LONDON 2012 OLYMPICS OPENS WITH SPECTACULAR CEREMONY

Seven promising young British athletes lit the Olympic cauldron early Saturday, capping the Games’ festive opening ceremony in east London.

The torch, which minutes earlier had been on a boat driven by football star David Beckham down the River Thames, had been carried into the stadium by five-time Olympic gold medalist Steve Redgrave.

The retired rower then passed it to the young athletes, who lit part of the outer rim of the torch, setting off a domino effect as fire methodically engulfed the cauldron. The small flames eventually rose and converged into the sky at the stadium.

A short time earlier, Queen Elizabeth II formally pronounced the Olympics open for business, saying, “I declare open the Games of London, celebrating the 30th Olympiad of the modern era.”

Organizers had said they expected a billion people worldwide to watch the opening ceremony — which was created by Danny Boyle, best known for directing the Oscar-winning film “Slumdog Millionaire” — on television.

Tens of thousands more congregated in “fan zones” around the British capital to watch the festivities on big screens, their enthusiasm hardly diminished by overcast sky and sporadic showers.

The event opened with a scene dubbed “Green and Pleasant,” after a line from poet William Blake. It featured an idyllic view of a British countryside. Rolling hills, fields and rivers — complete with picnicking families, sports being played on a village green and farmyard animals — made up the elaborate set.

Hundreds of volunteers dressed in period costumes walked, danced and otherwise performed as music played. The set soon transformed into one featuring factories, recalling the Industrial Revolution, including large smokestacks emerging from below.

After a short film featuring Daniel Craig, the latest actor to play cinematic British spy James Bond, and none other than Queen Elizabeth II herself, the next performance paid tribute to Britain’s National Health Service and children’s literature.

J.K. Rowling, author of the best-selling Harry Potter books, kicked off the scene — which featured, among others, the evil Voldemort from her series and magical nanny Mary Poppins.

Next came a performance of the iconic song from “Chariots of Fire,” a tale about two British Olympians from 1924 that was lightened up by slapstick comedian Mr. Bean. Then came a showcase for pop songs from the Beatles to the Rolling Stones to Frankie Goes to Hollywood to David Bowie, which was followed by a short live performance by rapper Dizzee Rascal.

There was also a special shout-out to Tim Berners-Lee, a London native who is credited with inventing the World Wide Web. His words, “This is for everyone” at one point lit up a part of the stands for all to see.

Just over one hour in, the Olympic athletes finally made their way into the stadium led, per tradition, by the Greek delegation.

That was followed by another performance featuring bicyclists with glowing butterfly wings going around the stadium, one of whom soared into the air.

Several dignitaries escorted the Olympic flag as it entered the stadium, among them U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and legendary American boxer Muhammad Ali.

AFTER THE COLORADO MASSACRE: WHY IS AMERICA SO ATTACHED TO GUNS?

What is it about Americans and guns?

How much time do you have?

“I can tell you that I don’t think there’s any other developed country in the world that has remotely the problem we have,” New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said, after the shooting rampage in Colorado.

There are an estimated 270 million guns in the hands of civilians in the United States, making Americans the most heavily armed people in the world per capita. Yemen, a tribal nation with no history of strong central government or the rule of law, comes in a distant second.

From Washington, D.C., to the well-stocked shelves of Walmart stores nationwide, guns are regarded in the United States as a commonplace if controversial consumer item for millions of law-abiding hunters, collectors and citizens concerned about their safety. They are also in the hands of thousands of killers too; a Washington-based anti-gun lobby says those guns shoot more than 100,000 people a year. In 2010, there were more than 30,000 deaths caused by firearms when the number of homicides, suicides and accidental deaths are tallied.

America’s collective memory — of the Wild West in the 1800s, the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King half a century ago and the front-page news from last week and is marked time and time again by guns.

“It’s undeniable,” writes Clayton Cramer, author of “Armed America: the Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie.” “Guns are at the center of much of America’s history, its legends, and its horrors.”

There were guns in America long before the America we know today was even born. Early settlers in several states were required by law to own and maintain weapons as a matter of collective defense.

By the time the United States was established, its citizens had taken up arms not only against their Native American neighbors but the army of their own king. Their new constitution reflected that in its Bill of Rights, declaring that “A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”

For more than two centuries that remained an important but largely overlooked guarantee, subjected to a modest series of controls. But in 2008 and 2010 landmark Supreme Court rulings gave that constitutional right sweeping new power, dramatically diminishing the authority of state and local governments to limit gun ownership.

Gun-friendly lawmakers have been active, too. Roughly half of the 50 U.S. states have adopted laws allowing gun owners to carry their guns openly in most public places. About as many states have ‘stand your ground’ laws that allow people to kill if they come under threat, even, in some cases, if they can escape the threat without violence.

The laws are being driven by politics and the politics are being driven by groups such as the National Rifle Association. Once a relatively modest organization of gun enthusiasts and hunters, it has become one of the most powerful political groups in the country. The Washington Post estimates that the NRA succeeded in helping elect four out of every five candidates it endorsed in the most recent congressional election.

In addition to that extraordinary impact in Congress, it has also been working to overturn gun-control laws in the courts as well.

The NRA and other gun-rights groups have allied themselves with the Republican Party and, especially, a sector of the American public suspicious of government intrusions into private life and often flatly hostile to Washington.

Read Dana Bash: For Democrats, gun politics are bad politics

“When they tell you that a government ban on certain firearms will somehow make you safer, don’t you believe it, not for a second, because it’s a lie just like the lies they’ve told you before,” NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre told a recent gathering of his members. “Their laws don’t work.”

“America stands alone in its historic and cultural attachment to guns. America stands armed.” Jonathan Mann

Poll results suggest most Americans wouldn’t agree. CNN and Gallup surveys going back years suggest that Americans are split between those who approve of current gun-control laws and respondents who would like to see them made more restrictive. Americans who’d like no controls at all are a small minority.

But even after the rampage in Colorado, American attitudes and laws aren’t likely to change much. Last year’s nearly fatal shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords didn’t move her state or federal colleagues to adopt any new gun control measures.

Both President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney issued statements in the hours after the Colorado shootings, and Sunday, Obama flew to the state to visit with shooting victims and their families. But neither proposed any changes to American attitudes toward guns.

“You know, soothing words are nice, but maybe it’s time that the two people who want to be president of the United States stand up and tell us what they are going to do about it, because this is obviously a problem across the country,” said New York’s Mayor Bloomberg, who is both a declared ‘independent’ politically and a vocal proponent of gun control.

America is not unique. Norwegians are marking the first anniversary of a shooting massacre that took the lives of 69 people at a summer camp outside of Oslo. Eight more people were that day killed by a bomb in the Norwegian capital itself. The confessed killer is awaiting the verdict of his trial.

But America seems to be the place the whole world thinks of when apparently ordinary people use guns for grotesque acts of violence. America stands alone in its historic and cultural attachment to guns. America stands armed.

From CNN.com

Posted by Ngo Okafor

15 DEAD, 50 WOUNDED IN BATMAN MOVIE SHOOTING IN COLORADO

A heavily armed gunman killed at least 14 people and wounded 50 more during an early Friday morning screening of the new Batman movie at an Aurora, Colorado, theater, police Chief Dan Oates told reporters.

Police arrested a man believed to be the shooter in a rear parking lot of the theater, Frank Fania, a police spokesman, told CNN. The suspect was not immediately identified, though Fania said he was believed to be in his early 20s.

“He did not resist. He did not put up a fight,” Fania said. Police seized a rifle and a handgun from the suspect, and another gun was found in the theater, he said.

Oates said there was no evidence of a second gunman, and FBI spokesman Jason Pack said it did not appear the incident was related to terrorism.

President Barack Obama issued a statement saying he and first lady Michelle Obama were “shocked and saddened” by the shooting and pledged the administration’s support for victims of the shooting.

“As we do when confronted by moments of darkness and challenge, we must now come together as one American family,” it said.

Chaos broke out during the showing of “The Dark Knight Rises” at the Century Aurora 16 theater when the shooting began, police and witnesses said.

Witnesses told KUSA that the gunman kicked in an emergency exit door and threw a smoke bomb into the darkened theater before opening fire.

One movie-goer, who was not identified, told KUSA the gunman was wearing a gas mask.

Some people in the audience thought the thick smoke and gunfire was a special effect accompanying the movie, police and witnesses said.

“We just heard a pop, pop, pop, pop,” said Quentin Caldwell, who was attending the Batman showing in an adjacent theater.

Cell phone video taken by someone at the theater showed scores of people screaming and fleeing the building. Some had blood on their clothes.

One police officer carried a girl believed to be about 9 with gunshot wounds to her back out of the theater, a witness said. “She wasn’t moving.”

Authorities also have evacuated the suspect’s Aurora apartment building after “he made a statement about explosives” in his unit, Oates said.

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents have searched the suspect’s car and went to his home to search for explosives, agency spokesman Tom Mangan said. They also are conducting emergency traces on the weapons used to see how they were obtained, he said.

Of the wounded, at least 20 were being treated at the University of Colorado Hospital, said spokeswoman Jacque Montgomery. All of the wounded suffered from gunshot wounds, which ranged from minor to critical, she said.

“They’re arriving by police, by ambulance. Some are walking in,” she said.

Ten people were killed in the theater and another four died at area hospitals, Oates said.

Hundreds of police officers descended on the theater, and the FBI has joined the investigation.

“We were calling for help from every police and fire agency,” Fania said.

Aurora, a Denver suburb, is about 13 miles from Littleton, Colorado — site of the April 1999 Columbine High School massacre.

In that incident, two teenage students, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, armed themselves with guns and bombs and opened fire inside the high school. They killed 13 people and wounding 23 others before killing themselves.

RED TAILS IS NUMBER TWO!!! ONE MORE DAY TO MAKE IT NUMBER ONE!!!

I got back to New York city last night after a great trip to Atlanta. Thank you once again to the entire Triage Entertainmemnt team for making my trip so smooth. I had a good flight back fom Atlanta. We got back to New York City so quickly that I was not able to finish the movie that I was watching. Ever since I was a kid, I always enjoyed flying. I loved the take off and landing. I felt that the vacation started on plane. There are so many videos to watch and video games to play. It’s like one massive hotel room shared by many people.  There’s so much stimulation that I would have to force myself to go to sleep. I developed some anxiety towards flying when I got on the plane on the trip to London to take care of Ogbogu. It continued on my trip to Nigeria, but I’ve been working on it; coming to terms with the root of it. I realized that on my trip back to NYC from Atlanta that I wasn’t anxious anymore.

On the car ride home from the airport, I called a great of mine, Myron Primes. We got on the subject of Red Tails. We talked about the fact that we had to make sure to go and see Red Tails this weekend because opening weekend is the most important for every theatrically released film. I’m going to see it tonight. The opening weekend is important because of several factors. Mainly though, it will give an indication of the amount of money it is likely to make, and the more money it makes, the more the word spreads about whether or not it is good. IT’S ALL ABOUT THE MONEY! If it is a good film but fails to make much money in comparison to its costs, then there won’t be many people that have seen it, and therefore word-of-mouth won’t go as far and as quickly. Entertainment business is what it is…BUSINESS!! The producers want to make money and tons of it. There are so many people to get paid when a film is completed that the numbers are key. That being said, if black people want to see more films with all black casts, we have to make the film explode on it’s opening weekend.

RED TAILS IS NUMBER TWO!!! ONE MORE DAY TO MAKE IT NUMBER ONE!!!

Hollywood, just like any other business is a copy-cat business. When one genre of film makes a ton of money, ten more films in that genre get made to try to capitalize on the success of the first one. That means that if Red Tails does well at the box office, 10 more action films with all black casts will get made. That means that the careers of several black actors will get jump started and flailing careers will get resuscitated. Instead of sitting around crying about who is not hiring us or not giving us an opportunity, we should make our own films and challenge each other to go out and support it. If a film is not made into a campaign, people will not be motivated to go out and see it. Red Tails was pushed as a campaign and black people were determined not let down.  WE DID IT!!!! Red Tails is number two in the box office!! It is not a comedy nor is it a film where black people are playing servants or drivers. This shows that films such as these can and will make money.  It goes to show that if you are strong enough to build it…they will come!

By

Ngo Okafor

The most downloaded black male model and actor

African american black male model photo gallery

www.getingo.com