Lil' Evil looking to do a lot of good

He’s built like a mini-tank, has multiple tattoos around his body, sports a crazy haircut and owns some of the gnarliest cauliflower ears, this side of Randy Couture. So based purely on looks, you’d think World Extreme Cagefighting featherweight Jens Pulver would be an intimidating and mean individual. While his in-ring/cage persona fits amazingly well with his “Lil’ Evil” nickname, the Maple Valley, Wash native has very little “evil” outside of the competitive stage. The good folks at the WEC recently got me in touch with the former Tahoma high school wrestling standout and ex-UFC lightweight champion. The 22-8-1 fighter discussed a wide range of issues including his upcoming bout with WEC featherweight champion Urijah Faber and his ultimate goal of coming back home.
TK: Thanks for taking the time to speak with me.
JP: Anything for Seattle.
TK: Tell me how training has been going.
JP: I’m right here at the same gym as always (Iowa’s Miletich Fighting Systems). I’ve also been training boxing at Alleycat gym and TFX gym for all my lifting and plyometrics and the local YMCA for swimming. I’m just kind of training all around Quad Cities. It’s been great.
TK: Talk to me about your upcoming title fight with Urijah Faber. What do you think of him and how do you plan on beating him?
JP: He’s a good champion. An explosive kid who goes out there and finishes fights. He can do some pretty off the wall things in the middle of fights. He’s just a really powerful guy. I just plan on taking it to him quick and explosive. You have to slow a guy like him down, like putting him in quicksand and prevent him from moving his feet. Then I just want to put pressure on him, put my size on him, put my own power on him. He loves scrambling and can do it all day long, so you have to just really try and slow him down. But I want to take the wrestling to him too. If he wants to grapple, let’s grapple. Everybody tries to size up my grappling because of how successful I wasn’t against BJ Penn. Well really? I mean how many people are very successful against BJ Penn, I mean he’s the best there is. I’m just out there to fight. Whatever I do, I just want it to hurt worse than whatever he does.

blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com


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Live TV Stream Available on iPhone and iPod Touch

OrbLive is the streaming media application developed by Orb Networks for iPhone and iPod Touch. With this app, you can stream all your media, no need to sync. This app plays live TV, Internet TV, and webcams on your iPhone or iPod Touch.
“TV on the iPhone is now real,” said Joe Costello, CEO of Orb Networks. “Steve Jobs may think that buying shows from iTunes is the same as watching TV, but iPhone users know better. When the NBA playoffs are on, you want to see the game, live, wherever you are. Free.”
Orb pulls files off your Mac and streams them to any device with an app or web browser capable of accessing the Orb interface. From there you can stream music, video files, and if you have a TV tuner card, live TV. According to Orb Networks, all media streaming is optimized so it works great over WiFi, AT&T, O2, and Vodafone.
You must have a jailbroken iPhone or iPod touch to get OrbLive. If you are not sure how to jailbreak into your iPhone safely, follow this link to learn how you can do it risk free in 3 minutes or less.
“Although the iPhone provides users with a great way to experience the web, it offers a ridiculously sub-par streaming video experience. When all the carriers’ free phones can stream lots of things that my iPhone can’t, something’s seriously wrong. OrbLive finally brings the iPhone’s streaming video experience up to par with other mobile phones,” - said Costello.

palluxo.com


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Pop Superstar Chris Brown Gives Fans More With the Release of …

NEW YORK, April 7, 2008 /PRNewswire/ — Jive Records recording artist Chris Brown is set to release Exclusive: The Forever Edition on June 3rd. The Forever Edition, is an updated and revamped version of his multi-platinum release Exclusive and includes the original 16 tracks from the sophomore effort plus four brand new tracks that feature top-notch collaborations and a bonus DVD with unreleased concert and behind the scenes footage.
"Forever," the lead single from the upcoming Forever Edition is a slight departure from Chris Brown’s usual musical forte. Produced by super-producer Polow da Don, "Forever," is a rhythmic up-tempo song with a funky pop edge. Additional bonus tracks include: "Heart Ain’t A Brain," "Super Human" with Keri Hilson, and the "Picture Perfect Remix" featuring Bow Wow & Hurricane Chris. Completing the Forever Edition package is a bonus DVD with a special montage of performances from his recent Up Close & Personal sold-out tour and never before seen behind the scenes footage.
This week the multi-talented performer’s current single, "With You" maintains the #1 position as the most played single on Billboard’s Hot 100 Airplay chart for the sixth week in a row. On the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, Chris Brown currently has two songs in the Top 10, holding the #8 slot with his hit single "With You," and is featured on Jordin Sparks’ smash hit song "No Air," which takes the #5 spot. The video for "With You" recently topped the video charts at #1 on both BET and MTV networks.On April 10th, Chris Brown and label-mate Jordin Sparks will perform the nearly platinum- selling hit single, "No Air" on American Idol.

earthtimes.org


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UFC 83: Match-by-Match Updates

TSN Producer Andrew Nichols is in Montreal at the sold out UFC 83: SERRA vs. ST-PIERRE 2, where Quebec’s own Georges ‘Rush’ St-Pierre attempts to become the undisputed champion in a rematch with reigning titleholder Matt ‘The Terror’ Serra. Follow Nichols’ Blog as he reports from the Bell Centre.
8:00pm ET - Well, after some technical difficulties, I think we’re up and running for the rest of the night. The pre-show card started about 30 minutes early. Jonathan Goulet defeat Kuniyoshi Hironaka by TKO in the 2nd round. The Bell Centre is only 30 percent full, but the house is rocking. The crowd is thoroughly behind the Canadian fighters. More to come.
8:07pm ET - In the 2nd fight of the night, Cain Velasquez defeated Brad Morris. Morris was dominated throughout the fight, and was caught a hook he could not recover from. Canadian Sam Stout is on his way to the ring. The crowd is lit up. Stout will give GSP a run for loudest reaction of the night.
8:31pm ET - Stout vs Rich Clementi (Lightweights): Sam Stout lost a split decision to Rich Clementi. We’ve had to sort out some technical issues on site, but it appears we’ll be full steam ahead for the rest of the card.
8:44pm ET - Demian Maia vs Ed Herman, 3 Rounds (Middleweights) - 1st Round: Herman’s tights have a large sponsorship for Condomdepot.com… his nickname is "Short Fuse"… only in the MMA. The first round was slow paced, with a lot of ground and pound exchanges.
8:48pm ET - Demian Maia vs Ed Herman - 2nd Round: Herman has the advantage through most of the round. Out of nowhere, Maia slips Herman into a triangle submission hold. Maia has his man fall asleep in the hold and pounds away until the referee stops the fight. Winner at 2:27 of the 2nd round: Maia.

tsn.ca


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How Nintendo makes the video game industry look good

For years, people like Jack Thompson have been spewing invective in an attempt to bring the video game industry to its knees. And while he and the rest of his cronies have done all they can to paint the picture that the entire video game industry is rife with sex, drugs and violence, Nintendo has led the way in showing the world that that’s not even close to true.
Last week, AJ Pierzynski of the Chicago White Sox was asked why he spent hours during spring training playing with his Nintendo DS. Instead of telling the reporters that he tried to kill 15 men in 10 seconds, he explained that he was playing a vision-training game on the device to improve his ability to see the baseball.
Of course, Pierzynski’s use of the DS isn’t the only “non-violent” use of video games today and many people have found the DS and Wii to be bastions of fitness, health and fun. And although others are trying to carry the torch with Nintendo, no company in the video game industry has done what the hardware and software manufacturer has been able to do: show the world that there’s more to video games than violence and sex.
Just don’t tell Jack Thompson that.
Too often, Nintendo is taken to task for being too “kiddie.” When a parent tries to decide which console they want to buy for their young children, more often than not, they’ll choose a Wii or DS because the library of games is more suitable to children of that age. Granted, there are some titles that may not, but Nintendo has gone out of its way to make sure its games are fun, innovative and especially, non-violent.
And yet, Nintendo is caught between a rock and hard place. There’s a certain group of people that look at Nintendo and commend the company for doing what it can to turn the tide of violence and sex in video games. On the other hand, a vocal group tries to condemn the firm for not offering the kind of content it believes most people want.

cnet.com


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Yanks' Duncan still doesn't know why Rays reacted

TAMPA, Fla. — Shelley Duncan watched video of his hard slide in the Yankees’ game Wednesday against Tampa Bay and still doesn’t think it was a dirty play.
The New York first baseman’s slide into second base with his spikes raised sparked a bench-clearing scrum that resulted in two players and two coaches being ejected during the second inning of Wednesday’s contest with the Rays.
“I saw it a couple times,” Duncan said Thursday. “I still don’t understand why they were as upset as they were.”
Duncan, who had hinted at the prospect of retaliating for the Rays’ Elliot Johnson barreling over New York catcher Francisco Cervelli last Saturday, spiked second baseman Akinori Iwamura in the right thigh and was immediately tossed.
Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon called the play “borderline criminal.”
“The words that come from another team don’t affect me,” Duncan said. “It doesn’t bother me. They won’t change how I play the game. I’ll continue to play the game as hard as I can. What matters to me the most is the respect of my coaching staff and my teammates.”
Duncan and Yankees manager Joe Girardi talked after Wednesday’s game and again before Thursday’s contest against Pittsburgh. Duncan declined to discuss specifics about the conversions.

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Anderson Silva Vs Dan Henderson Video

FightMetric has done a great breakdown, analyzing each fight of Anderson Silva’s career according to their unique scoring system. (They note that “There is apparently no existing video of Silva’s victory against Waldir Dos Anjos. That one is not included.” bummer!)
Most commenters looking at Silva’s career have focused on his great performances in the UFC as compared to his uneven work in PRIDE. I really think the guy’s just been on a tear since 2005. He rebounded to his legendary flying heel-hook loss to Ryo Chonan by going on a fucking tear. He’s jsut been deadly ever since then. Yeah Lutter gave him a hiccup and he got DQ’d against Okami (by using a kick that I don’t think should be illegal — IMO if you’re on your back you should be able to kick your opponent anywhere except his nuts and his kidneys regardless of where his knees are. The kick he used against Okami was just too beautiful to be banned.)
It’s also worth noting that even in his few losses, Anderson has rarely been dominated. Chonan was losing until he got the famous submission. Okami was getting a beat down before the DQ. The only guy to really take Silva out of his game was Takase who used better grappling to nullify Anderson’s game and get triangle choke. (watch it here). His loss to fellow Chute Boxe fighter (at the time) Luiz Azeredo was a close fought match but it was a long long time ago.
Here’s a fun highlight of Silva’s work. It’s too long, and has music and crap, but the first 2:30 are pretty magic.
In addition to the famous beatdowns of Franklin and Leben, his standing reverse elbow KO of Tony Frykland, and the side kick to the head of Okami from his back are heavily featured. I just wish that the HL reels would include that incredible switch he used to beat Nathan Marquardt. Marquardt was working a single leg that could’ve saved the round for him when Anderson reversed it beautifully and got a single leg of his own. From there he Pwned Nate the Great.
You can say what you want about hating wrestlers, but Silva has certainly learned some fine elements of that game. How much that will help him against a monster like Dan Henderson I don’t know.
I think the ever-improving wrestling of all top MMAers is a key factor of why the fights just keep getting better to watch. Why do you think the WEC is so fun to watch? Guys like Faber and Beebe can just flat-out wrestler. Same goes for Griffin/Edgar or Griffin/Guida — get two really good wrestlers in there and the last thing you’ll see is a boring lay and pray.
I hope they do a similar analysis of Henderson’s whole career before the March 2nd showdown.
Be sure and check out their philosophy of judging fights. I have to say I agree with 99% of it — the only quibbles I have are with these two points:
I agree with most of this BUT I think that big slam takedowns and dramatic throws should score points. They do damage and disorient and demoralize an opponent. Besides they’re fun as shit to watch and should be encouraged.
Again, I agree in part. Escaping the mount should definitely score points, but I don’t think a defensive maneuver should count quite as much as an offensive one. Maybe 3/4 as much. But those are minor quibbles, check out their site and their system, it’s a great piece of work and call me naive but I’d love to see it replace the 10 point must system some day.

bloodyelbow.com


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Gene Simmons Video

There’s a scene in the postmodern chase movie No Country For Old Men where Javier Bardem — playing the assassin Anton Chigurh — goes into the office of a trailer park looking for a man he wants to kill. The man isn’t there, and the manager of the park, a large woman, refuses to give Chigurh his work address because it’s against trailer park policy.
It’s a funny scene because Chigurh, an unstoppable killer, actually looks a little intimidated. At the Cannes film festival, where the movie had its premiere, Bardem recalled that the scene had to be shot several times because he kept breaking up over the deadpan performance of the woman playing the manager.
Her name is Kathy Lamkin, and although she appears to be just an ordinary person recruited to be in a Hollywood film, she’s a veteran actress who had small roles in three movies last year — including In The Valley of Elah and The Heartbreak Kid — and is probably most famous as “the Tea Lady” in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre films.
Lamkin is not up for an Oscar. She probably never will be. But she was one of the performers who added texture to No Country For Old Men, who grounded it in authenticity so that its flightier notions — of a mythical Evil stalking the land — could take hold. (Another such actor was Gene Jones, who played the gas station manager who flips a coin for his life.)
Lamkin is one of those actors who prove that not every memorable movie moment or performer gets an Academy Award nomination. Sometimes great artists are snubbed, and sometimes what they do isn’t really Oscar-worthy. It’s just wonderful.
Sometimes they seem to have been forgotten. Take the non-nominated song Pop! Goes My Heart, as sung by Hugh Grant in the romantic comedy Music & Lyrics. The movie was a pleasant diversion that probably benefited from low expectations, but the musical video, a straight-faced parody of Wham!, is one of those catchy and inspired movie moments that was pure pleasure.
We all understand that only five performers can be nominated in each category, but it is still too bad that there was no room for what Nicole Kidman accomplished in Margot At The Wedding, a mostly ignored family drama in which she played an angry and unhappy woman who, in one scene that sticks with you, climbs a tree just to prove that she can do it and gets stuck up there. Kidman was up a tree of one sort or another for most of Margot At The Wedding: She created a woman who was selfish, insensitive and bravely unlikable.
And two cheers for Catherine Keener, whose hippie mother figure lent such warmth to the chilly adventure story Into The Wild. It was a movie brimming with snubs — notably for director Sean Penn — but it would have been nice to acknowledge Keener, who has been bringing a sexy humanity to movies for 20 years (and has earned two Oscar nominations in the process).
We also loved J.K. Simmons, a character actor who has been delighting us for years both as the dyspeptic newspaper editor in the Spider-Man films (”If we get a picture of Julia Roberts in a thong, we can certainly get a picture of this weirdo!”) and now as the unexpectedly understanding father in Juno, another movie that relied on its supporting cast (Allison Janney as the mom, Olivia Thirlby as the best friend, Michael Cera as the boyfriend) to make a realistic landscape in which its unlikelihoods could unfold.
A movie forgotten in the rush for the statuette was Zodiac, a complex true-life crime mystery that is never solved, just another of the unresolved stories of 2007. It was a tough movie to connect with, but there was real, unnominated pleasure in watching Robert Downey, Jr., play a fidgety newspaper reporter: His line of fast-spoken, irreverent patter would be a healthy addition to any newsroom.
Another movie that came and went and didn’t seem to accomplish much but gave me pleasure was The Darjeeling Limited, Wes Anderson’s somewhat disconnected but always rollicking train trip through India. Owen Wilson is hilarious as the eldest of three brothers — the others are played by Adrian Brody and Jason Schwartzman, each of whom has his moments — and an Indian actor named Waris Ahluwalia was a small-scale delight as the steward who tries to keep order. None of them was acknowledged, but that doesn’t diminish their achievements.
Nor will there be an Oscar for another unlikely character, Steve Zahn, who played one of the desperate escapers in Rescue Dawn and almost made you forgive the fiasco that was Strange Wilderness, or for Christian Bale, who imbued his role in the film — the true story of a hair-raising escape from a POW camp during the Vietnam war — with such desperate hunger. Laura Linney’s nomination as best actress for The Savages was deserved, but that left out Philip Seymour Hoffman as her brother and Philip Bosco in a wonderfully realized performance as her ailing father. And it didn’t take everyone long to forget Ben Foster, who was the best thing about 3:10 to Yuma as Russell Crowe’s sidekick, or Peter Fonda, almost unrecognizable as the doomed bounty hunter. No Oscar? No problem.

canada.com


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No Air Video

By Dave Walker
Was Thursday a great day to be a journalism prof or what?
First, The New York Times goes slippery-sourced scandal-wacky on John McCain - and the mysterious lobbyist-lady at the heart and other parts of the story worked telecom issues, no less! - then the mayor of a once-major American city challenges the news director of a local TV station to a throw-down in the station’s parking lot.
On the station’s own air.
Watch WWL’s video of the exchange here:
We’ll leave the McCain thing for the approximately 10 billion other bloggers who’ve been heatedly typing away on the issue to devote all of our attention on New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin’s zany Thursday morning appearance on WWL-Channel 4’s morning news.
Nagin regularly does the chit-chat thing with WWL’s morning hosts, but Thursday the dude went off. (We used to kind of like that. No more.)
First on the Times-Picayune for running a photo of the mayor holding a machine gun at a publicity event announcing that the police department had procured machine guns.
Then at WWL itself for a story slated to run on that very night’s 10 p.m. newscast.
“You know, we’ve talked about a lot of the progress, and in some ways a renaissance the city is going through right now,” said host Eric Paulsen, according to an online WWL transcript of the segment. “In many ways it is. I mean, 2008 has started off with a boom. Do you feel you get the kind of credit you deserve for that?”
Nagin: “I don’t think it’s really that relevant right now. My disappointment …”
Paulsen: “Would another mayor get credit for this?”
Nagin: “Probably. But my disappointment is the way some in the media are handling me personally.”
Here, he talked about the misleading machine-gun photo, for which the newspaper apologized in a front page correction, and to which I officially have nothing to add.
But then Nagin looked directly into the camera and, um, unloaded on WWL, a topic solidly on On (and Off) the Air turf.
“And I’m a little upset with this station, because you’re advertising about the ratings, about what’s getting ready to happen with my schedule,” Nagin said. “You put my personal schedule out there, I am coming back to the station and me and your news director are going to be outside in the parking lot having a good one-on-one.
“You do not put my family at risk.”
Paulsen: “This was a schedule from last year.”
Nagin: “I don’t care. That schedule has formal stuff on it. It has patterns on it, and now you have these Aryan race people focused on me, and you got some mental cases out in this community, and you’re getting ready to put my schedule out there. Where are the other elected officials’ schedule? Are you going to do a follow up on that? This has gone beyond the point of reasonableness.”
All this from a hardly-hardball setup question — “Do you feel you get the kind of credit you deserve?” — predicated by wonderment at the city’s renaissance.
Bottom line, it was an unintended February sweeps promotion that money just can’t buy.
The story had already been aggressively promoted on WWL’s air - hence Nagin’s weird “advertising about the ratings” reference — and video of the mad mayor streamed all day Thursday at www.wwltv.com.
Sure enough, the overnight rating for the 10 p.m. newscast in which the schedule story ran: 23.6, with each rating point representing about 6,000 households.
The overnight ratings for the prior Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday night’s 10 p.m. newscasts on WWL, respectively: 14.6, 14.4, 14.6.
The story itself, reported by weekend anchor Lee Zurik, was fair, balanced, etc., etc.
Shown the schedule, veteran political observers split on Nagin’s work ethic - which was the whole point of doing the story, given Nagin’s widely held reputation as the crippled city’s absentee caretaker.
Nothing personal was revealed. In fact, some stuff in the mayor’s 2007 schedule (a public document that the station had to pry from the mayor’s office via public-information request), was noticeably blacked-out -done so well before Nagin’s on-air beefing began, said WWL.
And, nothing was changed in the story post-eruption, though Zurik did reference the mayor’s coffee-talk fit in his wrap.
As of mid-afternoon Friday, Nagin had called neither Zurik nor Chris Slaughter, WWL news director, to schedule the threatened parking-lot rumble.
Slaughter added that he didn’t see Nagin’s comments as fighting words.
“It was the mayor just being upset,” said Slaughter, who said he’s known Nagin, a former cable-TV executive, for more than 20 years. “On a personal level, I like Ray Nagin. I think Ray Nagin’s a nice guy. On a personal level, I think he’s got a different set of pressures in his position.
“I’d be glad to talk with him if he calls.”
Don’t sit by the phone, ND Slaughter.
Zurik said he made multiple fruitless attempts to contact Nagin to be interviewed for the schedule story.
“I don’t remember how many,” Zurik said.
Interestingly, Zurik said the public-records request that produced the schedule and subsequent dust-up was one of the easiest recent info-extractions the station has executed out of the mayor’s office.
“We received it pretty quickly, for the city,” he said. “They handed over the material quicker than most.”
And without any official concern expressed over the broadcast of whatever personal information the schedule might contain, added Zurik, who was in the shower when Nagin went off on the morning show.
“I was getting ready for work, and my cell phone rang and it was the station,” Zurik said. “Usually something is wrong when the station calls at 7:55 in the morning. I picked it up and said, ‘What’s wrong?’”
As Zurik toweled off, the mayor’s WWL morning hosts were exceedingly gracious on the air.
Concerned, even, for Nagin’s mental well-being.
“People who are listening to you speak, people who care about you, may be worried about you because of your emotional state,” said Sally-Ann Roberts.
(Possible alternative question: “You’re pissed? What about the city residents who filed 17,000 online complaints about blighted property to your administration’s Good Neighbor program only to discover that they’d all been ignored?” But I, a New Orleans homeowner whose flood-restored home overlooks an un-gutted house, digress.)
“Because it’s crossed the line, Sally,” Nagin continued. “It’s gotten personal now. I don’t appreciate the fact that I’m being exposed and my family is being exposed now. That was not part of this deal.”
Paulsen: “You’ve gotten a lot of heat over the past couple of years. I’ve never seen you this emotional.”
Nagin: “Well, because your newscast, the local newspapers, are feeding these awful, ugly talk shows that are feeding these blogs. If you go look at some of these blogs out there and some of the stories that come from the paper and you read the comments, it’s some
of the most vile, angry, people that I’ve ever seen in this community.”
Paulsen: “Are you concerned about your safety?”
(Alternative question: “Are you concerned about your safety … from the rampant and apparently unstoppable street crime in your own city?”)
Nagin: “I’ve got coverage. If somebody approaches me wrong, I’m going to cold-cock them. That’s the bottom line. You can come with that foolishness if you want, but you’ll see a side of Ray Nagin that you haven’t seen.”
“I was bothered by what I saw,” said Larry Lorenz, former chair of the communications department at Loyola University and current interim dean of the college of social sciences. “It seems to me that Nagin could take a lesson from Harry Truman. If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.”
Lorenz also chairs “Informed Sources,” WYES-Channel 12’s 7 p.m. Friday roundtable of local journalists.
“I thought that was uncalled-for,” Lorenz continued, of the latest Ray-being-Ray moment. “Particularly the talk about going out into the parking lot and fighting, especially in a community where violence so often seems to be the response to any kind of situation.”
TV columnist Dave Walker can be reached at dwalker@timespicayune.com or (504)826-3429.

nola.com


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