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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Honey Boo Boo Isn't The Only One! These Other TV Shows Were Also Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!

Posted: October 24, 2014 at 6:48 pm

TLC wasted no time dropping Here Comes Honey Boo Boo when it was revealed that Mama June may have dated a man she knew was a child molester.

But this was hardly the first TV show that owes its cancellation to a real-life scandal!

[ Related: The TV Guide Network Pulls 7th Heaven From Its Schedule After Stephen Collins' Child Molestation Confession Comes To Light ]

From hosts saying politically incorrect things to stars being accused of murder, here are 10 shows that could not survive their scandals!

CLICK HERE to see the gallery "TV Shows That Were Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!"

CLICK HERE to see the gallery "TV Shows That Were Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!"

CLICK HERE to see the gallery "TV Shows That Were Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!"

CLICK HERE to see the gallery "TV Shows That Were Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!"

CLICK HERE to see the gallery "TV Shows That Were Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!"

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Honey Boo Boo Isn't The Only One! These Other TV Shows Were Also Canceled In The Midst Of Scandal!

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Comment about Third World performance prompts national origin bias claim

Posted: at 6:48 pm

Isolated remarks related to an employees national origin may not be enough to support a claim of discrimination, but they can lead to costly lawsuits. During training, be sure that managers and supervisors understand the negative consequences of making politically incorrect comments.

Akila, an Egyptian dentist, enrolled in a 2-year dentistry program for international students at the University of the Pacific, intending to become credentialed to practice dentistry in the United States.

During a procedure 3 months before graduation, Akila followed her clinical supervisors instructions to seat a crown. The procedure was not successful.

After learning about the failed crown seating, Stuart, the head of the restorative dentistry program, told Akila that her clinical work on the patient was Third World dentistry. The comment was made in the presence of other faculty, students, and patients.

Akila confronted Stuart in his office. She told him that her clinical supervisor had recommended the crown-seating procedure, and she was merely following his instructions. Stuart noted that the procedure used was nowhere in the syllabus. Akila reiterated that she was following her supervisors advice, and she did not feel that it was [her] place to question the direction of a respected faculty member.

Stuart did not relent, saying, Its still Third World dentistry. When Akila said that his comment offended her, he asked her where she is from. When she replied that she is from Egypt, he told her that Egypt is not a Third World country. Akila responded that, in fact, Egypt is a Third World country. Stuart, however, insisted, No, its not, and its still Third World Dentistry. Yes, it is [a Third World country]. And in any case I learned this Third World dentistry in your First World clinic, Akila replied.

A short time later, Akila was greeted by another supervisor with the comment, Whats up, TW? Akila did not understand the remark. Oh come on! Dont you get it? ... Third World? the supervisor said.

She later sent that supervisor a thank-you e-mail for his assistance with a different procedure. She signed the e-mail with her name followed by aka T.W.

Akila learned 4 days before graduation that she would not graduate. Although her course work performance was more than adequate, she was told that she would have to do remedial work in restorative dentistry and removable prosthodontics. She was allowed to perform an additional quarter of clinical work at no extra cost, but her performance did not improve.

Her evaluators concluded that her performance was clinically unacceptable, and she was, in fact, harming patients. Faculty members discussed her poor performance in e-mails and tried to create a strategy to prevent her from practicing dentistry in the United States until she could practice safely.

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Comment about Third World performance prompts national origin bias claim

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The Notebook | Unnecessary Censorship – Video

Posted: at 6:48 pm


The Notebook | Unnecessary Censorship
I hope you enjoyed watching this censorship video for "The Lego Movie". I definitely enjoyed making it! If you like my videos, don #39;t forget to leave a like and subscribe. These take a lot...

By: iFunnyProductions

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The Notebook | Unnecessary Censorship - Video

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Ebola, Censorship, Jesse Ventura w/Guest John B. Wells – Video

Posted: at 6:48 pm


Ebola, Censorship, Jesse Ventura w/Guest John B. Wells
John B. Well joins the guys at Into The Black Hole Podcast to dicuss Ebola, his departure from Coast to Coast AM, censorship, Jesse Ventura, and more. This i...

By: CAV Radio 2.0

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Ebola, Censorship, Jesse Ventura w/Guest John B. Wells - Video

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NUJ bitterly disappointed by Irish Times costs decision

Posted: at 6:48 pm

Seamus Dooley of the NUJ said the union had grave concerns about the implications for the possible costs for any media organisation faced with this type of bill.

The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) has said it is bitterly disappointed at the rejection by the European Court of Human Rights of a case taken by The Irish Times over the costs of its successful legal battle with the Mahon tribunal.

The Strasbourg court ruled against two Irish Times journalists this week in their claim that the Supreme Court had interfered with their right to protect their sources by making the newspaper pay the costs of its dispute with the planning tribunal.

The case followed the publication of a story in 2006 which revealed that the tribunal was investigating a number of payments to then taoiseach Bertie Ahern. The Supreme Court ruled that Irish Times journalist Colm Keena and the papers then editor, Geraldine Kennedy, should not be ordered to reveal their sources, but directed the paper to pay all costs of the court proceedings.

In a majority decision, the European court rejected the papers application and found the claims of interference with freedom of expression to be manifestly ill-founded.

Reacting to the decision, the NUJ said it was disappointed by the decision of the court and the tone of its judgment.

The case is recognised internationally as having significance for the protection of sources, and having the freedom to protect sources but having to incur punitive costs to protect that freedom seems to me to be contradictory, said Samus Dooley, the NUJs Irish secretary.

We would have grave concerns about the implications of the possible costs for The Irish Times and for any media organisation faced with this type of bill.

The tribunal served a bill of costs on The Irish Times in October 2010, claiming the sum of 393,055.42.

In its case to the European court, the newspaper claimed there was a strong chilling effect to the Supreme Courts decision, since it was clear to the press, to potential sources and to the public that journalists could be compelled, under the threat of an order of costs, to disclose the source of information given in confidence. The court rejected this, a conclusion Mr Dooley said showed a worrying naivete on the courts part. The difficulty will be now, for any editor, to take a decision which has potential financial implications. Thats where the chill effect comes in, he said.

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NUJ bitterly disappointed by Irish Times costs decision

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Book review: Season of the Witch: How the Occult Saved Rock and Roll

Posted: at 6:47 pm

By Chris Klimek October 24 at 11:17 AM

Season of the WitchAt the beginning of Season of the Witch, Peter Bebergal sketches an autobiographical scene right out of the movie Almost Famous: Hes 11 years old and his brother has left for the Air Force, leaving behind a superb, previously off-limits collection of rock LPs for him to discover. He sits on the floor of his brothers bedroom, transfixed by the adult mysteries nested within the vinyl grooves and gatefold sleeves of albums such as Led Zeppelins Houses of the Holy and David Bowies Diamond Dogs.

But this isnt a memoir, its a dissertation a weirdly dry one, given its lurid topic on how the occult has informed a half-century or so of popular music. Surveying artists timeless (the Beatles) and now-obscure (the Crazy World of Arthur Brown), with stops at usual Satanic suspects like Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne, Bebergal argues that the artists openness to the supernatural made their music more adventurous and imaginative, and that the coalition of parents and politicians who have periodically sounded the alarm about this are hysterical and silly.

Despite the rich material, Bebergal repeatedly drains any sense of urgency from his work. Barely a third of the way through, he says that Jimmy Pages insistence that the maxim Do What Thou Wilt be inscribed in the lacquer of the master recording of Led Zeppelin III serves as a microcosm of the entirety of the influence the occult would have on rock and roll. If the invocation of dark forces is just libertarianism with the occasional bit of blood-drinking, why should we keep reading?

Occasionally, Bebergal rewards the dutiful reader with a zinger, as when he describes the Age of Aquarius as having ended not with a whimper but with a stabbing at the Rolling Stones 1969 concert at the Altamont Speedway. But he doesnt drop nearly enough of those gems to make up for his annoying habits his abuse of groove as a verb, for starters. His halfhearted discussion of Jay Z (At one time his clothing line offered a number of shirts with unambiguous Freemasonry symbols ) feels like a desperate explanation of why his book wasnt published in 1984. Likewise, his evaluation of Madonna via her Super Bowl halftime show in 2012 easily 20 years after her peak.

The musicians whose work Bebergal dissects with the greatest vigor the Beatles, the Stones, Pink Floyd, Bowie, Black Sabbath are dinosaurs, not dragons, no disrespect intended. Meanwhile, the 21st-century popularity of Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter and Game of Thrones has done more to drag the occult into the light than the 30-plus years of heavy-metal albums that preceded them ever did. Bebergal grew up lighting black candles and playing Dungeons & Dragons, he says, but somewhere in the writing of this book, his adolescent enthusiasm got replaced by a deadening academic scrupulousness. Dr. Strange, heal thyself.

Klimek is a freelance writer based in Washington.

Season of the Witch

How the Occult Saved Rock and Roll

by Peter Bebergal

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Book review: Season of the Witch: How the Occult Saved Rock and Roll

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[Crysis3] Chapter 1 (Post-Human Warrior Difficulty) – Video

Posted: at 6:46 pm


[Crysis3] Chapter 1 (Post-Human Warrior Difficulty)
My 2nd playthrough. Video is, besides at few points where I was changing recording settings, unedited. All deaths and fails included :P. This was my 1st attempt at recording my own footage...

By: Dravileyen

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[Crysis3] Chapter 1 (Post-Human Warrior Difficulty) - Video

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Google Executive Breaks Record With Near-Space Skydive

Posted: at 6:46 pm

Google Executive Alan Eustace descends from his record-breaking jump. (Credit: Paragon)

Two years ago this month, Felix Baumgartner broke a record with his near-space skydive in which he broke the sound barrier.

Alan Eustace, a Vice-President of Knowledge at Google Google, just broke it.

The funny thing is, though, is that in a project nearly three years in the making, it wasnt until the last minute that anyone knew he was going to.

As we were watching him go up today, somebody asked us what the record was, Paragon Space Development CEO Grant Anderson told me. We had to look it up! It was cool to break the record, but frankly it was not in the forefront of our minds at all.

Eustace first approached Paragon, which specializes in developing life support equipment for extreme environments, including space, in December of 2011. The goal apart from the fun of the stunt itself was to develop technologies that could be useful for more human exploration of the stratosphere and beyond.

The day of the flight began with a four-hour stint in an oxygen chamber, where Eustace had the nitrogen in his lung and tissues slowly washed out. Next Next up, he was prepared in the space suit, which is similar in design and material to the spacesuits used by astronauts on the International Space Station. (If it looks funny in the photos, thats because the life support system is on the front instead of the back in order to accommodate the parachute.

The spacesuit itself was absolutely necessary at the altitude Eustace flew to, the atmosphere is so thin that a human cant breathe. Also, the pressure is so low that even at the cool temperatures, the fluids in the body will begin to boil

The balloon that took Eustace to the stratosphere was then inflated with helium, and Eustace was hooked up in place to it. Unlike Felix Baumgartner, Eustace wasnt in a capsule. He was directly attached to a module held by the balloon.

Alan Eustace ascending to the stratosphere. (Credit: Paragon Space Development)

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Google Executive Breaks Record With Near-Space Skydive

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Revelation: A Futurist Interpretation. chapters 4,5. Four beasts, Angels, throne in Heaven – Video

Posted: at 6:46 pm


Revelation: A Futurist Interpretation. chapters 4,5. Four beasts, Angels, throne in Heaven
Revelation: A Futurist Interpretation, Part 1: Introduction, Revelation chapters 4 and 5 . More information at http://www.islamicstate.info . The throne in H...

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Revelation: A Futurist Interpretation. chapters 4,5. Four beasts, Angels, throne in Heaven - Video

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International Space Station Russian EVA 40 (time lapse) – Video

Posted: at 3:45 am


International Space Station Russian EVA 40 (time lapse)
Time lapse of the NASA TV feed of the extravehicular activity (EVA), or spacewalk, performed from the Pirs () module on the International Space Station (ISS) by cosmonauts Max Suraev...

By: Trent Faust

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International Space Station Russian EVA 40 (time lapse) - Video

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