6.27.2013

Trey Burke After Party: Watch How an NBA Lottery Pick Celebrates on Draft Night

The 2013 NBA draft was filled with nothing but surprises. It all started with the Cleveland Cavs shockingly taking Anthony Bennett over projected No. 1 pick NerlensNoel. After that pick, the draft turned into a frenzy.
One of the biggest names entering this year's draft, Trey Burke, was also a part of the madness. Drafted ninth by Minnesota Timberwolves, he was quickly traded to the Utah Jazz, a team in dire need of his services.
His night may have started with confusion but once he was officially with Utah, the young guard was ready to celebrate with his closest family members and friends. 
Watch now to view highlights from Trey's after party, and hear Trey and his family talk about the next chapter in his life.

Senate Immigration Reform Bill Passes With Strong Majority

WASHINGTON -- The Senate passed a politically fraught immigration reform bill on Thursday that would give a path to citizenship to some of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S., bringing them out of the shadows and preventing continued record deportations that have separated hundreds of thousands of families.
The bill passed 68 to 32, picking up all Democrats and 14 Republicans.
Undocumented immigrants and advocates in the crowd, many of them young so-called Dreamers, broke out into applause and chants of "yes we can!" after Vice President Joe Biden, who came to the Senate to preside over the proceedings, read the results. Senators in the bipartisan "gang of eight" that drafted the bill -- Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) -- patted each other on the back.
Just before the vote Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) dedicated the decision, in part, to the late Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.), who worked for reform but never saw it signed into law.
"Senator Kennedy knew the day would come when a group of senators, divided by party, but united by love of country, would see this fight to the finish," Reid said. "So the day is today. And while I am sad that Senator Kennedy isn’t here to see history made, I know he is looking at us proudly and loudly."
Although sponsors didn't get to the 70 votes they hoped for, the full support from Democrats and addition of Republican votes was significant. McCain, Rubio, Flake and Graham were joined in voting "yes" by Republican Sens. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), Kelly Ayotte (N.H.), Jeff Chiesa (N.J.), Susan Collins (Maine), Bob Corker (Tenn.), Orrin Hatch (Utah), Dean Heller (Nev.), John Hoeven (N.D.), Mark Kirk (Ill.), and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska).
The bill doesn't please everyone, but its passage is a victory for those who have been working on the issue for years and watched immigration reform fail six years ago. It addresses undocumented immigrants, legal immigration, border security, employer hiring and an entry-exit system so the government knows if foreign nationals leave the country when their visa expires. The path to citizenship is long -- likely 13 years or more -- and arduous, but advocates are thrilled that it would exist at all, given opposition from many Republicans and the failure of bills to carve out such a path in the past. Dreamers, young undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children, would be able to earn green cards in five years, as would some agricultural workers.

6.26.2013


Former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was formally charged Wednesday afternoon with first-degree murder, more than a week after a body was found near his Massachusetts home.

Hernandez was also charged with several counts of unlawful possession of firearms and possessing a large-capacity firearm. A judge ordered him to be held without bail because of the murder charge.
"He orchestrated the crime from the beginning and took steps to conceal and destroy evidence," First Assistant District Attorney Bill McCauley told the court.
Wearing a white V-neck shirt, red sports shorts, and handcuffs in Attleboro District Court, Hernandez showed no emotion as prosecutors laid out a bruising account of what allegedly happened the night semi-professional football player Odin Lloyd was killed, citing what they say is surveillance camera footage, text messages, and witnesses who were working the overnight shift who heard gunshots as evidence. He wiped tears from his face at the very end of the arraignment.

Deen Takes to ‘Today’ Show for Tearful Defense




Paula Deen insisted that she was not and never had been a racist, in a tearful interview on the “Today” show Wednesday morning.

Usually bubbly, Ms. Deen, a celebrity chef and frequent guest on the show, appeared tired and subdued as she faced both fans and critics, who have responded passionately since last week, when her deposition in a workplace-discrimination lawsuit came to widespread attention. In it, she admitted to using racist language, and tolerating racist jokes in one of her restaurants.

For the first time, she publicly referred to the plaintiff in the case, Lisa T. Jackson, the former manager at Uncle Bubba’s Oyster House in Savannah, Ga. “There’s someone evil out there who saw what I had, and wanted it,” Ms. Deen said.

The show’s host, Matt Lauer, whom she stood up for a scheduled interview last Friday, tried to focus on the threat to her multimillion-dollar business empire of restaurants, products and endorsements, asking, “Are you here to stop the financial bleeding?” Ms. Deen said she disagreed with the recent decisions of the Food Network and Smithfield Foods to end their relationships with her and noted that QVC had not done so.

On Wednesday, Caesars Entertainment announced that it had severed ties with Ms. Deen by “mutual agreement.” There are Paula Deen-themed restaurants at Caesars properties in Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina and Illinois. “Caesars intends to rebrand the restaurants in the coming months,” the company said.


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Tough odds are the norm for Texas lawmaker Wendy Davis

The 50-year-old legislator overcame hardships as a single teenage mom to graduate from Harvard.

AUSTIN — Wendy Davis, the fearless state senator who became an Internet sensation with her filibuster of a restrictive abortion bill that ground the Texas Legislature to a halt, has faced tough odds all her life.

"She's a total fighter," said Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Action Fund and daughter of the late Texas governor Ann Richards. "And the thing about Sen. Davis, she says she's going to do something, she gets it done."

The daughter of a single mom, Davis, 50, overcame her own hardships as a divorced teenage mother to graduate with honors from Harvard Law School.

At 19, Davis decided to become the first member of her family to go to college after hearing of a two-year paralegal program from a co-workers.

At the time, she was in a trailer park and raising her daughter by herself. "We were the working poor," she told The New York Times.

Davis clerked for a federal judge, practiced law and was CEO of a title company before getting into politics with her election to the Fort Worth City Council in 1999.

After unseating a longtime Republican incumbent in 2008 for state senator from Fort Worth, Davis, a Democrat, was named "Rookie of the Year" by Texas Monthlymagazine and was re-elected in 2012.

ABORTION LIMITS: Texas bill misses deadline

On Tuesday night, Davis' 10-hour filibuster of an abortion regulation bill came to an end when the chairman ruled she had gone off topic. Fifteen minutes before midnight, the Senate chamber's packed gallery erupted in raucous shouting, disrupting the proceedings and effectively killing the bill when the midnight deadline for passage came and went.

"I'm rising on the floor today to humbly give voice to thousands of Texans who are being ignored," she said when her speech began, later adding: "These voices have been silenced by a governor who made blind partisanship and personal political ambition the priority of our state."





'They're going to kill me,' Michael Jackson told son

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Michael Jackson often cried after talking to AEG Live executives as he prepared for his comeback concerts, his oldest son testified Wednesday.

"After he got off the phone, he would cry," Prince Jackson testified. "He would say 'They're going to kill me, they're going to kill me.'"

His father told him he was talking about AEG LIve CEO Randy Phillips and his ex-manager, Dr. Tohme Tohme, Prince said.

Prince, 16, began his testimony Wednesday morning in his family's wrongful death lawsuit against Jackson's last concert promoter, AEG Live.

His first 30 minutes on the stand were filled with videos and photographs of Jackson with his children, but then the questioning by Jackson lawyer Brian Panish focused on the last weeks of his father's life.

Prince testified that Phillips visited Jackson's rented Los Angeles mansion and spoke aggressively to Dr. Conrad Murray the night before his father's death.

"He was grabbing his elbow," Prince said. "It looked aggressive to me. He was grabbing by the back of his elbow and they were really close and he was making hand motions."

He couldn't hear what Phillips was saying to Murray, he said.

Michael Jackson was not there because he was at his last rehearsal, Prince said. He called his father from the security guard shack telephone to let him know Phillips was there. His father asked him to offer Phillips food and drink.

Prince said that was his last conversation with his father.

Prince was 12 when the pop icon died, but he said his father confided in him about whom he trusted and didn't trust and what he feared as he prepared for his comeback concerts.

Who is Wendy Davis?

You know, the Fort Worth Democrat who stood for eleven hours to filibuster a bill in the Texas State Senate that would place new restrictions on abortion clinics and ban the practice after 20 weeks of pregnancy? Here’s what you need to know. [UPDATE: She stood long enough to kill the bill, Texas' Lieutenant Governor ruled at 3:01 a.m.]

She knows about single motherhood, and poverty. The 50-year-old Davis had to care for her three siblings at the age of 14 for her single mother, and became a single mother herself at the age of 19.

She knows the law. Davis became the first person in her family to graduate from college, with a degree from Texas Christian University and then Harvard Law School. She clerked, litigated, and spent a few years in the title insurance business before starting her own practice for federal and local government affairs, real estate, and contract compliance.


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6.25.2013

Richard Matheson dies: A look back at his big-screen legacy


Science-fiction writer Richard Matheson died on Sunday at age 87, leaving a legacy of some of the best genre storytelling in literature, television and film.

Matheson’s prolific career includes dozens of novels and more than 100 short stories, not to mention screenplays for the big and small screens. Among Matheson’s works are “A Stir of Echoes,” “Ride the Nightmare” and his 1954 novel “I Am Legend” (on which no less than three movies were based, including the 2007 Will Smith feature), as well as many of “The Twilight Zone’s” most memorable episodes, such as “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet.” Matheson also wrote several Edgar Allan Poe adaptations, including “House of Usher,” “The Pit and the Pendulum” and “The Raven,” for filmmaker Roger Corman.

Matheson had been scheduled to receive the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films’ Visionary Award during the Saturn Awards on Wednesday. The award will be presented posthumously, and the event will now be dedicated to him.

What Is Cutis Laxa? Zara Hartshorn, Teenager With Rare Genetic Disorder, Gets Facelift At 16

A British teenager with an inherited genetic disorder that has made her look middle-aged practically since she was a child says she is thrilled with the results of a pioneering facelift. Zara Hartshorn, 16, from Rotherham, South Yorkshire, was given a free facelift after a doctor heard of her condition, and she said the results have given her a new lease on life.


Hartshorn has endured a lifetime of being picked on and mistaken for someone twice her age due to an extremely rare genetic condition called cutis laxa. The University of Pittsburgh’s Department of Human Genetics defines it as “a disease of prematurely loose, redundant, inelastic and wrinkled skin.” In addition to causing loose skin, cutis laxa can also cause heart and lung problems, and weaken joints.

Ouya Looks to Make a Dent in Game Console Market



Ouya, maker of a bite-sized game console that runs Google's Android operating system, wants to take a bite out the video game triumvirate of Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo.

The console, which went on sale Tuesday for $100, lets players try games for free before buying them, a selling point Ouya (pronounced oo-yah) CEO Julie Uhrman often makes to underscore that gamers who use consoles made by "the big three" can't test games before they spend as much as $60 to purchase them.

"We are definitely disrupting the console market," Uhrman says. "I mean, there's been no startup that has had a meaningful impact on the market in decades, and we're the first. We offer something different."

Missing red panda from National Zoo found in DC

WASHINGTON (AP) — A Twitter photo and phone tip from a resident helped animal keepers track down a red panda in a Washington neighborhood after it went missing from the Smithsonian's National Zoo.

The male named Rusty was captured Monday in a tree near a home in the Adams Morgan neighborhood Monday afternoon, said National Zoo spokeswoman Pamela Baker-Masson. It had traveled across the leafy Rock Creek Park, perhaps crossing a road or under a creek bridge to reach a residential area nearly ¾ of a mile from the zoo.

Senior curator Brandie Smith said animal keepers surrounded the area where he was found and called Rusty's name to calm him before capturing him in a net.

"We just had to approach him carefully," she said. "We are surprised by the distance he was able to cover."

The animal was taken to the zoo's animal hospital for a checkup and will remain there for several days.

How Rusty escaped is still a mystery, though. Zoo officials began reviewing security footage Monday morning to see if there is any evidence of how he escaped or whether he may have been taken by a human and then set loose. No security cameras are pointed directly at the red panda exhibit, though, and the zoo plans to add more cameras.

Curators have cut back several long tree limbs that may have aided the skilled climber with the escape.

"There is no obvious point that Rusty could have gotten out of the enclosure," Smith said, adding that it had held red pandas for years. "We all know that young males like to test boundaries."

Monica Lewinsky Negligee For Sale, But Not Infamous Blue Dress




Personal items, including a negligee, once owned by White House intern Monica Lewinsky and obtained during a federal investigation into her affair with President Bill Clinton are going on sale.

Among the letters and clothing items are an extra large black negligee and a large blue velour hoodie, but not the infamous blue dress, which played a role in proving the president and the intern had an inapropriate relationship in the 1990s.

The 32 items at one point belonged to Andy Bleiler, another married man with whom Lewinsky allegedly conducted an affair while she interned at the White House. In conducting his investigation into the president, special prosecutor learned of Lewinsky’s affair with Bleiler and took the items “to examine as potential evidence,” according to auction house Nate D. Sanders.




The lot is believed to be worth between $25,000 and $50,000. Online bidding concludes June 27. By Tuesday afternoon, the highest bid was $2,750.


Many of the items, including a birthday card Lewinsky asked the president to write Bleiler, as well as White House Matches and chocolates, were given to Bleiler by Lewinsky as gifts.

Star “examined each of the items in this lot as evidence in [the] impeachment case against Bill Clinton,” Sanders said in a statement.

The items are currently owned by Kate Nason, Bleiler’s now ex-wife.

Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives on perjury and obstruction of justice charges in 1998, but acquitted by the Senate and completed his term.

Lewinsky is currently believed to be living in the United Kingdom. Emails to her known representatives were not immediately returned.




Blackhawks return to Chicago champions again


The greatest -- or at the least the most publicly accessible -- victory lap in all of sports has picked up where it left off three years ago, with the Blackhawks trotting the Stanley Cup around Chicago as the city celebrates its second NHL championship since 2010. 

And this time the fans are ready.

Hundreds waited behind fences at O'Hare International Airport to welcome the bleary-eyed team home from Boston. The team plane carrying the Blackhawks and their championship trophy touched down shortly after 4 a.m., taxiing between fire trucks shooting water into the air and coming to rest in front of a small throng of fans. 

Players mingled briefly with supporters but did not address the media before boarding a team bus. Just as they did three years ago, the players stopped first at Harry Caray's in Rosemont to celebrate with their families. Roughly 1,000 fans dressed in bright-red Hawks gear waited outside the Italian steakhouse hoping to catch a glimpse of the team. 




Michael Jackson Death Anniversary: Remembering The King Of Pop 4 Years After His Untimely Death


It's been four years since Michael Jackson died, on June 25, 2009, from cardiac arrest caused by a lethal combination of prescription drugs. His death, later ruled a homicide, shocked fans and musicians across the world.
Jackson rose to fame in 1964 as the youngest member of his family's Motown group, the "Jackson 5," and continued to dominate the music industry with best-selling hits such as "Thriller," "Billie Jean" and "Beat It."
Jackson is survived by his three children, Prince Michael Jackson II, Michael Joseph Jackson Jr. and Paris-Michael Katherine Jackson.




George Lucas marries Mellody Hobson

The longtime loves tied the knot at Skywalker Ranch.

You know the Force will be with these two.

Star Wars powerhouse George Lucas and CBS News finance and economy analyst Mellody Hobson exchanged vows on Saturday at his famous Skywalker Ranch, confirms Amy Miller, a rep for Lucas. Bill Moyers officiated the ceremony and former Senator Bill Bradley walked Hobson down the aisle.

"Let's give a Galactic shout out to Master George Lucas & his bride Melodie on this, their wedding day," tweeted Samuel L. Jackson.

And Ron Howard tweeted that their ceremony "was a joy to behold." He added, "Bill Moyers service was beautiful, nothing short of profound. Congrats Mr. & Mrs. Lucas."

Lucas, 69, and Hobson, 44, got engaged in January, after dating since 2006.

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