Friday, April 10, 2015

Watch the moody trailer for 'True Detective' season 2



Watch the moody trailer for 'True Detective' season 2

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Watch the moody trailer for 'True Detective' season 2

Set in California, the eight-episode story will follow "three police officers and a career criminal (who) must navigate a web of conspiracy in the aftermath of a murder," according to HBO.

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Colin Farrell stars in the next season of 'True Detective.'(Photo: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)

The first teaser for True Detective's anticipated second season is here, and it's looking mighty dark:

What we know so far about the new season: Set in California, the eight-episode story will follow "three police officers and a career criminal (who) must navigate a web of conspiracy in the aftermath of a murder," according to HBO.

Colin Farrell will play Ray Velcoro, "a compromised detective whose allegiances are torn between his masters in a corrupt police department and the mobster who owns him."

Vaughn is Frank Semyon, "a career criminal in danger of losing his empire when his move into legitimate enterprise is upended by the murder of a business partner."

Rachel McAdams and Taylor Kitsch round out the series' four main characters, playing a cop and a highway patrol officer, respectively.

Season 2 premieres on June 21, and we can't wait to see more.

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Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2015/04/09/true-detective-season-two-trailer/25524781/



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Thursday, April 9, 2015

Unanswered questions in Dzhokhar Tsarnaev trial and more



Check out five opinions trending online, from White House gossip to the return of the Comma Queen.

Unanswered questions in Tsarnaev trial: Who helped the Tsarnaev brothers build their bombs, and why did the FBI fail to identify Tamerlan? Writing in the New York Times op-ed page, Russian writer Masha Gessen lays out some questions the trial didnt answer.

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Where were the bombs built? Investigators have testified that they were not built at the older brothers apartment or in the younger brothers dorm room. Were they built in someone elses apartment, house, or garage? If so, who, and was he a knowing accomplice? Did he help in any other way? Gessen writes.

The other big question is: Why did the FBI fail to identify Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the older brother, who had been fingered as a potential terrorist risk two years before the bombing and interviewed by field agents? Read more.

A call for body cams for police: A bystanders smartphone recorded video of the sickening killing of Walter Scott by a white police officer in South Carolina. But what if that bystander hadnt been there, asks the Washington Post editorial board.

Instead of relying on bystanders to provide evidence of wrongdoing, however, police departments should accept and accelerate the deployment of body cameras (which the North Charleston mayor has done in the wake of the shooting). Crime video isnt always perfect. But, as the Slager episode shows, it can prove crucial. Read more.

Facebook blues: Social comparison makes people feel depressed, and really, isnt that what Facebook is all about? James Hamblin does a Q&A in the Atlantic with social scientist Mai-Ly Steers about this source of existential panic.

Hamblin: So maybe everyone could just agree to post things that are only mildly interesting? So everyones lives seem accurately quotidian and banal?

Steers: Ive seen pictures of peoples Subway sandwiches. It really depends on the person and what they feel is important.

Read more.

White House confidential: After the Monica Lewinsky scandal broke, the atmosphere in the Clinton White House was chilly that is, when Bill and Hillary werent fighting, according to the staff. Reporter and producer Kate Andersen Brower takes us behind the scenes in her new book, The Residence. Politico has an excerpt:

During the height of the drama, Hillary routinely missed afternoon appointments. The details of running the executive mansion, understandably, took a backseat to saving her husbands presidency and their marriage. For three or four months in 1998, the president slept on a sofa in a private study attached to their bedroom on the second floor. Most of the women on the residence staff thought he got what he deserved. Read more.

Lets get restrictive: For grammar buffs who know a restrictive clause when they see one, Mary Norris, the New Yorkers Comma Queen, explains comma usage in the third episode of her video series. Sharpen your pencils and find it here or watch below.

Ellen Clegg is a member of the Globe staff. She tweets @ellenclegg.

Source: http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2015/04/09/unanswered-questions-dzhokhar-tsarnaev-trial-and-more/3oEIPU5MGSfe2vt0V0wKqJ/story.html



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Here is Tesla's New Model S 70-D, Starting at $75000



Tesla's new entry-level sedan comes with an improved battery, all-wheel drive and the ability to go from zero to 60 mph in 5.2 seconds. The Model S 70-D also comes with a higher price tag, starting at $75,000.

Tesla will stop selling the older model, the Model S 60, on Wednesday. It started at $70,000 and featured rear-wheel drive, the ability to go 208 miles on a charge, and could go zero to 60 mph in 5.9 seconds.

The new Model S 70-D will have an increased range of 250 miles, and include Tesla's Autopilot hardware and parking sensors. While the price tag might seem high, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said that with rebates and savings on gas, it really comes out to around $55,000 over five years.

For those pulling out their wallets right now, the car is also available in three new colors: Ocean Blue, Obsidian Black and Warm Silver. Those waiting for Tesla's Model X SUV will have to wait until "early 2016."

IN-DEPTHSOCIAL Keith Wagstaff

First published April 8 2015, 7:51 AM

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/here-teslas-new-model-s-70-d-starting-75-000-n337861



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Jeff Van Gundy Loves Jack Nicklaus, Not So Much Augusta's Racist Past (Video)



Want a great way to shut down some golf chatter? Just bring up one of the discriminatory history of one of the games iconic courses. That usually does the trick.

ESPN analyst Jeff Van Gundy went that route Wednesday night when Mike Breen, one of his colleagues on the Dallas Mavericks-Phoenix Suns broadcast brought up The Masters, and how Van Gundy probably wouldnt make a great golf announcer. Lets just say Breen was right.

Asked for his hot take on golfs first major tournament of the year, Van Gundy quipped, Oh, like how they didnt allow black people and women in there?

Predictably, Breen and Mark Jackson were rendered speechless.

Yeah, Im glad were quiet about that, Van Gundy said.

But anyway, Van Gundy said, how about Jack Nicklaus making a hole-in-one (Wednesday) in the par-3 tournament?

Thumbnail photo via Jerome Miron/USA TODAY Sports Images

Source: http://nesn.com/2015/04/jeff-van-gundy-loves-jack-nicklaus-not-so-much-augustas-racist-past-video/



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Boyd talks 'The Voice,' success and his Packers jersey



Craig Wayne Boyd, reigning champ of The Voice, will perform Sunday at the Meyer Theatre in Green Bay as part of the Y100 St. Jude Jam. Pssst, dont tell his friends back home in Texas, but he owns a Green Bay Packers jersey.(Photo: Chad Lee)

Craig Wayne Boyd apologizes for calling a few minutes late for an early morning phone interview on Tuesday, but once you hear his schedule, it's a wonder he found the time at all.

The winner of Season 7 of NBC's "The Voice" spent the night before taping with Christian music singer Jason Crabb for Trinity Broadcasting Network. It was up early the next morning to do an interview, wrap that one up so he could get in the car to do another and then off to shoot a Nissan commercial.

Such is life these days for the native Texan since Team Blake (Shelton) and "The Voice" put his country music career on the fast track last December.

"It's like nonstop," said the 34-year-old Boyd. "The rock star life is not what most people think it is. It's a lot of late nights and early mornings."

Not that he's complaining. At all.

"It's good to be busy. It beats sitting still, wondering what you're supposed to do next because you have no clue and there's no money coming in."

He knows a little something about that side of the country music dream, too. He moved to Nashville in 2004, pounding the pavement and playing bars before eventually signing a publishing deal and opening for Randy Houser and Jamey Johnson. It was his appearance on "The Voice," where he showed off his range by singing everything from "The Old Rugged Cross" to Alabama's "In Pictures," that gained him national attention. His coronation song from the show, "My Baby's Got a Smile on Her Face," shot to No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart.

He comes to Green Bay on Sunday as part of the Y100 St. Jude Jam, a benefit for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital featuring headliner Rodney Atkins. He'll be back in the state in August for the Wisconsin State Fair. He jokes that "y'all need to turn the heater up" in the state and he'd get up this way more often.

People often think of "The Voice" winners as achieving overnight success, but you paid your dues for 11 years before that show. How do those experiences serve you well now?

"All of the hard knocks and the struggles I have been through up until to this point have prepared me for where I'm headed to, because by no means do I think I have arrived yet. There are so many things that I want to do and places that I want to take my music to that I have not achieved. I just want to continue to keep my nose to the grindstone and work hard and take my music out to the people and hope that they continue to love it."

What can you tell fans about the album you're currently working on? Do you feel pressure to deliver after your win on "The Voice"?

"I never feel pressure, because music is something that's organic, and I feel like it's coming from a new place. It's coming from a fresh place for me, because coming off of a TV show and knowing what worked on there, I've approached the music that I'm putting out along the same lines as what I did on the show. I performed songs on the show that were songs I would've cut had they not ever been recorded. The thoughts and the feels that were on that show are the thoughts and the feels that I'm putting into this album."

Do you feel like you have a strong foundation to work from, having grown up with traditional country and gospel?

"Absolutely. It's something that has been lacking in music, and there's been an outcry I've noticed from people. They want real stories. They want subject matter they can relate to, and that's what I'm striving to give folks."

What has it meant to you to have Blake Shelton as a mentor?

"I owe a lot to him, because he brought my confidence back out. Being in Nashville and all the no's I kept getting over and over, he really encouraged me to stick to my guns and that my gut instincts would always be right."

You have a really diverse slate of artists you're playing with as you tour. Do you become a sponge and just soak up all you can from them?

"I sang one of their songs on the show, The Marshall Tucker Band, I'm playing with those guys. I'm playing with people like Buckcherry, and then turning around and playing with Marty Stuart and Dwight Yoakam. So the spectrum of other musical artists I'm playing with is very well-rounded, but I can learn something from each and every one of those guys."

Are you watching the current season of "The Voice"?

"I keep up with it vicariously through social media. I put my votes in last night."

As a child, did you ever get called out by your first name and middle name if you were being naughty?

"'Wayne' was only used if I was in trouble, and it perked my ears up."

Being from Texas, you must be a big Dallas Cowboys fan. The Cowboys-Packers rivalry is always a good one.

"Last time I was up your direction I got into a bet that I probably shouldn't have and yep, I own an Aaron Rodgers jersey."

kmeinert@pressgazettemedia.com and follow her on Twitter @KendraMeinert.

DO IT

Who: Rodney Atkins, Craig Wayne Boyd, Austin Webb and Kelsea Ballerini

What: Y100 St. Jude Jam

When: Doors at 5 p.m., show at 6 p.m. Sunday

Where: Meyer Theatre, 117 S. Washington St., Green Bay

Tickets: $25; Ticket Star outlets, (800) 895-0071 and ticketstaronline.com

Read or Share this story: http://gbpg.net/1FCTjrK

Source: http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/entertainment/music/2015/04/08/boyd-talks-voice-success-packers-jersey/25480885/



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Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Masters 2015: 'We were proud that a black man had won. Very, very happy...'



It was a fateful form of trespass. Jackson, whose less than promising start in life left him seeking makeshift golf practice on open fields and playgrounds, began caddying at the National as a 14-year-old in 1961 and will this week take his final bow after what will be his 53rd Masters.

Hes seen a fair bit; taken a few risks, down those years. He braved a backlash in 1970 by carrying Gary Players bag, after the South African had seemed to support the policy of apartheid. Another caddy received death threats after agreeing to join Player and withdrew. But Jackson, by then a young father, really needed the money.

It was six years later that he began his partnership with Ben Crenshaw and it has been against considerable odds that it has lasted ever since, with two Masters triumphs together 1984 and 1995 along the way. Augusta made the Masters a far whiter place in 1983 when it abandoned the stipulation that players must use club caddies the black loopers and allowed the superstars to bring in their friends, all white, to do the job instead.

Jackson vividly remembers the way that those black caddies were eased out that year. There had been a rainstorm in 1982, the caddies were late off the green and had all been told to put your clubs down by the caddy room, get dry and get home, he relates, in the soft voice which barely breaks a whisper. There was a shotgun start the next morning and golfers arrived to find their clubs wet. It was the straw that broke the camels back, he says. Players were already demanding their own caddies and no one could be forgiving.

One of the white caddies who began work at that time remembers the effect on the loopers. It was a killing blow for them, he says. They also told members they couldnt tip the club caddies. They hurt them twice over.

It was testament to Crenshaws foresight that he stuck with Jackson and his intuitive knowledge of the Nationals nuances. Their journey concluded with the 68-year-old caddy being presented with the keys to Augusta this week. Jackson and Crenshaw received cut glass bowls before a valedictory pre-tournament press conference at which Crenshaw paid rich tribute to his old partner. Ive loved the work and its paid my way, says Jackson.

And therein lies the story of the Augusta Nationals complex relationship with race. The racial demarcations of the place scream out to those uninitiated with it.

Black men sweep the carpets in the press room, using willow brooms straight out of the 19th century. The faces of those who serve in the canteen are, almost universally, the same colour. So, too, those who are on hand, with warmth, to spare us the trouble of opening a door. Its work. It pays their way, too.

Ben Crenshaw hugs Carl Jackson on the 18th green after winning the 1995 tournament (Getty)And yet to walk amid the patrons who line the tee boxes and fairways to watch the golf is to occupy an almost exclusively white space. Walk these acres for the past three days and you would have witnessed perhaps 10 faces of African extraction among those who are here to do anything but serve. This, in a city where 55 per cent of the population is black. It is 18 years since Tiger Woods became the first black man to win the Masters, but his face will still stand out this afternoon.

No surprise all of this, perhaps, since it was only in 1990 that the occupants of Nationals inner sanctum finally agreed to alter the 100 per cent white complexion of the place. The mono-racial Shoal Creek club had just been warned that it would be excluded from the PGA tour if it continued to exclude people of colour. Augusta saw the writing on the wall and, for the first time, a black man was allowed through the door in a capacity other than sweeper or doorman.

When Woods clinched that Masters, Jackson anticipated a different complexion to Augusta than the one in which he will be the only African-American teeing off this week. We were proud to see one of our own come through that day, he says. We were proud that a black man won. Very, very happy.

And though it is not the role of a golf club to institute the socio-economic development of the city outside, Jackson might also have expected the development of one of the planets most lucrative sporting events to send out some wealth beyond Magnolia Drive.

The Augusta you will conceptualise magnolia, yellow juniper, azalea, baize green jackets and turf actually bears no comparison with what lies down beyond the railway lines on Old Savannah Street, perhaps two miles away.

There are echoes of Detroit down there: fire-gutted clapboard houses, abandoned to their fate; others collapsing in on the inhabitants who stared out vacantly from verandas on Wednesday night. The white exterior of two boarded-up shacks offers graffiti potential. We hate n****s is scrawled on both. A roughly fabricated sign Stop the black on black crime deconstructs any simplistic notions about race and crime around here.

Click HERE to view full-size graphic

Jackson is phlegmatic about the poverty which still stalks the place after all these years. As a believer in the word of G*d, I know that word says there is always going to be poor among us, he says. There is going to be unjust things in the world. Its not just the black kids who are poor.

His outlook reflects the abundance of churches in the network of dead ends that run off Old Savannah: Green Grove Missionary Baptist Church, Good Samaritan Baptist, a dozen more.

His philosophy is that the individuals like him not the Augusta National are supposed to make things different. His charity, Carls Kids, creates a bridge to golf for what he describes as under-served children.

We are not trying to find another Tiger or [Phil] Mickelson, but good citizens, he says. What causes the great divide is education. And we believe that golf can help teach them integrity and how to respect your opponent. It can produce young men and women of good character.

This is what impassions him, not racial inequality. Carlskids.com, he says. You got that? So any kid in the world can see it.

It is against the backdrop of Augustas exclusivity that Jackson wonders aloud if he will ever get back to this golf course once he and Crenshaw have tackled Amen Corner for one last time on Friday. I would like to come back with my family, he says. But I cant come back as a caddy and I dont want to put anyone at the Augusta National on the spot.

So I put it to Bill Payne, chairman of the club, during his press conference, that some form of life membership might be needed to give Jackson, soul of this place, the same right to return that was bestowed upon Crenshaw as a former champion.

We dont have any lifetime membership, Payne replied. Ive been in discussion all week with Ben [about how] he and Carl mark the end of Bens career.

So, might Jackson return in perpetuity, I asked once again. We dont have lifetime membership for employees of the club, Payne said.

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/golf/masters-2015-we-were-proud-that-a-black-man-had-won-very-very-happy-10163612.html



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Rand Paul gets testy in NBC interview about foreign policy



Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., kicked off his presidential campaign at a Kentucky rally on April 7. (Carolyn Kaster, AP)

A day after declaring his presidential bid, Sen. Rand Paul took issue with a line of questioning over his foreign policy positions.

The Kentucky Republican clashed with NBCs Savannah Guthrie on the Today show when she tried to ask whetherhes changed his positions over the years on issues such as the threat posed by Iran and its nuclear ambitions and foreign aid to Israel.

Pauls foreign policy stance, in which hes generally opposed to U.S. intervention unless there are clear national security interests, could come under fire from more hawkish GOP rivals as the battle for the nomination unfolds. But his interactions with the news media will also be scrutinized, particularly following his February appearance on CNBC in which he got agitatedwith anchor Kelly Evans.

As Paul attempted to speak Wednesday, Guthrie spoke over him and suggested her query would be better phrased as: Have I changed my opinion? That would sort of be a better way to approach an interview.

He began his answer when Guthrie asked if Iran was still a threat. No, no, no, no, no, no. Listen, youve editorialized. Let me answer you ask a question, and you say, Have your views changed? instead of editorializing and saying my views have changed.

In his campaign kickoff speech, Paul said Tuesday that he would insist any deal with Iran about its nuclear weapons program be brought before Congress. He drew applause for saying he would oppose any deal that does not end Irans nuclear ambitions and include strong verification measures.

Paul expressed his skepticism about the framework of the Iran deal during his Today show interview, saying he does believe negotiation is better than war.

Source: http://onpolitics.usatoday.com/2015/04/08/rand-paul-iran-savannah-guthrie/



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