
NASA
Our red planetary neighbor will soon be even closer and brighter as Mars is set to be in opposition, which will put it at its closest distance from the Earth since 2005.
Our red planetary neighbor will soon be even closer and brighter as Mars is set to be in opposition, which will put it at its closest distance from the Earth since 2005.
The last year or so has seen many reports about BMW and Apple holding talks about possible collaboration on the latter’s top-secret car project, but now the two companies are finally coming together in a more official, albeit minor, way. The German luxury car maker is finally going to offer Apple’s CarPlay infotainment system in some of its upcoming models, … Continue reading
As far as video card upgrades go, there’s a lot to love with NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1080. We called it “the upgrade you’ve been waiting for” in our full review. The GTX 1080 blows away last year’s high-end cards, and even though it’s $599 ($699 for the…
Calvin Harris was injured in a car accident in Los Angeles on Friday night, according to a statement on his Facebook page. The 32-year-old was rushed to hospital with a laceration on his face, TMZ reports.
The DJ was on his way to the airport when a VW bug reportedly carrying a group of teenagers crossed the center line and collided with Harris’ Cadillac SUV around 11 p.m. The crash was “so violent” that one of the passengers in the VW was ejected from the vehicle and broke her pelvis, according to TMZ.
Paramedics took Harris to a Los Angeles hospital to treat his wound, but he reportedly left the premises soon after. He was set to perform at his regular gig in Las Vegas at the OMNIA nightclub, where he and girlfriend Taylor Swift danced the night away in March.
The Huffington Post has contacted Harris’ representatives for comment.
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Never flinch, never weary, never despair.
Sir Winston Churchill
No man can be given as much credit for saving the modern free world as Sir Winston Churchill.
A book simply on his greatest quotes could fill a library. His words of wisdom, comfort and strength were the ultimate tools in defeating fascism, and spurred not only England, but all of the free world, especially the United States to battle evil.
What is especially important to note was that Churchill did not inspire because he was fearless, but rather because he was filled with fear.
Churchill was afraid. His fear reminded him of something outside the circumstances; something above them. He did what he did despite the fear, in mind of the thing above it.
Dr. Larry Arnn – Churchill’s Trial
Dr. Larry Arnn, President of Hillsdale College and one of the great Churchill scholars, reminds us in his book, Churchill’s Trial, how the greatest statesman of the twentieth century left us timeless wisdom to guide and shape our next century.
Dr. Arnn lets us know just how prescient the great Churchill was when he cites a speech Churchill gave in 1931 titled: Fifty Years Hence.
In the speech Sir Winston said that he knew our world would be dominated by television and wireless phones. He was not concerned about the future but wanted to remind all that:
… The moral philosophy and spiritual conceptions of men and nations should hold their own amid these formidable scientific evolutions… No material progress, even though it takes shapes we cannot now conceive, or however it may expand the faculties of man, can bring comfort to his soul.
In my conversation this week with Dr. Arnn about Winnie we probe deep into the spirit of the great Sir Winston and prove why, as Churchill so eloquently stated: “All wisdom is not new wisdom.”
Enjoy the episode and have a great week,
Barry
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
At least four anti-government protesters were killed and 90 injured when security forces ejected them from Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone, hospital sources said on Saturday.
Iraqi security forces used live ammunition, rubber bullets, water cannons and tear gas on Friday to dislodge the demonstrators from the central district which houses government buildings, parliament and many foreign embassies.
The toll, compiled from four hospitals where casualties were taken and Baghdad’s central morgue, accounts only for gunshot wounds and does not include cases of suffocation caused by tear gas.
Civilians have breached the Green Zone twice in three weeks, raising questions about the government’s ability to secure the capital which has also seen a spike in bombings this month claimed by Islamic State.
Protesters on Friday included supporters of powerful Shi’ite Muslim cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and people from other groups upset with the government’s failure to approve anti-corruption reforms and maintain security in the city.
Jaafar al-Moussawi, deputy leader of Sadr’s political movement, condemned the government for using what he called “excessive force”.
“Using live bullets against peaceful protesters is completely unjustified and stark evidence that a supposedly legitimate government has turned into an oppressive government,” he said in a statement on Saturday.
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has condemned the Green Zone breach and warned against chaos and strife as government forces seek to keep up momentum against Islamist militants.
The United Nations expressed “deep concern” on Saturday about the incident and warned it could hamper efforts to defeat Islamic State, the ultra-hardline Sunni group that controls large swathes of territory in northern and western provinces.
“Only the enemies of Iraq, Daesh at the forefront, benefit from chaos,” U.N. Special Representative for Iraq, Jan Kubis, said in a statement, using an Arabic acronym for Islamic State.
(Additonal reporting by Stephen Kalin.; Writing by Maher Chmaytelli; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Stephen Powell)
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Dick Gregory isn’t playing himself in Turn Me Loose, at the Westside Theatre, although, at 83, he certainly could. Right now Joe Morton, whom current tv viewers know from Scandal, is impersonating Gregory in the Gretchen Law play that also has John Carlin taking on several roles, among them William F. Buckley.
The beauty of this incendiary piece, directed with punch by John Gould Rubin, is that the manner in which Law has transferred Gregory’s life to the stage has him transition from one of the first black stand-up comics gaining national attention in the 1960s–much thanks to his appearances with the now nearly forgotten Jack Paar–to an activist who stopped telling jokes because he increasingly came to believe there was less and less amusing about the condition of African-Americans in contemporary United States society.
He’ll slip in a joke about America being the one place on the planet where a poor black boy like Michael Jackson could become “a rich white man,” but more often than not he isn’t jokey about nation-wide racism. The one-liners Morton as Gregory tells when he’s meant to be at a comedy club’s mic are hardly abundant later when, for instance, he responds to Buckley’s leading Firing Line questions and comments.
There is an added element to Turn Me Loose. It’s a strong emotional tug that hasn’t only to do with one man’s anger and overall humanity. By the time the intermissionless Turn Me Loose ends, Gregory has become a symbol of growing impatience among black Americans for their civil rights, a growing demand for equality. Gregory morphs into a representation of a population greatly disturbed over a state of affairs remaining stubbornly in place.
******************
If you’re a Shakespeare idolater and don’t know the name James Shapiro, you’d better learn it now. The Columbia University professor is fast becoming one of today’s leading Shakespeare scholars. That’s if he isn’t already the preeminent titleholder.
Last year he published 1606: William Shakespeare and the Year of Lear, which is a follow-up to 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare. In both books he discusses the plays written during the year he’s commemorating, implicitly making the point that no other playwright can claim to have had such triumphant writing years.
Wowed by both the Bard and devoted academic Shapiro, Jim Niesen at Brooklyn’s Irondale has spent the past six years shaping the Irondale Ensemble into a celebration of Shakespeare, Shapiro and the plays of 1599. They’re Henry V, Julius Caesar, As You Like It and, last but hardly least (judging by world-wide fame), Hamlet.
Yes, that’s a quartet for both Ripley and the Guinness folks, and Niesen’s notion is to present during one four-hour-plus offering each play in a trimmed-to-an-hour version and performed by the same six-person team–Joey Collins, Michael-David Gordon, Terry Greiss, Sam Metzger, Alex Spieth and Katie Wieland. FYI: There’s a picnic meal between the two halves that takes place in what the Irondale people jokingly dub the forest of Arden. (It’s part of the high-ceilinged Irondale floor space where a large rug and some pillows are tossed.)
To be sure, the evening is something of a stunt. Yet the earnestness with which it unfolds in various parts of the main Irondale performance room–Julius Caesar occupies most of the wraparound upper level–goes some distance to make the time spent rewarding. Plus, the actors exhibit eye-popping stamina, especially Spieth as Rosalind and Collins as Hamlet. ‘Zounds!
*******************
David L. Arsenault’s set is what’s memorable about Wendy Beckett’s A Better Place. It rises in the wide area between the two facing bleachers at the Duke. It’s also in two separate parts. One depicts three floors of a post-war New York City apartment house, the middle abode furnished in a generic modern style. The facing apartment also between two half-seen floors is a more conventionally appointed flat.
In the modern unit, marrieds Mary Roberts (Judith Hawking) and John Roberts (James Edward Hyland) live with daughter Carol (Jessica DiGiovanni), who gets her sexual kicks when lovers abuse her verbally with real estate jargon. Meant to be amusing, the trope, repeated a few times, is merely tedious.
Directly opposite The Roberts are male lovers Les Covert (Rob Maitner), who’s younger and flighty, and Sel Trevoc (John Fitzgibbon), who’s older and surprisingly tolerant. Throughout the play, Les can’t stop staring across the way in unabashed jealousy. Sel lets it pass.
Beckett, who has nothing in common with (sur)namesake Samuel when it comes to dramaturgical inspiration, is mocking the prominence that real estate has in Big Apple mindsets. She just isn’t very funny about it as the Roberts argue over whether to sell and move to Florida and the Covert-Trevoc couple bicker over Les’s dissatisfaction with their cramped quarters. For much of the play John Roberts, a carpenter, is keeping a secret that comes out in due course but doesn’t lift matters.
Beckett has her own secret that some patrons may get on to and some may not. The name Les is Sel backwards, and the name Covert is Trevoc backwards. Just another element that isn’t especially amusing. The director is Evan Bergman.
******************
William Francis Hoffman’s Cal in Camo, at the Rattlestick, begins with Cal (Katya Campbell) attempting to produce milk for her newborn and then, after only a few seconds, proceeds to an extraneous scene wherein Tim (David Harbour), a beer salesman, tries to convince a bartender (Gary Leimkuhler) to purchase his product.
That Tim is doing worse on the road than Willie Loman could be established in a few sentences inserted into the following much longer scene. That’s when Cal and Tim, now in their serviceable kitchen (John McDermott designed it), tear into each other over marital frustrations. Cal and Tim are so volatile that audience members will wonder why they’re watching such unpleasant people.
A bone of contention for them is Cal’s brother Flynt (Paul Wesley), whose wife has just died (Tim didn’t even know Flynt was married) and for whom Cal has just bought a plane ticket she and Tim can’t afford. The plane ticket will bring Flynt their way for an open-ended stay. When he arrives, in a badly soiled camouflage outfit, he’s at loose ends and turns the Cal-Tim squabble into a three-way verbal brawl.
It may be that the eventual Cal in Camo saving grace is its illustration of how disappointed and disturbed people find a way to get through to one another. Unfortunately, Cal, Tim and Flynt are unbearable for so long–Adrienne Campbell-Holt is the flummoxed director–that by the time they reconcile, few watching them will care.
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
The Egyptian military on Saturday released images of the debris it has found from EgyptAir Flight MS804 that crashed into Mediterranean Sea.
The recovered items include some of the belongings of the 66 passengers and crew from a dozen countries who were on board when the jet went down en route from Paris to Cairo early Thursday. Photos and video that Egypt’s army provided also show plane wreckage with the EgyptAir logo, parts of seats and life vests.
French investigators said Saturday that the plane sent signals indicating that smoke was detected on board before it crashed. However, the cause of the disaster remains unknown.
Egyptian and international search teams are scouring the sea for the plane’s black boxes, which contain cockpit voice recordings and data readings, along with the bulk of the jet’s wreckage. Egyptian and Greek officials said earlier that crews had found some human remains believed to belong to passengers during the search.
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Oil companies have known about the effects of carbon dioxide emissions from cars far longer than many originally thought, according to recently released documents.
The planet Mars is about to be the closest it’s been to the Earth in over a decade this weekend, and you’ll be able to step outside and spot our red neighbor with the naked eye. Sunday, specifically, marks the “Mars opposition,” which is when the sun and Mars are on the opposite sides of Earth, but you can peer … Continue reading