Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Starting Stoudemire sign of indecisiveness by rookie coach

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 30 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

For a while Derek Fisher looked like a genius, a modern-day Zen Master. His late insertion of Amar'e Stoudemire into the starting lineup for Wednesday night's season opener against the Bulls at the Garden was providing instant results.

Looking like he did in his All-Star days, Stoudemire dominated the first nine minutes of the game, fueling the Knicks to a fast start that would see the home team take an early 16-11 lead. Stoudemire had half of the Knicks points, sandwiching two dunks between two outside jump shots that energized the sellout crowd.

What Stoudemire had hoped before the game was becoming reality.

"It's time to take the hard work I've done in practice to the game," he had said.

Now he was doing just that. Or so it seemed.

It wasn't long before Fisher wasn't a genius and Stoudemire wasn't 21 again. After Stoudemire left the game at 2:59 of the first quarter with the Knicks up by five, the Bulls bench dominated the rest of the quarter, jump-starting Chicago to an easy 104-80 win.

"The start of the game we played solid," said Stoudemire, who finished with 12 points and eight rebounds. "Then once they started ramping up the defense we took a step back."

It's unclear whether Stoudemire will start Thursday's game in Cleveland or go back to the bench. He spent the whole preseason coming off the bench, which is why eyebrows were raised when Fisher announced Stoudemire would start the opener at power forward.

Fisher said he looked at the matchup against the Bulls and teams in the Eastern Conference in making his decision.

"We feel good about having the two bigs out there starting the game," he said, referring to Stoudemire and center Samuel Dalembert.

That good feeling didn't last a quarter.

"We're still discovering all of our possibilities," Fisher said after the Knicks' most one-sided loss in a season opener since losing to the Sixers 101-72 in 2000.

Fisher was a player for nearly two decades so he knows how egos can impact an NBA team. You only can hope his decision to put Stoudemire in the starting lineup was for basketball reasons and not a flip-flop by a rookie head coach to appease one player.

"He's put himself in position where he's out there to start," Fisher said before the game. "He's worked hard to be in this position."

Stoudemire validated his start by his early impact. He played strong defense against Joakim Noah, ran the floor in transition and made his first four field goals. Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau wasn't surprised.

"People tend to forget how good Amar'e is," he said.

But starting Stoudemire left the Knicks bench without many weapons other than the streaky J.R. Smith. As Stoudemire and Carmelo Anthony watched from the bench, the Bulls claimed a 39-28 lead before they re-entered the game. It got ugly from there.

Fisher will have to figure out what works best for the Knicks and not what makes his players happy. It was just a few days ago when Stoudemire seemed annoyed at coming off the bench, saying, "I'm not sure why," when asked why he wasn't being considered to start. "I need to find out."

It's unclear if he and Fisher discussed his role.

"We have an open line of communication," is all Stoudemire would say. "He has an open-door policy with all of his players.We feel confident to talk him about any situation."

If Fisher changed his lineup simply to appease Stoudemire, that's not a good sign. It's never works when the inmates run the asylum.

Stoudemire said he would be happy starting or coming off the bench. He has always been a good soldier as a Knick, and if he twisted Fisher's arm to get a start on opening night that might be expected. But it's difficult to see the Knicks winning without either Stoudemire or Anthony on the floor.

Fisher promised to do what's best for the team and that might mean Stoudemire coming off the bench. Whatever the plan, the last thing the Knicks need is an indecisive rookie head coach.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

J.R. Smith: Knicks ‘stopped competing’ late in game

J.R. Smith spoke in a whisper, but his words were loud in their significance, biting criticism of his Knicks teammates in their no-show of a home opener. He basically said his team quit, without using the word.

"When we stopped competing at the end of the third, fourth quarter, we could all tell," Smith said after the Bulls embarrassed the Knicks at the Garden, 104-80. "They felt as though they smelled blood in the water. We just couldn't do anything about it.

"We put our heads down and tucked our tails, and we can't do that at home."

The Knicks were competitive early, trailed by 10 points at halftime, but were run out of the building after intermission, trailing by as many as 35 in the fourth quarter, boos filling the arena.

Smith said it's time for the Knicks to stop over-thinking the triangle offense's complexities and just play. He wasn't suggesting veering away from the offense — Smith said he is all in, willing to sacrifice his offense for defense — but the enigmatic shooting guard also said he believes the Knicks were too mechanical against the Bulls.

"I don't think we can be just thinking, thinking, thinking," said Smith, who was held to six points on 2-of-8 shooting in 22 minutes. "Right now it's time to react. If somebody just kicks down your mom's door and takes what they want, I think you have to react, you can't sit there thinking what should I do next.

By the time it's over, everything's going to happen."

He challenged his teammates to show up with the intensity and passion Thursday night in Cleveland that was lacking Wednesday. They will need to be far better against LeBron James, Kevin Love and Kyrie Irving at Quicken Loans Arena, which will be an atmosphere like very few regular-season games, as King James makes his long-awaited return after four years in Miami.

"This is something I've never seen before," Smith said. "It's almost like the Super Bowl for them. The first game of the year, so many acts and what not to start the season off, comedians coming. I don't know what to expect, honestly.

"I don't think we should watch the news, because it's gonna be everywhere. It's just a matter of staying focused and being locked in. Of course you want to be a part of history and stuff like that, but we want to be on the good side, the team that came out and beat those guys. We shouldn't get caught up in the hoopla. Just go out and play."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Former graffiti vandal to head Rikers Island jail

Spray it ain't so!

A notorious graffiti vandal from the 1970s who blighted the city by tagging buildings and subways is now a Department of Correction warden overseeing the largest jail on Rikers Island, sources told The Post.

In May, Turhan Gumusdere, 53, was promoted by DOC Commissioner Joseph Ponte to the top spot at the Anna M. Kross Center — even though Ponte knew about his past, sources said.

The DOC even wrote a post on its official Web site, boasting that Gumusdere was a "street artist" known as "Trike1," who recently donated one of his works to the Horticulture Society of New York's silent auction.

"He has graffitied the city since the 1970s causing lots of damage," said one correction source. "He is infamous in the urban art scene and even the DOC is aware that he is a graffiti vandal, and yet they promoted him."

Gumusdere, who makes $170,000 a year, told The Post almost every "young kid" in the '70s was tagging the city's subways and walls.

"As a teenager, there was a huge wave of kids writing on the walls. I did write my name here and there, but now I am an established artist," Gumusdere said.

The warden said his artwork is displayed in museums and galleries in New York, LA and Paris.

"I have also donated my work to Rikers Island for the benefit of the inmates," Gumusdere noted, adding, "The '70's was 40 years ago. I don't do anything illegal now."

But the correction source said Ponte shouldn't let Gumusdere off so easily.

"It makes Ponte look like a joke and the DOC look like they hire perps," the source said.

The New York Times reported last month that Gumusdere fudged the department's crime statistics by omitting hundreds of fights among inmates while he was a deputy warden in 2011.

City investigators determined that Gumusdere and Warden William Clemons should have been demoted by then-Commissioner Dora Schiro, but they weren't, the paper said.

Ponte took over this year and elevated Clemons to chief of the department while also promoting Gumusdere. Clemons recently retired.

The DOC did not immediately return a call for comment.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Principal & teacher fined for buying house before wedding

David Neering and Regina ShinPhoto: Facebook

You can't put a price on love — except in the city school system.

A Bronx principal and his teacher bride learned that the hard way when the city slapped them with conflict-of-interest fines just weeks after their wedding.

David Neering and Regina Shin, who were married this month in a scenic ceremony in upstate Garrison, were so dedicated to their profession that they skipped a honeymoon so they wouldn't have to spend time away from their students.

"We wanted to make sure we were back at work," Shin said.

And in return, they were hit with fines for purchasing a love nest last year while they were still working together.

City rules prohibit employees and their supervisors from entering into financial arrangements — even those that end in marriage.

"No public servant shall enter into any business or financial arrangement with another public servant who is a supervisor or subordinate of such public servant," the City Charter says.

Shin was fined $2,000 for her romantic wrongdoing. Neering said he shelled out even more in penalties, but wouldn't provide the specific figure.

Combined, their fines could have easily financed the honeymoon they didn't take or a mortgage payment on their new Rockland County home.

"I fell in love," said a giddy Neering, still beaming in wedded bliss. "It happens."

Shin, 29, was a teacher at IS 206, where Neering, 64, has been a principal for nearly a decade.

We had no intent of breaking a Department of Education law, but I did… I should have known better, but I didn't. - David Neering


Last year, a few months after Shin moved into Neering's Manhattan apartment, the couple bought a $400,000 home together in New City, and that's when they ran into trouble.

Dating and living with the boss was not a problem, according to the City Charter.

It was the financial arrangement of buying a house together that got them detention. Neering and Shin were married Oct. 5. The judgment against Shin was dated Oct. 24.

"It is what it is," Shin said. "We should have read it [the conflict rules] more carefully."

To avoid further scrutiny, Shin transferred in September to an elementary school in The Bronx.

Neering is still principal at the middle school. Last year, he earned nearly $134,000. Shin earned more than $72,000.

"I wasn't aware buying a house meant I was entering a fiduciary relationship," said Neering, who added that Shin received no favortism from him while they were working together.

"We fell in love, and I was under the impression that until we got married, I could still supervise her. We had no intent of breaking a Department of Education law, but I did. Ignorance is no excuse. I should have known better, but I didn't."

A spokesperson for the Conflicts of Interest Board, which imposed the fines, declined to comment.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

UN ambassador shows off new ‘Ebola handshake’

UN Ambassador Samantha Power showed off the new "Ebola handshake" Wednesday while greeting the World Health Organization's Dr. Peter Graaff in Liberia.

The two bumped elbows as health authorities in the three West African countries hardest hit by the virus urged people to no longer shake hands as a way to help stop the lethal virus.

Ebola is rampant in West Africa and is spread through direct contact, the CDC warns.

Power was in the region to urge countries to meet their commitments to help stop the spread of the disease.

"The US is not running away from Ebola but walking toward the burning building," Power said, as she urged other nations to do the same.

The WHO said Wednesday it had received about half of the $260 million it needs to meet its objectives.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Silicon Valley financial adviser out for young bucks

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 29 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

Millennials love Silicon Valley — and now Silicon Valley hopes the twentysomethings will start to love saving money, too.

WealthFront, a California investment advisory firm, secured a $64 million investment from venture capital firm Spark Capital Growth, the company announced on Tuesday.

WealthFront, which has more than 17,000 clients and tops $1.5 billion in assets, is focusing on attracting millennial investors early — and to keep them in-house through retirement.

"Millennials, which is a huge generation of Americans, really want a different type of investment service than their parents did," WealthFront's chief executive officer Adam Nash told The Post. "They're very skeptical of this idea that you can beat the market and avoid the downturns."

The company automates the investment process as much as possible to keep fees down, he said, and there are no fees for accounts under $10,000.

While Nash, 39, isn't himself part of the generation he's marketing to, he said he's banking on the model pioneered by companies like Charles Schwab, which cater to retiring baby boomers.

While millennials, which are people born roughly between 1981 and 2000, have been hit by the financial crisis, they'll control roughly $7 trillion in assets by around 2018, Nash said.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Facebook sees increased spending as growth slows

Three days before Halloween, Facebook investors got a scare as Mark Zuckerberg's social network predicted a slowdown in growth and a sharp rise in spending.

Despite the treat of having the company beat third-quarter profit and revenue forecasts, the trick of skyrocketing costs spooked investors and sent shares sliding 11 percent in after-hours trading, to below $73.

Facebook shares in regular trading closed at $80.77, up 0.6 percent.

Facebook also signaled a slowdown in fourth-quarter revenue growth — to a range of 40 percent to 47 percent — compared with third-quarter growth of 59 percent.

CFO Dave Wehner attributed the projected expense increase to "a significant investment year," during which Facebook plans to build out such recent acquisitions as Whatsapp and Oculus.

But the market's reaction was to punish the company's shares with a significant after-hours price decline — just as it did the shares of Amazon, Netflix and Twitter following their recent reports.

Not that Facebook's report contained unpleasant surprises.

Third-quarter revenue of $3.20 billion beat the $3.12 billion anticipated by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters, while earnings per share of 43 cents exceeded the 40 cents expected by analysts.

Compared with the year-earlier quarter, Facebook's 59 percent revenue increase took the total to $3.20 billion, adjusted net income rose 73 percent, to $1.15 billion, and EPS grew by 59 percent.

The company increased its revenue from advertising by 64 percent, to $2.96 billion — of which 66 percent represented mobile ad revenue.

"They continue to show that there is a lot of demand for their product, both in terms of users wanting to spend time there and advertisers wanting to spend money," said Macquarie Research's Ben Schachter.

COO Sheryl Sandberg underscored the importance of the mobile ad figure — up from virtually nothing at the time of Facebook's IPO in May 2012 — by noting "65 percent of people use their phone while out shopping."

Founder and CEO Zuckerberg kicked off the call by saying, "Facebook is getting strong every day" — a claim corroborated by its having 864 million daily active users (DAUs) in September for a year-over-year increase of 19 percent.

Of those, 703 million were mobile DAUs, representing an increase of 39 percent and yet another sign that consumers are no longer bound to desktop computers.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Wix’s OpenRest buy may help small restaurants succeed online

The expected acquisition of a restaurant services app maker by Wix.com could open the door for less-expensive Web marketing opportunities for mom-and-pop restaurant owners — while possibly putting pressure on GrubHub and Seamless.

The purchase of OpenRest by Wix.com, a user-friendly Web site-building platform for small businesses, is expected to be announced as soon as Wednesday. Terms of the deal could not be learned.

Services like Grubhub and Seamless, which increasingly have become default online venues for smaller restaurants, can charge 15 percent to 20 percent of the tab on every order processed through their sites.

That's a punishing rate for an industry whose margins are notoriously razor-thin, business owners said.

Breads Bakery off Union Square, which for the past two years has operated a Web site it developed with Wix, doesn't even consider Seamless an option right now, says co-owner Gadi Peleg.

"Our margins are such that I can't give anybody 15 percent and still enjoy a profit," Peleg said. "In that case, I'm working for them."

Building and maintaining a Wix site costs anywhere from free to $25 a month, depending on the services used, said Eric Mason, director of marketing.

"We don't get any kind of commission on transactions," Mason told The Post. "We don't think we'll replace these other services, but we give the small business owner a chance to fend for themselves."

In addition to steep fees, restaurant review and ordering sites have drawn complaints over bogus reviews and customer ratings that are gamed according to whether restaurants are paying for ads.

Wix.com shares rose 2.7 percent on Tuesday, to $16.62.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ocwen relents, enables retired nurse to keep her house

A 75-year-old Brooklyn woman won her five-year legal battle with one of the nation's biggest mortgage servicers after The Post reported on her struggle to save her Brooklyn home.

Eartha Smith, a retired nurse for the New York Fire Department, finally got an e-mail from Ocwen Financial granting her a mortgage modification following several false starts and 16 trips to court, according to her lawyer, Peter Gleason.

Ben Lawsky, New York's top financial regulator, has accused Ocwen of backdating thousands of time-sensitive letters to struggling borrowers, denying them the chance to rework their troubled loans.

In Smith's case, Ocwen sent her a letter in 2010 that was dated five months before it arrived, Gleason said.

Smith sought a modification after missing four payments on her $131,000 home loan in 2009. In September of 2014, Ocwen's lawyers said the company would accept $180,000. Then, in October, Ocwen did an about-face and demanded $205,000.

On Sunday, one day after The Post reported on Smith's problems, lawyers for Ocwen reached out to Gleason with an offer to accept the lower amount.

"We have authority to accept the 185K payoff," Seth Weinberg, a lawyer for Ocwen, said in an e-mail. "Please let me know if this is acceptable to resolve the matter."

While it tries to close the door on Smith's case, Ocwen is still dealing with regulators over a host of alleged borrower abuses. Lawsky's office is pushing Ocwen to overhaul management and provide consumer relief for homeowners, according to people familiar with the negotiations.

An Ocwen spokesman declined to comment.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Buffalo Wild Wings hiking menu prices

This wings news just might be too hot to handle.

Buffalo Wild Wings tucked a little nugget into its earnings release on Monday that isn't likely to sit well with its throngs of ravenous fans.

"Current costs for traditional chicken wings of $1.98 per pound are 30 percent higher than our third-quarter average cost," Chief Executive Sally Smith said.

"Given this trend and known raises in certain minimum wage rates, we are increasing menu prices an average of 3 percent at the end of November," she said.

The Minneapolis-based chain added that net earnings growth would exceed 28 percent for the year.

Buffalo Wild Wings also plans to open 50 company-owned outlets next year, and 40 franchised locations. Its plans include up to 10 international franchisees.

Shares spiked 13 percent, or $17.86, to $151.68, on Tuesday.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Teachout snubs Cuomo, won’t endorse him for a second term

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 28 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

Looking like a Blues Brother, re-election favorite Gov. Cuomo donned dark glasses — of the 3-D variety — to watch a special technology presentation at Mineola Middle School Monday to promote his $2 billion Smart Schools Bond Act.

Cuomo visited the Long Island school with Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt and Mineola Schools Superintendent Michael Nagler.

Voters will be asked to approve the bond sale in next Tuesday's election, where it will be listed as Proposal No. 3.

On the political front, lefty professor Zephyr Teachout said Monday she won't bury the hatchet and endorse Cuomo for a second term.

Teachout lost to the governor in the September Democratic primary, drawing one-third of the vote.

Her decision opens the door for her supporters to pull the lever for Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins.

Google's Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, Andrew Cuomo and Mineola Superintendent of Schools Michael Nagler use special glasses while watching a 3D technology demonstration in a Mineola Middle School classroom, Monday, Oct. 27, 2014.Photo: AP

Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino is Cuomo's Republican challenger.

"I'm not weighing in on the governor's race," Teachout told The Post.

Teachout, a Fordham Univeristy law professor, said she still has issues with Cuomo, whom she expects to win a second term.

"Cuomo hasn't even been fighting for Democratic control of the state Senate — and he should be," Teachout said.

Hawkins, in a conference call on Monday, appealed to the 181,000 Democrats who voted for Teachout to back him.

A series of polls over the past month show Cuomo leading Astorino by more than 20 points.

But Hawkins is drawing 9 percent, siphoning votes that would probably go to Cuomo.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

High-ranking Department of Correction official resigns

The highest-ranking uniformed official at the city Department of Correction resigned under pressure on Monday amid a furor over allegations that he downplayed juvenile violence in the prison system, The Post has learned.

Chief of Department William Clemons submitted his resignation Monday under pressure from Correction Commissioner Joseph Ponte, sources said.

"Yes, he was told to resign or be fired, so he was forced out by Ponte," a source said.

Clemons was allegedly involved in hiding hundreds of instances of correction officers fighting with teen inmates, resulting in a sanitized internal report three years ago, the source said.

Negative publicity surrounding that episode led to Ponte being skewered and prompted City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito to call Clemons "clearly incompetent."

"I think they had to do this. Correction is out of control, and this guy [Clemons] had some warts on him," a senior Correction official said.

A Correction spokesman did not return a call for comment, and a message for Clemons was not immediately returned.

Preet Bharara, the US attorney in Manhattan, issued a scathing report in August, claiming a "deep-seated culture of violence" against adolescent inmates at Rikers Island.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man accused of photographing abuse victim in court says he was set up

A man who was accused — and later cleared — of posting a photo of a sex-abuse victim is suing another man he says used a fake Twitter account to set him up, Brooklyn Supreme Court papers say.

The plaintiff, a Hasidic man who legally changed his name to Lemon Juice, claims that Moses Klein created an account using Juice's likeness and posted a photo of the victim as she testified in the 2012 trial of Nechemya Weberman.

Juice was charged with contempt because the judge prohibited taking pictures of the woman during the trial, but he was later exonerated.

"He was . . . maliciously prosecuted due to the act of an imposter," Juice's attorney, Leopold Gross, said.

Klein could not be reached for comment.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Woman at center of Brinkley-Cook split is married

At least someone is living happily ever after.

The teen temptress at the center of the sensational Peter Cook/Christie Brinkley breakup is now all grown up — and has moved past the 2007 sex scandal and gotten married, The Post has learned.

Diana Bianchi, now 29, wed Manhattan food writer Aaron Arizpe on Oct. 23 — a move that has made an honest woman out of one of New York's most notorious other women.

"She was just a kid when [her affair with Cook] happened," a family friend said. "She was a teenager. But things change, people change, they mature. She couldn't be happier now, and we're really happy for her."

Arizpe is described as a freelance writer with a passion for pasta and Champagne on one food Web site where he blogs.

"Guilty pleasures?" he wrote on the blog. "What does that even mean? I don't associate food with guilt, only pleasure!"

The couple got engaged July 21, according to social-media sites.

"This is the most wonderful thing ever," Arizpe wrote on Facebook.

Bianchi was just 18 in 2005 when Cook allegedly to wooed her behind the back of his supermodel wife. The wealthy architect hired the teen to do clerical work at his Hamptons office, then bedded her for about a year.

Her stepfather learned of the high jinks and ratted her out to Brinkley — who had given the commencement address at Bianchi's 2006 graduation from Southampton HS. In 2007, Brinkley left Cook, leading to the public exposure of the affair.

"Imagine going through that at such a young age," the friend said. "But she's a strong girl, and she pushed through."

Neither Arizpe nor Bianchi could be reached for comment.

Cook and Brinkley fought a bitter custody battle over their daughter, Sailor, 16, as well as a fierce legal fight over money after their divorce in 2008.

He remarried, but it ended after six years amid allegations of Cook's infidelity.

Meanwhile, Brinkley, whose ex-husbands include singer-songwriter Billy Joel, has vowed never to remarry.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Torn-up prenup is still in effect, judge tells wife

A Brooklyn businessman can enforce a prenuptial agreement against his wife of 12 years — even though he promised never to use it and even joined her in ripping up the contract and throwing it in the ocean on their honeymoon, a judge has ruled.

Ezra Braha, 44, convinced his then-fiancée, Rina Braha, 37, to sign the prenup during their "whirlwind engagement of less than three weeks" in 2012 by saying his father "threatened to cut him off" otherwise, court papers state.

He even promised they would tear up the contract together after they wed.

Rina "alleges that while they were on the cruise, both parties tore up their copies of the prenuptial agreement and threw the pieces into the ocean," court papers state.

Rina's lawyer, Laurie Mermelstein, deposed Ezra about the alleged deceit.

"He said, 'I ripped it up, but I only ripped up a copy,' " Mermelstein said. "He said it was never his intention to rip up the original; he couldn't betray his father."

Ezra kept the real prenup for when the marriage hit the rocks, court papers state.

Rina "thereafter believed that the prenuptial agreement no longer existed until [Ezra], in one of his fits of rage, dumped a copy on the table," according to Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Jeffrey Sunshine's decision.

Rina also accused Ezra of hiding the fact that he held a 25 percent stake in his multimillion-dollar family business which owns apartments in Brooklyn and hotels and malls in New Jersey, court papers state.

The prenup caps alimony payments at five years and also limits Rina's ability to win marital assets.

Sunshine ruled that the prenup stands — honeymoon shredding notwithstanding — because the document expressly states that no promises or covenants outside the prenup shall matter or be taken into account and because each Braha had their own lawyer repping them.

"In this case, defendant fails to make a sufficient showing that would warrant setting the prenuptial agreement aside," the decision states.

Rina has two children from a previous marriage and two kids with Ezra. She lives with all four kids in Gravesend, Brooklyn.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

‘New Black Panther’ group hails ax attacker

Written By Unknown on Senin, 27 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

The Muslim extremist who attacked rookie cops with a hatchet last week was "a crusader seeking justice'' — and more assaults will likely follow, the head of his local New Black Panther Party warned.

"It probably won't be the last [attack on police] because you have a lot of frustrated people out here," Queens chapter leader Frank Sha Francois told The Post.

Francois said ax-wielding Zale Thompson wasn't officially a member of his group, but he came to meetings and they talked about "police brutality" cases such as Eric Garner and Michael Brown.

"I don't condone violence, but something needs to be done," Francois said. "We need to have some type of deterrent and real oversight to deter the police from violating the laws and to know they are not above the laws."

While he hailed the ax man as a "crusader," Francois insisted he didn't agree with Thompson's methods.

"I tell people that to go up against law enforcement in this country is suicide," he said. "Our main way to deal with it is to rally and boycotting."

Thompson, 32, was a jihadist sympathizer who hated cops and white people, his family and friends have said. He was shot dead on a Jamaica, Queens, sidewalk Thursday after he lunged with a blue-handled hatchet at four rookie cops, striking Officer Joseph Meeker, 24, in the arm and Officer Kenneth Healey, 25, in the back of the head.

Francois's comments about Thompson came amid anxiety among cops over the attack. Officers fatally shot a Queens man Sunday morning after he threatened staff at New York Hospital Queens with a utility knife, police said.

Joseph Priolo, 29, had gone to the hospital hours earlier, at around 2:30 a.m., complaining of chest pain and shortness of breath. He was treated and released — but returned a short time later, pulling out the knife and demanding syringes. A staffer called 911.

When cops confronted Priolo later near the Kissena Boulevard apartment building where he lived, he lunged with the knife and was shot twice, police said.

"He brandished the utility knife and one of the two officers fired twice," said Chief of Patrol James O'Neill.

Priolo was rushed back to the hospital where he had menaced the workers and was pronounced dead.

Meanwhile, police officers and community members held a short prayer service outside Jamaica Hospital for Meeker and Healey.

"[Healey's] still in critical but stable condition, but his recovery's been dramatic," Deputy Inspector John Cappelmann said.

"He's speaking. He's doing limited physical therapy. He's doing great."

Meeker has already been released.

Additional reporting by Larry Celona and Elizabeth Hagen


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cipriani’s Pasta and Sauce files countersuit against Cipriani Group

A Chicago mom-and-pop joint called Cipriani has been accused of trying to profit off the Manhattan food empire of the same name, but its owner says that's a crock — because, frankly, her food is better.

Annette Johnson, owner of Cipriani's Pasta and Sauce of Chicago Heights, sniffs in a countersuit against the Cipriani Group that she has no desire to be associated or confused with the larger firm.

"The [Chicago] Ciprianis' pasta was and continues to be made by hand and is air-dried naturally, which gives the pasta more character and flavor and results in a higher-quality product compared to commercial pasta which is heat-dried," she says in papers recently filed in Manhattan federal court.

Johnson's filing was in response to a $1 million-plus trademark-infringement lawsuit that the Cipriani Group slapped Cipriani's Pasta and Sauce with in August.

The Cipriani Group's suit alleges that its own upscale eateries, including its Midtown and Wall Street locations, attract such A-listers as Derek Jeter, Kim Kardashian and Robert De Niro — and that the Chicago business is trying to profit off that reputation by making "a concerted effort to associate their inferior," cheaper wares with its own fancier foods.

Both businesses sell Cipriani-branded products in grocery stores, supermarkets and online.

But Johnson says in the papers that if anyone is deceiving customers, it's the Cipriani Group — causing Midwesterners to believe its products are affiliated with her popular local enterprise.

She's now seeking a court order prohibiting the Manhattan-based powerhouse — which operates eateries, banquet halls and other businesses worldwide — from hawking its products in Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin.

She also wants it to stop "doing any other act likely to confuse, mislead or deceive others into believing that CGI or its products and services are affiliated with, connected with, sponsored by, approved by CP&S or its products,'' according to the papers.

Johnson says in her countersuit that the Cipriani Group's trademarks dates only to 1985 — "long after" Cipriani's Pasta and Sauce opened a trademarked business.

Her business began as a small Italian restaurant in Chicago Heights opened by John and Mary Cipriani in 1929.

The couple expanded in 1955 by selling their homemade pasta and sauces in regional stores. Decades later, sales went online. Johnson bought the business in 2004.

Through her lawyer, Ira Glauber, Johnson declined to comment. Messages left with Cipriani Group lawyers were not returned.

Harry Cipriani Fifth Avenue in Midtown and other Cipriani Group establishments are an offshoot of Harry's Bar, a famous Venice, Italy, tavern opened in the 1930s by Giuseppe Cipriani.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Letterman writer behind cue-card man’s firing opens up

"Don't hate me."

That's the plea from "Late Show with David Letterman" writer Bill Scheft, whose backstage spat with cue-card man Tony Mendez led to the popular sign-holder's termination.

After The Post broke the story last week, Scheft went into hiding — where he has apparently been reading every word and comment about the brouhaha, with most readers taking Mendez's side.

"Being in the news cycle for 36 hours and reading not just every account, but every single comment," Scheft wrote last week on his blog. "If it ever happens to you, don't do that. Just don't. You'll thank me."

In a separate post on his blog, he simply wrote: "Don't hate me."

Still, the hubbub hasn't stopped the scribe from taking to Twitter to promote his latest novel, "Shrink Thyself," which he expects to trumpet even more Monday on comedian Mark Maron's podcast.

Mendez admitted he grabbed Scheft by the collar and pushed him on Oct. 9 after they argued the previous day.

"Bill was always undermining me — making himself out as Dave's No. 1," Mendez said.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Manager claims tenant who bowled with Ebola doctor is under home quarantine

The manager of a Brooklyn apartment building where a resident is under quarantine for possible exposure to Ebola complained Sunday that the feds have kept everyone else there in the dark since visiting last week.

The building manager, who gave her name only as Monica, said she thinks she knows which tenant went bowling with Ebola patient Dr. Craig Spencer before his diagnosis with the deadly virus last week.

She said workers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention visited the building without notice on Friday.

But she said that "the CDC is not even informing me. They are keeping it confidential, and I don't think it's right because it's in my building and I think I have the right to know.

"I have been trying to contact him myself via e-mail and phone call, telling him it's very important. I can't get him," she added.

A neighbor in the building said he was told by a city official that tenant is a doctor who hasn't suffered any symptoms of the virus.

The neighbor said he was also told that the man had voluntarily quarantined himself, but noted that the official he spoke with was carrying "several pairs of plastic handcuffs."

A second Brooklyn resident is also under quarantine after spending time with Spencer.

The CDC declined to comment.

Meanwhile, a Health Department worker dropped off a black duffel bag full of supplies Sunday morning for Spencer's fiancée, Morgan Dixon, who's quarantined inside the couple's Harlem apartment.

Cops were also standing guard outside the building, where Dixon returned after being discharged Saturday from Bellevue Hospital, where Spencer is being treated inside a special Ebola ward.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

School crossing guards plan pay-disparity lawsuit

The union representing New York's 2,000 mostly female school crossing guards plans to sue the city for discrimination, citing pay disparity with NYPD traffic-enforcement cops, The Post has learned.

The federal lawsuit will argue that crossing guards are paid $4 less per hour than the city's primarily male traffic-enforcement agents for comparable work, which they argue violates the federal Equal Pay Act and the city Human Rights Law.

Both traffic-enforcement agents and school crossing guards work for the NYPD. Traffic-enforcement agents are full time workers, while crossing guards are part-time, typically 25 hours per week.

"This lawsuit is our first step to raise the pay of thousands of public-school and NYPD employees who don't make $15 per hour, and don't work a 40-hour week. Fighting inequality must start with the city's own employees," said Local 372 president Shaun Francois, who represents crossing guards and other school support workers.

Traffic-enforcement agents make $17.40 an hour.

Local 372, part of District Council 37, has a new contract through 2016.

Under the prior contract, crossing guards made $10.26 to $13.43 per hour, depending on when they were hired. The top crossing-guard salary will jump to $14.30 in 2016.

"School crossing guards are largely women and are limited to 25 hours per week. They suffer not only from a pay rate which the city won't allow contractors to pay, they get treated worse than the largely male traffic cops simply because they are female," said Local 372 lawyer Arthur Schwartz. "It is a vestige of past discriminatory practices that Mayor de Blasio has to address."

One veteran crossing guard said enough is enough.

"We have crossing guards who get hit by cars to keep kids safe. We navigate potholes and breathe in fumes that make us sick. We should be considered equal to the traffic agents," she said.

City Hall downplayed the dispute.

"We're proud to have negotiated a fair contract with DC37 that respects our workforce and protects taxpayers," said de Blasio spokesman Wiley Norvell.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Post columnist Terry Keenan kept Wall Street honest

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 26 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

Every November, she called them turkeys: Business leaders she saw as major screw-ups would be outed on these pages in a loud voice and be awarded her annual booby prize.

That voice, sadly, has been silenced.

Terry Keenan, who occupied this space for many years, died on Thursday at 53.

As her editor for many years I can attest to Terry being a feisty, take-charge journalist who cut straight through corporate-speak and tough economics jargon.

"Even though her columns were filled with economics, the dismal science, they were notable for wit, candor and common sense," economist David Malpass told me Friday.

In April 2012, when Ben Bernanke's "green shoots" were all the rage again, Terry advised readers to get out of the markets. Quickly.

Stocks sold off a thousand Dow points over the summer and did not recover until after Labor Day.

Just this Sept. 6, with the Dow in full bull-market gallop, Terry wrote that the "market looks long in the tooth." Six weeks later it was down 6 percent.

In May, she wrote about Warren Buffett's shareholders attending Berkshire's annual meeting: "Buffettistas flock to Omaha for a good time and a good steak. But look behind the happy talk, and it's not hard to see that the commoner's capitalist has some real concerns."

Turkey Awards were a hoot.

In 2012, Bill Ackman got a Turkey for trumpeting a new marketing plan from JCPenney, his new activist target. It involved shoppers scanning barcodes with their iPhones. "Note to billionaire," she wrote: "Not all Penney's customers have iPhones!" The plan would later fail spectacularly.

It was classic Terry.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

How Billy Joel’s three wives stole his heart and his money

For someone who hasn't really released new music in more than 20 years, Billy Joel is having an epic third act. He has spent much of his life in battle: against his ex-wives, against booze, bad managers and bankruptcy, and against critics who've considered him too uncool for rock 'n' roll. Legendary Village Voice critic Robert Christgau derided him as "a force of nature and bad taste."

Today, at 65, Billy Joel is in the midst of an unprecedented residency at Madison Square Garden. His monthly shows gross him more than $2 million each. He has sold more than 150 million albums and has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame. In 2013, he was among the recipients at the Kennedy Center Honors. A Hicksville native, he has been considered the poet laureate of Long Island for decades.

Yet he's always felt a failure where it most counts: love.

"None of those people in the arena screaming your name really know you," Joel tells author Fred Schruers in the new book "Billy Joel: The Definitive Biography." (Joel, who sat for 100 hours of interviews, eventually withdrew from the project over fears it would be too revelatory.)

"You just need one — one person out of millions — to know and accept and love you for being, well, just the way you are . . . I see old folks walking down the street who look like they've been together 50 years, and there's something very touching about it — that they've lasted so long. I used to wonder: How come I don't have that? I can dream about it, think about it, write music and lyrics and sing about it. I can even try to achieve it again, and often have."

His three tortured marriages — and the music they've inspired — are testament to that.

The Shark

Billy Joel and Elizabeth WeberPhoto: WireImage

Joel met his first wife in 1970, through his friend and bandmate Jon Small. Elizabeth Weber was married to Small, and they had a baby son, Sean — but Joel was knocked out. "She wasn't like a lot of the other girls I knew at that time who had taken home ec and cooking classes," he told Schruers. "She was . . . intelligent and not afraid to speak her mind, but could also be seductive. Almost like a European-type — not a typical American girl."

When Small discovered the affair, Weber left them both, disappearing for weeks. Joel became suicidal. He was 21, broke, friendless, loveless and "crashing at my mom's place again, which is abject failure."

Not long after Weber took off, Joel overdosed on Nembutal, then called Small to apologize. Alarmed, Small raced to Joel's mom's house in Hicksville and found Joel on the floor. "The next thing I remember, I woke up in the hospital and learned that they had pumped my stomach," Joel told Schruers. "I thought to myself, 'Oh, great, I couldn't even do this right.' It was another failure."

A few weeks later, Joel tried again, this time drinking furniture polish. Another family member found him, and this time, Joel checked himself into a mental hospital, where he stayed for three weeks. He had an epiphany: "The people I was locked up with were never going to be able to overcome their problems, whereas mine were all self-made," he told Schruers. "I can fix this, I thought."

He began writing again. Never much into drugs, he self-medicated with booze and cigarettes. After much agonizing back-and-forth, he got together with Weber, who had shrewd business sense and agreed to manage him. They married in September 1973. "She's Got a Way" and "She's Always a Woman" were inspired by her, but many around Joel were concerned: They found Weber controlling, manipulative, rude and far more enthralled with the rock n' roll lifestyle than Joel.

He wrote "Just the Way You Are" as her birthday gift, and after he played it for her, she said, "Do I get the publishing, too?"


One year, he wrote "Just the Way You Are" as her birthday gift, and after he played it for her, she said, "Do I get the publishing, too?" She wasn't kidding.

As his wife, Weber was entitled to 50 percent of Joel's worth and was also taking a cut of his earnings as manager. She brought her brother, Frank, into the fold, and Joel felt deep unease. His next record — and its eponymous hit single, "The Stranger" — were also inspired by her.

In 1982, they filed for divorce, but Joel hoped to reconcile. He agreed to buy her everything she wanted — a $4 million town house on the Upper East Side, an Alfa Romeo — but then he had a motorcycle accident, smashing both his hands. While in the hospital, doped up on pain pills and contemplating what future he might have as a musician, Weber came to visit, contract in hand. Joel recalls her asking him to sign everything he had over to her.

"I may have acted like an idiot a time or two, but I'm not a complete idiot," Joel told Schruers. "That really killed it right there and then."

Frank Weber sided with Joel in the divorce. Years later, Joel would find Frank had siphoned nearly $30 million of his earnings, and in 1989, Joel sued him for that plus $60 million in punitive damages.

Frank outwitted Joel by filing for bankruptcy, and in 1990, Joel settled out of court.

"I hooked up with the Borgias!" Joel told Schruers. "What a family to pick."

The Supermodel

Billy Joel and Christie BrinkleyPhoto: Getty Images

Following the 1982 split with Elizabeth, Joel went to St. Bart's for the holidays. He found a piano bar and began playing; a few moments later, to his wonderment, Elle Macpherson, then just 19, and Christie Brinkley, 28, were standing at either side of the 33-year-old — along with an undiscovered Whitney Houston.

They were all vying for Joel's attention, Brinkley tells Schruers. "Whitney says, 'I can sing!' Meanwhile, Elle's draped herself on the piano like Michelle Pfeiffer [in 'The Fabulous Baker Boys']."

Back in New York, Brinkley and Macpherson competed for Joel, who was living in a penthouse apartment overlooking Central Park. His doorman, a struggling actor named Nick Turturro, would rank all the women Billy brought home. "Usually, he'd hold up eight, nine, 10 fingers," Joel told Schruers. Brinkley was the only one to get 10 fingers twice.

The first night Joel got Brinkley to come home with him, "I was trying to act cool, but somewhere inside me the kid from Hicksville was going, 'Yesssssss!' " When the elevator door opened to his apartment, there stood Macpherson. "Even as part of me thought, 'Oh, God, no,' another part of me was going, 'Holy crap, if my friends could see me now.' "

Christie likes to joke that the end of the marriage . . . spelled the end of my songwriting career… At least, I think it's a joke. - Billy Joel

Brinkley was unruffled. She left, Macpherson stayed, but Joel was in love with Brinkley. They married in 1985, and the album "An Innocent Man" was a love letter to her. They conceived their daughter, Alexa Ray, on their wedding night.

Yet Joel's financial crises meant he had to tour nonstop to recoup his money, and the marriage suffered tremendously. The breaking point came in 1993. After a show at Nassau Coliseum, Joel opted to stay at a nearby hotel rather than make the 90-minute drive home, and Brinkley was told by one of Joel's band members that he was having an affair. (Joel denies it.) By the end of that year, they knew the marriage was over — and it marked the last year Joel would issue a new album.

"Christie likes to joke that the end of the marriage . . . spelled the end of my songwriting career," Joel told Schruers. "At least, I think it's a joke."

The Social Climber

By 2002, Joel was again deeply depressed and drinking heavily. He was touring with Elton John, and one night had an onstage meltdown at the Garden, randomly shouting out famous battle sites: "Bunker Hill! Antietam!" (In 2011, John publicly castigated Joel on his drinking. Their relationship has never really recovered.)

Between 2002 and 2004, Joel had three car accidents on Long Island, once smashing into a house. He later blamed bad street lighting, local wildlife, his poorly constructed Citroën and 9/11. He checked into rehab but never bought into it. "The fact is, I like to drink," Joel told Schruers. "Sometimes too much."

Billy Joel and Katie LeePhoto: FilmMagic

The one bright spot was Katie Lee, a college girl from Ohio whom he had picked up in the lobby of the Peninsula Hotel. After graduating, she moved into Joel's house in the Hamptons, and in 2004, they married. Joel was 55, Lee 23 — just four years older than his daughter, Alexa.

They moved into a $4 million loft in Tribeca. Just months into the marriage, Joel was in rehab again.

After a stint at Betty Ford, Lee — herself an aspiring culinary star — encouraged him to get back out on the road, and he began playing live again. In 2008, while touring with Elton John, Joel kept seeing photos of Lee at premieres and gallery openings — and one in particular, of her dancing closely with another man at Art Basel in Miami.

"Those photos looked bad," Lee told Schruers. She denied an affair.

As the marriage unraveled, Joel held out hope. He told Lee he wanted to go to a therapist. She began talking about furniture. "I realized, 'It's not going to happen. We're over . . . Just don't send me messages, don't leave me cute little phone calls, don't tease me, don't f- -k with me, just end it. 'Cause I'm an old man now, a vulnerable man. Don't do that to an old guy.' "

They divorced in 2009. Today, Joel lives in Oyster Bay with his girlfriend of five years, a 33-year-old former hedge funder. He is in no rush to marry again, but, ever the romantic, remains on good terms with all his exes, even Weber. His philosophy, say all of them, is to look for the good in people, believe in it, and try again.

"You can have all the money in the world, you can have mansions, you can have properties, you can have yachts, you can have limousines, you can have motorcycles," he told Schruers. But without love, "it doesn't mean a goddamn thing."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

The funniest & meanest tombstone engravings

There's nothing grave about these inscriptions.

Tombstones can poignantly preserve the sweet memory of the dearly departed, but sometimes they can be bizarre, kinky — or downright mean, The Post found.

"He was a big golfer — but never as successful as he hoped," said Carole Cheskin, the widow of the recently deceased Joel.

Take the case of a son who forever cemented his lousy relationship with his mom.

"She put in her will that at the time of her demise he be barred from attending her funeral service," recalled Michael Lewis, owner of the Lewis Monument Co. in Glendale, Queens. "When she was being buried, there was a guard at the front who refused him entry."

As fate would have it, the son was the next of kin, so he was the one who bought the headstone and ordered this epitaph in the lower right corner: "RIHC."

Lewis recalled an exchange with the son: "He told me, 'It's a personal expression that my mother and I always use and it's very important to me.' He said, 'It means 'Rest in Heaven,' " with the C standing for the mom's first initial.

But after the marker was put up in a Queens cemetery, Lewis said, he received a call from a family lawyer angry over the acronym.

"He said, 'Do you know what that says? They had an expression that they used: Rot in Hell!' "

Some sentiments have to be kept even more on the down-low. One woman had to hide the inscription to her husband underground on the bottom of his footstone — because it was just too provocative, Lewis said. It said: "You were a great f–k," he recalled.

Inscriptions must be approved by a cemetery before work begins on the tombstone — and cemeteries reserve the right to reject them for any reason, according to Dennis Werner, president of the Metropolitan Cemetery Association.

"There are no specific guidelines," he noted.

That's why "Murdered by a Doctor" and "Murdered by her Husband" — two actual requests — didn't cut it, according to Patricia Levy, a vice president at Sprung Memorial Group on Long Island.

Family, too, can nix a request — like one recent order from a still-kicking 89-year-old man.

"He wants, 'Father of four wonderful daughters and a lying son,' " Levy said. "His daughter said, 'Just give him what he wants, and afterwards I'll change it.' "

Earthly passions often follow people to the grave. In the last week of 71-year-old Joel Cheskin's life, he told his wife, Carole, what he wanted on his gravestone: "At Last a Hole in One."

"He was a big golfer — but never as successful as he hoped," the widow said. "He was a man with a wry sense of humor."

The stone will be placed at New Jersey's Mt. Lebanon Cemetery.

"I was kind of surprised, but I liked it, so I decided that on mine, I'm going to get, 'I'm with Him,' with an arrow pointing to Joel," she said. "He would appreciate that."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gay love spat spurs slay: cops

A man was fatally stabbed in the neck by his live-in boyfriend after a lovers' quarrel in Brooklyn Friday, police said.

Ledaryl Burns, 31, had been arguing with Samuel Joseph, 27, inside their apartment on East 96th Street near Holmes Lane at around 9:50 p.m. when Joseph slashed him with a steak knife, police sources said.

Cops discovered Burns lying face down on the living-room floor covered in blood — with Joseph standing next to him, according to authorities.

Burns was pronounced dead at the scene.

Sources said the couple had lived together in the apartment for roughly three years.

Joseph was arrested and charges were pending Saturday, police said.

Calls to Joseph's relatives were not returned Saturday.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

To save a season — and Rex Ryan — the Jets look to Percy Harvin

The desperate push to ignite the dying embers of a season that would be reduced to ashes with a loss Sunday to the Bills, and very possibly to save Rex Ryan, falls now on the shoulders of Percy Harvin.

Geno Smith and the Jets are looking for Harvin to provide a spark on the field rather than a five-alarm fire off it.

No one should expect Harvin to start carving out Jack-o'-lanterns in the meeting room with his new teammates, nor should the Jets view him as a savior, but when you are 1-6, you cross your fingers and hope for the best.

The comparisons to Santonio Holmes, a treat until he got the money and then a trick, are inescapable with Harvin.

Trick: Trouble follows Harvin to Florham Park, and his nine-game Jets career is remembered mostly for its turbulence and turmoil.

Treat: Harvin drives defensive coordinators and special teams coaches mad with his now-you-see-me, now-you-don't speed and quickness, makes Smith a better quarterback and Eric Decker a more productive receiver and helps get Ryan another stay of Rexecution.

Trick or treat?

Which one will it be as Harvin makes his Jets debut?

Only this much is certain about Percy Harvin: He is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Harvin.

Percy Harvin speaks to the media after practice on Oct. 20.Photo: Bill Kostroun

Treat: "There's no better situation for me to come into," Harvin said at his introductory Vikings press conference after being the 22nd pick of the 2009 draft, which saw the Jets pick Mark Sanchez. "I'm just looking to come in here and be another piece of the puzzle. This is where I truly want to be."

Trick: The Vikings couldn't wait to get rid of him.

Treat: "Becoming a Seahawk, it's a big relief. I'm very grateful for this opportunity I've been given," Harvin said. "This thing is just so awesome on so many levels."

Trick: The Seahawks couldn't wait to get rid of him.

Michael Vick, whose mentorship could prove invaluable, guarantees it will be a chastened Harvin who comes calling five days before Halloween wearing a No. 16 green-and-white costume.

But there are no guarantees.

There are well-documented skeletons in Harvin's closet, and if his notorious competitiveness couldn't be a blessing on a Super Bowl champion, it is fair to wonder whether it will be a curse on an underachieving team that has been champion only of Wait Til Next Year since Jan.12, 1969.

If Harvin can slay whatever demons have tarnished his reputation and his career, if his acquisition proves to be a coup for general manager John Idzik, it will be regarded in many circles around the league as a bigger upset than AFL Jets' 16-7 drubbing of the NFL Colts in Super Bowl III. It's a plus that Everyman Ryan is his newest head coach, at least over these last nine games, but isn't it supposed to be fun playing for Pete Carroll, too?

The Jets, like most teams, would welcome Hannibal Lecter with open arms if he could run a 4.3 40. And Harvin became the best athlete in the room the second he walked in. He brings an athletic arrogance and raging swag that has been sorely missing on Smith's side of the ball.

Trick: Harvin has been in the trainer's room more than he's been on the field.

Treat: Harvin with the ball in his hands.

"He's lightning in a bottle, man, it's crazy how fast and dynamic that guy is," Jets guard Willie Colon said.

Idzik is to be commended for a Hail Mary with such an enticing risk-reward, a fourth-round draft choice if the experiment doesn't unleash Frankenharvin. At the very least, perhaps it will signal a welcome shift from Idzik's monotonous mantra of competition to ammunition.

Treat: Harvin is a chess piece offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg will move all over the board. Harvin will add electricity to the return game. He has a high football IQ He wants to be great.

Trick: "It's definitely a place I want to be for a long time," Harvin said when he met the New York media, sounding as if he had just been thrown a lifeline from the Love Boat.

He has a clean slate. A third clean slate. A chance to be a star. His new teammates have welcomed him with open arms. He has a chance to change the narrative on Percy Harvin. To run with blazing speed from the past, towards a future with a team and coach and quarterback that needs him as much as he needs them.

Dr. Jekyll, or Mr. Harvin?

Trick, or treat?


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Lincecum an option out of bullpen after getting clean bill of health

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 25 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

SAN FRANCISCO — Tim Lincecum's lower-back injury that forced him out of Game 2 is no longer an issue, so Giants manager Bruce Bochy has an option should he not want to use Hunter Strickland out of the bullpen in big spots for as long as the World Series lasts.

Lincecum underwent an MRI exam Thursday that didn't uncover structural damage and Bochy, before his Giants lost 3-2 to the Royals on Friday night, said Lincecum was available. Lincecum wasn't needed.

"It turned out fine. It was a clean MRI. So he's good to go. Now he'll go out and play catch, so we'll talk to him afterward to see how it felt when he throws a little bit out there,'' Bochy said. "But my guess is he's going to be fine to go, if we need him [in Game 3].''

Lincecum, a two-time Cy Young winner, worked 1 ²/₃ scoreless innings as a reliever in Game 2, didn't allow a hit and struck out two. It was Lincecum's first action since Sept. 28.

Considering Strickland has given up five home runs in 5 ¹/₃ postseason innings and lost his composure after Omar Infante homered off him in Game 2, Bochy might use Lincecum instead of the hard-throwing rookie.

"It's nice to get [Lincecum] out there and get him a little work,'' Bochy said. "So now if we use him, there's got to be a little sense of comfort for Timmy and us. You wouldn't feel about putting him in a high-stress situation.

According to Bochy, Strickland promised his manager the outburst of Game 2 won't be repeated.

"He said, 'It's not going to happen again,' " Bochy said. "He is a young kid whose emotions got the better of him. I still have confidence in him. He is still part of this bullpen. This is a tough kid. He's bounced back before and we may him. I need him to keep his confidence. You have to stay behind these guys. They need to know it so I am not going to say, 'No, I will not use him in a high-stress situation.' But I may tweak things and try to find another spot to use him like I did in the first game to get him back on track.''

Strickland worked a perfect ninth in Game 1 with the Giants ahead, 7-1.


With the Royals starting lefty Jason Vargas in Saturday's Game 4, Bochy was asked if he would play the right-handed hitting Michael Morse.

"I probably won't put him at first base, [Brandon] Belt has done a great job,'' Bochy said of Morse, who ignored a fever to deliver a pinch-hit, RBI double. "He hasn't played a lot in left. So more than likely [Juan] Perez will be out there. What Morse has done off the bench, that's valuable, too.''


In his first World Series start at 39, Tim Hudson overcame a shaky first two innings and limited the Royals to three runs and four hits in 5 ²/₃ innings.


Many view the NL team having the advantage in World Series games played in its park because the designated hitter is not used, which is the way it works during the regular season in NL stadiums.

Yet, Royals manager Ned Yost doesn't necessarily see it that way.

"We've got some weapons on the bench. We go Nori [Aoki] from the left side and we've got [Josh] Willingham. We've got Billy [Butler]. We can pinch-run Terrance Gore,'' Yost said. "We do have some options to help us win a ballgame late. Just because you are not starting a game in a National League [park] doesn't mean you are not going to have an impact to win the game."


Going into Friday night's action, the team that won Game 3 of a World Series tied, 1-1, had won the Series 66.1 percent of the time. That has happened in the last four of five and 11 of 13 instances.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Benihana owner’s widow to hire power lawyer

The widow of Benihana founder Rocky Aoki is serving up another course in her long-running legal battle with her stepkids for control of the Japanese steakhouse empire.

Keiko Aoki, who controls the international franchise rights, is set to hire high-powered lawyer Seth Waxman, a former US Solicitor General and Supreme Court advocate, to press the next phase of her case, Keiko told The Post in an exclusive interview.

The stakes are high. Whoever wins the next round will control the assets Rocky left behind, including nearly two dozen franchise restaurants in Asia, Canada and Europe.

In May, Keiko was dealt a major blow when the state Surrogate Court of Appeals ruled that she would lose control of the family's Benihana assets once the restaurateur's model daughter Devon; Aoki, 32; and DJ son Steve, 36, hit 45.

Keiko, who sat down for an interview at her new restaurant, Koa, in Manhattan's Flatiron District, said she's seeking to reverse the decision because that's what her late husband would have wanted.

"Rocky was a great guy. He believed that a company should have one voice," said Keiko, a former Miss Tokyo who wore a Chanel jacket to dinner. "I have a responsibility to keep the company together."

Rocky "loved his kids," but he wanted her to run the business, she said.

"They have different opinions," she said referring to his six children. "They are going to fight."

Rocky's children — from two different marriages — have long disputed Keiko's version of events. They depict her in court documents as a gold-digger who poisoned their father against them and brainwashed him into changing his estate plan to give her control.

Keiko has portrayed them as spoiled brats who messed up the company when given a chance, and were more concerned about cash than preserving their father's legacy.

Ken Podziba, a representative for the kids and Rocky's former best friend, declined to comment.

The family has been on the rocks for so long that New York magazine wrote a story in 2006, titled "Rocky's Family Horror Show." That year Rocky tried to boot four of his six kids from having any part in the company.

His death in 2008 started the latest legal battle.

In 2010, Keiko won partial control of the assets, which included a large stake in Benihana Inc., which runs the US franchise and has since been sold. Two years later, she was granted complete control of the assets until her death. Then came the May decision, which said the assets would revert back to two of Rocky's kids.

Keiko said she will be fine financially and otherwise if that decisions stands.

"If I get 25 [percent] or zero, my life is still the same," she said.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Citi Bike operator bought up by new company

A real estate company has bought the company that owns and operates the troubled Citi Bike program, a report said Friday.

REQX Ventures will own all of Alta Bicycle Share once the deal is completed and plans to double the number of bikes to 12,000, sources told Capital New York.

The price for an annual pass — currently $95 — is also expected to rise.

Neither company or the mayor's office would comment, the Web site said.

REQX owns bike share programs across the US and in Canada and Australia.

When the Citi Bike program was introduced, then-Mayor Bloomberg promised it wouldn't cost taxpayers any money.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Willow Smith wows the crowd at Fader Fort

The Fresh Prince has spawned a Fresh Princess.

13-year-old Willow Smith wowed a packed crowd in Brooklyn on Friday night with a brief set of woozy soul at the Fader Fort presented by Converse – a specially created venue for the CMJ Music Festival.

Will and Jada Pinkett Smith's youngest was also joined by her older brother Jaden who performed a guest rap on a track called "5." Additionally, R&B singer SZA also made a guest appearance and gave the rising starlet a ringing endorsement by praising her vocal talents and calling her "the future."

The show was Willow's first performance in three years and although she used most of it to debut material from her upcoming EP "3" (which is due to hit iTunes on November 10), the teenager closed out the show with her 2010 breakout hit "I Whip My Hair Back And Forth" which was recorded when she was just nine-years-old.

Although mom and dad were not in attendance, Willow's grandmother and family friend Kendall Jenner were on hand to lend moral support.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Jerry Lee Lewis excites the crowd in Times Square

There wasn't a whole lot of shakin' going on at B.B. Kings Blues Club and Grill on Friday night, but Jerry Lee Lewis' short and sweet set at the Times Square venue nevertheless provided enough excitement to ensure his status as a rock 'n' roll pioneer remains cast in stone.

The Louisiana man is currently in the city promoting the new book about his life "His Own Story" (by biographer Rick Bragg) and album "Rock 'n' Roll Time." While here, New Yorkers have been gifted the chance to see him at two rare shows, (he plays again at B.B. King's on Thursday October 30).

The reason for his general lack of live activity was immediately obvious as he took the stage. Now 79-years-old, "The Killer" is frail, speaks with a slur, and sat rigidly at the piano as he led his four-piece band through rickety, warbling versions of the early hit "You Win Again" and the Stick McGhee song "Drinking Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee." It was an underwhelming sight and an anaemic sound that made the memories of him scandalizing America with his overtly physical performances in the late 1950s feel even more distant than they are.

But thankfully, it turned out that the visceral power of Lewis music hadn't disappeared entirely but instead, was just slumbering. Steadily, the beast was awoken. A version of Chuck Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven" gave the show the jolt it so badly needed, as Lewis began to hammer at his piano, jabbing at the high notes and sliding up and down the keys in his signature style. The rising excitement in the crowd and the sheer effort of playing "Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On" forced him to take a moment and mop his brow. Having blown off the dust and now reaching full-speed, the familiar Jerry Lee Lewis shriek began to pierce the room on "Great Balls of Fire" and with that, he was done. It's easy to think that 35 minutes was all he could muster but like all showbiz mainstays, Lewis knows that a good performer always leaves them wanting more. There's plenty of life left in "The Killer" yet.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Why the numbers lie when it comes to the Jets defense

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 24 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

Isn't it time, at 1-6 with the season in peril, that Rex Ryan's defense — the unit he's always most proud of — makes a stand Sunday against a Bills team that comes to MetLife Stadium having lost its top two running backs to injuries last week and is playing its backup quarterback?

The Jets defensive players think so.

"We're still looking to play that complete game that we haven't played yet, and I think Sunday would be a good start for us,'' defensive lineman Leger Douzable said Thursday. "I really like the game plan we have. I think we're really confident that this could be the complete game that we need to play to win.''

There are, however, many brushfires for the Jets to put out before their defense delivers that first complete game.

Ryan is fond of referring to the NFL defensive rankings, touting wherever his defense is ranked on the list, which is usually at least in the top 10. The problem is this: Stats don't win games, and the Jets defense this season represents Exhibit A.

Sure, the Jets defense is ranked No. 9 overall, a number based on yards per game yielded. That number is a mirage. It is fraudulent.

That number has nothing to do with the fact that only six teams in the league have allowed more points per game than the 26.4 the Jets are giving up on average.

That number has nothing to do with the Jets ranking 27th in third-down defense, allowing opposing offenses to convert first downs at an obscene 46.6 percent rate.

That number does not reflect the critical points the defense has yielded in the final two minutes of the first half of four games already this season. See the games against the Packers (a TD with eight seconds remaining in the half), Lions (a TD with 22 seconds remaining), the Chargers (a TD with 51 seconds remaining) and Patriots (a field goal as time expired).

That No. 9 defensive ranking also masks the fact the Jets' defense has forced an NFL-low four turnovers in seven games, which has them on a pace for nine, which would break the 2006 Redskins' record for fewest in a season.

The Jets defensive players insist the emphasis continues to be on forcing turnovers and that they'll eventually come — perhaps even in bunches. There are, however, only nine games remaining, which is limited time for bunches to occur.

"The moment you start freaking out about those things and start putting those things in your forethought, that's when you get a complex about it,'' linebacker Jason Babin said of the turnover drought. "I think everyone's done a great job here of not doing that and approaching it week-to-week and not thinking about the elephant in the room.''

As for the end-of-the-half woes, the common denominator, according to the players, is lack of focus and self-inflicted wounds — two things that are simply inexcusable, especially when they've turned into a trend.

"It has been things we've done to ourselves more than what opposing teams have done to us — assignments, alignments, fundamentals,'' Babin said. "When you beat yourself, that's what frustrates guys the most.''

The Jets, it seems, have already endured enough frustration in seven games to last a season.

No one is more frustrated than Sheldon Richardson, whose enthusiastic disposition reminds you of a golden retriever running free in the park.

"I hate losing,'' Richardson said, "more than I love winning.''

And when the team has often lost on its six-game losing streak because of defensive deficiencies, that adds to Richardson's angst.

Asked what he does to balance his innate enthusiasm with the anger and frustration that has been building all season, Richardson said, "Pray.''

"If I'm stressed out and my mind is racing and I can't go to sleep and [it's] 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning, I just let God take the wheel and pray on it,'' he said. "I've got gray hairs in my beard, man. This is stressful.''


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Outside of Bumgarner, Royals hold edge in starting pitching

SAN FRANCISCO — Here is what we understand to be two absolute truths about the World Series: The Giants' Madison Bumgarner is clearly the best starter in the bunch, and the Royals' bullpen is superior to the Giants' pen that cost them Game 2.

So, with the lineups relatively even, what will decide who wins the 110th World Series, which resumes with Game 3 on Friday night at AT&T Park tied 1-1?

A popular neighborhood to visit is the starting pitching matchups, beginning Friday when veteran Tim Hudson — who is 39, has pitched 16 years in the big leagues but never has been in baseball's premier event — goes for the Giants and Jeremy Guthrie starts for the Royals.

Saturday's Game 4 features right-hander Ryan Vogelsong against lefty Jason Vargas. In Game 5 the Series reverts to Bumgarner against James Shields, which was a mismatch for the Giants in Game 1. Game 6 likely would be a Game 2 rematch between Yordano Ventura and Jake Peavy in which Ventura was better.

"After Bumgarner against Shields, I would say the edge goes to the Royals,'' an AL talent evaluator said. "I like their variety. They have a power guy [Ventura], an in-between guy [Guthrie] and a nickel-and-dime lefty [Vargas]. Peavy isn't a mystery to the Royals, they have seen him a lot. Hudson has a ton of experience, and Vogelsong, even in the game he pitched [against the Nationals in the ALDS] and won, he got away with getting the ball up in the zone.''

Another reason offered was the trio of gas-throwers who have developed into the story of October: Royals relievers Kelvin Herrera, Wade Davis and Greg Holland.

"When you look at it, the Royals' starters only have to pitch six innings, and if they have the lead those three power arms are coming in, and we have seen what they have done,'' the scout said.

"Especially, when you are talking about Vargas. He throws enough strikes and keeps hitters off balance with the change-up.''

Since the Royals swept the Orioles in the ALCS, each starter got one game. Vargas started and won the Game 4 clincher, going 5 ¹/₃ innings in which he gave up a run and two hits against a lineup that is better than the Giants'.

Giants manager Bruce Bochy, whose World Series experience and ability to get the best of the late-game matchups was supposed to give him an edge over Ned Yost but didn't in Game 2, was satisfied with leaving Kansas City with a split since he said he believes there is plenty of October baseball remaining.

"You would like to get greedy, but we know it's going to be a tough series,'' Bochy said after his bullpen, especially Hunter Strickland, imploded in the sixth inning of Game 2 when the Royals scored five runs to break a 2-2 tie. "With their pitching and our pitching and the way both teams play, we are going to have a fight, I think, every game.''

Playing the next three games without the DH, and remember Bumgarner is a very accomplished hitter for a pitcher, will help the Giants. So, too, will be home in one of the most unique settings in sports — where the smell of weed drifts around the jewel of a ballpark, fans drink wine from canvas containers and dance in the aisles in between innings.

Yet, pitching carries the day from April 1 to the final out of the World Series, and after Bumgarner it looks like the Royals have the better starters who can get them to the seventh with a lead.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Las Vegas could be the new home of an NHL team

Billionaire William Foley is betting hockey will sell in Sin City .

Foley is in advanced talks with the NHL about bringing the first major league sports franchise to Las Vegas, The Post has learned.

"He's the real deal," a source said. "He has deep pockets.

His goal is to bring an NHL team to Vegas starting with the 2017-18 season, which would mark the league's 100th anniversary.

If he succeeds, Foley will likely bring in others to run the team. He did not return calls seeking comment.

Foley, 70, made his fortune forming home title insurer Fidelity National Financial and consolidating the industry. He also owns 14 West Coast wineries.

One scenario is for Foley to buy the money-losing Arizona Coyotes and move them to Las Vegas, a source said.

Earlier this month, Philadelphia hedge fund manager Andrew Barroway reached a deal to acquire a controlling stake in the Coyotes franchise. Barroway sees flipping the team as a good investment, the source added.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman's half brother, Jeffrey Pollack, has been advising Barroway, sources said. Pollack also lives in Las Vegas.

While an NHL spokesman declined to discuss what, if any talks the league has held with Foley, he said it was "categorically wrong" that Foley is planning to buy the Coyotes and move them to Sin City.

Coyotes co-owner and CEO Anthony LeBlanc told The Post: "The Arizona Coyotes are absolutely not relocating. IceArizona is committed to our market and our fans."

IceArizona, which will maintain a 49 percent interest in the franchise after the Barroway sale, has a lease for the arena that contains an out-clause after five years, or after the 2017-18 season, if losses total $50 million.

Earlier this month, Bettman suggested the league was open to expansion, including bringing a team to the gambling mecca in the middle of the desert.

"We're going to continue to listen to expressions of interest, and that's gratifying that we're getting them, but we're not ready to go through a formal expansion project," he said.

MGM Resorts and arena operator AEG have broken ground on a 20,000 seat hockey-ready arena in Las Vegas that is slated to open in spring 2016.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Popsugar launching shopping magazine

Popsugar, one of the top lifestyle sites aimed at millennial women, plans to launch a shopping magazine next month.

Shopstyle will be based on its fashion search engine of the same name with more than one million copies distributed. The 50-page debut edition has five ad pages.

"It's a test, we'll see how it goes," said CEO Brian Sugar, who founded the company eight years ago with his wife Lisa, who is the editor in chief. "If it works out, we may go quarterly next year."

The magazine comes only days after the company said it teamed up with Above Average to produce its first scripted comedy show, Seriously Distracted, which will air on YouTube.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Men’s Journal publisher out after one year

The revolving door at Wenner Media's Men's Journal has swung again. Vincent Krsulich is out as publisher after only a year on the job.

Krsulich has been waiting in the wings as an associate publisher for six years, serving under four different publishers at the title. Chairman Jann Wenner finally promoted him to the top job a year ago August.

But his elevation did not stem the declines at the title, where ad pages through September were down 11.87 percent, to 496.17, according to Media Industry Newsletter.

Kruslich was the fifth publisher at the title in six years. A Wenner spokeswoman offered no details on a replacement.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Couples recall sexual mishaps that sent them to ER on TLC reality show

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 23 Oktober 2014 | 17.08

After a night of drinking with their cover band in a Long Island rehearsal studio, Queens couple and bandmates Andrew, 40, and Francine, 29, found themselves alone and getting frisky on a drum set stool.

But they never thought their tryst would end with a trip to the hospital — with Andrew on a gurney at 3 a.m. wearing Francine's skirt.

Their sexual adventure turned medical mishap is just one of many featured in the TLC series "Sex Sent Me to the ER," which returns for its second season Saturday at 10 p.m. with plenty of salacious tales and racy re-enactments — from a couple who falls into a grave while copulating in a cemetery to a duo that gets bit by a giant centipede during the deed.

"We figured behind the drums would be the easiest place to hide [in case anyone walked in]," Francine tells The Post about the incident, which is retold in an episode that airs Nov. 15. (Only first names are used so as not to violate health privacy laws.)

After their vigorous lovemaking session was over, the couple passed out on a nearby sofa, and only awoke when Andrew rolled off — splitting his chin open on a coffee table.

In a re-enactment, Andrew grimaces in pain with Francine (and medical personnel) by his side.Photo: Alaina Filo/TLC

But as soon as the still pants-less Andrew stood up, Francine knew that a bleeding chin wasn't his only problem.

"Oh s - - t," she exclaimed. Part of Andrew's privates had swollen to the size of an orange.

No longer able to squeeze back into his skinny jeans, Andrew put on Francine's floral skirt and she drove him to the ER. Facing his first-ever hospital visit, Andrew's mind quickly turned to the worst as he feared the swelling was the result of a tumor.

"The pain was so great there that it started to feel numb, like pins and needles," he says.

After a three-hour wait at the hospital, his chin was patched up with seven stitches, but it took several tests and a full questioning by his doctor to determine his was a sexual-sustained injury — orchitis, an inflammation that causes intense pain.

It could have been the angle at which we were having sex that caused it. - Francine, on the sexcapade that sent bandmate Andrew to the ER

"It could have been the angle at which we were having sex that caused it," Francine says. "I was sitting on top of him. The doctor said it could have happened to anybody in the same position. The [stool] we were sitting on wasn't cushioned, so that didn't help."

Andrew was relieved to find out he didn't have cancer — but still embarrassed.

"I had told a couple people I was [in the hospital]. I thought, 'I'm gonna have to explain now why I'm here and what actually happened.' "

Although he was initially vague on the details of his injuries, both have since told their parents the whole story.

"They laughed," Francine says. "My parents have such a funny sense of humor. There's no ill will."

Despite taking a week's course of antibiotics for the swelling to go down — and Andrew having to play a gig that night with an ice pack down his pants — the happy couple says the incident hasn't slowed down their sex life.

"We should be [more careful] because God forbid it happens again, but no," Francine says.
Still, they haven't fooled around on a drum set since.

Kinky kicks

Dr. Bob Slay intervenes when a lawyer's wife faces off his mistress in the ER.Photo: Alaina Filo/TLC

As an ER physician, Dr. Bob Slay (inset) has seen his share of sexually inflicted injuries, but even he had to exclaim "Wow!" when he encountered a cheating lawyer with a private part the size of a softball.

"I kept asking if he wanted pain medicine and he kept saying, 'No,' " recalls Slay. "He enjoyed the pain."

The lawyer refused to say what happened. But when his mistress ran into the ER, the whole kinky tale came out.

His wife had stopped by his office for a lunch date and had caught the pair engaged in S&M — she then gave her cheating spouse a swift kick to the groin that landed him in the ER.

While in the waiting room, both wife and mistress — who didn't know her sex partner was married — bonded over their anger at his two-timing ways.

The patient's manhood was saved by surgery, but his marriage wasn't so lucky — his wife announced in the ER she would be seeking a divorce, with his mistress, who also happened to be an attorney, representing her.

"Karma did come full circle on this particular gentleman that day," Slay says.

Alarm at the firehouse

Firefighter Clayton (inset, with partner Heather) had a tryst that went awry at his firehouse, re-enacted for TLC.Photo: TLC

Heather, 28, wanted to give Denver-based firefighter Clayton a sexy surprise for his 30th birthday last March, so she showed up at the firehouse where he works with a box of adult toys.

But fun with a gag turned to panic when Clayton's jaw locked and the toy got stuck in his mouth, restricting his breathing.

His fellow firefighters tried unsuccessfully to wiggle it out.

"At first they were dying [with laughter]," he says. "After that, they were like, 'Oh, my God, we've got to get you to the hospital.' "

That's when Clayton found himself being delivered by ambulance to the same ER where he usually drops off patients as a firefighter.

Not able to speak, he had a friend describe what happened, while the ER physician used a pair of tongue depressors to finally free his mouth.

"It was so awkward," he says. "Everyone at the firehouse knows. And they're still not over it."

Allergic to love

Cynthia and Andy (inset) on a date about to end badly, as depicted on TV.Photo: TLC

When Los Angeles couple Andy, 25, and Cynthia, 24, had sex for the first time four years ago, Andy wanted everything to go perfectly.

So he took a friend's advice and ate watermelon — a known aphrodisiac — on his way to meet her.

"Once I started eating the watermelon, I started feeling the effects somewhat, so I just figured I would take it to the next level," he tells The Post.

That's when he got the bright idea to apply the fruit juice topically down below.

But the night soon took a sour, rather than sweet, turn.

Unbeknownst to Andy, Cynthia was highly allergic to watermelon — and their moment of passion turned to pain when her body temperature soared and she started breaking out in hives.

With a history of allergies, Cynthia knew something was wrong, and once they got to the ER she started rattling off her long list of food allergies — which is when Andy realized his pre-date fruit indulgence was to blame.

It took shots of epinephrine and cortisone at the ER and the couple couldn't have sex again for a month, but Cynthia says she had no hard feelings toward her well-meaning partner.

"I couldn't help but just laugh," she says. "Because when you say it out loud — the reasoning behind why he did it — you can't be mad at him."

In this reenactment scene from "Sex Sent Me To The ER," a woman with mysterious symptoms ends up in the ER after she and her partner snuck away from a family member's wake to have some alone time. The source of her sickness? A mysterious sexual aid that no doctor would ever recommend. Their story (but not episode title) is called "Mourning Quickie."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Catching up with Fred Savage and Danica McKellar of ‘The Wonder Years’

Saviano (left), Savage and McKellar remained grounded kids over the course of six years on "The Wonder Years."Photo: ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

It's been 21 years since "The Wonder Years" went off the air, but some angry fans still badger Danica McKellar about one thing: "I get people going, 'Why didn't you and Kevin end up together?'" McKellar tells The Post of her character Winnie Cooper.

Somehow, we don't think Scott Baio gets questioned on the streets about the way "Charles in Charge" wrapped up.

But that's the thing about "The Wonder Years," the ABC single-camera dramedy that ran for six seasons starting in 1988. The show touched people more deeply than much of what was on the air at the time.

It centered on young Kevin Arnold's (Fred Savage) coming of age in the late '60s. The writing was sharp, with the perfect touch of sentimentality. The characters felt relatable and real — maybe a bit too real.

Jason Hervey, who played Kevin's obnoxious, bullying brother Wayne, was once punched by a random guy at a bar. To the man, Jason was Wayne. There was no difference.

You can relive "The Wonder Years" via the new DVD sets that hits shelves this week.

The series has been slow to come to DVD because of the trouble and expense of clearing the rights to the songs used in it, including tunes by the Beach Boys and Bob Dylan.

(Watch it on Netflix, for instance, and the theme song — originally "With a Little Help From My Friends" by Joe Cocker — has been painfully replaced by a bad cover version.)

"The music was not chosen randomly," Savage says. "A lot of times it was in the script. It would shape a scene. To take that out removed so much of what 'The Wonder Years' was about."

Josh Saviano (left), Fred Savage (center) and Danica McKellar in a December 1988 scene from "The Wonder Years."Photo: ABC Photo Archives

The stars remain identified with the series, even two decades later. As Savage, McKellar and Josh Saviano, who played Kevin's friend Paul, walk down a New York street, passersby stop and whisper, "The Wonder Years."

"I love the show," Savage tells The Post. "You hope to do something that endures. The fact that we were able to do something like that at such a young age, I'm proud of that."

Savage got the role after appearing in movies "The Princess Bride" and "Vice Versa." McKellar actually beat out her sister, Crystal, for her part. (Crystal later showed up as Kevin's spurned girlfriend, Becky Slater.)

The role of Winnie was originally intended as a brief guest appearance, which is the only reason McKellar's mom allowed her daughters to try out.

"We weren't allowed to audition for feature films or series regulars," McKellar says. "My mom knew that Hollywood had the potential for splitting up families, and that a lot of child actors had gone astray."

Now approaching middle age, McKellar (39) and Savage (38) are shockingly well-adjusted for former child stars. No bashing cars with umbrellas, no "Showgirls" on their résumés.

The stars credit the close-knit group of parents on the set for keeping them grounded.

"To all of our moms, the kids' well-being and education was the most important thing, and the show came down the list," McKellar says. "We definitely all benefited from those protections."

After the series ended, Savage says he had no time to get in trouble, because he simply went back to school.

"When the show was done, it wasn't like we lost our whole context in the world," he says. "It was almost like we had this fantastic extracurricular activity. All of us had these really full lives waiting for us with friends and a life outside the entertainment world."

Savage attended Stanford and has gone on to direct movies and TV, including episodes of "Modern Family" and "2 Broke Girls."

Saviano went to Yale and is now a lawyer at a New York firm. McKellar studied at UCLA and has written several best-selling books on math aimed at young girls.

McKellar has a 4-year-old son from a previous marriage, and she is set to wed her lawyer boyfriend later this year.

Saviano has a wife and daughter, while Savage is also married and has three kids, ages 8, 6 and 2.

"My wife just showed them last night the pilot episode of 'The Wonder Years,'" he says. "I think they liked it. They're not getting the show, but I think they liked seeing Dad."


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

‘Scandal’ actor pulls double-duty as ‘Grimm’s newest creepy creature

Brian Letscher has seen his "Scandal" character Tom Larsen grow — from a bit part as a Secret Service agent in the ABC drama's first season to a B-613 agent who played a major role in the death of the President's son at the end of Season Three.

While recurring as Tom on "Scandal" Thursday nights, on Friday Letscher joins the cast of NBC's supernatural drama "Grimm" in a two-episode arc — as a monster with the ability to absorb his victims' memories and sell them to enemy powers.

"He's basically a gun for hire," Letscher tells The Post of his "Grimm" role. "People who hire me want whatever knowledge/secrets are in other people's brains and pay me to go get that. So it's high-stakes."

Playing a creature with an octopus-like head and tentacles added via computer-generated imagery was a much different acting experience than Letscher's previous roles ("Hollywood Heights," guest spots on "Pretty Little Liars" and "Law & Order: SVU"), all of which have been grounded in the real world.

"It was weird. You definitely had extra takes," he says. "The coolest part was learning how to morph. You want to have this very specific physical movement that ties into your character so everyone's [creature morph] isn't the same."

After years of guest spots, "Scandal" has turned into Letscher's big break, with a shocker on last week's episode that saw Tom dragged in for questioning after evidence was found linking him to the meningitis strain that killed President Fitzgerald Grant's (Tony Goldwyn) son.

Facing being found out, both former B-613 commander Rowan Pope (Joe Morton) and the unit's current leader, Jake Ballard (Scott Foley), try to convince Tom to turn on the other.

"That was tough. I think Tom up until this point has been a loyal soldier," Letscher says. "He takes orders and does not question those orders and carries them out without question and without emotion.

"That scene on the park bench [with Rowan and Jake] was a real eye-opener for me and one in which I learned a lot about Tom," he says. "It's the first real moment that it wasn't just a 'yes-sir' moment. Tom really got a moment to be conflicted and think about things and to question his choices."

Ultimately, Tom was forced to give up Jake when Rowan took over his interrogation, and he ended the episode being hauled out in handcuffs.

"I don't think he wanted to do it at all but it was the only choice he had at that moment," he says. "I think I found a deep loneliness in Tom in that episode."

Letscher spent the first six years of his career as a college football coach in his native Michigan before burning out on sports and deciding to pursue a career in acting (his brother Matt is also an actor).

As for what awaits Tom on "Scandal," he can't say a lot.

Show creator Shonda Rhimes keeps all her actors tight-lipped, so Letscher can't tease much of what's next except to say viewers haven't seen the last of Tom.

"The repercussions for what he did at the end of Season 3, and in last week's episode, continue to deepen for him and people around him," he says.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More

Post-rehab Elizabeth Vargas back at ABC News

Elizabeth Vargas is returning to ABC News after a stint in rehab.

The "20/20" co-anchor, 51, took a leave of absence Aug. 21 to treat her alcohol addiction. "So many thx to everyone for your support!" Vargas tweeted. "It means so much. I am back to work next week, so happy to come back!"

She will return to "20/20" next Friday, Oct. 31, alongside co-host David Muir.

Vargas cut short a vacation in late August for her second rehab stint within a nine-month period.

Vargas and her husband, singer/songwriter Marc Cohn, are divorcing after 12 years of marriage. They have two children.


17.08 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger