WhiFinCog

For Whittaker-Finch-Cognetti Family & Friends To Blog Till They Can Blog No More!

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

wacko jacko or sneaky sneddon

Michael Jackson to face drug trafficking investigationNovember 30, 2005, 1:22:52

Michael Jackson is facing up to 20 years in prison for alleged drug trafficking.

The troubled singer is said to have a 40 pills-a-day habit, and has been accused of illegally importing anti-depressants and painkillers from the US to his hideaway in Bahrain.
The superstar - who was cleared of sex abuse in June - also faces allegations the drugs were obtained with fake prescriptions. Police are investigating claims by former aides of the star who say the 47-year-old is hooked on pills.
They say he takes around 40 tablets a day and was even seen falling flat on his face after injecting himself with a mystery substance. The investigation centres around a huge stash of drugs found at the star's Neverland ranch when police were probing the child sex claims made against Jackson in 2003.
Traces of cocaine were also found on the singer's underwear during the swoop. The probe is being run by district attorney Tom Sneddon - who is said to be angry he failed to convict Jackson on child sex charges in the summer.
A source close to the Jackson family is quoted in Britain's The Sun newspaper as saying: "Michael would fight this in court But none of us know if he could cope with another investigation
"Sneddon is obsessed with bringing him down This is not justice, it's a witch hunt"

http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/celebrity/74302004.htm

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Whittaker Farm


Whittaker Farm
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

Whittaker Farm


Whittaker Farm
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

Whittaker Farm


Whittaker Farm
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

Aunt Terri @ Aunt Bonnie's


Aunt Terri @ Aunt Bonnie's
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

Ed, Jim, Frank, & Wilma @ Aunt Bonnie's


Ed, Jim, Frank, & Wilma @ Aunt Bonnie's
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

The Best Christmas Puppy Photo


Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

This is the only decent one I captured with the whole photo session!

Vegas Smiling with his Antlers On his Neck!


Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

Robert trying to help Vegas with his Antlers


Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

Vegas grabbing Bristol by the Ear


Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

As I try to capture the perfect Christmas photo

Vegas Licking the Stool


Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

As I try to take the perfect pic for their Christmas Photo!

Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting


Bristol & Vegas Christmas Picture Sitting
Originally uploaded by shee_rah77.

This is what I captured as I tried to get my puppies to wear antlers for their Christmas photo shoot.

From the Press connects

Wedding - November, 2005
WHITTAKER-LIVERMOREAshley Livermore and Brock Whittaker were married September 4, 2005 at the Whittaker Family Farm in Whitney Point, NY.
Reverend Valentine performed the 6 p.m. ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Hope Livermore and Daniel Livermore, both of Harpursville, NY. The bridegroom is the son of Judith Whittaker and Scott Whittaker, both of Whitney Point, NY.
The bride was escorted by her father.
Sarah Van De Weert, best friend, was maid of honor. Lauren Crocker, Jessica Mras, friends, Theresa Whittaker and Aubrey Whittaker, sisters of the bridegroom, were bridesmaids. Katlynn Hayes served as flower girl.
John Hayes, best friend, was best man. Chad Livermore, brother of the bride, was usher. Jeff Livingston, cousin of the bride, Seth Livermore and Chad Livermore, brothers of the bride, were groomsmen. Noah Marshall served as ring bearer.
A reception was given at the Whittaker Family Farm in Whitney Point.
The bride graduated from Harpursville Central School and Broome Community College. She is an Administrative Assistant with Cornell University Cooperative Extension, Binghamton.
The bridegroom graduated from Whitney Point Central School. He is a Dairy Farmer with Whittaker Farms, Whitney Point.
The couple will honeymoon at a later date. They are living in Whitney Point.

Friday, November 25, 2005

terri

kirsty alley or Jenny Craig???



john in vegas

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Nick Lachey, Jessica Simpson Split


Jessica Simpson, 25, and Nick Lachey, 32, are going their separate ways, the couple announced in a statement Wednesday. "After three years of marriage, and careful thought and consideration, we have decided to part ways," the statement says. "This is the mutual decision of two people with an enormous amount of respect and admiration for each other. We hope that you respect our privacy during this difficult time." Reports that their union was in trouble began surfacing last October following a wild bachelor party attended by Lachey. The couple denied those stories, with Simpson telling PEOPLE: "Our relationship is better than it's ever been." Over the winter, the pair spent much of their time apart while Simpson was in Louisiana filming her movie debut as Daisy Duke in Dukes of Hazzard and Lachey worked on solo music projects.
But the couple reunited in the spring and shot down persistent rumors of a marital rift as they were seen out and about shopping, cuddling and clubbing together. Still, by July more reports surfaced that the marriage was kaput. Jessica's father and manager, Joe Simpson, stepped forward to defend the couple. "Do they fight? Hell yes, they fight. Have there been moments when Nick has wanted to leave Jessica or Jess has wanted to leave Nick? Absolutely," said the elder Simpson, explaining that the squabbles were not to be interpreted as a sign of major trouble in the union. "(It's the) same with me and my wife," Joe insisted. "If fighting is a sign of divorce, then we're all going to get divorced. My wife and I have been married 27 years. We've been at the edge of divorce for 26 of them." For her part, Jessica said that while she and Nick occasionally were seen squabbling, "You don't want to marry somebody who's just like you. So there are always going to be conflicts. An argument now and then is good. It means that we're communicating." And yet, the stories of a Simpson-Lachey rift continued to circulate. On Aug. 3, New York Post gossip columnist Cindy Adams went so far as to print that the couple had "hired divorce lawyers, already drawn up divorce papers, even actually signed divorce papers" – prompting Lachey to respond publicly. Cohosting TV's Live With Regis and Kelly with Kelly Ripa the day of Adams's item, Lachey said that everything was "absolutely wonderful" in his relationship with Simpson. He also denied being jealous of Simpson's movie career. The pair first met at the Hollywood Christmas Parade in 1998, when Lachey was still a member of the pop group 98 Degrees. He said what really made him fall for Simpson was seeing her perform. "I watched her sing and saw the way people responded," he said at the time. Within weeks of meeting her, he was telling fellow band members, "I'm going to marry that girl." In February 2002 Lachey chartered a yacht in Hawaii and proposed to Simpson as the sun set on the Pacific. They married in a lavish ceremony on Oct. 26, 2002, in Austin, Texas. Their new life together – mostly spent at their home in Calabasas, Calif. – was chronicled on MTV's reality series Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica. Before getting married, the couple briefly broke up in 2001 then decided to reunite after Sept. 11. "Nick was patiently waiting for me to grow up a little," Simpson told PEOPLE at the time. "I knew that I never, ever wanted to be away from Nick for the rest of my life."


http://people.aol.com/people/articles/0,19736,1053559,00.html

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Say It Isn't So...


Will “Walk the Line” star Joaquin Phoenix walk out of the business?

The moody actor, who plays Johnny Cash in the hit biopic, hinted to reporters that acting is so consuming he’s considering quitting.
“Getting into a character is very difficult for me because I step away from everything that makes me comfortable,” Phoenix told the London Mirror. “I show up with nothing in a strange hotel room in a strange city. I don’t know anybody. . . . I’d like a relationship — I’ve grown very tired of acting, the whole process, having to walk away from my life.”
Phoenix — who while playing the addicted Cash pulled a sink out of the wall even though it wasn’t in the script — checked into rehab shortly after the shoot. “It’s the best thing I ever did for myself,” he said. “Cash was addicted to pills, for me it was all about drinking.”

By Jeannette Walls
MSNBC

Monday, November 21, 2005

Happy Thanksgiving!

Sunday, November 20, 2005

more corrinn's b-day



corrinn's b-day






conrad's fave hat



For All the Smokers Out There


A healthy human lung, left, and a smokers lung injected with a polymer preservative are on display during a press preview of 'Bodies...The Exhibition,' Thursday, Nov. 10, 2005 in New York. The exhibit which feature 22 whole body specimens, as well as more than 260 additional organs and body specimens opens at the South Street Seaport Nov. 19, 2005. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Do You Need To See More?

Saturday, November 19, 2005

Generation X weaves a complex musical legacy


Although Gen X is linked to the grunge explosion of the early '90s, its glory years also included a roots-music movement and the mainstream rise of rap.

BY ERIC R. DANTON

The Hartford Courant



Eddie Vedder is 40.

Forty!

It wasn't so long ago that the Pearl Jam singer seemed ageless. With his band perched atop the charts in the early 1990s, Vedder was the popular symbol of a generation, a flannel-clad prophet giving voice to the disenfranchised acolytes of music called grunge.

Grunge's followers were tagged with the label ''Generation X,'' and the media dissected the motivations and modi operandi of young people commonly regarded as sullen slackers. That turned out not to be the case, of course Gen Xers overcame the economic recession of their early post-college years to play a key role in the '90s tech boom and grew up to be reasonably well-adjusted citizens, parents and neighbors.

Yet misconceptions linger and are even codified in things such as Whatever: The '90s Pop & Culture Box (Rhino), a new seven-CD compilation of music that completely misses the point about the relationship between Gen X and the music of the 1990s. Now, as the leading edge of Generation X begins following Eddie Vedder into middle age, it's time to more carefully examine the musical legacy of what has become pop culture's middle child, wedged between the marketing cash cows of the baby boom and Generation Y.

DEMOGRAPHIC BLIP

''In part, the story of the '90s is one of a demographic blip, of a particular age group having its brief, shining moment in the media spotlight,'' rock critic and author Jim DeRogatis, 41, writes in the liners notes to Whatever.

That's true, but it's not the whole story. Generation X is indeed inextricably linked to the grunge explosion of the early '90s. But its glory years also included a powerful roots-music movement, the mainstream rise of rap, the downfall of the aberration known as hair metal and the beginnings of what will surely form the foundation of Gen Y's legacy: emo. From Minneapolis in the early '80s to the death of Kurt Cobain and the dissolution of Uncle Tupelo in 1994, Gen X's musical legacy is staggeringly diverse.

The musical culture of Generation X is popularly believed to have been a revolt against the hair-metal debauchery of the late '80s. Actually, it began even earlier, as a younger age group reacted to the monolithic self-absorption of the baby-boom generation: 76 million people born between 1946 and 1964, according to demographers. Their development mirrored that of rock 'n' roll, and early boomers were children of post-war prosperity who witnessed The Beatles and Bob Dylan push against the boundaries of music. They basked in the mud at Woodstock and demonstrated against the war in Vietnam. They knew what it was to be young, man, and they haven't stopped talking about it since.

Their children noticed and, as children do, rejected the things their parents held dear. Those children, 41 million of them born between 1965 and 1976, were dubbed Generation X (though some definitions extend Gen X to 1978 or '79).

Punk was the first musical reaction to the classic-rock ethos of the Woodstock generation. The original punk rockers were late-period boomers eager to distance themselves from the supercilious upper end of their demographic, and their music, reflecting the dour economics of the late '70s, became a template for Generation X and the ensuing ''post-punk'' movement that eventually birthed grunge.

Assigning a birthplace or starting date to Gen X music is completely arbitrary, but let's say it began in the early '80s as part of underground scenes in towns such as Minneapolis and Athens, Ga. That's where the likes of Husker Du, the Replacements and R.E.M. co-opted elements of punk and made music reflecting values that were their own.

There were other post-punk scenes in other cities throughout the `80s: Boston yielded Mission of Burma and the Pixies. Dinosaur Jr came from Amherst. Fugazi hailed from Washington, D.C. Metallica moved from Los Angeles to the Bay Area. St. Louis gave rise to Uncle Tupelo, which kick-started alternative-country. And there was Seattle, which became a catch-all for the vibrant Pacific Northwest scene that included Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Sleater-Kinney, Bikini Kill, Mudhoney and others. Nirvana, a Seattle band, pushed punk into the popular consciousness in 1991 when it released Nevermind.

ALL ABOUT CRED

Punk was music obsessed with credibility, and nothing was more credible than rejecting an older generation's symbols of success. In the music business, that meant bands snubbed overtures from the major record companies and released their music on independent record labels. Eventually, though, bands that patterned themselves after the original post-punk acts started to become popular outside their own scenes. In many cases, they were unable to reconcile the competing notions of indie cred and mainstream success.

If punk started as the music of economic rebellion, it had a spiritual cousin in hip-hop. Rap was also obsessed with credibility, yet there was no similar ambivalence about popular success in rap music.

Hip-hop is ''arguably the single most significant achievement of our generation,'' Bakari Kitwana writes in The Hip Hop Generation: Young Blacks and the Crisis in African American Culture (Basic Civitas Books, 2003).

By ''our generation,'' though, Kitwana means black people born between 1965 and 1984. ''Generation X,'' he argues, is a term that applies primarily to whites, who are less conflicted about the split hip-hop represents in the black community. For all its cultural acclaim, Kitwana writes, rap music has foisted negative stereotypes on a generation of black youths, who are inundated with glorifications of ``anti-intellectualism, ignorance, irresponsible parenthood and criminal lifestyles.''

Subdividing Gen X isn't so easy, though, given the far-reaching influence Kitwana's hip-hop generation has had on its predominantly white counterpart. A former punk-rock trio called the Beastie Boys showed that white kids could rap with License to Ill in 1986, and a straight, short line connects Grandmaster Flash, Public Enemy, Rage Against the Machine and Limp Bizkit.

By the time the likes of Limp Bizkit arrived in the mid-'90s, bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam had demonstrated, however reluctantly, the financial possibilities of their music. The dollar signs attracted new bands that didn't share their predecessors' misgivings about commercial success, and rap and rock reconnected in the '90s, both as a short-term rap-metal musical fad and a longer-lasting business philosophy that placed a premium on material rewards.

The arrival of those bands, beautifully symbolized by the release in 1994 of Green Day's Dookie, signaled the end of Generation X's period of musical primacy.

GENERATION Y

Credibility doesn't look so different from commercial success to many of the 60 million-plus members of Generation Y, defined as people born between 1977 and 1993 or '94. Most members of the Bling Generation don't remember a time before MTV or the Internet, and their relationship with music, and pop culture in general, is necessarily different because of that.

Older generations see in Gen Yers a grabby sense of entitlement and a constant desire for distraction from the realities of the world around them. They don't have to actively seek music because it constantly surrounds them. It's online, it's on TV and in soundtracks, and it's more portable than ever, thanks to an ever-increasing variety of digital devices. All of those things will inform Generation Y's own musical legacy, whatever it turns out to be.

Generation Watch

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Chelsea In Taradise


Is Tara Reid the latest thong-flasher to threaten the Clinton political machine? We hear Sen. Hillary Clinton has been in crisis mode ever since she learned her daughter, Chelsea, has been spending time with the nip-slipping party girl.
Clubland sources say the Clinton’s Stanford-and-Oxford-educated spawn first met Reid in Europe over the summer while the American Pie actress was filming her short-lived E! show, Taradise. After Chelsea broke up with her longtime boyfriend Ian Klaus, she and Reid became inseparable, we’re told.
“It’s almost like Chelsea dumped Ian for Tara,” laughs one New York scenester. “All of a sudden Tara was staying at Chelsea’s in New York, and they were going out to Bungalow 8 and Nobu every night.”
Sources say the unlikely friendship remained out of the spotlight until the two flew to Las Vegas together in late September to attend the star-studded opening of Tao at the Venetian hotel.
“I think someone e-mailed a picture of Chelsea and Tara together in Vegas to Hillary,” a Capitol Hill staffer tells us. “All I know is I hear Hillary went nuts. She’s getting ready to run for President and her daughter is hanging out with Hollywood’s biggest mess.”
Now insiders say Chelsea, who works by day as a consultant at white-shoe firm McKinsey & Company, has strict orders not be seen in public with Reid.
“Tara still says they’re friends, but I haven’t seen them together lately,” says a Reid pal. “Hillary has enough political liabilities on her lap as it is,” notes the Capitol Hill source, “the last thing she needs is her daughter running around with another one.” (Regardless of whether her mother has gotten through to her, Chelsea at least had a good reason to skip her buddy’s 30th birthday party last weekend at Hollywood nightspot Mood. The young diplo-in-training was in Israel with her parents for the memorial service of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.)
Reid doesn’t currently have a publicist—her boozy antics have worn through three reps this year alone­—and her manager, Danny Sussman, was travelling and could not be reached for comment. A staffer in Sussman’s office, however, said that she didn’t know if the star-crossed pals see each other that much any more, “since Tara’s in L.A. and Chelsea’s in New York.” Senator Clinton’s spokeswoman, Nina Blackwell, did not respond to detailed calls and e-mails, and Chelsea’s rep, Julie Goldberg, said, “We don’t comment on Chelsea’s personal life.”

http://www.radarmagazine.com/fresh-intelligence/

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

No coins in the fountain



Italian police arrested four street cleaners Monday as they tried to pocket hundreds of euros scooped from Rome's famed Fountain of Trevi.

Each day, thousands of tourists stand with their backs to the Renaissance masterpiece and throw coins over their shoulders into its shallow basin in a tradition which is supposed to ensure they return to Rome.

The money, which adds up to several hundred euros a day or more, is regularly swept out by a cleaning firm with half of the proceeds handed over to Roman Catholic charity Caritas.

However, Caritas workers had noted a sharp decline in recent takings and alerted the police, who caught the quartet of cleaners Monday trying to walk off with some 1,200 euros.

A police official estimated they might have stolen as much as 110,000 euros in recent weeks before being stopped.

The quartet were not the first to try to cash in on the Trevi Fountain. In 2002 police arrested a homeless man, dubbed d'Artagnan, who made up to 12,000 euros a month with his pre-dawn raids on the tourist attraction.

Yahoo News

Sunday, November 13, 2005

At Center of a Clash, Rowdy Children in Coffee Shops


CHICAGO, Nov. 8 - Bridget Dehl shushed her 21-month-old son, Gavin, then clapped a hand over his mouth to squelch his tiny screams amid the Sunday brunch bustle. When Gavin kept yelping "yeah, yeah, yeah," Ms. Dehl whisked him from his highchair and out the door.

Right past the sign warning the cafe's customers that "children of all ages have to behave and use their indoor voices when coming to A Taste of Heaven," and right into a nasty spat roiling the stroller set in Chicago's changing Andersonville neighborhood.

The owner of A Taste of Heaven, Dan McCauley, said he posted the sign - at child level, with playful handprints - in the hope of quieting his tin-ceilinged cafe, where toddlers have been known to sprawl between tables and hurl themselves at display cases for sport.

But many neighborhood mothers took umbrage at the implied criticism of how they handle their children. Soon, whispers of a boycott passed among the playgroups in this North Side neighborhood, once an outpost of avant-garde artists and hip gay couples but now a hot real estate market for young professional families shunning the suburbs.

"I love people who don't have children who tell you how to parent," said Alison Miller, 35, a psychologist, corporate coach and mother of two. "I'd love for him to be responsible for three children for the next year and see if he can control the volume of their voices every minute of the day."

Mr. McCauley, 44, said the protesting parents were "former cheerleaders and beauty queens" who "have a very strong sense of entitlement." In an open letter he handed out at the bakery, he warned of an "epidemic" of antisocial behavior.

"Part of parenting skills is teaching kids they behave differently in a restaurant than they do on the playground," Mr. McCauley said in an interview. "If you send out positive energy, positive energy returns to you. If you send out energy that says I'm the only one that matters, it's going to be a pretty chaotic world."

And so simmers another skirmish between the childless and the child-centered, a culture clash increasingly common in restaurants and other public spaces as a new generation of busy, older, well-off parents ferry little ones with them.

An online petition urging child-free sections in North Carolina restaurants drew hundreds of signers, including Janelle Funk, who wrote, "Whenever a hostess asks me 'smoking or non-smoking?' I respond, 'No kids!' "

At Mendo Bistro in Fort Bragg, Calif., the owners declare "Well-behaved children and parents welcome" to try to stop unmonitored youngsters from tap-dancing on the 100-year-old wood floors.

Menus at Zumbro Cafe in Minneapolis say: "We love children, especially when they're tucked into chairs and behaving," which Barbara Daenzer said she read as an invitation to cease her weekly breakfast visits after her son was born.

Even at the Full Moon in Cambridge, Mass., a cafe created for families, with a train table, a dollhouse and a plastic kitchen in a carpeted play area, there are rules about inside voices and a "No lifeguard on duty" sign to remind parents to take responsibility.

"You run the risk when you start monitoring behavior," said the Full Moon's owner, Sarah Wheaton. "You can say no cellphones to people, but you can't say your father speaks too loudly, he has to keep his voice down. And you can't really say your toddler is too loud when she's eating."

Here in Chicago, parents have denounced Toast, a popular Lincoln Park breakfast spot, as unwelcoming since a note about using inside voices appeared on the menu six months ago. The owner of John's Place, which resembles a kindergarten class at recess in early evening, established a separate "family friendly" room a year ago, only to face parental threats of lawsuits.

Many of the Andersonville mothers who are boycotting Mr. McCauley's bakery also skip story time at Women and Children First, a feminist bookstore, because of the rules: children are asked not to stand, talk or sip drinks.

When a retail clerk at another neighborhood store asked a woman to stop breast-feeding last spring, "the neighborhood set him straight real fast," said Mary Ann Smith, the area's alderwoman.

After a dozen years at one site, Mr. McCauley moved A Taste of Heaven six blocks away in May 2004, to a busy corner on Clark Street. But there, he said, teachers and writers seeking afternoon refuge were drowned out not just by children running amok but also by oblivious cellphone chatterers.

Children were climbing the cafe's poles. A couple were blithely reading the newspaper while their daughter lay on the floor blocking the line for coffee. When the family whose children were running across the room to throw themselves against the display cases left after his admonishment, Mr. McCauley recalled, the restaurant erupted in applause.

So he put up the sign. Then things really got ugly.

"The looks I would get when I went in there made me so nervous that I would try to buy the food as fast as I could and get out," said Laura Brauer, 40, who has stopped visiting A Taste of Heaven with her two children. "I think that the mothers who allow their kids to run around and scream, that's wrong, but kids scream and there is nothing you can do about it. What are we supposed to do, not enjoy ourselves at a cafe?"

Ms. Miller said that one day when her son, then 4 months old, was fussing, a staff member rolled her eyes and announced for all to hear, "We've got a screamer!"

Kim Cavitt recalled having coffee and a cookie one afternoon with her boisterous 2-year-old when "someone came over and said you just need to keep her quiet or you need to leave."

"We left, and we haven't been back since," Ms. Cavitt said. "You go to a coffee shop or a bakery for a rest, to relax, and that you would have to worry the whole time about your child doing something that children do - really what they're saying is they don't welcome children, they want the child to behave like an adult."

Why suffer such scorn, the mothers said, when clerks at the Swedish Bakery, a neighborhood institution, offer children - calm or crying - free cookies? Why confront such criticism when the recently opened Sweet Occasions, a five-minute walk down Clark Street, designed the restroom aisle to accommodate double strollers and offers a child-size ice cream cone for $1.50? (At A Taste of Heaven, the smallest is $3.75.)

"It's his business; he has the right to put whatever sign he wants on the door," Ms. Miller said. "And people have the right to respond to that sign however they want."

Mr. McCauley said he had received kudos from several restaurant owners in the area, though none had followed his lead. He has certainly lost customers because of the sign, but some parents say the offense is outweighed by their addiction to the scones, and others embrace the effort at etiquette.

"The litmus test for me is if they have highchairs or not," said Ms. Dehl, the woman who scooped her screaming son from his seat during brunch, as she waited out his restlessness on a sidewalk bench. "The fact that they had one highchair, and the fact that he's the only child in the restaurant is an indication that it's an adult place, and if he's going to do his toddler thing, we should take him out and let him run around."

Mr. McCauley said he would rather go out of business than back down. He likens this one small step toward good manners to his personal effort to decrease pollution by hiring only people who live close enough to walk to work.

"I can't change the situation in Iraq, I can't change the situation in New Orleans," he said. "But I can change this little corner of the world."

The New York Times

Cash’s daughter objects to ‘Walk the Line’



Kathy Cash says the new film portray’s her mother as a ‘psycho’

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Kathy Cash, one of Johnny Cash’s five children, was so upset about how her mother is portrayed in the upcoming movie “Walk the Line” that she walked out of a family-only screening — five times.

She thinks the movie, which opens nationwide Nov. 18, is good and that performances by Joaquin Phoenix as her dad and Reese Witherspoon as her stepmother, June Carter Cash, are Oscar-worthy.

But she also said the film unfairly shows her mother, Vivian Liberto Distin, Johnny Cash’s first wife, as a shrew. Actress Ginnifer Goodwin plays her in the movie.

“My mom was basically a nonentity in the entire film except for the mad little psycho who hated his career. That’s not true. She loved his career and was proud of him until he started taking drugs and stopped coming home,” Kathy Cash said.

Vivian Liberto Distin died earlier this year as a result of complications from lung cancer. She and Cash were married 13 years and had four children together. He pledged to remain faithful to her in his song “I Walk the Line.”

Kathy Cash also said the movie fails to include any meaningful scenes with the children or show the pain she and her three sisters endured during their father’s fight with drugs and their parents’ divorce. She says it portrays Johnny Cash’s father too negatively.

“Anyone who wants a good sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll movie is gonna love it,” she said. “I’m anticipating dyed-in-the-wool fans objecting to a lot of stuff.”

John Carter Cash — Johnny and June’s only child together and an executive producer for “Walk the Line” — says his half-sister’s criticisms have merit. But he says it’s OK to take some license and that, in the bigger picture, the movie succeeds in telling his parents’ love story.

“I’m compassionately understanding,” he said, adding, “the point of the film is my parents’ love affair.”

© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Now you can have some Jesus Juice!


Michael Jackson's lawyers are desperately trying to stop a couple from producing a wine which they are planning to call Jesus Juice. This infamous beverage has been known to be used on little boys by Jacko. A producer for CBS and his wife have applied to trademark the term Jesus Juice. They have already produced the wine label which will feature a man hanging on a crucifix, wearing Jackson's trademark fedora hat, sequined glove and black loafers.

The man said: "My wife and I are hobby winemakers We made a few bottles for friends. We never wanted to sell it. We only trademarked it because we didn't want other people to try to make money off it.
"I apologize to anybody who is offended by this It was an irreverent idea that, in hindsight, I would discard - just like I'll probably discard those labels"


What was in the original juice? Like red wine and grape juice, right? Sick, why didn't he just give those kids some wine coolers? It's the same thing and comes in different flavors like peach fizz and very strawberry. He's a cheap fuck!

This is from DLISTED
Read more at
New York Daily News

Monday, November 07, 2005

Happy Halloween From On Common Grounds

Saturday, November 05, 2005

Cruise liner fends off pirate attack

(CNN) -- A luxury cruise line will re-evaluate whether to offer future cruises off the coast of Somalia after pirates attempted to attack one of its ships early Saturday.

The modern-day pirates were in two small boats and carrying machine guns and a rocket-propelled grenade when they attempted the attack on Seabourn Cruise Lines' "Spirit" about 5:35 a.m. local time Saturday, Deborah Natansohn, president of the cruise line, told CNNRadio.

The ship was carrying 150 passengers and a crew of about 160.

The ship, she said, immediately instituted its emergency response system. "The occupants of those boats did not succeed in boarding the ship and eventually turned away ... our captain and crew did a terrific job taking responsive action."

Passenger Mike Rogers of Vancouver, Canada, said the pirates were shooting and sending rockets at the boat.

"The captain tried to run one of the boats over, but they were small boats, about 25 feet long," he told CNNRadio affiliate CKNW in Vancouver.

"Each one had four or five people on it, and (the captain) said he was going to do anything to keep them from getting on board."

The captain, however, did not hit the alarm button to alert passengers of the emergency, Rogers said.

"He announced it over the speakers, because he was scared people would run up on deck, and he didn't want people on deck because they would have been shot."

The cruise ship eventually outran the pirates' boats, Natansohn said. One person suffered minor injuries, she said, but did not elaborate.

"There's some minor damage done to the ship," Rogers said. "There's no water right now, for instance, in some places, and I believe one of the grenades actually went off in one of the cabins, but everyone on board is fine."

The boat is now en route to the Seychelles Islands, Natansohn said.

On Thursday, the United Nations' World Food Programme warned that hijackings off the coast of Somalia were restricting the delivery of needed food assistance to the country.

"The southern Somali coastline is one of the most dangerous in the world," the WFP said on its Web site.

"In recent months, WFP's operations in Somalia have been sabotaged by the hijackings of two vessels carrying relief food. Ship owners are now demanding armed escorts to travel in these waters."

Natansohn said efforts were underway Saturday to locate the pirates. "We have notified U.S., Canadian and Australian authorities, because most of our passengers come from those three countries, as well as local authorities in Africa."

"Seabourn 'Spirit' has offered itineraries in that part of the world before, but we'll obviously be looking at the incident to determine what to do in the future," she said.

Rogers said, "we're always looking for adventure, but this is probably a little more than we would normally look for."

By CNNRadio's Matt Cherry and Amanda Moyer


Saturday, November 5, 2005; Posted: 4:41 a.m. EST (09:41 GMT)


Thursday, November 03, 2005


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