck’s version. With a look of
complete elation from the song’s momentous finish, she shyly said, “Sababa,” into the mic, which is Hebrew slang
for awesome, eliciting a round of laughter.
With her limited English skills, Hiromi addressed the crowd before dropping into the encore. “I’ve traveled a lot over
the years, so I often ask myself where is my place in the world? But when I come here that question disappears from
my head. I’ve only been to Israel three times, but when I come here I really feel at home (cue requisite chorus of
awwww’s from the audience). This one is dedicated to you. It’s called ‘A Place to Be’.” “A Place to Be” was an
uncharacteristically somber, deeply introspective piece that seemed to unveil the very being of Hiromi, as she sat
lonely by her piano, though still sporting that great big smile that simply could not be wiped from her face. Soon
Sonicbloom dropped right back into a scrumptious groove, inciting everyone to their feet to end the show with a
bang.
Often musical-lay people tend to get lost in the complexity of jazz, but even those who are not quite aficionados
could enjoy this blend of energetic jazz fusion. With an uncanny mastery of innumerable genres, ghostly, nimble
fingers, and a touch of youthful energy, Hiromi is single-handedly taking jazz into the future. With this gal at the
helm, Sonicbloom has become one of the most enjoyable and talented jazz acts out there.
Hiromi tour dates available here.
JamBase | Israel
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Freedom from the Soundbite
Something underrated about impact of the web on how we communicate – the fact that you can now get just about any major news video on demand.
I had heard a few things about Michael Jordan’s Hall of Fame acceptance speech and decided to consult the wise and powerful Google. I found a number of articles [...]
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Who is John Wall?
My wife’s friend is a teacher and she has a sign that says “You are special and unique, just like everyone else”. So for the record, I am unique as the only John J. M. Wall III and in fact, the M. has never really been made public and even the Goog doesn’t have it [...]




KDTU :: 04.29 :: Tipitina’s
Pretty Lights :: 04.30 :: Republic
Hiromi Uehara
Hiromi’s
Hiromi’s