3.6.09

Obama's West Wing: Bono, BlackBerries



Posted June 3, 2009 7:00 AM

by Mark Silva

Retired Marine Gen. Jim Jones, National Security Adviser to President Barack Obama, is "a Bono fan.''

Rahm Emanuel, making his second tour of duty in the West Wing of the White House, isn't about to publicly compare the greatest strengths of his two bosses, Obama and former President Bill Clinton.


And Obama himself, which could satisfy those critics who view him as a slave to the TelePrompTer, cannot always deliver a perfect take on the first run of his weekly radio-Internet address.

We learned all this in the first installment of NBC News' Inside the Obama White House, a two-part series that started last night and airs again this evening.

We heard some things we already knew: Emanuel, a former Chicago congressman who really would have loved to become the first Jewish speaker of the House and has forfeited time with his own family' to serve the president, is driven, obsessed with his BlackBerry. And he's not alone in that. The Obama Oval Office is a shirt-sleeves sort of operation - though we did see the president, sans suit-coat, with feet up in the backseat of the armored presidential limousine on his way to the Five Guys cheeseburger run he made last week with NBC's Brian Williams, narrator and supporting actor of the series.

But we didn't know that National Security Adviser Jones, who occupies a corner office of the West Wing where one normal computer terminal sits adjacent to one secured computer terminal, likes Bono. Williams, spotting a U2 disc on the desk near the computers, asked about it. "I'm a Bono fan,'' Jones said.

(U2's Bono performed at the Lincoln Memorial near the eve of President Barack Obama's inauguration in January. Photo above by Charles Dharapak / AP)


We suspected that it isn't always as easy as it appears for the president to read the scripts of those weekly addresses that he tapes each week for play on the radio, YouTube and the White House Website each Saturday morning.

Obama boasted at the start of the taping of the one that aired Saturday about his Supreme Court nominee, Judge Sonia Sotomayor, that he would get it in "one take.'' But, one paragraph in, he stumbled over a line. So much for one take, he joked. It took four, the NBC narrator revealed.

But we really never expected Emanuel to answer Williams' questions about the differences between Clinton and Obama.

Is it true, Williams asked, that Obama has "all the intelligence'' of Clinton, but also "discipline?''

Emanuel, clearly tempted, replied: "I'm not going to do that... They're totally different.''

Oh, and Obama is installing basketball hoops on the tennis court of the White House grounds. He's hoping for a game a week.

Williams promises some "tough questions'' for the president in the second installment this evening. We're looking forward to that.

swamppolitics
Lost concert film with the Police and U2 to screen June 14 in Hollywood
06:28 PM PT, Jun 2 2009

A film long thought lost documenting Amnesty International’s 1986 “A Conspiracy of Hope” concert that featured the Police, U2, Peter Gabriel, Jackson Browne, Miles Davisand others will be screened in its 11-hour entirety June 14 in Hollywood. The rarity will be the showcase jewel of a five-week film festival saluting the 30th anniversary of the international human rights organization’s music and comedy concerts.

The Secret Policeman’s Film Festival marathon screening marks the first time the concert has been seen since it aired live 23 years ago on MTV. It will screen from noon to 11 p.m. at the Egyptian Theatre as one of the marquee events in this edition of the American Cinematheque’s ongoing Mods & Rockers Film Festival.

Other acts who participated include Lou Reed, Joni Mitchell, Yoko Ono, Carlos Santana, Joan Baez, Steven Van Zandt, Bryan Adams, Ruben Blades and Bob Geldof. The Police’s performance was the trio’s first in four years.

The event aired live, but contractual stipulations precluded it from being repeated or issued on home video.

The tapes were scattered and stored in different locations; some were presumed lost. When all the tapes were found, some were in poor shape and had to be restored, according to Martin Lewis, organizer of the Mods & Rockers Festival.

The Secret Policeman's Film Festival runs June 11 to July 19 in Los Angeles and will be repeated June 26 to July 31 in New York City. Full schedule information is available at the festival’s website.

--Randy Lewis

latimes
Bono predicting U2 split
Bono is determined to enjoy U2's world tour because he fears it could be their last.




Bono is determined to enjoy U2's world tour because he fears it could be their last.

(BANG) -

Bono fears U2 will split up.

The singer says he and his bandmates - guitarist The Edge, drummer Larry Mullen Jr. and bassist Adam Clayton - are determined to enjoy their upcoming world tour because they fear it could be their last.

He said: "We want to play for each other as much as we want to play for the crowd this time. You just don't know how long you are going to be doing this. When we walk out on stage, the hairs on people's necks go up - but what people don't know is that the hairs on our necks go up too."

Larry is concerned their fans won't want to part with their money to watch them, even though tickets have been priced reasonably.

He said: "Will we sell it out? Who knows? Will the economic situation have an impact? Probably. But that's not going to stop us."

Larry recently admitted he wants the group to retire while they are still at the top.

He said: "There will be a time when it's like, 'It's time to go.' I would like that to be on a high when you're still achieving as opposed to the curve down. That'll be sad for me. I think it'll be a more dignified time to go."

elecanada
Six months later, no ISPs joining RIAA piracy fight

June 3, 2009

by Greg Sandoval

Last December, the music industry's message to song writers, publishers, and musicians was that antipiracy help was on the way. Hopes soared after the major labels announced that they had convinced a group of telecoms to work with them.

Filing lawsuits against individuals accused of illegal file sharing was, for the most part, a thing of the past, said the Recording Industry Association of America, the trade group representing the top music companies. The new strategy was to enlist Internet service providers, the gatekeepers of the Web, which would issue a series of warnings designed to increase pressure on alleged pirates in what the RIAA called a "graduated response." Under the plan, those subscribers who refused to heed warnings could eventually see their Web connection suspended.

Six months later, the music industry is still waiting to hear from the RIAA which ISPs have explicitly agreed to work with the association. When the RIAA first announced its new antipiracy project, it didn't name partners. Behind the scenes, industry insiders assured the media that the group would disclose the names of partner ISPs "within weeks." Six months later, however, not one ISP has publicly acknowledged working with the RIAA on a "graduated response."


That there are still no announced deals--and there's no guarantee the RIAA can sign any of the major broadband companies--indicates that at best the big recording companies may have spoken too soon when they said broadband providers would help, says one ISP executive. Ironically, at a time when many figured the RIAA had finally hit upon a compelling way to go after music piracy, the association's copyright protection efforts may be more toothless than ever.

"(The RIAA) has tried various ways to turn ISPs and other intermediaries into their own Internet cops," said Cindy Cohn, legal director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an advocacy group for Internet users. "What the ISPs appear to be saying is that this isn't our job."

To be sure, the RIAA continues to pitch its plan to ISPs, numerous sources have told CNET News. AT&T has launched tests of a graduated response--everything, that is, but service interruption. The telecom said it would never shut off a customer's service without a court order. The recording companies may soon announce some kind of agreement with one of the ISP trade groups. But this won't bind the group's members and the RIAA will still need to strike deals with individual companies.

"We have been working slowly but surely, directly and through the offices of (New York Attorney General Andrew) Cuomo, with virtually every major ISP on common approaches," said Jonathan Lamy, an RIAA spokesman in an e-mail. "During the past six months, a number of different ISPs have forwarded nearly half a million RIAA notices to P2P infringers. They had not done that before last winter. A number of individual ISPs now argue that notices alone are proving to have a sufficient deterrent impact."

What the RIAA seems to be suggesting here is that it doesn't need a threat of service termination for a graduated response to be effective. This, however, conflicts with what music executives say in private. They want a carrot and stick approach. They know they have to offer the public inexpensive and easy-to-use alternatives to illegal peer-to-peer sites. They also believe chronic abusers won't stop without the threat of a serious punitive consequence.

So, why did the RIAA announce the ISP-based program without any ISPs on board so many months ago?

Some RIAA critics have speculated that the December announcement was a smokescreen to cover the music industry's retreat from the 5-year-old and highly controversial strategy of filing copyright lawsuits against individuals accused of copyright violations. The theory goes something like this: the RIAA needed a face-saving way to walk away from the litigation, which resulted in more than 30,000 people being sued, a fortune in legal fees, a huge public relations black eye, and didn't do all that much to stop piracy.

"Every other month these Hollywood lobbyists pitch their antipiracy efforts to the public...this doesn't mean, however, that something is about to change."
--Ernesto, TorrentFreak founder

Ernesto, founder of the blog TorrentFreak, which focuses on file sharing, was always skeptical of the RIAA's announcement. He noted that some telecoms have voluntarily sent warning notices to subscribers accused of illegally downloading songs for years, while other companies refused. He says he sees nothing new.

"Yes, the RIAA, MPAA and other outfits do plan to send copyright infringement warnings to ISPs," Ernesto wrote in March, "but they've been doing so for at least half a decade. Every other month these Hollywood lobbyists pitch their antipiracy efforts to the public...this doesn't mean, however, that something is about to change."

According to the ISP executive who asked for anonymity because he's involved in negotiations with the music sector, the RIAA's tactics in dealing with the ISPs have been too heavy handed.

The executive complained that the RIAA has tried to use Andrew Cuomo to push the ISPs into helping. But Cuomo doesn't have the kind of political muscle to sway the major ISPs when they are acting well within the law, the executive said. There's nothing in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that requires ISPs to send their own warning letters to subscribers.

And some ISPs say the DMCA is unclear about when they must terminate service of repeat offenders. AT&T executives say they won't cut off someone's Web access based solely on evidence supplied by the recording industry and will only do so after receiving a court order.

"We keeping hearing about how (Cuomo) is supposed to make this happen," said the executive. "You don't see much changing, do you?

So if Cuomo isn't enough, why don't the music labels appeal to Congress to legislate the ISPs into submission? That's easy. The ISPs have much more influence in Washington than the music sector. There's also little public sympathy for recording stars, who are often perceived to be rolling in money--even if this is a reality for a tiny fraction of working musicians.

In an interview with CNET last week, Paul McGuinness, manager of the rock band U2, says that ISPs have for a long time profited from selling broadband to file sharers and have little interest in taking action without seeing financial reward. But he sees some progress around the globe.

"Perhaps broadband subscription sales are saturated in many territories and the ISPs are belatedly but realistically now turning to building revenue collection businesses with the content owners," McGuinness said. "I just hope it's not too late."

Cohn, from EFF, sees it differently. To her, cutting off someone's Internet connection for file sharing is like refusing to sell shoes to someone accused of jaywalking.

"Every day that passes we realize how important Internet connectivity is to people's lives," Cohn said. "The RIAA looks so out of step with what most people think is a reasonable response to (copyright) infringing behavior. Even to the people that believe we're locked into this 19th century view of copyright law, the RIAA looks hysterical."

cnet
Tokyo turns dump into forest-island


Japanese architect Tadao Ando (right) with Bono. Ando had an idea that became part of the city's Olympic dream -- to create a vast new "Sea Forest" at a landfill island in Tokyo


by Patrice Novotny Patrice Novotny – Wed Jun 3, 1:55 am ET
TOKYO (AFP) – Gazing down from a helicopter at a huge garbage dump in the middle of Tokyo Bay, architect Tadao Ando had an idea that became part of the city's Olympic dream -- to create a vast new "Sea Forest".

At the time, the man-made island of trash wasn't much to look at.

The mega city of Tokyo, the world's largest with 36 million people, long ago ran out of space for the mountains of rubbish it was producing and had used millions of tonnes since the 1970s as landfill to create the artificial island.

Looking down at the 88-hectare (217-acre) wasteland of garbage and dirt, fenced in and criss-crossed by bulldozer tracks, Ando instead imagined an oasis of natural beauty on the edge of the Japanese capital.

"I wanted to convert the landfill space into a forest," the renowned architect told AFP. "Japan in the past was covered in forests. But because we have burnt so much, these forests have started to diminish."

Ando said he wants to send a strong environmental message with the "Umi-no-Mori," or "Sea Forest", landfill project -- for a return to nature and to boost efforts to counter global warming.

"The Earth is going to face this problem of waste," he said. "That's the reason I want to show that waste can be converted into forest. This forest doesn't belong only to Tokyo but to the world."

With Tokyo bidding to host the 2016 Olympics and promising the greenest Games ever, the island is among the key features Japan hopes will bring the event back to the city for the first time since 1964.

As part of the green Games plan, Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara has also promised to add 1,000 hectares of green space over a decade, including parks, rooftop gardens and trees planted beside railway tracks.

On the island, tens of thousands of fast-growing tree saplings have already been planted since 2007 to turn it into a forest park that would host the Olympic equestrian and mountain bike and BMX cycling events.

A seawater channel that cuts through the island would be used for rowing, flatwater canoe and kayak competitions as well as marathon swimming.

The island, located about six kilometres (3.5 miles) from the site of the main stadium and 10 kilometres from central Tokyo's Imperial Palace, will be connected to the city by a road tunnel.

Pathways through the rows of planted trees have been built from the recycled rubble of demolished Tokyo buildings. An underground drainage system already ensures the toxins from the waste dump do not leech into Tokyo Bay.

Part of the design idea is that the forest-island will further cool sea breezes as they head into the concrete jungle that is Tokyo on sweltering summer days and act like a natural air-conditioner.

Rock star-activist Bono of Irish band U2 has planted trees at the site, as have Nobel laureates and a Japanese astronaut.

"We have asked 500,000 people to give 1,000 yen (10 dollars) each so that we can plant saplings on the landfill," Ando said. "We have received 400,000 donations so far. We are planting now.

"To pay for that would not be an issue for the government of Tokyo, but there is significance in the fact that everyone is contributing," said Ando.

"Children are planting the trees. We want to have 500,000 people to have a sense of belonging of that forest.

"The forest is symbolic," he added. "But it will be realized regardless of whether we win the Olympics or not, because improving the environment is not just for the Olympics."

yahoo
POLICEMAN'S BALLS TO CELEBRATE 30 YEARS AT FILM FESTIVALS

02JUNE 2009

The 30th anniversary of celebrity charity show THE SECRET POLICEMAN'S BALL is to be celebrated with film festivals in Los Angeles and New York.
Funnyman John Cleese organised the first Ball in 1979 to raise cash for human rights organisation Amnesty International, and there have since been another eight filmed charity events.
The Secret Policeman’s Film Festival will celebrate three decades of comedic and musical performances for Amnesty by over 100 top stars - with a five-week fete taking place in both Los Angeles and New York.
The festival will showcase the multiple films, TV specials, and documentaries that have chronicled The Secret Policeman’s Ball shows, including the uncut U.S. premieres of the three most recent Balls organised by comedian/actor Eddie Izzard.
The shows have brought together the cream of Britain’s comedic performers including former Monty Python cohorts John Cleese, Michael Palin, Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam and Graham Chapman, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, Rowan Atkinson, Billy Connolly, Izzard, Hugh Laurie and Russell Brand.
The Balls have also featured top musical acts, such as Pete Townshend, Sting, Peter Gabriel, U2 and Eric Clapton, who are all featured performing on film.
All nine Balls will be screened at the festivals, which run from 11 June (09) to the end of July (09) and the two events will culminate with an 11-hour marathon event recreating the experience of Amnesty’s landmark 1986 Conspiracy Of Hope concert at Giants Stadium.
A press release reads, "The screening will follow the exact time-frame of the original show, which took place from 12 noon till 11pm on a Sunday in June."


contactmusic
U2 ready to kick off epic 360 tour
Band plans to tell the world about Ireland, this 'little gem'
By DEBBIE MCGOLDRICK, Irish Voice Editor

Published Wednesday, June 3, 2009, 3:11 PM
Updated Wednesday, June 3, 2009, 4:30 PM



Irish chat show host Pat Kenny, who’s filled the chair of the country’s most popular program, "Late Late Show," for the past 10 years, retired last Friday night and received one heck of a going away gift – an appearance by U2 on his final broadcast, and the gift of a very rare guitar from The Edge.
The band performed their latest single, “Magnificent,” and chatted with Kenny about any number of topics, including, naturally, the upcoming tour which they intend to be groundbreaking in every way.
“We haven't seen (the stage) yet but we've seen some footage of it as it's been built in Belgium and I have to say I looked at it today and thought, 'Oh my God we've actually designed the Eiffel Tower!' It's this huge thing. It's pretty amazing,” Edge revealed.
Though the new tour has sold out pretty much all over the world, drummer Larry Mullen says that playing at home is an extra special event. They’ll get the chance to do that at Croke Park for three nights at the end of July. (“U2360” will make its world debut in Barcelona on June 30.)
“Expectations are always high, particularly in your homeland, but you know, that's what we do. We fly the flag wherever we can. And nowhere prouder than in our homeland,” said Mullen.
“So you take the pressure on, understanding that your family and your friends are expecting great things. They hear about all the stuff you do around the world and they want you to come home and show that you can do it for them as well.”
Though Ireland’s Celtic Tiger economy of a few years back has certainly taken a lickin’, U2 fully intends to spread the word about their country during their travels – they’ll be on the road for nearly two years when all is said and done.
“Larry was saying just a few days ago...I thought it was smart...that we have to, wherever we go, whether it's Barcelona, whether it's Chicago, just tell people about this little gem, this little jewel on the north Atlantic and how extraordinary its people are and how innovative and how smart they are and they'll get their way out of this mess. We're just going to tell them that nightly,” Bono says.

irishcentral