Showing posts with label Breaking news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breaking news. Show all posts

Friday, 16 December 2011

Howard stern america's got talent

Howard stern america's got talent - "America's Got Talent" could be getting just a tad bit edgier.

Radio shock jock Howard Stern is in negotiations with NBC to replace outgoing judge Piers Morgan on the performance show, an individual with knowledge of the negotiations confirmed to TheWrap.


Stern, who's already making a hefty sum for his Sirius XM Radio show, will pick up another big chunk of change if he decides to join Howie Mandel and Sharon Osbourne on the panel -- the talks are currently hovering around a $15 million annual sum.

Morgan announced Wednesday that he's leaving the popular reality show, tweeting that he'll be focusing on his CNN show, "Piers Morgan Tonight," which he began hosting in January.

"I'm leaving 'America's Got Talent' after 6 wonderful years," Morgan wrote. "Turned out that juggling's harder than it looks, so I'm going to focus on CNN."

Morgan officially announced his "AGT" departure on his CNN show Wednesday night, jokingly suggesting interest in the recently vacated Oscar-hosting gig, as "my schedule just cleared up a bit."


Source: yahoo

Friday, 9 December 2011

Man poses as teen to play football

Man poses as teen to play football - A Texas man seemingly desperate to pull on the pads may actually be looking to pull the wool over people's eyes.

Police say 22-year-old Taylor Markeith Smith has tried almost anything to play high school football. School officials said he solicited at least 13 different high schools in Dallas, man poses teen football, Garland and Richardson using different identities. To many coaches, Smith looked like the next star football player. man poses teen football,

"He met the eye test - let's put it that way," said Jim Ledford, football coach at Berkner High School in Richardson. "As a coach, you see a kid walk in and he's 6-foot-5, 220. Your eyes light up and automatically think defensive end, tight end." man poses teen football 13 schools,

Ledford said Smith told him he was 16 when he showed up at the school in 2008. He said his parents had died.

"We all may be tough guys in some respect, but we all have a soft heart for kids," Ledford said. "Smith was an extremely smart kid that articulated himself very, very well."

Ledford put Smith in pads and let him onto the field for two-a-days. The 30-year veteran coach saw talent and suspected Smith was older than 16. Smith showed a birth certificate that appeared to prove his age, but administrators soon saw evidence that it was altered or forged. They didn't let Smith in. He left and never came back. He was actually 19 at the time, records show. top 25 high school football teams,

"Next thing you know, you find out he's been pulling that everywhere and he may be a con artist," said Ledford, who talked to several other coaches at different schools.

Some schools let Smith practice with the football team, not realizing he had also visited other schools telling a similar story. South Oak Cliff High School officials said he brought someone posing as a district case worker. Smith actually attended Samuell High School, said Dallas Independent School District officials.

"I thought we had a troubled kid," Ledford said. "I'm just glad we caught it and it didn't affect our kids one way."  tampa 21 man football,

Smith also visited Richardson, Seagoville, North Dallas, Hillcrest, Townview Magnet, Sunset, W.T. White, Molina, Lake Highlands and Garland high schools.

Neither Dallas police nor Dallas Independent School District are investigating the incidents as a crime at this point.




Source: 9news

Thursday, 8 December 2011

Hoover dam helicopter crash

hoover dam helicopter crash - A tourist helicopter based in Las Vegas crashed near the Hoover Dam on Wednesday, killing all five people aboard, the National Park Service said.

The pilot of the helicopter and all four passengers are confirmed dead, the Lake Mead National Recreational Area said on its Twitter feed.

The Eurocopter AS350 helicopter crashed during the late afternoon, according to Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor. The circumstances of the crash approximately 12 miles east of Las Vegas McCarran International Airport were not known, he said.

The crash occurred on the western side of the River Mountains about a half mile within the boundary of Lake Mead National Recreation Area and about 4 miles west of the Alfred Merritt Smith Water Treatment Plant, according to National Park Service spokesman Andrew Munoz.

The helicopter belonged to Sundance helicopters, according to the park service, and crashed near Lake Mead.

"Sundance Helicopters regrets to report that a Sundance helicopter with five people on board went down 16 miles east of Las Vegas at approximately 4:45 this evening," company CEO Larry Pietropaulo said in a statement.

"Emergency personnel on the scene reported there were no survivors. Names of the deceased are being withheld pending notification of the next of kin. Sundance Helicopters is cooperating fully with the FAA and the NTSB in the investigation."

Sundance offers a helicopter tour to the Hoover Dam from Las Vegas, according to the company's website.

The company told the FAA that the aircraft was theirs and was on an air tour flight from McCarran to the Hoover Dam and back, Gregor said.

Sundance was involved in another deadly air crash in 2003, when the pilot of a helicopter of the same model and all six passengers on board were killed when one of the rotor blades apparently struck the Grand Canyon wall in Arizona, according to a National Transportation Safety Board report of the incident.

Recovery operations have been suspended for the evening, Munoz said, and will resume on Thursday morning.

The FAA and the NTSB are investigating the crash, Gregor said.

Source: yahoo

Weather disasters smash record

Weather disasters smash record - America smashed the record for billion-dollar weather disasters this year with a deadly dozen — and counting.

With an almost biblical onslaught of twisters, floods, snow, drought and wildfire, the U.S. in 2011 has seen more weather catastrophes that caused at least $1 billion in damage than it did in all of the 1980s, billion dollar weather disasters hits 12, even after the dollar figures from back then are adjusted for inflation. billion dollar weather disasters,

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration added two disasters to the list Wednesday, bringing the total to 12. The two are the Texas, New Mexico and Arizona wildfires and the mid-June tornadoes and severe weather. what is global warming,

NOAA uses $1 billion as a benchmark for the worst weather disasters.

Extreme weather in America this year has killed more than 1,000 people, according to National Weather Service Director Jack Hayes. The dozen billion-dollar disasters alone add up to $52 billion.

The old record for $1 billion disasters was nine, in 2008.

Hayes, a meteorologist since 1970, said he has never seen a year for extreme weather like this, calling it "the deadly, destructive and relentless 2011." billion dollar weather disasters hits 12,

And this year's total may not stop at 12. Officials are still adding up the damage from the Tropical Storm Lee and the pre-Halloween Northeast snowstorm, and so far each is at $750 million. And there's still nearly a month left in the year.

Scientists blame an unlucky combination of global warming and freak chance. They say even with the long-predicted increase in weather extremes triggered by manmade climate change, 2011 in the U.S. was wilder than they predicted. For example, the six large outbreaks of twisters can't be attributed to global warming, scientists say.

"The degree of devastation is extreme in and of itself, and it would be tempting to say it's a sign of things to come, though we would be hard-pressed to see such a convergence of circumstances occurring in one single year again for a while," said Jerry Meehl, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

Another factor in the rising number of billion-dollar calamities: More people are living in areas prone to disasters. billion dollar weather disasters hits 12,

The number of weather catastrophes that pass the billion-dollar mark when adjusted into constant dollars is increasing with each decade. In the 1980s, the country averaged slightly more than one a year. In the 1990s, it was 3.8 a year. It jumped to 4.6 in the first decade of this century. And in the past two years, it has averaged 7.5.

Other years had higher overall damage figures because of one gargantuan disaster, including Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and a 1988 drought.

But this isn't just about numbers.

"Each of these events is a huge disaster for victims who experience them," NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco said in an email. "They are an unprecedented challenge for the nation."

Half the billion-dollar disasters were tornado outbreaks in one of the deadliest years on record. More than 540 people were killed in those six tragedies. In four days in April, there were 343 tornadoes in the largest outbreak on record, including 199 in one day, which is another record.

Texas had more than a million acres burned by wildfire, a record for the state, and Oklahoma set a record for the hottest month ever in the U.S. The Ohio Valley had triple the normal rainfall, which caused major flooding along the Mississippi River.

"Too little water in the South, too much water in the North," said Andrew Weaver, a climate scientist at the University of Victoria in Canada. "It's a story we are hearing more and more often."

That's why the world has to do two things, said Princeton University geological sciences professor Michael Oppenheimer: try to slow global warming by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and prepare better for extreme weather.

Source: cbsnews

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