sábado, 3 de marzo de 2012

Drew Barrymore saves the whales and melts cold war ice in Big Miracle

Drew Barrymore saves the whales and melts cold war ice in Big Miracle

Hollywood fictionalises the story of Cindy Lowry, who persuaded the Americans and Russians to free trapped whales in Alaska
Drew Barrymore in a scene from Big Miracle, a film about the rescue of a family of gray whales
Drew Barrymore in a scene from Big Miracle, a film about the rescue of a family of gray whales trapped by rapidly forming ice in the Arctic Circle. Photograph: Darren Michaels/AP/Universal Pictures
October 1988, Alaska: the end of the cold war. Ronald Reagan was US president, communism in eastern Europe was cracking and the ice had come in early. Cindy Lowry, a Greenpeace representative in Anchorage, read in a local paper that three young gray whales were stranded near America's northernmost city, Barrow. It was the start of a story that 24 years later has Lowry portrayed by Drew Barrymore in Big Miracle, a Hollywood film out on Friday.
Lowry was with Donny, her doberman, working on oil companies and overfishing. Then the phone rang. Could Greenpeace lend an icebreaker to get the whales out? Greenpeace never had an icebreaker. A biologist called to say the whales had little time left.
Lowry hit the phones. First she called the governer's office to ask where the coastguard icebreaker was. No interest. Then she tried a senator, the state fisheries department and Noaa, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. She tried whalers and oil companies, the coastguard itself, then got through to General John Schaeffer, adjutant general of the Alaska national guard. A media friend had told her the US and Russia had an agreement to help each other if their ships were in trouble. So she phoned Moscow.
Her telephone manner must have been extraordinary. By the end of the day, Lowry had the offer of an oil company barge, the US under-secretary for oceans had called from Washington pledging help, and the Russians were said to be interested. "It was getting pretty crazy. Everyone was phoning me. But it didn't seem that strange at the time. I was just so focused on the mission," she says.
Rescuers look on as a gray whale surfaces in a breathing hole off Point Barrow, Alaska, in 1988. Rescuers look on as a gray whale surfaces in a breathing hole off Point Barrow, Alaska, in 1988. Photograph: Bill Roth/Getty Images Thirty-six hours later she was on her way to Barrow. "To start with there was just me, a biologist from Noaa, and the oil companies," she says.
An NBC crew with a helicopter took her to see the whales, about 12 miles away . " They were trapped in two tiny holes cut in the ice and there was only just room for two of them to breathe. We could tell right away that the smaller one wasn't breathing that well.
"The oil companies wanted to get barges to them, the Iñupiats [native Alaskans] wanted to chainsaw the holes. Every two or three days there was a new crisis. It was -20C and getting colder."
The drama was told around the world as the nations worked together, with the usual hostilities between corporations and environmentalists, media and military suspended.
By the end of week one, the ice was getting busy. The US air force diverted its largest cargo plane from Japan to bring in an 11-tonne amphibious icebreaking tractor from Prudhoe Bay, then came not one, but two Soviet ships, the icebreaker Admiral Makarov and a cargo ship, the Arsenev. The Iñupiat called the little whale Bone because its head had been rubbed raw as it tried to push through the ice.
The best hope lay with the Soviets clearing a channel, but the danger was that the ship would kill the whales. "It was one or two in the morning. We felt they were [getting] too close. The whales were getting frisky. I think they could start sensing open water, and they started swimming really fast from hole to hole," Lowry says.
An official trailer for Big Miracle on youtube.com The rescuers had set up a light for the Admiral Makarov to see the hole. "I thought I was going to say goodbye to the whales. I sat down by the hole on my own and one of the whales came up and spouted water. The freezing whale breath darkened my anorak.
"It was pretty surreal. You're 12 miles out and a Soviet icebreaker is [heading towards you] like a skyscraper. I kneeled down on the ice and the whale rested its head just inches away from me and we had this most amazing eye contact."
It was pure Hollywood, but the film has developed the story. It now runs: "The incredible true story that united the world. A small town news reporter and an animal-loving volunteer, Drew Barrymore, are joined by rival world superpowers to save a family of majestic gray whales trapped by rapidly forming ice in the Arctic Circle."
In the movie Donny the doberman doesn't get a part, the whales are puppets and the love interest is strictly between humans. "There was no romance on the ice. It was a romance with me and the whale," says Lowry, morphed into Barrymore's "animal lover" Rachel Kramer.
Lowry, who today has her own organisation, Oceans Public Trust Initiative, follows other US environmental women activists including Karen Silkwood, Erin Brockovich and Dian Fossey in having her story told by Hollywood.
She is not over-worried about the fictionalising. "It's not a documentary. It's pretty much the same. I just hope the movie will make people aware. I hope in my lifetime that I will see the end of whaling. The reality is that the oceans which we return whales into these days are in much worse shape now than they were just 20 years ago. The reality is that the oceans today are far more polluted than they were."
The real life story had a bittersweet ending. Three days after the whales were released a friend rang Lowry to say the gray whales were in Prince William Sound, heading south. But real life is not Hollywood: "The good news was two had survived. But Bone, the little whale, hadn't made www.realty-dejavu.com

Exclusive franchise tag for Brees could cost Saints less than $16 million

Exclusive franchise tag for Brees could cost Saints less than $16 million


Divisional Playoffs - New Orleans Saints v San Francisco 49ers Getty ImagesIf the Saints want to keepDrew Brees from having the ability to sign an offered with a team that would be willing to give the Saints two first-round draft picks as compensation for a “very good” quarterback, it won’t cost them as much in 2012 as previously believed.
The non-exclusive franchise tender for quarterbacks is expected to be in the range of a one-year, $14.4 million salary. The exclusive franchise tender, which will be based on the 2012 salary cap numbers for the five highest-paid quarterbacks, currently is expected to fall in the range of $15 million to $16 million.
As a source with knowledge of the calculation explained to PFT this afternoon, the upcoming release of Peyton Manning and restructurings by quarterbacks like Ben Roethlisberger, whose cap number for 2012 plummeted from $16.92 million to $8.895 million, will drive down the average for the top five quarterbacks. (That said, if a team like the Chiefs signs Peyton Manning to a front-loaded deal with a huge cap number in 2012, the average for the five highest-paid quarterbacks will be higher.)
Despite the risk of a quarterback contract with a skewed 2012 cap number, the downward trend makes use of the exclusive tender a no-brainer for the Saints. And it’s likely prompting the team to be willing to employ Brees on a year-to-year basis. If, as ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports, Brees wants a deal that pays out an average of $23 million annually for the first three years, the Saints could choose instead to pay him, based on the high side of the estimate, $16 million this year, $19.2 million in 2013 (i.e., 120 percent of the 2012 number, as required by the CBA), and $27.648 million in 2014 (i.e., 144 percent of the 2013 number, as required by the CBA). That’s a total of $62.848 million over three years, more than $6 million less than the $69 million Brees supposedly wants in that same period.
That said, a source with knowledge of the situation tells PFT that Brees hasn’t asked for $23 million annually over three years. Still, as long as Brees’ number is higher than $20.9 million, the year-to-year approach makes sense.
Of course, in three years the Saints would have to end the dance, since under the CBA the tender would rocket to $39.8 million. By then, however, Brees will be 36. And the question will be whether he wants to play the last few seasons of his career in New Orleans, or elsewhere.www.realty-dejavu.com

Russia’s elections: Putin makes U.S. enemy #1

Russia’s elections: Putin makes U.S. enemy #1

With Vladi­mir Putin expected to win the Russian presidential elections set for Sunday, Brookings scholar Fiona Hill says the United States should be concerned that the U.S.-Russian relations reset under current president Dmitry Medvedev is at risk.
“The rhetoric of [Putin’s] campaign has been very nasty,” says Hill. “Anti-Americanism is always an old tool in the toolkit for Russian politics,” she said, adding, “Now, during this campaign, Putin has put U.S. right back up top as enemy number one.”www.realty-dejavu.com

Vladimir Putin poised to regain Kremlin; protests likely

Vladimir Putin poised to regain Kremlin; protests likely

By Associated Press
Saturday, March 3, 2012 -
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MOSCOW — Vladimir Putin appears all but certain to return to the Kremlin in Sunday’s Russian presidential election, but he’ll find himself in charge of a country far more willing to challenge him.
An unprecedented wave of massive protests showed a substantial portion of the population was fed up with the political entrenchment engineered by Putin since he first became president in 2000, and police are already preparing for the possibility of postelection unrest in Moscow.
The Putin system of so-called "managed democracy" put liberal opposition forces under consistent pressure, allowing them only rare permission to hold small rallies and bringing squads of police to harshly break up any unauthorized gathering.
The Kremlin gained control of all major television channels and their news reports turned into uncritical recitations of Putin’s programs, often augmented with admiring footage of him riding horseback, scuba-diving or petting wild animals.
But the protests, sparked by allegations of widespread fraud in December’s parliamentary elections, forced notable changes.
Authorities gave permission, however grudgingly, for opposition rallies that attracted vast crowds, upward of 50,000 in Moscow. State television gave them substantial and mostly neutral coverage.
Whether that tolerance will last after the election is unclear. According to the most recent survey by the independent Levada Center polling agency, Putin is on track to win the election with around two-thirds of the vote against four challengers — enough to bolster his irritable denunciations of the protesters as a small, coddled minority.
Putin has repeatedly alleged that the protesters are stooges of the United States and Western European countries that want to undermine Russia and he has insulted them, saying for instance that their white ribbon emblems looked like condoms.
In the past week, the rhetoric became even harsher as Putin publicly suggested the opposition was willing to kill one of its own figures in order to stoke outrage against him. That claim came on the heels of state television reports that a plot by Chechen rebels to kill Putin right after the election had been foiled. Some of Putin’s election rivals dismissed the report as a campaign trick to boost support for him.
Protests after the election appear certain.
"People in Russia are not going to recognize Putin’s victory in the first round," Alexei Navalny, one of the loosely knit opposition’s most charismatic figures, declared flatly this week.
Another prominent protest figure, Ilya Ponomarev, a parliament member from the opposition A Just Russia party, said the protesters’ mood has become more truculent as authorities consistently brushed off their initial demands for nullifying the results of the December parliament election.
"It has evolved from ’we demand a rerun’ to ’go to hell’," he said.
The Interior Ministry is calling in 6,000 police reinforcements to the capital from other regions, the state news agency ITAR-Tass reported Friday.
Whether Sunday’s vote is seen as honest is likely to be key; a count without reports of wide violations could deprive protesters of a galvanizing issue.
As the first protests roiled the country, Putin announced an expensive program to place two web cameras in each of the country’s 90,000 polling stations, one showing a general view and one focusing on the ballot box. However, their effectiveness is in doubt.www.realty-dejavu.com

Syrian forces pound Homs again, block aid convoy

Syrian forces pound Homs again, block aid convoy












A handout photograph released by Syria's national news agency SANA March 3, 2012, shows a blast site where a suicide bomber killed two people and wounded several others in the southern Syrian town of Deraa on Saturday, the Syrian state news agency Sana said. REUTERS-SANA-Handout
Demonstrators gather during a protest against Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, after Friday prayers in Yabroud near Damascus March 2, 2012.       REUTER-Handout
1 of 2. A handout photograph released by Syria's national news agency SANA March 3, 2012, shows a blast site where a suicide bomber killed two people and wounded several others in the southern Syrian town of Deraa on Saturday, the Syrian state news agency Sana said.
Credit: Reuters/SANA/Handout

Syrian rebels fight back in Idlib (01:26)

BEIRUT | Sat Mar 3, 2012 12:48pm EST

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syrian forces bombarded parts of the shattered city of Homs on Saturday and for a second day blocked Red Cross aid meant for civilians stranded for weeks without food and fuel in the former rebel stronghold, activists and aid workers said.

The renewed government assault came a day after U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he had received "grisly reports" that President Bashar al-Assad's troops were executing, imprisoning and torturing people in Syria's third largest city.

"In an act of pure revenge, Assad's army has been firing mortar rounds and ... machine guns since this morning at Jobar," said the Syrian Network for Human Rights, naming a neighborhood adjacent to Baba Amro, from which Free Syrian Army rebels pulled out this week after almost a month of siege and shelling.

"We have no immediate reports of casualties because of the difficulty of communications," the campaign group said in a statement.

Syria's government says it is fighting foreign-backed "armed terrorists" which it blames for killing more than 2,000 soldiers and police. The United Nations says Syrian security forces have killed more than 7,500 civilians since the revolt against Assad's rule began in March last year.

Concern was mounting for civilians in freezing conditions in Baba Amro, where International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) trucks were still being held up by Assad's forces. The ICRC said the trucks would spend a second night in Homs and await permission to enter Baba Amro.

"The ICRC and Syrian Arab Red Crescent did not enter Baba Amro today. Our negotiations with Syrian authorities continue in order to enter and help as many people as possible," ICRC spokesman Hicham Hassan told Reuters in Geneva.

Anti-government activists said they feared troops wanted to prevent the ICRC witnessing a reported massacre of rebels in Baba Amro, which had become a symbol of a year-long uprising.

A Damascus-based ICRC spokesman said Syrian authorities had given the convoy permission to enter but that government forces on the ground had stopped the trucks because of what they said were unsafe conditions, including "mines and booby traps."

"There has been fighting there for at least a month. The situation cannot be good. They will need food, it's cold, they will need blankets. And there are injured there that need to be evacuated immediately," Saleh Dabbakeh told Reuters.

Syrian state television broadcast interviews with unnamed civilians in what it said was the stricken district, against a backdrop of empty streets, some with heavy conflict damage.

"Anyone who went out on the street was kidnapped or slaughtered. We called for the army to come in. God bless the army, they saved us from the armed terrorist gangs," said one interviewee, referring to the Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebels.

UNREST SPREADING

Elsewhere in Syria, anti-Assad activists reported mass arrests and the killing of six soldiers, while the government's SANA news agency reported a suicide car bombing in the southern town of Deraa, a blast activists denied was a suicide attack.

In a sign of unrest spreading, activists also said seven people had been killed in Syria's north, and that three had been shot dead in east Syria's Deir al-Zor when troops opened fire on a funeral for two killed in a crackdown on democracy protests.

Colonel Malik Kurdy, deputy of FSA chief Colonel Riad al-Asaad said rebel fighters had seized an arms cache in a battle in countryside north of Damascus and killed and wounded some 100 Syrian troops, but added that the report was preliminary.

Rights group Human Rights Watch distributed satellite images of Baba Amro that it said showed widespread destruction.

"The bombardment has severely restricted movement and relief efforts and deprived thousands of civilians of the ability to access the most basic commodities," it said in a statement.

In unusually tough remarks to the 193-member U.N. General Assembly on Friday, Ban explicitly blamed Damascus for the fate of civilians in the conflict.

"The brutal fighting has trapped civilians in their homes, without food, heat or electricity or medical care, without any chance of evacuating the wounded or burying the dead. People have been reduced to melting snow for drinking water," he said.

"This atrocious assault is all the more appalling for having been waged by the government itself, systematically attacking its own people."

Syrian U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari, said Ban's comments included "extremely virulent rhetoric which confines itself to slandering a government based on reports, opinions or hearsay."

SANA said the Deraa bomber killed three people and wounded 20 others, while residents said seven people had been killed.

Rami Abdelrahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said anti-Assad fighters had killed six soldiers and wounded nine in the town of al-Herak, south of Deraa.

He also said seven people had been killed in Syria's north in and around Idlib province, three by a roadside bomb and the others by gunfire from Syrian security services.

In the suburbs of Damascus activists reported hundreds of arrests and said Syrian security forces had killed three people during raids in which they also set alight homes and cars.

Due to media restrictions, the activists' reports could not be independently verified.

Former Syrian ally Turkey said Assad was committing "war crimes" and condemned Syria for blocking aid to Baba Amro.

"The Syrian regime is committing a crime against humanity every day," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in a news conference with Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said his government was again seeking to have the U.N. Security Council tackle the Syrian crisis.

"This means working with other countries such as Russia and China that have blocked previous initiatives," he told Sky News.

Russia and China twice vetoed council resolutions that would have condemned Damascus and demanded it halt the crackdown on anti-Assad demonstrators, accusing Western and Arab nations of pushing for Libya-style "regime change" in Syria.

The United States is drafting a legally binding council resolution that would call for aid workers to be allowed into besieged towns and an end to the violence, U.N. envoys said.

Western diplomats on Saturday received the bodies of American journalist Marie Colvin and French photographer Remi Ochlik, who were killed on February 22 during shelling of Baba Amro.

A Reuters witness said the diplomats, believed to be the French ambassador to Syria and a representative from the Polish embassy, which is managing U.S. affairs in Syria, had taken the bodies from the Al-Assad University Hospital in Damascus.

(Additional reporting by Oliver Holmes in Beirut, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Michelle Nichols in New York, Avril Ormsby in London; Writing and additional by Mohammed Abbas; Editing by Mark Heinrich)www.realty-dejavu.com

James McCartney to play Liverpool's Cavern Club

James McCartney to play Liverpool's Cavern Club


James McCartney James McCartney has performed on a number of his father's albums

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The son of Sir Paul McCartney is following in his father's footsteps by playing Liverpool's Cavern Club, where The Beatles made their name.

Musician James McCartney, 34, will play at the venue next month, as part of a short series of dates.

He has performed on a number of his father's albums and said it would be a "special moment" to play the club.

The Beatles were regulars at the Cavern in the early 1960s, performing nearly 300 shows.

The original venue closed in 1973, but was rebuilt on the same street and reopened in 1984, becoming a major tourist attraction.

James McCartney said: "Of course I'm really looking forward to playing at the legendary Cavern venue in Liverpool.

"It's where so many great music careers began and of course where my dad's band used to play, so it's a special moment." www.realty-dejavu.com

Peyton Manning a wanted man on Internet

Peyton Manning a wanted man on Internet

Mar. 3, 2012 |
2 Comments
In case you've missed it, Peyton Manning is a wanted man. Just check the Internet.
There's manningtomiami.com. And manningtojets.com. And peyton2az.com. And let's not overlook comehome peyton.com. In order, those are fan-initiated websites urging the Colts quarterback to consider taking his talents to the Miami Dolphins, New York Jets, Arizona Cardinals and Tennessee Titans.
Dolphins fans even put up a billboard in Fort Lauderdale featuring the website and a photo-shopped image of Manning in a Miami uniform.
While it's all speculation at this point, a tidal shift looms as Manning is expected to become the glitziest player to hit the NFL's free agent market since Reggie White in 1993.www.realty-dejavu.com