Monday, February 4, 2013

One Gaming Community - Internet Radio

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    On his show, Comedian Rodney Perry covers arts and entertainment, everything from comedy and politics to music and acting, with his signature comedic slant.

  • MashUp Radio is a 30-minute podcast that discusses the fusion of technology, life, culture and science. Host Peter Biddle, engineer and executive for Intel?s Atom Software, dishes up a thought-provoking discussion.

  • Joy Keys provides her listeners with insight to improve their lives mentally, physically, monetarily and emotionally. Past guests on the show have included Meshell Nedegeocello, Blair Underwood, in addition to an impressive list of CEOs, humanitarians and authors.

  • Host Barry Moltz gets small businesses unstuck. He has founded and run small businesses with a great deal of success and failure for more than 15 years. This is a business radio show where he shares all the craziness of small business. It?s that craziness that actually makes it exciting, interesting and totally unpredictable.

  • The Bottom Line Sports Show is hosted by former NBA stars Penny Hardaway, Charles Oakley, Mateen Cleaves. Tune in to get the inside scoop on what's happening in sports today.

  • Deepak Chopra Radio provides an online forum for compelling and thought provoking conversations on success, love, sexuality and relationships, well-being and spirituality.

  • Hits Radio covers basketball, sports culture and entertainment with past guests including Jason Kidd, Robin Lundberg and Chris Herren.

  • Listeners get an earful on The Halli Casser-Jayne Show, Talk Radio for Fine Minds. Whether it?s the current political cocktail or the latest must-read award-winning book, Halli tackles all topics and likes to stir ? and sometimes shakes ? things up.

  • Official Internet radio show of forthcoming epic paranormal investigation book by Eric Olsen and "Haunted Housewife" Theresa Argie.

  • Award-winning World Footprints is a leading voice in socially responsible travel and lifestyle. Hosts Ian & Tonya celebrate culture and heritage and bring a unique voice to the world of travel.

  • Football Reporters Online is a group of veteran football experts in the fields of coaching, scouting, talent evaluation, and writing/broadcasting/media placement. Combined, the group brings well over 100 years of expertise in sports.

  • Host John Martin interviews the nation's leading entrepreneurs and small biz experts to educate small business owners on how to be successful. Past guests have included Emeril Lagasse and Guy Kawasaki.

  • The Movie Geeks share their passion for the art through interviews with the stars of and creative minds behind your favorite flicks and pay tribute to big-screen legends. From James Cameron and Francis Ford Coppola to Ellen Burstyn and Robert Duvall, The Geeks have got'em all.

  • Sylvia Global presents global conversations pertaining to women, wealth, business, faith and philanthropy. Sylvia has interviewed an eclectic mix from CEOs and musicians to fashion designers and philanthropists including Randolph Duke and Ne-Yo.

  • Mr. Media host Bob Andelman goes one-on-one with the hottest, most influential minds from the worlds of film, TV, music, comedy, journalism and literature. That means A-listers like Kirk Douglas, Christian Slater, Kathy Ireland, Rick Fox, Chris Hansen and Jackie Collins.

  • Paula Begoun, best-selling author of Don't Go to the Cosmetics Counter Without Me, separates fact from fiction on achieving a radiant, youthful complexion at any age. She?s regularly joined by health and beauty experts who offer the latest on keeping your skin in tip-top shape.

  • Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onegamingcommunity/2013/02/03/super-bowl-show-mature-g4r-radio

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    Sunday, February 3, 2013

    93% Amour

    All Critics (148) | Top Critics (39) | Fresh (137) | Rotten (11)

    In many ways it's the best horror film I've ever seen. At the same time, it's hard to recommend; I believe I will be struggling to forget this film as long as I live. I doubt I'll succeed.

    As remarkable as Haneke's films are, not a one has been as transcendently generous as Amour, which is nominated for five Academy Awards, including best picture, best director and best foreign-language film.

    "Amour" isn't just a great movie, it's a movie that may actually do you some good.

    Shot in long, static takes, Amour stares directly into the indignities of old age and the curse of a slow death.

    Each actor draws on a lifetime's worth of experience, performing with grace and rare, uncompromising realism.

    Beautifully acted and unflinching, Amour goes where few movies have the courage to

    Riva's performance is undeniably magnificent, as she must chart every step of Anne's physical and mental deteriorating with exacting precision.

    Sadly effective, with two standout performances.

    Death, illness and tragedy transcend demographics, and the characters in "Amour" are all of us in the end.

    Moving, touching and beautifully acted. The question: Do audiences want to spend two hours watching an old couple go from sad to sadder to saddest?

    It is an inspirational film in the truest sense, and one to see with someone you love.

    ...this deceptively simple film makes clear that death, real death, the kind we all face and most art refuses to address honestly, is relentless and unsentimental.

    This is beautiful film, and a terrible one: devastating to stick out, and yet one of the most remarkable romances ever made...

    One of the ten best films of 2012.

    Amour may not inspire the kind of emotional epiphany that similar illness-driven dramas tend to, the results are still riveting.

    Death is part of love's bargain, and Haneke lays this fact bare.

    It is hard to recommend Amour. Austrian director Michael Haneke's film cannot justly be described as entertaining, and it will likely leave you sad and weary. But it is a film you must see.

    "Amour" isn't easy to watch, but its rewards are many.

    "Amour" isn't a fun time out at the movies, and I kind of doubt I'll ever see it again. But it's an amazingly act, absolutely heartbreaking film.

    A viewer may want to watch Amour, because it is a work of art.

    Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/771307454/

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    Movement Philosophy: Why Dance Education?

    During my time as a full time teacher, I was asked many times, "Why do we have to learn dance?" by my students. Some parents ask the same, even many teachers do. My subject was considered unimportant in school, especially when other than the International Baccalaureate students, they are not taking any formal examinations for it.

    So why am I teaching it? Why is the school offering it? Why does all the students up to year 9 have to do it?

    Well, at first, I even questioned myself. I did not grow up in a different environment from them. I went to government school, where language, math and science were given top priority. Subject like art (specifically visual arts), were looked down upon as unnecessary, an extra A for the gifted and that's about it. It was simply my love for the art form that caused me to take it seriously. But yet, it still appear very co-curricular and seemingly exists in the realm of leisure and entertainment.

    Why? "I don't know."

    "Because you are in this school and the school wants you to."

    "Because you need to move and get some exercise."

    "So that you can relax and take your mind off the books for awhile."

    "Because you have a body..."

    But really. "We all have a body, don't we?" as Sir Ken Robinson mentions in his speech in TED, which beautifully and humourously illustrates the importance of dance as an arts education.

    So well, as long as we have a body, and we live in/with it until the day we die, shouldn't we learn more about it? Learn how to use it, take care of it, get creative and have fun with it? (in many more ways...)

    And learning dance is more than just learning to use it athletically like in PE, but the benefits of learning dance includes those of learning music and visual arts.

    From simple dance exercises, students learn to listen, pay attention to and respond to music, its beats and nuances.

    In a creative dance or improvisation class, students learn to create and express their emotions through a healthy physical channel, and learn to develop a aesthetic considerations in the process. This kind of class is also very therapeutic.

    And not to forget, it is also a fun way of getting to know your friends and yourself!

    But one of my biggest reasons for loving and teaching dance was simply about connecting with the body, the anatomy, the movements, the sensations, and wonder.

    So, as I often say, learning dance is not just about another subject in your time table. Learning dance is learning about yourself, your body, your emotions. It's your life...

    So? Do you have other great answers to this?

    Source: http://movementphilosophy.blogspot.com/2013/02/why-dance-education.html

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    Accountants, Financial Advisors and Estate Planning | Morris, Hall ...

    I was visiting my dentist the other day, and while I was there, I asked him about some pain I was having in my ankle.? He told me that what I needed to do was ?walk it off,? and I should feel better in a few days.? Now that my ankle is the size of a grapefruit, I?m wondering if his advice was flawed?

    Obviously, I made up that story.? Hopefully, very few people, if any, would look for orthopedic advice from their dentist (no matter how smart their dentist may be).

    Although such an occurrence would be strange, it is happening all the time in another context.? Many people are going to their accountants and/or financial advisors to get legal advice.? In fact, they might not even realize that is what they are actually doing.

    Our attorneys are well versed in all aspects of estate planning, and we provide you with correct and updated information and instructions necessary to carry out your estate plan.? However, some clients, in talking with their accountants and financial advisors, get advice to take actions that jeopardize their estate plans. ?This is similar to going to your dentist to get advice on an ankle injury!

    Accountants and financial advisors play an important role in the estates of clients, and most perform their functions well.? But planning an estate is a complex process that requires an in-depth understanding of state and federal tax, property, asset protection and health care laws, as well as how the individual client?s goals and concerns are accommodated by the laws and planning strategies.? Accountants and financial advisors do not have, nor should they be expected to have, the full picture in creating and maintaining an estate plan.? Therefore, their advice on legal matters regarding your estate plan will not be adequate and will likely have a negative affect on your plan.

    The two biggest areas in which we are seeing problems are beneficiary designations for life insurance policies and retirement plans.? Generally, the beneficiary on your life insurance should be your trust. ?For a married couple, the beneficiary designation on a retirement account should be spouse primary and trust contingent.? For a single person, the trust should be the beneficiary of both life insurance and your retirement accounts.

    Just as you wouldn?t enlist your dentist?s aid for orthopedic matters, please be careful of any legal advice you might receive from your accountant or financial advisor concerning your estate plan.? If any instructions or suggestions we have given are ever unclear to you, please contact us at 888.804.5340.? We are always available to answer your estate planning questions.

    Jim Plitz, Attorney, Phoenix, Estate Planning, Asset Protection, LawyerContributed by MHK Albuquerque, Santa Fe and Las Cruces Estate Planning Attorney James P. Plitz.

    Why Choose Morris, Hall & Kinghorn:
    You have a number of options when it comes to estate planning, so why pick Morris, Hall & Kinghorn?? First off, estate planning and asset protection are a very complicated endeavor and you should only trust someone who focuses exclusively on those matters.? Also, MHK is a proud member of The American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys (AAEPA) which provides us additional support, advanced training, tools and information that is not available to others ? which means that we can better protect your assets and your loved ones.? We are one of only two firms in Arizona that belong to the AAEPA and are the only firm in New Mexico that has been granted membership.? If you have assets and loved ones that you want to protect, you are in good hands with MHK.? Contact us today at 888.804.5340 to schedule an appointment!

    This blog should be used for informational purposes only.? It does not create an attorney-client relationship with any reader and should not be construed as legal advice.? If you need legal advice, please contact an attorney in your community who can assess the specifics of your situation.

    Related Posts

    Tagged: Albuquerque, Arizona, Arrowhead, Assets, Attorney, Cave Creek, Death, Deceased, Estate Plan, Estate Planning, Family, Flagstaff, Fountain Hills, Gilbert, Goodyear, Las Cruces, Law, Law firm, Lawyer, Legal, Loved one, Mesa, New Mexico, Phoenix, Prescott, Probate, Protection, Santa Fe, Scottsdale, Sedona, Services, Sonoita, Tempe, Tucson

    Source: http://morristrust.com/2013/02/accountants-financial-advisors-and-estate-planning/

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    Saturday, February 2, 2013

    NASA 'Space Network' receives boost from satellite

    NASA launched a new communication satellite from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on Wednesday evening. This satellite is one of three expected to reach space between now and 2015, upgrading the agency's communication network.?

    By Miriam Kramer,?SPACE.com / January 30, 2013

    An Atlas 5 rocket carrying NASA's TDRS-K next-generation satellite launches from a pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida at 8:48 p.m. ET on Jan. 30, 2013.

    NASA TV

    Enlarge

    A next-generation NASA relay satellite was launched into orbit Wednesday (Jan. 30) on a mission to upgrade a vital communications network linking the space agency to its spacecraft orbiting the Earth.

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    The U.S. space agency's first launch of 2013, the new?Tracking and Data Relay Satellite K?(TDRS-K for short) soared spaceward atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida at 8:48 p.m. EST (0148 Jan. 31 GMT).

    "We have a customer that's quite thrilled right now to have a healthy satellite on orbit," Tim Dunn the TDRS-K flight director said in a NASA TV interview after the launch.

    The TDRS-K satellite is bound for an orbit 22,300 miles (35,888 kilometers) above Earth, where it will join a constellation of five other satellites currently in orbit to help NASA and other space agencies stay in touch with orbiting spacecraft.

    NASA's TDRS communications network began in 1983 and has not received an upgrade since 2002, when the space agency launched its 10th TDRS satellite. Five satellites are currently in use today, with the TDRS-K launch adding one more that number, mission managers said. [Launch Photos: NASA's TDRS-K Satellite Blasts Off]

    The TDRS-K satellite is expected to spend at least 15 years, but agency officials expect that the satellite will exceed its projected life-expectancy. Many of the network's satellites have?outlived their expected mission lifetimes, ?said Jeffrey Gramling, NASA's TDRS project manager.

    But that does not mean that TDRS-K is unnecessary. One of the satellites currently in active service is slated be retired in the next few months, and other satellites in the aging network are getting older, said Badri Younes, a scientist in NASA's Space Communications and Navigation office.

    The satellite launched today was the first of three new satellites expected to enter service between now and 2015 that should further bolster the network. The TDRS-K mission costs between $350 million and $400 million, not including the price of its rocket.

    The TDRS-K satellite is 26 feet long (8 meters) and weighs about 7,615 pounds (3,454 kilograms). It was expected to separate from its Atlas 5 rocket one hour and 46 minutes after liftoff, with a Centaur upper stage rocket engine slated to carry it the rest of the way to its geosynchronous orbit.

    The satellite is expected to deploy its solar arrays and giant antennas about 11 days after launch, according to a mission description. ?

    NASA's TDRS satellite network?is part of the larger "Space Network" used keep space agencies on the ground in constant communication with orbiting spacecraft. The International Space Station sends all of its data and messages through the network using the TDRS satellites. The rocket that sent TDRS-K into orbit even uses the space network to beam down data, Vernon Thorp, a program manager with NASA said.

    TDRS-K is now entering into a three month period of testing and calibrations, but once those tests are complete the NASA research team will decide if the satellite is ready for service.?

    Follow Miriam Kramer on Twitter?@mirikramer?or SPACE.com?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.?

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_XvygOYhCuk/NASA-Space-Network-receives-boost-from-satellite

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    Friday, February 1, 2013

    A Conversation With The Americans Showrunners Joe Weisberg and Joel Fields

    The Americans' Creator Joe Weisberg (L) and Executive Producer Joel Fields The Americans creator Joe Weisberg, left, and executive producer Joel Fields, right

    Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

    In The Americans, the new FX series that premiered Wednesday night, Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys play Elizabeth and Philip Jennings, two wholesome residents of an all-American suburb of Washington, D.C., circa 1981. But behind the facade of domestic drama, The Americans is an entirely different kind of show: The Jenningses are deep-cover KGB agents at the height of the Cold War. The series was created by Joseph Weisberg, who worked in the CIA?s directorate of operations from 1990 to 1994.

    Slate talked with Weisberg (who is also the brother of Jacob Weisberg, the Slate Group?s editor in chief) and his fellow writer, executive producer, and showrunner Joel Fields about authenticity, history, and making viewers fall in love with murderous Russian spies.

    Slate: Unlike any other espionage drama that I?m aware of on TV, this series was created by a former spy. I hear that Joe plays the ?spy card? when he feels that real spies wouldn?t do something the other writers are suggesting for the characters. Do you worry that viewers aren?t used to accurate portrayals of the spy world?

    Joe Weisberg: I used to worry about that, but now I only worry about the other writers in the room mocking me. People are used to things they?ve seen on TV. If you showed the way things really work, it would be boring. Like police and war, so much of this work is just sitting around, punctuated by moments of extreme violence.

    Joel Fields: There was a great day before we started shooting when Joe sat us down?the writers, Adam Arkin our producer/director, and actors Keri, Matthew, and Noah Emmerich?and took a half-hour with a white board explaining surveillance to us, teaching us how to know if you?re being followed when you?re driving a car, without anyone knowing you?re looking. And then we all went outside and got to practice traffic surveillance.

    Weisberg: I had a great ulterior motive. The only way they would stop mocking me about the spy card is if I gave them spy cards. But coming up in our third episode, we have a surveillance sequence that, for my money, is done more accurately and in a more interesting way than any surveillance sequence I?ve seen before.

    Slate: Are there any other areas, other than surveillance, where you feel you had more realism than the typical TV/movie version of the spy world?

    Weisberg: General tradecraft stuff. What we call communications, which is using signals to contact each other. Dead drops and the way agents are run and handled. A lot of what you see of spies in TV and movies has to do with blowing things up. In the real world, there?s a lot more recruiting and handling and running agents?which is all about relationships and human drama, which lends itself very well to a television show.

    Keri Russell as Elizabeth Jennings and Matthew Rhys as Phillip Jennings. Keri Russell as Elizabeth Jennings and Matthew Rhys as Phillip Jennings in The Americans

    Photo by Craig Blankenhorn/FX

    Slate: Homeland faced a backlash in Season 2 around realism and credibility. Is your show a response to Homeland?s having lost track of the real world?

    Weisberg: I twist myself up in knots thinking about that. In a way, it?s all about what feels real, what you accept as real. I read a lot of criticism of Homeland where people said, ?How would she ever be able to get to walk around headquarters when she?s just a visitor?? I worked at headquarters for four years, and I was leading the charge. I was outraged. And then at one point, I remembered, ?You know what? There was a special badge for visitors who don?t need an escort. And Carrie would be someone who maybe would have been given one of those badges. Actually, crazily enough, that might be realistic.? But it doesn?t matter that I know that, because it seems totally unrealistic.

    What matters is how it feels. John le Carr? says he doesn?t strive for realism, he strives for authenticity, which he defines as what feels authentic. He fully accepts that his novels are not in the least bit realistic, but he tries to make them feel real. You make your own choice?are you going to suspend disbelief or not? I willingly and happily suspend disbelief. I love Homeland.

    Slate: I?m fascinated by Philip and Elizabeth?s relationship. I wonder if the biggest challenge to their survival will come from outside?from the FBI?or from inside their marriage.

    Fields: The Americans is at its core a marriage story. International relations is just an allegory for the human relations. Sometimes, when you?re struggling in your marriage or with your kid, it feels like life or death. For Philip and Elizabeth, it often is.

    Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=1d24f62fd895a56762ccc57c0c38970d

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    BT offers mobile cloud storage service to broadband customers in the UK

    BT offers cloud storage service to broadband customers in the UK

    Your BT broadband account now comes with one more perk to justify its existence: a locker service that takes a leaf out of AT&T's book in offering online storage accessible via iOS and Android apps. How much you get depends on the value of your current contract, with an apparent minimum of 2GB and upgrade options extending up to 500GB. If your cloud needs aren't already being catered for, hunt down those BT login details and then use the links below to activate the service and pick up the app. Think of it as a 2GB gift horse.

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    Via: TheAppSide, Musically

    Source: BT Cloud, Google Play, iTunes

    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/01/bt-cloud-storage-service/

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