Sunday, April 12, 2009

THANKS CHINA.....MORE CRAPPY, TOXIC SHIT IMPORTED TO THE USA



PARKLAND, Fla. – At the height of the U.S. housing boom, when building materials were in short supply, American construction companies used millions of pounds of Chinese-made drywall because it was abundant and cheap.

Now that decision is haunting hundreds of homeowners and apartment dwellers who are concerned that the wallboard gives off fumes that can corrode copper pipes, blacken jewelry and silverware, and possibly sicken people.

Shipping records reviewed by The Associated Press indicate that imports of potentially tainted Chinese building materials exceeded 500 million pounds during a four-year period of soaring home prices. The drywall may have been used in more than 100,000 homes, according to some estimates, including houses rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina.

"This is a traumatic problem of extraordinary proportions," said U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler, a Florida Democrat who introduced a bill in the House calling for a temporary ban on the Chinese-made imports until more is known about their chemical makeup. Similar legislation has been proposed in the Senate.

The drywall apparently causes a chemical reaction that gives off a rotten-egg stench, which grows worse with heat and humidity.

Researchers do not know yet what causes the reaction, but possible culprits include fumigants sprayed on the drywall and material inside it. The Chinese drywall is also made with a coal byproduct called fly ash that is less refined than the form used by U.S. drywall makers.

Dozens of homeowners in the Southeast have sued builders, suppliers and manufacturers, claiming the very walls around them are emitting smelly sulfur compounds that are poisoning their families and rendering their homes uninhabitable.

"It's like your hopes and dreams are just gone," said Mary Ann Schultheis, who has suffered burning eyes, sinus headaches, and a general heaviness in her chest since moving into her brand-new, 4,000-square foot house in this tidy South Florida suburb a few years ago.

She has few options. Her builder is in bankruptcy, the government is not helping and her lender will not give her a break.

"I'm just going to cry," she said. "We don't know what we're going to do."

Builders have filed their own lawsuits against suppliers and manufacturers, claiming they unknowingly used the bad building materials.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission is investigating, as are health departments in Virginia, Louisiana, North Carolina, Florida and Washington state.

Companies that produced some of the wallboard said they are looking into the complaints, but downplayed the possibility of health risks.

"What we're trying to do is get to the bottom of what is precisely going on," said Ken Haldin, a spokesman for Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin, a Chinese company named in many of the lawsuits.

The Chinese ministries of commerce, construction and industry and the Administration of Quality Supervision Inspection and Quarantine did not respond to repeated requests for comment. Chinese news reports have said AQSIQ, which enforces product quality standards, was investigating the complaints but people in the agency's press office said they could not confirm that.

Meanwhile, governors in Louisiana and Florida are asking for federal assistance, and experts say the problem is only now beginning to surface.

"Based on the amount of material that came in, it's possible that just in one year, 100,000 residences could be involved," said Michael Foreman, who owns a construction consulting firm. The company has performed tests on some 200 homes in the Sarasota area and has been tracking shipments of the drywall.

Federal authorities say they are investigating just how much of the wallboard was imported. Shipping records analyzed by the AP show that more than 540 million pounds of plasterboard — which includes both drywall and ceiling tile panels — was imported from China between 2004 and 2008, although it's unclear whether all of that material was problematic or only certain batches.

Most of it came into the country in 2006, following a series of Gulf Coast hurricanes and a domestic shortage brought on by the national housing boom.

The Chinese board was also cheaper. One homeowner told AP he saved $1,000 by building his house with it instead of a domestic product.

In 2006, enough wallboard was imported from China to build some 34,000 homes of roughly 2,000 square feet each, according to AP's analysis of the shipping records and estimates supplied by the nationwide drywall supplier United States Gypsum.

Experts and advocates say many homes may have been built with a mixture of Chinese and domestic drywall, potentially raising the number of affected homes much higher.

So far, the problem appears to be concentrated in the Southeast, which blossomed with new construction during the housing boom and where the damp climate appears to cause the gypsum in the building material to degrade more quickly. In Florida alone, more than 35,000 homes may contain the product, experts said.

In Louisiana, the state health department has received complaints from at least 350 people in just a few weeks. Many of the affected homeowners rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina only to face the prospect of tearing down their houses and rebuilding again.

In another cruel twist, some of the very communities that have been hit hardest by the collapse of the housing market and skyrocketing foreclosure rates are now at the epicenter of the drywall problem.

Foreman warns of a "sleeping beast" in the thousands of bank-owned condos and houses across the country, with no one in them to complain.

Outside the South, it's harder to pinpoint the number of affected homes. And in drier climates such as California and Nevada, it may be years before homeowners begin to see — and smell — what may be lurking inside their walls.

The drywall furor is the latest in a series of scares over potentially toxic imports from China. In 2007, Chinese authorities ratcheted up inspections and tightened restrictions on exports after manufacturers were found to have exported tainted cough syrup, toxic pet food and toys decorated with lead paint.

Scientists hope to understand the problem by studying the chemicals in the board. Drywall consists of wide, flat boards used to cover walls. It is often made from gypsum, a common mineral that can be mined or manufactured from the byproducts of coal-fired power plants.

Plaintiffs in the lawsuits, as well as U.S. wallboard manufacturers, say the tainted drywall was made with fly ash, a residue of coal combustion more commonly used in concrete mixtures.

Fly ash can be gathered before it ever reaches the smokestack, where technology is used to remove sulfur dioxide from the emissions. The process of "scrubbing" the smokestack emissions creates calcium sulfate, or gypsum, which can then used to make wallboard, experts say.

Haldin, the Knaupf Tianjin spokesman, says some domestic drywall is also made from the less-refined fly ash.

But Michael Gardner, executive director of the U.S. Gypsum Association, said American manufacturers gather the gypsum from the smokestacks after the scrubbing, which produces a cleaner product.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has dispatched teams of toxicologists, electrical engineers and other experts to Florida to study the phenomenon. The commission is also working with the Environmental Protection Agency and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to determine whether there is a health hazard.

A Florida Department of Health analysis found the Chinese drywall emits "volatile sulfur compounds," and contains traces of strontium sulfide, which can produce the rotten-egg odor and reacts with air to corrode metals and wires.

But the agency says on its Web site that it "has not identified data suggesting an imminent or chronic health hazard at this time."

"We're continuing to test," said Susan Smith, a spokeswoman for the department, which has logged 230 complaints from homeowners.

Dr. Patricia Williams, a University of New Orleans toxicologist hired by a Louisiana law firm that represents plaintiffs in some of the cases, said she has identified highly toxic compounds in the drywall, including hydrogen sulfide, sulfuric acid, sulfur dioxide and carbon disulfide.

Prolonged exposure to the compounds, especially high levels of carbon disulfide, can cause breathing problems, chest pains and even death; and can affect the nervous system, according to the CDC.

"It is absolutely shocking what is happening," Williams said.

Dr. Phillip Goad, a toxicologist hired by Knaupf Plasterboard Tianjin, sampled drywall from 25 homes, some that contained the company's wallboard and some that did not.

"The studies we have performed to date have identified very low levels of naturally occurring compounds," Goad said. "The levels we have detected do not present a public health concern. The chemicals are naturally occurring. They're produced in ocean water, in salt marsh air, in estuaries."

But those who are living with it are convinced that something is making them sick, including dozens of homeowners in a single subdivision in Parkland, about 50 miles north of Miami. They are now faced with a daunting choice: Tear down and rebuild, or move out and be stuck with a mortgage and a home they cannot sell.

"We are particularly concerned about the safety and well-being of our children," said Holly Krulik, who lives down the street from Mary Ann Schultheis.

She and her husband, Doug, are suffering sinus problems and respiratory ailments, and their young daughter has repeated nose bleeds.

"If a shiny copper coil can turn absolutely black within a matter of months, it certainly can't be good for human beings," Krulik said.

Neighbor John Willis is moving out, even though he can hardly afford to walk away from a house he's owned for just three years. He cries as he speaks of his 3-year-old son's respiratory infection, which eventually required surgery.

"They basically took out a substance that looked like rubber cement out of my 3-year-old son's sinuses," he said. "My wife and I are now faced with the choice between our children's health and our financial health. My children are always going to win on that."

The subdivision's builder, WCI Communities, is in Chapter 11 bankruptcy restructuring and can do little more than log complaints, said spokeswoman Connie Boyd.

The federal government does not regulate the chemical ingredients of imported drywall.

Plasterboard Tianjin said it has been making drywall for 10 years in accordance with U.S. and international standards.

Another Chinese company facing lawsuits, Taishan Gypsum Ltd., also insists that it meets all U.S. standards.

Determining what is causing the problems could take months. Researchers will try to recreate in a lab the conditions that caused the sulfur compounds normally found in drywall to give off noxious gases.

Meanwhile, people like Lisa Sich, 43, are left with more questions than answers. Sich has not felt well since moving into the Henderson, Nev., apartment she rents less than a year ago, and her silverware quickly tarnished.

"I can hear myself wheezing," said Sich, who is having environmental experts test the apartment, built in 2007. "My eyes are constantly itchy, extreme fatigue."

And while Sich is not even certain she's got the bad wallboard, she has not felt like herself in months. She's missed five weeks of work just since Thanksgiving.

"I'm just tired all the time," she said. "It doesn't make sense."

___

Associated Press Writer Joe McDonald in Beijing contributed to this report. Burdeau reported from New Orleans.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

I AM SHOCKED BEYOND BELIEF...TOM PETERSON'S CLOSES AFTER 45 YEARS IN PORTLAND



Tonight I learned that local retailing icon, Tom Peterson's shut its doors on February 28, 2009. While I'm sure his business had been declining for some time, what amazes me is that the local mainstream media failed to cover this historic event.

Anyone who has spent time in the Rose City will never forget his corny commercials, flat-top haircut, Free.... is a very good price, and of course WAKE UP!!! WAKE UP!!!.

One of my prized possessions is a broken Tom Peterson alarm clock, permanently set for 11 o'clock, the time Portland Wrestling would air on KPTV on Saturday nights. Tom was a major sponsor.

For more information check out the following blogs:

http://anotherportlandblog.com/2009/03/tom-petersons-and-glorias-too-1964-2009.html
(some wonderful classic Tom Peterson commercials)

http://zehnkatzen.blogspot.com/2009/03/1964-2009-that-was-tom-peterson-and.html

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Thursday, March 26, 2009

HE'S BAAACK!!!!



















"Don't Tread on me, Bud!"

The new and improved Rantings of a TriMet Bus Driver blog is back. Check it out!!!

http://rantingsofatrimetbusdriver.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

RANTINGS OF A TRIMETBUS DRIVER: GONE, BUT NOT FORGOTTEN

















My good buddy, and blogging mentor, Al Margulies has shut down his award-winning blog Rantings of a TriMet Bus Driver due to objections from TriMet management.

It was a great ride Al, we're gonna miss your rants. I hope to see you online on some other forum soon.

Take care....my friend.

WHAT SENATOR CHUCK GRASSLEY THINKS OF AIG EXECUTIVES



A common expression in the farm belt.

Monday, February 2, 2009

BUDDY HOLLY: SEPTEMBER 7, 1936 - FEBRUARY 3, 1959
























Sorry, Don McLean, but the music didn't die.

50 years later, Buddy Holly's songs are still alive in the tunes we hear today


The wreckage of a single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza was scattered across a small area of snow-covered cornfield outside of Clear Lake, Iowa. The plane crashed into the ground suddenly, so most of the smoldering rubble was concentrated in one area. Three passengers — Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. Richardson, a.k.a. “The Big Bopper” — were ejected from the plane and died on impact, as did the pilot, 21-year-old Roger Peterson.

That happened on Feb. 3, 1959, exactly 50 years ago today.

It was the most infamous plane crash in rock and roll history, aided somewhat in that distinction by Don McLean’s wistful ballad, “American Pie,” in which he referred to the event as “the day the music died.”

Of course, that is erroneous. The music lived.

Assessing the importance of Buddy Holly is a more difficult task today than gathering up the evidence at the crash site was 50 years ago to determine the causes of the accident. In the intervening years, there have been countless Holly-influenced voices that have taken the music in different directions. His presence in music history has spawned so many tributaries that sometimes the source has been taken for granted.

It is a fool’s errand to seize upon the DNA of one individual and proclaim him the father of rock and roll. Chuck Berry was hugely important as a songwriter, performer and guitarist. Little Richard took rhythm and blues, soul and gospel and wove them all into a flamboyant concoction that began to seep into the mainstream. Elvis Presley took black music and packaged it for white audiences. Well before Elvis, in 1951, Ike Turner recorded “Rocket 88,” considered by many to be the first rock and roll song. Bill Haley & His Comets pushed the genre into a wider audience with “Rock Around the Clock” in 1954.

All of these people came along in a great 1950s tsunami that changed the landscape forever.

Today, Holly is recalled by the general public as somewhere between a footnote and an icon. The footnote status rests only with the uninformed, and primarily because Holly lived such a short life. He was only 22 when he died. If you chart his career as a major force in rock and roll from the time he signed his first record contract with Decca, he had only been working as a serious professional for three years, although his music background dates back to his days as a boy playing bluegrass and singing in the choir in Lubbock, Texas.

Buddy Holly was the James Dean of his generation. But whereas Dean — who died at 24 in a car crash in California — was celebrated for his brooding screen presence, it was Holly’s earnestness that defined him. At another time in history, he would have been called a nerd. Instead, he was the embodiment of a new art form that made dancing, shaking, shimmying, twisting and jumping to music as natural an expression of young love and restlessness as making out at Lover’s Lane.

In the year 2009, details of Buddy Holly are sketchy. He wore black horn-rimmed glasses, proper jacket and tie, and short wavy hair. Guitar buffs know him for being one of the very first to brandish a Fender Stratocaster, whose strikingly unique design revolutionized the ax business right at the time Holly was climbing the charts.

While Holly is recalled in random images, his importance acknowledged with reverential nods, it was his songwriting that set him apart and influenced scores of major artists, from the Beatles to the Rolling Stones to Bob Dylan, right down the line. The tradition of the day was to keep with the familiar, which meant covering already successful songs. But Holly stepped in and established himself as one of the first true singer-songwriters who made it big.

He wrote from his small-town sensibility, from “Peggy Sue” to “That’ll Be The Day” to “Not Fade Away” to “Maybe Baby” and more. He was fresh and honest and open, and he exuded a buoyant love of rock and roll and performing that turned his style and substance into magic. Paul McCartney was so enthralled by Holly that he bought his entire song catalog. The problem with rock and roll these days, the reason it has slipped below hip-hop as the dominant music genre, is because generations have copied generations, and thus the original potency of the music has been diluted. Just like rock of the ‘80s and ‘90s generally paled in comparison to what came out of the ‘60s because the music grew farther and farther away from its blues roots, the rock of today is niche-oriented rather than widespread and powerful.

But if you look back at rock and roll as one giant family tree, Buddy Holly was one of a small handful of founding fathers, someone whose influence remains massive and unshakable today. He excited millions. He brought young people from varied backgrounds into the same congregation. He represented the pure, uninhibited joy that made rock and roll great.

Sorry, Don McLean. You wrote a beautiful song, and your intentions were impeccable and honorable. But it only seemed like the music died on February 3, 1959, and that’s understandable. Because at that moment, there was just no way of predicting how long the music would live on.

Now we know.

Michael Ventre lives in Los Angeles and is a regular contributor to msnbc.com.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

NO FURTHER COMMENT IS NECESSARY


BLOWFISH TESTICLES SICKEN SEVEN DINERS IN JAPAN

TOKYO (AFP) – Seven Japanese have fallen ill with one in a critical condition after eating the testes of blowfish, police said Tuesday, renewing public fears over the dangerous delicacy.

The group ate raw meat and baked testes of blowfish -- known in Japan as fugu -- at an upscale restaurant late Monday in Tsuruoka, an old castle town by the Sea of Japan (East Sea), 350 kilometres (220 miles) north of Tokyo.

They were treated at a hospital for numbness in the hands and legs and other symptoms. One of them was in a critical condition on Tuesday.

"The victims included many public welfare volunteers and a town head. They came to party at the restaurant after a public welfare meeting," a Tsuruoka police spokesman said.

The seven men were aged between 61 and 69, except for a 55-year-old secretary at a community centre.

The restaurant, "Kibunya," did not have a licence from the provincial administration to prepare and serve blowfish, which contains tetrodotoxin in its organs, a powerful neurotoxin that can cause death in minutes.

Kibunya's owner, Iwao Aizawa, was being questioned by police on suspicion of professional negligence resulting in injuries.

"It is not so common to eat fugu in this region as it is caught in seas farther south. The fish was purchased from an ordinary dealer," the police official said.

Fugu, cooked in a cauldron or eaten in raw slices, is appreciated in Japan as a culinary delight, especially in the cold winter months. Its testes, known as shirako, are praised as creamy and rich in taste.

Blowfish deaths have fallen since 1983 when the health ministry instructed local authorities to ban eating of its dangerous parts. Only licensed chefs are now allowed to serve blowfish.

Six people died of blowfish poisoning in 2002 but since then Japan has seen no more than three deaths a year, according to health ministry statistics.

Blowfish is even called "teppou (gun)" in western Japan for its famous danger. In 1975, renowned kabuki actor Mitsugoro Bando VIII died at the age of 69 from eating a blowfish liver at a restaurant in Kyoto.


Wednesday, January 21, 2009

APPLIANCES MISSING FROM WHITE HOUSE

President Obama calls wife Michelle to tell her he found a fridge that he likes

DICK CHENEY RUMORED TO HAVE HURT BACK WHILE HELPING TO MOVE REFRIGERATOR

WASHINGTON (CAP) - Showing the resiliency that many say won him the election in the first place, President Barack Obama hugged his wife and children and mustered a smile for the reporters gathered on the South Lawn as he announced that the first family would be spending its first days in the White House without a washer, dryer or refrigerator.

"It, umm, appears that President Bush has, umm, taken the aforementioned appliances with him on his trip back to Crawford, Tex.," Obama said as he fought back tears. "This is not just a difficult time for Michelle and myself, and the girls, but a difficult time for all middle class Americans who just want a pair of clean socks."

According to CAP News sources at the White House, the appliances were present during Obama's walk-through just prior to the inauguration, but were noticed missing for the first time that evening. Witnesses did report seeing a pick-up truck with a large cargo departing from a service entrance shortly after Obama was sworn in as the 44th president, but believed workers were simply leaving with Dick Cheney's oxygen chamber.

"We all knew Obama would be tested as soon as he took that oath," said CAP News political analyst Fuad Reveiz. "How he handles this situation will set the stage for future crises, not the least of which is his own economic microcosm."

To Reveiz' point, Democratic leaders plan to push for $1,500 of the $350 billion in bailout money to be used for the purchase of new appliances for the Obamas. However, an unidentified Obama advisor said the president may be trying to have his old appliances shipped from Chicago if they have not yet been redistributed to another family. Civil rights leaders see a double standard.

"So President Obama has to use his old, crappy appliances - why? Because he's black?" said former Obama pastor Jeremiah Wright. "You know damn well if McCain had won he'd have a new refrigerator that makes those fancy ice cubes and always has a cold glass of water ready for your thirst.

"Everyone knows the way to break a black man's spirit is through his clothes and through his stomach," ranted Wright. "When will The Man stop trying to hold us down?"

Political pundits say if the Obamas do purchase new appliances, it could open the door to an entirely new controversy: whether or not to buy traditional white appliances or go with a more modern black look. Both sides of the aisle agree the new president could come across as indecisive if he opts to avoid any confrontation and go with something along the lines of chrome or stainless steel.

In the meantime, the Obamas have rented a small college dorm refrigerator for immediate needs and are using a local laundromat for their wardrobe thanks to the substantial amount of change they found wedged between the cushions of President Bush's old sofa.

"Thank God he left the toilet," said Reveiz, "or this could have been a lot worse."

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

PRESIDENT OBAMA'S NEW RIDE

The new President of the United States, Barack Obama, will be driven in a completely redesigned Cadillac Presidential Limousine after he is sworn in today.

Built by General Motors the armoured vehicle has been nicknamed ‘The Beast’. It is the latest in a line of cars built by Cadillac for the First Fleet, though historically the President has also been driven in Ford’s luxury brand, Lincoln. The latest Cadillac is reported to have military-grade armour at least eight-inches thick. The car is also said to be fitted with tear-gas cannons, reinforced tyres and a wheelbase built to resist bomb and missile attacks.

It has been 100 years since Congress approved funding for a presidential motor pool. President Wilson rode in a Cadillac during a parade marking the end of World War I and President Coolidge drove a 1928 Cadillac Town Car.

In 1938, the US government received two Cadillac convertibles – the Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Mary which were named after the ocean liners. Both were fitted with two-way radios, powerful generators and a huge array of weaponry. They continued to serve presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Eisenhower. Eisenhower also rode in a Cadillac Eldorado during his 1953 inaugural parade.

Cadillac next appeared in 1983, when President Reagan was driven in a Fleetwood which was the last equipped with the Turbo Hydra-Matic 400 3-speed automatic transmission. President Clinton rode in a Fleetwood Brougham powered by a 454 cubic inch (7.4 liter) V8.

Two presidential limousines have been used by the Bush administration. The first was a Deville Presidential model in 2001. President Bush updated it in 2004 with the DTS Presidential model.

The Secret Service is said to destroy all Presidential Limousines after their retirement to preserve their secrets.

HE'S IN!!!!



Wednesday, January 7, 2009

APPARENT LACK OF WORK FORCES "JOE THE PLUMBER" TO BECOME WAR CORRESPONDENT



TOLEDO, Ohio — Joe The Plumber is putting down his wrenches and picking up a reporter's notebook.

The Ohio man who became a household name during the presidential campaign says he is heading to Israel as a war correspondent for the conservative Web site pjtv.com.

Samuel J. Wurzelbacher (WUR'-zuhl-bah-kur) says he'll spend 10 days covering the fighting.

He tells WNWO-TV in Toledo that he wants to let Israel's "'Average Joes' share their story."

Wurzelbacher gained attention during the final weeks of the campaign when he asked Barack Obama about his tax plan.

He later joined Republican John McCain on the campaign trail. At one stop, he agreed with a McCain supporter who asked if he believed a vote for Obama was a vote for the death of Israel.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

IT'S TAX SEASON AGAIN


DETROIT (AP) — James Howarth is a little confused by two letters he has received from the Internal Revenue Service.

The Detroit defense lawyer received one letter in November that said he owed the IRS money — five cents.

He was warned that he should pay "to avoid additional penalty and/or interest," the Detroit Free Press reported Saturday.

Howarth says he then received a second letter telling him the government owes him money — four cents.

He was told he would have to request the refund since it's less than $1.

"When I owe them a nickel, I must pay them. It's not optional," he said. "But when they owe me, I have to ask for it."

Howarth says he's not sure if there is a connection between the two notices, or if the refund represents a recalculation of the original bill.

The perplexed lawyer says he called an IRS 800 telephone number but gave up after spending a long time on hold.

IRS spokesman Luis D. Garcia says the agency doesn't comment on individual accounts.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

THE TOP TEN POSTINGS FOR MY BLOG FOR 2008

The following are my personal favorites from the past year. They are not in any particular order, but I did limit myself to only one Sarah Palin post. (That was tough!)

Enjoy, and Happy New Year!

1: WARD CLEAVER DERAILS EFFORT TO RENAME PLAZA AFTER SUNSET BOB

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/08/ward-cleaver-derails-efforts-to-rename.html


2: A DAY IN THE LIFE OF GREEN ACRES

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/12/day-in-life-of-green-acres_26.html


3: ROSS WREDE REQUESTS $ 1 BILLION FROM GOVERNMENT BAILOUT

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/11/ross-wrede-requests-1-billion-from.html


4: THEY DID IT!!! I STILL HAVE A HARD TIME BELIEVING IT!!

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/11/they-did-it-i-still-have-hard-time.html


5: DICK CHENEY MEETS JOHNNY CASH

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/10/go-fuck-yourself.html


6: IF YOU WANT PEOPLE TO UNDERSTAND SOMETHING, EXPLAIN IT IN TV TERMS

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/09/cnbc-how-will-bailout-work-no-one.html



7: AL MARGULIES TO SING NATIONAL ANTHEM AT REPUBLICAN CONVENTION

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/08/al-margulies-to-sing-national-anthem-at.html


8: TYPICAL RIGHT WING DOUBLETALK

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/09/typical-right-wing-doubletalk.html



9: PORTLAND WOULDN'T BE THE SAME WITHOUT THIS GUY

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/12/portland-wouldnt-be-same-without-this.html


10: NA NA HEY HEY GOODBYE! ( I cheated: Sarah's included here too.)

http://rosswrede.blogspot.com/2008/12/na-na-hey-hey-goodbye.html

HE'S BACK!!!! JOE THE PLUMBER URGES ALL AMERICANS TO BUY A DIGITAL TV CONVERTER BOX FOR OUR NATIONAL SECURITY

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

BRISTOL COULD EARN $300,000 FOR BABY PICS

Let's hope they stash some of that cash away. With a name like "Tripp", he's going to need some serious therapy someday.

When Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin confirmed that her teenage daughter, Bristol, and boyfriend Levi Johnston were expecting a baby, the celebrity weeklies knew that the first photos of the Palin-Johnston baby would incite a bidding war.

Baby Tripp Easton Mitchell Johnston, born Dec. 28, proved those editors right.
According to one source, bidding for the baby photos began at $100,000. People won out in the end, but In Touch was the only other weekly to make serious bids, according to several sources involved in the process.

The price didn't soar immediately, according to the sources, because Sarah Palin stories just didn’t sell all that well for the weeklies on newsstands. “Sarah was on the cover of People, Us Weekly, and OK! the same week, and really only People saw a bump in sales," says a source.

The drug-related arrest of Johnston's mother, however, caused the price tag for the photos to go up. “The bidding started well before the baby was born, but once Levi’s mom was arrested — well, then you had a story,” says one editor. As for how much teen parents Bristol and Levi made from the deal — most estimates hover around the $300,000 range (none of the magazines would confirm the exact figure in the end, which is standard).

No word on whether the money will go to charity, as sometimes happens in a celeb baby deal.


Friday, December 26, 2008

A DAY IN THE LIFE OF GREEN ACRES



One of my all time favorite television shows.