David Ortiz Rips David Price For 'Acting Like A Little Girl' (VIDEO)

The rivalry between the Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays has been taken to another level. After a game that included four ejections, two bench-clearing altercations and two hit batters, Red Sox slugger David Ortiz lashed out at Rays ace David Price for “acting like a little girl.”

“I had a lot of respect for the guy, man. It is over now. I have no more respect for him,” said Ortiz, who was one of the Boston players to get hit. He also referenced Boston’s Game 2 win in the 2013 ALDS against Tampa Bay, after which Price got upset at Ortiz for watching his second home run of the game for what he thought was too long. Big Papi said Price apologized to him after the playoff game and he thought the two had “straightened things out.”

“So the first at-bat of the season against him, he drills me. That means … It’s a war. It’s on,” Ortiz said in the locker room after Boston’s 3-2 win on Friday night. “Next time he hit me, he better put his gloves on.”

On Friday night, Price hit Ortiz with a 94-mph fastball in the bottom of the first inning, causing both benches to clear and the home plate umpire Dan Bellino to issue warnings to both teams. Upset that Price wasn’t ejected, Red Sox manager John Farrell fumed at Bellino and got ejected. In the bottom of the fourth inning, Price hit Boston first baseman Mike Carp, causing the benches to clear again. This time, Ortiz erupted out of the dugout and needed to be held back from Price. Boston bench coach Torey Lovullo was ejected. After Red Sox reliever Brandon Workman threw a pitch behind Tampa Bay’s Evan Longoria in the sixth inning, he and Boston third base coach Brian Butterfield were tossed.

WATCH ALL 3 CONFRONTATIONS BELOW:

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Price, who stayed in the game after hitting both batters, told Joe Smith of the Tampa Bay Times that he didn’t intentionally drill Ortiz and Carp.

“I’ve got to establish my fastball in,” Price said. “I’ve got six lefties in that lineup. It’s my favorite side of the plate to go to.”

Farrell thought otherwise.

“David’s a heckuva pitcher,” Farrell said, via ESPNBoston.com. “He comes in with two hit batters and eight walks on the year. He’s got the lowest walk rate in the American League. And when he throws a ball and hits David Ortiz in the back, there is intent to that. They can dispute that all they want. There is intent to that pitch.”

It was the second ejection-filled game between the two AL East rivals one week. Back on Sunday, the benches cleared and some players nearly fought each other, leading to three ejections.

Cheryl Burke Gets Real About Body Image, Shares Relatable Message

Cheryl Burke shared an inspirational message on her Facebook page after People Magazine ran a story on her recent weight loss. In the interview, the “Dancing With The Stars” pro shared her tips on how she stays healthy and feels great.

Burke thanked her fans for their supportive comments, saying she’s had a “very public struggle” with comments about her weight for years. “I’m not caving in to the pressures of Hollywood, as some of you have expressed your concern that I might be, and I’m certainly not starving myself,” she wrote. “I’m thriving.”

Her comments were honest and relatable, and she encouraged her readers to tune out the critics. “Love yourself. Nourish your body. Be kind to one another.”

Read her full letter below.

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Known Knowns

There is a certain ironic symmetry in the resignation of General Eric Shinseki as Secretary of Veterans Affairs — the final act of a personal tragedy, perhaps not Shakespearean but pathetic nonetheless.

Shinseki was forced to quit because of outrage over reports that the sprawling Veterans Administration he oversaw was appallingly inefficient and corrupt. Hospitals and clinics across the system have been falsifying reports to hide the fact that staffs and facilities are overwhelmed by the bourgeoning numbers of injured veterans.

Rather than admit that the crisis existed and take the steps to fix it, the management of the VA had for years decided that the best way to deal with the awful problem was to pretend it didn’t exist. Congress and the administration went along with the sham.

Such self-serving lies and deceit are nothing new. From the start, they have been integral to the disastrous American invasion of Iraq. No one perfected the technique more cynically than Donald H. Rumsfeld.

In February, 2002, Rumsfeld, then Secretary of Defense, delivered his now infamous lofty musings at a briefing on Iraq, about the difficulties of finding the truth in the fog of war — talking about “known knowns” and “unknown unknowns.”

The fact is that, in most cases, the “unknowns” were unknown because that’s the way the people on top wanted things to be.

No one knows this better than Eric Shinseki. He was part of a movement in the army, determined to end the kind of official obfuscation that had led to America’s disastrous experience in Vietnam. Soldiers of all ranks would now be encouraged to tell the truth to commanders, all the way up the line, without fear of reprisal or intimidation.

Only, that’s not the way it worked out as Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and the neo-cons prepared America for a military adventure in Iraq. It was going to be a cakewalk, they said.

Shinseki, then Army Chief of Staff, saw things differently. The occupation he told a congressional committee, would require not tens of thousands of soldiers — as the administration had been claiming — but hundreds of thousands. Rumsfeld was livid. Shinseki’s statement was immediately disavowed by the Pentagon. It was attacked by Rumsfeld’s deputy, Paul Wolfowitz as “wildly off the mark”. Shinsheki was marginalized, retiring a year later. His fate sent a clear signal to others in the military about the line they were expected to follow.

The invasion of Iraq, of course, was based on other fabrications as well. Contrary to what was claimed, Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction; Saddam Hussein had no important ties with Al Qaeda.

And once the attack was launched, the falsehoods and distortions continued. Widespread looting that presaged the total breakdown in government was written off by Rumsfeld as “stuff happens.” Iraqis beginning to target American soldiers were disparaged as “dead enders.” The rising American casualty level was dismissed as not even on the level of urban violence in the U.S.

The Pentagon refused to let the media know the time and place that caskets containing American dead would be shipped back to the United States. No pictures. No problems.

There was a steadfast denial that Iraq, with thousands of civilian deaths each month, was headed towards full-scale civil war. No official count was kept of the rocketing number of civilian casualties.

The Pentagon’s reluctance to accept that Iraqi resistance to the occupation had grown far beyond the U.S. military’s capabilities let directly to massive overcrowding of prisons, specifically the shocking abuses at Abu Ghraib, staffed by reservists totally overwhelmed by their assignment, as a few of their officers attempted — and failed — to make clear.

In the same way, the inexorable influx of casualties from Iraq and Afghanistan — as well as the decision to extend treatment to thousands of new veterans — completely inundated the underpaid, shorthanded staff and creaking facilities of the Veterans Administration.

Despite the bloviating of supposedly outraged congressmen, editorialists and the White House, the Inspector General and the press have been reporting about the terrible shortcomings at the V.A. for years. Congress and past and present administrations, however, intent on cutting the budget, have been sweeping the scandal under the rug.

It’s a good bet that if most of the veterans were from middle class American families the V.A. crisis would never have been allowed to fester. But America’s professional military is not middle class.

Ironically, the Obama administration brought Shinseki back from retirement, making him head of the Veteran’s Administration, largely because of his reputation of truth-telling, of having stood up to Rumsfeld years before.

But now, the sorry circle is complete: the officer who cautioned about the true costs of invading Iraq and was denigrated as a result, has been felled by the consequences of the very attack he warned against.

That, you could definitely say, is a known known.

Barry Lando is author of a novel, ‘The Watchman’s File,” available on Amazon. He is currently working on a sequel, ‘Unknown Unknowns,’ about a TV correspondent’s investigation of his own erroneous report on war crimes in Iraq.

Psy's 'Gangnam Style' Hits 2 Billion YouTube Views

NEW YORK (AP) — It’s 2 billion and counting for Psy and his irrepressible “Gangnam Style.”

The South Korean pop star’s surprise hit has become the first YouTube video to surpass 2 billion views, crossing the mark around shortly before midnight EDT Friday. The unlikely viral star holds the record for most overall views and most views in a day with 38 million for his “Gangnam Style” followup “Gentleman.”

No other video comes close to “Gangnam” on the streaming service’s list of top videos. Justin Bieber’s “Baby” is the only other billion-plus video at 1.04 billion views. Cute kid video “Charlie bit my finger – again!” is a distant third with 711 million views.

Psy has three of the top 15 videos on the site.

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Online:

http://youtube.com

Stormtrooper Necklace: The Empire Strikes Neck

These laser-cut Stormtrooper necklaces will look pretty badass hanging around your neck. Support the galaxy’s Imperial police force by wearing one today.

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The charms are cut from 1/8″-thick wood or acrylic and measure 1-1/2 inches wide and 1-3/4 inches tall. Each Stormtrooper comes on a 18,23 or 31 inch chain with a clasp and you can find them in Etsy seller Unpossiblecuts shop for just $19.95(USD).

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This is probably the kind of thing that Stormtroopers wear on their days off so they can all identify each other with no armor. “Hey. Aren’t you TK-421?” “Nah. TK-425. That guy and TK-422 are still suspended because of the whole ‘letting people steal their armor’ incident’ on the Death Star.”

[via The Mary Sue]

How to Stream Anything from Android to AirPlay

How to Stream Anything from Android to AirPlay

The AirPlay wireless streaming system makes sharing stuff between your phone and TV incredibly easy—but only if stick with Apple gadgets. Try to share content from an Android and suddenly you’re out of luck. But with these third-party streaming apps, Airplay and Android can finally speak the same language.

Read more…



Coffee Rust Reaches New Heights In Central America

FRAIJANES, Guatemala (AP) — For years, Hernan Argueta’s small plot of coffee plants seemed immune to the fungus spreading elsewhere in Central America. The airborne disease that strikes coffee plants, flecking their leaves with spots and causing them to wither and fall off, failed to do much damage in the cooler elevations of Guatemala’s mountains.

Then, the weather changed. Temperatures warmed in the highlands and the yellow-orange spots spread to Argueta’s plants. Since the warming trend was noted in 2012, the 46-year-old farmer said his family went from gathering a dozen 100-pound (45-kilogram) sacks of coffee beans each month to just five.

Now, Argueta is among the region’s thousands of coffee farmers fighting the fungus called “coffee rust” in hopes they’ll continue to supply the smooth-flavored, aromatic Arabica beans enjoyed by coffee lovers around the world. But with no cure for the fungus, and climate conditions expected to encourage its spread, they are bracing for a long, hard battle to survive.

Argueta, like many farmers, is replacing his old trees with new coffee plants that better resist the rust, and cutting back existing trees in the hope they’ll spring new foliage. It will be two to three years, however before the new plants produce the bright red cherries that hold the valuable beans. Argueta has had to seek out construction jobs to get by. “Now we have had to find other lines of work,” he said.

Coffee rust first hit Central America in the 1970s. For decades, coffee growers simply coped with the blight and lower yields. But as rust spread to the highlands, the problem demanded action. Last year, Guatemala declared a national emergency, with officials estimating rust had affected 70 percent of the nation’s crop.

In neighboring El Salvador, the rate of infection is 74 percent, according to the London-based International Coffee Organization. In Costa Rica, it’s 64 percent; in Nicaragua, 37 percent; and in Honduras, 25 percent.

In its April report, the ICO said the average price for coffee hit a two-year high — more than US$1.70 per pound — as market watchers worried about production in Brazil, where severe drought is affecting the world’s largest coffee crop, and an El Nino weather pattern is expected to further hurt supply across the region.

The spread of rust has prompted growers to adopt new measures, such as “stumping,” the practice of pruning trees of all infected vegetation in hopes of encouraging them to regrow with greater vibrancy. They are also using fungicides and installing shade covers, which appear to help keep the fungus at bay.

Rust also has hit farms in Southern Mexico, which produces much of the region’s shade-grown coffee, and where the government is leading a sweeping replanting project.

“We have old, unproductive coffee plantations that haven’t been pruned. In some case they’re 40 years old,” said Belisario Dominguez Mendez, who heads up coffee issues for Mexico’s Agriculture Department. “Coffee rust is a good pretext to transform the coffee industry in Mexico,” he said, noting the government intends to replace about 20 percent of coffee plants each year, hoping to have them all replaced within five years.

None of that will make rust go away, however.

“It’s an issue of managing it, controlling it,” Dominguez Mendez said. “We have lived with rust for 30 years, and we will continue living with it for as long as we are around.”

In El Salvador, Claudia Herrera de Calderon worries over her family inheritance, two large coffee farms high in the mountains near the Guatemalan border. She has been stumping plants on the two parcels, which total about 500 hectares (1,200 acres) and spraying fungicides. But it’s not enough.

“Even if you cut them back, the problem is that with the climate changes we are seeing — the rains, the droughts, the rust — basically, we are looking at the need to replant everything,” Herrera de Calderon said.

With little government help, and her farms falling below the break-even point, she has had to lay off workers and lacks the funds needed to replant. And because the fungus spreads so easily, the cautionary steps have to be taken all together, or one farm will simply infect the next.

“Now, all the fincas are infected, and those of us who have made the effort to spray fungicides are left with problems by neighboring farms that haven’t done anything,” she said.

With many rural towns dependent on coffee production, observers fear widespread job losses. Producers in the Guatemalan highlands have lost, on average, between a third and 60 percent of their income in the last year, according to the United Nations. The National Coffee Association of Guatemala, known as Anacafe, says some 100,000 direct coffee jobs have dried up.

The United Nations is providing emergency food aid to 14,000 Guatemalan households that have lost income due to rust. Still, that’s less than 10 percent of the 160,000 homes estimated by the government nutrition agency to need such help.

Argueta, however, is not giving up. Just as he has “stumped” his existing trees, hoping to coax them to start all over, he is ready to begin anew.

On a recent day in Fraijanes, a town southeast of Guatemala City, he and other growers lined up for new, rust-resistant seedlings that the government is handing out.

“This variety is going to better,” Argueta said. “That, in itself, is a blessing.”

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Moises Castillo reported from Guatemala City and Marcos Aleman from San Salvador. AP Writer Mark Stevenson contributed to this report

Texas Restaurant That Refused 'Fag' Customers Touted As Gay Bar Online

A Texas restaurant that refused to serve “fag” customers is now getting some positive reviews online for being a “gay bar.”

Internet users have taken to Yelp to write reviews about Big Earl’s Bait House and Galley Cafe in Pittsburg, Texas, where a waitress told one gay couple not to return because they “don’t serve fags here.” The waitress who made the homophobic remark is the daughter of owner Earl Cheney, and Cheney defended her sentiment.

After the story broke on local news outlets, people began writing reviews for Big Earl’s claiming the Texas restaurant is actually a gay bar. It’s Yelp page has been flooded with photos of same-sex couples and an image of the store’s billboard has been manipulated to read “Big Gay Al’s.”

One Yelp review reads: “Lovely place to bring your same-sex partner to and show how much you love him/her as much as their food! The more flamboyant, the better!”

Another says: “On the positive side, it says “Bait House” but the place was more like a Bath House with all the horny Texas cowboys flirting and slapping each other’s behinds. Very gay-friendly atmosphere!”

Some in the Dallas LGBT community are planning on visiting the Pittsburg eatery.

“I think it’s a fantastic idea and I’ll be there,” Gary Burns told CBS affiliate KRLD. “There’s no reason not to just go and embrace those people and to love them and hug them and say ‘hey, we’re human beings too.’”

However, others are not in favor of this idea.

“I think that for the homosexual community to be targeting a restaurant and good people is ugly, it is uncalled for. They’re pushing an envelope and they want to not only have tolerance – they want to shove things down our collective throats,” Cathie Adams, president of the “pro-family” group Texas Eagle Forum, told KRLD. “As one who has been married for 45 years to my husband, I don’t think that it’s my role to stand in the street corner and start talking about the style of private life my husband and I have.”

Watch video of the original incident below.

What To Expect From 'Game Of Thrones' Season 4 Episode 8

It’s been two whole weeks since the last “Game of Thrones” episode, and that’s far too long for any diehard fan.

The series returns on Sunday, June 1, with “The Mountain and the Viper,” the third-to-last episode of Season 4 which will feature an epic battle, among other things. You’ve likely watched the episode preview multiple times to try and figure out just what will go down, but we have a little bit more info thanks to some new photos and interviews with the creators and episode director. Here’s what to expect from “The Mountain and the Viper.”

Oberyn vs. The Mountain will be beyond epic
This is a no-brainer, of course. Dan Weiss and David Benioff teased the fight to Entertainment Weekly, saying “It’s one of the best — if not the best — combat scenes we’ve done so far.”

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Oberyn will be a boss with a spear
Not all actors are skilled at stunt scenes, but Pedro Pascal, who plays Oberyn Martell a.k.a. the Red Viper, is a total pro. According to director Alex Graves, Pascal picked up his weapon and shot the sequence with ease.

The fight will be more than a bloodbath
Sure, things will get gory –it’s “Game of Thrones” after all! However, the fight will also serve as a pivotal moment in the series. Graves told IB Times that the scene “is two people skimming the surface of one of the single most important events in the mythology of the show.” In other words, it will tie a lot of things together.

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Littlefinger is going on trial
There will be “The Trial of Littlefinger” in Episode 8, which Graves described as the beginning of a big storyline for Sansa. Since she was the only witness to Littlefinger murdering her Aunt Lysa, it will be interested to see if the sneaky Petyr Baelish gets away with murder once again or is finally caught.

“Game of Thrones” airs on Sundays at 9 p.m. EDT on HBO.

This Ocean Art Is Beautiful And Horrifying At The Same Time

They’re beautiful from a distance — and appalling upon closer inspection.

A styrofoam coral reef, a water bottle jelly fish and a plastic whale ribcage are some of the giant sealife sculptures featured in Washed Ashore — a traveling exhibit open at the San Francisco Zoo all summer — made entirely from ocean debris collected on Pacific beaches. Exclusive to the San Francisco exhibit is “Buoy, Beat ‘n Bop,” a collection of musical sculptures featuring a swaying anemone chime, a colony of sea jelly bells and a school of percussive fish.

“I’ve created something I hope is beautiful and horrifying,” lead artist Angela Haseltine Pozzi told the San Francisco Chronicle.

The display, sponsored by Pozzi’s Artula Institute for Arts and Environmental Education, is the product of years of collecting more than 11 tons of beach trash to raise awareness of how plastic pollution affects the species featured.

“We’re thrilled that the Zoo is bringing this important art and educational message about ocean pollution to a wide audience in the Bay Area,” Pozzi said in a zoo press release.

Check out the photos below of Pozzi and the sculptures.

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All photos by Marianne Hale, courtesy of the San Francisco Zoo.