Friday, April 29, 2011

Petra , Jordan


Petra is a valley of colorful sandstone hills into which ancient Nabataeans carved immense ornate tombs in the 6th century B.C. Sandstone colors are red, yellow, blue, white, purple, and green patterned in straight lines, waves, and swirls. Up close, the rock has a natural beauty unequalled elsewhere in the world. Into this gorgeous setting are carved tombs with visually striking facades. One of the most impressive is the first one encountered after walking over 1km through the narrow cliff walls of the Siq. Used in the Indiana Jones movie “The Last Crusade”, this tomb called “The Treasury” is where Indiana Jones enters to retrieve the Holy Grail.

In 106 A.D., the Roman Empire took control of Petra and erected typical Roman city structures such as a theater, bath, and colonnaded street. Using the colorful sandstone as building material, these Roman ruins may be the prettiest in the world.

Before entering, purchase the “Map of Petra” available at most stores in Wadi Musa. Petra is at least 30km² and has over 800 registered sites, some up partially eroded stairs and others tucked behind rocks. The lack of signs in Petra make the map essential.

GETTING THERE
A bus runs between the Wahadat bus station and the roundabout in the center of Wadi Musa, the town next to the sandstone hills of Petra. Wahadat is the first town south of Amman but the Wahadat bus station is several kilometers away from its center. Finding bus or shared taxi transport in downtown Amman to the Wahadat bus station isn’t easy. A regular taxi should cost about JD 0.750.

The official price of the bus to Wadi Musa is JD 1.650 but tourists are often asked to pay JD 2.5 “with luggage”. The bus leaves when it’s full.

We went to Wahadat bus station one day ahead of time without our luggage to verify the price and departure time. This method normally got us accurate information in other countries. We were told that the bus leaves hourly starting at 07:00 and costs JD 1.500 without luggage or JD 2.500 with. “But be early to make sure you get a seat,” the bus attendant advised. The next morning slogging through a rain flooded Amman, we reached the Wahadat bus station at 06:30. 07:00 came and went. 08:00 was the same. By 09:30, the bus was full and we were on our way. So much for hourly departures! During our unexpected 3 hour wait, the price fluctuated between JD 2.500 and JD 1.500. A passenger who was an off-duty tourist police burst into argument with the bus attendant and suddenly the price for everyone, local or tourist, with or without luggage, was JD 1.650.

We reached Wadi Musa at 13:30, 4 hours after leaving Amman. The bus first stops at Musa Springs Hotel long enough for hotel staff to complete their sales pitch. Fortunately, a Belgian woman on our bus who had once stayed there warned everyone that it’s over an hour walk from the hotel to town where all the grocery stores and restaurants are. The next bus stop is the Wadi Musa roundabout where staff from several hotels await new arrivals.

WADI MUSA ACCOMMODATION
Few travelers have anything good to say about hotels in Wadi Musa. Many have warned to avoid Valentine Inn where the owner has a criminal history of harassing female tourists. We stayed at Saba’a Inn where the reception will tell any lie to trap guests into tours they sell to Wadi Rum. One couple we met liked the Orient Hotel.

PETRA ADMISSION
Admission to Petra is high but the site is possibly the most extraordinary in the world. Admission is JD 20.000 for one day, JD 25.000 for 2, and JD 30.000 for 3 or 4. The gate opens at 06:00 and officially closes at 17:00 but visitors can stagger back later. Most of Petra can be seen in one day with an early morning start. The heat during the day is exhausting so many people decide to view portions of Petra over multiple days.

From afar, the sandstone looks uniform in color. This is the Roman Soldier Tomb, so named because of the soldier statues above the entrance.

http://www.vacationreview.com/petra-jordan/

Shaver Lake Vacation Rentals, CA

I spent two days at this cabin in March of 2011. I can say that without doubt, it was the worst vacation I have ever had in my life.
Nothing was working like it should have. The heater was not working properly so it was very cold. Sleep was impossible because of the extreme cold. The clothes dryer did not work either so we could not dry out our clothes. The owner blamed us for the dryer problem and did not return the $500 returnable safety deposit.
But the worst was the fact that the owner did not let us know that he had installed hidden cameras. This was an invasion of client privacy.
So my advice would be DO NOT RENT THIS CABIN UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.

It was the worst weekend getaway ever and worst cabin. All my friends got sick after that terrible vacation. You will be wasting your money and your time.

2 Family, All-Season, Exquisite Vacation Lodge in the Sierra Mountains.
Property 253791
Gold Country / High Sierra

http://www.vacationreview.com/shaver-lake-vacation-rentals-ca/

Galapagos Island

I went there last summer as I was traveling through Latin America. I met someone that lived on the island before going, so I was fortunate enough to have a free place to crash and, they were a tour guide, so I got to squat on a free cruise/tour. Despite all this, it is not worth going unless you are a HUGE evolutionary biologist (or intelligent design researcher.)

It costs $100 just to leave the airport on the island (park fee). Then everything on the island is incredibly expensive. However, most everything to be seen is on islands, so you have to hire boats or cruises. Very expensive.

There are great photos to be taken and it is beautiful, don’t get me wrong. BUT… the Ecuadorian mainland is way cheaper and beautiful. for the same money you’d spend going to Galapagos, you could spend a week in the Amazon, see Quito, Guayaquil (coast), mountains, and go to Cuenca – the country’s 3rd biggest city that is largely unmodernized (cars weren’t common downtown until around the 60s).

Galapagos is a tourist attraction for people with a lot of money. Ecuador is a small and poor country, but they have just about all the geography you could ask for. Better recommendation – I flew into Quito, stayed there a bit, then ($50 flight) went to Coca, and took a boat up the Amazon to a place called Sani Lodge and stayed there for a few days. You could see all of Ecuador for twice as much time and probably spend half as much as you would on the islands. Also, the government is trying to save Galapagos, but Ecuador is really poor, so it is a tough balance to care about “lonely George” and the sparrows when people are hungry. I’d say your time is best spent on the mainland. However, if you’re looking for ocean in Latin America, the Caribbean islands (nutila is cheap!) of Honduras (2nd largest reef in the world) are supposed to be great. Also, Bocas del Toro in Panama are also impressive. However, having traveled from Guatemala to Peru… Colombia is amazing, Guatemala is one of the most beautiful places I’ve been (lago de Atitlan), and Ecuador has everything, including great people. Safe travels!


http://www.vacationreview.com/galapagos-islands/

Vermont

(Burlington, Vermont)

Yet another fantastic place to stop. The tour itself consists of you, the tourist, standing before a big glass window while the tour guide points out the factory workers and what they’re doing.

Our guide gave us an excellent tour and explained that Lake Champlain Chocolates is actually a third tier chocolatier. The first tier is the actual harvesting and roasting of the bean. The second is the process of making cocoa butter and chocolate. The third is actually doing something with the chocolate slabs. This is where Lake Champlain comes in. Yes, samples abound and the chocolate is excellent.

Magic Hat Brewing Company

(South Burlington, Vermont)
Ok, so I have to admit that we didn’t actually get to take the tour. Most of the breweries in Vermont give tours on the third Thursday after the full moon.

Maybe I’m exaggerating a little, but if you want a tour, have a free week because it will be at 1 pm in the middle of a weekday afternoon but you won’t know until the last minute. And don’t trust guidebooks or brochures, we found that they weren’t right either. Magic Hat had a plethora of interesting signs and gifts. They obviously didn’t have scads of money when they started and they used their creativity and ingenuity to develop a very unique brewery with some darn good beer. Definitely more than worth a look and a sip.

Vermont Teddy Bear Factory

(Shelburne, Vermont)

Do I need to even mention that your tour group will be minimum 50 percent kids? Lots of cute bears and they show you how a bear is “born”. From the fabric cuttings, to sewing, stuffing and packaging.

You get to watch the “handmade’ process in action. And it’s quite unique. There aren’t too many places that you can watch a teddy bear made or even stuff your own bear. Worth the stop, but it is teeming with people, so unless you’re one for crowds and large tour groups, be prepared to browse and tour in about an hour.

You can also purchase just about every kind of Teddy Bear in the gift shop and clothes too if you already have a bear.

Vermont Marble Exhibit

(Proctor, Vermont)

For those of you who share our fascination with things that are considered the world’s LARGEST of their species, this is a place you do not want to pass up. The front of the building alone affords you a place to have your picture taken with the largest hunk of marble in the world. The museum itself is nothing spectacular.

We arrived late in the day and missed the marble sculptor who is in residence. There are some impressive slabs of marble and there are samples of every conceivable marble in the world. Overall, the history behind the marble makes the tour interesting, although I wouldn’t plan on spending more than an hour.

Lake Champlain Chocolates Factory Tour

Wilson Castle

(Proctor, Vermont)
Another place that tickled our eccentric funny bone. It is the only castle in Vermont. Yet another instance of someone falling in love with Vermont and deciding to build a monstrosity of a house (see Hildene).

This isn’t exactly what I think of when I hear ‘castle’, but nonetheless it fits the necessary requirements. The castle is in bad shape in some places. The museum is looking to get some federal funding, so until then you’ll have to deal with a few crumbling ceilings. But the tour guides are friendly and a descendant of the original builder still lives in the house. Can’t beat that. Definitely worth a stop and the tour.

Robert Todd Lincoln’s Hildene

(Manchester, Vermont)

Robert Todd Lincoln, the only child of Abraham Lincoln to survive to adulthood, built Hildene. He was the president of the Pullman Car Company, which made passenger train cars, so it’s fitting that this monstrosity of a house was simply a summer home.

The guides tell stories chock full of eccentric tidbits. Though he was filthy rich, he pinched pennies until they screamed. When told of his father’s assassination, he ran through the White House collecting odd bits of his father’s personal effects. He also bought his wife a monstrosity of an organ whose pipes run the whole way up the entrance way stairwell. Of course, there are reasons and examples for all of these, but you have to take the tour to find out more.

Not so far off the beaten path, but not so much on the path to destroy the breathtaking views of Vermont’s Green Mountains.

Brookfield Floating Bridge

(Brookfield, Vermont)

Yet another great find from our pals at Roadside America. Unfortunately, the bridge is closed to vehicles right now. And there are great looming construction vehicles at the end of the bridge. But, you can still walk across and see plenty of Vermont’s breathtaking landscape.

Someone conveniently pulled out a few side rails, so that you can “jump off” of the bridge into the lake. The fall, as you can imagine, is non-existent.

Definitely out of the way, but well worth the stop. The very fact that the bridge is wooden and literally sits on the water is a marvel in itself.

Quechee Gorge

(Quechee, Vermont)

The “Grand Canyon” of Vermont. Or at least they advertise it as such. What can I say? You walk out on a bridge, it’s really high up, and oh yeah, the view is spectacular. But, you’ll be hard pressed to not find a beautiful landscape everywhere you go in Vermont.

Is Quechee Gorge worth the deviation? It’s chock full of tourists that seem to think so. And if you’re looking for a cheesy souvenir this is the place. Unfortunately, rather than being a fun and corny stop, it bordered on being a little too much. Hard to believe that could happen to us. There’s a great Scottish store on the way. And don’t forget the view from the bridge.

So is it worth stopping? Hey, we can’t tell you what to do, but this is not the Vermont that we know and love.

http://www.vacationreview.com/vermont/

Upper Peninsula of Michigan

That is because the Upper Peninsula, or U.P., is home to some of the harshest winters that the U.S.A. has to offer. You definitely shouldn’t be thinking about moving there if you cannot stand the cold, but if you are one of those people that appreciate the winter because it makes summer only that much better, then perhaps you should get a moving quote today, because the Upper Peninsula has one of the most beautiful summers in all of the U.S.A.

When Visiting the U.P. you will usually drive along highway 2. This is one of the most scenic car rides you can take in the U.S.A. as it borders Lake Michigan for much of the ride and the terrain of the U.P. is filled with beautiful forests, cliffs, and overall scenery.

Much of the area in the U.P. is forested, and it is the perfect place to take the family camping by one of the many inland lakes. At night you will be able to see every star, satellite, and planet in the sky – as well as the milky-way – as clear as the Hubble telescope does. It is a sight few get to witness and one you should definitely put on your bucket list.

The famous Mackinac Island has a population of around 492, but in the summer time it is a place full of thousands of tourists and visitors. It is known for its many fudge shops, and the use of motorized vehicles is prohibited on the island. It is a great place to take the family for a summer getaway.

http://www.vacationreview.com/the-upper-peninsula-of-michigan/

Tennessee

Jack Daniel’s Distillery
(Lynchburg, Tennessee)

Jack Daniel’s Distillery is a mecca in the state of Tennessee. People travel from all over the country through an area with more acres of trees than residents to experience the smell of this world famous whiskey. Yes, the smell. The distillery is smack dab in the middle of a dry county, so there is no tasting and no buying. But in the words of our guide, ‘You can sniff all you want!’

The parking lot, while chock full of parking spaces, has a very country feel with large hanging trees to protect against the glaring sun and baking heat of Tennessee. Before you start your tour, the distillery offers an area for you to walk around and learn more about the history of Jack Daniel’s the man and the whiskey.

The tour is first class all of the way from the opening movie that shows dogs chasing the old beat-up truck that the head distiller drives to work to the shuttle they use to drive you to the other side of the grounds. The grounds are spectacular with beautifully manicured lawns, old leafy trees and a cool creek (where they get the water for distilling) running through the property.

There was plenty of opportunity to sniff the whiskey, in fact our guide even flapped some of the vat lids to waft the smell out. Our tour guide was a perfect mix of Tennessee accent and quippy bits of information. They take you through the entire process, up the stairs and through the buildings and you see every step. The tour ends in the gift shop where you’re treated to a nice glass of Lemonade and told to go purchase your Jack Daniel’s when you get home.

Salute to the Tennessean Presidents
(Andrew Jackson, James Polk & Andrew Johnson)

Thus begins the chronicle of our quest to see at least one home of every president of the United States. I began touring president’s homes when I was 8 and haven’t stopped since. I can’t really tell you what the fascination is other than I’m always surprised by how much I learn about U.S. History, how much the President is revered in his hometown (streets, banks, stores, everything named after said president) and the wacky ways that the museum/park have come into owning their piece of history.

The funny thing about touring a Presidents’ home is how revered that President is in said area. Most areas name everything and anything in the area after the President out of pride, and I suppose a little bit of the American ideal, which capitalizes on a good thing. Come visit a piece of history, a bona fide president’s home!

Our experience in Tennessee at three different ex-presidents’ homes couldn’t have been more different. Our first stop was James Knox Polk’s house. He was the 11th president, who you may know from the ‘They Might Be Giants’ song. The estate made a fairly good attempt to basically cobble together every piece of memorabilia that he owned and give it a home in the only structure left that he ever lived in (besides the White House). We found Polk to be much like Coolidge, a good, hard working president, who didn’t accomplish anything extraordinary (well, he did expand the U.S. adding, Texas and California), but keeping the country alive. We were 2 of 3 people on the tour and when we ate our lunch in the backyard garden, nary a soul disturbed us.

Traveling to “The Hermitage” (You know you’re in trouble when the owner actually named the house), home to Andrew Jackson, we were confronted by rows upon rows of parking spaces. It was at this point that we began to realize that we had run into a bit of a Tennessee legend. General Jackson, as he preferred to be called (even during and after his presidency) was a leader to the tips of his toes. Either people hated him or they loved him. As with most legends, the state of Tennessee revered him as one of their most heralded attorneys, war heroes and politicians.

So it should come as no surprise that tours of the estate were both pricey and designed to shuttle as many people through the house as fast as possible. The grounds and home are kept in exquisite condition and there’s a veritable army of guides, gardeners and assistants.

Finally, we visited the home of the most curious of the three Tennessee presidents, Andrew Johnson. He was the only president besides Bill Clinton to have impeachment proceedings brought against him. Not knowing much about his impeachment trial, I was curious to see if the town even acknowledged his existence or merely found him an embarrassment. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Greenville revered Andrew Johnson. They have a bank and signs everywhere pointing to his home, museum and tailor shop. This is their main and perhaps only attraction in town.

The home is now owned by the National Park Service and delightfully, everything is free, including the guided tour and movie. Unlike Jackson’s home, but much like Polk’s home, it’s merely a house. It’s been added to and of course there are no bathrooms and the streets have widened, but it exists much as it did over 150 years ago when he lived there. The most interesting part of the entire tour is the section on the impeachment trial. Apparently, Hillary Clinton did not coin the phrase ‘right wing conspiracy’, she merely borrowed it from Andrew Johnson supporters. Another wronged person, as say the signs, that the Republicans tried to oust.

Carnton Plantation
(Franklin, Tennessee)

Carnton in Franklin, Tennessee is touted as a “plantation.” This label is a bit of a misnomer since the land was used for raising livestock and the food to feed them. Nonetheless, the house has the expansive porch and setting traditionally seen in a plantation. As the site of major Civil War activity, the Civil War buffs (and their screaming rug rats) were lined up in full force. This did not deter us. We braced ourselves and got a rather interesting tour of the house that was used as a temporary Civil War Hospital.

Throughout the house, bloodstains are still on the floors to the extent that you can see the outlines of the surgeon’s footprints and the bloody pool under his “cutting hand.” (Roadchick B is a sucker for the “gross out” factor).

Unfortunately on this tour, the guide was a history snob, and put us off a bit. Also, because of our proximity to Nashville and other commercially popular tourist attractions, it was extremely crowded, especially with young children.

Peabody Ducks
(People Watching Extraordinaire)

We were told about this attraction before we even started to really research Tennessee, and we actually only found one reference to it. We read that the ducks live on the roof (Penthouse) of the Peabody Hotel, one of the best hotels in the city of Memphis. Every day at 11 am and 5 pm the ducks get on the elevator and ride down to the Lobby, where a red carpet is rolled out for them. They then proceed to march down the carpet and swim around the Lobby Fountain. The guide book said to arrive an hour early for the best view.

We arrived 50 minutes early and couldn’t figure out why the book said to arrive so early. There were a few people sitting around the fountain, but certainly no organized gathering. So we sat down on the couch and made ourselves comfortable. Bad move. Soon, people started to trickle into the lobby and before we knew it there was a flood of people. They lined the path from the elevator to the fountain and we couldn’t even begin to get close enough to see anything.

Where are the Ducks?We thought that surely more people couldn’t arrive, but they did. I think the entire city of Memphis and every single tourist came to witness these trained ducks. We shortly climbed up the stairs to the second level in hopes of getting a better view. The view still wasn’t great of the ducks, but the view of the people was unbelievable. Adults jostling with children, parents shoving their children to the front and everyone holding their breath in anticipation when the elevator doors slid open.

We did finally see the ducks. They didn’t really march so much as run and then they spent the majority of their time trying to avoid grasping human hands as they swam around the fountain. All in all we decided that the people were more of an exhibit than the ducks.

Sun Studio
(Memphis, Tennessee)

What do Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Bono have in common? They’ve all recorded at the legendary Sun Studio, of course.
This tiny building in Memphis houses the hallowed ground of many famous recording artists and still operates as a studio in the evenings! The tour begins with a fantastic montage of artifacts, video, and audio recordings to get the flavor of the early days of the recording studio. . . the tour guides are carefully dressed to reflect the times, and our guide presented her wealth of information with a Southern twang.

The tour moves along to the original front office (where Elvis would check in for his appointments) and then to the studio itself. As a modern studio, it houses the latest audio/recording equipment and instruments, but the pictures on the walls took us back in time. Audio clips also offered a glimpse into the fun moments at the studio–imagine Elvis cracking up laughing in the middle of one of his takes because Carl Perkins was making funny faces through the front window. Well, it’s been immortalized on tape.

Kissing the Spot Where Elvis RercordedAn “X” on the floor in electrical tape marks the spot where Elvis stood, so Roadchick B found it perfectly appropriate to play “Elvis Fanatic” and kiss the spot (while trying not to envision 1000′s of other Elvis fans who have kissed the same spot). The front entrance is a gift shop (of course) and also a whimsical soda fountain. We made a last-minute decision to take this tour and it turned out to be one of the favorites of Memphis.

This tour is highly recommended for music fans, Elvis fans, and fans of the 1950′s alike–it has a little something for everyone. We would like to salute Sam Phillips, the dreamer, schemer and founder of Sun Studio’s and Sun Records. He passed away shortly after our visit in 2003 at the age of 80.

Graceland
(Memphis, Tennessee)

Every time we travel and discuss our upcoming plans with relatives, friends and coworkers, there is always an attraction that stands out in the collective consciousness of the masses. What is the Tennessee attraction that gets the, “Are you going to visit” inquiry? Graceland, of course.

We were lucky enough to score a campsite right across the street from Graceland with a sea of RV’s and streets named, “Hound Dog Way” and “Love me Tender Boulevard.” We walked right next door to the Graceland parking lot and followed the maze of walkways to purchase our ticket. Our most expensive tour of the trip included an audio tour of the King’s mansion and grounds. After waiting 20 minutes to get on the bus we were shuttled across the street to Graceland.

Let me begin by saying that although Graceland is a big, nice house . . . that’s really all it is. Don’t expect an expansive plantation or giant mansion. Not only that, but this big, nice house is decorated in extremely tacky 70′s styles with shag carpet (that was not limited to the floors) and dark wood paneling everywhere, bright colors, crazy fabrics and mirrors on the walls. I felt like I had stepped right back into my youth.

The tour wound through all the rooms on the first floor as well as the garage, racquetball court, trophy room and grounds. On the tour, the unpleasant demise of Elvis (if you believe he’s dead) is fairly glossed over in favor of touting his musical ability, groundbreaking hip gyrations and commercial appeal. The gravesite is priceless. Mobs of fans were crowded around; snapping photos, crying and praying. On the bus ride back across the street one rabid fan grilled the bus driver on the requirements for working at Graceland since that was her “ultimate goal.”

Graceland was not my favorite house tour, but when in Memphis, you MUST strap on the sideburns and lace up your blue suede shoes. Millions of Elvis fans can’t be wrong.

http://www.vacationreview.com/tennessee/

Water for Elephants


Whatever magic was included in Sara Gruen’s 2006 novel, “Water for Elephants,” has not made the arduous journey to the big screen.

An excruciatingly labored and uneven melodrama, the cinematic incarnation of the best-seller takes a vivid tale of romance and revenge and bleeds it dry of tension, electing to hang tight to a trio of miscast actors instead of developing the rich world and characterizations of the story. The best part of the picture is the elephant, and even she looks embarrassed to be a part of this charmless snoozer.

After a tragedy disrupts his efforts to study veterinary medicine at Cornell during the Depression, Jacob Jankowski (Robert Pattinson) retreats to the mystery of travel, soon stumbling upon the Benzini Brothers Circus, run by the vicious August (Christoph Waltz) and starring his wife, Marlena (Reese Witherspoon).

Working up the ranks to become the circus’s resident vet, Jacob receives an education in the ways of power, observing August batter his wife and his animals, including Rosie, the star elephant of the show. Developing a bond with Rosie and encouraging an affair with Marlena, Jacob finds himself in deep trouble when August grows aware of his intentions, leaving the young man frantic to free his lover and escape the circus.

The director for “Water for Elephants” is Francis Lawrence, best known for his work on the sci-fi thrillers “I Am Legend” and “Constantine.” His latest provides a change of pace for the director, and while I’ll always applaud filmmakers looking to stretch, it’s clear after the conclusion of the first act that this material lands well beyond his skill level as a storyteller.

A sprawling novel of circus performers, psychological torment, and intimate relations, “Water for Elephants” is an intricate web of ideas and faces, requiring a special vision behind the camera to awaken its riches. Lawrence lacks the finesse needed to pull this old-fashioned melodrama off, laboring to stitch narrative elements together while the whole endeavor slowly but surely deflates.

While a movie of colorful images and lively circus settings, “Water for Elephants” doesn’t have a pulse. It’s a stillborn drama concerned with nailing the surface details of the book, taking viewers into the Benzini madhouse, a collection of train cars staffed with boozy performers and damaged animals, with Lawrence keeping the atmosphere awake through top-notch production design efforts. The film is awfully pretty, but it hardly registers in the senses, with the love triangle between Jacob, Marlena, and August a halfhearted effort of suspense.

Making matters worse, the performances are either cringingly over the top (Waltz is just absurd here) or unnervingly zombified, with Pattinson and Witherspoon generating little heat as the secret lovers making boom-boom eyes behind the big top. In fact, Jacob shows more chemistry with Rosie than Marlena, creating the film’s only sense of sincerity when our hero nuzzles up to his elephant pal, using Polish as a secret language to encourage the beast to perform.

Also faring well is Hal Holbrook, here as an elderly Jacob in the picture’s bookend sequences. The seasoned actor has a natural way with the stiff dialogue that wakes the film up, finding heart in a feature that’s cold to the touch.

Lawrence just doesn’t have a firm grasp on his movie, with supporting characters reduced to a blur, Jacob’s romantic perspective bent (Marlena is about as appealing as the flu), and this whole business of “redlighting” (August’s order to toss freeloaders off his moving train) left a frustrating question mark of suspense until the final 10 minutes of the picture.

“Water for Elephants” is a film of pieces, not a convincing whole, losing personality the harder it tries to sell dramatic stasis as excitement. There’s nothing to care about here and nothing to fall in love with, despite a director frantically insisting life exists inside this decidedly bloodless motion picture.

http://www.darkhorizons.com/reviews/1167/water-for-elephants/

Dark Doctrine: "The Fall Of A Titan"

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

"American Idiot" movie lands at Universal



LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – "American Idiot," the Broadway musical based on Green Day's acclaimed album of the same name, is getting another life on the big screen.
Universal is in negotiations to pick up the screen rights and has hired Michael Mayer, the director of the stage production, to shoot the movie version.
Dustin Lance Black, the Oscar-winning writer of "Milk," is in discussions to write the screenplay. Tom Hanks will serve as a producer, along with the members of the punk rock trio.
A concept album tackling the ideas of love vs. rage, "American Idiot" follows three characters: the aimless Jesus of Suburbia, punk rock freedom fighter St. Jimmy, and Whatsername. It was released in 2004 and quickly became one of the band's biggest albums. It also spawned Grammy Awards, as did the Broadway version.
Hanks and business partner Gary Goetzman were producers on the mega-smash "Mamma Mia!," the adaptation of the musical based on the ABBA songs. Universal was behind that musical, which got it on the hunt for other musical projects.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110413/film_nm/us_americanidiot;_ylt=Ai8B_hApigMpPFVosDxqInMwFxkF;_ylu=X3oDMTJuY2sxajllBGFzc2V0A25tLzIwMTEwNDEzL3VzX2FtZXJpY2FuaWRpb3QEcG9zAzI4BHNlYwN5bl9wYWdpbmF0ZV9zdW1tYXJ5X2xpc3QEc2xrA3F1b3RhbWVyaWNhbg--

Robert Redford Q&A: 'I Live in Doubt, Great Doubt'



In 'The Conspirator,' director Robert Redford tells the little known story of Mary Surratt, the only woman charged as a co-conspirator in the Abraham Lincoln assassination. The 74-year-old icon is aware you likely have no idea who Surratt is, despite her connection to the most notorious murder in American history. PopEater spoke at length with Redford about his motivation for telling this gripping story, and we coax out other anecdotes, like his fanciful experience on a quiz show in 1960, the recipe for his expulsion from college, and what it was like to be a "kook" environmentalist when no one else gave a hoot. And because he's Robert Redford, the man got deep, slugging Sarah Palin for being "limited" and revealing despite all the riches he's earned, he still finds himself in dark places.

"I live in doubt, great doubt about everything," he said. "My family says if something good happens there must be something wrong with it. There's that, there's the doubt that every artist has."

I have to admit I'm a bit embarrassed to say I'd never heard of Mary Surratt.
Don't feel exclusive. Nobody else has either. That's why I decided to make the film. I never knew about it until I read the script and that's what intrigued me because when I first got it, I mistakenly thought it was going to be about Lincoln. And I thought well that probably is not going to interest me because that's territory well traveled by books and documentaries. Of all the characters in American history no one has survived with as much attention as Lincoln. But when I read the script I realized Lincoln was the frame, the assassination was the frame for the story that no one knew about and that's what intrigued me. A story tied to that assassination that no one knows about, and as I dug into it and went into the archives and got more and more into the story behind it, that led me to feeling like this is a story I wanted to tell. It's a story beneath a story that everybody knows.

It's a story about a trial and a woman that few people know about and inside of that which is where the creative work is done and the relationship between the lawyer and Mary Surratt and to me that's where the emotions lie and that's where I went to develop that aspect of it because I thought the arc of their characters had such a reach to it.

Do you see the relevance of the story today?
First of all the parallels that exist there are not for me to even talk about because they sit there provided by history. They're there for the film-goers to find and they're pretty obvious. I don't feel comfortable talking about them because otherwise it looks like I may be into a propaganda position I'm not really in. The parallels are given to us by historical fact now with today's headlines with Eric Holder announcing he's been pressured to have the 9/11 trials moved to a military tribunal; well it's almost speaking right to the film. I think that's for others to find, it's there obviously.

It's still not clear if Surratt was innocent or guilty. Do you have an opinion?
No, I don't and that's what I love about it. I probably would have been bothered had there been conclusive evidence one way or another. One of the appealing things was the ambiguity to her innocence or guilt. Because they never knew if she was guilty or not it was a double tragedy because she was put to death, not only was it a trial that violated the constitution which was very young at that time but it was one of the first violations of our constitution which has now seen many, many others come following that. There's always someone trying to mess around with our constitution. But the fact that they could never prove she was guilty I thought added an extra piece of ambiguity that made it intriguing.

It's a period piece. Those costumes look like they were pretty itchy.
The bigger problem was the heat. We were filming in October but Savannah is warm up until close to Christmas. The room was very small and there was also smoke to get that feeling of the day when everyone was smoking cigars or pipes.

So it was like a bad nightclub from 1865.
Exactly!

I have to tell you 'Quiz Show' is one of my favorite movies. I love all the different layers to it.
Thank you so much because it was a very special movie for me to make because I was actually in a quiz show. When I was a young actor in New York I was desperate. I had a wife who was pregnant about to deliver a child, we had no money, no resources and a teacher said, 'Hey, they're casting down at a quiz show, they're looking for people,' so I ran down because I was told you'd get $75 if you got selected. I got selected, it was a show called 'Play Your Hunch' with Merv Griffin as the host.

Did you win?
No! I wasn't a contestant. I was a subject. It was the most mortifying thing. This guy picked me and I said, 'Am I going to be on the show?' And he said, 'Yeah,' and I said, 'Oh my God I'm going to be on TV.' The next thing I know there are three screens and the contestants were two couples and they were arguing, they had to argue about those three screens that were silhouetted and in front of the screens stood a man and behind one of the screens was the guy's twin brother. They had to guess which one of the three was the twin brother. When my screen went up everybody booed. I thought what an entry into show business!

Anyway the issue for me was that back then the American belief system was still enough intact where you could not conceive that they would rip off the entire country. Then there was the whole issue that had never been touched, where I knew I was going to be in trouble, talking about anti-Semitism within the Jewish community. That had never been touched on and I was going to get clobbered on, who the hell is he to be doing that but I just saw it, just experienced my whole career life.

Having said that you know for Jewish girls you are a god because of 'The Way We Were?'
(Laughs) No, I swear to God I don't.

You've got honorary membership.
Well I consider that a pretty good club to belong to.

You were a big environmentalist way back in the early 70's.Were you considered a kook?
Yes I was. You know there was a derogatory categorization of anyone interested in the environment and preservation and nature. I was considered a tree hugger, granola cruncher, all these derogatory terms where for me it was about if we didn't start preserving something, are we going to survive? Because if we develop everything you have no life, so I focused on that and I got very committed but I received a lot of grief over those years because there was no real community of support for environmental preservation and now there is but there's still the forces against it which you can now see.

You've been in a zillion movies. What's your favorite?
I don't have a favorite. I'm not saying that just to be political. The most fun I've ever had was on 'Butch Cassidy' but in terms of making a story about something which I thought should be made, 'All the President's Men,' or 'The Candidate,' or 'Three Days at the Condor,' or 'Quiz Show.'

One of the things I remember as a young man in New York, the academic world was still considered a very high calling and order and you would see very frequently pictures on magazine covers of academic figures and entertainment was considered at the back end of it. It was back there with sports, cartoons and obituaries in newspapers. Slowly entertainment moved up to the front and the more substantial stuff got pushed away.

I felt like in that moment in history the quiz shows and the scandal that came, at that moment entertainment got exposed but academia got exposed, the corruption. The sad thing is it didn't hurt entertainment, it hurt academia.

Well I find it sad that Sarah Palin insinuates that higher education is elitist. I can't work that one out.
Well, I can because the country is made up of three categories. Traditionalists, cultural creative people and the moderns. The moderns are the hi-tech Silicon Valley people. The traditionalists on the lower end of it are the people who don't want change, they're afraid of change therefore they have anger. The fear card is a very big powerful card and when you have people afraid of change; they'll do anything to prevent it. They're doing it because they're limited, frightened of people who are not as limited. I think Sarah Palin, part of her strength is how limited she is.

What would we be surprised to know about you?
I think a lot of things. Like I live in doubt, great doubt about everything. I come from a very dark family, Irish immigrant family, quite poetic of mind but dark in outlook because they suffered so much in the past. My family says if something good happens there must be something wrong with it. There's that, there's the doubt that every artist has.

Are you a worrier?
Yeah I worry about things I don't need to worry about which is a waste of time. I'm very critical. I'm way too critical, that makes life hard and then there's just I think the idea that whatever you're doing is never quite as good as you want it to be and you have to live with that. I'm hardly someone who looks like he rode in on a golden horse.

But you do look like that!
I know! That's the problem, I keep hearing, 'Oh everything's so easy for you,' and that's not the case.

You were naughty. You got kicked out of college for drinking.
That was just one of the few naughty things; there were many other naughty things. I came from a very lower working class background in Los Angeles and the thing that got me out of trouble was being an athlete and then being an artist that saved me I think. I went to Europe to study art, I found myself by being in different countries. Seeing my country from another point of view. I had a full view of my country, that I think may have darkened things a bit so that eventually when I was able to make films, I wanted to tell stories about my country that were underneath the stories that you thought you knew. Like 'The Conspirator,' is underneath a story that you're aware of.

But yes I went through the normal process of being bad and of course it was great fun a lot of the time.


http://www.popeater.com/2011/04/13/robert-redford-conspirator/

Video: Daniel Radcliffe Moves on From 'Harry Potter' With Spooky New Film


Daniel Radcliffe is currently blowing up the boards on Broadway in 'How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,' which is helping the Great White Way enjoy a robust spring season, and now the trailer for the star's latest film has dropped, and suffice to say, it looks like just the ticket to continue Radcliffe's migration from the Artist Still Known as Harry Potter to bona fide movie star.

Radcliffe stars in 'The Woman in Black,' a creepy-looking period thriller about a young lawyer who travels to a remote village on business and finds himself in the sights of the ghost of a scorned woman with vengeance on her mind. Boo!

The creepy British thriller, directed by 'Eden Lake' helmer James Watkins, is set to be Radcliffe's first post-'Potter' film, and should hit American theaters sometime in the fall. The last 'Potter' flick, 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2,' will be released nationwide on July 15.

http://www.popeater.com/2011/04/12/video-daniel-radcliffe-the-woman-in-black/

Mustaine: A Heavy Metal Memoir


The fall and rise of a heavy metal icon Dave Mustaine is the first to admit that he's bottomed out a few times in his dark and twisted speed metal version of a Dickensian life. Impoverished, transient childhood? Check. Abusive, alcoholic parent? Check. Mind-fucking religious weirdness (in his case the extremes of the Jehovah's Witnesses and Satanism)? Check. Alcoholism, drug addiction, homelessness? Check, check, check. Soul-crushing professional and artistic setbacks? Check. Rehab? Check (seventeen times, give or take). Near-death experience? Check that one, too. James Hetfield, with whom many years ago Mustaine founded a band known as Metallica, once observed, with some incredulity, that Mustaine must have been born with a horseshoe up his ass. That's how lucky he's been, how fortunate he is to be pulling breath after so many close calls. And Hetfield is right. Mustaine has been lucky. He has been blessed. But here's the thing about having a horseshoe lodged in your rectum: It also hurts like hell. And you never forget it's there. Mustaine has battled through it all to achieve dizzying heights. From the early, heady days of Metallica, being unceremoniously let go only to become a world-famous rock star—founder, front man, singer, songwriter, and guitarist (and de facto CEO) for Megadeth, one of the most popular bands in heavy metal—Mustaine's is a story that will inspire, stun, and terrify

http://www.google.com/products/catalog?client=safari&rls=en&q=Dave+Mustaine+autobiography&oe=UTF-8&um=1&ie=UTF-8&cid=10872340638317688563&sa=X&ei=llumTdjyLsLtrAft4ZDyCQ&ved=0CBMQ8wIwAA#ps-sellers

ERAGON - CHRISTOPHER PAOLINI



The Kingdom of Alagaesia is ruled by the evil King Galbatorix, a former dragon rider that betrayed his mates and his people in his quest for power. When the orphan farm boy Eragon finds a blue stone sent by Princess Arya, he sooner realizes that it is a dragon egg. When the dragon Saphira is born, Eragon meets his mentor Brom, and becomes the dragon rider foreseen in an ancient prophecy that would set his people free from the tyrant Galbatorix. Eragon meets the rebels Varden and together they fight against the evil sorcerer Durza and the army of Galbatorix in a journey for freedom. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Orphaned farm boy Eragon destiny is sealed forever when a mystic stone chooses him for its keeper, this is no ordinary stone, this is the last surviving egg of the dragon race. Eragon is now the new Dragon Rider, the boy who will be savior to the repressed peoples of the Kingdom ruled by the wicked King Galbatorix and his evil wizard Durza. Running, hiding and battling across the lands with his mentor Brom and the gracious dragon Saphira, together, with the beautiful Princess Arya, this Band of Brothers learn more about themselves, their responsibilities and their destinies. Who shall succeed toward the end? Shall good overcome evil? Or will all be lost to the dark forces forever? Fly with the adventure. Written by Cinema_Fan

The story of a boy named Eragon finds a polished blue stone in the forest. At first, he thinks it's a lucky discovery, something that will bring meat to his poor family for the winter. Instead, it brings a dragon hatching, and Eragon is soon thrust into a world of magic and power through which he and the dragon must navigate. According to prophecy, Eragon is destined to be a dragon-rider like those who once protected a benevolent kingdom, thus reviving an ancient conflict against the army of King Galbatorix, a former dragon rider who turned to evil, now in alliance with a dark magic

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0449010/plotsummary

ERIC CLAPTON AUTOBIOGRAPHY BOOK


In the late 1960s, one of the most prominent pieces of graffiti seen in London and New York was "Clapton is God." Thirty years later, the stalwart guitarist and singer continues to hold the initiated enthralled, and a fair share of his present-day fans weren't even born when those words of worship were emblazoned on public edifices. Clapton's meandering and groundbreaking musical career has been punctuated by extreme personal hardship and tragedy. Through the emotional truth of his music, he has sought refuge and release from the suffering of drug and alcohol addiction, personal relationships gone awry, and the deaths of several loved ones.

Eric Patrick Clapton was born on March 30, 1945, in his grandparent's house at 1, The Green, Ripley, Surrey, England. He was the illegitimate son of Patricia Molly Clapton and Edward Fryer, a Canadian soldier stationed in England. After W.W.II Fryer returned to his wife in Canada, Patricia left Eric in the custody of his grandparents, Rose and Jack Clapp. (The surname Clapton is from Rose's first husband, Reginald Cecil Clapton.) Patricia moved to Germany where she eventually married another Canadian soldier, Frank McDonald.

Young Ricky (that's what his grandparent's called him) was a quiet and polite child, an above average student with an aptitude for art. He was raised believing that his grandparents were his parents and his mother was his sister, to shield him the stigma that illegitimacy carried with it. The truth was eventually revealed to him, at the age of nine by his grandmother. Later, when Eric would visit his mother, they would still pretend to be brother and sister.

As an adolescent, Clapton glimpsed the future when he tuned in to a Jerry Lee Lewis appearance on British television. Lewis's explosive performance, coupled with young Eric's emerging love of the blues and American R&B, was powerful enough to ignite a desire to learn to play guitar. He commenced studies at the Kingston College of Art, but his intended career path in stained-glass design ended permanently when the blues-obsessed Clapton was expelled at seventeen for playing guitar in class. He took a job as a manual laborer and spent most of his free time playing the electric guitar he persuaded his grandparents to purchase for him. In time, Clapton joined a number of British blues bands, including the Roosters and Casey Jones, and eventually rose to prominence as a member of the Yardbirds, whose lineup would eventually include all three British guitar heroes of the sixties: Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Jeff Beck. The group became a sensation for their blues-tinged rock, as did the budding guitar virtuoso Clapton,
who earned the nickname "Slowhand" because his forceful string-bending often resulted in broken guitar strings, which he would replace onstage while the crowd engaged in a slow hand-clapping.

Despite the popularity of the band's first two albums, Five Live Yardbirds and For Your Love, Clapton left in 1965, because he felt the band was veering away from its bluesy bent in favor of a more commercially viable pop focus. He joined John Mayell's Bluesbreakers almost immediately, and in the ferment of that band's purist blues sensibilities, his talent blossomed at an accelerated rate--he quickly became the defining musical force of the group. "Clapton is God" was the hue and cry of a fanatic following that propelled the band's Bluesbreakers album to No. 6 on the English pop charts. Clapton parted company with the Bluesbreakers in mid-1966 to form his own band, Cream, with bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker. With this lineup, Clapton sought "to start a revolution in musical thought . . . to change the world, to upset people, and to shock them." His vision was more than met as Cream quickly became the preeminent rock trio of the late sixties. On the strength of their first three albums (Fresh Cre
am, Disraeli Gears, and Wheels of Fire) and extensive touring, the band achieved a level of international fame approaching that of the Rolling Stones and the Beatles, and Clapton became even more almighty in the minds of his fans. In fact, the "Clapton is God" gospel contributed largely to Cream's disintegration--the band had always been a three-headed beast of warring egos, and their intense chemistry, exacerbated by the drug abuse of all three, inevitably led to a farewell tour in 1968 and the release of the Goodbye album in 1969. Early in 1969, Clapton united with Baker, bassist Rick Grech, and Traffic's Steve Winwood to record one album as Blind Faith, rock's first "supergroup." In support of their self-titled album, Blind Faith commenced a sold-out, twenty-four-city American tour, the stress of which resulted in the demise of the band less than a year after its inception.

Clapton kept busy for a time as an occasional guest player with Delaney & Bonnie, the husband-and-wife team that had been Blind Faith's opening act during their tour. A disappointing live album from that collaboration was released in 1970, as was Clapton's self-titled solo debut. That album featured three other musicians--bassist Carl Radle, keyboardist Bobby Whitlock, and drummer Jim Gordon--from Delaney's band, and yielded a modest pop hit with Clapton's version of J.J. Cale's "After Midnight." The collective proceeded to baptize themselves Derek and the Dominos, and commenced recording Clapton's landmark double album Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs, with the added contribution of slide guitarist Duane Allman. An anguished lament of unrequited love, "Layla" was inspired by a difficult love triangle between Clapton, his close friend George Harrison, and Harrison's wife Pattie (she and Clapton eventually married in 1979 and divorced in 1988). Unfortunately, personal struggles and career pressure on the gu
itarist led to a major heroin addiction. Derek and the Dominos crumbled during the course of an American tour and an aborted attempt to record a second album.

Clapton withdrew from the spotlight in the early seventies, wallowing in his addiction and then struggling to conquer it. Following the advice of the Who's Pete Townsend, he underwent a controversial but effective electro-acupuncture treatment and was fully rehabilitated. He rebounded creatively with a role in the film version of Townsend's rock opera, Tommy, and with a string of albums, including the reggae-influenced 461 Ocean Boulevard, which yielded a chart-topping single cover of Bob Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff." Some critics and fans were disappointed by Clapton's post-rehab efforts, feeling that he had abandoned his former guitar-heavy approach in favor of a more laid-back and vocal-conscious one.

Just One Night, Clapton's galvanizing 1980 live album, reminded devotees just exactly who their guitar hero was, but unfortunately, this period marked Clapton's critical slide into a serious drinking problem that eventually hospitalized him for a time in 1981. He experienced a creative resurgence after reining in his alcoholism, releasing a string of consistently successful albums--Another Ticket (1981), Money and Cigarettes (1983), Behind the Sun (1985), August (1986), Journeyman (1989)--and turning his personal life around. Though some say Clapton never regained the musical heights of his heroin days, his legend nevertheless continued to grow. That he was a paragon of rock became more than apparent when Polygram released a rich four-CD retrospective of his career, Crossroads, in 1988; the set scored Grammy awards for Best Historical Album and Best Liner Notes.

In late 1990, the fates delivered Clapton a terrible blow when guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan and Clapton road crew members Colin Smythe and Nigel Browne--all close friends of Clapton's--were killed in a helicopter crash. A few months later, he was dealt another cruel blow when Conor, his son by Italian model Lori Del Santo, fell forty-nine stories from Del Santo's Manhattan high-rise apartment to his death. Clapton channeled his shattering grief into writing the heart-wrenching 1992 Grammy-winning tribute to his son, "Tears in Heaven." (Clapton received a total of six Grammys that year for the single and for the album Unplugged.)

In 1994, he began once again to play traditional blues; the album, From the Cradle, marked a return to raw blues standards, and it hit with critics and fans. The fifty-one-year-old Clapton shows no signs of slowing down: in February of 1997 he picked up Record of the Year and Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Grammys for "Change the World," from the soundtrack of the John Travolta movie Phenomenon.

Already a double inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Yardbirds and Cream, a third nod as a solo artist is an inevitable honor for the legendary guitarist. Until Clapton springs his next album on a waiting world, fans can content themselves with his latest side project, TDF. The band's techno-pedigreed 1997 release, Retail Therapy, represents a marked musical departure from Clapton's blues-rock roots, and he appears on the album with the correspondingly off-the-wall pseudonym "X-Sample."

Next came the acclaimed Pilgrim, which captured the Grammy nomination for Best Pop Album in ‘98. In 1999 he won a Grammy for his performance on “The Calling” from Santana’s Supernatural. Clapton revisited the blues with friend and musical legend BB King in 2000’s Riding With The King, garnering the artist more platinum and a Grammy nomination in a career full of chartbusters and precious metal.

The only triple inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (as a member of both The Yardbirds and Cream and as a solo artist), Eric Clapton continues to astonish and delight a vast spectrum of music lovers. It’s a legacy that continues with the release of Reptile, the latest journey in the lifelong musical odyssey of an authentic musical genius.

http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/eric-clapton-biography/fd96ab79bed4598248256877002c0dae

ELDEST! - CHRISTOPHER PAOLINI



This book is the continuation to "Eragon", and it was written by Christopher Paolini. The plot starts right off in the middle of action, with Eragon and the Varden chasing away the urgals that are left from the battle of Farther Dur. It is a very dynamic start, with a major character dying in the first six pages.
It continues with Eragon and Saphira traveling to Du Weldenvarden, a forest which is home to the elves, in order to meet "The Cripple Who Is Whole". Also known as Togira Iknonoka, he is a mysterious entity who contacted Eragon at the end of the previous book, and who said to have all the answers to his questions. He is accompanied by Orik the dwarf and Arya the elf, to whom he feels affection for, but is not corresponded.
Parallel to this, the book shows the story of Nasuada, who has assumed the leadership of the Varden, in her quest to run from the Empire to Surda (a little independent country).
Furthermore, it explores

what has happened in Carvahall, Eragon's hometown, ever since he left. Roran returns from a nearby population only to discover that his town is being assailed by the king's army and the dangerous Ra'zac. Together with other townspeople he defends their home, and when all seems lost begin to retreat.

Eldest is a good book for those who like fantastic literature. The story is full of magic with elves and dragon confronting tyrant kings and enormous armies. While some characters die, it is fair enough to keep the book in its own realism: the fact that the land of Alagaësia is in an ongoing war. The characters are well developed, and the settings are greatly described. On the downside is its close resemblance to other pieces of literature and fiction, such as The Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, making it seems as if it offered nothing new.
A book full of action as this one is sure to keep the reader entertained until the very end. That is, of course, if you are into fantasy and fiction….

http://www.oppapers.com/essays/Eldest-Synopsis/134435

BRISINGR ! - Christopher Paolini



When Eragon, Saphira, and Roran head to the raz'acs' castle to save Roran's betrothed, Katrina, they soon kill the raz'ac and save Katrina, Eragon having to say good-bye to them to kill the last one. Eragon travels across Alagaesia to return to the Varden and is joined by Arya on the way.
They soon arrive and then head out again so Saphira can restore the dwarves' glass star's magnificent beauty. After this they travel to Du Weldenvarden where they meet up with their mentors (Oromis and Glaedr) and Eragon learns that Brom is his father. He also learns about Galbatorix's source of power - many dragons' heart of hearts and he recieves Glaedr's heart of hearts.
Oromis and Glaedr soon travel into battle with Murtagh and Thorn. They fight and Oronis dies and Glaedr is placed inside his heart of hearts. Eragon and Saphira, many miles away, are also fighting a battle and win. The story ends with Eragon holding up Glaedr's heart to a newly rising sun and feeling hopeful that he can defeat Galbatorix!


Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_summary_of_the_book_'Brisingr'#ixzz1JSX87OyD

Internet ad revenue hits high in '10

NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. Internet advertising revenue jumped 15 percent to $26 billion in 2010, setting a record high and proving that more companies are opening up their coffers to reach people online.
The new figures released on Wednesday by the Interactive Advertising Bureau and PwC also reported record online ad revenue increases in the fourth quarter of 2010, up 19 percent to $7.5 billion.
"We now have had five consecutive quarters of growth since the great recession impacted interactive advertising in 2009," Sherrill Mane, senior vice president, industry services at the IAB, said in a statement.
The report found that the most popular form of advertising was search, which represented 46 percent of revenue and increased 12 percent from 2009.
Digital video advertising accounted for 5 percent of total ad dollars spent online in 2010, or $1.4 billion.
Display advertising, which also includes video, jumped 24 percent to almost $10 billion last year.
The fastest growing form of advertising in 2010 was sponsorships, which soared 88 percent to $718 million.
"More time spent online, especially with increases in digital video and social media, has certainly helped to fuel the continued growth," David Silverman, PwC assurance partner, said in a statement.
(Reporting by Jennifer Saba; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)
(This story was corrected by the IAB to say "19 percent" in the 2nd paragraph instead of "16 percent")

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110413/wr_nm/us_internetadvertising;_ylt=AolXtSyobKpJEbqKWYxjViT6VbIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJzMzVubmVwBGFzc2V0A25tLzIwMTEwNDEzL3VzX2ludGVybmV0YWR2ZXJ0aXNpbmcEcG9zAzcEc2VjA3luX3BhZ2luYXRlX3N1bW1hcnlfbGlzdARzbGsDaW50ZXJuZXRhZHJl

Microsoft's Cloud ERP Plans Get Mixed Reactions

Microsoft's announcement this week that it would begin offering its Dynamics ERP (enterprise resource planning) software via the Azure cloud platform drew significant interest from attendees of the Convergence conference in Atlanta, but some users and partners have questions Microsoft has yet to answer about its plans.
With Azure, Microsoft said it can deliver ERP at scale for lower cost, through means such as multi-tenancy, an architecture that differs from traditional hosting by allowing many companies to share the same instance of an application, while keeping their data private. This approach enables vendors to apply upgrades frequently and more easily to customers, and is more economical.
Microsoft is not expecting all customers to adopt the Azure model, and anticipates many hybrid deployments.
That outlook is reflected in the attitude of users like Lee Weiner, chief financial officer of printer parts supplier Bradshaw Group in Richardson, Texas. The company currently runs Dynamics NAV on-premises.
"I have one IT guy, so it's not like I'm going to save a lot of money by outsourcing that," said Weiner, who also chairs the Dynamics NAV User Group's advisory board. However, he added, "I'm interested in following the technology."
"The other question is how much flexibility do you lose?" Weiner said. "The loss of flexibility, does it outweigh the cost that you save? Every company's going to see that a little bit differently."
Weiner also doesn't see a burning need to mess with success.
The NAV system replaced one from Sage that had been problematic. Thanks to the added efficiencies in NAV, Bradshaw has seen a significant return on investment. "We're doing more with less. There are less bodies to do the same amount of work. I can have one person in purchasing instead of three," he said.
He is concerned about potential downtime due to a system failure in the cloud. "I live and breathe on the fact that I have my systems up." Right now, Bradshaw is achieving nearly 100 percent uptime with the in-house deployment, he said.
Ryan Connolly, director of enterprise solutions at the American National Standards Institute in New York, said he is interested in cloud deployments, but it likely won't happen. ANSI uses Dynamics GP and CRM, among other Microsoft products.
"My boss isn't into the cloud thing. He likes having everything on-site, on-premise," Connolly said. The company's higher-ups are particularly afraid of customers' information being exposed, he said.
Connolly can see pushing ANSI's SharePoint and Exchange implementations to a cloud service. ERP would also be possible because ANSI's system has a small footprint, focusing on basic accounting functions and not more complex areas like manufacturing, he said.
Microsoft may have some success convincing customers with smaller IT shops to move to Azure, said Frank Vukovits, director of programming for the Dynamics AX User Group.
A single IT staffer may be pulling double, triple, even quadruple duties as a database administrator, network technician and Exchange server supporter, he said. If the ERP system was moved to Azure, that could free up time for projects that create new benefits, instead of keeping the lights on.
But for companies with larger IT staffs, such a move may be less attractive. "It's a little tougher to say we'll move ERP but keep everything else in-house," he said.
However, Dynamics customers who are already using a hosting service would do well to give Azure some consideration, according to Vukovits. "Most people don't know Microsoft has been in the hosting business for a long, long time," he said. "If I was a CIO I would probably be comfortable hooking up with Microsoft."
Argo Turboserve Corp., a user of both Dynamics AX and CRM, has some interest in moving to the cloud but will likely do a phased approach, said CIO Art Johnston, who is also chairman of the Dynamics CRM User Group's advisory board.
But Johnston is not satisfied with the level of detail Microsoft has provided so far about its plans, particularly about how such a deployment will integrate and co-exist with other systems at Argo, a supply chain management and nuclear engineering services company based in Edison, New Jersey.
Microsoft will tackle cloud integration with technologies like Azure Service Bus, according to Kirill Tatarinov, corporate vice president and head of Microsoft Business Solutions. "Interoperability has been a huge priority for Microsoft as a whole and Dynamics," he said.
Johnston also has mixed emotions about subscription pricing, which helps customers avoid large up-front costs, but in the long run may end up costing more.
Meanwhile, Dynamics ERP has historically been sold and delivered strictly through Microsoft's vast partner channel, whether in on-premises or hosted form. Partners have therefore been the primary "face" for Dynamics customers, not Microsoft itself. They also depend on ongoing revenue from services engagements.
"We expected it," said one employee with a hosting company based in California, who requested anonymity. "Their message for the last year or so has been all in [for the cloud]. You can't have 'all in' without ERP," he said.
Microsoft hasn't given partners like his company much information so far, he said. "They said they were going to bring the partners into the cloud. We're not sure how."
However, he added, "there's been room for us with [Dynamics] CRM Online, so we're thinking there's going to be some aspects where we fit in."
Microsoft is certainly trying to hammer that message home. "Whatever we do, we bring the ecosystem with us," Tatarinov said during a keynote address Monday. "It is hugely important for us to take the entire ERP ecosystem into the cloud."
It is not as if Microsoft would attempt to cut partners out of the loop, given their important role both as ISVs (independent software vendors) and systems integrators and as the vendor's sales channel.
For one, partners will be able to sell "cloud-enabled" vertical applications, services and add-ons through the Dynamics marketplace. Microsoft has also released a Cloud Partner Profitability Guide that is supposed to help partners mull over the financial implications of the cloud deployment model.
Partners "will still be very, very involved with the process," as Dynamics software moves to Azure and Microsoft's own data centers, said Guy Weismantel, director of ERP marketing. "Partners are still going to own the primary [customer] relationship in most cases. In today's environment, the partner's generally in the lead. We don't anticipate much changing as we move into the cloud."
However, it may be different for AX customers with multinational accounts, according to Weismantel. AX is aimed at larger companies, particularly manufacturers. "With those types of companies, they may want a direct relationship with Microsoft," he said.
Microsoft is still working on how to handle billing for Azure ERP so customers are presented with a single invoice, he said. It has had some practice, however, thanks to CRM Online, he added.
Partners will still have great flexibility to customize Dynamics software even when it is residing in a multi-tenant environment, although the process may need to be more regulated, according to Tatarinov.
That said, Microsoft has of late introduced much more regimentation and methodologies for development than in the past, he said. Now it will be about "taking it to the next level in the cloud."
"We have a broad partner ecosystem," Tatarinov added. "Some will make the transition, some will continue to sell on-premises."
In any event, members of the Dynamics ecosystem have plenty of time to figure out their positions. The first Dynamics application to hit Azure will be NAV 7, scheduled to be released next year.
That means it could be several years before the entire Dynamics lineup is ported to Azure.
Despite that timeline, Microsoft does not consider itself late to the cloud ERP game compared to competitors like NetSuite or SAP, and its approach is deliberately designed to ensure customer success, Tatarinov said.
"Nobody's doing it in the cloud at scale today. Everyone who's doing it today has massive issues. They're largely figuring it out," he said. Those challenges include privacy, partner models and ISV ecosystems, according to Tatarinov.
"We don't want customers to figure it out, we want to figure it out and bring it to our customers," he said.
Chris Kanaracus covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Chris's e-mail address is Chris_Kanaracus@idg.com

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Microsoft: Office for Mac SP1 Available for Download

Microsoft said Tuesday that Office for Mac 2011 Service Pack 1 is now available for download, as promised last week.
The new service pack can be downloaded from Microsoft's Web site.
Microsoft promised "increased stability, security, and some new features to the suite—including improved Outlook syncing support—as well as some performance enhancements."
Specifically, SP1 will enable calendar synching between Outlook for Mac and Apple's Sync Services, which Microsoft said was much-requested.
"This will let you sync your Outlook calendar as well as contacts, notes and tasks with any service or device that supports Sync Services, including your iPhone and iPad," Microsoft said in a blog post.
Microsoft stressed, however, that Apple's new version of MobileMe will not sync with MacOS Sync Services starting May 5; it's live now for people who have already moved to the new version of MobileMe calendar. "As a result, Outlook 2011 SP1 calendars that sync with Sync Services on the Mac, will NOT be synced with MobileMe calendars," the company said.
So, if you sync your iPhone or iPad calendar with Sync Services via iTunes over a cable, you can sync with Outlook 2011 SP1. But if you sync via MobileMe, it won't sync with Outlook 2011 SP1.
"Office for Mac SP1 is a big step forward," Microsoft said in the blog post. "But we know we have more work to do, specifically around better integration with additional services." However, the company did not share any information about future updates.
Other updates included in SP1, meanwhile, include: Outlook support for Exchange based server-side rules; Outlook Redirect button (you can redirect the message to the intended recipient and the replies will go to the original sender); Outlook Resend button; Outlook edit of existing messages; and Solver integration support in Excel.
Microsoft said future service packs will focus on better integration with other services, like contacts, calendars, tasks, and notes from Hotmail/Live, Google, and Yahoo.
For more, see PCMag's full review of Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 and the slideshow below.

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Adobe Warns of Another Zero-Day Security Risk in Flash

There's another zero-day security risk in Adobe's Flash. The new vulnerability comes a few weeks after the announcement of a previous one -- which was followed by updated versions of the popular multimedia software -- and in Adobe Reader and Acrobat.
In an advisory posted Monday on its security blog, the company said the vulnerability could cause a crash and, possibly, allow an attacker to take control of a system. The advisory also noted that there are reports the vulnerability is being exploited using a .swf Flash file embedded in a Microsoft Word file and delivered as an attachment to Windows users. Adobe added that it's not aware of any attacks using PDFs that target Reader or Acrobat.
Used in 'Spear Phishing'
The critical vulnerability exists in Flash Player 10.2.153.1, as well as earlier versions for Windows, Mac, Linux and Solaris; Flash Player 10.2.154.25 and earlier for Chrome users; Flash Player 10.2.156.12 and earlier for Android; and the Authplay.dll component that ships with Adobe Reader and Acrobat X (10.0.2) and earlier 10.x and 9.x versions for Windows and Mac operating systems.
Adobe said it's in the process of finalizing an update schedule for Flash Player 10.2.x and earlier versions for Windows, Mac, Linux, Solaris and Android; Acrobat X (10.0.2) and earlier 10.x and 9.x versions for Windows and Mac; Reader X (10.0.2) for Mac; and Reader 9.4.3 and earlier 9.x versions for Windows and Mac.
The company added that, because Reader X Protected Mode prevents the exploit from executing, the issue for Reader X for Windows will be addressed in the next quarterly security update for Reader, presently scheduled for the middle of June.
According to some security researchers, the Flash-based attacks are featured in some of the recent spear-phishing campaigns against major organizations, including marketing house Epsilon and security firm RSA. The attacks reportedly utilized Flash embedded inside Microsoft documents disguised as government documents.
Flash Threat Predicted
Spear-phishing refers to e-mails that purport to be from a trusted company or organization that are looking to obtain confidential information and targeted toward specific users.
In its 2010 Threat Predictions report released -- ironically -- as a PDF in late 2009, security firm Symantec predicted that, in 2010, "Adobe software, especially Acrobat Reader and Flash," would take the top spot as a target of cybercriminals, replacing Microsoft products such as Windows and Internet Explorer.
The report noted that Flash and Acrobat Reader have become a favorite among attackers, who use "reliable 'heap spray-like' and other exploitation techniques." Adobe has been successful in making Flash and Adobe Reader virtually ubiquitous on every computer platform, and has touted this huge cross-platform installed base as a strength.
But Symantec noted that this wide deployment also makes Flash and Adobe Reader increasingly attractive to attackers, because they "provide a higher return on investment to cybercriminals."

Windows Phone Tools Aimed at Richer Mobile Apps


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Microsoft is doing a lot of teasing these days -- teasing about the next iterations of some of its products, that is. Besides offering a sneak peak at Internet Explorer 10, Microsoft on Wednesday also offered a glimpse of the next version of the Windows Phone operating system at its MIX11 conference in Las Vegas.
Microsoft will roll out a new version of Windows Phone 7 later this year. With it, Microsoft promised developers more hardware capabilities, better browsing and improved tooling, and expanded opportunities and Windows Phone Marketplace options. The goal is to create a richer application environment that expands mobile usage scenarios.
Joe Belfiore, vice president of Windows phone program management, called the next release of Windows Phone an evolution of Microsoft's strategy to make sure developers are at the forefront of what's next. He explained, "We will soon deliver a new set of Windows Phone developer tools that will enable developers to create a new generation of apps that are even faster, more capable, and better integrated with Windows Phone."
Leveraging Live Tiles
Some of the improvements to Windows Phone developer tools include a performance profiler and sensor simulation. That upgrade will make way for developers to build more integrated applications.
For example, the new tools make possible application multitasking for background processing, audio and file transfers, and fast application switching. It also lets developers integrate apps with the platform more deeply so the apps can take better advantage of Live Tiles. Live Tiles are dynamically updated to show real-time content. This differs from traditional static icons that offer stepping stones to an application.
Finally, Windows Phone tools allow access to the camera and motion-sensor library so developers can build apps that incorporate device hardware and build augmented reality experiences. This could be especially significant for mobile gaming.
Microsoft also offered a glimpse of app concepts for the next version of Windows Phone, including new looks at Skype, Spotify, Layar, Qantas, Amazon Shopping, and Kik Messenger. The free developer tools will be available in May.
Will Microsoft Meet the Deadline?
So what does the next Windows Phone need to look like to draw new developers and handset makers? A lot like what Microsoft showed at MIX, according to Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Gartner.
He said it's unlikely that Nokia will build devices based on the existing Windows Phone platform. The handset maker is more likely to roll out its first devices with the new Mango platform showcased at MIX on Wednesday. It's important for Microsoft to meet the development deadline, he said, so Nokia can ship a flagship device with the new release this calendar year.
"What Microsoft showed certainly covers a multitude of issues that both users and developers had in the first release," Gartenberg said. "The key for Microsoft is going to be getting this out the door and getting it onto existing and new devices. This next update is super-important for existing customer satisfaction and to help drive the platform forward for the holidays and into 2012."