Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Donnie Webb's sac fly helps Akron avoid sweep by New Hampshire: Minor-league report

T.J. House loses 11th game as Kinston falls; Lake County swept in twinbill; Lake Erie nipped at Evansville; Columbus and Mahoning Valley rained out.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 2, Fisher Cats 1: Donnie Webb broke a 1-1 tie in the top of the ninth with a sacrifice fly as Akron avoided a three-game sweep at Eastern League foe New Hampshire. Lefty pitcher Matt Packer (6-11) pitched eight innings, allowing one earned run on three hits in eight innings. He struck out seven and walked one.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Red Sox 10, Indians 3: Left-hander T.J. House (6-11) surrendered three runs in five innings and absorbed the loss as Kinston (N.C.) lost a Carolina League game in Salem, Va. House gave up eight hits and walked four. Second baseman Casey Frawley hit his 11th home run of the year for the K-Tribe, a bases-empty shot in the ninth.

A Lake County Captains

Dragons 9-7, Captains 2-1: Dayton beat visiting Lake County twice Sunday. The Dragons' 7-1 victory followed the completion of a game suspended by rain in Eastlake on Aug. 9. The Captains' lone run in the second game came in the top of the seventh and final inning on a ground out by Aaron Fields that scored LeVon Washington. The opener picked up in the top of the fourth with Dayton leading, 2-0. Although not the losing pitcher, Joey Mahalic gave up six hits and five runs -- four earned -- in four innings of relief Sunday.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Otters 7, Crushers 6: Lake Erie lost its second straight Frontier League game in Evansville, Ind., after having won 10 in a row. Evansville out-hit Lake Erie, 11-8.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers vs. Red Wings, ppd.: Columbus' International League game at Rochester, N.Y., was rained out. A doubleheader in Rochester is scheduled Monday at 5:05 p.m.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers vs. Cyclones, ppd.: The New York-Penn League game between Brooklyn (N.Y.) and Mahoning Valley in Niles was rained out. No makeup date was announced.

Notes: Outfielder Jordan Smith leads the Scrappers in hitting with a .335 average. He has 61 hits in 182 at-bats. With 25 walks, his on-base percentage is .430.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/donnie_webbs_sac_fly_helps_akr.html

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Zach Braff: And now for my comedy about suicide

At 14, he was acting alongside Gwyneth. At 18, he was in a Woody. And now, after eight years as the star of Scrubs, Zach Braff has written a play. He talks to Laura Barnett about learning to swear like a Brit

About four years ago, Zach Braff faced up to the fact he had developed a fear of flying. Like most nervous flyers, he thought that learning a bit about aviation ? "How the hell a plane flies through the air" ? would help. But, unlike most nervous flyers, Braff ended up learning how to pilot a plane. "I fell in love with it," he says. "I got my licence two years ago. I have a little single-engine four-seater. It's great for those hour-and-a-half hops around LA."

It's an example of the extraordinary can-do spirit that has underpinned Braff's career. Best known for his eight-and-a-half-year turn as the nervy young doctor JD in the brilliant TV hospital comedy Scrubs, for which he was nominated for one Emmy and three Golden Globes, Braff is that rare breed of actor who is also taken seriously behind the camera. He directed several episodes of Scrubs and, in 2004, wrote, directed and starred in his first film, Garden State, a comedy drama about a man returning home to New Jersey after his mother's death. He won a Grammy for the soundtrack and also put together the music for the 2006 pregnancy romcom The Last Kiss, in which he starred.

Now Braff has turned his attention to the theatre, bringing his play, All New People, across the Atlantic in what is a daunting series of firsts: first play he's ever written for the stage; first time he's starred in his own play; first time he's performed on stage in the UK (the play opens in Manchester before transferring to Glasgow and then London for a 10-week run).

Most first-time playwrights would be quaking in their boots, but Braff, when we meet at a London hotel, seems unruffled. "I always dreamed of doing a play in the West End," says the 36-year-old, sipping on a supersized coffee, his puppyish charm undimmed by the fact he only got off a plane from the US (disappointingly, he didn't fly it) a few hours before. "I've been to London a few times ? as a child, as a backpacker, and for my 35th birthday. I said, 'I've got to come and do a play here.' But I never in 1,000 years guessed it would be my own play. It's like I've spoken it into existence."

All New People is a comic four-hander set in a holiday apartment in Long Beach Island, where the miserable Charlie (played by Braff) is marking his 35th birthday by attempting suicide. This is frustrated by the arrival, in quick succession, of a British estate agent, a fireman and a prostitute. It's already had a successful run off-Broadway ? although staging it there was a high-risk strategy for a debut playwright, as Braff acknowledges. "Here was a guy who'd just come off eight and a half years on a TV show," he says, "bringing his first play to New York ? and just plopping it down right in the middle of the theatre district without workshopping it somewhere else first. I had a big bullseye on my forehead."

Some critics took aim and fired. "When the play is not artificial," sneered the New York Times, "it is aimless. Often it is both at once." But the New York Daily News drew a comparison between Braff and one of his heroes, the playwright and screenwriter Neil Simon: All New People, the critic said, was "blacker in tone and with nastier language than Neil Simon ever used".

"To get any sort of comparison was a tremendous compliment," Braff beams. "As a Jewish kid growing up in suburban New Jersey, Simon and Woody Allen were like religious figures to me. I remember as a very young kid, my father throwing an Annie Hall dinner party, where he projected the film on the living room wall. And we went to see the whole [of Simon's] Eugene trilogy. I'm talking about real fans."

Braff originally had himself in mind for the character of Charlie, but was advised, ahead of the New York run, not to take the role. It was the right decision, he says. "Initially, I was like, 'I want to be in it, I wrote it for myself!' But as the writer, you want to sit in the back of the house, look at the proscenium, take it all in, and tweak it on the laptop as you go. Obviously, there'll be some tweaking here, but not nearly as much. So I felt like this time I wanted to give the part a shot."

This "tweaking" appears to be continuing: I'm not allowed to read the play until shortly before we meet, as I'm told Braff is still working on it on the plane. Most of the changes, he says, are to make the script more accessible to British audiences, who might not have understood, say, the gag about Americans sneaking into Canada to buy prescription medicine. "Carey Mulligan did an early reading for me in New York," he says. "There were a couple of places where she said, 'OK, this expression we don't really use, but we would say this.' Words like 'bollocks' ? if you say that to an American audience they'll be like, 'What the hell does that mean?'"

As we speak, Braff frequently erupts into infectious bursts of laughter, and occasionally jumps to his feet to act out what he's talking about. Though he's best known for his TV and film work, he was first drawn to acting by the theatre. His parents would drive the half-hour from their New Jersey home to Manhattan to see everything from Neil Simon plays to musicals; his father also put on community theatre shows, and Braff recalls as a pivotal moment going backstage during one show. "I remember seeing him in Hello, Dolly! I must have been eight years old. The curtain opened ? and there was a full orchestra, set, lights. The whole technical side of things just seemed like magic."

Braff was talent-spotted by an agent at 13, while on a summer theatre camp. A series of high-profile near misses followed: he tried for a part in a Broadway Waiting for Godot, alongside Steve Martin and Robin Williams, but didn't get it, and was pipped at the post by Joaquin Phoenix for a role in the 1989 film Parenthood. He did get a couple of early breaks, though, appearing at the age of 14 alongside Gwyneth Paltrow in High, a one-off TV pilot set in a high school; and in 1993, at 18, he played Woody Allen and Diane Keaton's son in Manhattan Murder Mystery. "Were my parents excited?" he grins. "Are you kidding?"

A few years after studying film at Northwestern University in Illinois, Braff was working as a waiter in a French-Vietnamese restaurant in Beverly Hills. He got a call to say he'd landed the part in Scrubs. "I had about 250 bucks in my bank account. I was waiting tables, and I wasn't getting too many callbacks for TV comedies." He had, he says, been finding it hard to give his all at auditions for these shows. "I honestly didn't find them that funny. And then here was Scrubs ? and I just thought it was hilarious. But I had no idea it would get such a hardcore, loyal fanbase. When we were starting, it got moved everywhere ? it even moved fucking networks! And wherever it went, the fans would follow us."

As the show's narrator JD, Braff is the power behind Scrubs, his daydreams featuring in strange surreal skits in which doctors do battle armed with light sabres, or he gets crushed by a ton of bricks dropping right in the middle of the ward. Two years ago, though, he decided to quit the show that made his name. "I just didn't ever want to be phoning it in." Since then, aside from the flying and the writing, he's spent six months in Detroit, working alongside Rachel Weisz and James Franco on Oz, The Great and Powerful, Disney's Wizard of Oz prequel. He's also planning to direct another film this year, though he can't say what.

All of this, says Braff, comes from one central impulse: a simple desire to entertain, something that has its origins in the geeky, class-clown role he revelled in as a child and can't quite shake off. "In fifth grade," he says, "we had to write a story and read it in front of the class. When I read mine out, the class were just belly laughing. And I remember being like, 'This is the coolest!' So I want to dedicate my life to trying to make people laugh. I can't imagine doing anything else."

? All New People is at the Opera House, Manchester (0161-828 1700), 8?11 February, then touring. Details: allnewpeople.co.uk.

Guardian Extra members can get a free seat upgrade for performances of Zach Braff's All New People in Glasgow, London and Manchester. For more information, go to guardian.co.uk/extra


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2012/jan/30/zach-braff-comedy-play

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How penny auction websites can leave you with a hole in your pocket

Methods vary but the message at penny auctions is the same ? make the winning bid and you can pick up expensive goods at a fraction of their value. But is it as straightforward as it seems?

Somewhere in the UK a person going by the name of "minga60" must be feeling gutted. He recently spent more than �200 trying to win a 32" LG flatscreen TV at penny auction website Madbid.com, only to see a rival bidder steal in and win it at the last second.

Madbid.com, and rivals such as Bid Budgie and Fastbidding.com, are at the forefront of an explosion in penny auction websites in the UK, with shoppers enticed by gaudy adverts boasting that Sony PlayStations have sold for a fiver or MacBook Pros for �90. But a closer look reveals that consumers can end up with nothing to show for it.

Unlike eBay, where bids are free and you only pay the price at which you win an item, participants in a penny auction must pay to place each bid as well as the final price of an item should they win it. Of course, there can be only one winner so everyone else is left out of pocket.

At Madbid.com it works like this. To place a bid you need to buy credits sold in blocks typically costing �9.99 for 80 or �374.99 for 3,750, meaning individual credits cost 10p-12.5p. You need up to six credits to make a single bid. This means that bidding on some items can cost as much as 75p each time. Each bid raises the auction price of an item by 1p and at the same time extends the closing time of the auction by up to 60 seconds.

Things are even more confusing at FastBidding.com, where some auctions close temporarily and there are different styles of auction, including ones that offer cashback, "equal bid" auctions and "lowest unique bid" auctions. At sites such as this, beginners need to tread even more carefully.

At BidBudgie.co.uk, where everything is apparently "going cheep", users must make the lowest unique bid to win ? an incredibly confusing system where you must ensure you are the only person who has registered a bid at, say, 3p. The trick is that rivals can also bid 3p to ensure your bid is no longer unique, then enter their own unique bid of, say, 4p and take the lead. Bids cost money unless you enter a free auction ? to win credit that can only be used on BidBudgie.

With penny auction websites everyone helps ramp up the price and, at some sites, as long as people keep bidding the auction never ends. If you win, how much you eventually pay depends on how many credits it took to place each bid, how many times you bid, and the eventual sale price.

We took a detailed look at the bidding history for Madbid's recent LG TV auction, which required four credits per bid. We found that 79 people placed bids in total and the winner spent �217.60 on bids to win the TV ? at great cost to rival bidders. Thirty nine of them bid once and so lost only 40p (assuming they bought credits at the cheapest rate of 10p per credit); 10 people lost 80p after making two bids; while 19 people wasted between �1.20 and �4.80.

Nine people spent between �5 and �30, but the failed bidder who lost the most cash was minga60, who wasted �211.60 by placing 529 bids.

Madbid can make a lot more than the sale price on each item. On the LG TV, Madbid could have raked in as much as �612, assuming all bidders spent 10p to buy each credit. That's �162 more than the recommended retail price of �450.

Similarly, we have calculated that by attracting 252,907 bids Madbid could have made �151,744.20 on an Audi A3 Sportback that had an RRP of �18,790 ? 600% more than the cost of the car.

But it often loses money too. A pair of hair tongs worth �40 recently sold for 25p, making Madbid as little as �10 from the 25 bids it attracted. A men's Fila watch worth �139 attracted only 23 bids, worth as little as �9.20 to the website.

Dr Mark Griffiths, professor of gambling studies at Nottingham Trent University, says bidding on these types of auctions is gambling: "Winning a penny auction is essentially chance-determined and does not depend on any discernible skill ? a person can bid again and again with no certainty that they will ever win the product. If there is no real skill in participating and it is essentially a chance activity, how is this not a form of gambling? The vast majority of people who bid on penny auction websites do not get anything for their money, except the hope of winning."

But the UK's Gambling Commission has refused to acknowledge penny auction sites are gambling operations, something Madbid.com agrees with. A spokesman says Madbid is an "interactive social auction website ? that features a 'buy it now' option, refund policies and interactive elements, creating a fun shopping experience that requires skill and strategy to land bargains". The "buy it now" option allows users to buy a product at a slight discount off the RRP. If it is a product users have bid on already, they can use their spent credits to further discount the price.

The internet is awash with penny auction forums where fans debate strategy and share tips, but there are also threads such as "Penny Burn Out?" for people who have spent too long bidding on auctions. One poster wrote: "I think bidding is taking up too much of my time. I may have to add up all my costs vs wins and decide it [sic] this is really worth it. At the very least, I have to slow down. Its taking too much time away from my relationship. Not cool."

Griffith has made repeated calls for the sites to be regulated, and in late 2010 the OFT clamped down on the use of auto-bid functions by some companies that were using software programs to place artificial bids against consumers ? this led to the closure of BattyBid. But the OFT says it has nothing to add to the work it has already done.

Madbid's Facebook page attracts many positive comments from its fans, though there are also regular criticisms of the group's customer service and complaints about the cost and difficulty of winning auctions. Thomas Richards, wrote: "You never win a bid so what's the point in putting money on the website its all a con." Another dissatisfied customer, Richard Harrison, wrote: "I wouldn't bother it's a joke. Items not sent and the worst customer service in the world."

The Madbid.com spokesman said it is a "misconception" that penny auction sites are a scam, adding that Madbid does not make false claims in its advertising. "We have been reviewed by the world's fifth largest independent accounting network, BDO, which looked at the specific control procedures used by MadBid.com to ensure the legitimacy of our auction model. It concluded that MadBid.com winners had average savings of 81% (including final auction prices and cost of bids) when compared to the RRP." He added that Madbid takes customer complaints "very seriously" and looks into each one, "whether it comes via email, a phone call, Facebook or Twitter".

Madbid's parent company, Marcandi Ltd, appears to be in poor financial health. It's latest report and accounts show it lost �395,915 in the year to 30 June 2010 ? a figure one leading accountant called "a substantial amount of money". He believed Marcandi continues trading only because it received a large cash injection from shareholders and said he viewed the future prospects of this company with deep suspicion.

Perhaps this is unsurprising, given that Madbid is a recent start-up. Indeed, legions of penny auction sites have folded, including Swoopo, Rapid Bargain and Bid Boogie.

Madbid's spokesman would not discuss the company's financial health but said its mission is to "revolutionise the way consumers shop online, offering an entertaining alternative to the likes of Amazon and eBay".


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2012/jan/28/penny-auction-websites

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Spartacus Vengeance: still cutting edge?

The death of Andy Whitfield has left a hole at the centre of the show. But viewers should give Spartacus a chance to hit its stride once more

The one-time gladiator fishes around in the slave trader's mortal wound and pulls out his entrails ? as Spartacus returned to screens last night, it was clear that it had lost none of its eye for the macabre. But great as it was to see familiar faces such as Manu Bennett as Crixus and Peter Mensah as Oenomaus, there was one face whose absence cast a shadow over proceedings. Andy Whitfield's death has left a gaping hole at the heart of the show and while Spartacus is the role of a lifetime for Whitfield's replacement Liam McIntyre, those are not easy sandals to fill.

And much as I want to say that McIntyre is every inch the Spartacus that Whitfield was, he lacks something in terms of charisma and physical presence when compared with his predecessor. Nonetheless, we've so far seen a solid unfussed performance, and McIntyre deserves time to grow into the role.

In any case, this third season is a big ask for everyone given that we pick up the action after Kill Them All, one of the best executed season finales of recent times. Emotional resonance, biblical payback and gloriously choreographed slaughter combined in a jaw-dropping resolution to a season that got better and better as it progressed. How do you follow that?

With difficulty. But the big theme of the opener was a good one: private revenge conflicting with the common good; Spartacus recklessly endangering the slave rebellion in going after Glaber. While he may no longer be a slave to Rome he's still a slave to his past and the memory of his dead wife ? something new love interest Mira can't fail to notice. It takes Aurelia's deathbed cursing for Spartacus to realise that while you can kill some of the Romans some of the time, choosing your moment is everything. They head to the mountains. Welcome to Guerrilla Warfare 101.

The big surprise of the premiere was that Lucretia survived being kebabed courtesy of Crixus's impromptu family-planning clinic ? although I'm presuming that the child she was carrying did not. Currently, Lucretia stands a babbling half-crazed shadow of herself, it seems a safe bet she will be back to her fearsome best and out for blood at some point during the season.

But she's grieving a loss we all feel and that's the death of Quintus Lentulus Batiatus. One of the reasons I respect Spartacus so much is that it made me care about John Hannah, an actor whose presence in a film was previously a guarantee I wouldn't see the closing titles. His Batiatus was terrific ? raging, devious and profane. He was both villainous and the most human character on Spartacus ? above the common herd yet not nobility, enduring frequent humiliations at the hands of his overbearing father and brutal hen peckings from his formidable wife.

Beset by the demands of social climbing, ludus politics and being quite literally pissed on by the ruling class, Batiatus was the most unlikely everyman character. He saw the insanity of the times yet did his best to work with them and find his place within them. Of course, he deserved to die like the dog he was but the show misses him terribly.

It's good to see that the gorgeous language of Spartacus remains intact. I particularly liked "Let us split darkness with the cries of Romans" and "see her bathed and tended ? and what fragments her shattered mind yet holds" and Crixus gently admonishing Spartacus with "when the sun rises I would see reason dawn". It's a good demonstration of that character's development from snarling meathead to three-dimensional human being ? one of my favourite character journeys of the first two seasons.

More than ever, the show needs those high-impact characters and Oenomaus did not disappoint with as casual an eye gouging, arm break and evisceration as you're likely to see. The former Doctore is not a man to go looking for trouble ? but if trouble finds him he'll give it back double. Bounty-hunters better watch their backs. Glaber too needs to keep on his toes as he faces strong competition to capture Spartacus from the young upstart Seppius, and I don't think I'm the only one who detected an incest vibe between him and sister Seppia. If you think the writers lack the stomach to go down that particular road then we've clearly been watching different shows.

Overall, I was happy with the Spartacus Vengeance opener even if the show is palpably weakened by the loss of Whitfield and Hannah. No show loses its two biggest assets and operates at full strength but the quality of its first two seasons means Spartacus deserves to be given a chance. It's a story Steven DeKnight and crew are passionate about ? and a rebel slave army looking to shake Rome to its core is a promising enough premise for me to keep watching.

Let us know how it grabbed you. Is it good to have it back? What did you think of McIntyre in the leading role ? and where do you see the show going in its difficult third season?


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/tvandradioblog/2012/jan/31/spartacus-vengeance-cutting-edge

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Water meter case study: 'They have set the charges too high'

One family are doing all they can to reduce their water usage, but their bill is still almost double

Consumers who are considering a water meter to save money should think carefully about their consumption before making a decision. Tony Scudder and his family believe their water bill will nearly double from �262 a year to an estimated �508 following the installation of a water meter.

The family ? Tony and his partner Karen plus their two children Lois and Eddie ? lives in Rochester, Kent, part of the Medway area where Southern Water started installing water meters on a universal basis in 2010.

Tony's estimate of �508 is based on a "three-month letter" sent out by Southern Water to indicate what households will pay if they don't reduce their water consumption.

He says: "I'd be outraged, if I hadn't expected it. If [a water company] is going to install a meter, it might as well make sure it's going to make more money. Sadly, as water meters are now compulsory, should the water company wish to install them you are thrown to the wolves."

Southern Water, a company that supplies water and deals with sewage, is installing compulsory meters under amendments recently made to the Water Industry Act, which allows water companies to universally meter households if the area in which they operate is an area of "serious water stress" because of population growth and lack of water.

The company has already introduced meters to the areas under the greatest stress ? the Medway, Southampton, Horsham, Littlehampton and Crawley ? and will extend the programme throughout the majority of homes in Kent, Sussex and Hampshire by 2015. South East Water, which supplies water-only in the same counties, started a similar programme in 2011.

A spokesman for Southern Water said that while half of its customers will pay more through metering, the rest will benefit from lower bills: "In a survey, the vast majority of our customers agreed that paying for the amount of water they use, as measured by meter, is the fairest way to charge and puts them in control of their bills."

He added that when meters are installed, customers are provided with information and practical advice on easy ways to save water, energy and money. The company has also developed two tariffs for metered customers: one for those on benefits and low incomes, and a changeover tariff to allow people to gradually increase the bill to the full metered amount.

Tony has now switched to the changeover tariff, which will charge two-thirds of the old rateable bill and a third of the metered amount in the first year; a third of the rateable bill and two-thirds of the metered amount in the second year; and the full metered amount from the third year onwards. This will reduce his estimated bills to �344 and �426 over the next two years.

He says: "I agree with the idea of conserving water. Our children are sharing their bath and only having one every other day, and at the ages of two and four they already know they can't leave taps running. We only use the washing machine once every two days, and I shower at the gym every day. We certainly won't be using the hosepipe in the garden anymore. We are doing everything we can to keep our water usage down, but the bill is still nearly doubling. I just think they have set the charges too high."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2012/jan/31/water-meter-case-study

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This is Nottingham commented Do you recognise CCTV of man wanted over attempted burglary?

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Falklands? government advances in options for a proposed new port facility

The current FIPASS or the Mare Harbour facilities among the options A paper relating to further work on options for the proposed new port facility for the Falkland Islands was presented to the latest Executive Council Meeting by the Falkland Islands Government Projects Director.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2012/01/31/falklands-government-advances-in-options-for-a-proposed-new-port-facility?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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Chun Chen has three hits in Akron Aeros' victory over Richmond: Minor League Report

The Clippers, Captains and Mahoning Valley Scrappers all lose on Friday night.

chun chen.JPGView full sizeAkron Aeros catcher Chun Chen.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Indians 2, Clippers 1 RH Corey Kluber (7-10, 5.65 ERA) struck out seven and allowed two runs in seven innings, but host Columbus lost to Indianapolis in International League play. Kluber gave up three hits and two walks. SS Luis Valbuena (.304) and LF Tim Fedroff (.269) each had two hits. CF Jerad Head (.280) and DH Nick Johnson (.204) each doubled, and Johnson had an RBI.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 7, Flying Squirrels 5 C Chun Chen (.259) had three hits, and 2B Cristo Arnal (.199), SS Juan Diaz (.258) and DH Michel Hernandez (.348) each had two as host Akron held off Richmond (Va.) in Eastern League play. Arnal drove in two runs. Chen, Diaz, Hernandez, 3B Kyle Bellows (.222) and CF Ben Copeland (.264) delivered one RBI each. RH Steven Wright (2-3, 5.66) allowed five runs in 6 innings but still got the victory. Cory Burns (2.18) pitched 1 scoreless innings to earn his 33rd save.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Indians vs. Hillcats, ppd. Kinston's Carolina League game against visiting Lynchburg (Va.) was postponed due to weather.

A Lake County Captains

Whitecaps 4, Captains 2 LH J.D. Reichenbach (7-2, 3.34) allowed four runs -- three earned -- in five innings as Lake County lost to host West Michigan.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Jammers 6, Scrappers 3 RH Nathan Striz (3-5, 3.86) allowed four runs in 3 innings as host Mahoning Valley lost to Jamestown (N.Y.) in New York-Penn League play.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 4, RiverHawks 0 Jereme Milons homered, RH Josh Roberts (9-6) got the victory as host Lake Erie four-hit Rockford (Ill.) in Frontier League play.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/08/chun_chen_has_three_hits_in_ak.html

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Madonna to debut new single on American Idol

Singer will perform Give Me All Your Luvin' on US talent show this Thursday. Sadly, it's not a ZZ Top cover

Madonna has unveiled release details for her new album. With the first single due on Friday, MDNA will appear on 26 March.

"The Material Girl is back on the dance floor!" Madonna's website announced on Sunday. Give Me All Your Luvin', MDNA's lead single, will debut on Americal Idol on Thursday night, and will go on sale the following day. Produced by French DJ Martin Solveig, this is the finished version of the demo that leaked in November, featuring MIA and Nicki Minaj. Madonna will also appear this evening on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

These appearances anticipate her Super Bowl XLVI performance this Sunday. More than 100 million people are expected to watch the American football game and the Material Girl's half-time set. MIA and Minaj will reportedly join her, while the video for Give Me All Your Luvin' is "football- and cheerleader-themed", according to a press release.

Despite initial excitement over Madonna's reunion with Ray of Light collaborator William Orbit, the producer seems to have contributed to only a few MDNA tracks. The rest of the songs include Madonna's work with Solveig, the Benassi Bros and the Demolition Crew.

While Give Me All Your Luvin' will be released on Friday, another new song is available now. Masterpiece, "one of the few more down-tempo songs", Madonna told MTV News, features on the soundtrack to the singer's new film, W.E. Produced by Orbit, the Golden Globe-winning track will be included on the deluxe version of MDNA. "Magic happens when [William and I] get into a recording studio together," Madonna said at W.E.'s premiere. "We've worked on stuff for so many years that we finish each other's sentences."

Madonna's previous album, 2008's Hard Candy, reached No 1 in 37 countries.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/jan/30/madonna-new-single-american-idol

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Spain seen heading for recession as economy shrinks

MADRID-Paul Day(Reuters) - Spain's economy looks set to slip into recession after contracting for the first time in two years in the last quarter of 2011, highlighting the challenge for EU leaders as they meet to find ways to boost growth while cutting budgets.The leaders are meeting in Brussels on Monday with the goal of helping Europe's economy but they have to balance austerity with the need to help countries struggling with dismal economic performance.The finances of neighboring Portugal faced fresh scrutiny by markets on Monday and Spain's prime minister said this year's official growth goal would be missed.Gross domestic product in Spain shrank 0.3 percent in the fourth quarter from zero growth the previous quarter, preliminary data from the National Statistics Institute showed, in line with forecasts in a Reuters poll.Spain has massive unemployment -- around a third of the euro zone's unemployed are Spanish -- and a banking sector that has been hobbled by a collapsed property sector."I don't see any way countries like Spain can avoid recession through the first half of the year at the very least," said Steve Webster, economist at consultancy 4Cast."Politicians in Davos are talking about not just relying on austerity and are talking about growth efforts. But that won't be easy, and so a prolonged recession is the risk."On an annual basis, the economy grew by 0.3 percent, slowing from 0.8 percent in the previous quarter but slightly above expectations for growth in a Reuters survey.Many economists are concerned the euro zone's deficit-busting strategies aimed at easing market fears over fiscal imprudence will make growth difficult, potentially condemning the region to a "lost decade."The Bank of Spain said it expects the economy to shrink 1.5 percent this year due to stringent cost-cutting aimed at cutting the public accounts shortfall to 4.4 percent of GDP from around 8 percent in 2011.Spain, Greece, Portugal and Ireland face a year or two of economic problems as austerity measures hurt growth prospects, a Reuters poll January 27 showed.Germany has weathered the euro zone's crisis better than most, underscoring the divergence that has developed among Europe's economies, and is leading the drive for fiscal austerity.MISSED TARGETSSpain will miss the official growth target of 2.3 percent in 2012 Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said. His centre-right government, which trounced the Socialists in November's election, is due to announce new growth targets in March.Spain has suffered from the collapse of the once-powerful property market as well as falls in spending by consumers unable to get loans from cash-strapped banks and afraid to spend their nest eggs while faced with the EU's highest unemployment rate."We now expect to take a more downbeat view in the February forecast round, with the economy condemned to shrink for two successive years, by 1.5 percent in 2012 and 0.2 percent in 2013," economist at Global Insight Raj Badiani said."A major factor behind the darker outlook is the government's continued commitment to the fiscal budget deficit targets ... which will require even tougher austerity measures to prop up the multi-year budget deficit reduction plan in the face of a poorer economic climate."The economy has remained virtually stagnant since emerging from recession in the first quarter of 2010, with only strong exports keeping it from shrinking again, but a slowdown among key trade partners has hit its only pillar of growth.The European Commission forecasts 2012 economic growth of just 0.5 percent for the 17 nations in the euro zone compared with growth of 1.5 percent in 2011 and 1.9 percent in 2010.The International Monetary Fund expects the region to contract 0.5 percent in 2012 and warned it could drag the world into recession.REFORMIST GOVERNMENTSpain will pass a decree on further restructuring its banking system later this week and a draft labor law in February, Rajoy said on Monday, as part of its reformist agenda for the damaged economy.The ailing banking sector holds billions of euros of unsaleable property, overpriced land and bad loans to defunct property developers, prompting some economists to say the government will need to use public cash to solve the problem.Rajoy has said he wants the banks, which have been through a restructuring process over the last two years more than halving the number of regional savings banks through mergers, to cough up 50 billion euros to cover potential losses.The Bank of Spain says around half of banks' exposure to the real estate sector is problematic -- equivalent to 176 billion euros of foreclosed property and unrecoverable loans. Around 33 percent of those assets, have already been provisioned for, the cen ...

Source: http://www.tayyar.org/Tayyar/News/WorldNews/en-US/spain-economy-shrinks-cg-978.htm

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LDP acceptable partner in government


?In previous mandate the SPS had a coalition agreement with the DS only. We had nothing in common with parties such as the G17 Plus, SPO or LSV. We completely disagreed with neo-liberal model promoted by Dinkic. As regards the SPO there is nothing in common between the chetniks and partisans. And finally, the SPS have been constantly fighting against separatism in Vojvodina, while Canak is promoting it even today. Serbian political elite has been more or less the same for rather long time and it is high time that it reaches consensus over all national issues?, Dusan Bajatovic, the SPS Vice President says for ?Blic?.

Source: http://english.blic.rs/News//8398/LDP-acceptable-partner-in-government

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Monday, January 30, 2012

Big Brother creator to launch 'first' gameshow/talent show hybrid

John de Mol teams up with Universal Music Group as he looks to sell The Winner Is ? to a UK broadcaster

Big Brother and The Voice creator John de Mol has teamed up with Universal Music Group to launch what he claims is the first ever gameshow/talent show hybrid.

De Mol's company Talpa Media has signed a global recording and artist services agreement for the new show, The Winner Is ? . It is understood that the Dutch media tycoon is in early discussions with UK broadcasters over selling the format.

The weekly, 90-minute television programme sees a number of singers competing in various "duels", which are judged by a panel of 100 people and one well-known expert.

If a contestant wins a round they accumulate cash which grows after each round. But they are also able to negotiate with each other to decide who goes through to the next round ? they can take the money or continue in the contest if they are confident in their abilities.

Once the field is narrowed to two performers, they each get a suitcase filled with �100,000 in cash which they can keep if they step away from the contest. Or they can try and win the contest and the �1m prize.

De Mol has described the new format as "75% a singing contest and for 25% a gameshow, which makes it a completely new combination of two highly appreciated TV genres".

The chief operating officer at Universal Music Group International, Max Hole, said his company's artist development skills made him confident the show would become a "worldwide success".

The chairman and chief executive at Universal Music Group, Lucian Grainge, said: "UMG is about breaking and nurturing new artists and their music. Our partnership with John and his team has provided the right combination of innovation, platform and talent to do just that in dynamic new way."

? To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/jan/30/big-brother-gameshow-talent-show

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We still have a month


?I am always cautious in predictions and I always say that I hope that the positive outcome shall happen. I also always point out that positive outcome understands progress in fulfilling the conditions. Regarding getting of the candidate status for the EU membership in March, those conditions have been defined in December by the European Council?, Milica Delevic, Director of Government?s Office for European integration says for ?Blic?.

Source: http://english.blic.rs/News//8401/We-still-have-a-month

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Rewind radio: Vic Oliver ? The First Castaway Remembered; Friends Through Thick and Thin; Woman's Hour; Mr and Mrs Smith ? review

Desert Island Discs' 70th birthday spawned a fascinating programme about its first castaway

Vic Oliver: The First Castaway Remembered (R4) | iPlayer

Friends Through Thick and Thin (R4) | iPlayer

Woman's Hour (R4) | iPlayer

Mr and Mrs Smith (R4) | iPlayer

It's Desert Island Discs' 70th birthday today, as if anyone who listens to Radio 4 doesn't know. In honour of this significant anniversary, Sir David Attenborough has been strapped into the castaway chair. For the fourth time. Even us Attenborough fanatics can't really justify picking through his life three times more than most other DID guests, but the programme is one of the BBC jewels and the corporation can't resist pumping itself up. Attenborough is the most loved of BBC names. No way would the 70th have featured Jonathan Ross, for instance. Even though (whisper it) he'd be a lot more interesting.

Anyhow, Attenborough's previous appearances were in 1957, 1979 and 1998, when his luxuries were a piano, some binoculars and a guitar. I'm hoping he'll go the whole hog this time and ask for some varifocals attached to a mouth organ and back cymbal, all worked by his left foot. Admittedly, the full one-man band might hamper Sir David sneaking up on island species to observe their mating habits. But it would give the parrots a laugh.

The first ever castaway, back in 1942, to what was then Roy Plomley's island was an entertainer called Vic Oliver. As part of the 70th celebrations, David Baddiel examined his life in Vic Oliver: the First Castaway Remembered, a programme that left you feeling rather sad. Oliver was one of those old-time pros that could not only rattle off jokes but play the violin and piano beautifully. He had an accent ? Austrian-American ? that you rarely hear any more. And like many comedians who can play straight but are never allowed to, he felt under-appreciated. He married Winston Churchill's daughter. When Churchill was asked which politician he most admired, he replied, "Mussolini. Because he had the good sense to shoot his son-in-law." Vic worshipped Churchill. Poor Vic.

On Wednesday, Radio 4 celebrated female friendship with Friends Through Thick and Thin, a sweet programme that interwove the stories of three pairs of BFFs (best friends forever). The oldest were June and Jean, friends for 65 years, who met at work and then lived in a commune together. Wa-hey, you thought, but it wasn't that sort of commune. June's husband and son lived there too, as did Jean's mum, "in an apartment". When they all died, apart from June and Jean, Jean helped June through her grief of losing her husband and son, without allowing her to become too dependent. "It wouldn't have done either of us any good if we'd become a couple," she said firmly, and June agreed.

The other two stories were more dramatic: one pair of friends fell out and didn't talk for 10 years; another woman gave her best pal her kidney, to stop her dying. But I liked Jean and June best. The programme triggered a Woman's Hour special about friendship the following day. Chaired by Jane Garvey, it was interesting, but sometimes descended into gender cliche. There were some nice touches (I liked the school kids from Hornsey and the revelation that in Elizabethan times, friendship contracts were actually written down) but I wanted more examination of how modern life has changed friendship and a little less of the "men talk about football, women bang on about relationships" stuff.

Mr and Mrs Smith, a new comedy about a bickering couple, began with a petty argument and continued like that until the end of the show. Rather like Arthur Smith's last Radio 4 series, confusingly. This Smith, though, was Will Smith. There were some nice lines and I liked the horrendous friend of Mrs Smith. Could be a grower.

And, oh, did you hear the Murray v Djokovic match on 5live on Friday? I thought I was going to pop!


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2012/jan/29/desert-island-discs-70th-birthday

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How penny auction websites can leave you with a hole in your pocket

Methods vary but the message at penny auctions is the same ? make the winning bid and you can pick up expensive goods at a fraction of their value. But is it as straightforward as it seems?

Somewhere in the UK a person going by the name of "minga60" must be feeling gutted. He recently spent more than �200 trying to win a 32" LG flatscreen TV at penny auction website Madbid.com, only to see a rival bidder steal in and win it at the last second.

Madbid.com, and rivals such as Bid Budgie and Fastbidding.com, are at the forefront of an explosion in penny auction websites in the UK, with shoppers enticed by gaudy adverts boasting that Sony PlayStations have sold for a fiver or MacBook Pros for �90. But a closer look reveals that consumers can end up with nothing to show for it.

Unlike eBay, where bids are free and you only pay the price at which you win an item, participants in a penny auction must pay to place each bid as well as the final price of an item should they win it. Of course, there can be only one winner so everyone else is left out of pocket.

At Madbid.com it works like this. To place a bid you need to buy credits sold in blocks typically costing �9.99 for 80 or �374.99 for 3,750, meaning individual credits cost 10p-12.5p. You need up to six credits to make a single bid. This means that bidding on some items can cost as much as 75p each time. Each bid raises the auction price of an item by 1p and at the same time extends the closing time of the auction by up to 60 seconds.

Things are even more confusing at FastBidding.com, where some auctions close temporarily and there are different styles of auction, including ones that offer cashback, "equal bid" auctions and "lowest unique bid" auctions. At sites such as this, beginners need to tread even more carefully.

At BidBudgie.co.uk, where everything is apparently "going cheep", users must make the lowest unique bid to win ? an incredibly confusing system where you must ensure you are the only person who has registered a bid at, say, 3p. The trick is that rivals can also bid 3p to ensure your bid is no longer unique, then enter their own unique bid of, say, 4p and take the lead. Bids cost money unless you enter a free auction ? to win credit that can only be used on BidBudgie.

With penny auction websites everyone helps ramp up the price and, at some sites, as long as people keep bidding the auction never ends. If you win, how much you eventually pay depends on how many credits it took to place each bid, how many times you bid, and the eventual sale price.

We took a detailed look at the bidding history for Madbid's recent LG TV auction, which required four credits per bid. We found that 79 people placed bids in total and the winner spent �217.60 on bids to win the TV ? at great cost to rival bidders. Thirty nine of them bid once and so lost only 40p (assuming they bought credits at the cheapest rate of 10p per credit); 10 people lost 80p after making two bids; while 19 people wasted between �1.20 and �4.80.

Nine people spent between �5 and �30, but the failed bidder who lost the most cash was minga60, who wasted �211.60 by placing 529 bids.

Madbid can make a lot more than the sale price on each item. On the LG TV, Madbid could have raked in as much as �612, assuming all bidders spent 10p to buy each credit. That's �162 more than the recommended retail price of �450.

Similarly, we have calculated that by attracting 252,907 bids Madbid could have made �151,744.20 on an Audi A3 Sportback that had an RRP of �18,790 ? 600% more than the cost of the car.

But it often loses money too. A pair of hair tongs worth �40 recently sold for 25p, making Madbid as little as �10 from the 25 bids it attracted. A men's Fila watch worth �139 attracted only 23 bids, worth as little as �9.20 to the website.

Dr Mark Griffiths, professor of gambling studies at Nottingham Trent University, says bidding on these types of auctions is gambling: "Winning a penny auction is essentially chance-determined and does not depend on any discernible skill ? a person can bid again and again with no certainty that they will ever win the product. If there is no real skill in participating and it is essentially a chance activity, how is this not a form of gambling? The vast majority of people who bid on penny auction websites do not get anything for their money, except the hope of winning."

But the UK's Gambling Commission has refused to acknowledge penny auction sites are gambling operations, something Madbid.com agrees with. A spokesman says Madbid is an "interactive social auction website ? that features a 'buy it now' option, refund policies and interactive elements, creating a fun shopping experience that requires skill and strategy to land bargains". The "buy it now" option allows users to buy a product at a slight discount off the RRP. If it is a product users have bid on already, they can use their spent credits to further discount the price.

The internet is awash with penny auction forums where fans debate strategy and share tips, but there are also threads such as "Penny Burn Out?" for people who have spent too long bidding on auctions. One poster wrote: "I think bidding is taking up too much of my time. I may have to add up all my costs vs wins and decide it [sic] this is really worth it. At the very least, I have to slow down. Its taking too much time away from my relationship. Not cool."

Griffith has made repeated calls for the sites to be regulated, and in late 2010 the OFT clamped down on the use of auto-bid functions by some companies that were using software programs to place artificial bids against consumers ? this led to the closure of BattyBid. But the OFT says it has nothing to add to the work it has already done.

Madbid's Facebook page attracts many positive comments from its fans, though there are also regular criticisms of the group's customer service and complaints about the cost and difficulty of winning auctions. Thomas Richards, wrote: "You never win a bid so what's the point in putting money on the website its all a con." Another dissatisfied customer, Richard Harrison, wrote: "I wouldn't bother it's a joke. Items not sent and the worst customer service in the world."

The Madbid.com spokesman said it is a "misconception" that penny auction sites are a scam, adding that Madbid does not make false claims in its advertising. "We have been reviewed by the world's fifth largest independent accounting network, BDO, which looked at the specific control procedures used by MadBid.com to ensure the legitimacy of our auction model. It concluded that MadBid.com winners had average savings of 81% (including final auction prices and cost of bids) when compared to the RRP." He added that Madbid takes customer complaints "very seriously" and looks into each one, "whether it comes via email, a phone call, Facebook or Twitter".

Madbid's parent company, Marcandi Ltd, appears to be in poor financial health. It's latest report and accounts show it lost �395,915 in the year to 30 June 2010 ? a figure one leading accountant called "a substantial amount of money". He believed Marcandi continues trading only because it received a large cash injection from shareholders and said he viewed the future prospects of this company with deep suspicion.

Perhaps this is unsurprising, given that Madbid is a recent start-up. Indeed, legions of penny auction sites have folded, including Swoopo, Rapid Bargain and Bid Boogie.

Madbid's spokesman would not discuss the company's financial health but said its mission is to "revolutionise the way consumers shop online, offering an entertaining alternative to the likes of Amazon and eBay".


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2012/jan/28/penny-auction-websites

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Jerad Head, Jared Goedert homer as Clippers turn back Norfolk: Minor-league report

Adam Miller labors for Aeros, Montero shines for Captains, Casas has three hits in Kinston loss, late rally lifts Scrappers, Lake Erie dominates Washington.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Clippers 5, Tides 4: LF Jerad Head (.282) hit a two-run homer and doubled in a run and 3B Jared Goedert (.206) added a two-run homer as host Columbus beat Norfolk (Va.) in the International League game.

AA Akron Aeros

SeaWolves 5, Aeros 0: RH Adam Miller (1-3, 7.01) stumbled on the comeback trail, giving up eight hits and five runs in two innings of relief as Erie (Pa.) beat the Aeros at Canal Park in the Eastern League game.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Blue Rocks 4, Indians 1: SS Gerard Hall's two-RBI single in the seventh inning lifted host Wilmington (Del.) to the Carolina League win. RF Jordan Casas, recently promoted from Lake County, went 3-for-4 with a triple and scored the K-Tribe's run.

A Lake County Captains

Captains 7, Lugnuts 5: C Moises Montero (.175) doubled in a run in a three-run rally in the second inning and doubled and scored in the seventh as Lake County defeated host Lansing (Mich.) in the Midwest League game. Captains 3B Giovanny Urshela (.244) hit a two-run homer.

A Mahoning Valley Scrappers

Scrappers 4, Ironbirds 1: Mahoning Valley used RBI singles by C Jake Lowery (.273), 2B KC Serna (.264) and 1B Jerrud Sabourin (.195) and took advantage of sloppy defense by the IronBirds to score four runs in the eighth inning and win at Aberdeen (Md.) in a New York-Penn League game.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Crushers 7, Wild Things 0: OF Kellen Kulbacki tripled and C Kyle Shaffer doubled as Lake Erie rapped out 10 hits in the rout in Avon.

Source: http://www.cleveland.com/tribe/index.ssf/2011/07/jerad_head_jared_goedert_homer.html

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Childish Gambino; Zulu Winter ? review

The Camp; XOYO, London

You don't often see violins at hip-hop gigs. Or xylophones. For his UK headline debut in this dank east London basement, US rapper Childish Gambino comes accompanied by a live band, in which it is one man's role to alternate between violin, xylophone and ? yes, really ? a tambourine.

Some hip-hop enthusiasts would suck their teeth at all this, and at the absence of a DJ. There will always be those who will point to the fact that Gambino's real name is Donald Glover, and his day job is comedy writing (The Daily Show, 30 Rock) and acting on TV (NBC's Community). Instead of oversized sportswear and even bigger jewellery, he wears a white hipster's V-neck T-shirt for much of his set, giving him the faint look of a young Cassius Clay. In fact, the most bling thing about Gambino is his fluorescent orange ear-plugs.

Much of his considerable appeal lies in the way he repeatedly questions the fundamentals of hip-hop culture. Outside the venue are posters advertising Gambino's recent album, Camp ? a pretty tendentious title in a genre not know for embracing its feminine side, much less its love of the great outdoors.

In the flesh, though, he is a powerhouse. Lithe and animated, Gambino flies through more than an hour of word-perfect flows, climbing on the lighting desk, freestyling capably, going walkabout in the audience, and rapping so fiercely into one girl's camera you fear for the spittle in its circuits. His critiques of hip-hop's codes are all the more powerful because they come not from a worthy "conscious" rapper but from one who throws out funny, rude rhymes like shrapnel made from gynaecological instruments.

"Yeah my stinger's in the flower/ I hope she let me pollinate/ Working hard as shit/ Yeah this beat is made from concentrate," is one neat couplet from "Freaks and Geeks", the point, four songs in, at which the audience stops being merely excited and actively starts convulsing.

Many of Camp's highlights are here, as well as the fruits of his pre-breakthrough mixtape albums. "Backpackers" is a slick take-down of his critics and their disdain for Glover's non-ghetto background. He grew up in the suburbs in Georgia, the child of Jehovah's Witnesses who fostered troubled children. Glover worked hard, went to a predominantly white school, then college, then swiftly into comedy writing. In the process, he was never "black enough" for the purist hip-hop crowd, but still plenty "black enough" for cops and racists. This simmering volcano of indignation erupts just as often into humour as into vitriol.

Gambino's stylistic debt to that other middle-class rapper, Kanye West, seems a little smaller tonight than on record, even when he uses West's "All of the Lights" as a springboard for one of his own hell-for-leather verses. Even better is Gambino's embellishment of Adele's "Rolling in the Deep" (via Jamie XX), a frenetic blur of bitter words about a girl in which the whole venue feels like a ship pitching in a storm. If there are moments of relative regret ? "All the Shine" is a wobbly rock fusion in which Glover's singing never quite convinces ? then a raw and manic "Bonfire" relights the touchpaper.

Across the road, in another dank east London basement the following night, the season of new band showcases is in full non-swing. Playing to a roomful of stony-faced industry types standing at the back, and a handful of genuine gig-goers bobbing at the front, is probably no fun at all ? especially when the fans are there for the headliners, Howler (aka "the new Vaccines").

But London's Zulu Winter make the most of it. Their own bizarre "new Vaccines" tag makes no sense unless you know ZW share their management with 2011's indie success story, rather than their sound.

Zulu Winter actually take as their starting point the dance-rock of Foals and Friendly Fires, adding Arctic Monkeys phrasing and considerable bone structure from singer Will Daunt. If they look like a perfect storm in Dalston, they sound all sinuous and saturated on songs such as "We Should Be Swimming", only their second single.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/jan/29/childish-gambino-zulu-winter-review

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Non-stop violence continues in Syria

Syrian security forces killed in recent days at least 33 people in the town of Rankous, about 30 miles from the Syrian capital of Damascus, reports said Sunday. Opposition sources, cited by Reuters, claimed that government forces launched a massive raid against insurgents and army deserters in the 25,000 inhabitant town.

They pointed out that the operation is carried by several thousand soldiers from the 4th Division under the command of the brother of President Bashar Al Assad, Maher.

Syria
� 2012 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/non-stop-violence-continues-syria-410658

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Benefits cap concessions expected to win support for welfare reform bill

Government expected to agree to fund families who could be made homeless at sensitive time in children's education

The government is expected to make a series of concessions in the coming days on it controversial �26,000 household benefits cap to win over wavering Liberal Democrat MPs.

Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, is expected to agree that a discretionary fund should be established to ease the burden on families who could be made homeless at a sensitive time in their children's education.

The move comes as Labour seeks to work with the Lib Dems - whose former leader Lord Ashdown voted last week to exempt child benefit - on agreeing a local rate for the cap.

In a letter to Nick Clegg, the shadow work and pensions secretary, Liam Byrne, says a local cap could ensure that 20,000 people avoid being made homeless by the changes.

"Under the government's proposals, there is a very real risk that 20,000 people will be made homeless, and that this bill will fall on council tax payers," Byrne writes. "The government's own modelling suggests this could end up costing more than it saves. A local cap solves this problem."

Duncan Smith has rejected a variable cap, though he said he was happy to discuss regional rates for benefits across the country. He also insisted that the government would seek to overturn six defeats in the House of Lords when the welfare reform bill returns to the Commons on Wednesday. Sources in the Department for Work and Pensions insisted there would be no concessions, though they pointed out that Duncan Smith has always made clear that the changes would be introduced in ways that would not cause hardship.

There are growing expectations that Simon Hughes, the Lib Dem deputy leader who has voiced concerns about the cap, will be won over by a new "discretionary fund". Hughes has expressed fears that the cap, which includes housing benefit, could force thousands of families out of their homes in London and the south-east.

The discretionary fund would allow councils to exempt some families from the cap for a limited period of time if, for example, a child was due to sit examinations. The fund, which would only apply to existing recipients, would be modelled on the system that was set up after Hughes voiced fears last year about the impact of the housing benefit cap.

The cap, which will mean that no working household will be allowed to receive benefits of more than �26,000, is due to come into force in April 2013. This means that councils will have around a year to introduce the changes, assuming that the House of Lords does not delay the welfare reform bill for a prolonged period of time. The government is threatening to force the bill through using the Parliament Act if peers hold out, but this would lead to a delay.

The Lib Dems have argued that showing discretion for a limited period of time could avoid families moving into expensive bed and breakfast accommodation if they are forced out of their rented home but need to remain in the same area for their child's schooling.

The government is also looking at the introduction of a grace period for people who suddenly lose their jobs and are immediately hit by the cap. Lord Freud, the welfare reform minister, said he would look at this after Lord Best, a crossbench peer, called for a grace period of 26 weeks. Best withdrew his amendment after the assurance from Freud.

In his letter to Clegg, Byrne says that varying local rates for the cap should be set by an independent commission. He writes: "We believe that a local cap would be a better fit. Let's be honest, a one-size-fits-all national cap simply would not work in practice. The high level of rents in London is forcing up the national average to a level that does not make sense in many parts of the country. For the same reason, a regional cap would clearly not be right. We need a local cap right for each area."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2012/jan/29/benefits-cap-concessions-welfare-reform

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