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A jury has found James Broadnax guilty of capital murder over the killings of Stephen Swan and Matthew Butler outside their Christian music studio in 2008.

The punishment phase begins in the morning.

The jury deliberated about 40 minutes.

In closing arguments, defense attorney Brad Lollar focused on whether confessions given to the media or Broadnax's actions were intentional because he had used marijuana laced with PCP and embalming fluid.

He also said without those confessions to reporters, prosecutors would not be seeking the death penalty.

Dallas County prosecutor David Alex countered that Broadnax knew what he was doing and sounded "proud" of his action in those interviews.

He said the interviews "only amplif[y] that he is as cold as they get," Alex said. But they are not the reason that prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

"This defendant took the handgun you all saw and executed Stephen Swan and Matthew Butler for no other reason than they had stuff and he didn't," Alex said. source>>>

Christian Creationism Exhibit at Tulsa Zoo a Top Priority for Mayoral Candidate

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 203 Views

Related Categories: General

A mayoral candidate in Tulsa, Okla., is reportedly putting a Christian creationism exhibit in the Tulsa Zoo among her top priorities, along with addressing crime and budget issues.

Republican Anna Falling says the people of Tulsa must recognize that God needs to be honored in the city, Tusla World reported.

"If we can't come to the foundation of faith in this community, those other answers will never come," she told the paper.

As part of that effort, Falling has resurrected a failed push for an exhibit at the Tulsa Zoo that would tell the Genesis story of God creating the world in six days and resting on the seventh, originally proposed by Christian activist Dan Hicks in 2005, Tulsa World reported.

"Installation of this exhibit at the Tulsa Zoo was raised in 2005, discussed, vetted and resolved in a very public process involving the entire community," Zoo officials said in a prepared statement, "A public vote four years ago by the Parks Board resolved the issue."

The zoo currently has a display of the earth's creation from a scientific point of view and an elephant-like statue said to represent the Hindu god Ganesha, Tulsa World reported.

Falling, a former city councilor and founder of several Christian non-profit groups, also stressed the need to reserve leadership positions for those who will "honor God," the paper reported.
source>>>

Political gamesmanship takes over health care debate

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 214 Views

Related Categories: General

The politics of health care reform are overwhelming the policy discussion. That's inevitable, although nonetheless regrettable.

The Democratic strategy is to recast health care reform as a political melodrama. The villain has been cast: the evil health insurance companies, who are standing between the American people and a beneficent government that wants to shower them with quality health care for everyone.

Hence President Obama and his administration now refer to health insurance reform, rather than health care reform, and inveigh against the cruel and rapacious insurance companies at every opportunity.

There's just one rather large problem with the Democratic narrative. The health insurance companies, by and large, are actually supporting the Democratic plan.

The heart of the Democratic proposal is to treat health insurance as a public utility. The government will decide the benefit packages companies can offer. Medical underwriting is prohibited. Price differentials based upon other factors - age, gender, geography - are sharply limited. Profits are capped.

The health insurance companies are willing to accept being treated like a public utility. They have asked for only one thing: a mandate that everyone purchase their product. That way the subsidy for the health care of those older or with chronic illnesses will be borne by the young, who will pay much higher premiums than if medical underwriting were permitted.

The health insurers have also asked not to be subject to one thing: a government-owned competitor, the much-debated public option. But they are playing an inside lobbying game against the public option, not engaging in a scorched-earth outside public education and grassroots mobilization campaign against the public option or the Democratic reform proposal in general.

There is, however, such a scorched-earth campaign going on, manifested most visibly in the congressional town hall protests. These protests are the subject of remarkable disingenuousness by Republicans and hypocrisy by Democrats.

Republicans are portraying protesters as citizens who are just so upset they have spontaneously dropped their plows and frying pans to go yell at their congressman. In reality, they are being mobilized by fiscal conservative organizations, primarily FreedomWorks and Americans for Prosperity, to turn these public meetings into an act of political theater.

Using protest politics and treating public meetings as political theater, however, has been a staple of the left since the Progressive Era. Democrats just can't get over the shock of it being used against them rather than for them.

Those tut-tutting such tactics tend to have false memories of an era in which Americans discussed political issues civilly and with respect. Such an era never existed. American political discourse has always been dominated by partisan sniping, hyperbole and bluster.

The federalists and republicans had substantial philosophical differences. But in political combat, they rarely debated them. Instead, they mostly maligned each other's character. Occasionally, there were even duels fought over the insults.

We've moved beyond politicians shooting at each other, but our political discourse has rarely risen much above the scurrilous.

What's new and different aren't the tactics. It's that fiscal conservatives are using them.

Social conservatives have always been able to mobilize. Fiscal conservatives appeared to be unorganizable. These town hall protests, and the tea party protests that preceded them, suggest they may be organizable after all. That would be a new dynamic in American politics.

Protest politics aren't my cup of tea. I prefer civil discourse, even if I don't have any expectation of actually seeing it.

Still, in this case the protests reflect the hard edge of a broader resurgent skepticism about the reach of the federal government that I had feared had faded away. So, it's welcome, even if I wish it were expressed with more decorum. source>>>

The NSE 2009 College Football Preseason Final Poll

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 135 Views

Related Categories: Sports

I truly hate these things. I cannot stand the idea of breaking teams out in a ranking before the first game is ever played. It seems wrong to me on many, many levels. But, I have already harped about my issues with the BCS and my issues with the way that preseason rankings affect the outcome of the final polls in any given football season. Look at this and this if you have the stomach to read more than one of my pieces in a twenty four hour period.
The coach's poll is in and you can see that here. Six of the usual suspects are in the Top Ten, which is not too surprising at all. What is surprising is that this year, they, (the coach's) gave the top four slots to usual suspects. Shoot, most years, they at least try and throw someone like Georgia or Michigan in there to make you think that someone else has a chance. What they have done this year is to virtually ensure that USC, Florida, Texas or Oklahoma will win the whole enchilada.
OK, scratch Oklahoma...Bob Stoops and the boys haven't been able to win a BCS bowl game in years...but that doesn't stop the BCS from giving them the opportunity.
So, instead of giving you a preseason top twenty, I am going to try and figure out what the polls might, (and the operative word here is might),look like at the end of the 2009 college football season. We are going to try to read the future and give you a preveiw if what it may look like after all of the twists and turns of a college football season have played out.
Note: I didn't even try to match the teams up with the bowl game that their conference champion plays in, so please, save me that ball of crap in your comments.
I just hope that you have read the previous paragraph and understand the position of this article before calling down the fires of hell upon me because I don't have the Florida Gators ranked number one.
I just figured that if the coaches and other writers could decide who the best teams in the land were before the first game has been played, that I could prognosticate the end of the season at the same time. It makes just as much sense, doesn't it???
So, here is your Preseason Final Football Poll for 2009.
1) Florida State - We knew that FSU might be good this year, but we had no idea how good. In Bobby Bowden's last year at the helm in Tallahassee, the Seminoles ran the table in the ACC Atlantic Division, beat North Carolina in the ACC Championship game and absolutely destroyed Oklahoma in the National Championship game. It looks like FSU football is back. (If you believe this, then you are a bigger FSU homer than I am. This was put in along with the TCU beating of WVU comment in the #2 ranking to bust my buddy Ben's chops. However, it is expected that anyone that plays Oklahoma in a BCS game should win....same thing goes for Ohio State)

2) TCU - We couldn't keep ignoring them forever...and they and Penn State are the only other undefeated teams in the land, so for the second year in a row, we hand the booby prize to a team from the Mountain West. Congratulations TCU on your Fiesta Bowl win over West Virginia. We (The BCS) wanted to get TCU some real competition, but we're locked into this "We have to invite certain conference champions to the big bowl games thing". Our bad.

3) Penn State - Despite playing in the Big Ten and having a soft out of conference schedule, we feel obligated to rank Penn State this high. After all, they did beat USC in the Rose Bowl and PSU is the NSE's Dad's alma mater.

4) North Carolina - Butch Davis surprised everyone this year. We knew that he had a good team, but we didn't expect the Tar Heels to run the board in the ACC Coastal, only losing twice, (to Florida State both times, once in the regular season and once in the ACC championship game), and then to slap Ole Miss around in the Orange Bowl.

5) Oklahoma - It is a law that the Sooners have to finish in the top five in the final polls every year. Even if it is a completely fictitious poll. If you do a final poll and don't rank them in the top five, Bob Stoops sends his Regulators to your house and you have to revise the poll at gunpoint. (OK, I made the Regulators thing up)

6) Florida- Like them or not, the Gators are the team of the naughts, the zero zero's, the double nuts, or whatever it is that you want to call this decade...too bad that they had to lose the last game of the year to FSU, before destroying Ole Miss in the SEC Championship game and rolling over Texas in the Sugar Bowl.

7) Utah - With their only loss this season to TCU, the Utes seem to be taking their place as a national powerhouse. Move over Florida, Ohio State, LSU, Texas and USC. Utah will be one of the favored children in 2010.

8) Boise State - Even though they did beat Oregon and ran the table to finish undefeated and won the JackArute.Com bowl...we still have no respect for Boise State and refuse to rank them any higher than this.

9) Ole Miss - Almost had it made...Almost ran the table....That is until the Gators exacted their revenge for 2008 in the SEC Championship game, followed by UNC giving them a taste of the whip in the Orange Bowl.

10) USC - If they could actually beat Oregon State, this ranking may have been higher. Losing to Penn State in the Rose Bowl didn't really help either.

11) Georgia Tech - Who says that the triple option is an antiquated offense??? If it weren't for North Carolina, the Ramblin' Wreck would have been in the ACC championship game this year.

12) Texas - Looked good in everything except the Red River Rivalry and the Sugar Bowl. It's OK though; the Longhorns will be in the 2010 preseason top five, along with the other usual suspects, so that they can have another shot.

13) Alabama - Nick Saban's crew had a down year in 2009, but they will be back and in the hunt next year, so will Les Miles and LSU....Not so much for Houston Nutt and Ole Miss.

14) Georigia - After beating up on Ohio State in the Citrus Bowl, the Bulldogs and Mark Richt look to 2010, when the coach's should have them near the top of the preseason rankings again.

15) Ohio State- Like Oklahoma, you can only rank the Buckeyes so low. Captain Sweater Vest doesn't get upset, but the legion of OSU alumni and sidewalk alumni do. OSU can be no lower than fifteen at the end of the year. No lower than eight in the preseason polls.

16) California - It is also a law that at least one team other than USC from the PAC-10 has to be ranked in the top twenty.

17) Oklahoma State - if the Cowboys didn't play in the same division of the Big 12 that two of the BCS's favorite children, (Texas and Oklahoma), play in, then they might actually challenge for a national title, but alas, when you play in the Big 12 South, you WILL lose to Oklahoma and Texas. It is in the conference by laws. Just ask Texas Tech...they beat Texas in 2008 and their coach, Mike Leach was almost dismissed for the effrontery. (OK, I made the Mike Leach thing up)

18) Virginia Tech - I tried to be nice when I previewed them for the ACC series, but a few of their fans were complete jack asses, so I thought that I'd take this opportunity to point out that the Hokies have no passing game, none, zip, zilch, bupkis....and a team that is one dimensional is not going to challenge for a conference crown, much less a national title.

19) Kansas - Someone has to win the Big 12 North...right????

20) LSU - I just couldn't think of any other team to put into this slot.

So there you have it. My twisted and perverted view of what the polls might look like at the end of the 2009 College Football season. Sadly, there are actually people that take these preseason polls seriously. Even more sadly, some of the people that have to take this crap seriously are the folks that write the software for the BCS computers.
How about we just have a playoff, so that neither I, nor anyone else ever has a reason to do something as silly and asinine as a preseason poll again??? source>>>

Penn State on regional cover of SI college football preview

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 95 Views

Related Categories: Sports

Sports Illustrated's college football preview hit newstands today and -- surprise! -- you won't find Michigan or Michigan State on a regional cover. Penn State gets the nod in the Midwest.

The magazine projects Florida vs. Texas in the BCS Championship Game and Southern Cal vs. Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. The Buckeyes and Trojans meet first Sept. 12 in Columbus.

The other BCS bowl projections: Penn State vs. Virginia Tech in the Orange, Ole Miss vs. Rutgers in the Sugar and Oklahoma vs. Boise State in the Fiesta.

Neither MSU nor U-M cracked the preseason Top 20 or landed a player on the All-America team. Florida quarterback Tim Tebow made the All-America team, but Texas QB Colt McCoy edged him for the Heisman.

The top 10: 1. Florida, 2. Texas, 3. Oklahoma, 4. USC, 5. Virginia Tech, 6. Ole Miss, 7. Oklahoma State, 8. Alabama, 9. Boise State and 10. Ohio State.

The next 10: 11. Oregon, 12. Georgia Tech, 13. LSU, 14. Penn State, 15. Georgia, 16. Florida State, 17. TCU, 18. Oregon State, 19. Utah and 20. North Carolina. source>>>

Xbox 360 version of Black College Football game release slated

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 108 Views

Related Categories: Sports

Nerjyzed Entertainment, of Baton Rouge, plans to release the Xbox 360 version of its game, BCFx, the Black College Football Xperience, on Sept. 1, to coincide with the college football season, Chief Executive Officer Jacqueline Beauchamp said Tuesday.

The console version's release date has been delayed for months while Nerjyzed worked out some technical issues, Beauchamp said.

"There are a lot of pieces to this game. Literally, it's two games in one," Beauchamp said.

In addition to the football game -- which features matchups between historically black colleges and universities, or HBCUs -- BCFx includes a Battle of the Bands halftime show and head-to-head drumline play.

The halftime show required developers to coordinate the movement of around 200 band members, Beauchamp said. Nerjyzed also had to make sure the drum pads used in the interactive musical portion of the game worked correctly.

Integrating all of those separate elements seamlessly was new and different, not to mention complicated, she said.

Nerjyzed is promoting BCFx: the Doug Williams Edition by sponsoring the Bayou Classic's Battle of the Bands and Greek Show, which will be held Nov. 27, the Friday evening before the football game between Southern and Grambling State universities. Nerjyzed will also buy television commercial time during the game's broadcast as the firm did last year.

Beauchamp said the company did not want to ship its game until everything was correct. It's better to delay the launch than to have consumers asking why the game was released before all the bugs were worked out, she said.

"At the end of the day, our goal was to make sure that we had a phenomenal game that was going to be placed on the market," she said.

The delays forced Beauchamp to seek an additional $1 million to $2 million in funding from Nerjyzed's investors. The company initially raised $8 million in startup capital.

Beauchamp said she's excited about all of the firsts Nerjyzed has recorded, which include being the first African-American video game company to release an Xbox version of a game that specifically targets African-American consumers.

Beauchamp said the company expects to move at least 500,000 of the games.

The game is priced at $39.99; that works out to $20 million in sales. source>>>

The Tim Tebow blog

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 104 Views

Related Categories: Sports

Yes, the Tim Tebow blog exists. That's 24/7 of Tebow.

I'm always on the lookout for interesting items about college football. But a whole site dedicated to one player really got my attention.

Kudos to Dan Shanoff for coming up with the idea and then executing it. I suspect his Tebow blog will provide interesting reading throughout the season.

The blog's message: "Covering the Tim Tebow Era." I also like the "About" part: "Obsessive coverage of Tim Tebow."

If I had to pick one player to dedicate an entire blog to, it would be Tebow, Florida's superb quarterback. He'll go down as one of the greatest college football players ever. He already has two national titles, plus a Heisman. He can certainly add to those numbers this season.

Tebow isn't the most talented or gifted player in college football, but he is definitely the most valuable. source>>>

Rick Pitino's one-night stand with a woman in a Kentucky restaurant could lead to his firing under a "moral depravity" clause in his megabucks Louisville contract.

The New York native, in an interview with police, acknowledged the sexual encounter in August 2003 - and admitted paying her $3,000, reportedly for an abortion.

Language in his 2007 contract extension says the 56-year-old basketball coach can be dismissed for "acts of moral depravity" or behavior that would "bring Employee into public disrepute or scandal."

Pitino earns $2.25 million a year under the deal that runs through 2013. At the time he signed, Louisville's athletic director said Pitino was "worth every penny of it, probably double it."

But Pitino - the only coach in NCAA history to take three different teams to the Final Four - is facing the first major scandal since his Hall of Fame-caliber career began.

The married father of five was forced to go public with his tryst after Karen Cunagin Sypher was charged with trying to extort $10 million from Pitino.

Sypher, 49, alleged after her arrest earlier this year that Pitino had raped her inside the restaurant - and then again a short time later.

Pitino confessed to the one-time sexual escapade inside Porcini restaurant, but denied the rape allegation. Kentucky authorities said there was insufficient evidence to support the rape allegation. source>>>

 

Eunice Kennedy Shriver helped Kids with disabilities shine brightly

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 118 Views

Related Categories: Children

"You are the stars," Eunice Kennedy Shriver said. "And the world is watching you."

She spoke those words at the 1987 Special Olympics World Games in South Bend, Indiana, according to the Special Olympics website.

She was speaking to the kids who were competing that day.

But Eunice Kennedy Shriver was a star in her own right - a star who allowed kids with developmental disabilities to shine more brightly than they ever thought possible.

Mrs. Shriver founded the Special Olympics in 1968.

On Tuesday, she died at a hospital in Massachusetts.

She was 88 years old.

Some people will remember her for being a sister of the late President John F. Kennedy.

Some people know her as the mother of California's first lady, Maria Shriver.

But to millions of kids around the world, she was a hero - a woman who used her family name and influence to make a powerful change in the way people view the developmentally disabled.

"Thank you for starting Special Olympics," said a tribute posted on the group's website. "It's done so much for those kids who participate."

It came from a woman who identified herself only as Cheryl.

"I know because I was one of those kids," she continued. "I went to state meet three times in (New York) state. Win or lose every kid felt like a winner."

That's the whole point of the Special Olympics.

Everybody wins - whether you come in first or last.

"Let me win," the Special Olympics motto says. "But if I cannot win, let me be brave in the attempt."

"By your presence, you send a message to every village, every city, every nation," Mrs. Shriver told the athletes on that day in 1987. "A message of hope. A message of victory."

The inspiration behind the Special Olympics was someone very close to Mrs. Shriver - her oldest sister, Rosemary.

Rosemary Kennedy was developmentally disabled.

Yet her sister Eunice liked to talk about what Rosemary could do, not what she couldn't.

"Rosemary could swim better than any of us," she once told a reporter.

Rosemary was three years older than Eunice.

But throughout their lives, it was Eunice who looked out for Rosemary.

"I had an enormous affection for Rosie," she said two years ago, in an interview with National Public Radio (NPR).

It was Rosemary's athletic ability that drove her sister to create the Special Olympics.

She recognized that kids with developmental disabilities were capable of much more than they'd been given credit for.

"If I never met Rosemary, never knew anything about handicapped children, how would I have ever found out?" she told NPR. "Because nobody accepted them anyplace. So where would you find out, unless you had one in your own family?"

Family was important to Mrs. Shriver.

She was married for 56 years to Sargent Shriver.

And in addition to her daughter Maria, she raised four boys - Robert, Timothy, Mark and Anthony.

Tim Shriver is now the chairman of the Special Olympics.

"She believed that people with intellectual abilities could - individually and collectively - achieve more than anyone thought possible," he said in a statement released on Tuesday. "This much she knew with unbridled faith and certainty."

Had she been born in another era, Eunice Kennedy Shriver might have followed her brothers John, Ted and Bobby into politics.

"She should have been President," her nephew Robert Kennedy Junior once said. "She is the most impressive figure in the family."

Some people say the Special Olympics will be the Kennedy family's greatest legacy.

"An inspiration to us all," said another tribute posted on the Special Olympics website. "A woman who taught us to exceed our expectations and triumph over adversity, to live life fully and embrace challenges."

"Thank you for being a champion for our children," said another tribute.

"Thank you so much," said yet another. "Because of you, people like me are seen as valued not as incapable."

"My sister Rosemary taught me what it meant to love one's family and to look out for one's sister," Eunice Kennedy Shriver said two years ago, speaking to the young athletes at the 2007 Special Olympics World Summer Games. "You have given me the gift of a dream come true." source>>>

Dell unveils Nickelodeon PC for kids

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 82 Views

Related Categories: Children

Dell Inc (DELL.O) on Tuesday unveiled a line of Nickelodeon co-branded personal computer for children, the first in a series of branding deals intended to galvanize its consumer business.

Dell's move is the latest example of PC makers using design and targeting particular demographies to stand apart from rivals such as Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ.N) and Acer Inc (2353.TW) in an increasingly commoditized industry.

The Dell Inspiron Mini Nickelodeon Edition will come clad in the Viacom Inc (VIAb.N) channel's trademark "green slime" design, with additional designs based on programs such as "SpongeBob SquarePants" and "iCarly."

The 10-inch netbook has wireless Internet access, weighs less than 3 pounds and comes loaded with entertainment and educational content. It will also feature a personalized user interface with Nickelodeon-branded desktop wallpaper and icons, and easy access to the channel's online content.

Michael Tatelman, vice president of global consumer sales and marketing for Dell, said the Nickelodeon netbook is just the start of its co-branding effort as it pushes into areas such as college students and pro sports.

"The PC, like the smartphone, has become a 21st century symbol of self-expression. People are identified by what they carry, and people identify with what they carry," he said.

Leigh Anne Brodsky, president of Nickelodeon and Viacom consumer products, said the "sweet spot" for the PC was the so-called "tween" market.

"This really is not a toy. This is the real deal," she said.

The world's No. 2 PC maker did not announce pricing for the netbook, which will be available in October in the United States through Dell's online store, and at Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) outlets and Walmart.com.

The Nickelodeon PC is based on Dell's Inspiron Mini 10v, which starts at $300. source>>>

Parents, kids today more in harmony than prior generations

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 69 Views

Related Categories: Children

Popular wisdom suggests many young people and their Baby Boomer parents get along great -- unlike many Boomers and their own parents did back in the '60s and '70s. So does that mean the generations see eye to eye?

Not at all. But they aren't fighting about it like they used to. Forty years after Woodstock, the generation gap has mellowed.

A survey out today from the Pew Research Center finds two-thirds of Americans 16 and older see an age divide in every one of the eight areas listed. Among the biggest gaps:

-Technology: 73% call tech use "very different."

READ: Pew Research Center report
BUSINESS TO FUN: How different generations spend time online
'DUMBEST GENERATION'? Professor blames technology

-Music: 69% say tastes are "very different."
FIND MORE STORIES IN: New York | World War II | Columbia University | George Washington | Brookings Institution | Elvis Presley | Emory University | Jimi Hendrix | The Beatles | Woodstock Festival | Generation Y | Baby Boomer | Popular | The Rolling Stones

-Moral values: 80% call them "very" or "somewhat" different; 80% said the same for work ethic.

'CIVIC GENERATION': Rolling up their sleeves in record numbers

But can these kinds of differences be called a real generation gap? That depends, demographers say.

"The generation gap referred to a vast gulf between the basic values and norms for youth and the midlife generation of parents and leaders," says historian and demographer Neil Howe of Great Falls, Va., who has co-written several books on the generations.

"Those were the Americans who had been through World War II and presided over great American prosperity and affluence. They felt a million light-years removed from these kids that seemed to have no loyalty or connection, or even thanks. The music, the literature, the poetry, the pop culture of the young all expressed a repudiation of older people and the system they stood for. It was a time of screaming matches between generations over basic values."

The Pew survey of 1,815 people in July and August found that although differences were clear, respondents didn't believe they created much trouble in their own families or in society overall. Just 26% say there are strong conflicts between generations.

"This survey suggests the generations have discovered they can disagree without being disagreeable," says Paul Taylor, director of Pew's Social and Demographic Trends Project, which did the survey as a follow-up to a survey in June that found a generation gap wider than in 1969, at the height of conflict.

To a Boomer, the generation gap is more than just a catchy phrase; it represents an era when clashes over civil rights, women's rights and Vietnam forged a counterculture that would change American life. For their kids, often called the echo boomers, Generation Y or the Millennials, the gap that was a chasm decades ago isn't so deep now.

"Part of Baby Boomers challenging the status quo might have played more into the fact that they were challenging their parents," says Matt Heineman, 26, a freelance filmmaker in New York. "We're not necessarily challenging our parents. We're trying to figure out what challenges of the world to take on."

Only 10% of survey respondents with a child over 16 say they've often had major disagreements with the child in his or her late teens or early 20s. But 19% of parents say they had major disagreements with their parents.

"When young people say they're close to their parents, they don't mean they agree on these issues. It's a psychological and emotional closeness," says William Galston of the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C.

"Most Boomers would rather have been caught dead than have serious discussions with parents about these things, because serious discussions tended to break down into painful arguments," says Galston, who has studied the younger group. "I don't think today's young people are afraid the relationships they have with their parents will be frayed or broken if they're more candid."

As the father of two daughters in theirs 20s, David Hesel, 62, of Concord, Mass., says parents really do try to understand kids. "They're bombarded with much more than we ever were," he says. "That's not to say I endorse everything they do, but when they look for guidance, it's not based on what it was when I grew up."

Most say differences persist

Kate Cleary, 53, of Lutherville, Md., has two sons, 17 and 19. "I can relate to my kids on some issues my parents couldn't relate to me on, because it wasn't in their experience at all," she says.

Eric Chester, 51, of Lakewood, Colo., says "if there's more accord, it's because the parent tries to be young at heart and tries to give the kid their space."

As president of Generation Why, a consulting firm, he says misunderstandings in the workplace come from different expectations. "They may have skills and are techno-savvy and book-smart and streetwise, but they don't understand what the big deal is if they're five minutes late," he says of young people today. About half of those surveyed (53%) call the generations "very different" in the respect they show others.

"The classic thing is they show up on Day One and want to tell you how to change your business," says Bruce Tulgan, 42, founder of Rainmaker Thinking, a research and management training firm in New Haven, Conn., and author of the 2009 book Not Everyone Gets a Trophy: How to Manage Generation Y.

"It leads older people to think they have a radically different work ethic, but Gen Yers said 'I thought you want me to care about this place.' "

Galston says such attitudes aren't just about work but rather about hierarchy. "These young people have grown up in very flat, horizontal relationships. So, the idea of deferring to someone older, simply because that person is there, is not part of their makeup."

Although Pew didn't define "moral values," some cite sex.

"I think some people in my generation are more liberal when it comes to sex as opposed to my parents' generation," says Margot Hesel, 25, of Manhattan, who works for the city of New York.

But the greatest gap Pew found was over technology.

"It's at the core of their relationships," says David Morrison, 41, of Twentysomething Inc., a Philadelphia consulting and research firm. "It's difficult for them to understand how other generations are not as connected as they are."

The technology divide

Kate Hesel, 27, a graduate student in public health at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., says that for her parents' generation, technology is "less fluid and less easy and more of a foreign thing to them." For her peers, it's "second nature -- like a part of you."

But computers make it so easy to copy and paste that many do, raising new questions about the definition of cheating, says English professor Mark Bauerlein, 50, of Atlanta's Emory University. "Enormously high rates of people said they used other people's work and were not really seeing it as cheating," he says.

Also, he says, many young people text peers to warn them about things like pop quizzes. "They have more of a sense of unity and togetherness that they regard as virtuous," he says. "It's kind of a moral code of togetherness."

Pew found the generations actually disagree about almost everything except the type of music they listen to. Except for those 65 and older, rock 'n' roll is king. That's a striking change from 1966, when a national Harris survey of 1,250 adults found almost half (44%) said they didn't like rock 'n' roll; 21% said they liked it and just 4% said it was their favorite kind of music.

Pew gave respondents a list of 20 performers and groups from the 1940s to the present and asked which they liked a lot, a little, disliked or haven't heard of. Results show that 1960s rock has a strong place among not just Boomers, but Millennials. Performers including the Beatles, Rolling Stones and Jimi Hendrix are among favorites of Gen Y -- even those who haven't performed in their lifetimes, such as Elvis, who 24% of 16- to 29-year-olds said they like "a lot."

But some say the idyllic relationship may not last.

Steven Mintz, a history professor at Columbia University in New York City, worries that cuts in government spending could pit the Boomers and Millennials in a kind of generational warfare over limited resources.

"As the Baby Boomers retire, there's going to be a limited budget, and the question is 'Where do those resources go? Are they going to go into health care and Social Security for the elderly or to child care for young parents?' "

Morrison says there will always be differences between generations, but these groups do have a strong connection.

"Generation Y gets their Boomer parents. They fully understand where they're coming from," he says.

And "Boomer parents, in part, get Generation Y." source>>>

Miley Cyrus is looking for a groupie.

The 16-year-old "Hannah Montana" star is auctioning off the chance to be her roadie for a day on eBay. The "roadie" will select a date of their choosing during Cyrus' upcoming 45-city concert tour, which kicks off on Sept. 14 in Portland, Ore. The auction package includes a backstage meet and greet and a personalized Cyrus fan kit.

In a second auction, the teen star is giving fans the chance to steal clothes directly from her closet, including some of her red carpet fashion statements.

Cyrus is also auctioning off autographed movie posters and photos.

The eBay auction, which runs from Aug. 6 through Aug. 13, is designed to raise money for the Pappy Cyrus Family Foundation, a family charity aimed at children who are in need of improved health care, medical treatment, education, social services and community and economic development.

Click here for the Miley Cyrus Auction. source>>>

EBay Requires Developers to Change Their Account Passwords

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 63 Views

Related Categories: Online Auctions

Members of the eBay Developers Program must change their account passwords because the e-commerce company recently discovered a way in which account information could be accessed by malicious hackers.

This requirement comes "out of an abundance of caution" on the part of eBay, which hasn't detected any suspicious activity in developer accounts, the company said Monday evening in a blog post.

"This type of access does not allow the capture of financial or other sensitive information, such as credit card or bank account information or Social Security numbers," wrote Kumar Kandaswamy, head of eBay's developer program and platform product.

In the brief blog post, eBay doesn't say when it discovered this security vulnerability, nor in what it consists of, so it's not clear if the problem lies with eBay back-end systems or if it involves a concerted, external phishing attack.

It's also not clear what type of account information is vulnerable to fraudsters, nor why eBay is only requiring developers to change their passwords as a defensive measure.

The security warning comes as eBay gets closer to launch the new version of Selling Manager, the set of eBay tools used by thousands of merchants which will soon feature for the first time applications from external developers.

In April, eBay opened Selling Manager broadly as a platform to all interested external developers, with the plan to make the applications available to merchants at some point this summer.

EBay has about 87,000 external application developers and about 700,000 merchants.

EBay didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. source>>>

Michael Jackson's $1,000,000 Bill for sale on eBay

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 116 Views

Related Categories: Online Auctions

EBay_LogoSince Michael Jackson's untimely death, many products have emerged with the King of Pop's likeness on them. Some items, like t-shirts and posters, seem like a natural fit; while others, like this tribute bill, leave us wondering why exactly anyone would buy them. Obviously not legal tender, the bill has five iconic images of MJ and probably makes fans feel like a million bucks once it is framed and hung on the wall. source>>>

At eBay, Showrooms Push Aside Yard Sales

Posted on August 12, 2009 | 99 Views

Related Categories: Online Auctions

On Aug. 11, Mark Christopher Auto Center in Ontario, Calif., listed a 2009 Chevrolet Corvette on eBay for $73,512, along with other new cars collecting dust on its lot. "If I have more eyes looking at my inventory, I have a better opportunity to sell it," says Greg Heath, vice-president of the dealership.

A lot of car dealers hope to hawk autos on eBay (EBAY) over the next few weeks as part of a trial with General Motors, announced Aug. 10, that lets 225 GM dealers in California post new models on the site through Sept. 8. Long known as an online flea market for secondhand goods, eBay wants to ramp up sales of new products to jump-start its growth. "They have realized that the secondhand market in most goods is only growing at 1% or 2% a year and if they want to be seen as a growth company they have got to get into new products," says Jeffrey Lindsay, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein.

With sales cut by the recession and rivalry in e-commerce, eBay could find a new growth vehicle in new but out-of-season goods, analysts say. The company is pursuing deals with manufacturers besides GM to sell excess inventory on its site, says eBay spokesman Usher Lieberman. "People looking for the latest iPod or the latest TV are more likely to go to Amazon (AMZN) or Best Buy (BBY)," says Colin Sebastian, an analyst at Lazard Capital Markets. "But for those who may be willing to buy merchandise that's not so perfect, eBay should be an interesting channel."
EBay Motors: Clearing Dealer Lots

In July, eBay reported that sales in its core shopping business fell 14%, to $1.3 billion, in the second quarter. While e-commerce continues to feel the impact from the slowdown in consumer spending, analysts said the slide appeared to be nearing its bottom.

In the case of GM, eBay will play the role not of a retailer, but of a liquidator. "A big part of the focus will be helping dealers clear inventory from their lot," says Rob Chesney, vice-president of eBay Motors. All of the cars listed on gm.ebay.com are new, but many are 2008 and 2009 models that have been passed over for the 2010 arrivals. EBay spokesman Lieberman declined to name additional manufacturers whose wares may end up on the site, but analysts say makers of consumer electronics and other auto brands are likely candidates.

Indeed, some retailers and manufacturers already use eBay to sell returned, refurbished, or past-season wares, and many of its largest merchants are volume discounters of new products. Such e-commerce sites as Overstock.com (OSTK) have established businesses selling liquidated goods to consumers online.

Last year e-commerce site Buy.com began offering a portion of the millions of electronics, DVDs, books, and other products it sells each year on eBay. Buy.com is one of several "diamond tier" merchants on the site, meaning it receives special negotiated rates in exchange for selling at least $500,000 worth of items per month. EBay says the number of diamond-tier sellers is growing at a steady rate.
A Back Seat for eBay's Small Sellers?

Despite sales of some new items, eBay has failed to shake its reputation as a bazaar for used goods. "When a majority of people think of eBay, they think of an auction site for the stuff in your garage," says Piper Jaffray (PJC) senior research analyst Gene Munster.

Whatever else the impact of selling more new products, the move will probably further alienate the legions of existing smaller sellers who rely on eBay for part or all of their livelihood. "You'll always see a market on eBay for secondhand and vintage goods as well. We don't think those are mutually exclusive," says eBay's Lieberman.

Manufacturers forging closer ties with eBay also could put a wedge between themselves and existing retailers, analysts say. "With items as powerful as TVs, Best Buy would be infuriated if [eBay did] something like discount last month's model -- and they could threaten" to retaliate, such as by phasing out certain goods, Munster says.

For eBay, the benefits of hosting bigger sellers are numerous. In addition to processing higher volumes of goods, the site is likely to see more consistency in sales. "When you do a yard sale on eBay you may not do many of them, but when you have retailers and distributors, they're going to have this pattern year after year, season after season," says Gene Alvarez, an e-commerce strategist with Gartner (IT). source>>>

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