Friday, March 29, 2013

98% 56 Up

All Critics (55) | Top Critics (22) | Fresh (54) | Rotten (1)

Yes, on some level it's just a seven-year check-in with people maybe half-remembered, if that. Yet the films also serve as a kind of check-in with us, too.

What ultimately is so compelling about 56 Up is the universality of the experiences. We were all once children. And we all will die. And in between, there is everything else.

We feel good, refreshed and depressed in watching these people get older, also embarrassed in moments and cautioned about the passage of time.

Apted, himself now in his early 70s, says he hopes to continue the series further. Long may it live.

Watching "56 Up" gives you the wonderful feeling of seeing a sociological experiment blossom into something novelistically rich and humane.

Time has been neither kind nor cruel to the 13 men and women profiled in "56 UP." It has just been time, which is what this groundbreaking series is about.

Chances are that you'll come away from this long film feeling a sense of knowing its characters.

We might say that '56 Up' serves much the same function as 'Amour,' but it responds to the inevitability of decline with compassion, not dread.

What started as a crafty way of looking at the U.K.'s rigid class structure has grown into a portrait of melancholy middle age, with its heartbreaks and minor-key triumphs.

Those British kids are now 56

Watching the eighth film is intriguing but, in a way, disappointing. At this point in the game, it feels as if all the characters have determined their lots in life and are simply plodding through their interviews.

Quite simply one of the great documentary projects in the history of cinema, an engrossing sociological experiment on film; and though this mostly mellow installment isn't as revelatory as some earlier ones, it's still a remarkable document.

... feels like a retrospective and summation of the whole series, with ample quotation from the previous films, an approach that makes it interesting even for viewers who haven't seen the previous installments.

A completely unique and remarkable documentary project.

Apted skillfully weaves old footage with the new, and we become poignantly aware of another factor shaping their lives (and our own): biology, as the we watch the once-cute kids grow gray and heavy.

Perhaps the boldest and probably longest running sociological experiment on film.

I think the best thing about this movie (and the entire series) is that it forces the viewer to think about their own lives. It's kind of an awakening experience.

Once again, Apted assembles a captivating documentary that's profoundly educational, essential viewing to aid the understanding of the human experience.

"56 Up" is well worth seeing.

56 Up is still moving and philosophic, though not as exciting as earlier episodes, which had more drama.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/56_up/

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Apple's Long-Rumored Game Controller May Soon See The Light Of Day

apple-pippinI've long believed that touchscreens leave a certain something to be desired when it comes to playing games, and if a new (and very curious) report holds true, Apple may feel the same way. According to PocketGamer.biz's Jon Jordan, Apple has been meeting with developers on-site at this year's Game Developers Conference in San Francisco to talk about a forthcoming Apple game controller.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/AKAG9ajrNIs/

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Meet the Lucky People Who Suddenly Owe Google $1500 (Updating)

We already knew about the lucky six who will officially have the honor of paying Google $1,500 in exchange for Glass and the adventures and (highly likely) ridicule that will soon follow. But now @projectglass is announcing the rest of the lucky winners by replying individually to their #ifihadglass tweets. Here they are in all their glory. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/O5znVxKm5RY/meet-the-people-who-suddenly-owe-google-1500

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Sprint Epic 4G Touch will receive Android Jelly Bean update today

DNP Sprint Epic 4G Touch Jelly Bean update starts today

Sprint's Galaxy S 4 recently took one step towards being ready for mass consumption, however the carrier hasn't forgotten the device's forefathers. We've received a memo from an anonymous tipster advising that the Epic 4G Touch is set to make the jump to Jelly Bean (Android 4.1, to be exact) starting sometime today. The new software bump will come directly from Samsung and will require a visit to an external website that has yet to go live. The memo also notes that in order to perform the update, you'll need access to a rig with Windows 7, Vista or XP -- in other words, OS X and Windows 8 users will have to visit a Sprint store to get their fix. For those fortunate enough to gain access in the coming hours, let us know how it's treating you in comments below.

[Thanks, anonymous]

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/qjY16vgkSF8/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Is The Sky The Limit For Wind Power?

Wind turbines at the San Gorgonio Pass Wind Farm in Whitewater, Calif., in 2012.

Bloomberg via Getty Images

Wind turbines at the San Gorgonio Pass Wind Farm in Whitewater, Calif., in 2012.

Bloomberg via Getty Images

Wind power is growing faster than ever ? almost half of the new sources of electricity added to the U.S. power grid last year were wind farms.

But is the sky the limit? Several scientists now say it's actually possible to have so many turbines that they start to lose power. They steal each other's wind.

Sailboat captains experience a similar phenomenon; they call it "dirty air." If you're sailing directly downwind of another sailboat, you'll slow down. That's because the lead boat creates a turbulent vortex of air behind it as the wind spills off its sails. As sailors know, "dirty air" means less power.

The blades on wind turbines make dirty air too, so engineers space the machines far apart. But wind developers want to bring the total number of turbines in the U.S. to more than 100,000, up from about 45,000 today. Would that spread the turbulent air far and wide?

Harvard physicist David Keith says that's possible. "[With] very large wind farms," he says, "we can now see long footprints that extend, in some cases, tens of kilometers downstream, where you have slower-moving wind."

Keith is one of several scientists who have designed computer simulations to see what might happen at huge wind farms. "If we're going to scale wind power up to supply a significant fraction of the global energy demand ? say 10 percent of global energy demand as we get towards midcentury ? then these effects begin to matter," he says. "Exactly how much they matter we still don't know."

The answer has become a kind of puzzle for atmospheric scientists. Just what, they ask, is the "saturation point" for wind power? That is, when is the wind so dirty that there's no point in building one more turbine?

So far, that point is hypothetical. To get to saturation, you'd need huge wind farms ?bigger than any that exist now ? with thousands of square miles packed with turbines. For the 45,000 big turbines now spread around in clusters throughout the U.S., that's not a problem.

Atmospheric scientist Mark Jacobson at Stanford University has done calculations that suggest you'd have to get up into the many millions of turbines before you'd lose a serious amount of wind. And people are thinking about how to get around the problem.

"We found that by spreading out the wind farms themselves," Jacobson says, "you reduce this impact of having low energy when you just have one wind farm with lots of turbines."

Elizabeth Salerno at the industry's American Wind Energy Association says developers are making sure they're not going to dilute the wind. Doing that would lose money.

"Our developers spend a lot of time with experts and atmospheric scientists to ensure that they are putting each individual wind turbine and the entire project in a location and a layout that's going to optimize their result," Salerno says.

But as you build more and more wind farms, spreading them out could present complications, too. You can't put them just anywhere ? you need to have transmission lines reasonably close by, for example. Also, as you get more wind farms, more people are likely to complain about the view. And lots of places simply aren't windy enough to be useful.

Even with those limits, there's plenty of wind to go around, Salerno says. "We have enough wind resource in the U.S. on shore [and] on land to do 10 times over our power production today."

That's 10 times all the power produced now in the U.S from every means, including coal, nuclear and hydropower.

Salerno says no one expects wind power to come anywhere close to that. For one thing, the nation's electricity grid runs more reliably if utilities can draw on different kinds of energy that can back each other up. When the wind isn't blowing, the grid can draw on natural gas or nuclear power. Or if natural gas prices spike, people can use more wind.

At the moment wind provides about 3.5 percent of all electricity in the U.S. The wind association says a reasonable goal is to raise that to 20 percent of the nation's electricity needs by 2030. That would mean building maybe 75,000 more wind turbines, Salerno says, and not building them all in one place.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/03/27/174820893/is-the-sky-the-limit-for-wind-power?ft=1&f=1007

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Friday, March 8, 2013

China on track to become globe's top luxury car market

Demand for luxury vehicles in China will make it the world?s second-largest market for expensive vehicles by 2016 and number one by decade?s end when it will likely surpass the U.S., according to a new study by the consulting firm of McKinsey & Co.

But industry analysts and planners caution that several obstacles could delay or completely short-circuit the boom in automotive demand in China, both on the mainstream and luxury level.

Sales of premium vehicles will probably equal that of all of Western Europe by 2020, as incomes continue to rise in what is now the world?s second-largest economy, according to McKinsey & Co. China is already the largest automotive market in the world overall.

Deliveries of upscale autos will probably climb to 2.25 million by 2016, according to McKinsey?s estimates, and will reach 3 million by 2020. That compares with luxury vehicle sales of 1.25 million last year, McKinsey said in the new report. The growth rate is expected to significantly outpace that of the total Chinese market.

Increased income levels clearly will help, as will the general aspirations of Chinese consumers who, until relatively recently, were barred from owning luxury goods. Also driving the surge is the expanded presence of luxury makers.

General Motors recently began production of the Cadillac XTS in Shanghai and expects sales by the Caddy brand in China to reach 100,000 units by 2015. Virtually all major high-line brands, such as Mercedes-Benz and BMW, are already operating in the country. And new makers are looking for access.

Related: GM outlines strategy to slash fuel consumption

?We expect it to become our number one market,? said Victor Muller, founder and chairman of little, Dutch-based Spyker Cars, which introduced plans for new products and global growth during a preview at the Geneva Motor Show this week.

Ford Motor Co. plans to start sales of its Lincoln nameplate in China next year, while PSA Peugeot Citroen is readying its flagship DS dealership in Shanghai, according to the report.

Nissan considers China so important that it recently set up new headquarters for the luxury brand in Hong Kong. It will try to challenge German marques, led by Audi, which account for about 80% of the highline segment, according to McKinsey.

?Even now, China?s premium car market presents a sizable opportunity for latecomers,? authors Sha Sha, Theodore Huang and Erwin Gabardi wrote in the McKinsey report. ?Japanese and U.S. attackers still have a chance to create a market footprint.?

Luxury car sales have increased 36% annually in the past decade, compared with the 26% rate for the total passenger vehicle market, according to McKinsey. The segment remains attractive for automakers as 111 large Chinese cities still don?t have premium car dealerships, says a separate analysis by Morgan Stanley & Co.

In its survey of Chinese consumers, 59% of respondents said they won?t choose a local brand when buying premium vehicles, while 16% believe a Chinese automaker will never be able to produce a luxury model that garners global recognition.

Related: Ferrari goes hybrid for fastest car ever

Can the luxury market meet the lofty expectations set out by McKinsey and others?

The Chinese government announced it has targeted GDP growth of 7.5% for this year, unchanged from 2012, as the annual parliamentary session opened this week. The country also set a lower inflation goal of 3.5%, aimed at keeping prices in check, according to the forecast in Premier Wen Jiabao?s work report, as he opened the National People?s Congress.

McKinsey noted China?s economy is making its historic shift to a more consumption- and service-driven model that should help sustain the country?s growth, albeit at a slower rate, over the next decade and beyond.

?As November?s 18th congress of the Chinese Communist Party showed, new government policies are helping to move the economy in this direction, even though investment?the historical motor of China?s growth?will still command the lion?s share of the economy in the near term,? the McKinsey analysis noted, adding that the government?s policies should ?create more and better-paid jobs and thus raise the share of the national income in the hands of consumers?the key determinant of China?s future economic profile.?

But not everyone is quite so confident. Some skeptics note that demand for luxury vehicles was unsteady last year, forcing makers like Mercedes to enact unexpectedly sharp price cuts to maintain momentum.

As TheDetroitBureau.com reported this past week, there are growing concerns about a slowdown in the automotive market that could follow new efforts to reduce endemic air pollution problems that are steadily worsening in cities like Beijing.

Related:Could China?s car market go bust?

?They could change policies overnight if they want,? cautioned Spyker?s Muller, and that could bring the overall Chinese car market to a standstill or just slow it down.

The most likely scenario, though, is that regulators will demand automakers switch to battery cars and other clean technologies at an even faster pace than currently mandated. That could play well for some luxury brands, however, as makers ranging from Ferrari to Audi have been introducing new hybrids, plug-ins and full electric vehicles that could meet the new standards.

Copyright ? 2009-2013, The Detroit Bureau

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/china-track-become-globes-top-luxury-car-market-1C8730403

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Hill Poll: Growing Numbers Feel Obama Doesn't Back Israel Enough

Sandy Fitzgerald - Mar 04, 2013
Newsmax


A growing number of people believe the Obama administration is not doing enough to support Israel, according to a recent survey commissioned by The Hill newspaper.

The poll of 1,000 likely voters conducted Feb. 28 found that three times more voters think the White House is not supportive enough than those who believe it is too supportive.

The new numbers for those who said President Barack Obama does not back Israel as much as he should are higher than they were in three similar Hill surveys conducted since May 2011.

The February poll found 39 percent of respondents said Obama does not support Israel enough compared to 13 percent who said his policies are too supportive.

A slightly larger percentage, 30 percent compared to 28 percent, said Obama is more anti-Israel than pro-Israel. But the percentage of people labeling Obama as being pro-Israel is up slightly from a September 2011 poll.

Obama's policies on Israel are being watched closely, while concerns rise about Iran's nuclear program. Israel says Iran must be stopped from obtaining a nuclear weapon, even if it involves a military strike. The Obama administration favors a diplomatic solution instead.

The White House is renewing its focus on Israel this month, with Vice President Joe Biden to address the American Israel Public Affairs Committee conference Monday, and Obama to make his first presidential visit to Israel later this month.

The Hill poll, conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, also found that most voters think Obama should be somewhat or very involved in helping broker a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians. However, a third of voters said he should not be involved.

The survey also revealed that fewer voters think Obama is improving the U.S. standing worldwide. Thirty-seven percent said the United States is more respected internationally than it was before Obama took office, and 43 percent said the country is less respected.


Unity Coalition for Israel 3965 W. 83rd. Street #292 Shawnee Mission, KS 66208
Phone: 913.648.0022 I Fax: 913.648.7997
Website copyright ? 2006-2013. http://unitycoalitionforisrael.org.

Source: http://www.unitycoalitionforisrael.org/news/article.php?id=9077

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Amazon's Mobile Ad Network Is Getting Even Bigger - Business Insider

Amazon / YouTube

A still from Amazon's new ad.

Good morning, AdLand. Here's what you need to know today:

Amazon's?mobile ad network is getting bigger. It's now extended to the Android app, and Adweek notes that Amazon's Mobile Ads API could rival Google's AdMob (and whatever Facebook has in store for us.)

Arnold?made a new ad for Jack Daniels.

72andSunny took a very close look at biscuits in the new Hardee's ad.

Time looks at why we love and hate different brand logos.

There's a new agency in SF, and it's called Argonaut. The new shop is led by two Goodby alums, COOs Rick Condos and Hunter Hindman, and president Jordan Warren.

Edelman named Julianna Richter, a 13-year veteran at the firm, its COO.?Lisa Sepulveda, who worked at the firm between 1987 and 2006, is now back as president of global client relationship management.

WPP?bought John St, a Canadian creative agency.

The tablet market is growing, and mobile marketers are pleased.

Previously on Business Insider Advertising:

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/amazons-mobile-ad-network-is-getting-even-bigger-the-brief-2013-3

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

How To Treat With Hair Loss ? Different Hair Loss Treatments

Hair Loss Bald is not beautiful, so each one of us dream of a beautiful hair. A shiny and silky hair can go a long way in enhancing the look of any individual. Hair loss seems to be the most common problem affecting all of us. Symptoms of hair loss include sudden thinning of hair, a disappearing hairline leaving the scalp exposed, lots of hair fall etc.

There are several factors responsible for hair loss such as nutrition, hereditary, disease, dandruff, hormonal changes, stress, medications etc. There are various hair loss treatments available in the market to reduce hair loss.

Tips for a Healthy Hair

For a beautiful and envious hair, here are a few tips:

1. Use the shampoo and conditioner that suits your hair.
2. Use a comb with soft and gentle bristles. Avoid rough handling of hair by brushing, combing needlessly.
3. Stress contributes for hair fall. Meditate to avoid stress.
4. Eat a balanced diet

Various Hair loss Treatments

Natural methods of treatment

Though hair loss is not curable it can surely be controlled through natural ways. Most common natural ways include

Hair Massage

This form of treatment improves the blood circulation to the scalp and to the hair glands thereby reducing hair fall and supporting hair growth.

Hair Massage

Handling hair roughly can also contribute to hair fall.? Be tender to your hair and massage your hair slowly for a few minutes everyday.

Balanced Diet and Nutrition

A common factor responsible for hair loss is lack of nutrition. Eating a healthy and balanced diet can enhance hair growth and prevent hair fall. Eating protein and vitamin rich food, drinking plenty of water, walnuts, food rich in calcium such as dairy products with less fat content ensures a lustrous hair and helps to prevent hair fall.

Herbal Oils

Using herbal oils proves to be an effective natural hair loss treatment. You can try using various herbal oils which help in not only reducing hair fall but also thickens the hair and provides the much needed shine to your hair.

Herbal oils

Some of the herbal oils such as basil, tea tree oil, lavender oil, rosemary, jojoba oil etc. have good medicinal properties to stimulate hair glands and reduce hair fall.

Also Read

Best Shampoos to Evade Hair Loss
Effective Remedies To Control Hair Loss
Major Reasons For Hair Loss In Women
Effective Solutions For Hair Loss
Diet Tips For Hair Loss

Medical Treatments for Hair Loss

Medication

Hair loss treatments can be done through medications and surgery. Medicines are prescribed after diagnosing the cause for hair loss. In case it is due to a disease, medicines are prescribed to treat and cure the disease if possible.

Medication

In case it is due to a nutritional deficiency, vitamin or other supplements are prescribed to treat the condition accordingly.

Surgery

This type off hair loss treatment is generally done to treat permanent hair loss. This is done by hair transplant or by scalp reduction technique. Hair transplant involves removing plugs of skin containing hair and implanting it on the bald side of your head.

Scalp reduction technique involves removing a bald portion of the scalp and replacing it with hair covered scalp. These procedures however are painful and also costly. Infection and scarring are some of the side effects associated with these hair loss treatments.

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Source: http://www.ayushveda.com/magazine/different-hair-loss-treatments/

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Monday, March 4, 2013

McConnell readying for tough re-election fight (The Arizona Republic)

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McConnell readying for tough re-election fight

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) ? U.S. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is gearing up for a tough re-election fight next year in Kentucky.

He wants to prevent one, too.

McConnell is trying to head off a GOP primary challenge by cozying up to the tea party. He's also trying to scare off potential Democratic contenders ? actress Ashley Judd is one ? by providing a glimpse of his no-holds-barred political tactics.

The strategy seems to be working, so far. No serious Republican opponent has emerged. Democrats haven't fielded a candidate yet, though Judd, a Kentucky native who lives in Tennessee, is considering a run. She would have to re-establish a residence in Kentucky before she could challenge McConnell.

The lack of an opponent hasn't kept McConnell from sounding an alarm over his potential vulnerability. It's a tactic rooted in reality and intended to help raise money.

"We know that President Obama's allies in Washington are doing everything they can to find a candidate to run against me in a primary or a general election," McConnell said in a statement to The Associated Press. "They've made no secrets about their willingness to back anybody right, left, or center to get me out of their way."

Defeating McConnell would be the Democrats' biggest prize of the 2014 election.

His seat is one of 14 that Republicans are defending while Democrats try to hold onto 21, hoping to retain or add to their 55-45 edge.

The 71-year-old McConnell, first elected to the Senate in 1984, is a resilient politician with an unbroken string of victories and a reputation of pummeling opponents. He's taking no chances even with an election more than a year away.

He has amassed a hefty bank account, with $7.4 million on hand of the $10 million he's already raised, mostly from out-of-state donors. That's a huge amount in Kentucky, where TV advertising rates are less expensive than elsewhere.

Given his leadership post and fundraising prowess, McConnell could double that as the election nears.

He spent more than $20 million in 2008 and won by just 6 percentage points over Louisville businessman Bruce Lunsford. This time, he'll probably need as much as he can collect. Polls show that McConnell is widely unpopular in the state, and Democratic-leaning groups have started running ads against him.

To endear himself to voters, McConnell has promoted his efforts to protect jobs in Kentucky. In doing so, he has sent them a not-so-subtle message that his clout as Republican leader is reason enough to give him a sixth term.

Factory representatives have credited him with helping preserve some 3,000 Kentucky jobs last year alone. Many were in small sewing factories that were at risk of losing federal military contracts. A deal he brokered with Energy Secretary Steven Chu saved 1,200 jobs at the Paducah gaseous diffusion uranium enrichment plant.

The longest-serving senator in Kentucky history has presided over a GOP revival in the state over the past three decades. Republicans hold both Senate seats and five of the state's six seats in the U.S. House. All were won with help from McConnell, who may not look the part of a political powerhouse but whose keen instincts have kept him at the top.

The chairman of Kentucky's Democratic Party, Dan Logsdon, says McConnell's longevity will be a critical issue. "He's become a part of Washington, and Kentuckians all across our commonwealth have said it's time to make a change," Logsdon says.

McConnell counters: "I have no sense of entitlement about representing Kentucky. Kentuckians always choose the person who earns their support."

As the face of the Republican establishment, McConnell saw his standing in the state threatened during the 2010 elections when his chosen candidate for a vacant Senate seat, then-Secretary of State Trey Grayson, lost to tea party-backed Rand Paul in a primary campaign that pitted the old guard in the GOP against a new band of insurgents.

McConnell's answer to bridging those divisions and, perhaps, insulate himself from a primary challenge was to form strong tea party ties himself.

He quickly mended fences after Paul won the GOP nomination, and helped Paul raise money and develop strategy for the general election. The two have had a relationship of tolerance on Capitol Hill.

The tea party leader praised McConnell as a friend before hundreds of tea party activists last year on the Statehouse steps, and McConnell drew cheers. McConnell has recruited Paul's former campaign manager, Jesse Benton, to lead his own re-election effort.

The moves signaled that potential tea party opponents should stand down even if they still disagree with McConnell.

He agitated tea party activists anew when he joined with Vice President Joe Biden late last year to work out a compromise on the "fiscal cliff," which threatened automatic tax increases and spending cuts. One of those activists, David Adams of Nicholasville, said that deal "is just more smoke and mirrors from someone who has a decades-long track record of mostly smoke and mirrors."

Despite grousing, Kentucky tea party groups have had little luck trying to recruit a strong primary challenger. At least two businessmen with tea party ties, John Kemper of Lexington and Matt Bevin of Louisville, are considering runs.

Beyond any primary, McConnell also is taunting would-be Democratic challengers in a comical online video intended to raise second thoughts about taking on a politicians known as brawler. Never hugely popular with his constituents, McConnell has managed to win elections by making his opponents even more unpopular.

The video shows Judd, who has a home in the Nashville, Tenn., suburbs, saying "Tennessee is home" and that San Francisco is "my American city home." It also shows some of Kentucky's leading Democrats, including Lt. Gov. Jerry Abramson, U.S. Rep. John Yarmuth, Attorney General Jack Conway and Auditor Adam Edelen, saying they won't run against McConnell.

Republican-leaning group American Crossroads is assailing Judd in its own online video that plays up the fact that she lives in Tennessee, and that she campaigned for President Barack Obama, who is unpopular in Kentucky.

Judd has been discussing the prospects of challenging McConnell with Democratic leaders, including Gov. Steve Beshear. Her interest has other Democrats sitting on the sidelines until she makes a decision. She has kept silent in the face of the early attack, as has the state Democratic Party.

McConnell said in a national broadcast interview Sunday that he expected "a spirited race. And of course there are a lot of left-wingers around the country who believe that the 2014 Senate race in Kentucky is the only race of national significance. And they would love to take out the Republican leader of the Senate. We'll be ready for them."

Asked specifically about Judd, McConnell said on CNN's "State of the Union" that "we'll see who they nominate and we'll be happy to run against whomever is chosen."

Republican strategist Larry Forgy, a Lexington lawyer and former gubernatorial candidate, said it appears McConnell and his allies are giving Judd a taste of what she'd face as a candidate ? a barrage of attack ads playing nonstop for months.

"They figure she's not thick-skinned, that she won't put up with this, that she'll see they'll say everything in the world," Forgy said. "Mitch McConnell is not afraid of her, because she's just not politically positioned in this state philosophically to beat him. But he'd rather run against nobody."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mcconnell-readying-tough-election-fight-124322783--election.html

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FREE IS MY LIFE: MOVIE REVIEW: Jack the Giant Slayer

This movie review for "Jack the Giant Slayer" was written by guest blogger Liz Parker...

Nicholas Hoult, recently seen as a member of the undead in Warm Bodies, has the title role in Jack ?the Giant Slayer, and although I liked him as a zombie, he works just fine as a human as well. I didn't know Stanley Tucci was in this film, either, and playing "the bad guy," nonetheless; a role that is different than his usual roles. However, despite mediocre reviews from friends, I ended up enjoying Jack, although it's not a "thinking person's" movie by any means.

Jack (Hoult) lives in a tiny cottage with his dad. Princess Isabelle (Eleanor Tomlinson), heir to the throne, lives in the palace with her mom and dad, the king and queen of their small city in medieval England. Ten year later, Jack has lost his dad to an illness, and Isabelle has lost her mom, too, and the times have not been kind to them - Jack lives with his uncle, a constant nag, and Isabelle's father, the king (Ian McShane), has betrothed her to a man twice her age, Roderick (Stanley Tucci), despite her pleas that she be allowed to marry for love instead. Jack goes into the village one day to sell a horse, and a monk gives him some magic beans for it, and cautions him not to let the beans get wet. Unfortunately, that's exactly what happens, and a beanstalk grows through Jack's cottage, which has the princess inside at the time. Jack and some of the king's men, including Roderick and Elmont (Ewan McGregor), must climb the beanstalk and rescue the princess, and hope that there's no giants at the top like legends have foretold.

I saw this movie in 3D, and the 3D wasn't really necessary, although some of the parts with the giants were fun to look at in 3D. The movie was a lot more exciting than I had expected it to be, and although there were a few slow parts throughout, for the majority of the time it stayed "on course" and kept you interested in the plot. It's definitely a "fluff" movie - one that you enjoy but then promptly forget about the next day - but it's a cool way to re-imagine the telling of Jack and the Beanstalk.

Yes, see this movie. I liked Nicholas Hoult a lot in this film, and Eleanor Tomlinson, Stanley Tucci, and Ewan McGregor were good in it as well. Ian McShane plays the king, Tomlinson's father, and he had a few interesting parts throughout as well. I will warn you that even though it's rated PG-13, there's a few gross/scary parts throughout, so it may not be as appropriate for younger kids; however, kids 10 and up would enjoy it.

Jack the Giant Slayer?is in theaters now and is rated PG-13 with a runtime of 114 minutes. 3.5 stars out of 5.

Click here if Jack the Giant Slayer movie trailer is not shown

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Liz Parker is a University of Michigan graduate with a degree in Creative Writing and Literature, and she loves going to the movies.?Visit her at her movie blog?Yes/No Films

Source: http://www.freeismylife.com/2013/03/movie-review-jack-giant-slayer.html

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