AMA Aims to Deter Purchasing of Failure-Prone EMRs | EMR Straight Talk
Tags: failure, emrs, productivity lossPosted on 10 April 2010.
AMA Aims to Deter Purchasing of Failure-Prone EMRs | EMR Straight Talk
Tags: failure, emrs, productivity lossPosted in Actor Corey Haim14 Comments
Posted on 10 April 2010.
“Just found a £fiver blowing in the wind” Is it finders keepers?? I think sooo!!”Oh well that’s my Good Friday beers sorted then”,6 pack,film and a cosy night in or what?I seam to have posted this twice,my pc,had lost it for a mo,but the cold beers will make up for my loss of 5 points twice…lol…Happy Easter!!!”Hey”, swing notice,for your info I am not drunk,and thanks for the slight! Dumb was it? I thought I was feeling just “Lucky”…Happy easter and get well soon!!
“Lucky Good Friday”?? Anonymous beer donor??
Posted in Actor Corey Haim17 Comments
Posted on 09 April 2010.
Most Republicans who have gay relatives:Vice President Dick Cheney (his daughter)San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders (his daughter)McCain Advisor Steve Schmidt (his sister)Maine Republican Phillip Schooner (his son)are able to empathize with those who are close to them.Cheney, Sanders, Schmidt, and Schooner all publicly supported both their choice of lifestyle and their right to marriage.but Newt Gingrich, however, is unable to empathize with his gay sister, Candace.He has expressed nothing but resentment towards her.He is offended by her relationship.She got married, and he refused to attend her wedding.Why is Newt Gingrich unable to empathize with the people who are close to him? Has he no heart?
Why is Newt Gingrich unable to empathize with those who are close to him?
Posted in Actor Corey Haim11 Comments
Posted on 09 April 2010.
People who are fond of music would often like to wear their favorite band on their shirts. There are a lot of brands that manufacture these shirts. Aside from that, there are also a number of people who choose to print their own shirts. Nevertheless, a lot of people are buying shirts with these designs. One way you can save money on these shirts, apparel and accessories is by having a Hot Topic promo code.
Hot Topic is a retail store which sells apparel, accessories, shoes, and even concert tickets to people who are huge fans of music. They also have items for babies. Among the famous artists that they carry include Justin Bieber, Bob Marley, Owl City, Deftones, The Offspring, Attila Wolf, Lil Wayne, Angels & Airwaves, and a lot of other bands.
But apart from just concentrating on music, Hot Topic also carries famous characters and movies on their apparel line. On this list includes Elmo (Sesame Street), Super Mario Bros., Wonder Woman, Marilyn Monroe, Invader Zim, Hello Kitty, Batman & Robin, Alice in Wonderland and many more. Usually, their design appeals to the younger crowd as these are mostly composed of loud prints and messy lines. But anyone can wear the shirt.
If you have a Hot Topic promo code, you can use it on your purchase and be able to save money on the price of the shirt. There are even some promo codes that will entitle you to get free shipping when you buy online. So if you are looking for a new shirt, why not consider the brand?
Use a Hot Topic Promo Code For Your New Shirt Purchase
Tags: concert tickets, famous artists, elmo sesame street, alice in wonderlandPosted in Actor Corey Haim7 Comments
Posted on 09 April 2010.
Traditional forms of motorsports such as stockcars, sports-car racing, speedboats and even motocross tend to be very expensive. The capital investment can range from $20,000 for lower entry level local classes to well over $100,000 for a touring series race car. Not to mention thousands if not millions of dollars for tools, equipment, testing, and engineering.
Click Here to Discover Lawn Mower Racing Secrets
With the ever-escalating costs of racing in mind and in an effort to create a cheaper alternative, in 1973 a group of locals from the town of Wisborough Green, West Sussex, England came up with the idea of racing lawnmowers. The concept was simple. Everyone in town owned a lawnmower, and therefore the cost to race would not be prohibitive. No need to search for sponsors, no expensive engines, no travel cost.
The basic tools to perform the necessary maintenance on racing lawnmowers were already in the in the garden shed. The group staged an event in a local farmer’s field. Word traveled fast, and the competitive hunger. A total of 80 competitors showed up for the inaugural event. I have seen local Saturday night short tracks with fewer teams registered on any given night.
The first race in 1973 was a big hit, an instant success. Racing lawnmowers was fun, fast, and furious. It’s no wonder the participants craved for more. As news spread of the event, so did the yearning to participate. And for those who participated in the race they developed a thirst for more action. Racing can be very addictive, the natural stimulant adrenaline can be more powerful than anything your pharmacist might recommend.
From that first event, racing lawnmowers has continued to grow and evolve as a sport. What began as a simple gathering of friends has become an international phenomenon. The sport crossed the ocean in 1992. The United States Lawn Mower Racing Association, USLMRA, introduced lawnmower racing to the United States.
In the U.S.A. alone, the sport of racing lawnmowers is now governed by multiple sanctioning bodies and has gained national recognition. There are several touring series as well as many local chapters. Some racing events are even televised at the national level and have prime sponsorship.
In 2009, the USLMRA announced the creation of the Lawnmower Racing Hall of Fame. While outsiders may have once thought this sport was for “County Folk”, it has been legitimized as a genuine form of racing. Only after seeing a race first hand will you really appreciate the technology, the speed and the thrill of the close competition. And then, you’ll be back for more racing lawnmowers.
Now that you are completely energized about racing and eager to participate, look for some of the many resources for getting started.
Click Here to Discover Lawn Mower Racing Secrets
The History of Racing Lawnmowers
Posted in Actor Corey Haim9 Comments
Posted on 08 April 2010.
Although it seems everyone wants to make money working from home, not everyone is suited to being their own boss. Operating a business from home can require a lot of determination and courage, especially in the early start-up stages of the business.
Most business start-ups being life with no customers, so it can be an uphill battle to win over custom and get into profit. That is where the persistence comes in. You need to have confidence in what you are doing, be prepared to work hard, and pick yourself up after each knock-back.
Working for yourself is not like working for someone else. There is no guaranteed wage packet each week, and you need to be a highly motivated self-starter. You will often be working on your own with no one else around to support or mentor you.
However, despite all that, working from home can be very exciting and financially rewarding. There are literally millions of home business entrepreneurs worldwide. Many make money working from home on the internet, and other do more traditional work.
Before getting started working from home, have a good look around at some of the thousands of home business opportunities that exist, and see what takes your fancy. Remember though, there always needs to be a market for any product or service you want to sell. There is no point in coming up with a brilliant idea, if no one on the planet wants to buy it.
Here are 10 Business Start-Ups to get your brain ticking over. One of the ideas might stimulate your thinking, and you might think of an even better idea.
1. Garden Water Features
It is becoming more and more popular to have a special water feature in your garden. Create water sculptures from stone, wood, clay or plastic. Use lighting for added effect. Some training may be required, start small and build on your experience.
2. Decorative Boxes
Create individual boxes for special gifts. Decorate plain cardboard or wooden boxes with raffia, shells, fabric or any other material that adds a special look to the box. Sell to specialty stores or by mail order.
3. Chocolate Easter Eggs
Make hand crafted chocolate Easter eggs for clients. Decorate the Easter eggs with a variety of edible products and include solid chocolate eggs as well as those with soft centers in your selection of edible delights. Check local authority bylaws etc to see that you comply with any requirements, especially around food preparation.
4. Publicist
If you have contacts in the media you may like to start a home business promoting special events organized by local businesses, clubs, retail outlets or schools. The events could be over a period of time, such as a summer festival, or one-off events, such as the opening of a new store.
5. Cat and Dog Treats
Provide fresh home-made meals for cats and dogs, made from quality ingredients. Sell your gourmet pet packs through pet stores or customers could buy direct from you. Again check regulations.
6. Gingerbread Houses
This traditional craft/edible delight is a wonderful way to bring a little magic to people’s homes. There are many good books available from your local library, or bookstore, that shows you how to make gingerbread houses both large and small. The internet is a get source for research. Sell through specialty stores on order.
7. Four Leaf Clover Plants
Why not bring someone unlimited good luck by giving them a gift of living four leaf clover plants. Cultivate and package these lucky charms for your clients. Sell through specialty stores and garden centers. If you can’t grow the plants, then make lucky four leaf clover novelties or collectables from plastic, resin, plaster, wood, or some other suitable material.
8. Smelling Sweet
Handcrafted soaps make a beautiful gift for anyone. Incorporate aromatherapy essential oils for added impact and desirability. Sell either as individual items or make customized soap gift baskets with a theme. For instance, you could have a revitalizing gift soap basket with soaps that have rose, mint and violet essential oils incorporated into them.
9. Home Office Designer
With a growing trend in people working from home, why not start a business designing office space for other home based businesses. Start up costs are minimal, although you will need to develop contacts in the office furniture and accessories business.
10. Christmas Decorations
Make some quality Christmas decorations to hang on Christmas trees. Use a variety of materials. Package them in attractive boxes of six to twelve decorations, or crackers (bon bons) per pack. The key is to make the decorations different to the kinds you normally see in retail stores. You could even personalize them with kid’s names or photos etc.
Please note; if you want to make money working from home on the internet or in any job, always check laws and regulations that could affect your business operation. What may be legal in one country may not be legal in another.
10 Business Start-Ups to Make Money Working From Home
Posted in Actor Corey Haim17 Comments
Posted on 08 April 2010.
By Shawn Levy, The Oregonian March 27, 2010, 1:48PM
Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland”: a remake that the public embraced.
Last week, word came that a proposed (threatened?) remake of The Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine” might be scuttled because of some corporate maneuvering involving the production companies behind the project.
Throughout the blogosphere there was rejoicing — and much of it took the shape of the complaints that one always hears at news of yet another remake plopping into the Hollywood pipeline: ‘Hollywood doesn’t have any new ideas,’ ‘They’re gonna ruin a great movie,’ ‘How dare they?,’ and, inevitably in our fallen age, ‘All remakes (vulgar verb).’
And while I myself am hardly likely to defend Hollywood as a rich and limitless mine of creative originality, I think that the question of remakes is of deeper historical and cultural complexity than it might initially seem. Certainly deeper than those knee-jerk reactions.
Consider three films:
1) A detective story that has already been filmed twice in the past decade and not well, now being remade yet again, this time with a debuting director, a B-movie star for leading man, and some unknown and frankly grotesque supporting players in key roles;
2) A not-very-good caper movie made decades earlier and remembered chiefly for the off-camera antics of its stars, now being reimagined by a director known principally for indie films and a massive cast of stars with droll and insidery sensibilities;
3) A fantasy story set in a world of make-believe that has been filmed, in one guise or another, more than 40 times over the years, brought to the screen this time around by a director with tastes for blood and perversity and a recent track record of puzzling disappointments.
Now, that sounds like a litany of awful films doomed to failure, yeah?
Well….
View full sizeThird time’s the charm: Humphrey Bogart in “The Maltese Falcon”
The first is “The Maltese Falcon,” made in 1941 by director John Huston and star Humphrey Bogart after two previous efforts to bring the great Dashiell Hammett novel to the screen bore tepid results. Huston’s “Falcon” is only one of the greatest films ever made, and the incidental fact that it’s a remake make it the stuff of surefire barroom trivia bets.
The second film is “Oceans Eleven,” first made by Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack as a lark in Las Vegas, then revisited in 2001 with significantly more sharpness, wit, verve and style by Steven Soderbergh and a cast including George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts and Matt Damon. The new version was sparkling fun and made tons of dough and yielded two profitable sequels.
The third is, Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland,” which is currently enjoying its third week on top of the North American boxoffice, having grossed $266 million in its first 17 days in theaters despite mediocre reviews.
That last detail is, naturally, the most telling: Hollywood remakes classic films and retells oft-told stories because moviegoers pay to see them. People may often complain that the movies all seem familiar, but when it comes time to buy tickets, the majority avoid novelty and seek out what’s comfortable. As proof, three of the boxoffice top 20 of 2009 were remakes: “Star Trek,” “Sherlock Holmes,” and “A Christmas Carol” (and another 10 or so were sequels or adaptations from TV series — another depressingly successful pair of filmmaking phenomena). There isn’t a business in the world that would ignore that trend.
Sure enough, 2010 promises more opportunities for Hollywood to be rewarded for cannibalizing its past. “Clash of the Titans,” a remake of the laughable 1981 mythological epic, should rule the boxoffice on Easter weekend. The summer will yield such remakes as “Robin Hood,” “The Karate Kid,” “Predators,” “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” “Piranha,” and “Dinner for Schmucks,” a Hollywood version of the hilarious French comedy shown here as “The Dinner Game.” In the fall, new versions of “Red Dawn” and “Tron” (“Tron Legacy”) are lined up, as is “Let Me In,” an American remake of the nifty Swedish vampire picture “Let the Right One In.”
Some of these pictures will, inevitably, vanish without making a dent at the boxoffice. But some will be hits. In short, and without attaching any moral judgment to the fact, Hollywood remakes movies because you, Mr. and Ms. Moviegoer, like them.
But if Hollywood beancounters and moneymen can be expected to go for anything that smells of profit, and hack directors can be found to do just about any paying job in the business, how do you explain the relatively artistically pure likes of, oh, Huston, Soderbergh or Burton being so willing to mine other people’s filmographies for new works of their own?
Well, as it happens, it has ever been thus.
View full size
View full sizeAmong classic directors, John Ford made remakes, Cecil B. DeMille and Alfred Hitchcock (see left) explicitly remade films of their own, and Howard Hawks revisited his “Rio Bravo” plot a mere seven years later to make “El Dorado.”
More recently, such venerated filmmakers as Steven Spielberg (“Always,” based on “A Guy Named Joe”) and Martin Scorsese (“Cape Fear”) have taken rides on the remake carousel. And, for that matter, Messers Burton and Soderbergh are multi-pass riders, with “Batman” and “Planet of the Apes,” and “The Underneath” and “Solaris,” respectively, while those icons of originality, the Coen brothers, have done it twice, too: “The Ladykillers” and, in production, “True Grit.”
Based on that evidence alone, perhaps the question we should be asking isn’t, Why would such stellar talents indulge in such a low pursuit as remaking someone else’s film? but rather, Why do we consider remakes in and of themselves to be so wrong? Great artists, after all, seem quite willing to engage in them.
Take, for one, the example of Shakespeare, who took virtually all his plots from earlier plays, poems, tales and histories, meaning that a huge chunk of the greatest drama in our language consists, yes, of remakes. And Shakespeare was following in the centuries-old tradition of retold, recrafted, and reimagined versions of myths, war stories, tales of love, and so on. (And few indeed would be the voices which claimed that the originals which Shakespeare remade were superior, a point which the knee-jerk I’ve-seen-this-story-before-therefore-this-is-no-good school of film criticism needs to consider, but that’s a rant for another day….)
Indeed, for most of recorded time, the idea of originality in art was less venerated than the idea of fealty to previous generations of art and artists. Sometime in the 19th century, perhaps with the rise of Impressionism in painting, the notion that each new work of art had to break with the past in all aspects took hold, and that value — famously encapsulated by Ezra Pound in the dictate “Make it new!” — has become a war cry.
But, like a lot of war cries, the impulse to iconoclastic originality has led overeager adherents to messy ends. Originality — real originality, not just novelty for its own sake — depends on deep acquaintance with the old, with tradition, with the canon of great works. To make something new, to refashion it with contemporary sensibilities, to convert what’s worth keeping from posterity into something that speaks to your contemporaries — that’s originality, or at least one very important kind of it, and surely the kind which Pound meant.
“Red Dawn”: about to be remade — a meat patty or filet mignon?Perhaps this is why such filmmakers as Huston, Ford, Soderbergh, the Coens, and so on are drawn to remake previous directors’ movies: not to pad their resumes and bank accounts with make-work or to break down imaginary walls with presumed acts of originality, but rather to take themes that speak to them from the past and fit them out into more modern clothing. Not to replace the originals, in other words, but to expand on and amplify them and demonstrate their relevance — as art, as knowledge, as entertainment — in the modern world.
This doesn’t justify the truckloads of truly dreadful remakes that Hollywood churns out, of course. But it does explain, in part, why some important artists are drawn to replication of prior artists’ works. And it does constitute a mighty “Yes, but…” to the claim that “All remakes (vulgar verb)” — at least until that new “Yellow Submarine” is revived, that is.
Now playing (again) at the multiplex: why remakes aren't all bad
Posted in Actor Corey Haim9 Comments
Posted on 08 April 2010.
Sectarian tensions were, as ever, in evidence at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre for the ceremony of the Holy Fire, which symbolizes the resurrection of Jesus after his death on the cross. But, under a heavy Israeli police presence, there was none of the factional violence that has seen rival clergy trade punches — and even a stabbing — in the past few years.
A mass influx of Russian and other visitors from the former Soviet bloc, and the absence of many Palestinians denied permits from Israel to enter the Old City, confirmed the changing face of Christian rites in Jerusalem since the fall of Communism.
The coincidence of the Easter calendars of the Eastern and Western churches has prompted ecumenical gatherings during Holy Week, notably among the dwindling Christian communities in the West Bank, where Israeli occupation and more militant Islam have fostered emigration in recent years, local church figures said.
Roman Catholics and Protestants, however, eschew the Holy Fire rite; Western visitors have for centuries scoffed at the ceremony in which the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Jerusalem produces a lighted candle from the sealed and empty tomb — without the aid of matches or other, visible, terrestrial aids.
At times, terrible stampedes have left worshippers injured or even killed. Several hundred died in a crush in 1834.
For thousands of locals and foreigners packed in the many corners of the ancient church around the ornate stone tomb on the traditional site of the crucifixion and resurrection, the ritual progressed much as it is must have done for a millennium.
For hours, competing chants, singing and processions marked out areas of the church dominated by the Greek Orthodox and the Armenians, congregations which, with Roman Catholics, have the main rights to the Holy Sepulchre through an arrangement drafted under 19th century Ottoman Turkish rulers anxious for calm.
Colorful, noisy groups from other denominations, including Copts from Egypt and Syrian Orthodox, added to the throng.
A couple of dozen teenagers in uniform red T-shirts from one church group, Roman Catholic monks observing with detachment from the upper balconies, and a preponderance of heavy-set young men in clerical garb at the forefront of the main Greek and Armenian delegations lent an air of sporting competition.
But fears of a showdown between the two denominations, whose clergy engaged in a widely televised bout of fisticuffs inside the church less than 18 months ago, proved unfounded.
The Greek patriarch and a senior Armenian cleric both emerged from the tomb bearing the holy fire for their followers.
In seconds, light spread around the darkened chapels as the delighted faithful lit one bunch of candles from flaming others.
“This is the greatest joy of my life,” said 64-year-old Suhair Amin, who had travelled two days by bus from Egypt and said many of her Coptic fellows were denied entry to the church.
Competition for places has become particularly intense with Israel’s opening of visa-free travel for Russians, tens of millions of whom have embraced the Orthodox Christianity long frozen out under Communism. One Russian attending on Saturday said he had paid $700 for a pass given by one denomination.
Asked whether it was worth it, as the candle flames raced around the church, he was speechless, simply beaming in reply.
Members of smaller but hitherto influential denominations in Jerusalem, like the Greeks and Armenians, are wary of the surge in numbers and money coming from Russia — and of Israel’s potential to use its control as a diplomatic bargaining chip with Moscow, at the expense of smaller churches.
(Editing by Paul Casciato)
Holy Fire brings Jerusalem Easter to joyful climax
Tags: site of the crucifixion, resurrection of jesusPosted in Actor Corey Haim12 Comments
Posted on 07 April 2010.
HPG Sponsors Duke Start-Up Challenge
Posted in Actor Corey Haim16 Comments
Posted on 07 April 2010.
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Posted in Actor Corey Haim9 Comments
