Monday, September 23, 2013

Dinnertime Crunch: 26 Easy 30-Minute Meals For the Entire Family August 19, 2013


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Officials in Malaysia Attempting to Ban Lamb of God as Satanists Posted 09/03/2013 at 10:44am | by Guitar World Staff


On September 28, Lamb of God are scheduled to perform in Malaysia's capital, Kuala Lumpur.
It's a calendar item that has stirred a bit of controversy among Malaysian officials.
According to New Straits Times, the Department of Islamic Development Malaysia (Jakim) is calling upon local authorities to ban the group's performance, labeling the band "satanic."
"Lamb of God had drawn many controversies and was dubbed a 'satanic' band that fitted evil spirituality and anti-godliness even by the Christian community," said Datuk Othman Mustapha, the department's director general. "The name 'Lamb of God' also referred to Jesus that Christians referred to as the son of god."
The department also claimed the band aired Quranic verses during some US concerts and expressed concern over song titles such as "Walk With Me in Hell," "Sacrament" and "Resurrection." Representatives named the band's 2000 release, "New American Gospel," as opposing to Islamic Syariat (Sharia) and morals.
"The organizing of such events do not only corrode morality but also the faith of Muslims," Mustapha said. "Performances by heavy metal outfits that were often extreme also encouraged its audience to lose control," he concluded.

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Sunday, September 22, 2013

Zachary Quinto: A Playwright’s Home, an Actor’s Muse


Benjamin Norman for The New York Times
Zachary Quinto, who plays Tom in “The Glass Menagerie,” next to the caricature of the playwright Tennessee Williams at the Monkey Bar in Midtown.
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Shortly after a downpour hit Manhattan last Thursday, Zachary Quinto abandoned his car and driver to the gridlock on Madison Avenue and walked up to the Hotel Elysée on East 54th Street. As he apologized for being late, the actor looked up at the red and gold flag emblazoned with the name of the hotel, took out his iPhone and snapped a shot.

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“Wow,” Mr. Quinto said. “Can we go see the room where Tennessee died?”
“Tennessee” is the playwright Tennessee Williams, who lived and worked in the hotel for about 20 years until his death in 1983, reportedly after choking on a plastic bottle cap. The visit was something of a pilgrimage for Mr. Quinto, who is making his Broadway debut later this month in “The Glass Menagerie,” Williams’s first Broadway production.
Mr. Quinto, 36, was obliging a request to be interviewed at the Monkey Bar, off the lobby of the Elysée. It was a favorite, convenient bar for the playwright.
“I was reading about the hotel in anticipation of coming here,” Mr. Quinto said. “Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy and Marlon Brando and Lillian Gish, all of these amazing luminaries of the theater spent time in this place.”
Seated at a corner red banquette, the actor — dressed in a mauve T-shirt, jeans and high-top sneakers he admitted had been appropriated from a friend — spotted a depiction of Tennessee Williams behind him in the famous Edward Sorel mural that wraps around the restaurant. He attempted to move a lamp for a better look. It was bolted down.
“Unreal. Unreal,” he said. “It’s a huge thing for me.”
The day before, Mr. Quinto had appeared at a Cantor Fitzgerald 9/11 benefit held at BGC Partners (its trading floor reminding him of the set of his 2011 movie “Margin Call”), appeared in matinee and evening performances of “Menagerie” and made it to the Standard, High Line hotel for a New York Fashion Week party. He said he was asleep by 3 a.m. “I’m good on six hours,” he said.
The play, which also stars Cherry Jones, is in previews and is to open Sept. 26. In a glowing review of the Boston production earlier this year, Ben Brantley of The New York Times wrote: “Mr. Quinto, best known for his screen work, is the finest Tom I’ve ever seen, a defensive romantic, sardonically in love with his own lush powers of description.”
Mr. Quinto, who studied acting at Carnegie Mellon, talked about developing the character of Tom, Williams’s given name.
“Tom is the most autobiographical character in his canon, so it became clear to me right away that, as the point of entry, the more I could learn about Tennessee and understand what he was trying to capture, and the same time what he wanted to run away from, the better off I’d be,” he said.
Mr. Quinto started with a biography by Lyle Leverich, “Tom: The Unknown Tennessee Williams,” concentrating on the family dynamics depicted in the play among the aging mother and her two adult, unmarried children.
“There is no shortage of works about the life of Tennessee, or works by Tennessee or both,” he said with a laugh and a slight eye roll.
He moved on to the playwright’s memoirs, the first MGM screenplay of “Menagerie” and all the versions of the short story that morphed into the play.
“In the screenplay, there’s actually a scene where Tom goes to the movies and meets a young girl and has a quixotic interaction with her,” he said in his deep baritone. “It informs my understanding how Tom fills his time not in the apartment. All of that is really exciting.”
Lunch — tomato soup and a grilled cheese sandwich — arrived. (Perfect on a rainy day, Mr. Quinto said.)
It got him talking about a scene in which the cast mimes the act of having dinner (sans tableware and food) and yet communicates the bond of that experience.
“The feeling of what it is to eat, the emotional relationships you have with the people you are eating with, these are the things that are important,” he said, “and the things that Tennessee was trying to convey.”
In researching the character, Mr. Quinto, who came out as gay in 2011, considered the struggles Williams had with his own sexuality.
“I think it is something that plagued Tennessee his whole life, something he really wrestled with,” he said. “I don’t think it ever fully resolved for him. I feel much more resolved in my own life.”
And, not surprisingly, Mr. Quinto considered how sexuality informed the character he plays.
“I think Tom knows that his relationship to alcohol and his constant seeking of adventure, as he calls it in the play, belies a kind of desire that he is not able to fully embrace,” he said.
After lunch, John Avina, the general manager of the Elysée, took Mr. Quinto on a quick tour of the Tennessee Williams Suite, which is not the playwright’s old rooms but the apartment of the former owner of the property. There were plays on the bookshelves, photographs and a framed letter from Williams to a friend who was to visit, which gave the name and address of the hotel. Mr. Quinto read aloud: “I’ll probably still be alone as my friend is having a vacation in Veracruz, Mexico. He is attracted to sinister places.”
The actor politely asked to see the rooms where the writer had spent his final days, but was told they were occupied. Mr. Avina handed him a card, and said he would arrange for him to visit or stay on a night when the play was dark.
“Thanks, man,” Mr. Quino said, heading to rehearsals. “I’ll definitely be in touch.”



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A Romp Into Theories of the Cradle of Life By DENNIS OVERBYE Published: February 21, 2011



TEMPE, Ariz. — We’re not in the Garden of Eden anymore.
Darwin speculated that life began in a warm pond on the primordial Earth. Lately other scientists have suggested that the magic joining of molecules that could go on replicating might have happened in an undersea hot spring, on another planet or inside an asteroid. Some astronomers wonder if it could be happening right now underneath the ice of Europa or in the methane seas of Titan.
Two dozen chemists, geologists, biologists, planetary scientists and physicists gathered here recently to ponder where and what Eden might have been. Over a long weekend they plastered the screen in their conference room with intricate chemical diagrams through which electrons bounced in a series of interactions like marbles rattling up and down and over bridges through one of those child’s toys, transferring energy, taking care of the business of nascent life. The names of elements and molecules tripped off chemists’ tongues as if they were the eccentric relatives who show up at Thanksgiving every year.
They charted the fall of meteorites and the rise of oxygen on the early Earth and evidence in old rocks that life was here as long as 3.5 billion years ago. The planet is only a billion years older, but estimates vary on when it became habitable.
In front of a 2,400-member audience one night they debated the definition of life — “anything highly statistically improbable, but in a particular direction,” in the words of Richard Dawkins, the evolutionary biologist at Oxford. Or, they wondered if it could be defined at all in the absence of a second example to the Earth’s biosphere — a web of interdependence all based on DNA.
Hence the quest for extraterrestrial examples is more than a sentimental use of NASA’s dollars. “Let’s go look for it,” said Chris McKay, a planetary scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Laboratory in Mountain View, Calif., who is involved with the Mars Science Laboratory, which will be launched in November.
The rapid appearance of complex life in some accounts — “like Athena springing from the head of Zeus,” in the words of Dr. McKay — has rekindled interest recently in a theory fancied by Francis Crick, one of the discoverers of the double helix, that life originated elsewhere and floated here through space. These days the favorite candidate for such an extraterrestrial cradle is Mars, which was once a water world. Perhaps, some think, its microbes hitched a ride to Earth on asteroids — unless, of course, the microbes went the other way and what’s to be found on Mars are the dead remains of long-lost cousins of Earth.
“We’ve crashed more space probes on Mars than anywhere else — it’s that interesting,” Dr. McKay said.
The conference was sponsored by the Origins Project at Arizona State University in an effort to get people together who don’t normally talk to each other, said Lawrence Krauss, a physicist who helped organize the meeting.
Talk is indeed hard across disciplines and geological ages. John Sutherland, a biochemist at Cambridge University in England, said geologists and astronomers were more interested in talking and speculating about the origin of life than chemists were, even though it is basically a problem of “nitty-gritty chemistry.”
The reason, he explained, is that “chemists know how hard it is.”
The modern version of the Garden of Eden goes by the name of RNA world, after the molecule ribonucleic acid, which plays Robin to DNA’s Batman today, but is now thought have preceded it on the biological scene. RNA is more versatile, being able not only to store information, like DNA, but also to use that information to catalyze reactions, a job now performed by proteins. That solved a sort of chicken-and-egg problem about which ability came first into the world. The answer is that RNA could be both.
“If you want to think of it that way, life is a very simple process,” said Sidney Altman, who shared a Nobel Prize in 1989 for showing that RNA had these dual abilities. “It uses energy, it sustains itself and it replicates.”
One lesson of the meeting was how finicky are the chemical reactions needed for carrying out these simple-sounding functions. “There might be a reason why amino acids and nucleotides are the way they are,” Dr. Krauss said.
What looks complicated to us might not look so complicated to a piece of a carbon molecule awaiting integration into life’s dance. “Complexity is in the eye of the beholder,” said Dr. Sutherland, who after 10 years of trying different recipes succeeded in synthesizing one of the four nucleotides that make up RNA in a jar in his lab.
With the right mixture and conditions, complicated-looking molecules can assemble themselves without help. “When everything is in the pot,” he said, “the chemistry to make RNA is easier.”
  • 1 Dr. Sutherland’s results were hailed as a triumph for the RNA world idea, but there is much work to be done, said Steve Benner, who constructs artificial DNA at the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution, in Florida. Nobody knows whether Dr. Sutherland’s recipe would work on the early Earth, he said. Moreover, even if RNA did appear naturally, the odds that it would happen in the right sequence to drive Darwinian evolution seem small. “Other than that,” Dr. Benner said, “the RNA world is a great idea for origin of life.”
    Some others, including astronomers and geologists, have another view of biological inevitability. Life is a natural consequence of geology, said Everett Shock, a geophysicist at Arizona State. “Most of what life is doing is using chemical energy,” Dr. Shock said, and that energy is available in places like undersea volcanic vents where life, he calculated, acts as a catalyst to dissipate heat from the Earth. In what he called “a sweet deal,” life releases energy rather than consuming it, making it easy from a thermodynamic standpoint.
    “Biosynthesis is profitable — it has to be; they live there,” said Dr. Shock, referring to microbes in undersea vents.
    Some scientists say we won’t really understand life until we can make it ourselves.
    On the last day of the conference, J. Craig Venter, the genome decoding entrepreneur and president of the J. Craig Venter Institute, described his adventures trying to create an organism with a computer for a parent.
    Using mail-order snippets of DNA, Dr. Venter and his colleagues stitched together the million-letter genetic code of a bacterium of a goat parasite last year and inserted it into another bacterium’s cell, where it took over, churning out blue-stained copies of itself. Dr. Venter advertised his genome as the wave of future migration to the stars. Send a kit of chemicals and a digitized genome across space.
    “We’ll create panspermia if it didn’t already exist,” he said.
    The new genome included what Dr. Venter called a watermark. Along with the names of the researchers were three quotations, from the author James Joyce; Robert Oppenheimer, who directed the building of the atomic bomb; and the Caltech physicist Richard Feynman: “What I cannot build, I do not understand.”
    When the news came out, last year, Dr. Venter said, the James Joyce estate called up and threatened to sue, claiming that Joyce’s copyright had been violated. To date there has been no lawsuit.
    Then Caltech called up and complained that Dr. Venter’s genome was misquoting Feynman. The institute sent a photograph of an old blackboard on which Feynman had written, “What I cannot create, I do not understand.”
    And so his genome is now in the process of acquiring its first, non-Darwinian mutation.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Celebrate Sea Otter Awareness Week With The Marine Mammal Center!


sea otter 
Sea otters are the furriest creatures in the world!
Join The Marine Mammal Center this Sunday, Sept. 22, as we kick off Sea Otter Awareness Week with our Sea Otter Spectacular - otterly awesome themed classroom talks and tours!
Book a TourRead on to learn more about this threatened species and get the latest U.S. Geological Survey California sea otter census results.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

"White Gold" or "Bloody Teeth"?


Just days after Zimbabwe authorities reported the discovery of 41 dead elephants, poisoned by poachers, the US Fish and Wildlife Service announced plans to destroy the US ivory stockpile. The government will crush the 6 million tons of seized ivory, forever removing it from the illegal market while raising awareness of this international threat to elephants and security.
Goal: 50,000 Progress: 47,906
Sponsored by: The Rainforest Site
After facing decimation in the 1980s, a global ban on ivory sales barely saved Africa's elephants from extinction.
Then, in 2008 the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) agreed to unleash stockpiles of ivory in a "one-off" sale to China, and the decision kicked off a surge in demand for the coveted "white gold". Rather than reduce the need for black-market ivory and the poaching that supplies it, China's growing middle class wants more.
And they are willing to pay for it. Soaring prices encourage more poaching and attract the attention of armed rebel groups, corrupt government officials, and international criminal organizations. The profits, in turn, fund other illegal activities elsewhere in the world.
2011 and 2012 were especially lethal years for elephants, smashing previous records for illegal ivory seizures, typically captured en route to China. The trend shows no sign of slowing in 2013.
Petition the Chinese Ambassador to the United States to help reverse this bloody path towards extinction.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Standing Up To Illegal Whaling Operations — Care2 Member Takes the Lead! by Andrew A. September 30, 2009 10:50 pm


For years, a portion of the Japanese whaling fleet has engaged in illegal whaling activities in the Antarctic and lack of enforcement and regulation has allowed them to operate largely unopposed. Operating under the Dutch flag, Sea Shepherd, an international, non-violent organization protecting the world’s oceans, has tried to stop these poachers, but have been met with strong resistance.
In fact, powerful resistance from the illegal whaling industry has been on the uptick. Whaling operations have repeatedly complained to the Dutch government about the work Sea Shepherd has done to protect whales because it has cut into their industry. Unfortunately, it appears as though the illegal whalers may have finally succeeded in gaining enough traction to dictate Dutch law and are trying to enact a ban on Sea Shepherd’s work in the Netherlands.
For Care2 member Claudia, from the Netherlands, the thought of losing Sea Shepherd had huge ramifications for the health of whales and other ocean life. Starting a citizen petition, she quickly saw that thousands of people in her country and countries around the world supported the Sea Shepherd’s work. Her petition generated over 7,000 signatures urging the Dutch Government to stand strong and support the international laws protecting whales that the Sea Shepherds standup for.
On Tuesday September 22nd, Claudia went to The Hague (the Netherlands’ seat of government) to meet with two cabinet members — delivering 7,697 signatures urging the Netherlands government to continue to let Sea Shepherd sail under the Dutch flag and not be bullied by the whaling industry.
On behalf of myself and Care2, we’d like to give Claudia and everyone else who’s actively making the world a better place a huge a round of applause! We know there are thousands of you just like Claudia and together we’re making real changes. Please share your success stories by emailing me here: successstories@earth.care2.com


Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/standing-up-to-illegal-whaling-operations-care2-member-takes-the-lead.html#ixzz2f6XocJY5

Orca Family Cares for Disabled Calf Posted by Michael Mountain on Thursday, May 23, 2013 ·


disabled-orca-052213
This young orca is missing her dorsal fin and her right-side pectoral fin. That means she can’t navigate well, and can’t catch food on her own.
You might imagine that the other killer whales in her family pod would have had to abandon her and do what’s best for the pod overall. But it seems that what’s good for the pod overall involves looking after the youngster, even if this slows them all down a bit.
Rather than being left to fend for herself, then, the young orca is being cared for by the rest of the family.
Underwater photographer Rainer Schimpf came face to face with the youngster off the coast of South Africa. Rather than being left to fend for herself, the young orca is being cared for by the rest of the family.
He told reporters: "Incapable of fast hunting and ambushing prey it has to be dependent on the pod which, one assumes, looks after it very well. It shows these mammals are not really just ruthless killing machines but they also have complex, caring social-structures in which they and care for their own disabled members."
He said the younger orca was following the family and seemed to be falling behind, staying at a distance while the rest of the pod was hunting for food. But then she would dive down to where the other were – apparently to join in when it was time to eat.
Orcas have very close family bonds. Last year, a group of orca experts published a study showing that female orcas have the longest menopause of any nonhuman species. Most animals don’t live long after their days of being able to reproduce are over. Humans, as we know, have an extended menopause, and this appears to have developed because of the benefits to the family of having grandmothers who can join in the raising of the children.
The same seems to apply with orcas. Dr. Emma Foster, lead author of the study, wrote:
Like humans, female killer whales … stop reproducing in their 30s-40s, but can survive into their 90s. The benefit of a menopause to both human and killer whale mothers is in spreading their genes. The different ways this has evolved reflects the different structure of human and killer whale societies.
While it is believed that the menopause evolved in humans partly to allow women to focus on providing support for their grandchildren, our research shows that female killer whales act as lifelong carers for their own offspring, particularly their adult sons.
That’s because in orca families adult sons stay with their mothers as long as the mother lives. One famous orca matriarch, known to researchers as J2 (she’s the leader of the "J" pod of resident orcas in the Salish Sea off the coast of Seattle) is thought to be around 102 years old. One of her sons, J1, stayed close to her side until he died, a few years ago, at around the age of 60.
Everything we know about orcas and all the species of dolphins leads us to understand that they have very close family bonds and a sophisticated culture about which we still know relatively little.
But one thing we know for sure is that none of these animals belong in captivity for the purposes of entertaining humans.

Friday, September 13, 2013

At Washington University in St. Louis, pediatrics residents use cats to learn how to insert a breathing tube in a human infant. They force long tubes down the cats' windpipes, which can cause bruising, bleeding, scarring and intense pain. The cats will be abused again and again like this for years.

Sponsored by: Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
Washington University is the only civilian medical center training doctors that continues this inhumane practice. We've scored major victories in the past — and recently convinced the University of Virginia to stop using cats. But we can't rest until every cat is safe from this severe form of cruelty.
These procedures are completely unnecessary because human infant simulators — used at every other medical center in the U.S. — provide a superior learning experience and are cruelty-free. In fact, Washington University uses simulators to teach intubation procedures to practicing physicians, but they refuse to use them for pediatrics resident training. It doesn't make sense!
Tell Washington University to put a stop to this cruel and inhumane practice before they harm another cat.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Domoic Acid Presents a Puzzle for Marine Mammal Experts


The central California coast is experiencing harmful algae blooms that produce the toxin domoic acid, a threat to sea lions and other marine life.


September 10, 2013
It's always great when a story has a happy ending, and such was the case with Perfume, a California sea lion who was one of a number of sea lions being treated for domoic acid toxicity at The Marine Mammal Center over the past few weeks. Perfume was released back to the ocean on Saturday, September 7, at Scotty Creek Beach near Bodega Bay. A crowd of onlookers and well wishers watched as she joyously made her way back home.
Perfume is Released back to the Ocean
Perfume returns home to the ocean, at Scotty Creek Beach in Sonoma County

September 5, 2013
Currently, The Marine Mammal Center has a large number of patients affected by domoic acid:  Marilou, Vuronica, Shia, Perfume, Lumi, Surfer, Jerika, Late Night, Bautista, and Whirley. Several others have been released following successful treatment, and two have died during treatment. These patients, all of them California sea lions, were rescued in the past few weeks along the San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara County coast.
Perfume
Perfume is a California sea lion who was rescued in San Luis Obispo County, suffering from domoic acid toxicity (acute)
© The Marine Mammal Center

What is domoic acid?
Domoic acid is a neurotoxin associated with algal blooms which can have serious effects on marine mammals and humans when it gets into the food chain. It was first discovered in the red algae known as "doumoi" in Japanese, hence the origin of the name, although this algae is not traditionally related to the toxicities that we see. Domoic acid is often referred to as “red tide,” although this is a misnomer, since the algae is often colorless, or has colors other than red. It is also not typically associated with the movement of the tides. Scientists prefer the term “harmful algal bloom.”
Domoic acid is produced by the algae Pseudo-nitzschia and accumulates in shellfish, sardines, and anchovies. These fish are then eaten by sea lions, otters, cetaceans, and humans, among others. If consumed in significant quantities, domoic acid can cause seizures and other central nervous problems. Exposure to the biotoxin affects the brain, causing those affected to become lethargic and disoriented. In humans, domoic acid toxicity manifests itself as “Amnesic Shellfish Poisoning,” which can cause short-term memory loss, brain damage, and even death in some cases.
Shia, California Sea Lion
Shia is another California sea lion patient suffering from domoic acid toxicity (acute)
© The Marine Mammal Center
Diagnosis of domoic acid toxicity is based on clinical signs and the known presence of Pseudo-nitzschia algae in the environment. The toxin itself is often long gone from the animals by the time they are examined. The Center’s researchers diagnosed the first case of domoic acid toxicosis in marine mammals in 1998, and have conducted extensive studies of the condition since then.

Why is this information so important? 
Marine mammals are like canaries in the coal mine -   they warn us of potentially serious environmental conditions in the ocean that can affect not only marine mammals, but humans and other animals as well.
This information also provides critical data for scientists conducting research on global health, and it contributes vital information to resource managers who monitor human activities that impact marine mammals in the area.  Equally important, it provides substantive evidence to help inspire protection and conservation of the ocean and those creatures that call it home.
What causes harmful algal blooms?
No one knows for sure, but Pseudo-nitzschia (and most microorganisms, for that matter) really like nitrogenous waste products/nitrates, and other fertilizers (being plants of a sort).  There are a lot of maps that show algal blooms forming at major river mouths or other waste outfall areas. Also, when the algal cells die or are consumed by animals, domoic acid is released.  Thus there is ample evidence that human activity can lead to worsening blooms of harmful algae and affect the health of our sea lion patients.
Phytoplankton Monitoring
Phytoplankton monitoring carried out by the CDPH Marine Biotoxin Monitoring Program along the California coast
© California Department of Public Health


The California Department of Public Health website currently shows that Pseudo-nitzschia is common or abundant at every phytoplankton sampling site throughout the 600-mile rescue range covered by The Marine Mammal Center. However, high concentrations of Pseudo-nitzschia do not always mean high levels of domoic acid are present because phytoplankton don’t always produce the toxin.  So sometimes there are Pseudo-nitzschia blooms without any increase in sea lions stranding with domoic acid toxicity.
Since the first sea lions affected by these blooms began coming into The Marine Mammal Center about two weeks ago, we’ve noticed that the more recently rescued animals are showing more intense symptoms. The puzzle confronting our veterinarians is why the severity is increasing. They are trying to determine if it is caused by a longer exposure time, an increasing amount of toxin in the water, or simply that these particular animals had previously been exposed to the toxin and are now experiencing an acute poisoning, with the combination of previous exposures causing more severe illness.
Stay tuned as our research and veterinary science teams learn more.
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Monday, September 2, 2013

Build-A-Bear Recall! 26,000 Stuffed Sulleys August 30, 2013 by Patricia-Anne Tom 2




Look out for this furry blue creature! Build-A-Bear is recalling about 26,000 of its Sulley stuffed animals in the United States and Canada, the Consumer Product Safety Commission reports. The eye can detach, posing a choking hazard to young children, though thankfully no injuries or incidents have been reported. And yes, we mean Sulley, the furry blue creature from the Monsters movies; this particular model measures about 17 inches high and 10.5 inches wide. Get all of the details at the CPSC.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

The Record that Changed My Life: Dave Mustaine Discusses AC/DC's 'Let There Be Rock' Posted 08/26/2013 at 12:19pm | by Dave Mustaine


FROM THE ARCHIVE: Megadeth mainman Dave Mustaine chooses (and discusses) the record that changed his life.
AC/DC
Let There Be Rock (1977)
I was 16 or 17 when I got this album. I remember taking it home, putting it on my cheap turntable and dropping the needle down on the vinyl. The first couple of notes of "Overdose" just blew my mind.
The sound of the guitar was so untamed, and it lit a fire inside me to approach the guitar like a weapon. The lore behind Let There Be Rock is that Angus and Malcolm Young would face a Marshall against the wall and crank the sucker all the way up. You can tell the amp was turned up unbelievably loud: you can practically feel Angus' fingerprints rubbing against the strings.
[Singer] Bon Scott instantly became a hero of mine, too, because of the words he was using. I was a teenager and here was this guy singing about blowjobs, overdosing and dating fat chicks! I'm thinking to myself, Well, I haven't had the misfortune of dating fat women yet, but I sure do relate to the rest of it. Bon was singing my song!
The more I got into AC/DC, the more I started to develop as a musician. When I was a really young kind and learning music, I was very influenced by the British Invasion: the Beatles, the Who and the Stones. But when it came to developing my own guitar playing style, it was all about the New Wave of British Heavy Metal.
Some people will argue whether or not AC/DC were a part of this new wave, but I do know there was a void between the British Invasion and the New Wave of British Heavy Metal, and that AC/DC fell into it. When I think of how my style evolved, it was certainly influenced by bands like AC/DC, Diamond Head and Iron Maiden. If you listen to my style — even though it's sloppier — it contains essences of Jimmy Page, Michael Schenker and Angus Young.
But while Angus was always a hero of mine, I identified more with Malcolm. Rhythm is really important in rock and metal, and taking a percussive approach to the guitar is an art that's vital to the sound of that music. That's what Malcolm brings, and that's why AC/DC is his band.
To this day, I listen to Let There Be Rock and it motivates me. That album marked the defining moment in my life when I made my mind up that I was gonna do this, no matter what.

Exclusive Song Premiere: "London's Burning" from The Clash's Initial Recording Session in 1976

Newsletter - August 27, 2013

Exclusive Song Premiere: "London's Burning" from The Clash's Initial Recording Session in 1976



Today, GuitarAficionado.com presents the exclusive premiere of a previously unreleased version of "London's Burning" by the Clash.

The track, which is included on the band's new deluxe, career-spanning box set, 'Sound System,' is from their first-ever recording session at Beaconsfield Film School in 1976 and was recorded by Julien Temple.

Sony Music Entertainment will release 'Sound System' September 10.

The box set, which is housed in boombox packaging designed by Paul Simonon of the Clash, contains the band’s five studio albums, all remastered by the Clash; three discs with demos, non-album singles, rarities and B-sides; a DVD with previously unseen footage shot by Julien Temple and Don Letts, original promo videos and live footage; an "owner’s manual" booklet; reprints of the band’s original 'Armagideon Times' fanzine and a new edition curated and designed by Simonon; plus dog tags, badges, stickers and an exclusive Clash poster.

On the same day, the Clash will release a new compilation, 'The Clash: Hits Back' (available as 2-CD/3-LP/digital), and 'The Clash: 5 Album Studio Set,' box sets that collect the band's original five studio albums on CD.

Read more»

Instagram Censors the Naked Breastfeeding Yoga Mom August 26, 2013 by Patricia-Anne Tom 41




Much to the online community's disbelief, the Instagram account of Amy Woodruff, known as "Naked Yoga Breastfeeding Mom," has been shut down, The Huffington Post reports.
Two years ago, a photo of Woodruff doing yoga while naked and breastfeeding went viral after she posted it on her blog. When BabyCenter recently published an interview with Woodruff in which she discussed the photo, readers flocked to her blog and Instagram account. Her fans on the image-sharing network grew by the thousands in days, but the account was shut down.
To find out how Instagram and Woodruff's fans have responded to the removal of her account, read the whole story on The Huffington Post.