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Posts Tagged ‘Thompson’

Jennifer Hudson to headline ‘Wizard Of Oz’ concert in New York

American singer Jennifer Hudson is set to headline a free concert in New York’s Central Park to launch the newly-remastered ‘Wizard Of Oz’ movie.
Hudson, 27, will be one of several singers performing classic songs from the 1939 Judy Garland film, reports Contactmusic.
The show sponsored by Netflix will taken place on September 29, and it will [...]

Croat police find no fault with Thompson concert

Controversial Croatian singer Marko Perković, aka Thompson, did not commit any criminal offense at his recent concert in Biograd, Croatian police said. According to a statement from police, after interviews with people and officers who were in attendance, because the concert was not recorded, it was confirmed that Thompson’s statements at the event were in a context that did not indicate he committed misdemeanor or criminal offense.

AKMuckraker: Sarah Palin’s Farewell Address – Full Transcript

Sunday July 26, at 3pm Alaska time, Governor Sarah Palin stepped down from her position as governor. The full transcript of her rambling, 2300-word farewell…

Croat singer introduces Ustasha salute

Croatian pop singer Marko Perković aka Thompson is once again stirring up controversy with his concerts. He started his show in Biograd, Croatia, on Saturday night with the Ustasha greeting of “Za dom spremni” (For home-ready).

Iced coffees are as fattening as a steak meal

Forget about dinner after having that chilled iced coffee with friends, for an expert says that some of these cold coffees have more calories than a steak and chips dinner.
Dr. Rachel Thompson has found that women who have the drink are consuming a quarter of their recommended 2000-calorie daily intake.
And this intake of calories increases [...]

Blagojevich Judge: Actor, Novelist, “No-Nonsense” Arbitrator

CHICAGO — Judge James B. Zagel has meted out justice on the silver screen and masterminded a bank robbery in the pages of a novel.

But the veteran federal court judge who will preside over former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s corrupti…

Amy Winehouse acquitted of assault in Britain

LONDON (AP) — A British judge acquitted Amy Winehouse on Friday of assaulting a fan who asked to take her picture, a dose of good news in the beehived soul diva’s tumultuous life.
District Judge Timothy Workman found the 25-year-old singer not guilty of punching dancer Sherene Flash in the eye after the fan asked [...]

Dan Cantor: Why Working Families Back Thompson

The Working Families Party has a ticket one can be proud of, starting with Bill Thompson.

Winehouse ‘punched dancer after photo request’

Amy Winehouse reacted with “deliberate and unjustifiable violence” when a dancer politely asked her for a photograph at a charity ball, a court heard today.

Lyall Thompson, prosecuting, said the 25-year-old singer appeared to be under the influence of alcohol or “some other substance” when she punched Sherene Flash in the eye at the summer ball in Berkeley Square, London, last September.

Winehouse, who performed at the ball before the alleged assault, denied punching Flash but admitted pushing her away when Flash put her arm round her.

The court heard the incident happened backstage in a dressing room soon after midnight on 26 September. Winehouse had agreed to have her photograph taken with Flash, whose friend Kieran Connelly then tried to get into the photograph.

Winehouse, who pleaded not guilty to assault at a previous hearing, said: “Her friend came round in front of us and started taking a picture … I was like, ‘Do I get a choice in this, hello?’

“I pushed her up, like away. I wanted her away from me. It was more like an indication of ‘leave me alone, I’m scared of you’. I meant to just get her away from me … I thought, people are mad these days, people are just rude and mad, or people can’t handle their drink.”

Winehouse said attention from the public was “not necessarily unwanted”.

Flash said she had had several alcoholic drinks that evening but denied being drunk. She said that Winehouse, who had drunk champagne, vodka and white wine, “punched forcefully in my right eye”, adding that she was shocked and began to cry.

The trial continues.

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Amy Winehouse Fan Assault Trial Begins

Amy Winehouse arriveed at Westminster Magistrates Court in Central London on Thursday to face a charge of assaulting a woman after a charity ball last year.

Reuters

Prosecutor Lyall Thompson said the award-winning Back to Black singer seemed to be under the influence of alcohol or “some other substance” when she struck Sherene Flash in a dressing [...]

Winehouse accused of ‘unjustifiable violence’

Singer alleged to have punched dancer after performance at charity ball

Singer Amy Winehouse reacted with “deliberate and unjustifiable violence” when a dancer politely asked her for a photograph at a charity ball, a court heard today.

Prosecutor Lyall Thompson said the 25-year-old singer appeared to be under the influence of alcohol or “some other substance” when she struck dancer Sherene Flash at the summer ball in Berkeley Square, central London, last September.

Winehouse, who performed at the ball before she is alleged to have assaulted Flash, gave her name as Amy Jade Civil at the start of her trial at the City of Westminster magistrates court. Thompson said all the witnesses in the case knew her better as Amy Winehouse.

Winehouse, wearing a grey pinstripe skirt suit, sat quietly in the dock with her head bowed as the prosecution opened the case.

The court heard the incident happened in a dressing room soon after midnight on September 26. Thompson said Flash asked “politely” for a photograph of Winehouse.

The court heard the star appeared reluctant at first, but then agreed.

Flash was with a drunk friend called Kieran Connelly and as he tried to get into the photo Flash was taking, Winehouse punched Flash to her right eye, the court heard.

“It may be that it was that that annoyed Miss Winehouse,” Thompson said.

“Miss Winehouse may have felt she had generously agreed to be photographed on her own and not with a drunken stranger.”

But he said: “This was a deliberate assault by Miss Winehouse. There was nothing accidental about Miss Winehouse’s actions. She reacted badly to a polite request.”

He told the court that while stars of Winehouse’s stature may find such requests “tiresome”, they “need to develop strategies to deal with unwanted attention”.

Thompson said that when Winehouse was arrested and questioned on March 5 she issued a prepared statement before answering “no comment” to questions.

The singer told police she had told Flash she wanted to say goodbye to someone else first, but Flash put her arm around her and told her the other person “could wait”.

Thompson said: “Miss Winehouse admitted she was offended and claimed to feel intimidated.”

But he said she told police her only physical reaction was to push Flash away with her forearm. Winehouse also told police that Flash put her arm around her.

Thompson said: “Far from having her arm around her, Miss Flash was not even standing next to Miss Winehouse.

“The movement of her arm was indicative of a direct blow.”

Patrick Gibbs, cross examining Flash, argued that Winehouse had agreed to be photographed but had asked the dancer to come back later .

Flash rejected this and insisted the singer had said nothing of the sort.

Gibbs continued: “What happened is this. You wanted to be in a photo with Miss Winehouse. When she said: ‘I am coming back in two minutes time,’ you weren’t prepared to wait.

“You put your arm around her and she pushed you away, and she must have caught you on the side of your eye.”

He asked if there was an unwritten rule about not requesting performers to pose for photos in the backstage area.

Flash replied: “No, you just know your place.”

Gibbs asked if the dancer may have misread the situation.

She answered: “Even if I did, it doesn’t give someone the right to punch someone in the face.”

The dancer acknowledged that she had drunk wine, champagne and sips of a cocktail during the evening but insisted that she had not been drunk.

She said: “In that environment I am at work, so I don’t drink too much.”

She said she had behaved politely during her conversation with Winehouse.

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Shawn Healy: Cap’n Kirk Reporting for Duty

By positioning himself as a centrist removed from the scandalous Blagojevich years, Mark Kirk has a betting chance to wrestle away a Senate seat in a purple state that has trended blue.

Emma Thompson Celebrates Adopted Son Tindyebwa Agaba’s Graduation

Six years ago she saved him from a life of unimaginable hardship, as a child soldier in war-torn Rwanda.

And yesterday Emma Thompson beamed with pride as she watched her adopted African son graduate from university.

Wearing a cream suit and …

Obama seems to have eclectic tastes when it comes to choice of drinks

Unlike some of his predecessors, U.S. President Barack Obama has appears to have eclectic tastes, when it comes to the choice of drinks.
While Franklin D. Roosevelt had a thing for martinis, Richard Nixon loved Chateau Margaux and Lyndon Johnson preferred scotch, Obama choices are varied.
Rather than sticking to one signature drink, he has been [...]

Les Leopold: Wall Street and Anti-Semitism

With unemployment rising to depression-like levels, we should be mindful of depression-like hatred.

BBC bosses ‘leaving staff in despair’

Culture secretary Ben Bradshaw makes strong attack on Mark Thompson and Sir Michael Lyons over BBC licence fee

The culture secretary, Ben Bradshaw, has attacked the BBC director general, Mark Thompson, and Sir Michael Lyons, the chairman of the BBC Trust, for “self-defeating” and “wrong-headed” resistance to sharing the licence fee with other broadcasters.

BBC management had lost the confidence of many of their senior staff who had been left with “almost a feeling of despair”, he said.

Speaking on the eve of the publication of the corporation’s annual report, Bradshaw said Thompson and Lyons were misguided in their resistance to government plans, outlined in Lord Carter’s Digital Britain report, to share some of the £3.6bn licence fee with rival broadcasters.

“[There] are plenty of people within the BBC that do not feel it is a well-led organisation and that is almost for me the most worrying thing,” Bradshaw told the Financial Times.

“And they don’t feel they are being well-led on this issue. It fits into a pattern. It is not the only issue. There is almost a feeling of despair among a lot of highly respected BBC professionals.”

Digital Britain outlined proposals for the BBC to share some of the licence fee with other broadcasters for the first time in its history. Around £130m of licence payers’ money will go towards ITV regional news programmes, and possibly children’s programming.

Thompson accused ministers of having an “ideological” motivation for the plan, while Lyons said the BBC Trust would not “sit quietly by and watch this happen”.

Bradshaw, who succeeded Andy Burnham as culture secretary last month and is himself a former BBC journalist, said: “I don’t know why they have adopted this position. I don’t think it’s sensible.

“I think it’s wrongheaded and will ultimately be self-defeating. And there are plenty of people I know in the BBC who agree with me.

“I think the BBC is far more likely to be able to make a strong case in future for the retention of the licence fee if it sees itself as an organisation that is not just simply always interested in defending its own narrow interests, but has a broader role in terms of defending and providing high-quality public-service content.”

This echoed Bradshaw’s comments at the all-party parliamentary media group’s summer reception last month, where he said he rejected the idea that top-slicing threatened the future of the licence fee. “I think the opposite is the case,” he said. “It is far more likely to secure the licence fee if you share it, rather than end it.”

Bradshaw told the FT that a consultation period lasting until early September was “an opportunity for the leadership of the BBC to show some leadership rather than feel that the bunker is the place they want to be in”.

He said the idea that the top-slicing plans were ideologically motivated was “nonsense”. “We have an ideological commitment to ensuring that the public gets high quality public service provision in those areas which the public tell us matter to them – and local and regional news are at the top of that list.”

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The New AP

Matt Thompson and Jeff Jarvis have been doing some important thinking on how news coverage needs to change in the Internet Age. They argue that a flow of shallow, time-dependent stories no longer works as a foundation for helping readers understand the world.
Thompson started a blog devoted to exploring an alternative. He writes in the [...]