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1 Views
19:40:30 08/11/11
Hard Last Name - Keith Alberstadt
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 19:40:30 08/11/11
Hard Last Name - Keith Alberstadt
Rooftop Comedy films stand-up comedy 7 nights a week in the best comedy clubs around the world bringing you instant access to the biggest headliners and a first look at the new voices of comedy From: RooftopComedy Views: 3500 194 ratings Time: 00:51 More in Comedy
0 Views
15:52:53 06/29/11
Attack on Kabul hotel leaves 10 dead
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 15:52:53 06/29/11
Attack on Kabul hotel leaves 10 dead
Police in Kabul are continuing to search for any more casualties after a militant attack on a landmark hotel popular with foreigners. So far eight Afghan civilians and two policemen are known to have died in shootings and explosions carried out by Taliban insurgents. Eight men armed with grenades and guns stormed the Intercontinental hotel, which is supposed to have been heavily guarded. The attack lasted some five hours and a NATO helicopter is reported to have been used in a final rooftop battle. ... www.euronews.net From: Euronews Views: 171 1 ratings Time: 01:06 More in News & Politics
1 Views
13:33:11 06/17/11
Rare Total Lunar Eclipse Turns Moon Red in China
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 13:33:11 06/17/11
Rare Total Lunar Eclipse Turns Moon Red in China
For more news visit ? english.ntdtv.com Follow us on Twitter ? http Add us on Facebook ? facebook.com Last night, people in many parts of the world were treated to something special in the night sky. A rare total lunar eclipse--the longest eclipse in 11 years--turned the moon red. And it caught the attention of these young Chinese moon-gazers. Many amateur astronomers in China witnessed the "red moon" at dawn on Thursday. It's the longest-running and the maximum eclipse. The moon looked red because while the sunlight reflected by the moon entered the earth atmosphere, the blue light scattered backward from the sunlight looks red when seen from the earth. In Pu'er, Yunnan Province, many amateur astronomers came to the best place for moon observation in advance with cameras, large and small. The moon didn't come out until 2:50 am Thursday. At about 3:20 am, the moon became completely red as if it was shy and then quickly hid itself in the clouds. Amateur astronomers seized the chance to have a date with this rare red moon. "It's quite rewarding tonight. I saw a different moon which looked like a setting sun." In Shijiazhuang, amateur astronomers were worried that they couldn't see the red moon due to a thundershower before the eclipse. However, at 02:22 am, the eclipse appeared as expected. In Urumqi, students saw the rare red moon through an astronomical telescope on the rooftop of the school building with the help of their teacher. From: NTDTV Views: 138 12 ratings Time: 01:32 More in News & Politics
4 Views
00:28:33 06/17/11
Rare Total Lunar Eclipse Turns Moon Red in China
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 00:28:33 06/17/11
Rare Total Lunar Eclipse Turns Moon Red in China
For more news visit ? english.ntdtv.com Follow us on Twitter ? http Add us on Facebook ? facebook.com Last night, people in many parts of the world were treated to something special in the night sky. A rare total lunar eclipse--the longest eclipse in 11 years--turned the moon red. And it caught the attention of these young Chinese moon-gazers. Many amateur astronomers in China witnessed the "red moon" at dawn on Thursday. It's the longest-running and the maximum eclipse. The moon looked red because while the sunlight reflected by the moon entered the earth atmosphere, the blue light scattered backward from the sunlight looks red when seen from the earth. In Pu'er, Yunnan Province, many amateur astronomers came to the best place for moon observation in advance with cameras, large and small. The moon didn't come out until 2:50 am Thursday. At about 3:20 am, the moon became completely red as if it was shy and then quickly hid itself in the clouds. Amateur astronomers seized the chance to have a date with this rare red moon. "It's quite rewarding tonight. I saw a different moon which looked like a setting sun." In Shijiazhuang, amateur astronomers were worried that they couldn't see the red moon due to a thundershower before the eclipse. However, at 02:22 am, the eclipse appeared as expected. In Urumqi, students saw the rare red moon through an astronomical telescope on the rooftop of the school building with the help of their teacher. From: NTDTV Views: 591 9 ratings Time: 01:32 More in News & Politics
5 Views
00:22:53 04/02/11
Wiz Khalifa Talks Curren$y, Odd Future, Freshmen, Black And Yellow
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 00:22:53 04/02/11
http://www.hardknock.tv In part 2 of Hard Knock Tv's conversation with Wiz Khalifa, Wiz talks to Nick Huff Barili about collaborating with Curren$y on the track Rooftops which in on Wiz's album Rolling Papers. Wiz elaborates that his radio promo run has been so exhausting that when he has any down time he tries to get some sleep in which is why he hasn't had much time to hang out. Wiz explains why he doesn't perform Say Yeah any more even though he still has love for that song. Wiz also address the situation with Odd Future and how he met them and squashed the issue of both parties using "Rolling Papers" for titles of albums. Lastly Wiz talks about what it was like to hear Black and Yellow during the NFL playoffs and how people from other regions were repping Pittsburgh. This interview also contains live performances for On My Level, Rooftops, Ink My Body Up and Black and Yellow. Make sure to subscribe to www.youtube.com/hardknocktv to get more exclusives from Wiz Khalifa including part 1 of this interview.
Author: hardknocktv
Tags: Wiz Khalifa Hard Knock Curreny Nick Huff Barili Rooftops Rolling Papers Say Yeah Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All OFWGKTA Tyler The Creator NFL Level Pittsburgh Ink Whole Body Black And Yellow
Posted: 02 April 2011
Rating: 0.0
Votes: 0
35 Views
04:46:21 02/03/11
Massacre of Egyptian People in Tahrir Square, Egypt 2.3.2011
[LESS INFO] 35 VIEWS | ADDED 04:46:21 02/03/11
Toll mounts as pro-democracy supporters apparently come under attack from Mubarak loyalists in the Egyptian capital. Heavy gunfire is being heard in Cairo's Tahrir (Liberation) Square as pro-democracy demonstrators continue to defy curfew in the Egyptian capital. Ambulances were seen heading to the area on Thursday morning and at least two fatalities were reported. Protesters from the pro-democracy and pro-government camps fought pitched battles on Wednesday in Tahrir Square, the epicentre of demonstrations against Hosni Mubarak for the past nine days. At least three people were reported to have died and more than 1,500 others injured in those clashes, according to officials and doctors quoted by the Reuters news agency. An Al Jazeera correspondent, reporting from just outside Tahrir Square late on Wednesday night, said dozens of pro-Mubarak supporters erected barricades on either side of a road, trapping the pro-democracy supporters. They were gathering stones, breaking streetlights and using balaclavas to cover their faces, apparently in preparation for a fresh standoff with the pro-democracy crowd. Our correspondent said local residents thought the men preparing for the standoff were police officers but the claim could not be independently confirmed. Just hours earlier, an Al Jazeera online producer reporting from near Tahrir Square said: "Someone - a few people actually - were dropping homemade bombs into the square from the buildings surrounding it." Gunshots were also regularly ringing out of the square. Army standing by Witnesses said the military allowed thousands of pro-Mubarak supporters, armed with sticks and knives, to enter the square. Opposition groups said Mubarak had sent in thugs to suppress anti-government protests. One of our correspondents said the army seemed to be standing by and facilitating the clashes. Though initially put on the backfoot by the sudden attack, determined anti-government protesters looked to be winning the battle against Mubarak supporters. Witnesses also said that pro-Mubarak supporters were dragging away protesters they had managed to grab and handing them over to security forces. Salma Eltarzi, an anti-government protester, told Al Jazeera there were hundreds of wounded people. "There are no ambulances in sight, and all we are using is Dettol," she said. "We are all so scared." Aisha Hussein, a nurse, said dozens of people were being treated at a makeshift clinic in a mosque near the square. She described a scene of "absolute mayhem", as protesters first began to flood into the clinic. "People are coming in with multiple wounds. All kinds of contusions. We had one guy who needed stitches in two places on his face. Some have broken bones." Mustafa Hussein, a physician who was treating the injured at a makeshift hospital near Tahrir Square, told Al Jazeera that most of the injured protesters "coming in today are suffering from head injuries resulting from rocks being thrown at them". Meanwhile, another Al Jazeera correspondent said men on horseback and camels ploughed into the crowds as army personnel stood by. At least six riders were dragged from their beasts, beaten with sticks by the protesters and taken away with blood streaming down their faces. One of them was dragged away unconscious, with large blood stains on the ground at the site of the clash. The worst of the fighting was just outside the world famous Egyptian Museum, which was targeted by looters last week. Concrete blocks Al Jazeera's correspondent said a group of pro-government protesters took over army vehicles. They also took control of a nearby building and used the rooftop to throw concrete blocks, stones, and other objects. Soldiers surrounding the square took cover from flying stones, and the windows of at least one army vehicle were broken. Some troops stood on tanks and appealed for calm but did not otherwise intervene. Many of the pro-Mubarak supporters raised slogans like "Thirty Years of Stability, Nine Days of Anarchy". Al Jazeera's Jane Dutton, also in Cairo, said that security guards have also been seen amongst the pro-Mubarak supporters, and it may be a precursor to the feared riot police arriving on the scene. Dutton added that a journalist with the Al-Arabiya channel was stabbed during the clashes. Fighting took place around army tanks deployed around the square, with stones bouncing off the armoured vehicles. Several groups were involved in fist fights, and some were using clubs. The opposition also said many among the pro-Mubarak crowd were policemen in plain clothes. "Members of security forces dressed in plain clothes and a number of thugs have stormed Tahrir Square," three opposition groups said in a statement. Mohamed ElBaradei, a prominent opposition figure, accused Mubarak of resorting to scare tactics. Opposition groups have reportedly also seized police identification cards amongst the pro-Mubarak demonstrators.
0 Views
04:46:21 02/03/11
Massacre Of Egyptian People In Tahrir Square Egypt 2 3 2011
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 04:46:21 02/03/11
Toll mounts as pro-democracy supporters apparently come under attack from Mubarak loyalists in the Egyptian capital. Heavy gunfire is being heard in Cairo's Tahrir (Liberation) Square as pro-democracy demonstrators continue to defy curfew in the Egyptian capital. Ambulances were seen heading to the area on Thursday morning and at least two fatalities were reported. Protesters from the pro-democracy and pro-government camps fought pitched battles on Wednesday in Tahrir Square, the epicentre of demonstrations against Hosni Mubarak for the past nine days. At least three people were reported to have died and more than 1,500 others injured in those clashes, according to officials and doctors quoted by the Reuters news agency. An Al Jazeera correspondent, reporting from just outside Tahrir Square late on Wednesday night, said dozens of pro-Mubarak supporters erected barricades on either side of a road, trapping the pro-democracy supporters. They were gathering stones, breaking streetlights and using balaclavas to cover their faces, apparently in preparation for a fresh standoff with the pro-democracy crowd. Our correspondent said local residents thought the men preparing for the standoff were police officers but the claim could not be independently confirmed. Just hours earlier, an Al Jazeera online producer reporting from near Tahrir Square said: "Someone - a few people actually - were dropping homemade bombs into the square from the buildings surrounding it." Gunshots were also regularly ringing out of the square. Army standing by Witnesses said the military allowed thousands of pro-Mubarak supporters, armed with sticks and knives, to enter the square. Opposition groups said Mubarak had sent in thugs to suppress anti-government protests. One of our correspondents said the army seemed to be standing by and facilitating the clashes. Though initially put on the backfoot by the sudden attack, determined anti-government protesters looked to be winning the battle against Mubarak supporters. Witnesses also said that pro-Mubarak supporters were dragging away protesters they had managed to grab and handing them over to security forces. Salma Eltarzi, an anti-government protester, told Al Jazeera there were hundreds of wounded people. "There are no ambulances in sight, and all we are using is Dettol," she said. "We are all so scared." Aisha Hussein, a nurse, said dozens of people were being treated at a makeshift clinic in a mosque near the square. She described a scene of "absolute mayhem", as protesters first began to flood into the clinic. "People are coming in with multiple wounds. All kinds of contusions. We had one guy who needed stitches in two places on his face. Some have broken bones." Mustafa Hussein, a physician who was treating the injured at a makeshift hospital near Tahrir Square, told Al Jazeera that most of the injured protesters "coming in today are suffering from head injuries resulting from rocks being thrown at them". Meanwhile, another Al Jazeera correspondent said men on horseback and camels ploughed into the crowds as army personnel stood by. At least six riders were dragged from their beasts, beaten with sticks by the protesters and taken away with blood streaming down their faces. One of them was dragged away unconscious, with large blood stains on the ground at the site of the clash. The worst of the fighting was just outside the world famous Egyptian Museum, which was targeted by looters last week. Concrete blocks Al Jazeera's correspondent said a group of pro-government protesters took over army vehicles. They also took control of a nearby building and used the rooftop to throw concrete blocks, stones, and other objects. Soldiers surrounding the square took cover from flying stones, and the windows of at least one army vehicle were broken. Some troops stood on tanks and appealed for calm but did not otherwise intervene. Many of the pro-Mubarak supporters raised slogans like "Thirty Years of Stability, Nine Days of Anarchy". Al Jazeera's Jane Dutton, also in Cairo, said that security guards have also been seen amongst the pro-Mubarak supporters, and it may be a precursor to the feared riot police arriving on the scene. Dutton added that a journalist with the Al-Arabiya channel was stabbed during the clashes. Fighting took place around army tanks deployed around the square, with stones bouncing off the armoured vehicles. Several groups were involved in fist fights, and some were using clubs. The opposition also said many among the pro-Mubarak crowd were policemen in plain clothes. "Members of security forces dressed in plain clothes and a number of thugs have stormed Tahrir Square," three opposition groups said in a statement. Mohamed ElBaradei, a prominent opposition figure, accused Mubarak of resorting to scare tactics. Opposition groups have reportedly also seized police identification cards amongst the pro-Mubarak demonstrators.
3 Views
21:25:51 10/25/10
2am Club: Chat New Album, Tour Antics and MORE!
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 21:25:51 10/25/10
Last time we caught up with the talented fellas of 2am Club-- we were in Austin, Texas for SXSW livin' it up music festival style! In an effort to be reunited; Marc Griffin, Tyler Cordy, Matt Reagan, Dave Dalton, Ian O'Neill and Matt Warshauer stopped into Hollywire's studio to chat the low-down on their new record, dish on their recent tour adventures, and even showed off their goofy side via a fun white board game!
Author: HOLLYWIRE
Tags: 2am Club Hollywire Interview Chelsea Briggs Mike Posner New Album Album Release Rooftop Interview Hollywire Exclusive
Posted: 25 October 2010
Rating: 0.0
Votes: 0
2 Views
21:25:51 10/25/10
2am Club: Chat New Album, Tour Antics and MORE!
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 21:25:51 10/25/10
Last time we caught up with the talented fellas of 2am Club-- we were in Austin, Texas for SXSW livin' it up music festival style! In an effort to be reunited; Marc Griffin, Tyler Cordy, Matt Reagan, Dave Dalton, Ian O'Neill and Matt Warshauer stopped into Hollywire's studio to chat the low-down on their new record, dish on their recent tour adventures, and even showed off their goofy side via a fun white board game!
Author: HOLLYWIRE
Tags: 2am Club Hollywire Interview Chelsea Briggs Mike Posner New Album Album Release Rooftop Interview Hollywire Exclusive
Posted: 25 October 2010
Rating: 0.0
Votes: 0
0 Views
21:25:51 10/25/10
2am Club: Chat New Album, Tour Antics and MORE!
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 21:25:51 10/25/10
Last time we caught up with the talented fellas of 2am Club-- we were in Austin, Texas for SXSW livin' it up music festival style! In an effort to be reunited; Marc Griffin, Tyler Cordy, Matt Reagan, Dave Dalton, Ian O'Neill and Matt Warshauer stopped into Hollywire's studio to chat the low-down on their new record, dish on their recent tour adventures, and even showed off their goofy side via a fun white board game!
Author: HOLLYWIRE
Tags: 2am Club Hollywire Interview Chelsea Briggs Mike Posner New Album Album Release Rooftop Interview Hollywire Exclusive
Posted: 25 October 2010
Rating: 0.0
Votes: 0
4 Views
18:10:36 05/13/10
Snowden / Lemon Peel / Music Video
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 18:10:36 05/13/10
Jordan, frontman of the band Snowden, and I had been talking about doing a new set of promo photos for him while we were both in New York last September. We were going to do the shoot on a Sunday night. That morning I called him and asked if he wanted to do a video instead. I had this idea I just needed to find a rooftop in Manhattan with a garden hose. Jordan was down for it. This is what we through together that evening.
3 Views
00:00:00 03/08/10
That Sucks: Drinking
[LESS INFO] 3 VIEWS | ADDED 00:00:00 03/08/10
Me? I'm drinking to forget all the stuff I did last time I got this drunk. You?
1 Views
11:41:00 06/22/09
LIONESS DOWN, SPIRIT SOARS
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 11:41:00 06/22/09
Neda Agha Soltan, a 27 year old philosophy student, died by the hand of the Islamic Republic's Basij militia on Saturday.
Photo: "A Voice for Neda" H
er name is Neda. Her name will always be Neda. When she fell and left it behind her, it was raised by hundreds, then thousands, now millions. Not was — her name is Neda.
Neda Agha Soltan was a 27 year old student of philosophy in Tehran. The bare outline of her story can only be provisionally pieced together from the unconfirmed snippets of discussion trickling out of Iran by her compatriots in freedom's cause. Perhaps one day soon, when journalism is no longer illegal in that country, her full story will be told.
It is said that she was standing on the sidelines of Saturday's forbidden protest, watching beside her father teacher. A wobbly cell-phone video shows the two of them together among the crowd. He is the grey-haired man in a blue striped shirt, she wears black.
If the gentle reader has not yet seen what happened to Neda (some news outlets are showing it), and is willing to have his or her heart broken yet again, then click the button while observing my strong content warning . Neda was alive at the beginning of this scene, but not at the end.
Direct Video Link The original upload carried the following description:> At 19:05 June 20th
Place: Karekar Ave., at the corner crossing Khosravi St. and Salehi st.
A young woman who was standing aside with her father watching the protests was shot by a basij member hiding on the rooftop of a civilian house. He had clear shot at the girl and could not miss her. However, he aimed straight her heart. I am a doctor, so I rushed to try to save her. But the impact of the gunshot was so fierce that the bullet had blasted inside the victim’s chest, and she died in less than 2 minutes.
The protests were going on about 1 kilometers away in the main street and some of the protesting crowd were running from tear gass used among them, towards Salehi St.
The film is shot by my friend who was standing beside me.
Please let the world know. I've gathered from reading many Iranians (who have become like autonomous solo broadcasters) these past days that her name, Neda, means "Calling" or "Voice". The man believed to be her father is calling to her as she dies, which has been translated as:> "Neda, don't be afraid. Neda, don't be afraid. [obscured by others yelling] Neda, stay with me. Neda stay with me!" Courageous women have been the backbone of these demonstrations, according to many witnesses. I listened to an Iranian professor this morning talk about the phenomenon, which is not new. "Shirzan" is the Persian word he used for them, which he said Iranians will commonly use to describe such women without fear. It means "lioness" or "lion-woman," he said. Women have been estimated to comprise around 40% of the freedom protesters during the past 10 days.
No one knew whether the planned Saturday protest would go ahead or not, following the unveiled threat delivered by Supreme Ayatollah Khamenei on Friday. Everyone who considered going out of their house on Saturday knew that they could be risking their life. Mr. Moussavi had promised a statement in the afternoon, but it never came (his website has come under attack as well). Yet less than an hour after the planned meeting time of 4 pm, everyone who was following any of the many autonomous solo broadcasters (twitterers with a reliable reputation), knew that Tehran's people were in the streets again and were being foiled by huge numbers of riot police and Basijis already occupying their meeting places in the public squares. International media continued for hours saying the streets were quiet, while heads were already being cracked. CNN's not the "first name in news" anymore, and if they keep getting "Khomeni" and "Khamenei" mixed up and refering to demonstrators as "rioters" for defending themselves, they'll be the last name in news before long.
While earnest news anchors were saying that no one had seen Mr. Moussavi on Saturday, those who followed the solo tweet-casters already knew that he had spoken to the demonstrators in Jeyhoon Street. Before long, his words were translated, posted and linked by the Iranian tweeters.
By late night in Tehran the truth was evident to all, finally including international media. A vicious crackdown was underway, an unknown number of the freedom movement had been killed, and protests were continuing in most (if not all) Iran's major cities. Tweets from eyewitnesses circled the earth in seconds, thousands of citizen videos were uploaded to sharing sites, there are no secrets any more — at least, nothing this big can be kept secret when technology and an adept people are present.
I'm in a time zone two and a half hours ahead of Tehran. At around 2 am on Sunday morning here, the screen of the AP satellite feed showed a caption warning agencies to be ready. (paraphrasing) "Standby. White House statement 3:10 pm. Standby." The time corresponded to 02:10 am Bangkok time, in other words, imminent. It was just before midnight in Tehran, and we all knew what had happened during the afternoon and evening there. The White House was finally ready to take a stronger moral stand after these latest brutal killings, I thought. It could have come days earlier, after Basijis had raided Tehran University, beating and killing a number of students in their dorms. Or, a day or two before that when Basijis shot up a crowd around one of their bases, killing at least seven. But better late than never. I waited.
Nothing came across the AP feed after an hour, then after two hours of staying awake refreshing some pages of those solo broadcasters, I crashed out around dawn. Sunday afternoon, I learned what the "Standby" was all about.
Can't a man enjoy his waffle(cone)? The White House statement was that the President had taken his daughters out for a Father's Day ice cream. Seriously! And that's not all. Bo got frozen Puppy Pops to go. (The photo is from an earlier ice cream excursion, I can't find any pictures from Saturday's fun.) Take a look at Patterico's juxtaposition of contemporaneous tweets out of Iran and Washington. Hey, did you know that real journalists use Twitter too? It's true! But only click on that one if you don't mind your heart being broken yet again.
Earlier, President Obama had said something which seemed stronger than the previous "concern" and "bearing witness."> "I'm very concerned based on some of the tenor and tone of the statements that have been made that the government of Iran recognise that the world is watching," Obama said on US television on Friday.
"And how they approach and deal with people who are, through peaceful means, trying to be heard will, I think, send a pretty clear signal to the international community about what Iran is and is not." Well, it nudged the concern and witness ideas ahead a little bit (if ya squint!). A later written statement added the mourning of innocent life lost to the bearing of witness and concern. The toughest line was, "We call on the Iranian government to stop all violent and unjust actions against its own people."
Those brave 21st century Iranians need to hear that the free peoples of the world are with them. The placards, chants and comments of the demonstrators have often asked specifically for this, and it would mean a lot for them to hear it unambiguously from the leader of the free world. Whether he makes a strong, principled statement on the urgent need for liberty and the dignity of Iran's freedom-seeking people, or sticks with the current weak expressions of concern, makes no difference to the ruling hardliners in that country. They are blaming Britain, France, USA and all western countries for fomenting the rebellion in any case. To hell with them — speak directly to those millions of Iranians who are demanding their fundamental rights. They are the only ones who count, and the only ones listening anyway.
So far, the Prophet of Cairo seems to be all Barack and no bite. His original "on the one hand, but on the other hand" stance (that dealing with Ahmedinejad or Moussavi makes no difference to him, that they are about the same) certainly did offend many of those risking life and limb for liberty, and they should expect clearer messages from a US president. For better or worse, those who want to live in a free(r) country have gathered together with Mr. Moussavi, demanding the fair election they have yet to receive. That alone means that the two are not the same.
A Life Magazine photojournalist disappeared on Saturday in Tehran. You can view his gallery here , with the following notification:> A NOTE TO OUR READERS: We are saddened to report that the Iranian photojournalist, whose pictures appear in this gallery, is missing. He has not been in contact with us; this morning we received the following email from one of his relatives. We will update this space when we have more details.
THE EMAIL: Hi im [photographer’s relative], when he go outside yesterday for he never came back home and also his friend and a lot of our young brave people, government arrested them [. . .] don’t let them suffer in those bloody hands. With thanks. Here's a sample of some of the proven reliable Twitter feeds. Most are in Tehran. The last two are hashtag searches (categories). #Neda sprang up on Saturday night. #IranElection is very high volume (beware of rumours and regime dis-information there).> Raymond Jahan (StopAhmadi)
Iranian Student (Change_for_Iran)
Alireza Sedaghat (IranElection09)
TehranBureau.com (TehranBureau)
madyar (madyar)
Iran (IranRiggedElect)
oxfordgirl (oxfordgirl)
persiankiwi (persiankiwi)
#Neda
#IranElection If you need to get caught up on the important developments over the weekend, there's no better place at the moment than Hot Air. AllahPundit is keeping on top of things very well, and these were continually updated on Saturday and Sunday . Also very good is NYT's The Lede Blog . The blog of the National Iranian American Council is worth keeping an eye on, for nuggets like this — which stuck in my mind last week (and I had a hard time finding it again). Posted on June 17 :> 9:47 am: In response to Ahmadinejad calling Mousavi supporters “brushwood and thorns” at the victory rally Monday, Iran’s most famous classical musician has ordered that Iranian government television/radio never play his music again. Mohammad Reza Shajarian told BBC Persian in an interview:> “Don’t broadcast my voice on Seda va Sima [IRIB Music channel] ever again: my voice is like brushwood and thorns, and it will forever remain brushwood and thorns!”
0 Views
17:48:32 02/04/08
The Last Rooftop
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:48:32 02/04/08
These words are important, and this man believes they are very important. Try to listen. Can he get his point across?
0 Views
21:02:45 11/15/06
Making A Movie Los Angeles
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 21:02:45 11/15/06
You've got to take your eagle-eyed view wherever you can find it. That was the case last night. Since I knew no one in that area that could take me to a rooftop, I decided to find another way to shoot this "making of" a different way. It was not the best choice but it worked for my purposes.










