Breaking News:
A man named Scott Gammer Shot a woman in the head as she sat with her daughter in front of a bedroom window, according to a report.
KTLA reports that Gammer allegedly fired his gun five times and struck the female victim in the back of the head.
The victim's 18-year-old daughter escaped from the home but was able to dial 911.
The female victim is currently in stable condition with her injuries being non-life-threatening.
Police say Gammer fled the scene.
During a search, police discovered Gammer's truck at the dealership. The windows had been shot out.
Anyone with information is asked to call the LAPD's Robbery-Homicide Division.
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A Killing Spree in the school
The former Secretary of State has admitted she made racist comments about a young woman who was at her high school when her two-year-old son, who is six months old, was killed on the school 's campus.
The daughter of a high school student was killed as she was walking along the campus after her son-in-law had stabbed him in the head, killing him.
The daughter of the victim, who has not yet been identified, was the daughter of the deceased.
The mother of the daughter, who has not yet been identified, was in the car carrying her daughter from the school on the night of the murder, after the shooting.
Alan Jackson With Cameras? MTV Not Happy.
The People's TV show premiered on MTV Dec. 8 at 9 PM and the show (above) included Alan Jackson in a performance. The two other artists on the show were Sugarland. The release had earlier earned an RIAA Gold Certification, which recognizes 500,000 units sold.
Gary Primm from the show's studio noted on Twitter that before the show’s airing MTV execs didn’t know if it was okay for Jackson to be in the show or not. Apparently Jackson was allowed on the show and recorded the segment, which did include pictures of Jackson backstage. MTV decided not to edit it because Jackson told them he’d take pictures on his own and that MTV couldn’t censor the images (a claim Jackson's people will tell you hasn’t been confirmed.)
If the people don’t realize that Jackson hasn’t released a record since 2005, you can’t really blame the network. After all, where else can you get a red-hot tour this time of year, instead of a Christmas double-disc boxed set or a DVD documentary? Where else do you find Jackson performing in one of his most show-stopping songs? For the complete package, for free? It has to be pretty surprising when you learn you are on the cover of Rolling Stone and have already recorded a Grammy award for Best Country Solo Performance and you are now on a television show. And, it’s about more than a song.
The video premiered right after MTVs 2013 Year in Review special where the video was screened at a club. Jackson is no longer the lead act, but as the encore, Jackson sang with a band. I’m not sure what’s up with the rest of the show, but Sugarland is performing songs from their fourth album, “Twice the Speed of Life,” which is this year’s hottest release on country radio. It debuted at No. 1 and is gaining momentum by the day, having logged over one million sales. Sugarland, a trio of sisters who grew up in Oklahoma, released their first album in 2004, but haven’t hit No. 1 until this year, thanks to hits like “Baby Girl” and “Stay.” Also, Nikki Rowland as a solo artist is gaining momentum. Her debut album “Love and War” (for which she’s also the songwriter) sold over three million copies in the U.S. in the first six months of 2011, according to the Billbord album tracking company.
As Jackson and Rowland put on a show, they could probably keep the MTV show going through today. Country artists, many who were powerhouses when MTV began their programming blitz a decade ago, are ruling the music charts in a different time.
The people seem to love Sugarland, Jackson and Tyler Farr, who is a vet of several country radio stations in Virginia. In the next week or so they could become MTV’s biggest duo again, it is also unclear what will happen if there are more performances on MTV. If there are no sit-downs, see the accompanying story from the Vertical Press for insight into Farr’s concert tonight.
Gary Primm from the show's studio noted on Twitter that before the show’s airing MTV execs didn’t know if it was okay for Jackson to be in the show or not. Apparently Jackson was allowed on the show and recorded the segment, which did include pictures of Jackson backstage. MTV decided not to edit it because Jackson told them he’d take pictures on his own and that MTV couldn’t censor the images (a claim Jackson's people will tell you hasn’t been confirmed.)
If the people don’t realize that Jackson hasn’t released a record since 2005, you can’t really blame the network. After all, where else can you get a red-hot tour this time of year, instead of a Christmas double-disc boxed set or a DVD documentary? Where else do you find Jackson performing in one of his most show-stopping songs? For the complete package, for free? It has to be pretty surprising when you learn you are on the cover of Rolling Stone and have already recorded a Grammy award for Best Country Solo Performance and you are now on a television show. And, it’s about more than a song.
The video premiered right after MTVs 2013 Year in Review special where the video was screened at a club. Jackson is no longer the lead act, but as the encore, Jackson sang with a band. I’m not sure what’s up with the rest of the show, but Sugarland is performing songs from their fourth album, “Twice the Speed of Life,” which is this year’s hottest release on country radio. It debuted at No. 1 and is gaining momentum by the day, having logged over one million sales. Sugarland, a trio of sisters who grew up in Oklahoma, released their first album in 2004, but haven’t hit No. 1 until this year, thanks to hits like “Baby Girl” and “Stay.” Also, Nikki Rowland as a solo artist is gaining momentum. Her debut album “Love and War” (for which she’s also the songwriter) sold over three million copies in the U.S. in the first six months of 2011, according to the Billbord album tracking company.
As Jackson and Rowland put on a show, they could probably keep the MTV show going through today. Country artists, many who were powerhouses when MTV began their programming blitz a decade ago, are ruling the music charts in a different time.
The people seem to love Sugarland, Jackson and Tyler Farr, who is a vet of several country radio stations in Virginia. In the next week or so they could become MTV’s biggest duo again, it is also unclear what will happen if there are more performances on MTV. If there are no sit-downs, see the accompanying story from the Vertical Press for insight into Farr’s concert tonight.
Your Dougie, Vote for the Best-of-the-Best!
That plain white cake, cake that you put in an iced bowl, with your metal eyes on it, and then you stick to it all day? Good luck with that! That cake needs something special to be… yup, perfect!
That’s what happened with nearly 600 hundred Facebook users and Vine-absorbed fans!
Like many a national athlete in media glory, Jared Goff showed off his little vid that has his immortal face all over the Internet.
It’s 3:09 in the clip below.
The young man from San Diego shows that he has the carefree face of the young star at the Los Angeles premiere of #Titanic in 1997.
Take that, Cameron Crowe, and add a little extra, social media love, from the internet’s posse!That Youtube-nation of 98 million agreed!
And now Jared Goff has become a well-endowed man… If it’s good enough for that young, laid-back crusty guy, I know it’s good enough for me.
And you, too! So now, let’s go.
Vote for our Best-of-the-best of our 2011 Dougie Contest
What is your favorite Dougie?
If you're a Dougie fan, you may want to help answer some questions about Dougies in an interview for our upcoming Dougie Contest.
That's right folks! You make the call!
Just visit www.facebook.com/ to vote for your favorite Dougie and tell us what Dougie you like!
Then, in 10 days, we will name the best Dougie in the week-long celebration of December 9th through 14th, 2011.
Email (email).com with your email address and tell us who your favorite is!
Yup, you just made some history, and we are excited about it!
First Enchanted: Break the rules
There’s not a single headline in this august 2008. There is no exciting new world-changing discovery in the molecular world. No greater discovery will shake the foundations of the universe. There is no new istemppture to hold our notice as we approach the hour of the blind marching toward the 12.30pm super-black hole.
There is only bad news.
One malady, somewhat awkwardly and against the grain of the usually good news, is the something worse than climate change. This phantom disease has been streaking through the lives of teenagers all over the world for almost three years, a disease known as the ADHD minefield, incipient army of teenage males who are so obsessively absorbed with the slivers of their lives and the awareness of that world that they have been reported to forget to wear their pants. Many of them act as if they are the cat in the people-watching game. Only rarely do you see one of these boys looking out of a window, smiling, or drinking a pitcher of cherry Crush, tapping his feet and randomly tossing a guitar case or the bottom of a bag. I have never seen one of these boys looking even remotely like Andy Rooney. He owns his time and its meaning.
From the early 21st century on, it seemed as if the focus of each day’s news was parents throwing their kids out of the house. The question should be, what took them so long? Shouldn’t these parents have realized that they had made a bad choice a long time ago, that they had fucked the pooch and then cursed them in public. And then maybe they should have realized that their decision to throw away the sin bin of parent ethics, puppy rescue, and separation from their children, no matter what happens or how unbearable the loss of the fact that their children are no longer with them in the flesh, was not the right thing to do. The ADHD dumpster is a physical safety hazard, but let’s not get carried away, and make the land quiver, lest we imagine how easily this can happen to our most precious wives. Here in Redwood City, everyone I’ve told about ADHD’s danger has rolled their eyes. “See, there they are right there!” the 60-year-old saying mother said. But they do exist! These are not all kids in schools or at college. They are right here in the community, where every adult in the town can see them at meal time or any social gathering. One man told me that he and his friends recently went into his local Stop ‘n Shop and saw a teenager as old as 16 hiding under a pile of cereal boxes as young people walked by, picking their pant legs as they went. If not for the sight of this boy, no one would know he was there. He was totally gone.
Here, and all over America, there are ADD children, a societal plague that seems beyond the reach of the average caring, caring person. There are cities with more adults who are diagnosed with ADHD than cities with younger kids. I am curious. Are we so squeamish about our own stuff we can’t grasp it, or is it us that is really sick in the head? Is it that our parents failed to plant in us the seeds of acceptance? Or was it us? Both. That fear that springs from doubt is the lifeblood of our country. Any competent politician could take the lead in recognizing ADHD’s presence and encourage us to recognize that the game of perfecting ourselves will never work. As civilization progresses, more and more of us will move into this new realm, the Alzheimer’s of the mind, and in it will launch itself into a war of the brain. We need love now more than ever. We need people to come over and hug us like we never hugged them before. Someone to show us their mommy chair, tell us to watch the birds, teach us to pray. Someone to tell us our parents are not the only ones who can’t read. But more than that, we need family, friends, neighbors, bosses, and employers to realize that at this time in our history, we all need to work together, even though we think that’s impossible.
Don’t you have enough on your plate?
Stop complaining and start helping,
Emily Ron
There is only bad news.
One malady, somewhat awkwardly and against the grain of the usually good news, is the something worse than climate change. This phantom disease has been streaking through the lives of teenagers all over the world for almost three years, a disease known as the ADHD minefield, incipient army of teenage males who are so obsessively absorbed with the slivers of their lives and the awareness of that world that they have been reported to forget to wear their pants. Many of them act as if they are the cat in the people-watching game. Only rarely do you see one of these boys looking out of a window, smiling, or drinking a pitcher of cherry Crush, tapping his feet and randomly tossing a guitar case or the bottom of a bag. I have never seen one of these boys looking even remotely like Andy Rooney. He owns his time and its meaning.
From the early 21st century on, it seemed as if the focus of each day’s news was parents throwing their kids out of the house. The question should be, what took them so long? Shouldn’t these parents have realized that they had made a bad choice a long time ago, that they had fucked the pooch and then cursed them in public. And then maybe they should have realized that their decision to throw away the sin bin of parent ethics, puppy rescue, and separation from their children, no matter what happens or how unbearable the loss of the fact that their children are no longer with them in the flesh, was not the right thing to do. The ADHD dumpster is a physical safety hazard, but let’s not get carried away, and make the land quiver, lest we imagine how easily this can happen to our most precious wives. Here in Redwood City, everyone I’ve told about ADHD’s danger has rolled their eyes. “See, there they are right there!” the 60-year-old saying mother said. But they do exist! These are not all kids in schools or at college. They are right here in the community, where every adult in the town can see them at meal time or any social gathering. One man told me that he and his friends recently went into his local Stop ‘n Shop and saw a teenager as old as 16 hiding under a pile of cereal boxes as young people walked by, picking their pant legs as they went. If not for the sight of this boy, no one would know he was there. He was totally gone.
Here, and all over America, there are ADD children, a societal plague that seems beyond the reach of the average caring, caring person. There are cities with more adults who are diagnosed with ADHD than cities with younger kids. I am curious. Are we so squeamish about our own stuff we can’t grasp it, or is it us that is really sick in the head? Is it that our parents failed to plant in us the seeds of acceptance? Or was it us? Both. That fear that springs from doubt is the lifeblood of our country. Any competent politician could take the lead in recognizing ADHD’s presence and encourage us to recognize that the game of perfecting ourselves will never work. As civilization progresses, more and more of us will move into this new realm, the Alzheimer’s of the mind, and in it will launch itself into a war of the brain. We need love now more than ever. We need people to come over and hug us like we never hugged them before. Someone to show us their mommy chair, tell us to watch the birds, teach us to pray. Someone to tell us our parents are not the only ones who can’t read. But more than that, we need family, friends, neighbors, bosses, and employers to realize that at this time in our history, we all need to work together, even though we think that’s impossible.
Don’t you have enough on your plate?
Stop complaining and start helping,
Emily Ron
Welcome to the auto Generated Blogs and News
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we automate text demo autocomplete textbox value.js
a href hover text is animation library portfolio.com
radia-scan issues is and sophos.
ok, bye gif funny
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