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Posts Tagged ‘tucker’

Tucker Carlson Michael Vick Diss: “He Should Be Executed”

A speech from Al Sharpton coming in 5, 4, 3, 2…. Either political pundit Tucker Carlson’s a really big fan of dogs or the FOX News commentator earned his right-wing credentials at the “Off With His Head! Institute of Conservatism.” Carlson, who has spent the post-holiday week filling in for FOX News’ Sean Hannity, has [...]

Sleater Kinney’s Corin Tucker: New Album/Single/Tour

1,000 YEARS DUE OUT OCTOBER 5


1,000 Years

On October 5, 2010 Kill Rock Stars will release 1,000 Years, the debut album from The Corin Tucker Band, which
features Corin Tucker (Sleater Kinney), Sara Lund (Unwound), and Seth Lorinczi
(Golden Bears).

The band will be heading out on tour starting October 7 in Portland, OR. All dates are below. You can download
“Doubt” from 1,000
Years
here.

TOUR DATES:


10.07 – Portland, OR @ Aladdin Theater – w/ The Golden Bears
10.08 – Seattle, WA @ Showbox – w/ The Golden Bears

10.09 – Eugene, OR @ WOW Hall – w/ The Golden Bears

10.11 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall – w/ The Golden Bears
10.13 – Los Angeles, CA @ El Rey – w/ The Golden Bears
10.23 – Hoboken, NJ @ Maxwell’s – w/ Hungry Ghost
10.24 – Northampton, MA @ Pearl Street – w/ Hungry Ghost
10.25 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club – w/ Hungry Ghost
10.26 – New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom – w/ Hungry Ghost
10.28 – Philadelphia, PA @ First Unitarian Church – w/ Hungry Ghost
10.29 – Washington, DC @ Black Cat – w/ Hungry Ghost

The Corin Tucker Band
Tour Dates

::
The Corin Tucker Band News
::
The Corin Tucker Band
Concert
Reviews


Drive-By Truckers/Lucero | 04.03 | Philly

Words & Images by: Jake Krolick

Drive-By Truckers/Lucero/Langhorne Slim :: 04.03.10 :: The Electric Factory :: Philadelphia, PA

Drive-By Truckers :: 04.03 :: Philly

The workingman’s plight has long been subject matter for musicians. From Tennessee Ernie Ford’s “Sixteen Tons” to Sam Cooke’s “Chain Gang,” artists have been spilling their guts about day-to-day troubles for years. Philadelphia residents understand these lessons as well as any area in the country. Last Saturday evening, as the city sat quietly poised for Easter Sunday, a mass of working stiffs shuffled into The Electric Factory to put their work week behind them. We exchanged coffee mugs for whiskey bottles as we took in the music performed by a man from Langhorne, PA, a band from Memphis, Tennessee, and one of the most celebrated workingman’s bands ever.

Langhorne Slim‘s boundless energy and showmanship were less of a precursor to the songwriting skills of Lucero and Drive-By Truckers and more of a peek at another version of life’s struggles. Slim, born Sean Scolnick, was not just dancing and smiling during his performance. The strum of his guitar coupled with his quick vocal switches lifted his third album’s title track “Be Set Free” from a bland love story to an engaging song. Flanked by his band, The War EaglesJeff Ratner (bass), Malachi DeLorenzo (drums) and David Moore (banjo) – they formed a healthy force to reckon with. The band rattled and shook the crowd with “Restless.” Too bad so many were still getting into the venue and missed Slim’s set. The crowd finally took notice of their lively performance as Moore and DeLorenzo connected with a fury on “Cut It Down” off Electric Love Letter. They created a whirlwind with Moore’s aggressive banjo plucking and DeLorenzo’s patient yet bombastic combination of rim shots and bass kicks before Slim bent to his knees to rock “I Love You So Bad.”

It’s pretty widely known that there have been times when Lucero was too intoxicated to perform a decent show. This was not the case Saturday evening as the band demonstrated just how amazing they could be when firing on all cylinders.


Ben Nichols – Lucero :: 04.03 :: Philly

Lucero’s music chews on you like a Southern punk version of The Hold Steady with its spiral of horns and gruff sounds. Just like The Hold Steady, they sing to appease the heart and mind of the common man. Lucero is chock full of wild fellows, but the soul is singer-songwriter-bandleader Ben Nichols. He radiates outlaw grace with a voice that could influence an uprising. His songs are pushed through gritted teeth, back alley poetry about the people he lost or longed for and the lifetime of booze that he’s consumed. Nichols crooned into the microphone all evening like a less showy version of The Mighty Mighty Bosstones‘ singer Dicky Barrett. Their set was nothing short of amazing as Nichols, drummer Roy Berry and gray bearded guitarist Brian Venable looked outward and raged against the slings ‘n’ arrows of life. Lucero didn’t miss a note as they rattled off 13 songs that ran their illustrious career. The set spanned from the brick of pain “Kiss The Bottle” off The Attic Tapes to the highlight of their set, a positive, horn-filled “Smoke” that linked Todd Beene‘s pedal steel with a gaggle of huffing and puffing horn players. Simply put, they slayed their set.

The Drive-By Truckers have just released The Big To-Do (JamBase review). This album is somewhat different than previous efforts. The songs lack a certain raw feeling many have grown accustomed to, and it features many more melodic moments. However, it still contains the soul of the Drive-By Truckers and it shines in its ability to carry on where the other albums have left off. There are plenty of seedy stories of deception, strippers and cheaters, all on some form of drug or religion. Even if the music is starting to bend into a more harmonious form, the lyrical edge remains evident, as in this nugget from “This Fucking Job.”

Workin’ this job is a kick in the pants
Workin’ this job is like a knife in the back
It ain’t gettin’ me further than the dump I live in
It ain’t gettin’ me further than the next paycheck


Neff & Hood – DBTs :: 04.03 :: Philly

The Electric Factory was like being in one giant black megaphone. The front row was blasted by the Drive-By Truckers vinyl-only release “You’re Woman Is A Living Thing” as we prepared for the onslaught of the louder-than-the-Lord Southern rockers. Wild-eyed enthusiasm manifested itself within leader Patterson Hood as he stepped onstage, while guitarist Mike Cooley unabashedly came out smoking a cigarette. You can see a clear difference in these two personalities that drive the band, but it’s those variations that make the Truckers click. Behind them was a floor-to-ceiling backdrop of the Wes Freed circus train that adorns The Big To-Do album cover.

They devoted the first half of the set largely to new album, and while several of the new songs haven’t quite acquired the fire of older material, Hood and Cooley ground out “This Fucking Job” in fine form. Both seemed to find a connection with the audience and showed us that they were simply not ready to let us settle for the guillotine of conformity. Hood’s Southern drawl came out strongly, and for the first time during the performance so did his nonchalant ability to make us feel better by really hanging on certain lyrics. It’s this bit of human emotion that helps us tell The Man to fuck off instead of just lining up to have our heads chopped off.

The DBTs are one of those bands that sometimes need a push to get the show in gear. Enter Cooley on “Sink Hole” and “Self Destructive Zones.” His axe work was bloody loud and awe-inspiring. As he saluted the crowd with his guitar at the edge of the stage, you could hear the band starting to turn even sweeter. Drummer Brad Morgan shook the giant bass drum to life behind Cooley. It was somewhere around this point in the show that some jackass started screaming at the sound guy because he felt that the sound was too loud for his taste, though his discomfort was more likely due to too much alcohol because a few minutes later he was involved in a melee with a group of fans and security. However, Hood was loose by this point, and if he was drinking, we damn well better be, too. He split apart “The Company I Keep” and started teasing James Taylor’s “You’ve Got a Friend” before telling us to pour ourselves a cocktail because the night was going to be long and glorious.


Drive-By Truckers :: 04.03 :: Philly

New ones “Daddy Learned to Fly” and “Birthday Boy” was a finicky back-to-back combo. You could hear a more instrumental side working its way out of the Drive-By Truckers on both songs, which probably had a lot to do with their time as a backing band for Booker T. Jones. It’s surprising how much patience they had on “Daddy Learned to Fly,” and I’d give all that timing credit to Cooley’s searing guitar work and Jay Gonzalez‘s keyboard accents. The sound combination of these two had a similarity to late ’90s Widespread Panic with Michael Houser and JoJo Herman. They built it up just enough to make our skin boil, though “Birthday Boy” didn’t translate live as well as it does on the album. No matter, the set ended on a high point with Hood crooning on a cover of Eddie Hinton’s “Everybody Needs Love.”

As with most Drive-By Truckers shows, the encore was thick and hearty. Hood had started the evening by thanking Lucero for opening for them and reminisced about how the Truckers opened for them in 1996 in Memphis. This deep adoration culminated in a six-song encore with Lucero’s Todd Beene sitting in the entire time on pedal steel. One of my favorites from The Big-To-Do kicked off the encore as bassist Shonna Tucker started “You Got Another” by herself at the piano. Her elegant take on the tale of a jilted lover destroyed all that I thought I knew about the Drive-By Truckers. Somewhere during Tucker’s soft piano beginning the song turned into a full sonic head-fuck as Beene slid off hollow notes that linked with Cooley’s squealing guitar.

The band followed this pleasing but odd choice with some boisterous fan favorites, including “18 Wheels of Love” and “Let There Be Rock,” where Hood’s preaching dominated extended versions of each. His words came off as Southern tinged Arlo Guthrie style tales. He changed the words of “Let There Be Rock” into an advertisement for their opening spot for Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers this summer. He sang about his first band, Breakdown, and substituted Tom Petty in for Molly Hatchet. But, it was John Neff who ran away with the song as he rocked us with an electric sitar. Gonzalez had us dancing to his banging piano work on Southern Rock Opera‘s “Shut Up And Get On The Plane” before Cooley ended the show in high style performing a touching rendition of “Angels and Fuselage.” With a final mighty whack of the giant bass drum, Morgan ended the show.

Lucero set list
Intro > Sounds of the City, That Much Further West, Can’t Feel a Thing, Raising Hell, Slow Dancing, Sixes and Sevens, Goodbye Again, Kiss the Bottle, Mom, Smoke, Tears Don’t Matter Much, I Can Get Us Out of Here

Drive-By Truckers set list
You’re Woman Is A Living Thing on PA, After The Scene Dies, Get Downtown, (It’s Gonna Be) I Told You So, This Fucking Job, Sinkhole, Self Destructive Zones, The Company I Keep, 3 Dimes Down, Daddy Learned To Fly, Birthday Boy, Girls Who Smoke, Eyes Like Glue, The Living Bubba, Zoloft, A Ghost To Most, Everybody Needs Love, Puttin’ People On The Moon
E: You Got Another, 18 Wheels Of Love, Zip City, Let There Be Rock, Shut Up And Get On The Plane, Angels and Fuselage

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=16″);}); Drive-By Truckers, Lucero, Langhorne Slim | Electric Factory | Philadelphia, PA On the eve of Easter Sunday, Drive-By Truckers, Lucero and Langhorne Slim celebrated the working man in Philadelphia… View Photos

Drive-By Truckers Tour Dates :: Drive-By Truckers News :: Drive-By Truckers Concert Reviews

JamBase | Big Top
Go See Live Music!


15 Truly Awful Celebrity Parents

Although it may not always be fun, the responsibility of ensuring a child’s well being should always be a parent’s number one priority. Unfortunately, some celebs simply neglect this general rule — as easily as they do most other ones — and as a result, their children suffer. Here are fifteen celebrities who have been caught being awful parents.

moe. | 01.22.10 | NYC

Words & Images by: Jarrod Dicker

moe. :: 01.22.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY

moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

“Thank you, NYC, and welcome to the show,” Rob Derhak announced while smiling after the conclusion of moe.‘s second selection of the evening, “Bearsong.”

“We are extremely pumped to be here, thank you all for coming and supporting WHY [World Hunger Year],” continued Derhak. “We have a lot of guests coming out tonight and a lot of fun in store. We’re here to have a good time, but the cause is what it’s all about. So, even though we’re all enjoying ourselves up onstage and you’re all dancin’ in the crowd, just know that the money that’s spent on this show will be feeding a lot of people.”

Cheers filled the Roseland Ballroom on what was truly an evening to remember. moe.’s New York City homecoming served somewhat as a “jam band prom” for all ye’ faithful in attendance, attracting fans and performers from all over the musical spectrum.

Publicized as a WHY benefit performance, the band announced on their website that the charitable contributions would be allocated accordingly to assist Haiti after the devastating earthquake that shocked that country on January 12.

The crowd eagerly awaited the Buffalo natives to hit the stage, as well as anticipating the much-publicized guests that were scheduled to appear on the benefit’s bill. The evening’s ensemble consisted of Butch Trucks (Allman Brothers), Jeff Austin (Yonder Mountain String Band), saxophonist David Sanborn, Marco Benevento, Danny Barnes (Bad Livers) and, of course, Rob, Chuck, Al, Jim and Vinnie.

Danny Barnes w/ moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

The evening, which marked the kick off of moe.’s 20th anniversary tour, began with Headseed favorite “Timmy Tucker,” performed with extreme velocity. The crowd took well to the familiar introductory track, and further applauded the in-depth jam session that inevitably followed.

“Tucker” fed into “Bearsong,” which exhibited yet another unbelievable shred session, highlighting what makes moe. moe. – the high peak and plateau riding grooves that give up little if any energy throughout.

The band then welcomed their first two guests of the night, Danny Barnes on banjo and Marco Benevento on keys, for the infamous moe. tune “Captain America,” followed by Barnes’ “Caveman,” where Jeff Austin came out to contribute mandolin.

There was talk leading up the show that the presence of all these different players onstage together might produce a confusing, jumbled mess since the entire group as a whole have never all played with one another simultaneously. As soon as “Captain America” and “Cavemen” were played, all those concerns went right out the door.

Jeff Austin w/ moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

“Nebraska” was next up in the first set, followed by “Happy Hour Hero.” moe. invited David Sanborn and Butch Trucks up to assist on “Hero,” hinting with Trucks’ presence at some classic Allman tunes to come. Sanborn’s saxophone mirrored the drum and guitar lines throughout “Hero,” creating a fresh – and possibly better – version than the original with the beautiful saxophone infusion.

At the conclusion of “Hero,” Derhak grabbed the mic and said, “We got a singer? Yes.” The bass line started and Jeff Austin took hold of the microphone. The Allman Brothers’ “Whipping Post” ensued, creating absolute musical mayhem (in a good way). It is hard for guitarists (even Al and Chuck) to mimic the hammering of Duane and Dickey, and even Warren and Derek. However, the band adopted the song rather well in terms of providing a complimentary and thorough version of the gem.

Returning from set break, the group (accompanied by Benevento and Trucks) went right into Dickey Betts’ “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed.” Marco on keys was unbelievable throughout, venturing beyond back beats to engage with the wide variety of musicians onstage.

“Shoot First” came and went, followed by “Waiting for the Punchline.” During “Waiting,” Al adjusted the verse to compliment his new ‘supergroup’ bandmates: “Jeff Austin told me about the likes of you.” A hoedown jam arrived after the verses, and Rob yelled, “Jeff Austin and Danny Barnes, everybody – separated at birth!” The fusion of moe., Barnes and Austin was unbelievable, especially during this track, which fit the musicians’ instruments rather well.

moe. :: 01.22 :: Roseland Ballroom

After “Waiting,” Al said, “Mr. Marco, everybody. It’s our pleasure to get to play with Marco finally, and we get to do it with style. We’re going to play one of Marco’s songs now. He made a really cool video for this song that you can see on YouTube. It’s called ‘The Real Morning Party’ and it’s awesome!”

“The Real Morning Party” was followed by “Shake Your Hips.” Then, Austin grabbed the mic again, “So, I gotta say something. When I was first riding around playing music I met the moe. guys and they were just so nice to me. That was ten years ago and they’re still so great to me now. It’s just a pleasure to be playing with these guys. They’re just the best. So, give it up for this great band we got up here! And they wanted to learn one of my songs so we’ll play it right now.”

Austin offered lead vocals on moe.’s cover of Yonder’s “East Nashville Easter.” Benevento remained with the group through “Blue Jeans Pizza,” and then Butch came back out for the set closing “Mexico.”

All guests stepped back on the stage and assembled for the grand finale of this outrageous and unbelievable event. The guitar began, and it took the crowd less than two seconds to figure out the encore. It seemed fitting at this special event that the group closed with one from The Last Waltz. “The Weight” was performed exceptionally well, rotating vocals between members of moe., Austin and Barnes.

“Thank you very much NYC,” Rob graciously pronounced at the end of “The Weight.” “Have a great night everybody. Thank you for coming out. Let’s give a hand for the WHY Band, Marco Benevento on keyboards, Danny Barnes on banjo, Jeff Austin on mandolin and vocals, Mr. Butch Trucks on drums, Mr. David Sanborn, and the rest of you guys for making this all possible. Give yourselves a hand. Have a great night. We’ll see y’all tomorrow night.”

moe. :: 01.22.10 :: Roseland Ballroom :: New York, NY
Set I: Timmy Tucker > Bearsong, Captain America, Caveman, Nebraska, Happy Hour Hero, Whipping Post

Set II: In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed, Shoot First, Waiting For The Punchline, The Real Morning Party, Shake Your Hips, East Nashville Easter, Blue Jeans Pizza, Mexico

E: The Weight

moe. is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Big Apple
Go See Live Music!


Jan. 22, 1950: Jury Acquits Tucker of Fraud

1950: Along with seven business associates, Preston Tucker — founder and namesake of the Tucker Car Corporation and the creator of the ultramodern Tucker ’48 sedan — is found not guilty of 25 counts of mail fraud, five counts of violating SEC rules and a single count of conspiracy to defraud.
The company, however, would [...]

Drive-By Truckers Sign to ATORelease New Album in March 2010

DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS SIGN TO ATO RECORDS, RELEASE NEW ALBUM

“Drive-By Truckers are the best rock band in America.” CNN.com

Drive-By Truckers

ATO Records is pleased to announce the signing of Drive-By Truckers and their label debut, The Big To-Do. The album, which will be the band’s tenth in their thirteen-year career, is scheduled to be released March 16, 2010. The Big To-Do features thirteen new tracks from the Drive-By Truckers and was produced by their long time producer, David Barbe (Sugar, Bettye LaVette). “It’s very much a rock album,” says Patterson Hood of the Truckers’ upcoming release. “Very melodic and more rocking than anything we’ve done since disc 2 of Southern Rock Opera.”

The inspiration for The Big To-Do came to the band during their time on the road. “We’ve often set our songs and albums in different periods of time, but this one finds us directly in our present. Riding all through the highways of America (and Europe) trying to make sense of a very different world than the one we grew up in,” says Hood. “I don’t write a lot of songs on the road, but I did more than usual on this album and many more were inspired by or set there, either in a literal sense or something I witnessed or heard about while I was out there.”

Hood and Mike Cooley continue to be the chief songwriters of the group, continuing a musical partnership that has lasted over twenty-three years. Bassist, Shonna Tucker, flexes her songwriting muscles once again by contributing two original songs to the album. Brad Morgan (drums), John Neff (guitar/pedal steel) and Jay Gonzalez (keyboards) round out the current Drive-By Truckers lineup.

The band recently backed legendary R&B musician, Booker T. Jones, on his critically acclaimed, Grammy-nominated album, Potato Hole. The album is nominated for Best Pop Instrumental Album and Best Rock Instrumental Performance.


The Drive-By Truckers will be hitting the road at the beginning of the new year. A full tour supporting The Big To-Do will be announced in early 2010.

The Big To-Do Track Listing:

1. Daddy Learned to Fly

2. The Fourth Night of My Drinking

3. Birthday Boy

4. Drag the Lake Charlie

5. The Wig He Made Her Wear

6. You Got Another

7. This Fucking Job

8. Get Downtown

9. After the Scene Dies

10. (It’s Gonna Be) I Told You So

11. Santa Fe

12. The Flying Wallendas

13. Eyes Like Glue

14. Girls Who Smoke (Bonus track – vinyl only)

Drive-By Truckers on tour:

1/14 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club

1/15 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club

1/16 Athens, GA 40 Watt Club

1/28 Huntsville, AL Crossroads Music Hall

1/29 Mobile, AL Soul Kitchen

1/30 Tuscaloosa, AL Jupiter Bar & Grill

2/11 Greenville, SC Handlebar

2/12 Raleigh, NC Lincoln Theatre

2/13 Raleigh, NC Lincoln Theatre

2/14 Knoxville, TN Bijou Theatre

2/25 Charlotte, NC Neighborhood Theatre

2/26 Charlottesville, VA Jefferson Theatre

2/27 Charlottesville, VA Jefferson Theatre


Palin slammed for using her autobiography for “petty and pathetic” score-settling

Senator John McCain’s aides have slammed Sarah Palin for criticizing the press strategy of the former presidential nominee’s campaign in her upcoming book.
In her book, Palin charges that the staffers assigned to her by McCain’s team blocked her from speaking to the press aboard the campaign plane.
“Aboard the campaign plane I was within twenty-five feet [...]

Drive-By Truckers: Live from Austin, TX

By: Brian Gearing

Maybe the liner notes are an apology: “It’s the songs,” says Austin City Limits producer Terry Lickona; and yes, the songs are great, but pop in the CD of the Drive-By Truckers‘ audio/visual combo Live from Austin, TX (New West), and you can’t help but wonder if “their kick-ass rock and roll sound” got left on the bus with the ubiquitous bottle of Jack Daniels.

Patterson Hood has on his nice corduroy jacket, and the set starts off with three relatively subdued numbers for the raucous sextet. Not until “Puttin’ People on the Moon” does the Truckers’ signature Alabama ass-whoopin’ commence in earnest, and with setlists that usually include at least a few ear-bleeders, the CD’s brightest spot is Hood’s narrative before “18 Wheels of Love.” Maybe along with Lickona’s disclaimer should have come directions for use: “Insert DVD first.”

Even before the first notes, it’s obvious that this is a huge honor for the band, and one can understand a degree of reverence for the moment. On the second track, “Heathens,” a quiet song with a redneck punk message, Hood stands in his best rock-out pose, trying mightily to squeeze both rock and reverence from his acoustic guitar. But despite any shyness the band might feel at the outset, they shake off the jitters by Mike Cooley‘s “Ghost to Most.” Yes, Mr. Lickona, the songs are great, but that’s no reason to bury the rock beneath six feet of Texas mud.

There’s no question that DBT has grown up since Southern Rock Opera blew them onto the pages of virtually every music magazine, and Brighter Than Creation’s Dark, the most recent studio album from which five of Live from Austin, TX‘s thirteen tracks come, was testament to that. John Neff‘s pedal steel and Jay Gonzalez‘s keyboards share the stage with Hood and Cooley’s acoustic guitars on “Perfect Timing” and “Heathens,” much like the album versions “The Righteous Path” gets the rock show started proper, and Cooley rips his guitar up like every 13-year-old headbanger’s dream. Shonna Tucker‘s deep country voice slow dances beautifully with Neff’s pedal steel on “I’m Sorry Houston,” and Cooley’s “Space City” is the perfect reprieve after the righteous anger of “Puttin’ People on the Moon” ferments the crowd into a moonshine-soaked, fist-pumping tirade.

The difference in sound quality between the CD and DVD is most evident on “The Living Bubba,” where the reverb nearly shatters the glass on the TV screen, but the stereo speakers just hum along lazily. “Zip City” is more of the same, muffled and quiet. The rockers don’t really rock, and the quiet ones just snore. The DVD sounds rich and full of ringing guitar strings, chiming organ, rattling drums, and yes, great songs. So, if you’re thinking about buying Live from Austin, TX for your car, take Mr. Lickona’s notes to heart and move along to the next DBT selection in the rack. But, if you like to watch your rock as well as listen, take them as a reminder that yes, beneath Hood’s snarl, Cooley’s cool, and the big rock stomp of Tucker and Morgan, there’s a depth to these songs that’s the real reason you hold this set in your hands. Any band can make your ears bleed, but it’s the ones that make your eyes water that make it to Austin City Limits.

JamBase | TV Land
Go See Live Music!


UK Business Credit Availability Is Hitting Consumers Too

Nine-year lending low forces businesses to cut investment The Bank of England’s (BoE) quarterly review of lending trends found that many firms still experiencing the effects of the credit crunch, with business lending suffering its biggest drop in nine years. Thinking Money highlights that net lending to private non-financial corporations also fell by 5.4 billion [...]

Mark Blankenship: True Blood Sucker Punch: Episode 6

Warning: This post contains spoilers. Welcome to Sucker Punch, the only blog post that ranks the gaudiest moments on this week’s episode of True Blood….

Diane Tucker: Hey, Sarah Palin, Quit Stealing My HuffPost Blogs

(In order to get Ms. Palin’s attention, I use an unforgivable number of ice hockey terms in this post.) Dear Sarah Palin, During your resignation…

Diane Tucker: Fared Shafinury : Austin Singer-Songwriter Learns The Hard Way Not To Jam In Tehran Park (VIDEO)

Classically trained musician Fared Shafinury grew up in Corpus Christi, went to college at the University of Texas, and yet somehow always felt too Iranian for South Texas. So the American singer-songwriter moved to Iran.

Diane Tucker: Iranians Worldwide Roll Out Green Scroll Against Ahmadinejad (PHOTOS)

AUSTIN, TX — When a reporter asked Vaclav Havel to comment on the election protests in Iran, the former Czech president said, “Expressions of solidarity…