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17:55:47 01/29/12
CBS Sunday Morning - Tory Burch taking fashion world by storm
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:55:47 01/29/12
CBS Sunday Morning - Tory Burch taking fashion world by storm
Tory Burch, known for her classic tunics and popular Reva ballet flats, has taken the fashion world by storm. Launched only in 2004, Tory Burch now owns 65 boutiques all over the world. Rita Braver sat down with the fashion mogul to discuss her family, her career, and got a sneak preview at an upcoming collection for New York Fashion Week. From: CBSNewsOnline Views: 345 2 ratings Time: 07:01 More in Shows
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17:55:47 01/29/12
CBS Sunday Morning - Tory Burch taking fashion world by storm
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:55:47 01/29/12
CBS Sunday Morning - Tory Burch taking fashion world by storm
Tory Burch, known for her classic tunics and popular Reva ballet flats, has taken the fashion world by storm. Launched only in 2004, Tory Burch now owns 65 boutiques all over the world. Rita Braver sat down with the fashion mogul to discuss her family, her career, and got a sneak preview at an upcoming collection for New York Fashion Week. From: CBSNewsOnline Views: 345 2 ratings Time: 07:01 More in Shows
0 Views
01:22:00 01/11/12
Ultrabook, smartphones take CES stage
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 01:22:00 01/11/12
Jan 10 - The world's biggest consumer electronics show puts a spotlight on razor-thin laptops, as well as faster and powerful smartphones, and thinner flat panel televisions at the annual event in Las Vegas. Conway G. Gittens reports.
3 Views
04:20:40 01/07/12
Collaboraction brings Dark Play Home
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 04:20:40 01/07/12
Collaboraction is a wonderfully active local theater company who have been roaming Chicago for over 15 years and now that they have a wonderful space on the third floor of the Flat Iron arts Building they are putting on what will prove to be a wonderful run of great actors working with a great script. Written By Carlos Murillo "Dark Play or Stories for Boys" follows a teenage boy's foray into the virtual world. His fictional internet identity begins as a harmless game, but the game takes on a frightening reality when real emotion overtakes his online relationship. When Nick's virtual world collides with the real world, his fantasies of love, intimacy, obsession and betrayal spiral into consequences that lead him to the brink of death. If you are interested in contacting collaboraction email info (at) Collaboraction (dot) com Links: Carlos Murillo http://www.pegasusplayers.org/artists_directory.php?id=9 Collaboraction http://collaboraction.org/ dates and times: -Preview- Thu, Jan 12: 8:00pm Fri, Jan 13: 8:00pm Sat, Jan 14: 8:00pm Sun, Jan 15: 7:00pm -Regular Run- Mon, Jan 16: 7:00pm Thu, Jan 19: 8:00pm Fri, Jan 20: 8:00pm Sat, Jan 21: 8:00pm Sun, Jan 22: 7:00pm Thu, Jan 26: 8:00pm Fri, Jan 27: 8:00pm Sat, Jan 28: 8:00pm Sun, Jan 29: 7:00pm Mon, Jan 30: 8:00pm Thu, Feb 2: 8:00pm Fri, Feb 3: 8:00pm Sat, Feb 4: 8:00pm Sun, Feb 5: 7:00pm Mon, Feb 6: 8:00pm Thu, Feb 9: 8:00pm Fri, Feb 10: 8:00pm Sat, Feb 11: 8:00pm Sun, Feb 12: 7:00pm Mon, Feb 13: 8:00pm Thu, Feb 16: 8:00pm Fri, Feb 17: 8:00pm Sat, Feb 18: 8:00pm Sun, Feb 19: 7:00pm Mon, Feb 20: 8:00pm Thu, Feb 23: 8:00pm Fri, Feb 24: 8:00pm Sat, Feb 25: 8:00pm Sun, Feb 26: 3:00pm http://martinjon.com
2 Views
00:00:40 01/06/12
Mitt Romney, a Profile in Cowardice
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 00:00:40 01/06/12
For months, likely Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has made Barack Obama's supposed "failure of leadership" a centerpiece of his campaign. But like his ill-advised comparison of President Obama to Marie Antoinette , Romney's sound bite could well boomerang. After all, when Multiple Choice Mitt isn't comically reversing his stands, he's too afraid to take any at all .
That cowardice starts with his tax returns . While John Kerry and John McCain at least presented a summary of their (and their well-to-do wives') payments to Uncle Sam, the $250 million Mitt has so far refused to do so. Despite his famous demand in the 1994 Senate race that Ted Kennedy release his tax returns to show he has "nothing to hide," Romney reiterated his own paperwork would not be forthcoming. "We don't have any current plans to release tax returns, but never say never," Romney said, adding: >
"I can tell you we follow the tax laws, and if there's an opportunity to save taxes, we like anybody else in this country will follow that opportunity."
Or as he put it to CNN's Wolf Blitzer last week (at around the 6:40 mark): >
"I don't put out which tooth paste I use either. It's not that I have something to hide."
That's one interpretation. Another is that Mitt Romney is desperate to avoid the horrible political optics his tax returns would inevitably produce. After all, because Romney's continuing millions in annual income from Bain Capital (a company the Los Angeles Times recently explained "often maximized profits in part by firing workers") are taxed at the 15 percent capital gains rate, Mitt already pays a much lower share to Uncle Sam than most middle class families .
Romney's pusillanimity extends to his own tax proposals as well. Unlike virtually all of his GOP rivals , Romney has held back on endorsing either a flat-tax or the complete elimination of the capital gains tax. As he seemed to suggest to the Wall Street Journal , discretion is the better part of valor when it comes to telling voters about the massive windfall the Romneys would reap under the tax policies that dare not speak their name: >
What about his reform principles? Mr. Romney talks only in general terms. "Moving to a consumption-based system is something which is very attractive to me philosophically, but I've not been able to sufficiently model it out to jump on board a consumption-based tax. A flat tax, a true flat tax is also attractive to me. What I like--I mean, I like the simplification of a flat tax. I also like removing the distortion in our tax code for certain classes of investment. And the advantage of a flat tax is getting rid of some of those distortions"... >
Amid such generalities, it's hard not to conclude that the candidate is trying to avoid offering any details that might become a political target. And he all but admits as much. "I happen to also recognize," he says, "that if you go out with a tax proposal which conforms to your philosophy but it hasn't been thoroughly analyzed, vetted, put through models and calculated in detail, that you're gonna get hit by the demagogues in the general election."
Mitt Romney's fear of getting hit was also on display during the debt ceiling debate this summer. As the GOP's brinksmanship over defaulting on the U.S. debt reached its climax in late July, Romney turned his tail and fled. As MSNBC reported at the time: >
NBC's Garrett Haake reported that Mitt Romney told reporters in Ohio yesterday that he would not comment on the debt negotiations in Washington. And so far, he has refused to either endorse Boehner's legislation (as Huntsman has done) or oppose it (as Pawlenty and Bachman have done). Our question: How does someone who wants to be the leader of the Republican Party not have a position on one of the biggest issues facing Washington, especially after the dueling primetime speeches by Obama and Boehner? It's actually quite surprising; this isn't just another Washington fight. Is the lack of a position proof of how fragile Team Romney believes its front-runner status is right now?
(Ultimately, Romney used Facebook to announce his support of the Boehner bill, but only after it passed the GOP House .)
As it turns out, Ohio was the scene of another of Mitt Romney's moments in cowardice.
After visiting a Republican phone bank calling voters about the state's controversial Issue 2 curbing public unions , Romney amazingly refused to take a position: >
"I'm not saying anything one way or the other about the two ballot issues."
Embarrassed by his obvious lack of backbone, Romney endorsed the measure the next day. Ohio voters, who handily defeated the Republican measure, won't soon forget Romney said goodbye to his spine in Columbus.
Romney's vertebra similarly went missing on immigration and abortion , two issues near and dear to the Republican primary voter's heart. As Steve Benen recounted, Mitt's campaign simply would not answer Joe Klein question about what President Romney would do about the 12 million illegal immigrants already in the country: >
The evasion wasn't exactly graceful. Klein asked what Romney would do with the undocumented immigrants who are already here, and Fehrnstrom replied, "He would not grant them amnesty." Right, Klein said, but instead of amnesty, what would Romney do with these people? "He would not grant them amnesty," Fehrnstrom answered. Got it, Klein said, but what, specifically, would Romney do? "I just told you, he's not going to grant them amnesty," the campaign spokesperson said. When Klein then explained that this isn't actually an answer, Fehrnstrom, once again, said, "He would not grant them amnesty."
The Romney camp built a similar stonewall after their man seemingly came out in support of the soon-to-be defeated "personhood" initiative in Mississippi . But the day after the ballot measure went down to crushing defeat, Team Romney insisted "he's being falsely characterized as supporting a proposed amendment to define a fertilized egg as a 'person.'"
On matters small and large, duck and cover is Mitt Romney's posture. Afraid to admit that he has obviously been running for President without interruption since his failed campaign four years ago, Romney's wife claimed his 2012 run was all her idea. As Ann Romney told Wolf Blitzer last week (starting around the 2:30 mark in the video above): >
BLITZER: Is it true that you had to talk to Mitt into running again? >
ANN ROMNEY. ROMNEY: It is true...after the last campaign, it was kind of ironic that I was the one that said I'd never do this again, and now, this time around, I'm saying, you know what, Mitt, you've got to do this again.
But in Mitt's telling, his latest White House bid is all due to Barack Obama. As he told the Wall Street Journal just days ago, Mitt was content to hang out in his $12 million, soon-to-be doubled-in-size California beach side home : >
The Republican presidential candidate says he never intended to run for office again after 2008--"I went back and bought a home which was far too expensive and grandiose for the purposes of another campaign," he jokes. He was drawn back into public life amid Mr. Obama's bid to "fundamentally transform" the country, to use the president's own words, into "an entitlement society," to use Mr. Romney's.
Given his Boston area townhouse and lakeside mansion with man-made beach in New Hampshire, a third palatial retreat would have seemed excessive for a candidate Romney. After all, Mitt Romney's running for office as a " man of the people "; he can't have mansions, for Pete's sake .
"If it seems like this keeps coming up with the former governor," Benen concluded, "it's not your imagination." >
Romney refused to take a stand on Paul Ryan's budget. Romney refused to take a stand when asked about voters booing a U.S. soldier serving in Iraq during a Republican debate. Romney refused to take a stand when Rick Perry dabbled in Birtherism. Romney initially refused to take a stand on Ohio's campaign to undermine collective-bargaining rights, and then sheepishly backpedaled when the right complained. >
There's going to come a point next year when the Obama campaign is likely to say, "Mitt Romney lacks the courage and the character to be a leader." And the criticism will sting because it's based in fact.
And so it goes for the man George Will rightly described as a "recidivist reviser of his principles." On the issues where he doesn't change his mind, Mitt Romney - the man who would be leader of the Free World - lacks "the courage of his absence of convictions."
(This piece also appears at Perrspectives. )
0 Views
00:00:40 01/06/12
Mitt Romney, a Profile in Cowardice
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 00:00:40 01/06/12
For months, likely Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has made Barack Obama's supposed "failure of leadership" a centerpiece of his campaign. But like his ill-advised comparison of President Obama to Marie Antoinette , Romney's sound bite could well boomerang. After all, when Multiple Choice Mitt isn't comically reversing his stands, he's too afraid to take any at all .
That cowardice starts with his tax returns . While John Kerry and John McCain at least presented a summary of their (and their well-to-do wives') payments to Uncle Sam, the $250 million Mitt has so far refused to do so. Despite his famous demand in the 1994 Senate race that Ted Kennedy release his tax returns to show he has "nothing to hide," Romney reiterated his own paperwork would not be forthcoming. "We don't have any current plans to release tax returns, but never say never," Romney said, adding: >
"I can tell you we follow the tax laws, and if there's an opportunity to save taxes, we like anybody else in this country will follow that opportunity."
Or as he put it to CNN's Wolf Blitzer last week (at around the 6:40 mark): >
"I don't put out which tooth paste I use either. It's not that I have something to hide."
That's one interpretation. Another is that Mitt Romney is desperate to avoid the horrible political optics his tax returns would inevitably produce. After all, because Romney's continuing millions in annual income from Bain Capital (a company the Los Angeles Times recently explained "often maximized profits in part by firing workers") are taxed at the 15 percent capital gains rate, Mitt already pays a much lower share to Uncle Sam than most middle class families .
Romney's pusillanimity extends to his own tax proposals as well. Unlike virtually all of his GOP rivals , Romney has held back on endorsing either a flat-tax or the complete elimination of the capital gains tax. As he seemed to suggest to the Wall Street Journal , discretion is the better part of valor when it comes to telling voters about the massive windfall the Romneys would reap under the tax policies that dare not speak their name: >
What about his reform principles? Mr. Romney talks only in general terms. "Moving to a consumption-based system is something which is very attractive to me philosophically, but I've not been able to sufficiently model it out to jump on board a consumption-based tax. A flat tax, a true flat tax is also attractive to me. What I like--I mean, I like the simplification of a flat tax. I also like removing the distortion in our tax code for certain classes of investment. And the advantage of a flat tax is getting rid of some of those distortions"... >
Amid such generalities, it's hard not to conclude that the candidate is trying to avoid offering any details that might become a political target. And he all but admits as much. "I happen to also recognize," he says, "that if you go out with a tax proposal which conforms to your philosophy but it hasn't been thoroughly analyzed, vetted, put through models and calculated in detail, that you're gonna get hit by the demagogues in the general election."
Mitt Romney's fear of getting hit was also on display during the debt ceiling debate this summer. As the GOP's brinksmanship over defaulting on the U.S. debt reached its climax in late July, Romney turned his tail and fled. As MSNBC reported at the time: >
NBC's Garrett Haake reported that Mitt Romney told reporters in Ohio yesterday that he would not comment on the debt negotiations in Washington. And so far, he has refused to either endorse Boehner's legislation (as Huntsman has done) or oppose it (as Pawlenty and Bachman have done). Our question: How does someone who wants to be the leader of the Republican Party not have a position on one of the biggest issues facing Washington, especially after the dueling primetime speeches by Obama and Boehner? It's actually quite surprising; this isn't just another Washington fight. Is the lack of a position proof of how fragile Team Romney believes its front-runner status is right now?
(Ultimately, Romney used Facebook to announce his support of the Boehner bill, but only after it passed the GOP House .)
As it turns out, Ohio was the scene of another of Mitt Romney's moments in cowardice.
After visiting a Republican phone bank calling voters about the state's controversial Issue 2 curbing public unions , Romney amazingly refused to take a position: >
"I'm not saying anything one way or the other about the two ballot issues."
Embarrassed by his obvious lack of backbone, Romney endorsed the measure the next day. Ohio voters, who handily defeated the Republican measure, won't soon forget Romney said goodbye to his spine in Columbus.
Romney's vertebra similarly went missing on immigration and abortion , two issues near and dear to the Republican primary voter's heart. As Steve Benen recounted, Mitt's campaign simply would not answer Joe Klein question about what President Romney would do about the 12 million illegal immigrants already in the country: >
The evasion wasn't exactly graceful. Klein asked what Romney would do with the undocumented immigrants who are already here, and Fehrnstrom replied, "He would not grant them amnesty." Right, Klein said, but instead of amnesty, what would Romney do with these people? "He would not grant them amnesty," Fehrnstrom answered. Got it, Klein said, but what, specifically, would Romney do? "I just told you, he's not going to grant them amnesty," the campaign spokesperson said. When Klein then explained that this isn't actually an answer, Fehrnstrom, once again, said, "He would not grant them amnesty."
The Romney camp built a similar stonewall after their man seemingly came out in support of the soon-to-be defeated "personhood" initiative in Mississippi . But the day after the ballot measure went down to crushing defeat, Team Romney insisted "he's being falsely characterized as supporting a proposed amendment to define a fertilized egg as a 'person.'"
On matters small and large, duck and cover is Mitt Romney's posture. Afraid to admit that he has obviously been running for President without interruption since his failed campaign four years ago, Romney's wife claimed his 2012 run was all her idea. As Ann Romney told Wolf Blitzer last week (starting around the 2:30 mark in the video above): >
BLITZER: Is it true that you had to talk to Mitt into running again? >
ANN ROMNEY. ROMNEY: It is true...after the last campaign, it was kind of ironic that I was the one that said I'd never do this again, and now, this time around, I'm saying, you know what, Mitt, you've got to do this again.
But in Mitt's telling, his latest White House bid is all due to Barack Obama. As he told the Wall Street Journal just days ago, Mitt was content to hang out in his $12 million, soon-to-be doubled-in-size California beach side home : >
The Republican presidential candidate says he never intended to run for office again after 2008--"I went back and bought a home which was far too expensive and grandiose for the purposes of another campaign," he jokes. He was drawn back into public life amid Mr. Obama's bid to "fundamentally transform" the country, to use the president's own words, into "an entitlement society," to use Mr. Romney's.
Given his Boston area townhouse and lakeside mansion with man-made beach in New Hampshire, a third palatial retreat would have seemed excessive for a candidate Romney. After all, Mitt Romney's running for office as a " man of the people "; he can't have mansions, for Pete's sake .
"If it seems like this keeps coming up with the former governor," Benen concluded, "it's not your imagination." >
Romney refused to take a stand on Paul Ryan's budget. Romney refused to take a stand when asked about voters booing a U.S. soldier serving in Iraq during a Republican debate. Romney refused to take a stand when Rick Perry dabbled in Birtherism. Romney initially refused to take a stand on Ohio's campaign to undermine collective-bargaining rights, and then sheepishly backpedaled when the right complained. >
There's going to come a point next year when the Obama campaign is likely to say, "Mitt Romney lacks the courage and the character to be a leader." And the criticism will sting because it's based in fact.
And so it goes for the man George Will rightly described as a "recidivist reviser of his principles." On the issues where he doesn't change his mind, Mitt Romney - the man who would be leader of the Free World - lacks "the courage of his absence of convictions."
(This piece also appears at Perrspectives. )
3 Views
22:53:18 12/09/11
2012 Dodge Challenger SRT8 Rips Up Calico Salt Flats! - World's Fastest Car Show 12
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 22:53:18 12/09/11
We take the new 2012 Dodge Challenger on a classic road trip en route to Las Vegas and let 'er rip at the salt flats near Calico, California. Then we drive a pre-production mule of the Jaguar XKR-S that no one else has got their hands on. Justin takes a look at an all-new vehicle in its prototype form long before it hits the road. Check out those air traps on the front fenders!
Host: Justin Bell PLAY VIDEO Running time: 9:04 FIND US ON EBAY MOTORS eBay Motors mobile app , eBayMotors.com/WFCS
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1 Views
15:07:26 11/23/11
SOUL VID’ / FLAT & STREET REVOLUTION
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 15:07:26 11/23/11
It was inevitable, using the same environment, flat and street would connect one day and create a new evolution (a revolution ?) of bmx riding. After legends like Dave Voelker, Paul Osicka, Chad De Groot, Akira Okamura or even Steve Hamilton for his nosemanual, the world best flatlander Matthias Dandois wanted to explore new horizons and transfer his incredible skills to the streets, creating a new style of riding. Close witness of this, we (soulbmxmag) wanted to associate the other french bmx genius Florent Soulas, and Guillaume Le Goff (aka libellule) a super tech back wheel street rider from paris to make an article in soul #72 where the guys explain this new thing and also in this beautiful (i think) video from our unique Hadrien Picard who is showing the hard working and talented french connection in some incredible and never seen moves.
4 Views
10:06:24 11/14/11
Lonmin's Farmer Expects `Flat' Platinum Prices in 2012
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 10:06:24 11/14/11
Lonmin's Farmer Expects `Flat' Platinum Prices in 2012
Nov. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Ian Farmer, chief executive officer of Lonmin Plc, talks about the outlook for platinum prices and the company's growth prospects. Lonmin is the world's third-largest platinum producer. Farmer speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move." (Source: Bloomberg) From: Bloomberg Views: 14 0 ratings Time: 04:11 More in Entertainment
11 Views
01:36:41 11/10/11
ZENandTECH 22 [Video]: Criticism
[LESS INFO] 11 VIEWS | ADDED 01:36:41 11/10/11
Criticism is everywhere. But how well do we handle dishing it out, and how well do we take it? Georgia and Rene talk about why criticism exists, and how to get better at giving and taking it, especially in our modern, often anonymized internet world -- from constructive to destructive to flat out trolling and flaming. This is ZENandTECH.
33 Views
00:30:00 11/09/11
Drive it!: The Motor Magazine
[LESS INFO] 33 VIEWS | ADDED 00:30:00 11/09/11
In this edition: Miraculously spacious - the third generation of the Opel Zafira Tourer. Dream cars - we hit the Alps with the Aston Martin Virage, Jaguar XKR, Audi R8 GT, and Mercedes SLS AMG. Stylish - Range Rover's new Evoque model strikes out in a whole new direction. present it!: The Opel Zafira TourerOpel recently launched a third generation of the Zafira Tourer that looks and feels different than its predecessor. The interior has become much more flexible and versatile.The second row of seats in the seven-seater compact van can now be turned into armrests, making the outer two in the row loungers. A new extender element on the carmaker's trademarked bike-rack system also allows you to carry four bicycles instead of two. Drive it! takes a close look at the new Opel Zafira. compare it! Dream cars on dream streets: Aston Martin Virage -Jaguar XK - Audi R8 - Mercedes SLS AMGForget for a moment about climate change and CO2 emissions. Let's talk about power, performance and handling.drive it! Takes the Aston Martin Virage, Jaguar XKR, Audi R8 GT and Mercedes SLS AMG up into the Alps to see how they perform when challenged by some of the world's most demanding mountain passes. taste it!: The Land Rover Range Rover EvoqueBeefy, gas-guzzling SUVs are on the way out. The trend is toward sportier, more economical off-roaders like the new Range Rover Evoque. The design is a big step for the British carmaker.It's not only the smallest, lightest and most economical of any model in their range, it also diverges radically from the brand’s classic look. It's flat, streamlined design is more reminiscent of a Jaguar than a Range Rover. And the price is also a surprise. The basic version of the Evoque costs just €33,000 in Germany. vintage: Around the world in twenty yearsA single glance is enough to tell you that this 2CV - and its owner - have been through their fair share of adventures. Drive it! car tester Stefanie Tücking headed up to the far north of Germany to get to know Manni Müller and his car 'Difty'.Together, the two completed a journey that took them through 83 countries, clocking up 350,000 kilometers along the way. Manni and Difty were on the road for 20 years, a feat that won them a listing in the Guinness Book of World Records - and a lifetime of stories.
6 Views
07:00:02 11/02/11
How to Locate a Gas Fireplace
[LESS INFO] 6 VIEWS | ADDED 07:00:02 11/02/11
The dreaded corner gas fireplace has long been one of the prime targets of attack from the Slow Home front. The reason the corner gas fireplace is such a bad idea is that it shifts the focal point of the room to the corner and often prevents an effective furniture arrangement. Furniture groupings in living spaces work best when they are organized around a focal point like a fireplace, television or view. Sometime back in the 1980′s, designers and builders began to set gas fireplaces on 45 degree angles in the corners of the living spaces sending the design world into a downward spiral that we are still trying to get out of today. Gas fireplaces need to be thought of as part of an overall composition, and not as an appliance that is drywalled into a corner. Gas fireplaces … Continue reading →
0 Views
08:41:14 10/27/11
Guinness World Records - Largest Collection of Clowns
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 08:41:14 10/27/11
Guinness World Records - Largest Collection of Clowns
Ortrud, known to her friends as 'Orty', has been collecting model clowns for over 15 years, and in that time amassed 2053 different models. The collection is so large that Ortrud has had to move to a larger flat to accommodate them, and even set up her own museum at her home in Essen, Germany. Ortrud goes to sleep each evening with hundreds of clowns smiling back at her. From: GuinnessWorldRecords Views: 51213 303 ratings Time: 00:42 More in Entertainment
0 Views
08:41:14 10/27/11
Guinness World Records - Largest Collection of Clowns
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 08:41:14 10/27/11
Guinness World Records - Largest Collection of Clowns
Ortrud, known to her friends as 'Orty', has been collecting model clowns for over 15 years, and in that time amassed 2053 different models. The collection is so large that Ortrud has had to move to a larger flat to accommodate them, and even set up her own museum at her home in Essen, Germany. Ortrud goes to sleep each evening with hundreds of clowns smiling back at her. From: GuinnessWorldRecords Views: 51213 303 ratings Time: 00:42 More in Entertainment
2 Views
21:00:49 10/25/11
Independent Lens | Lives Worth Living | Excerpt #3 | PBS
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 21:00:49 10/25/11
Independent Lens | Lives Worth Living | Excerpt #3 | PBS
www.pbs.org Premiering in October. Check local listings: www.pbs.org Fred Fay's life proves that one man can change the world, even though he has to lie flat on his back just to stay alive. LIVES WORTH LIVING looks at Fay's struggle to survive after a spinal cord injury and the small group of dedicated activists who formed the Disability Rights Movement to drive the nation towards equal rights. Learn more about "Independent Lens": www.pbs.org Watch "Independent Lens" films online: video.pbs.org From: PBS Views: 340 9 ratings Time: 02:07 More in Film & Animation
2 Views
09:00:23 10/25/11
Independent Lens | Lives Worth Living | Excerpt #2 | PBS
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 09:00:23 10/25/11
Independent Lens | Lives Worth Living | Excerpt #2 | PBS
www.pbs.org Premiering in October. Check local listings: www.pbs.org Fred Fay's life proves that one man can change the world, even though he has to lie flat on his back just to stay alive. LIVES WORTH LIVING looks at Fay's struggle to survive after a spinal cord injury and the small group of dedicated activists who formed the Disability Rights Movement to drive the nation towards equal rights. Learn more about "Independent Lens": www.pbs.org Watch "Independent Lens" films online: video.pbs.org From: PBS Views: 477 10 ratings Time: 03:00 More in Film & Animation




![ZENandTECH 22 [Video]: Criticism](http://www.mobilenations.com/broadcasting/podcast_mobile_nations_united_1200.jpg)





