Sunday, April 24, 2016

Outlander Recap: A Woman Can Only Drink Tea for So Long


"Game of Thrones" Season 6 LA Premiere Emilia Clarke, Lena Headey, Sophie Turner ARRIVALS

What does it mean for a woman to be useful? Thats the question Outlander grapples with this week as Claire, having finally settled in France, searches for something to occupy her ample free time. Despite the endlessly sensational wardrobe options, life must have been excruciatingly dull for women of Claires sort back in the 18th century. Traditional jobs were beneath their station; education was reserved for the domestic arts; even child-rearing was delegated to the help. A woman can only drink tea, play the harpsichord, and swan around at b***s for so long before losing the entirety of her mind.

And, of course, there was (and remains) the matter that not all women are created equal. So much of theexistential angst upper-class women felt was made possible by all those other womenthe working-class ones who had no choice but to spend their lives in servitude, either domestic or industrial. While the 99% were also wives and mothers, they received no gilded preparation for those roles, nor did they have help in fulfilling them. (This, my friends, is why feminism must be intersectional.)

Episode 3, Useful Occupations and Deceptions, recognizes thatwith varying degrees of sensitivity, and success. When the episodeopens, Jamie is carousing in brothels and playing chess with his new friend Duverney, the finance minister, whileClaire sitsaround looking pretty and having tea with ladies. Beingathoroughly modern woman, Claireclearly resentsJamies busy schedule, even more so because Jamieseems utterly oblivious to her boredom. The man is gorgeous and sexy and kind, but sometimes he needs to be guided to the feminist light.

Jamie Fraser is gorgeous and sexy and kind, but sometimes he needs to be guided to the feminist light.

Claires idleness is good for at least one thing, though: gathering information. During a card game, we learn that Mary Hawkinswhos just announced she is horrified at the prospect of sexis the ancestor of Claires dreary 1940s husband Frank, and will be Black Jack Randalls wife at some point in the future past. This presents Claire with yet another conundrum vis--vis telling Jamie that his rapist/nemesis lives: Jamie can get his revenge and murder Black Jack, or Randall can be allowed to live so that dreary Frank can be allowed to live. Its a silly choice (kill the b*****d!), but Claire, as usual, makes it seem as though she is the most put-upon woman in the world.

Mary Hawkins (Rosie Day) and Claire discuss Marys ancestry ( 2016 Starz Entertainment, LLC)

Could be shes frustrated that she and Jamie still arent having s*x. Murtagh, meanwhile, is having quite the bawdy romp with Suzette, the maid, which Claire discovers when she goes looking for Suzette. Its remarkable how quickly Claire has adjusted to her role as lady of the manor. Shes irritated that her maid isnt doing her bidding, when not so long ago, she was uncomfortable at the very idea of having domestic help. Money changes people, obviously.

So much so, it seems, that it turns Claire into a bit of a hypocrite. Now that she knows how Suzette is passing her afternoons, she visits Master Raymond for some ancient birth control powder so no one is inconvenienced by any unintended consequences.Pausewhat? Claire canseekautonomy, but Suzette cant be trusted withher own fertility? Its a bizarre moment for a show otherwise attuned to imbalances of power. Whats worse, it turns out to be a lame plot contrivance: Master Raymond is little more than a masterguffin to getClaire volunteering atthe local charity hospital.

LHopital des Anges is a grim place, but as Claire pulls up, dressed in yet another flawless outfit, she is thrumming with excitement. Mother Hildegarde, a stern nun, is rather skeptical of Claires benevolence and clearly doesnt think much of wealthy women with too much free time. But the nun is quickly won over when Claire tends to a pale, sickly woman. (This, by the way, is how Claire wins over nearly everyone.) After giving the urine sample next to the sick womans bed a good sniff, Claire sweartoGod tastes a sick 18th-century strangers pee. Ill repeat that. She puts a dab of stranger pee in her mouth. While pregnant. Let that linger.

With her improbably vast knowledge of medicine, Claire tells Mother Hildegarde the woman has sugar sickness. Mother Hildegarde is impressedshe has never seen a woman who knows urinoscopy! Even then, expectations for women were desperately low. Now Claire gets to do even grosser things with far sicker people. She is, at last, a woman with a purpose beyond that which society has chosen for her.

Mother Hildegarde (Frances de la Tour) isnt just a sister act, shes also J.S. Bachs BFF. ( 2016 Starz Entertainment, LLC)

Back at the brothel, Duverney, Charles, and Jamie are engaged in tedious man talk when Charles reveals he has secured nearly all the funds he needs for his campaign via pledges from influential Englishmen. Charles also offers the French an alliance with Britain, should the French give him the money he still needs to reinstallhis father on the British thronethus treating us toanother smugness-born-of-perspectiveJeopardy! moment (and its a Daily Double!). For his part, Jamie is consternated because Charles has not confided this secret to him, which means they arent BFFs, and anyway, this development will certainly interfere with the grand Change History plan.

When Jamie gets home, his wife is nowhere to be found, and he is none too pleased. I mean, where could the woman possibly be when she should be waiting at the front door with a martini and a smile? When Claire arrives, Jamie has a temper tantrum, totally destroying Claires excitement about all the boils she lanced and the pee she tasted. Claire explains that she wants to feel useful, which is obviously just silly talk. Her only use, naturally, is sitting around at home, bored and alone, waiting around for whatever her man needs. And, of course, shes pregnant, so at this point, really, she should just stay in bed, because the child she is carrying is far more important than her cute need to be human. How is a woman useful? By being a good wife and mother, Jamie Fraser would have us believe.

Though Claire makes a good argument for, you know, being a sentient, independent woman, Jamie storms off after whining about spending all of his day engaged in treachery, idle flattery, and cavorting in brothels. Clearly, a mans work is never done.

Though Claire makes a good argument for, you know, being a sentient, independent woman, Jamie storms off after whining about spending all of his day engaged in treachery, idle flattery, and cavorting in brothels. Clearly, a man"s work is never done.

Jamie drowns his sorrows at the brothel, where he notices a pickpocket making mischief. He drafts the boy into service and renames him Fergus, which is more manly. All you really need to know here is that Fergus will steal letters between Charles and his financiers so Jamie can copy them, read them, and figure out what the h**l is going on.

While Claire is wasting her time at the hospital feeling useful and using her professional training for the betterment of society (there is oozing pus, a scalpel, and an infection-sniffing dog involved), Jamie appears, needing musical help from Mother Hildegard. The show has its fun as Hildegard ruminates on her buddy, Johann Sebastian Bach, whose music is not the sort to endureclever but no heart. Long story short, the musical score Jamie has brought to the hospital holds the key to decoding the absconded royal correspondence.

Murtagh, Jamie, and Claire figure out that Charles has about 40,000 pounds, which is a lot but not enough, and that Sandringham is one of the men willing to fund the divine-royal-overthrow escapade. Jamie is ecstatic, but Claire is more subduednow she needs to tell Jamie that Randall is alive before he meets with Sandringham. Trying to be a good wife, I guess, she holds her tongue, not wanting to temper Jamies joy.

In the end, Im not sure this episode offers much clarity on what it means for a woman to be useful. But it certainly highlights some of the challenges 18th-century upper-class women were facingall while blithely overlooking, of course, the needs of their middle- and working-class counterparts. I suppose we cant fault Outlander too much. History wasnt made in an episode.

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Source: http://www.wired.com/2016/04/outlander-recap-s2e3/

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Cleveland Cavaliers have Terry Talkin" about Tristan Thompson and Timofey Mozgov heading in different directions ...


Detroit Pistons Vs Cleveland Cavaliers | Full game 1 highlights - NBA Playoffs 2016 | April 17

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Think about the Cleveland Cavaliers at this time a year ago as the playoffs opened. Who would you have considered more valuable -- Tristan Thompson or Timofey Mozgov?

That would have made for an interesting debate. Some would have preferred Mozgov, the 7-foot-1 center who came to the team in January of 2015 and helped spark them to the 34-9 finish. Others would have taken Thompson, the 6-foot-10 forward/center who is more athletic than Mozgov.

Their stats were close. Mozgov averaged 10.6 points and 6.9 rebounds in 25 minutes a game for the Cavs in 2014-15. Thompson was 8.5 points and 8.0 rebounds in 27 minutes.

Thompson was outstanding in the 2015 playoffs, averaging 9.6 points and 10.8 rebounds. That helped secure a five-year, $82 million contract extension in the summer.

At the start of this season, Mozgov had a legitimate reason to believe that type of deal could be coming his way when he becomes a free agent in July of 2016.

WHAT HAPPENED?

Mozgov averaged 10.6 points and 7.3 rebounds in 25 minutes a game during the 2015 postseason. The Cavs didn"t even know Mozgov"s knee was bothering him until he told them after the playoffs. On July 2, he had arthroscopic surgery on the right knee that was supposed to keep him out six to eight weeks.

"Things just snowballed for Timo in a negative way from the beginning," said GM David Griffin. "He came to camp slightly uncomfortable because he"d spent the off-season rehabbing his knee. He wasn"t in the kind of condition to play that he"d like. We spent time getting him in shape."

The comeback was slow.

"There is nothing wrong with the knee," said Griffin. "He"s had no swelling, recurrent issues relative to the surgery. We have to almost throw him off the court after practice because he just wants to keep working. If you have issues with your knee, you would not do that."

This season, Mozgov is averaging 6.3 points and 4.4 rebounds in 17 minutes. He"s not the same shot-blocker or defender. As more teams employ smaller lineups with no real center, his playing time also has been slashed.

"I think he put incredible pressure on himself," said Griffin. "He came into the year with the high level of expectations that we have as a team ... and his own expectations because he"s a free agent ... all that pressure he put on himself made it hard for him to play that way."

There have been times when Mozgov looks as he did season ago, but he hasn"t sustained it. Other games, he drops passes and plays timidly. As I recently wrote, the Cavs too often play poorly as a unit with him on the floor -- and lots of stats back that up.

Mozgov didn"t play in Friday"s Game 3 of the Detroit series. He will be 30 on July 16. It"s hard to imagine the Cavs spending much to keep him as Thompson has taken over at center. Kevin Love has shown he can play some center, and they also added 6-foot-11 Channing Frye.

Thompson, Love and Frye are all on long-term contracts.

It"s also difficult to figure out what type of contract will be awaiting Mozgov this summer, other than it will be considerably less than he"d have received a year ago.

ABOUT THOMPSON

What does Griffin think about Thompson in light of the contract he signed?

"I"m grateful he"s on the team," said the general manager. "Some people have a difficult time understanding the impact he makes on the game because he doesn"t have the traditional statistics (especially scoring). We have a measure known as "win shares," and he"s 22nd in the NBA."

That sounds outrageously high for a player who averaged 7.8 points and 9.0 rebounds, shooting 59 percent from the field and 62 percent at the foul line.

"The reason he"s so essential to us is that he"s a Swiss Army knife type of player," said Griffin. "He can guard any type of frontcourt player. He also can cover some of the deficiencies of others in the front court because he covers so much ground. He has become an infinitely better rim-protector this season. His court awareness has improved significantly."

Thompson has played in 370 consecutive regular season games, the longest current streak in the league. At 25, his game can continue to improve. His weakness is offense, something the Cavs really don"t need.

"Tristan is someone you could have invested any amount of money in and you know he"d continue to work at his craft," said Griffin.

In case you were wondering about a former Cavs big man, Anderson Varejao has played very little since being signed by Golden State in February. He is averaging 2.6 points and 2.3 rebounds in 8.5 minutes per game. He"s sat out six of 28 games since the trade, and played only seven minutes in the postseason.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/pluto/index.ssf/2016/04/cleveland_cavaliers_have_terry_48.html

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Cowlishaw: Uncertainty in net is now very much a factor for the Stars heading into Game 6


Minnesota Wild @ Dallas Stars. Round 1 Game 2

By Tim Cowlishaw , Staff Columnist Contact Tim Cowlishaw on Twitter:

For 82 games, the Stars" two-headed goaltending plan seemed to be, if not quite the stuff of genius, at the very least a working system that kept both Antti Niemi and Kari Lehtonen fresh heading into the playoffs.

Five games into the postseason, the Stars still haven"t wrapped up the first round. And while all sorts of defensive breakdowns contributed to Friday"s 5-4 overtime loss at the AAC, uncertainty in netis now very much a factor as Dallas heads back to Minnesota.

Are the Stars gearing up for a second goaltending change in the first round? That"s rarely a good sign.

But Dallas has given up 12 goals to the Wild in the last three games. That should never happen. Minnesota lacks anything approaching the firepower that the Stars possess. Their leading scorer, Zach Parise, scored 53 points which would have ranked sixth in Dallas. And he hasn"t played a minute in this series.

Lehtonen surrendered five (technically four plus an empty-netter) in a 5-3 loss to Minnesota in St. Paul that cut the Stars" series advantage to 2-1. At than point I was all in favor of giving Niemi the opportunity for Game 4 even though a lot of folks around this team thought it was too soon to pull the plug on Lehtonen.

I didn"t see it as pulling the plug or a benching. Coach Lindy Ruff was simply going from 1 to 1A.

And Niemi was excellent in the third period of Game 4 Wednesday when the Stars appeared to take control of this series with a 3-2 win. Dallas didn"t put a single shot on net in the last 15 minutes of the game, letting the defense and Niemi preserve the victory that set the stage for Friday night.

A sellout crowd of 18,889 was ready to lend full voice to a first-round triumph, to witness the traditional handshake line that would send the Wild home and the Stars on to play the winner of the Blues and Blackhawks in the second round.

It didn"t happen.

Dallas held a 4-3 lead for nearly eight minutes of the third period before Mikko Koivu put the puck past Niemi to tie the score with 3:09 left in regulation. Just 4:55 into overtime, it was Koivu again, redirecting a Ryan Suter shot past Niemi for the game-winner.

Like I said, there were plenty of fingers to point at the defense, in particular the top pair of Alex Goligoski and John Klingberg. But at the same time, the last line of defense has to just show up and make a big save from time to time and that never happened with Niemi Friday.

The Wild won this game, scoring five goals on just 24 shots. Those aren"t numbers that Niemi are any other solid NHL goaltender should surrender. At the opposite end, Devan Dubnyk stopped 37 of the Stars" 41 shots, silencing the "Doob-Nick" chants and extending this series for at least another 60 minutes.

Going home with a 3-1 lead and wrapping up a series in Game Five doesn"t sound like it should be an arduous task. But that"s exactly what it has become in these playoffs.

It wasn"t terribly surprising that St. Louis didn"t finish off Chicago Thursday night at home. The Blackhawks are three-time Stanley Cup champs over the last six years for a reason, and they went to double overtime before Patrick Kane preserved their season for a couple more days.

A much bigger surprise came in Washington Friday where the Capitals figured to close the lid on the the season for the young Philadelphia Flyers. Not so fast. Michal Neuvirth stopped everything in sight -- 44 shots -- for a 2-0 victory to push the East"s top seed to a Game Six back in Philly.

As for the Stars, they had trouble immediately. Down 2-0 to the Wild just 5:16 into the game? Are you serious?

Dallas spent much of the rest of the game playing catchup, getting a huge tying goal from Jason Spezza, their hottest player, to make it 3-3 with just under 12 minutes left in regulation. And 28 seconds later, a slap shot from Goligoski made it 4-3 Dallas and had the sellout crowd waving those towels and ready to pocket a victory and move on to the next round.

The Wild never quit. They aren"t close to the offensive team that the Stars are, and yet it"s Minnesota that has reached the 5-goal mark twice in the last five days. Dallas hasn"t done it yet in this series.

And a competitive series is exactly whatthe Stars have on their hands now.

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Source: http://sportsday.dallasnews.com/dallas-stars/stars/2016/04/23/cowlishaw-uncertainty-nets-now-much-factor-stars-heading-game-6

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Saturday, April 23, 2016

Kanye West Tries To Defend His Lyrics Against Taylor Swift In "Famous"


Famous

The Kanye West and Taylor Swift controversy has been talked about to death. And trust us, we wouldloveto just put it to bed and never think about it again (except for our yearly Remember when posts, of course). But one person in particular just cant let sleeping dogs lie: Kanye West himself.

West stirred up the controversy again when he released the song Famous onThe Life Of Pablo. With lyrics that were clearly referencing the West/Swift spat from the2009 MTV Video Music Awards, Kanye says, I feel like me and Taylor might still have s*x //Why? I made that b***h famous (G*d d**n). Pretty compelling stuff.

Butat Paradise International Music Festival in The Philippines two weekends ago, Westperformed his most recent album for the first time and came to the defense of Famous.

What I wanted you to know the whole time in the spirit of Nina Simone, in the spirit of real artists, this is the song that broke the writers block for me because its something I wanted to say so bad that they told me I couldnt say, he told the crowd. That night when I went onstage was the beginning of the end of my life. Lady Gaga canceled the tour the next day. You know what night Im talking about. When I just said what everybody else was thinking. So if I get in trouble for saying the truth, whats being said the rest of the time?

Its a little hard to take Kanye seriously as he plays the victim in this case. Then again, hes never been known for discretion or keeping quiet at the right times. Wed love for this to be the end of the story. Wed love for Taylor Swift to hear this and think, Okay, and go right on with her day. Wed love that. Well have to see if it really happens, though.

via BET

TOP TRENDING MUSIC

Source: http://www.youredm.com/2016/04/22/kanye-west-tries-defend-lyrics-taylor-swift-famous/

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Rachel Feinstein and Patton Oswalt stand up for your enjoyment


Patton Oswalt My Weakness Is Strong

Heres whats up in the world of TV for Friday, April 22 and Saturday, April 23. All times are Eastern.

Top picks

Patton Oswalt: Talking For Clapping (Netflix, 3:01 a.m., Friday): Whether you admire Patton Oswalts skills as a standup, character actor, author, filibuster-er, animated rodent, or Twitter provocateur extraordinaire, his new standup special is here for your literately nerdy enjoyment. In his review, Dennis Perkins says its Oswalt at the top of his game, with an extended rant about a certain animated universe that vies with that Parks And Recreation riff for the most Patton Oswalt thing ever.

The Toxic Avenger Earth Day Marathon (El Rey, 8 p.m., Friday): Celebrate the symbolic saving of the Earth alongside Tromavilles greatest, grossest, eco-friendly, family-unfriendly superhero The Toxic Avenger (Toxie, to his pals) as El Rey runs all four Toxic Avenger movies in a row. (Along with the hard to believe this existed Toxic Crusaders animated kids show. (You know, for kids!) Saving the planet has never been so disreputable. (Usual disclaimer: El Rey, like The A.V. Club, is owned by Univision Communications.) (Added disclaimer: Neither El Rey nor Univision have any input, nor interest, in anything your Whats On Tonight writers do.)

Amy Schumer Presents Rachel Feinstein: Only Whores Wear Purple (Comedy Central, 11 p.m., Friday): And once your laughter has subsided from that Patton Oswalt standup special, steady yourself for another dose from comic (and thanks for the loan of your name pal of Amy Schumer) Rachel Feinstein. In her review of the special, Emily L. Stephens says of the always brash comic, Feinsteins acute observation creates memorable, silly, sympathetic characters with a shift of tone, a turn of phrase, or a gesture, and it keeps her exquisitely, if subtly, attuned to her audience. She may have also mentioned the term lopsided starter t*t in there somewhere, so its not all subtlety.

Premieres and finales

Thunderbirds Are Go (Amazon, 3:01 a.m., Friday): In this reboot of the legendarily puppet-y sci-fi adventure series from the 1960s, the puppets are a lot less puppet-y. Will that un-puppet your enjoyment of it? Who can say? Is un-puppet a word? The A.V. Club copy desk says, Of course not. Do not be dumb. See us, please.

Last Man Standing (ABC, 8 p.m., Friday): Its the fifth-season finale of this sitcom about Tim Allens he-man conservative husband and dad trapped in a house full of women, including his Hillary Clinton-supporter wife Nancy Travis. Way back in 2011, our reviewer offered up pretty much the dictionary definition of faint praise, saying, Theres skill and craft at work here, and skill and craft can keep multi-camera sitcoms, if not good, at least vaguely tolerable. If your kids somehow get sucked into this show (and please keep them away from it), you probably wont want to shoot yourself after. Shockingly, ABC did not adopt You probably wont want to shoot yourself after! as a catchphrase.

Dr. Ken (ABC, 8 p.m., Friday): When this sitcom starring undeniably funny but heretofore best-in-small-doses Ken Jeong was announced, people asked if his signature manic shtick would be sustainable over an entire season as a main character. And now, with the first season coming to an end, the answer is a resounding, Kind of! In the season finale, Kens standup comic college pal (Jeff Ross) encourages the good doctor to hop up on stage to pursue his own dreams of standup stardom.

Time Traveling Bong (Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m., Friday): Man, time flies when you have a time-traveling bong, as this three-episode miniseries from Broad City buddies Ilana Glazer and Paul W. Downs wraps up tonight. Will these intrepid, impaired time travelers smoke their way back home, where, presumably, they will smoke even more weed? And, even if they do, will their woozy, weed-happy actions have repercussions beyond dry mouth and a serious need for spicy buffalo wings? Sure, James Franco had to try to save a president and all, but did he have to cope with the munchies at the same time? No, didnt think so. Point: Glazer and Downs.

Regular coverage

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt (Netflix)The Vampire Diaries (CW, 8 p.m., Friday)Grimm (NBC, 9 p.m., Friday)Banshee (Cinemax, 10 p.m., Friday)Adventure Time (Cartoon Network, 7 p.m., Saturday)Outlander (Starz, 9 p.m., Saturday)

Streaming pick

Buffy The Vampire Slayer, This Years Girl/Who Are You? (Netflix/Hulu): Since it looks like well finally be meeting new guest puncher Eliza Dushku on this weeks Banshee, why not warm up with perhaps her finest outing as rogue Slayer Faith in the famous body switch double-episode of Buffy? Sure, shes no Tatiana Maslany (by the way, how great would a reboot of Dollhouse be with Maslany?), but Dushku does stellar, surprisingly subtle work when violent cleavage-y slutbomb (Willows words) Faith is forced to walk around in the skin of Sarah Michelle Gellars do-gooder Buffy Summers (and vice-versa). Oh, shes still really good at the punching, as well.

Source: http://www.avclub.com/article/rachel-feinstein-and-patton-oswalt-stand-your-enjo-235509

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Pittsburgh Penguins: "The Past is the Past"


New York Rangers @ Pittsburgh Penguins. Round 1 Game 1

The Pittsburgh Penguins will return to Consol Energy Center today with a 3-1 series lead over the Rangers and a chance to earn some rest as they await the result of Washington and Philadelphia.

Sound familiar?

In 2014, the Penguins found themselves in this exact position. That series played out a bit differently, as the Rangers won game one beforePittsburgh beat them three consecutive times to form what seemed like an insurmountable lead. The Penguinslooked unstoppable, having outscored New York 9-2 and shutting them out twice in those three wins.

Unfortunately for Pittsburgh, the Rangers werent going away easily.

Mats Zuccarello and Derick Brassard put together three-point nights and the Rangers dominated the Penguins on their way to a 5-1 victory. Henrik Lundqvist weathered a second period storm and honestly, it seems as if that was the start of an era in which Pittsburgh had no answer for him. New York eventually forced a game seven and eliminated Pittsburgh. They havent been able to score on the Rangers since.

Of course, things have changed since Mike Sullivan entered the picture.

The Past is the Past Mike Sullivan

(Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports)

Sullivan is very familiar with what happened in 2014. Hes also well-aware of what occurred last spring, when the Penguins were eliminated in just five games at the hands of the Rangers. When asked about that very situation he stated the following

The past is the past.Thats how we look at it. This is a new team, a new coaching staff, a new experience.

The Penguins are indeed a new team. In fact, only six players that take the ice today were on the roster for that dreaded game five in 2014. Aside from the lineup, the Penguins have completely replaced their coaching and management regime, as well as mostof their front office.

Now, they simply have to prove the changes made over the past two seasons, or more specifically, the past six months, were enough to take this team to the next level.

General Manager Jim Rutherford helped the Penguins build an identity based on speed. He added Trevor Daley, Carl Hagelin and Justin Schultz. Almost Simultaneously, Sullivan wrote-off the likes of Sergei Plotnikov and called up a number of players from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, where he coached prior to replacing Mike Johnston. Those players added even more speed and tenacity. Names like Conor Sheary, Bryan Rust and Tom Kuhnhackl have also provided an insurgence of youthful energy and a hunger for the game unlike anything Pittsburgh has seen in recent years.

What does it all add up to?

These Arent the 2014 Pittsburgh Penguins

(Adam Hunger-USA TODAY Sports)

The Penguins are no longer the top-heavy, shallow team weve seen in recent seasons. In 2014, their bottom-six consisted of names like Marcel Goc, Brian Gibbons, Craig Adams, and Joe Vitale. Ray Sheros Penguins coveted grit and character but ignored the importance of skill and an ability to contribute offensively.

Rutherfords Penguins looked similar at one point as well.

After watching the Chicago Blackhawks and Tampa Bay Lightning in the Stanley Cup Finals last season, Rutherford learned and changed his approach. Those lessons have paid dividends.

Pittsburgh leads all postseason teams with 15 goals-for in four games, averaging 3.75 goals-per-game. They boast the top power play unit, which is clicking at 36.8-percent despite late season struggles that raised plenty of concern as the playoffs approached. And, theyre doing all of this against that pesky Lundqvist guy they cant ever seem to beat.

Impressive, right?

While the data proves just how dominant the Penguins have been, be it traditional stats or advanced stats, theres something special about this team that isnt really tangible. This group has faced situations that would normally cause them to meltdown, draw them into bad penalties and result in frustrating losses. That isnt the case anymore and from the looks of things, when Pittsburgh faces familiar foes that are used to getting under their skin, you can see that roles are reversed.

RELATED: Stubborn Penguins Wont Let Playoffs Dictate Play

Pittsburgh started this series on a bad note. Despite winning game one, they were outplayed by the Rangers and after losing game two in the fashion they did, one had to wonder if it would be more of the same. It wasnt.

Pittsburgh rallied and found their way in game three. So far, it looks as if they arent willing to regress and the Rangers, while still alive, cant find an answer. Todays game five matchup will be a true test for a Pittsburgh team looking to prove theyre ready to be a contender once again. And, all thats left is finally eliminating a team that has booted them from postseason play for two consecutive years.

Shouldnt be that difficult, eh?

Source: http://thehockeywriters.com/pittsburgh-penguins-the-past-is-the-past/

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Fatal shooting in Pike County, Ohio


Ohio AG: 8 dead in Pike County "execution-style" shooting

At least seven people, including two children, have been killed at three homes along a rural road in Pike County, Ohio, but no arrests have been made and its unclear whether the killer or killers were among the dead, authorities said Friday.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine and Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader said all the victims are believed to have been members of the same family. All were shot to death, they said.

There is not an active shooter, they said. Authorities are trying to determine a motive, identify the deceased and determine if the killer or killers are on the loose.

DeWine and Reader said in a statement that the slayings appear to have been execution-style.

Find more news-related photo galleries on the Yahoo News Photo Tumblr.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNEcERoc0O6qvwCJaJM8a2VlAreYLQ&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&ei=Rp8bV_hVx9HeAcnIsegM&url=https://www.yahoo.com/techtest/fatal-shooting-pike-county-ohio-183452380.html

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