Friday, January 31, 2014

Molly Schuyler eats 363 wings - ESPN

Updated: January 31, 2014, 3:24 PM ET

ESPN.com news services

Pass the napkins, please.

Molly Schuyler, a 5-foot-7, 125-pound mother of four, devoured a jaw-dropping 363 wings over 30 minutes and three rounds to set the record at Wing Bowl 22 on Friday at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia.

The previous record was held by Takeru Kobayashi, who ate 337 wings at the event in 2012.

[+] EnlargeMolly Schuyler

SportsRadio 94WIPMolly Schuyler captured a $22,000 payday by devouring 363 chicken wings in 30 minutes at Wing Bowl 22. She also surpassed the previous record of 337, set by Takeru Kobayashi in 2012.

Schuyler, from Omaha, Neb., didn't exactly cruise to the crown, however. She narrowly defeated fellow competitive eater Patrick Bertoletti, a Chicago native who finished with 356 wings. Jamie "The Bear" Anderson, last year's champion, was third among the six finalists with 304.

For her gutsy effort, Schuyler won the $22,000 top prize as well as a gold medal and a championship ring.

"I have car payments and kids, so it's all good," Schuyler told Philly.com.

And perhaps even more impressive: All this was accomplished in an hour's work beginning at -- get this -- 8 a.m.

Schuyler breezed to the first-round lead, eating 186 wings in 14 minutes as the top 10 advanced. One of those eliminated in the first round was Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce, who managed only 65 wings. The second round lasted 14 minutes, and the final round was a two-minute sprint to the finish.

To qualify for the Wing Bowl, Schuyler ate nine pounds of cottage cheese in 114 seconds. She also holds a world record for eating a 72-ounce steak in less than three minutes.

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Kristen Davis, Scarlett Johansson chose different paths when work, Oxfam clashed - Fox News

Published January 31, 2014

FoxNews.com

“The Summer Scorcher issue” of V Magazine features sexy star if "Iron Man 2.".

Click through for a preview of the June issue, and find out why Scarlett is like ... a sausage? 

Visit vmagazine.com for more! V65 hits newsstands on May 11th.

(Photo: Inez van Lamsweerde & Vinoodh Matadin for V Magazine)

Kristen Davis knows a few things about what Scarlett Johansson has been going through this week.

Five years ago, Davis was a Global Ambassador for the international aid group Oxfam. She was also working as a spokesperson for Ahava, a cosmetics company located in a Jewish settlement in the West Bank, which Oxfam deems to be illegally occupied by Israel.

Oxfam said she had to choose between Ahava and them. After much pushing and pulling, Davis decided to stick with Oxfam and sever her ties with Ahava, and her contract with them was allowed to expire.

Fast forward to this week, when Oxfam announced Johansson's support of the Israeli company SodaStream, operating in a West Bank settlement, was incompatible with her role as an Oxfam Global Ambassador.

This time around, the actress chose to stay with her company and part ways with Oxfam.

Johansson announced Wednesday that she was resigning her Oxfam role because of a "fundamental difference of opinion."

Oxfam said it accepted her resignation.

The international humanitarian organization said Thursday that it believes SodaStream and other businesses operating in Israeli settlements in the West Bank contribute to the "denial of rights of the Palestinian communities that we work to support." 

The charity said it opposes all trade from the Israeli settlements, "which are illegal under international law."

Pro-Palestinian activists who advocate consumer boycotts of goods produced in Jewish settlements — which are deemed illegal by much of the international community — have encouraged the public to shun SodaStream. The company's main plant is in an Israeli industrial zone next to the settlement of Maaleh Adumim in the West Bank.

Approximately 500 Palestinians work at the SodaStream factory in the West Bank. 

Some 550,000 Israelis live in settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in 1967, along with the Gaza Strip. The Palestinians seek all three territories for a future state.

Johansson, who is Jewish, has become a global brand ambassador for SodaStream, and she recently appeared in an attention-grabbing commercial for the company, which has been gaining attention on YouTube and social media sites, and will air on the Super Bowl this Sunday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Groundhog Day: 5 Things You Didn't Know About The Quirky Holiday - Hollywood Life

Groundhog Day Trivia

Alex Wong/News/Getty Images

As we anxiously await Punxsutawney Phil’s prediction for whether spring will come early this year, let’s take this time to learn some fun facts about Groundhog Day!

It’s that time of year again! On Sunday, Feb. 2, Americans will wait with bated breath to get their weather tips from a groundhog. So how did this quirky holiday come to be? HollywoodLife.com has rounded up five fun facts about Groundhog Day that we bet you didn’t know!

Groundhog Day Trivia — 5 Things You Didn’t Know About The Quirky Holiday

Before there was Groundhog Day the movie, there was Groundhog Day the (weird and random) holiday!

1. Groundhog Day was adopted in the U.S. in 1887 after Clymer H. Freas, the editor of the local paper Punxsutawney Spirit, began promoting the town’s groundhog as the official “Groundhog Day meteorologist.” The origins of the holiday, however, date all the way back to ancient Europe, when people turned to badgers or bears for their winter weather predictions.

2. Have you ever wondered how Phil’s prediction is determined? Of course we know that if he sees his shadow, there will be six more weeks of winter. But apparently the world’s most famous groundhog uses “a chirp and a click and a wink of an eye” to inform the president of Phil’s Inner Circle about his vision, Inner Circle VP Mike Johnston reveals. How magical!

3. Don’t get too down if Phil predicts six more weeks of winter this year. His accuracy is reportedly only 39 percent, according to Stormfax.

4. Wondering about Phil’s forecasts from Groundhog Days past? Look no further than the Congressional Record, in which Phil’s predictions are routinely recorded!

5. After the 1993 movie Groundhog Day, starring Bill Murray, was released, tens of thousands of people began to flock to Punxsutawney, Penn. to see Phil give his forecast in person.

So HollywoodLifers, are you looking forward to Groundhog Day? Do you think Punxsutawney Phil is worried that the Super Bowl will overSHADOW his big day? Let us know in the comments below.

– Tierney McAfee

More Groundhog Day News:

  1. Groundhog Day: Did Punxsutawney Phil See His Shadow?
  2. Groundhog Day Shocker: Did Punxsutawney Phil See His Shadow?
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NESN taking Jenny Dell off Red Sox broadcasts - Boston Globe

Jerry Remy’s announcement Monday that he will return to the NESN booth this season — even as his son’s upcoming murder trial hovers grimly above his head — answered one question about the Red Sox broadcast team.

But with pitchers and catchers due to report to Fort Myers in less than three weeks, another question remained: What is Jenny Dell’s status?

As it turns out, she’s in a weird sort of limbo. When asked if Dell would be part of Red Sox broadcasts this season, NESN spokesman Gary Roy confirmed with a reply to an inquiry that her role has changed:

“NESN has an active search for a Red Sox sideline reporter. Jenny Dell, a multi-talented on-air personality, is anchoring NESN Sports Today and handling other assignments for NESN.”

That seems to confirm what an industry source told me Wednesday morning: that she was informed recently by NESN vice president of programming and production Joseph Maar that she would not be part of the Red Sox broadcast team this season.

Recently, Dell has been filling in as anchor on “NESN Sports Today,” a perfectly viable role but one that according to another industry source is her penance for . . . well, one thing or the other.

Dell, the popular in-game reporter the past two years, is dating Red Sox third baseman Will Middlebrooks. The relationship wasn’t exactly a well-kept secret around the team for some time, but the official acknowledgment of it via a Middlebrooks tweet on New Year’s Eve brought fair questions about the ethics of a reporter dating a player.

While a sideline reporter isn’t necessarily a journalist, the effect that fraternizing with the players has on genuine female journalists who have fought for access and credibility is palpable.

While it’s very hard to believe that their relationship was breaking news to NESN management, it certainly appears as though Dell’s status has been affected by either the backlash to that or perhaps her desire to work elsewhere. There was mutual interest between Dell and Fox Sports 1, though that appears to be in a holding pattern.

Until Roy’s statement, the silence regarding the subject among NESN personnel was deafening; multiple parties did not respond to requests for comment, including Dell.

But a representative for a personality in another market reported to this address that his client had been contacted by NESN about filling the Red Sox reporter role.

Super Bowl lineup

Pretty rough year for the Joe Buck bashers out there. Fox Sports’ voice of — well, pretty much every prominent event this side of the Sprint Cup Series — will call the Super Bowl Sunday alongside analyst Troy Aikman. It’s the fourth time the network’s top NFL broadcast tandem will call a Super Bowl together. For Buck, the assignment arrives roughly three months after he called the Red Sox’ World Series victory over the Cardinals.

Buck and Aikman will be joined by sideline reporters Pam Oliver and Erin Andrews. This is Oliver’s seventh Super Bowl — she has been part of the first six to air on Fox — and Andrews’s first. Should the Seahawks win, it will be fascinating to see whether Andrews is positioned for a sequel to her instant-classic NFC Championship postgame interview with Seattle defensive back Richard Sherman.

Fox’s pregame show begins at 2 p.m., with the usual crew of cohosts Terry Bradshaw and Curt Menefee and analysts Howie Long, Michael Strahan, and Jimmy Johnson handling the studio duties, with Jay Glazer (the subject of a fascinating GQ feature this month) popping in as the information guy.

During the pregame festivities, it appears, as much if not more attention will be paid to the host city rather the teams participating. A feature is planned on Vince Lombardi, a Brooklyn native whose roots still run deep in New York, as well as a look back at the 1958 championship game between the Giants and Colts, and a segment on the life of Pat Summerall, the iconic ex-Giant and broadcaster.

If you need time to load up on pregame snacks or make a run to the store, I’d suggest doing it during the grating red carpet portion of the pregame show, when Michael Strahan and Charissa Thompson greet arriving celebrities — does Jared from Subway count? — at MetLife Stadium.

Credit report

One thing I mean to do in this space — but don’t do often enough — is give credit to those who do excellent work behind the scenes in the electronic media. So let’s do so this week with much-deserved kudos for the Comcast SportsNet New England crew that put together an extraordinary video segment in the aftermath of Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett’s return to the Garden Sunday night. Titled “Thanks For The Memories” and narrated by Mike Giardi, it was a thoughtful and complete look at the way Boston celebrates and embraces its sports heroes, and vice versa. The segment was the brainchild of executive producer John Zannis and news director Kevin Miller. Zannis wrote and produced the piece, with Joe Rolfe in charge of the editing. I can’t recommend it enough.

Where’s Breer?

NFL Network national reporter Albert Breer, formerly of the Globe, has been conspicuously absent during coverage of both conference championship games as well as this week’s buildup to the Super Bowl. He also has not had a column published on NFL.com since Jan. 4. A network spokesperson told Sports Illustrated.com’s Richard Deitsch last week that Breer was on “a temporary leave of absence from NFL Media.” I got the same response, with the addendum, “As this is an internal matter, we will have no further comment.” Breer, who has been at the NFL Network since October 2010, responded to a message but said he could not comment . . . Bruins radio voice Dave Goucher has the call of Friday night’s Boston University-UMass college hockey matchup on NBC Sports Network. Ken Hodge Jr. joins him as the color analyst. The puck dr ops at 7:30 p.m.

Chad Finn can be reached at finn@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeChadFinn.

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The Secret of Groundhog Day - Huffington Post

Nostalgia and superstition are guilty pleasures, and one time we allow ourselves to indulge in them, albeit with titters of embarrassment, is on Groundhog Day. This comes on February 2, when the groundhogs allegedly come out of their burrows. If they see their shadows, they will be frightened and return, in which case winter will last for another six weeks. Thousands of people gather around the burrows of famous groundhogs, most notably Punxsutawney Phil in Pennsylvania, and newscasters film their ascent. Officials dressed anachronistically in top hats and frock coats mark the occasion with speeches. Should the groundhog decide to stay, they hold him up for the crowd to see. Critics allege that the result is predetermined, or at least manipulated, by heaters that are placed under the ground.

Groundhog Day goes back to societies in which agriculturalists watched for subtle signs such as the migration of birds or the emergence of animals from hibernation to decide on the best times for planting and harvesting. In England, Germany and Ireland, the prophetic animal is a badger rather than a groundhog. At one time, it was probably the bear, a more imposing creature that probably endowed the day with greater dignity. In Lithuania and parts Italy, it has been a snake.

The idea of using animals to predict the weather, or even climate change, is not by any means irrational. Following an old tradition, the Chinese still use goldfish to predict earthquakes. In Italy in 2009, toads in very large numbers were observed leaving their burrows in Acquilla several days before an earthquake, and scientists who have studied this maintain it was probably due to the release of gases caused by seismic activity. Animals such as bears and groundhogs may be very sensitive to subtle changes in the thawing of the soil and other possible signs of spring. But, for traditional farmers, these indications to the changes in the weather were read in the context of many other clues. A bit like the animals themselves, they cultivated an intuitive sensitivity to climate, which almost everyone today has lost. Furthermore, they did not use the emergence of animals from hibernation to predict the weather in vast geographic areas but only in the local community.

Groundhog Day is set on the same day as the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox celebration of Candlemass, when lights are lit to celebrate the presentation of Jesus, "light of the world," in the temple. The slightly nervous laughter that usually accompanies Groundhog Day, may reflect a Protestant mockery of Catholic rituals. But Candlemass itself goes back to the traditional Celtic celebration of Imbolc, the beginning of spring, which was also set in the first days of February.

With irony, and even a little sneering, Groundhog Day celebrates a rural way of life, which we can now barely remember, yet somehow miss. It is a loss we hardly name, yet still feel intensely. Holidays are times set aside to reflect on the meaning of our past, and Groundhog Day, while seemingly trivial, turns out to have a history as old and complex as perhaps as any commemoration that we have.

Our nostalgia will not long be satisfied by a few top hats and campy homilies. Groundhog Day holds a secret, more concealed than any subterranean stove -- the groundhog represents humanity, as we confront a profoundly uncertain future. From time to time, we contemplate our prospects, like the animal emerging from its burrow. If they are too terrifying or confusing, we return to our hole, to watch Survivor on television or surf the net.

Groundhog Day, 2005 (photo: Aaron Silvers)

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Jesse Eisenberg and Jeremy Irons Cast in the Superman/Batman Film! - Superherohype.com

Jesse Eisenberg and Jeremy Irons Cast in the Superman/Batman Film!Warner Bros. Pictures announced today that Jesse Eisenberg has been set to star as Lex Luthor and Jeremy Irons will play Alfred in the upcoming Zack Snyder untitled Superman/Batman film. The dual announcement was made today by Greg Silverman, President, Creative Development and Worldwide Production, and Sue Kroll, President, Worldwide Marketing and International Distribution, Warner Bros. Pictures.

Snyder stated, "Lex Luthor is often considered the most notorious of Superman’s rivals, his unsavory reputation preceding him since 1940. What's great about Lex is that he exists beyond the confines of the stereotypical nefarious villain. He's a complicated and sophisticated character whose intellect, wealth and prominence position him as one of the few mortals able to challenge the incredible might of Superman. Having Jesse in the role allows us to explore that interesting dynamic, and also take the character in some new and unexpected directions."

Jesse Eisenberg and Jeremy Irons Cast in the Superman/Batman Film!The director added, "As everyone knows, Alfred is Bruce Wayne's most trusted friend, ally and mentor, a noble guardian and father figure. He is an absolutely critical element in the intricate infrastructure that allows Bruce Wayne to transform himself into Batman. It is an honor to have such an amazingly seasoned and gifted actor as Jeremy taking on the important role of the man who mentors and guides the guarded and nearly impervious façade that encapsulates Bruce Wayne."

Eisenberg received Academy Award, Golden Globe Award, Screen Actors Guild Award and BAFTA Award nominations for his starring role as Mark Zuckerberg in David Fincher’s The Social Network. He also starred in Woody Allen's To Rome with Love and Louis Letterier's Now You See Me. He next appears in The Double and NightMoves.

Irons won the Academy Award for his portrayal of Claus von Bülow in Reversal of Fortune. His work in the film also garnered him a Golden Globe Award. He won an Emmy Award and a Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Award for his performance in the TV miniseries "Elizabeth I," opposite Helen Mirren, and recently starred on the small screen as Rodrigo Borgia in Neil Jordan's highly acclaimed Showtime series "The Borgias," for which Irons earned a Golden Globe nomination. He was recently nominated for a SAG Award for the PBS Great Performances television miniseries "The Hollow Crown," for his performance as Henry IV.

Jesse Eisenberg and Jeremy Irons Cast in the Superman/Batman Film!Snyder's film stars Henry Cavill, reprising his role as Superman/Clark Kent, Ben Affleck as Batman/Bruce Wayne, and Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince. The film also reunites Man of Steel stars Amy Adams, Laurence Fishburne and Diane Lane.

The new film is currently being written by Chris Terrio, from a screenplay by David S. Goyer. Charles Roven and Deborah Snyder are producing, with Benjamin Melniker, Michael E. Uslan, Wesley Coller, David S. Goyer and Geoff Johns serving as executive producers.

The film is set to open worldwide on May 6, 2016, and is based on Superman characters created by Jerry Siegel &Joe Shuster, Batman characters created by Bob Kane, and Wonder Woman created by William Moulton Marston, appearing in comic books published by DC Entertainment.

(Photo Credit: Daniel Deme / FayesVision / WENN.com)

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Dust-up could hurt Michael Grimms reelection - Politico

Michael Grimm is pictured. | AP Photo

It’s not the first time Grimm’s personal behavior has come under the microscope. | AP Photo

New York Rep. Michael Grimm was already facing a tough reelection. His post-State of the Union blowup could make it even tougher.

A moderate Republican who represents a swing Staten Island district, Grimm has been atop Democratic target lists for months. National Democratic strategists have been talking up the idea of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to unseat the second-term congressman. They want to hit the airwaves with TV ads casting him as a tea party figure who’s too conservative for his district.

Continue Reading

Grimm apologizes, says he wasn't drinking

Grimm’s altercation with a reporter who asked the congressman about a federal investigation of his campaign finances instantly went viral – footage played in an endless loop on cable TV and garnered hundreds of thousands of hits on YouTube.

(WATCH: Grimm presser after altercation)

“I’ll break you in half. Like a boy,” the former Marine and FBI agent told the NY1 cable TV reporter Michael Scotto.

Some Republicans worried that the memorable images would provide Democrats with more fodder for attacks this fall.

“It’s going to have an impact on the race…He’s been very angry and very aggressive. It’s the State of the Union. It’s a solemn event,” said Leticia Remauro, a former Staten Island Republican Party chairwoman. “People are going to ask, ‘What’s going on here?’”

Domenic Recchia, a New York City Councilman and Grimm’s Democratic opponent, wasted no time seizing on the incident. In a fundraising appeal to supporters Wednesday afternoon, he wrote: “We shouldn’t have a Congressman who resorts to bullying, threats and even more extreme tactics to get what he wants. … It’s time for Michael Grimm to go. He continues to be an embarrassment to his district and to his constituents.”

Not everyone agrees that the incident will seriously undermine the congressman’s reelection bid. Coming nearly nine months ahead of the election, they argue, few voters will remember it by the time they head to the polls. And some Republicans say Grimm’s tough-guy image could be an asset in a New York City district where voters are more likely to reward brashness.

“I don’t think [voters] would take a lot of umbrage over him roughing it up with a reporter a little bit,” said David Catalfamo, a former top aide to onetime GOP Gov. George Pataki.

It’s not the first time Grimm’s personal behavior has come under the microscope. The congressman has been dogged by an investigation into fundraising practices he employed during his 2010 campaign, with officials looking into whether he evaded donor limits. And in 2011, The New Yorker published an article reporting that Grimm had been investigated internally at the FBI over whether whether he used excessive force during an undercover operation.

Despite those bruises, Grimm managed to easily win reelection in 2012. Overcoming the moderate tilt of his district – which President Barack Obama carried that year – the congressman received 52 percent of the vote, prevailing over a relatively weak Democratic opponent. In his first race for the seat two years earlier, Grimm, boosted by endorsements from former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, won a hard-fought Republican primary and then notched a narrow win over then-Democratic Rep. Michael McMahon.

Grimm began his reelection race as the favorite. Some handicappers see Recchia as a flawed opponent because he hails from Brooklyn and the district is centered on Staten Island. Plus, without Obama running at the top of the ticket in 2014, there’s a possibility that fewer Democratic voters will turnout.

On Wednesday morning, Grimm issued an apology to the reporter and announced that he’d be going out to lunch with him next week. But some Republicans called Grimm’s dust-up an unforced, made-for-the-tabloids mistake that’s likely to come up repeatedly as the election year unfolds.

“It doesn’t help,” said O’Brien Murray, a Republican strategist in New York City. “The question is how much it hurts him.”

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Report: Microsoft prepares to go with Satya Nadella as CEO - USA TODAY

Scott Martin and Jon Swartz, USA TODAY 9:01 p.m. EST January 30, 2014

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SAN FRANCISCO — The board of directors at Microsoft is preparing to tap Satya Nadella as CEO Steve Ballmer's successor and is holding discussions to replace Chairman Bill Gates, according to a report.

A candidate to replace Gates as chairman, John Thomson, the software giant's lead independent director, has emerged as well, according to Bloomberg News, citing people briefed on the process.

USA TODAY could not independently confirm the decision. Microsoft did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

As of Thursday night, Microsoft's board was meeting. An announcement was expected as soon as Friday. Microsoft shares were up 1%, to $37.20, in after-hours trading.

Should Ballmer and Gates depart, the software giant would be without its two most recognizable figures for the first time in its 39-year history.

The report said that Nadella jumped forward as the front-runner in recent weeks as Ballmer's replacement. However, the plans aren't finalized, according to the report.

Nadella, who joined Microsoft in 1992, is in charge of the company's enterprise and cloud businesses.

When Microsoft filed its last annual proxy in October, it reported Nadella received compensation valued at about $7.6 million for the 2013 fiscal year, including $669,167 in salary, a $1.58 million bonus and a $5.4 million stock award. He gained another $4.9 million from previously awarded shares that vested.

Microsoft also said Nadella held another 454,000 shares, worth $15.6 million, that had not yet vested.

It's likely that Nadella would receive a large salary increase and sizable stock award if he's named CEO. When Apple's Tim Cook was named CEO, he received a restricted stock award then valued at about $376 million.

Microsoft has been searching for a new chief since Ballmer announced he was stepping down in August amid grumblings about Microsoft's strategy and its direction the past few years.

Among the candidates floated as successors to Ballmer have been Microsoft Executive Vice President Tony Bates and Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner. Several outsiders emerged, too, including former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, Ford Motor CEO Alan Mulally and Qualcomm CEO-elect Steve Mollenkopf.

But Mulally took himself out of the running this month.

Thompson, who led the CEO search, wrote in a blog post last month that the board started with more than 100 candidates.

"If you were going to pick somebody who is an established Microsoft veteran, Nadella is the guy," says reDesign analyst Rocky Agrawal, a former Microsoft employee. "He seems like the best bet. I would have been really disappointed if they had picked Stephen Elop given what happened with Nokia."

Contributing: Gary Strauss

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'Dude, where's my car' recurring theme in Atlanta - USA TODAY

Many in Atlanta are turning to social media for help during the snowstorm. (USA TODAY, USA NOW)

Larry Copeland and John Bacon, USA TODAY 3:28 p.m. EST January 30, 2014

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ATLANTA — The parking lots otherwise known as Georgia interstates were clearing out Thursday as the city began to emerge from its icy, two-day gridlock.

The snowstorm that swept across the Deep South this week was blamed for more than a dozen deaths and created havoc for millions, prompting six states to declare emergencies. Nowhere were the problems more severe than in the Atlanta area, where less than 3 inches of snow sent cars and trucks spinning across major roads.

Thousands of motorists spent long hours sitting in traffic Tuesday — and many gave up and walked away. Crystal Paulk-Buchanan, a spokeswoman for the Georgia Emergency Management Agency, said 2,029 vehicles were abandoned on interstate highways in metro Atlanta and on Georgia 400. Hundreds more were abandoned on local roads.

"The Georgia State Patrol can run their information and see whether or not it's been towed," she said. "Or they can drive out (with National Guardsmen) and try to find it."

STORY: Governor takes responsibility for chaos

As the temperature slowly crept above freezing Thursday, people were being sent to one of two staging areas, depending on where they left their cars. Gas and jumps were available, Paulk-Buchanan said.

Kevin Andrews, 50, of Powder Springs arrived at one of those stations looking for his wife Vickie's 2012 Honda Civic. He said she left her car on a highway near the Six Flags amusement park Tuesday. She had left her hospital job at 3:30 p.m. that day -- and was stuck in the car until 7 a.m. Wednesday, when her husband, marooned at work himself until 6 a.m. Wednesday, was able to rescue her, thanks to a co-worker's four-wheel-drive vehicle.

"She was frozen," Andrews said. Sitting in a full-stop gridlock, she was playing the radio and had gotten out of the car around midnight Tuesday to get a blanket from the trunk, Andrews said. She rolled down the back window to have something to hold onto as she fetched the blanket. When she got back in the car, the battery died before she could roll the window back up.

"It was pretty rough on her. She started crying for a second, and I told her to get a hold of herself," Andrews said. "She never lost (cell) phone service, and she was able to talk with me and a lot of her other friends.

"She had her Bible. So she wasn't mad. She was just cold."

Similar stories were playing out all over metro Atlanta.

Dulcy Longines left her 2005 Chevy Equinox about 5:30 a.m. Wednesday when her husband and son came to pick her up. She'd been sitting in the car since 2 p.m. Tuesday, after an ordeal of trying various road alternatives to get home. On Thursday, a state trooper told her that her car wasn't in the system as having been towed, and that the National Guard would take her to look for it where she'd left it.

The State Patrol responded to more than 1,460 crashes between Tuesday morning and Wednesday evening, including two fatal crashes, and reported more than 175 injuries.

Thursday morning rush-hour traffic was much lighter than normal: Most metro area schools canceled classes for the day, state government and many businesses were closed and the Georgia Emergency Management Agency was asking motorists to stay off the roads if possible.

Following another bitterly cold morning Thursday, the thawing-out process was getting underway all across the Deep South. Temperatures were forecast to rise into the 40s in Alabama, Georgia and the Carolinas, according to meteorologist Nick Wiltgen of The Weather Channel.

He said highs Thursday afternoon along the Gulf Coast should get to the low 50s, helping to put an end to the icy misery there.

But another chilly overnight — with temperatures dropping below freezing — is forecast across the region, which means a refreeze of untreated roads and bridges.

The real thaw will get underway Friday, as highs soar into the 50s and 60s in the South, the National Weather Service forecasts. With temperatures staying above freezing overnight Friday, the week of wintry misery could finally be ending.

Contributing: Doyle Rice

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Justin Bieber: Would US actually deport pop prince? - Christian Science Monitor

There's a request to deport Justin Bieber on the White House 'We the People' online petition site, and it’s got almost 200,000 signatures.

Can the US government deport Justin Bieber? We’re pretty sure that is not an agenda item for the next National Security Council Deputies Committee meeting. But there’s a request to deport the Canadian pop prince on the White House “We the People” online petition site, and it’s got almost 200,000 signatures. When an appeal gets that much support, the administration is supposed to officially respond.

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Peter Grier is The Christian Science Monitor's Washington editor. In this capacity, he helps direct coverage for the paper on most news events in the nation's capital.

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What that response will be, we don’t yet know. The world holds its breath, apparently.

First, for all you Beliebers out there, don’t be too worried. The “We the People” site is not some sort of citizen vigilante Supreme Court. It’s a PR thing by the White House to make people feel they have an influence, however small, on the course of our great nation. Mr. Bieber will not be deported just because hundreds of thousands of Americans wish it. He’ll be deported because his music is terrible.

Ha, ha, just kidding kids! Can I have my Twitter feed back now?

Anyway, the White House (may) respond to this petition when it gets around to it. But that “response” may be just some sort of generic statement that it's heard the will of the people, or that this raises some serious issues, or that we should all calm down and listen to some Nickelback. It doesn’t have to involve action at all.

Second, as things stand now, there’s no way Bieber gets booted out of the country. He’s here on a valid visa, and last we looked, he has been convicted of no crime. Sure, he was arrested in Miami on suspicion of drunken driving, resisting arrest, and other bad stuff. He could face vandalism charges for that egg-throwing incident back in the L.A. area, where a neighbor claims Bieber-launched yolks caused extensive damage to his house.

But Bieber hasn’t gone to trial, and good lawyers ought to be able to plea-bargain and otherwise maneuver their client’s way through this thicket.

“We will see how Bieber’s legal proceedings play out. Criminal convictions would seem necessary to ever deport him, especially given his ability to secure immigration counsel,” writes Kevin Johnson, dean of the University of California at Davis School of Law, at the “ImmigrationProf Blog.”

Third – and here’s the “but” moment – Bieber may be safe for now, but he can see deportation from where he’s standing. In fact, advocates for immigration reform are pointing to Bieber’s case as a moment to try to teach Americans about what the advocates say are the excesses and arbitrary nature of the deportation system.

If Bieber were poor or Hispanic, it is much more likely that his actions would result in a one-way ticket to his homeland, they say.

“[W]e are watching with interest to see issues Bieber’s situation will shine on the United States’ dysfunctional immigration enforcement system, which doesn’t offer due process to those caught up in its web,” writes Diana Scholl of the American Civil Liberties Union in a post on the case.

Bieber is a legal resident. He is in the US on an “O-1” visa, which is given to people in science, business, athletics, education, and the arts who exhibit “extraordinary ability.”

Sometimes the best jokes write themselves.

Long story short, an O-1 visa holder generally has to be convicted of an aggravated felony or crimes of “moral turpitude” to be deported under US law. But that’s not quite as difficult as it sounds. Some misdemeanors can be defined as “aggravated felonies” for the purposes of deportation, according to immigration lawyers. The American Immigration Council points to the case of Kellyann Jeanette Charles, a native of Trinidad and Tobago and green-card holder who is facing deportation on a shoplifting conviction that has been classified an aggravated felony.

“[F]or immigrants ... 'aggravated felony' covers more than thirty offenses, including simple battery, theft, filing a false tax return, and failing to appear in court,” writes Matthew Kolodziej, a legislative fellow at the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

Drug crimes can also lead to deportation – and Bieber allegedly has copped to having smoked marijuana and popped some pills prior to his Miami arrest, though he hasn’t been charged with drug-related offenses in either Florida or California.

Again, Bieber’s been charged with nothing so far that a good lawyer probably can’t handle. (But he’s also fortunate to be able to afford lawyers. Unlike in criminal court, in immigration court defendants are not guaranteed right to counsel, according to the ACLU.) Unless his notorious activities escalate, Bieber should remain a US resident.

But a few more blowups, and Bieber may be saying, “Hello, Toronto.” Where he faces separate legal charges for allegedly assaulting a limousine driver, by the way.

“Of course, one could face worse fates than being deported to Canada. But, depending how all this plays out, Bieber could face a bar on returning to the U.S. for a long time after deportation – long enough to lose those baby cheeks,” writes Ilona Bray, an immigration lawyer and author of “Becoming a U.S. Citizen.”

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The Miami Heat, for once, have something to prove against the Oklahoma City ... - Yahoo Sports (blog)

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Christie Brinkley at 60: Bring on the younger men! - Fox News

Published January 30, 2014

ET Online

Days before her 60th birthday, supermodel Christie Brinkley opened up her home in the Hamptons to Entertainment Tonight's Nancy O'Dell, and revealed the troubles she faces in her love life.

Namely, she has a hard time finding men her age to date.

"It seems like during this period that most of the guys are like 38, 39, 42, like that sort of age group," Brinkley told Nancy. "It’s funny because I think that at that age they have nothing to prove. They’re very confident and do they just what they want to do."[With] men my age I feel quite invisible to them," Brinkley added.

Brinkley turns 60 on February 2, and is still modeling, showing off her stunning swimsuit body on the February cover of People magazine.

However, when it comes to dating younger guys, Brinkley says she still has some limitations on how much younger the man can be.

"I think a ten year span is fine," Brinkley said.

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Dust-up could hurt Michael Grimms reelection - Politico

Michael Grimm is pictured. | AP Photo

It’s not the first time Grimm’s personal behavior has come under the microscope. | AP Photo

New York Rep. Michael Grimm was already facing a tough reelection. His post-State of the Union blowup could make it even tougher.

A moderate Republican who represents a swing Staten Island district, Grimm has been atop Democratic target lists for months. National Democratic strategists have been talking up the idea of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to unseat the second-term congressman. They want to hit the airwaves with TV ads casting him as a tea party figure who’s too conservative for his district.

Continue Reading

Grimm apologizes, says he wasn't drinking

Grimm’s altercation with a reporter who asked the congressman about a federal investigation of his campaign finances instantly went viral – footage played in an endless loop on cable TV and garnered hundreds of thousands of hits on YouTube.

(WATCH: Grimm presser after altercation)

“I’ll break you in half. Like a boy,” the former Marine and FBI agent told the NY1 cable TV reporter Michael Scotto.

Some Republicans worried that the memorable images would provide Democrats with more fodder for attacks this fall.

“It’s going to have an impact on the race…He’s been very angry and very aggressive. It’s the State of the Union. It’s a solemn event,” said Leticia Remauro, a former Staten Island Republican Party chairwoman. “People are going to ask, ‘What’s going on here?’”

Domenic Recchia, a New York City Councilman and Grimm’s Democratic opponent, wasted no time seizing on the incident. In a fundraising appeal to supporters Wednesday afternoon, he wrote: “We shouldn’t have a Congressman who resorts to bullying, threats and even more extreme tactics to get what he wants. … It’s time for Michael Grimm to go. He continues to be an embarrassment to his district and to his constituents.”

Not everyone agrees that the incident will seriously undermine the congressman’s reelection bid. Coming nearly nine months ahead of the election, they argue, few voters will remember it by the time they head to the polls. And some Republicans say Grimm’s tough-guy image could be an asset in a New York City district where voters are more likely to reward brashness.

“I don’t think [voters] would take a lot of umbrage over him roughing it up with a reporter a little bit,” said David Catalfamo, a former top aide to onetime GOP Gov. George Pataki.

It’s not the first time Grimm’s personal behavior has come under the microscope. The congressman has been dogged by an investigation into fundraising practices he employed during his 2010 campaign, with officials looking into whether he evaded donor limits. And in 2011, The New Yorker published an article reporting that Grimm had been investigated internally at the FBI over whether whether he used excessive force during an undercover operation.

Despite those bruises, Grimm managed to easily win reelection in 2012. Overcoming the moderate tilt of his district – which President Barack Obama carried that year – the congressman received 52 percent of the vote, prevailing over a relatively weak Democratic opponent. In his first race for the seat two years earlier, Grimm, boosted by endorsements from former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, won a hard-fought Republican primary and then notched a narrow win over then-Democratic Rep. Michael McMahon.

Grimm began his reelection race as the favorite. Some handicappers see Recchia as a flawed opponent because he hails from Brooklyn and the district is centered on Staten Island. Plus, without Obama running at the top of the ticket in 2014, there’s a possibility that fewer Democratic voters will turnout.

On Wednesday morning, Grimm issued an apology to the reporter and announced that he’d be going out to lunch with him next week. But some Republicans called Grimm’s dust-up an unforced, made-for-the-tabloids mistake that’s likely to come up repeatedly as the election year unfolds.

“It doesn’t help,” said O’Brien Murray, a Republican strategist in New York City. “The question is how much it hurts him.”

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Dust-up could hurt Michael Grimms reelection - Politico

Michael Grimm is pictured. | AP Photo

It’s not the first time Grimm’s personal behavior has come under the microscope. | AP Photo

New York Rep. Michael Grimm was already facing a tough reelection. His post-State of the Union blowup could make it even tougher.

A moderate Republican who represents a swing Staten Island district, Grimm has been atop Democratic target lists for months. National Democratic strategists have been talking up the idea of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to unseat the second-term congressman. They want to hit the airwaves with TV ads casting him as a tea party figure who’s too conservative for his district.

Continue Reading

Grimm apologizes, says he wasn't drinking

Grimm’s altercation with a reporter who asked the congressman about a federal investigation of his campaign finances instantly went viral – footage played in an endless loop on cable TV and garnered hundreds of thousands of hits on YouTube.

(WATCH: Grimm presser after altercation)

“I’ll break you in half. Like a boy,” the former Marine and FBI agent told the NY1 cable TV reporter Michael Scotto.

Some Republicans worried that the memorable images would provide Democrats with more fodder for attacks this fall.

“It’s going to have an impact on the race…He’s been very angry and very aggressive. It’s the State of the Union. It’s a solemn event,” said Leticia Remauro, a former Staten Island Republican Party chairwoman. “People are going to ask, ‘What’s going on here?’”

Domenic Recchia, a New York City Councilman and Grimm’s Democratic opponent, wasted no time seizing on the incident. In a fundraising appeal to supporters Wednesday afternoon, he wrote: “We shouldn’t have a Congressman who resorts to bullying, threats and even more extreme tactics to get what he wants. … It’s time for Michael Grimm to go. He continues to be an embarrassment to his district and to his constituents.”

Not everyone agrees that the incident will seriously undermine the congressman’s reelection bid. Coming nearly nine months ahead of the election, they argue, few voters will remember it by the time they head to the polls. And some Republicans say Grimm’s tough-guy image could be an asset in a New York City district where voters are more likely to reward brashness.

“I don’t think [voters] would take a lot of umbrage over him roughing it up with a reporter a little bit,” said David Catalfamo, a former top aide to onetime GOP Gov. George Pataki.

It’s not the first time Grimm’s personal behavior has come under the microscope. The congressman has been dogged by an investigation into fundraising practices he employed during his 2010 campaign, with officials looking into whether he evaded donor limits. And in 2011, The New Yorker published an article reporting that Grimm had been investigated internally at the FBI over whether whether he used excessive force during an undercover operation.

Despite those bruises, Grimm managed to easily win reelection in 2012. Overcoming the moderate tilt of his district – which President Barack Obama carried that year – the congressman received 52 percent of the vote, prevailing over a relatively weak Democratic opponent. In his first race for the seat two years earlier, Grimm, boosted by endorsements from former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, won a hard-fought Republican primary and then notched a narrow win over then-Democratic Rep. Michael McMahon.

Grimm began his reelection race as the favorite. Some handicappers see Recchia as a flawed opponent because he hails from Brooklyn and the district is centered on Staten Island. Plus, without Obama running at the top of the ticket in 2014, there’s a possibility that fewer Democratic voters will turnout.

On Wednesday morning, Grimm issued an apology to the reporter and announced that he’d be going out to lunch with him next week. But some Republicans called Grimm’s dust-up an unforced, made-for-the-tabloids mistake that’s likely to come up repeatedly as the election year unfolds.

“It doesn’t help,” said O’Brien Murray, a Republican strategist in New York City. “The question is how much it hurts him.”

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John Boehner Is Not Amused By Obama's State Of The Union Speech (VIDEO) - Huffington Post

All eyes were on President Obama as he delivered his State of the Union address Tuesday night, including those of House Speaker John Boehner, who sat just behind Obama. Whether he was giving the thumbs up, blowing his nose or just looking like he'd rather be taking Bo Obama for a walk than listening to the president, Boehner's looks were priceless.

For your viewing pleasure, HuffPost Live captured the best of Boehner's reactions. Spoiler alert: it was pretty much downhill after that thumbs up.

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More snow-stranded schoolchildren in South get home - CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: All Atlanta kids are either home or headed that way, school spokeswoman says
  • Georgia, Alabama students stuck at school, on buses as weather hammers South
  • District: In Hoover, Alabama, about 4,000 students sheltered in schools Wednesday
  • Dad walked 6 miles to elementary school to spend night with daughter

(CNN) -- Atlanta is shut down -- businesses, roads, government in general -- and while that's generated furor among residents, the angst is exacerbated by the overnight uncertainty involving many of the city's cubs.

Across the state, and even extending into Alabama, there were reports of children spending the night in schools, their parents or school buses unable to navigate treacherous conditions that Georgia Department of Public Safety Commissioner Col. Mark McDonough said caused almost 1,000 accidents in the Georgia capital alone.

Fifty Atlanta students remained on school buses overnight, and seven of them still weren't home by 5 a.m. ET Wednesday, Atlanta Public Schools spokeswoman Kimberly Willis Green said.

Atlanta police delivered food to the kids, who were all home or returned to schools by 9 a.m. ET, she said.

Finally, word came from Green on Wednesday evening that every child that had been stuck was on a bus and headed home.

That included the 2,000 Fulton County Schools students and 400 Atlanta Public Schools kids who had stayed at their schools overnight.

Facing critics who ask how fewer than 3 inches of snow could cripple the city, especially after it tangled with another debilitating storm in 2011, Mayor Kasim Reed assured Atlantans the city was working to open roads and asked them to stay at home.

"What I want to say to them is hold off on trying to get to them. What I can assure (you) is they are safe," he said. "The safest place for them was in the school system. ... I know it is very tough."

There were uplifting stories amid the chaos, however, as the city schools' Twitter feed and a specially created Facebook page, SnowedOutAtlanta, which had more than 52,000 members as of Wednesday night, showed a steady stream of gratitude alongside the messages of frustration.

At E. Rivers Elementary School, about 150 students and teachers spent the night on gym mats, according to CNN affiliate WSB. They watched movies, ate a warm meal Tuesday night and were served French toast for breakfast, the station reported.

Was Atlanta asleep at the wheel?

One father, who identified himself only as Mark, said he walked 6 miles to spend the night with his 5-year-old daughter, Elizabeth. He said it put his mind at ease to see how the school staff was taking care of the youngsters.

"It was fantastic. All the students seemed like they were having a great time," he told WSB. "It looked like a very large sleepover party."

Added young Elizabeth, "We got to watch four or five movies."

Heartwarming stories were heavily outnumbered by those from worried parents who had to spend the night without their children.

Corliss Collins, for instance, said she spoke to her granddaughter, one of about 200 students who spent the night at New Manchester High School in Douglasville, west of Atlanta, around 8 a.m. The granddaughter ate dinner and breakfast there, but told her grandmother that school officials were asking parents to pick up their children because the cafeteria had run out of food, Collins said.

Principal Constance Craft told CNN there was no truth to reports the school had no food.

"We are trying to get teachers who have been here since early morning yesterday home to their families. Our manpower is exhausted, and our children are ready to be home," she said in an e-mail.

Craft later added that the National Guard troops who helped escort the students home were "wonderful." All students had been sent home by lunchtime Wednesday, she said.

In West Atlanta, about 60 students from Riverwood International Charter School remained at a Kroger supermarket Wednesday morning after being transported there from their buses, which were stuck on I-285, said store employee Kim Bradley. The store provided food for them, she said.

About 90 high school students were initially taken there overnight in ambulances, with Highway Emergency Road Operators clearing a path, the state Department of Transportation said. The four buses were evacuated about 6 a.m. after being stuck in ice and traffic all night, the department said.

A total of 51 schoolbuses "needed support" because of the snow and ice, said Matthew Kallmyer, director of Atlanta-Fulton County Emergency Management Agency.

Other reports from Georgia and Alabama include:

-- Eight students from Marietta City Schools, northwest of Atlanta, spent the night in the school bus depot, and 669 students spent the night at eight schools in the system, said spokesman Thomas Algarin. The system was working to get them all home, he said Wednesday morning.

"Our schools were prepared for this," Algarin said, adding that Marietta High School's culinary team a "terrific gourmet meal last night."

-- Schools in Cherokee County, Georgia, north of Atlanta, reported 150 students remained at 11 schools as of Wednesday morning. The number had dwindled to 10 as of 12:15 p.m. ET.

"Students are being kept safe, warm and fed, and staff are doing their best to keep them entertained with movies, games, books and other activities," spokeswoman Barbara Jacoby said in a statement.

-- In Georgia's Paulding and Douglas counties, west of Atlanta, schools reported about 1,800 collective students were sheltered at county schools, CNN affiliate WXIA reported. In Douglas County, the schools offered shelter to people had gotten stuck on the roads or walked to the schools, the station reported.

-- In Hoover, Alabama, one bus with 61 children was stuck until 6 a.m. ET, but the kids were safe, said spokesman Jason Gaston, and another stranded bus had its 21 occupants moved to a local children's hospital.

About 4,000 students and 350 adults -- including some community members who couldn't make it home -- were sheltered in Hoover schools Wednesday morning, Gaston said, adding that the cafeteria was well stocked and the schools were prepared to host those in need until the roads cleared. Students were watching movies and playing video games, he said.

iReporter Monica Cantwell said she spent the night in her office at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and her 13-year-old daughter was stuck at her middle school in Hoover.

The school separated the kids by gender and put them into small groups at bedtime. The kids were playing games and watching videos in the gym and watching videos, she said, and her daughter had texted her to say was bored and none too thrilled to be spending the night on campus.

-- As of 8 a.m., at least 1,400 students spent the night in Birmingham, Alabama-area schools, and none spent the night on buses because they were either shuttled back to school or picked up by parents, said Jefferson County Emergency Management officer Bob Ammons.

Steve Smith, associate superintendent of Atlanta Public Schools, told CNN that roughly 1 million people attempted to go home Tuesday, gnarling traffic on Atlanta's roads and highways.

"The storm was much more intense than anyone knew, and even with our efforts of early dismissal, we still ran into the challenge of having the gridlock," he said.

Smith declined to say when the students would be home but said they'd be reunited with their parents as soon as conditions allowed it.

Could the city have handled the situation better? Sure, he said.

"There's always room for improvement, but we're just appreciative of our parents who have been understanding and patient with us, and our bus drivers have really been the heroes in this situation. They've made some real sacrifices," he said. "Our staff with students as well have made sacrifices. So our principals and staff, they've worked with us and have been very cooperative."

Birmingham Mayor William Bell, too, said his city was expecting a "light dusting," and by the time they realized the severity of the wintry weather, "it was too late."

"All of the businesses and schools began to let out. It clogged up our interstate system, which then led to a clogging of the side roads and many people became stranded," he said. "We have had to scurry to try to play catch up and all of our people working in the public works department, our public safety units within the fire and the police department, they've all been out overnight to try to deal with the stranded motorists."

Opinion: Stranded in Atlanta

CNN's Devon Sayers, Victor Blackwell, Paul Caron, Kate Bolduan and Jamie Morrison contributed to this report.

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