Thursday, July 19, 2012

Polyamory on TV ? New Showtime Series to Feature Consensual ...

Premium Cable stalwart Showtime is moving into new territory this month with the premiere of a new reality TV series that will take a serious look at the practice of polyamory. It marks the first time that the practice of consensual non-monogamy will get this kind of treatment from a major media outlet.

From the Showtime news release:

The new SHOWTIME docu-series, POLYAMORY: MARRIED AND DATING, exploring alternative relationship structures, premieres on Thursday, July 12th at 11 PM ET/PT. Polyamory or ?poly? as it is often referred to, is practiced by couples who believe that they can also have deep, committed, long-term and loving relationships with people other than their spouses. Unlike polygamy, polyamory is not based on any religious tenets nor does it involve multiple spouses. Produced by BermanBraun, this series of seven episodes presents the various ways in which poly practitioners approach non-monogamy.

That?s not to ignore the impact of the docu-series Sister Wives or the HBO series Big Love, but those shows were not really about polyamory as much as they were about polygamy. As the news release correctly states, there is a distinct difference between those experiences, but the media has been quite blase about it, typically aiming at the sensational instead of the educational.

That?s not to say that this series will be any different. We?re going to withhold judgment until we see it, but the storylines they describe in the release could really go in either direction:

POLYAMORY: MARRIED AND DATING features Lindsey and Anthony, Los Angeles-based grad students who have been married for four years. In the premiere episode, the duo is reconnecting with their primary girlfriend of the past two years, Vanessa, who desperately wants a formalized commitment from her polyamorous triad. Further down the coast in San Diego, Kamala Devi and Michael have been married for 10 years and are the proud parents of a four-year-old son. The couple currently identifies 12 other lovers ? some they share and some they don?t. Devoted to expanding their family, they are inviting two of their lovers, married couple Jen and Tahl, to move in with them.

The first synopsis refers to a relatively common poly format, the closed triad. This is when a couple engages a single bisexual female in a relationship with both partners. In the poly lifestyle, the act of looking for such a partner is called ?unicorn hunting,? because single bisexual women who are interested in such relationship are so rare, they are practically thought to be mythical in nature. Okay. No, not really. But they are rare.

The second synopsis that describes a couple with 12 lovers stretches reality for us, if, for any other reason, there are only 24 hours in a day. How much of a meaningful relationship can all these people truly have? Do they work? Do they eat? Do they bathe? Because if they actually took the time to properly tend to each of those relationships, we?re reasonably certain they wouldn?t have any time left to do anything else.

Also, we can see some poly folks being upset about the depiction of the second couple, because the first thing many poly couples will proclaim is that poly is not about sex ? it?s about relationships. With Kamala Devi and Michael ? 12 lovers? Really? ? that they may be more about the sex than anything else. Although, we would like to meet their physical trainer.

But we could be wrong about all of it. We?ll wait for the series to play out before we make a final comment on it. However, in celebration of alternative concepts like polyamory getting somewhat of a serious look by the media, we are going to feature two more blogs over the next couple of weeks to deliver some straight talk about the alternative lifestyle known as polyamory. Tune in next week ? to Showtime and to our blog.

Source: http://chuckandjoannbird.com/polyamory-on-tv-new-showtime-series-to-feature-consensual-non-monogamy/

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Sunday, July 8, 2012

User:PowerIsrael926 - TaeskWiki

From TaeskWiki

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Source: http://taeskmanual.pluspeople.dk/index.php/User%3APowerIsrael926

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Thursday, July 5, 2012

Androidheadline: Google's New Voice Search Survives a 47 Question Barrage http://t.co/WGMaJSEg #android

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Source: http://twitter.com/Androidheadline/statuses/220604981185740800

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Fallen Texas Soldier Returns Home

Midweek July Fourth causes muddle for travelers
NEW YORK (AP) -- This year July Fourth is on a Wednesday, and that has created a dilemma for some folks -- how long to go away, if at all. Anthony Del Gaudio, who's vice president of hotel sales for Loews Hotels, says he isn't seeing the normal July Fourth spike in bookings. ...

Source: http://weareaustin.com/news/top-stories/stories/vid_2603.shtml?wap=0

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Western wildfire smoke blankets nation

Dozens of wildfires are raging around the western United States, and the large-scale burns are sending smoke as far east as Greenland, according to some atmospheric models.

In all, about 60 wildfires are burning around the nation, from Alaska to Utah to Florida, and satellite images show hazy curtains of smoke hanging over huge portions of the eastern two-thirds of the country.

Smoke travels well, said Georg Grell, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Earth System Research Lab in Boulder, Colo.

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The hotter the fire, the higher its smoke can go ? and the higher the smoke goes into the atmosphere, the farther it typically travels, Grell told OurAmazingPlanet.

"The winds are much stronger up there, so it gets transported much quicker," he said. In addition, once smoke gets to certain altitudes, it's less likely to be washed out of the air by rainstorms, Grell said.

Smoke from extremely hot wildfires can rise 4 to 5 miles (7 to 8 kilometers) into the atmosphere, and can even trigger massive thunderstorms, but it's likely that the smoke from the recent spate of fires is hanging out about 1 mile (1.5 km) above the ground.

Smoky trails
An animation produced by the weather-forecasting branch of NOAA shows plumes of smoke drifting up over the Great Lakes states and reaching areas of the East Coast by June 29. [ Watch the smoke animation ]

Grell said that 10-day models from his own branch, which deals only in research, show the smoke reaching the Eastern Seaboard, out over the Atlantic, and drifting up toward the southern tip of Greenland. However, he said, although it is certain that wildfire smoke would certainly be in the mix, a certain proportion of the drifting haze would be pollution produced by the city centers along the East Coast.

"There is definitely still going to be some smoke effect in there ? how much of it, I can't really say," he said.

Smoke does play a role in the weather ? it can reflect sunlight, cooling some regions, and plays a role in cloud formation, Grell said.

Smoke danger?
Although the maps may look dire, those who live in the smoke's path aren't likely to feel any ill effects if they're far enough away from the wildfires, according to asthma expert Mitchell Grayson in Milwaukee, one of the areas beneath a smoky plume in the models.

"Even though it could be covering a large area, if (the smoke) is in the upper atmosphere, it's not going to be a problem, because it's not the air we're breathing," said Grayson, an associate professor of pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

"When you can smell it, that's when you're going to have problems," he said.

Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com, or follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter @OAPlanet. We're also on Facebook?? and Google+.

? 2012 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48061348/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

EU Parliament rejects ACTA anti-piracy treaty

Green Party members of the European parliament demonstrate against the ACTA project (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) during the vote Wednesday, July 4, 2012 at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. The European Parliament has overwhelmingly defeated the international ACTA anti-piracy agreement, after fears that it would limit Internet freedom. A "no" vote in the Parliament on Wednesday would kill the treaty as far as the European Union is concerned. Supporters say that ACTA ? the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement ? is needed to harmonize international standards to protect the rights of those who produce music, movies, pharmaceuticals, fashion goods and other products that often fall victim to piracy and intellectual property theft. Opponents say it would stifle free access to information. (AP Photo/Christian Lutz)

Green Party members of the European parliament demonstrate against the ACTA project (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) during the vote Wednesday, July 4, 2012 at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. The European Parliament has overwhelmingly defeated the international ACTA anti-piracy agreement, after fears that it would limit Internet freedom. A "no" vote in the Parliament on Wednesday would kill the treaty as far as the European Union is concerned. Supporters say that ACTA ? the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement ? is needed to harmonize international standards to protect the rights of those who produce music, movies, pharmaceuticals, fashion goods and other products that often fall victim to piracy and intellectual property theft. Opponents say it would stifle free access to information. (AP Photo/Christian Lutz)

Green Party members of the European parliament demonstrate against the ACTA project (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) during the vote Wednesday, July 4, 2012 at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. The European Parliament has overwhelmingly defeated the international ACTA anti-piracy agreement, after fears that it would limit Internet freedom. A "no" vote in the Parliament on Wednesday would kill the treaty as far as the European Union is concerned. Supporters say that ACTA ? the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement ? is needed to harmonize international standards to protect the rights of those who produce music, movies, pharmaceuticals, fashion goods and other products that often fall victim to piracy and intellectual property theft. Opponents say it would stifle free access to information. (AP Photo/Christian Lutz)

Green Party members of the European parliament demonstrate against the ACTA project (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) during the vote Wednesday, July 4, 2012 at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. The European Parliament has overwhelmingly defeated the international ACTA anti-piracy agreement, after fears that it would limit Internet freedom. A "no" vote in the Parliament on Wednesday would kill the treaty as far as the European Union is concerned. Supporters say that ACTA ? the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement ? is needed to harmonize international standards to protect the rights of those who produce music, movies, pharmaceuticals, fashion goods and other products that often fall victim to piracy and intellectual property theft. Opponents say it would stifle free access to information. (AP Photo/Christian Lutz)

(AP) ? The European Parliament overwhelmingly defeated an international anti-piracy trade agreement Wednesday after concern that it would limit Internet freedom sparked street protests in cities across Europe.

The vote ? 39 in favor, 478 against, with 165 abstentions ? appeared to deal the death blow to the European Union's participation in a treaty it helped negotiate, though other countries may still participate without the EU.

Supporters had maintained that ACTA, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, was needed to standardize the different national laws that protect the rights of those who produce music, movies, pharmaceuticals, fashion goods and other products that often fall victim to piracy and intellectual property theft. EU officials said, too, that protecting European ideas was essential to the economic growth the continent so badly needs.

But opponents feared the treaty would lead to censorship and snooping on the Internet activities of ordinary citizens. Alex Wilks, who directed the anti-ACTA campaign for the advocacy group Avaaz, said the agreement would have permitted private companies to spy on the activities of Internet users and would have allowed users to be disconnected without due process.

Wilks said the agreement did not properly balance the rights of private citizens and those of copyright holders, whom he described as companies, though their ranks also include individual authors and musicians of modest means.

Beyond the EU and 22 of its member countries, eight other countries also signed the agreement ? the U.S., Australia, Canada, Japan, Morocco, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Korea ? though none has yet ratified it. The EU vote will not affect them.

David Martin, a member of the European Parliament from Scotland, pronounced the agreement dead.

"No emergency surgery, no transplant, no long period of recuperation is going to save ACTA," Martin said. "It's time to give it its last rites. It's time to allow its friends to mourn and for the rest of us to get on with our lives."

But EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht did not sound ready to give up altogether. He said in a statement that he would push ahead with his plan to have Europe's highest court determine whether the agreement, as currently written, would curtail any fundamental European rights, and would consider his next move in light of that opinion.

"It's clear that the question of protecting intellectual property does need to be addressed on a global scale ? for business, the creative industries, whether in Europe or our partner countries," De Gucht said. "With the rejection of ACTA, the need to protect the backbone of Europe's economy across the globe: our innovation, our creativity, our ideas ? our intellectual property ? does not disappear."

But the overwhelming vote Wednesday seemed to indicate that the agreement in its current form has no chance to be approved.

The treaty was unanimously approved by the 27 EU heads of government in December. But EU efforts to ratify it ran into trouble almost immediately. For the EU to become a party to the treaty, all 27 member countries would have to formally approve it.

Protests erupted on the streets of several European cities. A petition by Avaaz in opposition to ACTA garnered 2.8 million signatures and played an important role in influencing the debate.

It began to look increasingly unlikely that all 27 countries would ratify the agreement, so much so that in February the European Commission, the EU's executive branch, suspended ratification efforts and instead asked the European Court of Justice to render its opinion. The hope clearly was to stall for time and try to resume ratification efforts, armed with a favorable court opinion, in a calmer atmosphere.

As if to underscore the difficulty in getting the agreement ratified by all 27 EU countries ? even had the Parliament given its approval ? France's governing Socialist Party issued a statement Wednesday crowing about the parliamentary rejection of the treaty.

"Today, the European Parliament has buried once and for all the ACTA treaty," the statement said. "For the French Socialists, the vote marks the first and foremost a new inter-institutional balance of power, with the active participation of citizens in the European debate."

But copyright holders were, as Martin said, mourning the treaty's demise. A release on behalf of Europe's "creative industries," saying it represented 130 trade federations representing sectors employing over 120 million workers, bemoaned Wednesday's vote, saying it would damage Europe's economy.

"The decision on ACTA is a missed opportunity for the EU to protect its creative and innovation-based industries in the international market place," the statement said. "Intellectual property rights remain the engine for Europe's global competitiveness and a driver of economic growth and jobs. In the current economic climate, it is particularly crucial to protect these beyond the EU itself."

Alan C. Drewsen, executive director of the International Trademark Association, was particularly critical.

"Europe could have seized the chance to support an important treaty that improved intellectual property standards internationally," Drewsen said. "We expect that ACTA will move ahead without the EU, which is a significant loss for the 27 member states."

The failure to ratify the treaty is a humiliation for the European Union, which was one of the prime movers in the multi-year effort to negotiate the agreement. EU officials had maintained that ACTA would change nothing in European law, but would be simply an instance of the EU leading by example and exporting its strong copyright protection laws to other countries where safeguards are weaker.

___

Don Melvin can be reached at http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-07-04-EU-Parliament-Copyright%20Treaty/id-44c391ab3f34402085d916d7b8b00bc6

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Monday, July 2, 2012

Bring on the heroes: Spain embraces its team

A Spanish fan reacts during the viewing of Euro 2012 soccer championship final match between Spain and Italy at the Fan Zone in Madrid, Spain, Sunday, July 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

A Spanish fan reacts during the viewing of Euro 2012 soccer championship final match between Spain and Italy at the Fan Zone in Madrid, Spain, Sunday, July 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

Spanish fans celebrate during the viewing of Euro 2012 soccer championship final match between Spain and Italy at the Fan Zone in Madrid, Spain, Sunday, July 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

A Spanish soccer fan shows his scarf reading "This is Spain, that is why I love it, who (ever) does not like it must leave" in front of a shop with a banner reading "discounts" in Madrid, Spain, Sunday, July 1, 2012. Spain won its third straight major soccer title Sunday, beating Italy 4-0 in the European Championship final. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

Spanish fans celebrate during the viewing of Euro 2012 soccer championship final match between Spain and Italy at the Fan Zone in Madrid, Spain, Sunday, July 1, 2012. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

(AP) ? Out with feckless politicians, in with Spain's unforgettable soccer stars?

Spain's national team headed home Monday after a historic win in Euro 2012 championship final, raising spirits across a country drowning in financial woes. Their elegant 4-0 dispatching of Italy on Sunday night had some Spaniards offering grand, tongue-in-cheek designs for the athletes: They're so perfect, how about letting them run the country?

In one newspaper cartoon, coach Vicente del Bosque is surrounded by the team captain Iker Casillas and stars like Xavi Hernandez and Andres Iniesta, all dressed up in suits for a new line of work after their crushing win in Kiev.

The victory made them the first team ever to bookend a World Cup championship (2010) with two Euro Cup triumphs (2008, 2012).

"The solution to our problems: the government of prime minister Del Bosque and his ministers," read the vignette in El Mundo.

The team was to be received later Monday by King Juan Carlos, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and then snake through Madrid atop an open-air bus to bask in the adulation of tens of thousands.

As the country recovered from a national hangover of elation, pride and booze, Spaniards soaked up sweet memories of a night no one will forget. For a few hours, the realities of 25 percent unemployment, a grinding recession and a banking bailout from the European Union to the tune of up to ?100 billion ($125 billion) were put aside.

Maria Jose Herraiz, a 54-year-old homemaker, was so nervous she had to listen to the game on the radio instead of watching it on TV.

"When I heard people scream 'Goal!' I would run to the TV," she said.

She called the victory marvelous, a potent shot of mood-boosting adrenalin for people sorely in need of it, but knew it would be only short term.

"It will be a sort of flower that blooms for just one day, because economic problems do not go away just because Spain wins," Herraiz said.

Her two adult children ? aged 26 and 28 ? are both still living at home. They are struggling on rock-bottom salaries as low as ?300 ($377) a month for half-day work despite being a computer scientist and a physicist. They came home near dawn after a night of celebration, their faces painted in team colors of red and yellow.

Cristina Rivas, a 41-year-old musician, acknowledged that soccer prowess and government have nothing to do with each other but said there was something very special about those fast guys in red. She suggested that Spain's conservative government was interested only in meeting austerity goals to satisfy the country's European creditors, no matter how much it hurts the average Joe, or "Fulanito," as Spaniards would call him.

"Perhaps this team played like a team, and (the government) plays more as if they were protecting a patch of land," said Rivas.

.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-07-02-SOC-Euro-2012-Celebration/id-6779ea4975d24a1097a1b58a3131c14d

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