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Pop Culture Happy Hour: The Guilty Pleasure Problem And The Holiday Tune

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We’re not sure whether we really believe “guilty pleasures” exist, so naturally, we decided to start our show by talking about them. (Hey. We’re exploring ideas over here.) We throw around some of our more conflicted ideas about guilt, morality, taste, nostalgia, aesthetics, and ’80s girl-group pop. No, really! It’s a pretty complex topic, so settle in for a combination of toe-tapping and theorizing about whether it’s ever worth feeling guilty about the things you enjoy. (The fact that you can’t see the chair-dancing is a little sad.) The first time the phrase “I don’t even know what you’re talking about” is used is at about the 16:30 mark, so look out for that — and for the chaos that quickly follows. If you notice that I am not quite the same after that point, it’s because it took long minutes upon minutes for me to gather myself after Glen’s discussion about … well, it’s about karaoke, kind of, and everything sort of hit the skids after that. Because we’re on the topic of songs and because it’s that time of year, we move on next to holiday songs. Will Trey’s selections be more classical than, for instance, mine? Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps. Some of it is classical, some of it involves pop stars across generations, and some of it is about animals. That might be mine. Oh, quiet. Also, Trey does some homework and brings us the voice behind an extremely well-known tune you might be hearing right about now. Naturally, we end the show with a round of what’s making us happy this week, from unexpected performances to the coming of a backstage drama to yet another really, really funny Tumblr. Find us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter: me, Trey, Stephen, Glen and Mike. Tell us how to feel about guilt; we are begging you. And of course, share some holiday tunes or what’s making you happy.

Pop Culture Happy Hour: The Guilty Pleasure Problem And The Holiday Tune

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Instant Classic! Bob Dylan?s New Children?s Book and CD

Sterling Publishing releases a new children’s picture book, Blowin’ in the Wind, based on Bob Dylan’s classic song.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/PAY3zn0emMA/

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Live: Updates from Eagles-SEahawks

Scoring Summary

First Quarter

Phi Sea

TD

9:19

Marshawn Lynch 15 yard TD run (Steven Hauschka extra point is GOOD)?9:19
Drive:?5 Plays, 60 Yards, 3:19

0

7

Second Quarter

Phi Sea

TD

14:50

Marshawn Lynch 40 yard TD run (Steven Hauschka extra point is GOOD)?14:50
Drive:?6 Plays, 88 Yards, 2:54

0

14

TD

11:43

LeSean McCoy 1 yard TD run (Alex Henery extra point is GOOD)?11:43
Drive:?5 Plays, 71 Yards, 3:07

7

14

FG

0:16

Steven Hauschka 49 yard field goal?0:16
Drive:?7 Plays, 49 Yards, 2:33

7

17

Source: http://scores.nbcsports.msnbc.com/fb/boxscore.asp?gamecode=20111201026

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Bat Ears Deform For Better Ping Pickups

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Slow motion video and high resolution imaging show that horseshoe bats can deform the shape of their outer ears for superior echolocation. Cynthia Graber reports.

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Bat see with their ears. Which are highly attuned to pick up minute variations in the reflection of the sound pulses they use to echolocate. Here are some pulses, slowed down. [Bat sound.]

And now researchers have shown that horseshoe bats can manipulate the shape of their ears in milliseconds to better catch those bouncing sound waves.

Horseshoe bats had been known to move their entire outer ear, or pinna. But scientists wondered whether the motion was a generalized swiveling of the entire ear?the way a cat can point its whole ear in a specific direction?or whether the bats could delicately manipulate the shape of the pinnae.

The researchers analyzed the pinnae with high-speed video and high-resolution imaging. And they found that the pinnae could move from upright to bent and back again within a tenth of a second, less than the blink of an eye. The study appeared in the journal Physical Review Letters. [Li Gao et al, Ear Deformations Give Bats a Physical Mechanism for Fast Adaptation of Ultrasonic Beam Patterns]

The changes in the deformation of the bats? ears can correspond to different echolocation beam patterns. Which might allow the bats to tune in to particular frequencies. And you thought wiggling your ears was impressive.

?Cynthia Graber

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=f010bdbf20ada05402fcb69da921463a

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Patriots rout Eagles

By ROB MAADDI

updated 8:53 p.m. ET Nov. 27, 2011

PHILADELPHIA – The way Tom Brady was getting everyone involved, it’s a surprise no linemen or linebackers caught passes.

Brady threw for 361 yards and three touchdowns and the New England Patriots beat the Eagles 38-20 Sunday in a rematch of the 2005 Super Bowl.

Filling in for the injured Michael Vick for the second straight game, Vince Young couldn’t keep Philadelphia’s fading playoff hopes alive despite throwing for a career-best 400 yards passing.

The AFC East-leading Patriots (8-3) stayed in the hunt for the No. 1 seed in the conference behind a surgical-like effort from Brady.

The six-time Pro Bowl quarterback finished 24 of 34, Deion Branch had 125 yards receiving and Wes Welker caught eight passes for 115 yards and two TDs. Brady’s favorite targets, tight ends Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez, also chipped in.

Gronkowski caught his 11th TD pass and Hernandez had six receptions. BenJarvus Green-Ellis scored twice on the ground.

“It was more balanced today,” Brady said. “That’s how it needs to be. You have to run it. You have to throw it to everybody. We did a good job maximizing all the guys.”

The Eagles (4-7) are all-but-mathematically eliminated from playoff contention in a season that began with Super Bowl expectations.

Angry fans made their feelings known about coach Andy Reid, chanting “Fire Andy!” in the second half.

“The way we played, I can understand,” Reid said.

The defending NFC East champions fell to 1-5 at home and have lost eight of nine at the Linc, including a playoff loss to Green Bay last January.

Down 10-0 early, the Patriots rallied behind Brady. New England scored on five of its next six possessions, excluding a kneel-down at the end of the first half.

“Overall we did a great job of staying composed on the sideline and making the right adjustments and doing pretty much what we game planned for,” Branch said.

Brady and coach Bill Belichick improved to 4-0 against Reid’s Eagles, including a 24-21 win for their third NFL title in four years after the 2004 season.

“Tom did a good job really pressing the issue,” Belichick said. “He felt he had them on the run with some of the mismatches. Tom kept pressing it, guys got open and Tom did what he does best, finding the open guys.”

Young led the Eagles to a 17-10 win against the New York Giants last week in his first start in nearly a year. He put up decent numbers against the worst-ranked defense in the league, but couldn’t overcome another inept performance by the Eagles’ defense.

Young finished 26 of 48. It was just his third career game over 300 yards.

“Andy’s a tremendous guy,” Young said, defending Reid. “I have the utmost respect for him. Fans don’t understand some of the situations that goes on during the game. You can’t put it all on Andy. We’re going to always continue to keep fighting hard, playing hard for him.”

Michael Vick broke two lower ribs in a loss to Arizona on Nov. 13. He got hurt on the second play of that game and stayed in, but hasn’t practiced the past two weeks. It’s uncertain whether Vick can play when Philadelphia visits Seattle on Thursday night.

After a fast start, the Eagles fizzled.

Brady engineered a 70-yard drive capped by Green-Ellis’ 4-yard TD run to cut it to 10-7. The Pats converted two third downs on the drive, including two by penalty.

Helped by a missed call, New England’s defense then forced a three-and-out. Young was sacked by Rob Ninkovich, who spun the quarterback down by pulling his facemask. But the referees didn’t see it, eliciting loud boos from the crowd when the replay was shown on the video screen.

One play after just-signed Tiquan Underwood dropped a wide-open pass, Brady connected with Branch for 63 yards to the Eagles 1 on a third-and-13. Green-Ellis scored on the next play to put the Patriots up 14-10.

Antwaun Molden intercepted Young’s deep pass intended for DeSean Jackson on Philadelphia’s next play and returned it 27 yards to the Eagles 34. But the Patriots couldn’t convert the turnover into points. Stephen Gostkowski missed a 39-yard field goal wide right.

No problem for Brady and Co.

The Eagles went three-and-out again, and the Patriots went to a no-huddle when they got the ball back.

Welker blew past the secondary and Brady hit his wide-open target in stride for a 41-yard TD pass to give New England a 21-10 lead.

“He said if he got a certain look he could get it,” Brady said. “Afterward he came to the sideline and said, ‘I told you! I told you!’ It’s nice when they work out the way you talk about.”

Jackson dropped what could’ve been a 4-yard TD pass and the Eagles settled for a 22-yard field goal to get within 21-13.

It was the second time in the first half that Jackson appeared to shy away from contact and dropped a pass across the middle.

Fans let him hear it with a chorus of boos. Jackson, a two-time Pro Bowl pick, is in the final year of his rookie contract and has been unhappy that he didn’t get a new deal. He dropped a deep pass that could’ve been a TD in the third quarter, and was benched in the fourth quarter.

The Patriots got the ball to start the second half and Brady led them into the end zone again, tossing a 9-yard TD pass to Welker for a 31-13 lead.

Brady threw a 24-yard TD pass to Rob Gronkowski to extend it to 38-13 in the fourth quarter.

Notes: Patriots WR Chad Ochocinco sat out with a hamstring injury. … Gostkowski’s miss was his second from under 40 yards in 14 attempts. … McCoy has 11 TDs rushing, five shy of breaking the single-season team record held by Hall of Famer Steve Van Buren. … Young’s last 300-yard game was against Arizona on Nov. 29, 2009. He threw for 387 yards in Tennessee’s 20-17 win.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Ben Roethlisberger threw a short touchdown pass to Weslye Saunders and the Pittsburgh Steelers took advantage of four turnovers by Tyler Palko to beat the Kansas City Chiefs 13-9 on Sunday night.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45456717/ns/sports-nfl/

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TaraStiles: @heidikristoffer is back in NYC from her awesome retreat in Mexico! Come get the scoop and take her classes this week @stralayoga yay!

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Christmas shopping is easy. Buy books. (hamptonroads)

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Italy’s borrowing rates skyrocket, Monti scrambles

Italian Premier Mario Monti arrives for a meeting with European Commissioner for the Economy Olli Rehn, at Chigi’s Premier palace in Rome, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Italy had to pay sharply higher borrowing rates to entice investors to part with their cash during a couple of auctions Friday, in an acute sign that Europe’s crippling debt crisis is laying siege to the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The auction results are another sign that the country’s new technocratic government, faces a big battle to convince that it has a strategy to get a grip on the country’s massive debts. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Italian Premier Mario Monti arrives for a meeting with European Commissioner for the Economy Olli Rehn, at Chigi’s Premier palace in Rome, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Italy had to pay sharply higher borrowing rates to entice investors to part with their cash during a couple of auctions Friday, in an acute sign that Europe’s crippling debt crisis is laying siege to the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The auction results are another sign that the country’s new technocratic government, faces a big battle to convince that it has a strategy to get a grip on the country’s massive debts. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

European Commissioner for the Economy Olli Rehn, left, shakes hands with Italian Premier Mario Monti as they meet at Chigi’s Premier palace in Rome, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Italy had to pay sharply higher borrowing rates to entice investors to part with their cash during a couple of auctions Friday, in an acute sign that Europe’s crippling debt crisis is laying siege to the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The auction results are another sign that the country’s new technocratic government, faces a big battle to convince that it has a strategy to get a grip on the country’s massive debts. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

European Commissioner for the Economy Olli Rehn, left, is greeted by Italian Premier Mario Monti as they meet at Chigi’s Premier palace in Rome, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Italy had to pay sharply higher borrowing rates to entice investors to part with their cash during a couple of auctions Friday, in an acute sign that Europe’s crippling debt crisis is laying siege to the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The auction results are another sign that the country’s new technocratic government, faces a big battle to convince that it has a strategy to get a grip on the country’s massive debts. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Italian Premier Mario Monti arrives for a meeting with European Commissioner for the Economy Olli Rehn, at Chigi’s Premier palace in Rome, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Italy had to pay sharply higher borrowing rates to entice investors to part with their cash during a couple of auctions Friday, in an acute sign that Europe’s crippling debt crisis is laying siege to the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The auction results are another sign that the country’s new technocratic government, faces a big battle to convince that it has a strategy to get a grip on the country’s massive debts. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Italian Premier Mario Monti arrives for a meeting with European Commissioner for the Economy Olli Rehn, at Chigi’s Premier palace in Rome, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Italy had to pay sharply higher borrowing rates to entice investors to part with their cash during a couple of auctions Friday, in an acute sign that Europe’s crippling debt crisis is laying siege to the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The auction results are another sign that the country’s new technocratic government, faces a big battle to convince that it has a strategy to get a grip on the country’s massive debts. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

(AP) ? A week into his new job, Premier Mario Monti is running out of time to reassure nervous investors that his government has a strategy to deal with Italy’s crippling debts.

The nation’s borrowing rates skyrocketed Friday after a grim set of bond auctions, with a new auction looming Tuesday. Another borrowing debacle could ratchet up fears that Italy has entered a debt spiral driving it toward bankruptcy and the 17-nation eurozone into its most acute crisis yet.

Monti’s government of so-called “technocrats” is battling to convince investors that it has a successful strategy to reduce the country’s ?1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) debt. But Friday’s dismal bond auction results for the eurozone’s third largest economy temporarily battered Europe’s stock markets.

The auction outcome also is likely to fuel calls for European Union officials to do more to jump-start economic growth and the European Central Bank to use more firepower to cool down a rapidly escalating debt crisis.

“We still haven’t found a response that reassures investors,” said Jose Manuel Barroso, head of the European Commission. “As long as we’re unable to do that, we’ll have very serious problems and discussions in Europe.” He spoke during a visit to Portugal, which, like eurozone members Greece and Ireland, has taken an EU bailout to avoid bankruptcy.

Stephen Lewis, an analyst at Monument Securities, agreed with that outlook.

“The signs are that the euro will need a highly skilled financial engineer at the controls if it is to withstand the strains it is likely to face in the five remaining weeks of this year,” he said.

Driving market fears is the knowledge that Italy is too big for Europe to bail out.

Given the size of its debts ? Italy must refinance ?200 billion by the end of April alone ? the government is depending on investors for money. But when borrowing rates get too high that can fuel a potentially devastating debt spiral which could bankrupt the country.

Friday’s auctions showed that investors see Italian debt as increasingly risky.

The country had to pay an average yield of 7.814 percent to raise ?2 billion ($2.7 billion) in two-year bills ? sharply higher than the 4.628 percent it paid in the previous auction in October. And even raising ?8 billion ($10.7 billion) for six months proved exorbitantly expensive, as the yield for that spiked to 6.504 percent, nearly double the 3.535 percent rate last month.

Following the grim auction news, Italy’s borrowing rates in the markets shot higher, with the 10-year yield spiking 0.34 percentage point to 7.30 percent ? above the 7 percent threshold that forced other euro nations into bailouts.

Solid returns on Wall Street helped European markets recover from earlier losses Friday fueled by fears over Italy.

The EU monetary chief, Olli Rehn, also tried to reassure markets. After meeting in Rome with Monti on Friday, he emerged to praise new economic reforms that are “going in the right direction,” such as liberalizing professions, encouraging employers to hire, and making it easier for them to transfer workers.

But Rehn also said he expects more “bold measures” to follow.

Italy must adopt “a comprehensive and wide-ranging package of reforms to kick-start growth and offer young people not only more jobs but also better jobs,” the monetary affairs commissioner said.

Rehn was in Rome to monitor Italy’s compliance with promises to liberalize its labor market, reduce the bloated public sector and sell some state assets.

Analyst Raj Badiani, an economist at IHS Global Insight in London, said Monti must deliver more.

“I don’t think the markets have turned against Monti” and his “first stab” at promised reforms, Badiani said. “However, I argue that he will need to consider more draconian labor market reforms to reverse Italy’s woeful productivity performance since the adoption of the euro.”

Other analysts were less accommodating toward Monti, a former European Union competition commission with a reputation for taking tough stands.

“Mario Monti has failed so far to impress bond markets he has the power and authority to do what is required,” said Louise Cooper, a markets analyst at BGC Partners.

Monti was appointed to replace premier Silvio Berlusconi, whose conservative coalition squabbled for months over measures such as pension reform, which were urgently sought by EU and European Central Bank officials.

But Monti has no political party behind him, meaning he is at the mercy of lawmakers from Italy’s infamously bickering parties to back him on painful doses of austerity, with the next election looming in early 2013.

Italy was not the only euro-using country to have a disappointing auction this week.

Even Germany ? the region’s strongest economy and the main funder of eurozone bailouts ? suffered a shock Wednesday when it failed to raise all the money it sought, its worst auction result in decades.

Spain saw its borrowing rates ratchet sharply higher, even after a landslide election victory for the conservative Popular Party, which has made getting Spain’s borrowing levels down its top priority.

“Within the eurozone, the more favorable political climate in Spain and Italy has not brought any improvement in market sentiment,” said Herve Goulletquer, head of fixed-income research at Credit Agricole.

Monti has promised to balance Italy’s budget by 2013. He has pledged to introduce “fair but incisive” structural reforms, his office said after a Cabinet meeting Friday. Monti has promised to reform the pension system, reinstate home property taxes eliminated by Berlusconi’s government, and slash spending on government offices.

But even as Italy struggled to rescue itself, other signs of Europe’s debt crisis emerged.

Standard & Poor’s announced it is lowering its long-term sovereign credit rating for Belgium, citing a threat to exports and the euro country’s lack of a permanent government. The agency cut Belgium’s credit rating from AA+ to AA.

Belgium has been without a permanent government for 530 days, as a series of negotiators has struggled without success to bridge the country’s divide between its French-speakers and its Dutch-speakers.

On Friday, Moody’s also downgraded Hungary’s sovereign debt to junk status ? from Baa3 to Ba1 with a negative outlook ? a decision Hungary hotly criticized. Hungary is not a member of the eurozone, but trades with many of its members.

This week’s developments have ratcheted up the pressure on the European Central Bank to step up its bond purchases in the markets, though Germany adamantly opposes that. The current program is designed to support bond prices in the markets, thereby keeping a lid on the borrowing rates.

So far, the ECB has been buying limited amounts of bonds and has to sell an equivalent amount of assets.

The ECB said Monday it bought bonds worth only ?4.5 billion ($6 billion)last week, down from ?9.5 billion ($12.7 billion) a week earlier.

Potentially, the ECB has unlimited financial firepower through its ability to print money, and many countries in the eurozone, including France, want the bank to act more decisively to solve the debt crisis.

However, Germany finds the idea of monetizing debts unappealing, warning that it lets the more profligate countries off the hook for their bad practices.

Analyst Badiani said financial markets are “despairing over the very public disagreement between the French and German governments about how to use the ECB to regain control of the crisis, which has curbed the markets’ appetite for sovereign debt across Europe.”

But EU chief Barroso insisted that Germany isn’t opposed “in principle” on eurobonds.

Germany’s view is that “eurobonds can be considered once there’s a higher level of integration and discipline in the eurozone,” Barroso said.

____

Barry reported from Milan. AP writers Pan Pylas in London and Barry Hatton in Lisbon contributed to the story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-25-Italy-Financial%20Crisis/id-d5d98feade474cd3ae3f78874f4158c3

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