black lights CNN.com - Watch your weight, cut your cancer risk - Sep 29,
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( CNN) - - The American Cancer Society said Thursday that keeping weight under control is the most important thing non- smokers can do to prevent the disease. In revised guidelines, the society put top priority on diet and fitness, saying that eating a nutritious diet, staying active and limiting alcohol are the top things that people who don' t smoke should do to fight cancer. The guidelines are published Thursday in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians. ( One- third of the more than 500, 000 cancer deaths each year are attributable to poor diet and inadequate physical activity, including overweight and obesity, the cancer society said.
That' s about the same number of cancer cases caused by smoking. Avoiding tobacco products continues to be the most important avoidable risk factor in reducing cancer risk. But about 80 percent of Americans don' t smoke, and for those people, diet and exercise are paramount. & quot; No doubt about it - if you smoke, the most important thing for you to do is quit. If you don' t use tobacco products, your best shot at reducing your cancer risk is to watch your weight, be more active and eat well, & quot; said Colleen Doyle, director of nutrition and physical activity for the American Cancer Society and co- author of the report.
Research has long shown that colon, rectal, stomach, breast , prostate and pancreas cancers are related to diet. New studies indicate that for most nonsmokers, weight control can cut other cancer risks. & quot; There is evidence that losing weight can reduce the risk for postmenopausal breast cancer, and because of hormonal changes that occur with weight loss, there' s reason to believe it' s beneficial for other cancers as well, & quot; said Ms. Doyle. The guidelines also say that the standard recommendation - - 30 minutes of moderate exercise five days a week - - is still good, but it works better with with more strenuous activities such as biking, running or power walking.
Doyle said it' s time people understand they have a say in the future of their health. & quot; Unfortunately, there' s no guarantee. You can do all those things and still get cancer.
But the good news is that a lot of people think they don' t have any control over their risk of cancer and we' re here to tell people that absolutely you do have some control. & quot;
loans Hate messages found in museum suspect's car -
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WASHINGTON ( CNN) - - A handwritten message in a notebook found in the car of the man accused of fatally shooting a Holocaust museum security guard boasted, & quot; You want my weapons - - this is how you' ll get them, & quot; an FBI criminal complaint says. The purpose of the complaint is to establish probable cause for bringing charges against white supremacist James von Brunn, 88, in the shooting death Wednesday of a security guard at the U. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Von Brunn is charged with a federal count of murder, according to court documents. If convicted, said acting U.
Attorney Channing Phillips, he would face a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole and, if certain criteria are met, could face the death penalty. Von Brunn also is charged with killing while in possession of a firearm in a federal facility. He remained hospitalized in critical condition Thursday from shots fired by other security guards.
The complaint says he was shot in the face and fell backward outside the museum' s front door. Stephen Tyrone Johns, the security guard who was shot to death, had opened the door for the gunman, who then raised a rifle and killed him, authorities told reporters Thursday.
Johns, 39, & quot; was kind enough to open the door, allowing him to enter, & quot; Lanier said. & quot; As he entered, he raised the rifle and shot special police Officer Johns. & quot; According to the complaint, Johns was shot in the left upper chest area. He died at a hospital. The notebook discovered by police also contained other messages from the man who flaunted his anti- Jewish, anti- black beliefs. & quot; The Holocaust is a lie. Obama was created by Jews. Obama does what Jew owners tell him to do.
Jews captured America' s money. Jews control the mass media. The First Amendment is abrogated - - henceforth, & quot; an excerpt said.
At the end of the writings was the signature: James W. von Brunn. The Holocaust museum, which is near the Washington Monument and other popular tourist attractions, remained closed Thursday, its flags lowered to half- staff in tribute to Johns. A six- year veteran of the museum' s security staff, Johns was hailed as a hero by Washington Mayor Adrian Fenty and other officials.
Johns was a resident of Temple Hills, Maryland, according to a statement issued by Wackenhut Services Inc. , which provided security services at the museum since 2002. Johns & quot; died heroically in the line of duty, & quot; said Sara Bloomfield, director of the museum. & quot; Obviously there are no words to express our grief and shock over the horrific event that took place at this museum today, & quot; Bloomfield said.
Von Brunn is a Holocaust denier, well- known to human rights groups for decades, who created an anti- Semitic Web site called & quot; The Holy Western Empire. & quot; The Southern Poverty Law Center, which focuses on human rights, said von Brunn has & quot; an extremely long history with neo- Nazis and white supremacists. & quot; He has repeatedly claimed & quot; The Diary of Anne Frank, & quot; an iconic diary written by a teenage girl who was hiding from Nazis with her family, was a hoax. Johns was killed on the day the museum was to stage a play based on Anne Frank and two days before what would have been her 80th birthday. Joseph Persichini Jr. , assistant director in charge of the FBI' s Washington Field Office, said at a news conference that police were investigating whether the killing of Johns, who was black, might be considered a hate crime.
Von Brunn served six years in prison for trying in 1981 to kidnap Federal Reserve Board members because of high interest rates. He blamed his prison term on a & quot; Negro jury, Jew/ Negro attorneys& quot; and & quot; a Jew judge, & quot; he said on his Web site. One of many questions is whether von Brunn, as a convicted felon, should have been barred from owning weapons.
Witnesses to the shooting described blood on the floor and chaos within the museum' s halls. Visitor Maria Hernandez told CNN she heard five shots and saw the wounded security guard. & quot; It was definitely a security guard; he was down bleeding on the floor, & quot; said Hernandez, 19. & quot; He was face down.
His back . . . blood was coming out. & quot; Sirens blared as emergency vehicles converged on the area.
The museum was full at the time, with a & quot; couple of thousand& quot; people inside, said William Parsons, chief of staff at the museum. & quot; Never take your guard force and security people for granted, & quot; he said. & quot; They did exactly what they were supposed to do to protect people in the museum. & quot; The shooting sent shock waves throughout the nation' s capital and elsewhere. & quot; I am shocked and saddened by today' s shooting at the U.
Holocaust Memorial Museum, & quot; said President Obama, who just days earlier had spoken emotionally about the Holocaust when he visited Buchenwald, a former Nazi concentration camp with Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel. & quot; This outrageous act reminds us that we must remain vigilant against anti- Semitism and prejudice in all its forms, & quot; Obama said Wednesday. Israel issued a statement through its embassy, expressing sadness and condemning the attack. The Anti- Defamation League said the shooting & quot; reminds us in the starkest way where the spread of hatred can lead. & quot; The Council on American- Islamic Relations condemned & quot; this apparent bias- motivated attack& quot; and said it stands & quot; with the Jewish community and with Americans of all faiths in repudiating the kind of hatred and intolerance that can lead to such disturbing incidents. & quot; The museum canceled a performance scheduled for Wednesday night of a play about racism and anti- Semitism, based on a fictional meeting between Anne Frank and Emmett Till, the teenage victim of a racist killing in the United States. Attorney General Eric Holder and Rep.
Steve Cohen, D- Tennessee, were among those planning to attend the play, which was written by Janet Langhart Cohen, the wife of former Defense Secretary and U.
Treating compulsive gambling can be challenging. That' s partly because most people have a hard time admitting they have a problem.
Yet a major component of treatment is working on acknowledging that you' re a compulsive gambler. If your family or your employer pressured you into therapy, you may find yourself resisting treatment.
But treating a gambling problem can help you regain a sense of control & mdash; and perhaps even help heal damaged relationships or finances. Psychotherapy.
Psychological treatments, such as behavior therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy, may be beneficial for compulsive gambling.
Behavior therapy uses systematic exposure to the behavior you want to unlearn ( gambling) and teaches you skills to reduce your urge to gamble. Cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on identifying unhealthy, irrational and negative beliefs and replacing them with healthy, positive ones.
Medications. Antidepressants and mood stabilizers may help problems that often go along with compulsive gambling & mdash; such as depression, obsessive compulsive disorder or ADHD & mdash; but not necessarily compulsive gambling itself. Medications called narcotic antagonists, which have been found useful in treating substance abuse, may help treat compulsive gambling. Self- help groups.
Some people find self- help groups, such as Gamblers Anonymous, a helpful part of treatment. Even with treatment, you may return to gambling, especially if you spend time with people who gamble or in gambling environments.
If you feel that you' ll start gambling again, contact your care provider or sponsor right away to head off a full- blown relapse. & copy; 1998- 2011 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research ( MFMER) .
Ex- editors: James Murdoch ' mistaken' Is Congress less partisan than we think? Octomom: Baby factory is closed forever Kyron Horman' s mom: ' We want answers' Bristol: I' m not accusing Levi of rape Zakaria: Cutting too fast slows growth Terror warning for utility companies Are tabloid papers good for America? Husband wanted to divorce missing wife Dogs attack shark Congressman battles home invader Mickelson' s science project Is a deal on the debt ceiling in sight? Owling: The new planking Ex- editors: James Murdoch ' mistaken' Young boy fights for kids' health care NFL owners approve labor deal How will a debt deal affect the economy? What is a social media background check?
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multi 30 years on, 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' inspires real adventures -
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( CNN) - - & quot; I will say, this moment is one that I will never, ever forget, & quot; said Jason Glisson, recalling a 2008 trip to La Milpa, Belize. & quot; I was the first person inside a very, very old manmade chamber. It was an incredible feeling.
Then I turned on my headlamp and saw three huge spiders. & quot; The opening to a possible future & quot; Indiana Jones& quot; movie? Close.
Glisson was describing his discovery of an ancient tomb - - including very well- preserved bones found therein - - as part of his study of archaeology, a passion that began for him when he saw the Indiana Jones movies as a child. & quot; Obsessed is more like it, & quot; he said, describing his interest in the movies, the first of which, & quot; Raiders of the Lost Ark, & quot; was released 30 years ago this summer. & quot; I could probably recite a large majority of the movies. & quot; Even though he' s a fictional character, it' s fairly safe to say that Indiana Jones is the most famous archaeologist in the world. & quot; As a teacher, I would ask my students, ' How many of you were influenced by Indiana Jones films? ' & quot; said Fred Hiebert, an archaeology fellow with National Geographic. & quot; Everyone in the class would raise their hands. & quot; Hiebert is the co- curator of an exhibition that makes its worldwide debut at the Montreal Science Centre from April 28 through September 19 and then moves on to other international locations. His enthusiasm for Indy, and the exhibition, is infectious.
The exhibition & quot; has an incredible array of movie props from the films. It' s got a lot of the designs and paintings and artwork behind the making of these films, & quot; he said. & quot; And, we not only have almost 100 incredible treasures from around the world, but we also have the archaeologist' s drawings and techniques they use to investigate the past.
You get to see what was in the minds of the filmmakers, and the archaeologists. & quot; Aside from the & quot; Indy& quot; versions of the Ark of the Covenant and the Holy Grail, there is a lot in the exhibit for hardcore fans of archaeology as well. & quot; We have a clay tablet with a map of a Mesopotamian city, one of the world' s oldest maps, & quot; Hiebert said. & quot; We have a fragment of a pot made 6, 000 years ago, with the oldest representation of wine.
We have a whole series of gorgeous prescribed pots from South America, and the first video of a scholar reading a scene from a stela, in a language no one has spoken for hundreds of years. & quot; Hiebert said he hopes that with this exhibition, & quot; People will enter the door as Indiana Jones and they will exit very inspired about archaeology. We want to inspire as many people as possible about science. & quot; Indy has certainly inspired a lot of people in the last few decades, judging from the i. Reporters, like Glisson, who shared their stories of adventure. & quot; Thirty years ago I sat in a darkened theater, my eyes glued to the big screen, and was swept away into a world of wonder as ' Raiders of the Lost Ark' unfolded in front of me, & quot; said Tim Preston of Petaluma, California. & quot; Like many of my generation, I dreamed of donning a fedora, picking up a bullwhip and setting off to confront the unknown. & quot; Things didn' t quite work out like that for Preston, but 10 years ago, he took a chance and flew to Belize to join an excavation with the Maya Research Program. & quot; One summer turned into another, followed soon thereafter by a graduate degree in archaeology and finally a job doing what I love the most: excavating Maya ruins deep in the jungles of Belize. & quot; Preston finds his occupation quite fulfilling: & quot; While I have never had to evade a cunningly constructed death trap or hold off a sword- wielding fanatic with my trusty bullwhip, I feel that I am living out the dream that I had as a young man. & quot; Jamin Eggert of La Jolla, California, who left his dedicated four- year engineering program at the University of California, San Diego, had a similar experience in 2009. & quot; I had dreamed of exploring hidden chambers and escaping in runaway coal cars since I first saw the ' Raiders' movies as a child, & quot; he said. & quot; Once the opportunity presented itself, I grabbed my hat and jacket and flew along the ' red arrow' over the Atlantic. & quot; Taking part in an archaeological dig in Khirbat- en- Nahas, Jordan, was unforgettable for Eggert. & quot; It was an adventure in detailing history, and I am very fortunate to have been able to be a part. & quot; The excavation was documented in a 2010 issue of & quot; National Geographic. & quot; Jasmine Prater was also intrigued by archaeology at an early age, thanks to Indy, and studied geoarchaeology at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio.
In 2007, she participated in a study in Guatemala' s Maya lowlands. & quot; The study is ongoing and we hope to learn a great deal about the site selection of the inhabitants in the region. & quot; & quot; Even though there isn' t as much danger and none of the spectacular Hollywood effects, it is no less exciting seeing these sites firsthand, & quot; she said. & quot; Indy' s gung- ho, get anything done attitude has served me well over the past 15 years working in the developing world, & quot; said Dr. Grant Gilmore, who runs the archaeology volunteer program at the St. Eustatius Center for Archaeological Research in the Netherlands Antilles. & quot; Indy is passionate when he is teaching - - that is perhaps the most common adjective used by my students to describe me. I would like to think that I strike a bit better balance between archaeology ' work' and family life - - thus Indy provides an example of how not to go about things. & quot; Gilmore said he keeps Indy in mind, along with other influences, like Norman Barka and Geoff Egan, when managing more than 650 archaeology sites.
Thomas Riddle from Greenville, South Carolina, integrates Indiana Jones' adventures into his history classes and created the website & quot; Adventures in Learning with Indiana Jones. & quot; His work on this and in promoting the educational value of the & quot; Young Indiana Jones& quot; series on DVD led to the opportunity to visit George Lucas' Skywalker Ranch in October: & quot; Twenty- nine years after first seeing a scruffy- looking, thrill- seeking archaeologist acquire, then lose, an odd- looking golden idol, I stood face- to- face with that same idol as it grinned at me from behind the glass of a display case. In an instant, I was sitting in a darkened theater watching Indiana Jones do his thing.
It was 1981, and I was 12 years old again. & quot; Of course, there' s a big difference between the fantastical adventures of the & quot; man in the hat& quot; and real archaeology ( the vast amounts of paperwork, for example) , but even so, fans like Glisson call it & quot; a wonderful source for inspiration and adventure. & quot; In a time where it seems just about anything can be found simply by searching online, the legacy of Indiana Jones is a reminder that there' s still more of the world left to be explored.
Ex- editors: James Murdoch ' mistaken' Is Congress less partisan than we think? Octomom: Baby factory is closed forever Kyron Horman' s mom: ' We want answers' Bristol: I' m not accusing Levi of rape Zakaria: Cutting too fast slows growth Terror warning for utility companies Are tabloid papers good for America?
Husband wanted to divorce missing wife Dogs attack shark Congressman battles home invader Mickelson' s science project Is a deal on the debt ceiling in sight? Owling: The new planking Ex- editors: James Murdoch ' mistaken' Young boy fights for kids' health care NFL owners approve labor deal How will a debt deal affect the economy? What is a social media background check? Murdoch paper' s controversial cartoon British phone hacking inquiry widened Ridicu.
List Classic: Actor, 51, weds teen ' This is no time to compromise' Consequences of not raising debt ceiling School district' s policy under scrutiny Notorious con man to return to prison Neutrality policy impacting bullying?
Teenager known as the ' Barefoot Bandit' Ridicu.
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Most expensive city in the world Lawmakers fighting like cats and dogs Fareed Zakaria answers your questions Bernard- Henri Levy speaks out on DSK Peter Godwin on Sudan Getting a Picasso into a war zone Choi: DADT dead but journey ' not done' Debt talks break down, so what happened?
Did James Murdoch mislead Parliament? Will NFL players agree to owners' offer? Hacking scandal: ' Somebody high up' knew Abrams: Murdochs ' got to be thrilled' Zakaria: Cutting too fast slows growth Ex- player: NFL abandoned me after injury Ex- insider: ' Murdoch is on the run now' Gergen: Prospects for default above 50% Debt crisis: Whatever happened to jobs? House vote ' one way of herding the cats' Octomom: Baby factory is closed forever Paris Hilton walks off set of GMA Gay man turns himself ' straight' Can Casey Anthony ever be forgiven?
Roseanne: I' m not good at marriage Chubby teen becomes beauty queen Shannon Tweed walks out on Gene Simmons Would Casey' s attorney let her babysit?
My father was ' The Grim Reaper' Clinton nudges India, upsets China Docs: Mammograms each year starting at 40 Cops: Law grad' s torso found at apartment Parents of missing triplet mom speak out 5- month- old vanishes in front of mom An initiative that could save lives Missouri mother of three is missing TV producer claims he met with Casey Murray' s defense wants jury sequestered My life as a Baldwin Adam Levine on why he loves Twitter Daniel Baldwin intent on divorce Has America lost its mojo? Is Congress less partisan than we think? Prince Alwaleed on Apple, News Corp. Panel judges Murdoch' s performance Cornel West and Tavis Smiley speak out Piers Morgan blasts Mensch' s ' lie' Piers Morgan: Behind the scenes Trump: Bachmann is ' highly underrated' Murdoch takes pie in the face The history of cocaine ' Mini Darth Vader' talks health care Impact of concussions to brain Ex- players sue NFL over concussion risks Carrie Underwood earning big Katy Perry' s 9 VMA noms; Gaga snubbed? Ryan Reynolds on the fame game Chris Brown to star in a romantic movie Will Nancy Grace interview ' tot mom' ?
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( CNN) - - Since its debut in late June, Google+ has captured much of the tech world' s online conversation. The chatter is generally positive, with tech bloggers cheering Google' s new social network as a cleaner and more robust alternative to Facebook.
But there have been some bumps on the road. Over the weekend, some Google+ users with notification e- mails - - the messages the company sends out if another user adds you to their & quot; circles& quot; of contacts on the site or comments on one of your posts. Instead of sending those notes out only once, as intended, Google+ sent them & quot; over and over again, & quot; writes Google' s Vic Gundotra in a post on his Google+ page. & quot; Thank you for helping us during this field trial, and once again, we are very sorry for the spam, & quot; the Google vice president wrote Saturday.
Most Google+ users seemed quick to forgive the slip- up. & quot; No worries Vic.
Keep up the good work!
Looking forward to more improvements! & quot; one user wrote in a reply to the apology. & quot; It' s alright, man! : D You rocks! & quot; said another.
Gundotra chalked the spam up to growing pains. & quot; For about 80 minutes we ran out of disk space on the service that keeps track of notifications. Hence our system continued to try sending notifications. Over, and over again. Yikes, & quot; he wrote. & quot; We didn' t expect to hit these high thresholds so quickly, but we should have. & quot; It' s unclear exactly how many people have joined Google+ , and the service undoubtedly has far, far fewer users than Facebook, which leads the field with . The fact that the Google+ community is still relatively small is no surprise for two reasons: First, the site is so new; and second, it still isn' t public, meaning you have to get a personal invitation in order to sign up - - at least for now.
But it' s clear that the new, non- Facebook social network has attracted enough attention that it' s growing rather quickly, setting it apart from Google' s other attempts to start a social network. Google+ already has more than 4. 5 million users, , Paul Allen, who used census data about surnames to make his calculation. One problem with this rapid growth, as the Google spam shows, is technical.
It' s hard to make a new network work perfectly if it' s expanding too quickly. Google has used this logic repeatedly to justify its limited- invite approach, instead of letting anyone on the Internet join the network.
Another issue, however, is social. At first, a limited network like Google+ feels intimate - - just as Facebook did before nonuniversity users could join it. But with growth comes change, and that could leave some Google+ users feeling that their cozy private party has been transformed into the county fair. Finally, Google+ users have been pointing out features of other social networks that either don' t exist on Google+ or aren' t easy to use.
One is the idea of & quot; institution pages, & quot; which, on Facebook and Twitter, let companies put out info about new products, news stories and such. There' s no such feature to date on Google' s new social network, although . Another is celebrity verification.
On Twitter, for example, if you go to Lady Gaga or Justin Bieber' s profile page, there' s a little next to the name, which is a signal to visitors that it' s actually the account of a celebrity. On Google+ , it' s unclear if accounts are real or fake. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg' s Google+ page stirred up news on the blogosphere because it' s interesting that the leader of a competing social network would join this new service, and because it was unclear if his page was real. Blogger Robert Scoble cleared this up in a text message conversation with Zuckerberg, who .
Similar authenticity issues have popped up with the Google+ pages of Kanye West, Nancy Pelosi and Michael Dell, among others. The & quot; While it' s understandable that a verification system was not at the forefront of Google' s mind when preparing to launch the network, it looks like one is desperately needed now. We want to be able to tell the real stars from the fakes, so we' re not wasting our time.
Or even better - - maybe there should be a way for the fakes to never exist in the first place. & quot; For its part, Google continues to say additional updates are coming. And, in comments to those pleas for patience, users generally seem to believe that the benefits of the service will be worth the wait.
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My father was ' The Grim Reaper' Clinton nudges India, upsets China Docs: Mammograms each year starting at 40 Will migraines impact Bachmann campaign? Murdoch acting like himself? Gadhafi: Brega will be ' hell' Republican social issues in 2012 5- month- old vanishes in front of mom An initiative that could save lives Missouri mother of three is missing TV producer claims he met with Casey Murray' s defense wants jury sequestered Tot mom allegedly spotted at airport Cops: Son kills parents, throws party Where is Casey Anthony? Has America lost its mojo? Is Congress less partisan than we think?
Prince Alwaleed on Apple, News Corp.
Panel judges Murdoch' s performance Cornel West and Tavis Smiley speak out Piers Morgan blasts Mensch' s ' lie' Piers Morgan: Behind the scenes Trump: Bachmann is ' highly underrated' Murdoch takes pie in the face Piers Morgan: CNN host, ' AGT' judge Tom Arnold discusses his dark past Nancy Grace opens up on fiance' s murder Claustrophobic fighter pilot ' Mini Darth Vader' talks health care Impact of concussions to brain Ex- players sue NFL over concussion risks Brain injury patient back on the road Katy Perry' s 9 VMA noms; Gaga snubbed? Ryan Reynolds on the fame game Chris Brown to star in a romantic movie Will Nancy Grace interview ' tot mom' ? Bounty hunter wants to sue Casey Anthony Khloe Kardashian' s Twitter outrage Hollywood hacking outrage J. Lo and Marc Anthony split shocker Justin and Selena: Wedding crashers? Casey Anthony in disguise?
Kim Kardashian' s mom gets facelift Al- Qaeda uses cartoons to get recruits al- Awlaki: Wanted Dead or Alive?
Musharraf to U.
S: Keep your guard up Drone of the future tested Terror warning for utility companies Musharraf: I think Perry will run Lobbyists battle amid deficit cuts Debt debate gets ugly New TSA body scan less invasive Hackers turn tables on Murdoch empire Migraines a deal breaker for Bachmann? ' Nobody proved Murdoch was involved' How Giuliani would negotiate debt talks Rudy Giuliani weighs in on debt talks Politicos agree: GOP field leaderless
( CNN) - - After the birth of octuplets this week, some doctors are questioning the ethics and medical practice that contribute to extreme multiple births. Multiples have higher health risks because of their likelihood to be born premature. Many premature babies, such as the new California octuplets, are much smaller and face greater dangers than full- term. These risks include bleeding in the brain, intestinal problems, developmental delays and learning disabilities that could last throughout their lives. But not all preemies have medical or developmental problems.
Doctors who are caring for the octuplets at Kaiser Permanente hospital in Bellflower, California, caution that it is too soon to tell whether any of the eight premature babies have neurological or medical conditions, such as cerebral palsy or anemia.
Dr. Mandhir Gupta, director of neonatology at the hospital, said Tuesday, & quot; There are no indications so far, but again, it is very, very early.
They are not 24 hours old yet. & quot; The six boys and two girls were born Monday through Caesarean section.
Several are getting oxygen assistance but are reported to be & quot; doing very well& quot; after nearly 31 weeks in the womb. Ten years ago, Nkem Chukwu of Houston, Texas, gave birth to the United States' first surviving octuplets. The eighth baby, a girl named Odera, weighed only 10.
3 ounces and died after suffering heart and lung failure a week after birth. In total, the eight premature babies weighed about 10 pounds. Septuplets born to Bobbi and Kenny Mc.
Caughey of Des Moines, Iowa, in November 1997 all survived, and two of them have cerebral palsy. The mother of the California octuplets wants to remain anonymous, and the hospital has not answered questions about whether she was using fertility treatments. But medical experts who are not connected with the births say it would be nearly impossible for a woman to naturally conceive eight babies at once.
Dr. Mary Hinckley, a California- based reproductive endocrinologist, said, & quot; most commonly, this happens via fertility- assisted conception. & quot; A mother with a multiple birth could have used hormones to grow and ovulate multiple eggs at the same time.
A patient may have not followed the doctor' s recommendations, or the doctor may not have understood the consequences, allowing the patient to produce too many eggs, which were then fertilized, resulting in a multiple birth. & quot; It' s considered fairly reckless for reproductive endocrinology in the United States, & quot; Hinckley said. & quot; Through guidelines, we' ve really altered this so [ large multiple births] are incredibly uncommon here in the U. It' s usually if the doctor is not doing what he was trained to do or the patient is not following the doctor' s advice. & quot; The more premature the babies are born, the greater risks they have of dying or facing significant lifelong problems, said Dr. Norbert Gleicher, medical director at the Center for Human Reproduction in New York. & quot; The media should not make this into heroic case, & quot; Gleicher said. & quot; This is anything but a heroic case.
This is very bad medicine. & quot; Twins carry low risk of premature birth. Triplets have higher risk than twins, quadruplets have even higher risks, and so on, he said.
As a result, & quot; octuplets are crazy with tremendous risk, & quot; Gleicher said. & quot; Our function as physicians is to help our patients to have babies, but it is our principle that patients have healthy babies. So we have an absolute responsibility to prevent high or multiple births. & quot; Experts aren' t sure why multiple births tend to occur prematurely. Some suggest that the uterus can' t handle such a large mass, causing the woman to go into early labor.
During the , the fetuses are cramped inside the uterus and compete for the same resources, and some may be weaker or smaller than others. The eight children born this week weighed from 3.
4 pounds to 1. 8 pounds. & quot; There was a wide range of weights, & quot; said Dr. Leonard E. Weisman, director of the Perinatal Center at Texas Children' s Hospital. & quot; Some of that might be due to human variation, or some of it might be due to the fact they might have been compressed and not getting enough support from the placenta. & quot; Weisman, who helped deliver the first set of octuplets 10 years ago, said there are health risks to the mother as well. & quot; There' s a potential that the babies would outstrip the needs of the mother, & quot; Weisman said. & quot; It' s rather remarkable mother could stay with eight fetuses for 31 weeks.
That' s unusual. & quot; Two of the California octuplets were on ventilators, or breathing tubes, in the hours after their birth, but those tubes were removed Monday night, Gupta said. While some of the babies are receiving oxygen through their noses, most are breathing by themselves, he said. & quot; The lungs are still immature, but they really are doing very well, & quot; Gupta said. & quot; The hearts are working very good.
We have very good blood pressure. & quot; Gupta refused to comment on the babies' chances of survival, since & quot; we' ve never had eight babies born at 30 weeks. & quot; Single babies born at 30 weeks face & quot; very, very good& quot; odds, he said. With multiples, even twins, he said, & quot; we expect them to do a lot worse than these babies are doing. & quot; Gupta said Monday that the first three to seven days will be critical for the octuplets, saying they could be in incubators for six to eight weeks and hospitalized for 10. The babies have not been named.
The parents of the first octuplets offered their advice for the newest family. & quot; There' s definitely been some challenges, of course. It initially was overwhelming. But now we' re getting used to it, & quot; Nkem Chukwu told CNN Radio. & quot; They are now 10 years old, and it' s like we' ve forgotten what it was like during the initial stage. & quot; Her husband, Iyke Louis Udobi, said the new parents will need community support, & quot; a lot of diapers and milk. And they need to take it easy. & quot; CNN' s Shahreen Abedin and Shelby Erdman contributed to this report.
Editor' s note: CNN has asked its journalists across the country to offer their thoughts on how the economic crisis is affecting their cities. In this installment, All Platform Journalist Jim Spellman reports from Denver, Colorado. DENVER, Colorado ( CNN) - - The conventional wisdom here in the Mile High City is that Denver entered the recession early and is pulling out of it ahead of the rest of the country. Time and again I have heard politicians, journalists and business people tell me that it isn' t so bad here, that Denver is poised to lead the nation in an economic recovery. Maybe, but the signs on the ground are a little harder to read.
Down on Broadway I stop by a UPS store a couple of times a week. The owner' s name is Hari Dallakoti. Dallakoti always has a smile on his face and seems to know all his customers by name - - he was calling out to me by the second time I entered the shop.
People drop by to ship out packages, make copies and pick up deliveries. There is always a crowd when I have been in, but Dallakoti tells me business is down 25 percent this month versus the same time last year. & quot; Finally it' s hitting in this area, and I believe that people are afraid of spending money, & quot; he says. & quot; It' s like a ripple effect, and I think I am feeling it now. & quot; Dallakoti says customers who once sent birthday presents across the country are now only sending cards. Also, e. Bay- related shipping is down, and he has seen a falloff in people sending mortgage- related documents.
He has five employees and says he hasn' t had to let anyone go, but he has had to cut back their hours.
He agrees that business is better in than in other parts of the country and is confident he will weather the economic storm, but it may be a while before things get better for him. & quot; In my opinion it' s going to get worse for the next couple, three months, and I' m hoping it will turn around after June, & quot; he says.
A block up Broadway is a little guitar store called Music Gear Guys. I play guitar, and this was one of the first businesses I stopped by when I moved to Denver in January. I have been in the shop four or five times and have been surprised that every time I drop by, the place is packed. & quot; The recession affected us a little last year but overall - - knock on wood - - it hasn' t really affected me too much, & quot; says owner Gregory Decker, who thinks the recession may actually be helping his business. & quot; I have a feeling that people are looking for hobbies or different forms of entertainment that aren' t too expensive, & quot; Decker explains. His store is crowded with new and used guitars, amplifiers and accessories. He says guitars based on designs from the 1960s are the hot items in the store.
Like Dallakoti, the UPS store owner, Decker seems to know all of his customers by name.
He says that in this economy you have to focus on customer service to stand a chance. He doesn' t advertise, instead relying on word of mouth, and keeps overhead low: He is the sole employee. & quot; Relationships are what make my business thrive. Without them I wouldn' t be as successful, & quot; he says.
But even here in a relatively successful small business there are signs of the hard times other people have been experiencing. Beginning last year more customers started coming in to sell Decker their guitars in hopes of making ends meet. & quot; A lot of people are selling their gear due to job layoffs and needed the money, & quot; he says. The recession started with free- falling housing values and, in this respect, the signs are harder to read. Over the weekend I took my dog for a walk through my neighborhood near Sloans Lake in Northwest Denver and decided to count how many houses were for sale. In a six- block walk, I counted two houses for rent and 13 for sale, including the house next door to me.
These homes sit like ghosts in the neighborhood. There are open houses on Sundays, but few people come by. The houses are all well- maintained, though most of them appear to be empty. My neighbors hope these places don' t fall into foreclosure; they are worried the neighborhood will fall apart if they do.
I' ll be keeping my eye on the house next door, and keeping my fingers crossed that my new hometown will be back on track soon.
forex CNN Student News Transcript: August 19, 2009 -
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( CNN Student News) - - August 19, 2009 Quick Guide - Help students visualize some complex issues surrounding health insurance. - Learn about security concerns tied into Afghanistan' s presidential election. - Celebrate the centennial birthday of Abraham Lincoln' s monetary debut. Transcript THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED. CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Penny for your thoughts, or thoughts on the penny? We' ve got one of those in today' s CNN Student News.
From the CNN Center, I' m Carl Azuz. AZUZ: First up, recess! That' s what Congress is in right now. It' s not in session, but that doesn' t mean the lawmakers are on vacation.
Many of them are holding town hall meetings in their home districts, where voters are encouraged to raise questions or concerns about what' s going on in Washington. Now recently, these town halls have been dominated by health care. As we' ve talked about this week, one of the biggest issues in the debate is the so- called public option: a government- run health insurance program.
President Obama supports it; some lawmakers strongly oppose it. Earlier this week, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said the public option is & quot; not the essential element of health care reform. & quot; Some people took that as a sign that the president might be giving up on the idea. Yesterday, Secretary Sebelius said that' s not the case. HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES SECRETARY KATHLEEN SEBELIUS: Absolutely nothing has changed.
We continue to support the public option that will help lower costs, give American consumers more choice and keep private insurers honest. If people have other ideas about how to accomplish these goals, we will look at those too. But the public option is a very good way to do this. AZUZ: Some senators are proposing another idea: health care cooperatives, or co- ops. Just like the public option, these are plans that some people are for, and you guessed it, others are strongly against.
If all this talk about health care reform has you a little confused, don' t worry about it. You are not alone. This iss an incredibly complex issue, one that Tom Foreman helps us visualize right now. TOM FOREMAN, CNN CORRESPONDENT: If you want to understand what' s really happening with this whole health reform debate, think of the insurance business as a big shopping mall where there are a bunch of private stores that sell insurance. The supporters of the reform say they don' t really compete a whole lot with each other, so they let the prices get higher and higher.
And there are people like this who really don' t go anywhere and they don' t fit into insurance reform. So the goal of reformers, many of them, is to say, & quot; Let' s have a government insurance office in the middle of this mall. & quot; They will be heavily funded; they' ll give a place for these people to go so they will have some kind of place where they can have insurance. And because they are offering a lower- cost alternative, because they' re not out to make a profit, they will force the other places to lower their prices and effectively have a sale that will benefit everyone.
Now, critics of this program say that' s not what' s going to happen.
They say that instead of having a sale, what you' re actually going to have is people that are driven out of business.
There will simply be not enough business once all these people start being more attracted to the more cost. . . less expensive government insurance. So the bottom line is, this is the fear of those who say this is a bad idea. So if this does not happen, then what do you look for?
Well, another option is an insurance cooperative system. What is that? Well, an insurance cooperative basically will take people from across the country who can' t afford insurance, no matter where they are, and it will connect all these people to each other. By connecting them, it will make it possible for these people to share the cost of their medical expenses with each other.
They would essentially form a small, private insurance company that they would run with their own board of directors.
It' s a non- profit, so it would also create competition for existing insurance companies, but possibly push the prices down, at least that' s the theory. But this is also very much up in the air as to exactly how it would work, who would be involved and what it would really cost and what the benefits might or might not be. Vaccine Trials AZUZ: Textbooks, pencils, hand sanitizer? It might be a common sight in the classroom this year, as schools prepare to fight the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu.
The federal government is getting ready too, stocking up on doses of an H1N1 vaccine.
Officials say 45 million doses will be ready in October.
That' s a lot less than anticipated, but they' re going to add 20 million more doses each week. Health experts say there are some simple steps you can take to help prevent the spread of the virus yourself, like washing your hands and covering your mouth when you cough or sneeze.
Fast Facts GEORGE RAMSAY, CNN STUDENT NEWS: Time for some Fast Facts! Afghanistan is scheduled to hold a presidential election this Thursday.
It' ll be just the second one since its former Taliban rulers were thrown out of power in 2001. According to the Afghan constitution, candidates must be Muslim, must be Afghan citizens with Afghan parents, and must not have been convicted of any crimes. More than 30 men and women are running for the office, but the leading candidates are current President Hamid Karzai, Dr. Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani. In order to win, a candidate has to get more than 50 percent of the vote; otherwise, a run- off election will be held.
AZUZ: Officials are deploying about 300, 000 troops to give security for Afghan voters tomorrow. The Taliban have said it plans to disrupt the election, and they' ve threatened to kill Afghans who show up at the polls.
The country has been struck by a wave of violence leading up to this week' s presidential election, including two attacks yesterday in the capital city of Kabul. Seven people were killed and more than 50 others injured in a suicide bombing aimed at a military convoy. And earlier, two rockets were fired at the presidential palace. Blog Update AZUZ: Alright. We love to hear your voices in our show too, and one way we do that is through our blog at CNNStudent.
News. com. We asked you recently about NFL Quarterback Michael Vick: Will you be cheering, booing or just not caring when he takes the field for the Philadelphia Eagles? Kerri wrote, & quot; I think it' s really cruel that Vick did the whole dogfighting thing, so he doesn' t really get my respect. & quot; But Eric says, & quot; Vick was a top- notch quarterback. Since he' ll be an impact player on his team, I think that fans would support him since fans want to be entertained. & quot; Tarence notes, & quot; Vick served his time in prison, so I think people should give him another chance. & quot; But Elijah says, & quot; Vick couldn' t act appropriate for a man of his wealth and fame and should not get another chance. & quot; And Toray writes, & quot; People focus too much on the extra drama instead of enjoying the game.
Sure I' d watch him play. It' s not about what mistakes he made; it' s about how good of a football player he is. & quot; Great stuff!
We love your comments! Please remember, first names only.
We can only use your first names. And please be sure to stay on the subject of the blog you' re talking about. Is this Legit? TOMEKA JONES, CNN STUDENT NEWS: Is this legit? The American penny has always featured the face of Abraham Lincoln.
Not legit! So when did the former president' s face first show up on the coin?
You' re about to find out.
AZUZ: This is a tale of heads: Abraham Lincoln' s, to be specific.
For in the year of his 200th birthday, there' s something else to celebrate about the popular president: his bronzed bust! You' ve got it in your pocket.
Lincoln has headed up the penny for 100 years, to the month. Never one to be a conformist, number 16 does something no other president does on a U. S. coin: face right. Don' t give a cent for any conspiracy theories though; it' s only because Lincoln happened to be facing that direction in the image the designer picked.
And if you' ve happened to pick up a 1909 Lincoln head penny, it could be worth a lot more than your thoughts.
An e. Bay search revealed that some of these vintage coins command more than $ 1, 000 each. Now that' s change we can believe in!
And it certainly goes further than a modern penny. In 2006, it actually started costing more to make a penny than the coin was worth. That was because the price of the metals used was on the rise.
But that didn' t stop the U. S. mint from minting a tribute to Lincoln five score after he got set on a cent. The & quot; obverse& quot; of the penny - - in other words, heads - - will look the same.
But the & quot; reverse, & quot; tails, will tell four different tales, with four new designs showing scenes from Lincoln' s life. AZUZ: So while the value of the penny might have changed over the past century, you could see why the design still makes sense. Promo AZUZ: Okay, of you' re curious about what' s coming up tomorrow on CNN Student News, then you want to sign up for our daily e- mail! This free newsletter gives you a sneak preview of some of the stories we' re covering on the show, and it includes links to our blog and downloadable maps. Head to CNNStudent.
News. com and sign up today! Before We Go AZUZ: Before we go, we' ve got a couple tickets to the gun show! Shirley Coen may not look like a typical weight lifter, but don' t underestimate this 85- year- old powerhouse.
She just set a bench press world record!
55 pounds, the first woman ever in her age group to pump that much iron. She' s only been lifting for two months, and Coen' s already boasting that she plans to break the record she just set. Goodbye AZUZ: She did it once, so I guess the weight' s already off her shoulders. We won' t press our luck with any more puns, even though you said you wanted then. Have a great day.
( CNN) - - One person was killed and two people were injured after gunmen attacked Guinean President Alpha Conde' s residence, a government spokesman said Tuesday. The person killed was a member of the presidential guard, the Ministry of Communications said. The president was not injured. The attack occurred in downtown Conakry, the capital city of the West African nation early Tuesday morning and the battle lasted two hours.
Authorities believe the attackers may have been soldiers with the Guinean army, said Durus Yale Dore, a government spokesman. Local reports were calling it a failed coup attempt. Conde has been the president of Guinea for less than a year.
His election last year ended a two- year transition to civilian rule after a military junta took power in December 2008. Journalist Amadou Tam Camara said the attackers were heavily armed and the group had a rocket launcher. The president' s compound was heavily damaged and the attack has surprised many in Guinea, Camara said.
lawyer Apple may fill its iPhone 5 vacuum with new Macs and an interim phone -
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( ) - - Apple may be changing its usual i. Phone update schedule to the fall, instead of a pre- summer launch in June/ July - - the news has popped up multiple times, and a source familiar with Apple' s plans has also confirmed it with Fast Company. But is a company that thrives on PR excitement. . . and the big hole in the update schedule before the i.
Phone 5 arrives could damage sales.
Hence Apple seems to be ready to release a barrage of new hardware, including the white version of the i. Phone 4, to keep everyone' s pro- Apple sentiment topped up. At the same time, there are many rumors about future Apple products, including the next- gen i. Phone. Is all this deliberate spin?
If so, it' s pretty clever. It may even allow Apple to delay the really juicy new hardware until Steve Jobs is back from medical leave, and ready to hit the hot seat again. Macs Apple' s supply of i.
Macs in stores is . This tallies with rumors the i.
Mac line is getting a refresh next week, probably bringing Intel' s latest and greatest Sandy Bridge chips with it, as well as Apple' s new speedy interconnect protocol Thunderbolt. Will the devices also get a design overhaul? They' re a little long in the tooth now. Maybe Apple will further reduce the i.
Mac' s signature & quot; chin& quot; and skinny- up the chassis a little. White i. Phone 4 Now that Apple' s cracked its technical issues with the paint and light leakage into the white i. Phone 4, it' s finally about to go on sale. Stores in Belgium have .
From the boxes, the design doesn' t seem to incorporate the new four- section antenna that the redesigned Verizon i. Phone 4 sports.
In pretty much every significant way, the white i. Phone 4 is just a white i. Phone 4 - - its only unique asset is the unusual, apparently much- sought- after color. Commentators are speculating that the & quot; mystique& quot; of the phone may even propel ' s sales through the summer, filling the gap left by what we now think is a deliberately delayed i. Phone 5 launch.
Mac. Book Airs in June with Thunderbolt The Mac. Book Air only just got a refresh, it seems, with a slinky new design that includes SSD- only drive options. It' s been selling like hotcakes. Now there' s a they' re due a minor update in June, mere weeks after the i.
Mac refresh, which will see a spec bump with better Intel graphics, Sandy Bridge CPUs, and the Thunderbolt speedy I- O system.
Mac. Book Pros The next revision of the Mac.
Book Pro is to include a & quot; milestone& quot; redesign. This tallies with our of the year. We think Apple will again take design cues from the Mac.
Book Air, giving the new Pro' s a skinnier, tapered frame and possibly ditching the optical drive and hard drives ( though they may remain as an option, for big- storage users) . Could this revision come as a & quot; mid 2011& quot; update, after the & quot; early 2011& quot; update was a pretty mediocre spec bump that merely introduced us to Thunderbolt? T- Mobile' s i. Phone & quot; 4S& quot; prototype A prototype i.
Phone has out from Apple' s super- tight lockdown again. This version seems to have been adapted to run on T- Mobile' s 3G network, and it' s a new Apple A5 processor which leads some to label it the & quot; i. Phone 4S. & quot; Apple' s also alleged to be these phones to certain games developers, to give them a head- start in producing even more powerful games for a future i. Phone version.
Would a summer launch of a T- Mobile i. Phone 4 make sense, given that the new i.
Phone would be mere weeks away and thousands of buyers could be disgruntled? Not really. This is most likely a hint that the i. Phone 5 redesign will be essentially similar to the i.
Phone 4' s, and when it arrives it' ll have a better CPU and run on pretty much every phone network you can imagine. i. Phone 5 images Ex- Engageters at received what they believed to be credible data on the next i.
Phone revision - - it will have an edge- to- edge screen as rumored, with a display slightly larger than the i.
Phone 4' s, along with a tapered back ( possibly in unibody aluminum style) , and a touch- sensitive home button with a larger & quot; gesture area& quot; around it. Meanwhile, received what it believed was credible imagery of an i.
Phone 5. This one looks a lot more like the i. Phone 4, just a little narrower front- to- back and with a similar edge- to- edge display. Are these actually both real, both future versions - - one the i.
Phone 5, the other the oft- rumored i. Phone & quot; Lite& quot; ? i. Phone 6 screen It may be a long way in the future, but there' s about the i. Phone 6 ( doesn' t that confirm exactly how excited people are about Apple' s products? ) . Sharp has apparently been tipped to deliver a screen for the phone in Spring 2012 based on its low- temperature poly- silicon system, which delivers crisper, brighter displays that consume less power and which can be bonded directly to the device' s glass front - - making for a skinnier overall profile.
If true, it' s a sign Apple' s avoiding using OLED tech. Copyright & # 169; 2010 , a unit of Mansueto Ventures, LLC. All rights reserved.
chocolate Bounty hunter says he will sue Casey Anthony -
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Read more about this story from . ( CNN) - - A California bounty hunter says he will sue Casey Anthony and her defense attorney Jose Baez for misleading him when he helped search for her young daughter Caylee. Leonard Padilla said he is seeking $ 200, 000. Padilla said Anthony' s attorney allowed him to fly to Florida in 2008 and help search for Anthony' s then- missing 2- year- old daughter. Anthony left jail Sunday after being acquitted of murder charges in connection with the death of her daughter. Padilla says when he heard Baez' s opening statement during Anthony' s murder trial he felt conned. & quot; It turns out she knew where the child was all along, & quot; Padilla said. & quot; They misled me, and it is definitely fraud. & quot; At one point during the highly- publicized search for Caylee, Padilla offered a $ 25, 000 reward for the girl' s return.
He also says he spent $ 50, 000 to bond out Anthony when she was initially jailed. He said he also brought in people to help provide security. He said he talked to Anthony on many occasions during that time and that she never said she knew where Caylee was. & quot; She told me the babysitter stole the baby, & quot; Padilla said. & quot; They were both feeding us that line. And now we know it was never true.
We lost a lot of money. & quot; Padilla says it may take a few weeks to get his lawsuit together. Johnny Griffin, a California legal expert, told that Padilla' s lawsuit may have legal merit. But he may need to do some work to prove his case, Griffin said. & quot; Casey Anthony never testified at trial. So he needs to prove that she lied to him, & quot; Griffin told the affiliate.
Baez can also claim that Padilla made more money becoming part of the Casey Anthony story than it cost him to be part of the search, Griffin said. When the lawsuit is filed, Padilla may have to get in line behind the others seeking money from Anthony. Florida officials are asking that Anthony repay the state for the enormous cost of investigating the case. In a motion filed earlier this month, the state called for a hearing so it can tally up costs and slap Anthony with the bill. & quot; The efforts and costs of the investigation were extensive and not immediately available and accordingly, the State of Florida respectfully requests this Court to set a hearing within 60 days to determine total costs, & quot; the motion says. The motion cites a Florida law that allows the state to fine defendants in criminal cases to recoup money spent.
Texas Equu. Search, a firm that helped search for Anthony' s daughter, also wants its money back. The company said it used 4, 200 searchers and spent $ 112, 000 looking for Caylee in Florida after the girl was reported missing in July 2008.
Tim Miller, the head of company, has said he is suing because he believes Caylee never was missing. Anthony also faces a lawsuit from a woman named Zenaida Gonzalez. At the time of Caylee' s disappearance, Anthony told family members and police that the little girl was with a nanny named Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez.
That account resulted in one of Anthony' s lying convictions. Anthony also claimed Gonzalez had kidnapped the toddler. Authorities never found a nanny by that name who cared for Caylee. They did, however, find a woman named Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, who denied ever meeting Anthony.
Gonzalez then filed the defamation lawsuit. The judge handling the defamation lawsuit set Anthony' s deposition for October 8. CNN' s Greg Morrison contributed to this report. Watch Nancy Grace Monday through Sunday starting at 8 p. m. ET on HLN.
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florist The billion-dollar grudge match: The enormity of El Clasico -
florist
( CNN) - - There are few rivalries in sport that capture the imagination like the coming together of Real Madrid and Barcelona - - a soccer match of such enormity that it has its own nickname: & quot; El Clasico. & quot; On the field, it is a billion- dollar grudge match between the two best teams in the football- mad country of Spain. Off the field, it is a tale of two cities - - a clash of Castilian nationalism and Catalan pride; and a rivalry of cultures forged in the Spanish civil war and the reign of General Franco. The two will clash Wednesday at Real Madrid' s Estadio Santiago Bernab& eacute; u before traveling to Barcelona for the second leg of the Champions League semifinal next week. In a freak of fixture commitments, the superpowers of Spain will have met four times in the space of 18 days by May 4, giving the historic rivalry an epic new chapter. Billion- dollar ball game The modern- day El Clasico brings together the world' s two highest- earning sports clubs - - boasting combined revenues of over $ 1 billion, according to international consulting firm Deloitte.
The great rivals also lead the sports world in wages. According to Sporting Intelligence, Barca paid an average salary of $ 7. 9 million to players last season, with Madrid dishing out $ 7.
4 million. The New York Yankees baseball team are third on the list, paying an average $ 6. 8 million. & quot; Both teams ( Madrid and Barca) have steadily grown their revenue streams in recent years, contributing to their on- pitch performance through investment in better facilities, players and the development of youth team players, & quot; said Dan Jones, sports business partner at Deloitte.
But while the two teams clearly share a license to print money, they have contrasting approaches to the business of spending it.
Madrid are famed for their extravagance - - with the $ 130 million paid to Manchester United for Cristiano Ronaldo in 2009 typical of their cavalier policy in the transfer market. They profess the ' & quot; Galacticos& quot; mentality - - a team of superstars - - demonstrated by a 2010- 11 squad that cost an eye- watering $ 689 million to assemble. Barca are not without their big- name signings, but rely far more heavily on homegrown talent - - with the likes of Lionel Messi and Spanish World Cup winners Xavi and Andres Iniesta being products of the club' s youth academy. Barca' s current squad cost just $ 254 million to assemble.
History of rivalry Barcelona and Real Madrid played for the first time in 1902, but the rivalry soon transcended the confines of a soccer match. Barca came to represent the fight for Catalan independence from Spain, and a rejection of the nationalist regime that ruled the country from Madrid - - especially under the rule of Franco, who came to power at the culmination of the bloody Spanish Civil War in 1939. & quot; In Spain, the population of Catalonia don' t consider themselves Spanish, & quot; said Adi- Oula Sebastian, editor of Barca fan site barcablaugranes. com. & quot; When the General Franco dictatorship forbade the use of regional dialects, the Camp Nou ( Barcelona' s home stadium) became one of the few places Catalans were allowed to speak their language, without having to fear repercussions. & quot; Madrid were the all- powerful institution. They had political and royal backing - - the & quot; Real& quot; in their name, meaning & quot; Royal, & quot; was a gift from King Alfonso XIII in 1920 - - and from the 1950s, boasted a collection of the world' s best and most glamorous players. & quot; For Madrid fans, the game isn' t just about getting one over on our eternal rivals, it' s about winning a small argument about the country itself, & quot; said Gabe Lezra, editor of fan site, managingmadrid. com & quot; In many ways, Madrid fans view these games as a playful argument about the way to see and understand the country as a whole. & quot; The relationship was exacerbated by the transfer of Alfredo Di Stefano to Madrid in 1953.
The Argentine was wanted by both clubs, and both thought they' d signed him.
But it was Madrid who got the legendary striker, and Di Stefano duly inspired a decade of dominance at the Bernabeu.
Barca have always suspected foul play. Their official website claims a & quot; royal decree& quot; persuaded Di Stefano to join Madrid, and there has long been the suggestion that the establishment pushed the deal through. & quot; To this day supporters of Barcelona feel robbed, while Madrid fans argue the legitimacy of the deal, & quot; said Sebastian. & quot; Imagine if Michael Jordan gave his word to sign for the Chicago Bulls, then joined the New York Knicks instead! & quot; El Clasico personalities The El Clasico as we find it today is defined by two world- class players, and two world- beating coaches. It is Madrid' s Cristiano Ronaldo against Barca' s Messi on the field, and Jose Mourinho against Pep Guardiola on the sidelines.
Ronaldo is the powerfully- built Portuguese winger, with speed to burn and an armory of tricks at his disposal. Messi is the pint- size Argentine genius, who took Ronaldo' s crown as World Player of the Year in 2009 - - and retained the award in 2010. & quot; There' s no- one to touch Messi at the moment. People compare him to the great Diego Maradona, and it' s a fair comparison, & quot; said Tim Hanlan, author of & quot; A Catalan Dream. & quot; & quot; Ronaldo is not quite on the same level, but his strength and pace can make him just as effective as Messi on his day. & quot; Both players are having prolific seasons in front of goal, with each vying to be Europe' s top scorer. Their coaches have equally impressive resumes.
Guardiola took over at Barcelona in 2008, and led his team to Champions League glory in his first season in charge. Mourinho oversaw Porto' s shock European triumph in 2004, and repeated the feat with Inter Milan in 2010. & quot; I' ve always loved Mourinho. Since his time at Porto I wanted him to join Madrid, & quot; said Lezra. & quot; He' s a brilliant tactician, an incredible motivator and a born winner. And his personality fits Real Madrid perfectly. & quot; Until relatively recently the Real- Barca rivalry was a one- sided affair.
Madrid built dynasties in the 1950s and 1960s, and continued to dominate domestically and in Europe throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Barca enjoyed sporadic success, but it wasn' t until the early 1990s that they finally launched a dynasty of their own - - winning four titles in a row under Dutch coach Johan Cruyff before lifting their first European Cup in 1992. The balance of power shifted back and forth over the next 15 years, but Barca are now in the ascendancy.
Guardiola' s team have won the last two Spanish titles, and claimed a third Champions League crown in 2009. Meanwhile, Madrid are without a European success since 2002. & quot; Barcelona are definitely on top right now. They' ve put together a great team, and have been playing the same style, with more or less the same players, for the last four years or so, & quot; said Lezra. & quot; Madrid, on the other hand, have fired managers, brought in new players and made various tactical adjustments - - not a good strategy if you' re looking for long- term success. & quot; Whether Barca can stay on stop will undoubtedly be influenced by the outcome of this year' s Champions League semifinal - - the latest chapter in a rivalry as fierce and colorful as any in sport. & quot; The rivalry between Barcelona and Real Madrid is special because both teams are made up of superstars, & quot; said Sebastian. & quot; You' ll be hard- pressed to find as many world- class players sharing the pitch at the same time. In football, the El Clasico rivalry is as good as it gets. & quot;
( CNN) - - The space shuttle Atlantis will be in space for one more day than originally planned, NASA announced Monday. The shuttle, which was scheduled to land July 20, will now make what NASA called a night landing at Kennedy Space Center at 5: 56 a. m. July 21. Atlantis lifted off Friday on NASA' s final space shuttle mission.
On board is a four- person team: mission commander Christopher Ferguson, pilot Doug Hurley and mission specialists Sandy Magnus and Rex Walheim. The crew of veteran astronauts docked Sunday at the InternationalSpace Station to deliver a load of supplies.
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Los Angeles, California ( CNN) - - Lindsay Lohan' s lawyer is ready for her close- up. Shawn Chapman Holley plunges her hands into the pockets of a frisky black dress on a late summer afternoon, channeling Tyra Banks as she poses for a magazine photographer at her comfortable Mediterranean- style home. & quot; As much as I used to laugh at Tyra' s tips on ' America' s Next Top Model, ' they actually work, & quot; Holley quips, leaning back in a pair of black, red- soled Christian Louboutin pumps. Click. & quot; That whole smile- with- your- eyes thing? & quot; Click. & quot; I get it. & quot; Holley is no ing& eacute; nue. She' s a criminal defense attorney who toiled for five years in the gritty trenches of the public defender' s office and backed up the late Johnnie Cochran during O. Simpson' s murder trial.
Her hot client these days is Lindsay Lohan, who spent the summer in court, jail and rehab for a DUI- related probation violation. Lohan was sent back to jail Friday morning, but Holley appealed and Lohan was out by midnight. A hearing will be held October 22 to determine whether Lohan violated probation a second time by failing a drug test. & quot; Shawn' s the celebrity go- to lawyer right now, & quot; attorney Carl Douglas said of Holley, with whom he worked on the Simpson case. As bloggers, entertainment news shows and tabloid media outlets transform the courtrooms of Los Angeles into a virtual reality show, Holley - - along with Blair Berk, who represents Mel Gibson - - are the moment' s undisputed legal & quot; It Girls. & quot; Holley is a criminal defense lawyer to her core, and she burns with a passion for the underdog.
She says she' s daunted by Hollywood' s & quot; fancy people. & quot; Her manner is cheerful and open; her quick laugh and glib one- liners can disguise her status as a serious player in the courtroom. Several seasoned criminal defense attorneys, all men, expressed surprise that Holley would be profiled. Some were critical of the way she handled the Lohan case. One pointed out that the actress was sentenced in July to 90 days in jail - - much more time than prosecutors sought. ( Lohan served just 13 days. ) But other observers say such sniping is typical in a competitive, big- ego profession that until very recently was dominated by men. & quot; She' s not a lightweight. Anyone who says otherwise is sexist, & quot; said Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School who follows high- profile cases. & quot; When you hear petty remarks, they are just that - - petty, jealous remarks. & quot; Holley should no longer be viewed as just a & quot; sidekick& quot; to power lawyers Johnnie Cochran and Howard Weitzman, Levenson added. & quot; She' s really coming into her own.
She takes on the basket cases. She has high- maintenance clients, and she' s able to maintain them. She does it with great professionalism. & quot; Douglas agreed. & quot; I can' t fault Shawn at all for Lindsay' s predicament. I' m not sure any lawyer could have handled it better than Shawn. & quot; The legal & quot; It Girls& quot; ( they' re not girls, of course; Holley is 48 and Berk 46) share more than a high profile: They' ve both represented Lohan.
And each, at one time or another, has quit the case. Berk referred Lohan to Holley. Neither would reveal details of how the handoff came to pass. & quot; You' ll have to ask Blair that one, & quot; said Holley, who in a similar DUI case got reality TV star Nicole Richie in and out of jail in 82 minutes. & quot; Ask Shawn, & quot; said Berk. Suffice it to say that Berk didn' t feel she was getting through to her famous client. For a while, neither was Holley.
Living La Vida Lohan It' s a moment that makes every defense lawyer cringe. The client begs for one more chance, but the judge won' t buy it.
For Holley and Lohan, the scenario has become all too familiar. The plea deal Blair Berk cut for Lohan in the 2007 case began to fall apart in July. As Judge Marsha Revel ticked off examples of Lohan' s failure to take responsibility, it became obvious that Holley would not be able to make the save. & quot; Please, Shawn, & quot; Lohan begged. & quot; Pleeeeaaase! Ten days ago, when trouble arose a second time, Lohan called Holley. The timing couldn' t have been worse.
On that day, another Holley client, Reggie Bush, was giving back his Heisman trophy.
She' d been up all night helping Bush work on his statement. Back to court Holley and Lohan went. Lohan showed little emotion Friday as Holley asked Beverly Hills Municipal Court Judge Elden Fox if he would consider bail. & quot; May I be heard? & quot; Holley asked. & quot; Nope, & quot; the judge responded and Lohan was handcuffed and led away. & quot; That shocked me, & quot; Holley said. She followed Lohan into the holding cell, and & quot; she just locked eyes with me, & quot; Holley recalled. & quot; Promise me you' re going to get me out of here, & quot; Lohan pleaded, according to Holley, who quickly replied, & quot; I promise you. & quot; She asked Fox to reconsider, then informed him she would appeal. & quot; From there, I just put on my rocket shoes, & quot; Holley said.
She appealed to the Superior Court, writing, & quot; There is no question that Ms.
Lohan is entitled to bail while the alleged probation violation is being adjudicated. & quot; To get in front of a judge, she raced across town and ran into the Criminal Courts Building in downtown Los Angeles as everyone else was leaving. The courtroom where appeals are heard was already dark. She was steered to Superior Court Judge Patricia Schnegg, who agreed with her and set bail at $ 300, 000.
There was Lohan family drama to deal with, as well. Earlier in the day, Dina Lohan sat with her daughter and Holley in court in Beverly Hills. Lindsay Lohan' s father, Michael, who has been ordered to stay away from Dina, his ex- wife, was also there.
Afterwards, he lit into his daughter' s lawyer, mother, and management team in front of camera crews. He called them & quot; enablers& quot; and accused them of & quot; destroying my daughter' s life. & quot; & quot; I' m not going to dignify those comments with a response, & quot; said Holley, who in the past has pointed out that her client is estranged from her father. When Lohan was first sentenced to jail she tweeted, comparing herself to the Iranian woman sentenced to be stoned to death for adultery. Much ado was made over the expletive stenciled on the nail of her middle finger. Holley quit the case for reasons more complicated than tweets and manicures, but returned to Lohan' s defense within days because she felt her client needed her.
There were no pity tweets the second time around. Holley thinks Lohan is heading in the right direction. & quot; She had to come to terms with all the things that were happening in her life, & quot; Holley said in August. & quot; I think she was hoping that things could be different than they were. When she realized that things could not be different, she had to accept reality. & quot; & quot; It' s a work in progress, & quot; Holley said over the phone on Saturday. According to the Hollywood rumor mill, the Lohan case took a toll on Holley' s friendship with Berk.
Both tiptoe around the rumored rift, so its origins remain murky. & quot; It' s all good now, & quot; Holley said. Berk declined to give details, but said, & quot; Shawn' s a champion for stepping up. & quot; Holley said she visited Lohan on 11 of the 13 days she was in jail, and camera crews swarmed her BMW station wagon every time. & quot; It was absolutely crazy, & quot; Holley said. & quot; I just don' t feel they would have been there for a positive Lindsay Lohan story. If she was building a house for Habitat for Humanity, I don' t think they would have been there. & quot; Holley empathizes with Lohan: & quot; Lindsay Lohan is a 24- year- old girl.
I was a 24- year- old girl. I did a lot of wild, crazy, fun stuff.
We probably all did. But we didn' t have all of that stuff photographed and publicized. & quot; She believes Lohan will overcome her troubles. & quot; She' s tough, and she' s tough on the people around her. When you' re working with her, and for her, and she' s tough on you, you can get grrrrrr - - but I respect her and I admire her and I really think she' s going to come out of this a superstar.
I really do, & quot; she said. Celebrities Behaving Badly It' s another day in court, another pair of red- soled Christian Louboutins for Holley, this time in a summery shade of tan. She' s come a long way from her public defender' s paycheck: The designer kicks go for $ 695 and up. & quot; I call a big part of my practice Celebrities Behaving Badly, & quot; Holley says, navigating her station wagon through a spaghetti bowl of freeways on her way to a hearing.
On this August morning, her attention is on the Calorie Commando case. Her client, former Food Network chef Juan Carlos Cruz, is accused of trying to hire three homeless men to kill his wife.
He has pleaded not guilty. Los Angeles is a car culture. That means busy criminal defense attorneys spend a lot of time idling in the exhaust fumes. Some are chauffeured and work from the back seat, but Holley has become adept at driving both BMW and Black.
Berry at the same time. She dispatches a long list of incoming calls, briefings, legal motions and other mini- crises over the speaker phone with her legal assistant, Jentry Collins. They' ve worked together 12 years and have an easy, bantering rapport. & quot; You' re my best friend, & quot; Collins coos as they sign off. Holley is under a surreal fisheye lens, and even the smallest development in a case can overload her Black.
Berry to the point of meltdown. There are reputations to protect! Careers to save!
Tabloid headlines to shake!
And tabloid reporters literally lurking in the bushes. & quot; They can make mountains out of molehills, & quot; she says.
And on cue, Holley' s Black.
Berry lights up with messages about the celebrity news of the day: The judge is stepping down from the Lohan case.
Holley shakes her head. What' s the fuss?
To her, it' s old news, something that happened the previous week in the judge' s chambers. But everyone' s angling for a comment: TMZ, Radar Online, Us Weekly, Access Hollywood, even CNN and The Los Angeles Times. Any contribution she might make to the noise won' t do Lohan any good, Holley decides. She holds up her Black. Berry and presses: Delete.
Delete. Delete. & quot; When you handle [ celebrity] cases, you can no longer just focus on the case.
There' s all this other stuff that you have to be concerned about, & quot; Holley says. & quot; It' s their livelihood. It' s important for their team - - and their criminal defense lawyer is part of their team - - to be mindful of that and do whatever you can to preserve their image and reputation. & quot; When Holley joined her current firm, Kinsella Weitzman Iser Kump & amp; Aldisert - - a mouthful she hopes some day will include & quot; Holley& quot; - - she worried she' d be out of her element, handling a lot of civil business cases. The boutique entertainment litigation firm is best known for negotiating kidnap victim Jaycee Dugard' s $ 20 million settlement with the state of California and advising the executor of Michael Jackson' s estate. & quot; But many of our entertainment clients had DUIs, & quot; Holley said. & quot; And so, Howard Weitzman and I handled Paris Hilton' s DUI.
And then I handled Nicole Richie' s DUI and it just kind of grew from there. & quot; By taking on celebrity cases, Holley joined a small but specialized club. ( Read CNN' s upcoming coverage of other lawyers to the stars: Blair Berk, Marty Singer, Harland Braun, Tom Mesereau, Laura Wasser, Bert Fields and Gloria Allred. ) She darts on and off the 405 freeway and cuts across side streets flanked by dun- colored hills, talking nonstop for 30 minutes on the car' s speaker phone while simultaneously juggling the Black. Berry. A tall cup of designer coffee sits untouched. Holley arrives in court at 8: 40 a. m. She meets briefly in a holding cell with her client, Cruz, who is sporting a fresh shave and haircut with his orange jail jumpsuit. & quot; He looks good, & quot; Holley says.
She schmoozes with the court staff and a couple of attorneys as they wait for the judge to emerge from his chambers. Four camera crews occupy the jury box. Finally, at 9: 52 a. m. , court is in session. But there' ll be no drama on this day.
The hearing is postponed and Holley is free to go. Before she can leave the courtroom, Holley is stopped by a court deputy. He used to be a chef, he tells her. Could she pass along a & quot; hello& quot; to Cruz?
Holley laughs. No one has to remind her: This is Hollywood.
Everyone wants to be a star. J. s and No. Js The only child of a working single mom, Shawn Chapman grew up around lawyers.
She met them at functions at the law offices where her mother worked as a legal assistant and office manager. She became fluent in their language and ways. & quot; She didn' t know her father, and so from day one it was Shawn and I, & quot; said her mother, Freddi King. & quot; I think she got her work ethic from me.
I wasn' t a slacker. & quot; King stressed education and moved around so Shawn could enroll in the best public schools. & quot; She was very headstrong, and she was pushing the envelope, & quot; King recalled. & quot; She was very social. She had black friends and white friends. Everybody loved her. & quot; The day after Shawn graduated from UCLA, her mother received her master' s degree in business administration.
Holley taught at an urban school for a semester after graduation. But one day she brought her mother to class to show her what school was like. & quot; She said, ' I can' t really do this. These children are too far gone, ' & quot; her mother recalled. While attending classes at Southwestern Law School, Holley worked as an intern at the public defender' s office.
She was hooked. & quot; It was such an amazing experience that all I wanted to do was be a public defender, & quot; Holley said. & quot; The first couple of years are really like doing social work. And you have clients you love and care about. Oftentimes they are just poor people who have maybe stolen milk or diapers for their baby and yes, they' re guilty, but you want to help them just the same. & quot; She relished the esprit de corps of the office and its young lawyers & quot; full of zeal and idealism. & quot; Eventually, she moved up to felony cases and started defending real bad guys.
Johnnie L.
Cochran Jr. , the legendary Los Angeles civil rights lawyer, saw her in court one day and recruited her to his firm.
He had known her mother in college. & quot; In Los Angeles, Johnnie was the end- all, be- all lawyer, & quot; Holley said. & quot; He could be seen driving around town in a blue Rolls- Royce. He had personalized plates at a time when a lot of people didn' t have personalized plates. He was very flashy and fabulous. So if Johnnie Cochran recruits you to come to his firm, you go. & quot; At the time, Cochran' s firm didn' t handle criminal cases, and she was reluctant to leave criminal defense work.
But the hiatus didn' t last long. Six months after she joined Cochran, the firm got the O. Simpson murder case and Holley, then still Shawn Chapman, became part of Simpson' s & quot; Dream Team. & quot; & quot; Had Johnnie said, ' You' re going to be on the case, but you' re going to be working in the library and doing grunt work, ' I would have been happy with that, & quot; Holley said. & quot; But he was so generous and he believed in me.
I got to cross- examine a witness.
I got to argue motions. I was in every defense team meeting. He trusted my opinion. I had an equal voice. & quot; She stays in touch with Carl Douglas, who also worked with Cochran on Simpson' s defense. For Holley and himself, Douglas said, & quot; it was like grad school for young lawyers. & quot; He ranked as some of the greatest moments in his career listening to appeals master Alan Dershowitz and forensics wizards Henry Lee and Michael Baden discuss the week' s events.
Often, Douglas recalled, former Santa Clara University law school dean Jerry Uelmen was there, too. & quot; ' If the glove doesn' t fit, you must acquit. ' That was Jerry Uelmen' s line. He said it and we all said, ' Wow. ' It was one of those magic moments. & quot; Television footage shows a young Shawn Chapman in tears as the verdict is announced.
They were tears of relief, she said. & quot; Everyone was afraid there' d be a mistrial and we' d have to do it all over again. & quot; But, she said, when she heard the word & quot; verdict& quot; and saw the single- page verdict slip, she knew it said & quot; not guilty. & quot; A guilty verdict slip would have been several pages. Then came life after the & quot; trial of the century. & quot; Cochran' s firm became a magnet for criminal cases and Holley took over that part of the practice. & quot; I represented Tupac Shakur, who had a number of criminal cases, and a lot of civil cases arising out of pseudo- criminal behavior.
We were part of the Snoop Dogg murder trial; we handled one of the defendants in that case. & quot; The Simpson case made Cochran a celebrity; he moved to New York, wrote a book and co- hosted a Court TV show with Nancy Grace before dying of a brain tumor in 2005. He influences Holley to this day. & quot; I always ask myself, ' What would Johnnie do? ' What would Johnnie do is my guiding question as a lawyer. & quot; Holley went to work for a small firm in Beverly Hills, where the defense of former 1970s radical Sara Jane Olson occupied her for several years. Olson, accused of planting pipe bombs under a police car, ran from the law and hid in plain sight in Minnesota as a doctor' s wife for 23 years. The 9/ 11 terrorist attacks had a huge impact on the case; prosecutors immediately began referring to the fugitive as a & quot; terrorist. & quot; While working on that case, Holley met the man who would become her husband. She was on a flight home from Sacramento, California. & quot; I don' t usually do this, but when I looked up and saw him, I asked, ' Do I know you? ' & quot; He said, ' I wish. ' & quot; About five months later, she started receiving gifts in her office from an admirer who signed the cards & quot; Impulsive. & quot; When she finally agreed to meet him for dinner, she was relieved to see it was the man from the plane.
Dorian Holley toured with Michael Jackson, was a vocal coach on & quot; American Idol, & quot; and is now the singer with the house band on & quot; The Tonight Show. & quot; When Shawn is busy with a case, Dorian sometimes takes their 7- year- old daughter, Olivia, to work with him. When Cochran returned to practice law in Los Angeles, Holley rejoined him. On the side, she worked as a legal correspondent for the E!
Network. She and Howard Weitzman were on a panel of legal analysts for the network' s daily reenactments of the Michael Jackson trial.
Some thought the show was a gimmick, but it paved the way for the next step in Holley' s career. After Cochran died, Holley followed Weitzman to his new firm in Santa Monica. Weitzman is always urging her to be & quot; a real lawyer, & quot; she said. & quot; He' s talking about a big- time, big- money civil lawyer. & quot; She was heartbroken by the death of her legal mentor. But she carried with her one of Cochran' s most valuable lessons: Every client matters. & quot; There are two types of clients, as Johnnie used to say: the OJs and the No. Js. & quot; I' m used to a lot of No.
J' s. I like the No.
Js, too. & quot; The TMZ era With all the injustice in the world, Holley shakes her head at how much breathless attention a few celebrity DUIs can get.
But she deals with the crush because it' s part of an unforgiving but highly lucrative landscape. She talked to the reporters and camera crews that swarmed her at the jail because, she said, & quot; I' m an outgoing person, and so I talk to them because it' s not their fault they' re assigned to be there. They' ve just been sitting at the jail all day and all night. So it' s hard for me to not be gracious and talkative. And then, after I do that, I' m like, ' Ugh, why did I do that? ' That' s when I say, ' What would Johnnie do? ' I feel if Johnnie was alive in the TMZ era, he would be charming and chatty, too. & quot; TMZ creator Harvey Levin, who also is a lawyer, covered the Simpson trial for a Los Angeles television station and watched Holley play Cochran' s understudy, and then come into her own. & quot; I think she' s a great lawyer.
I think she' s really effective, & quot; said Levin, who is teased by his staff for having a & quot; lawyer crush& quot; on Holley. & quot; She learned a lot from Johnnie. Not just about dealing with clients, but dealing with high- profile clients, and how the media intersects. & quot; It' s a game of mutual interests, Levin said. & quot; The sham of this whole business is everybody says ' Hey, we' re journalists, we don' t get used. ' That' s baloney.
Every reporter gets used. It happens all the time. If Lindsay decides to do the ' Today' show, they' re being used. & quot; Experienced Hollywood lawyers look back with nostalgia to a simpler time when they could easily keep their secrets. But the TMZ website launched in November 2005, and the world of celebrity justice hasn' t been the same since. & quot; Kiefer Sutherland recently just had another DUI. It was clear he had prior DUI, & quot; Holley said. & quot; Nobody knew anything about it because it was a completely different time.
I think TMZ has changed everything as far as that is concerned. & quot; & quot; Even in Nicole Richie' s case - - which wasn' t that long ago - - if it happened today, it would be a completely different thing.
I wonder if it even would have been the same outcome because there' s so much swirling around it, & quot; she added. & quot; Anything anybody does now, it' s just whoooosh! Holley knew exactly who' d have the facts on June 25, 2009, when she heard that Michael Jackson had collapsed.
Her husband was in final rehearsals for Jackson' s & quot; This Is It& quot; comeback tour. Choreographer Kenny Ortega told him everything was fine, she recalled.
But over the phone, it was TMZ' s Levin who told her, & quot; Shawn, I think he' s dead. & quot; Minutes later, the news spread around the world: The King of Pop was dead.
The attention showered on a celebrity lawyer can be annoying and intoxicating.
But mostly, it' s exhausting, Holley said. She looks forward to being ignored again when she' s out to lunch with her mother, to not looking over her shoulder for photographers when she takes her daughter to the park. & quot; When I see colleagues and they say, ' I haven' t seen you in the press in a while, ' I say, ' Great - - that means I' m doing my job. ' I feel like I' ve failed as a celebrity lawyer if you see too much of me, because that means I couldn' t keep it hidden. I couldn' t keep it out of the spotlight, and that is not a good thing. & quot;