Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Diddy, Drake Get in Fight Over Music Rights at Miami Nightclub: Details



Drizzy better watch his back these days! First Chris Brown called Drake out on Instagram over the weekend for secretly dating Karrueche Tran while he was behind bars, and now Us Weekly has learned that he got into a fistfight with rapper and producer Diddy at Miamis LIV nightclub on Sunday, Dec. 7.

PHOTOS: Celebrity feuds

A source tells Us that the scuffle took place outside of the club and that it revolved around music rights to a song.

Diddy was the one that was upset with the music rights, the source reveals to Us. It started inside the club, and then the fight ended up happening outside.

PHOTOS: Stars fight back on social media

Another source claims Diddy, 45, threw the first punch, but neither artist went to the hospital and no police were called. There was no report filed from the incident.

PHOTOS: Celebrity scandals and meltdowns

Following the fight, Drake, 28, left LIV while Diddy went back inside. A third source tell Us, Later, Diddy was inside the club with his son, smiling and having a great time.

PHOTOS: Celeb mugshots

Kim Kardashians longtime pal Jonathan Cheban happened to be at the club, and posted an Instagram video of the star-studded performers in attendance, who included Lil Wayne, Rick Ross, Fabolous, Ace Hood, Busta Rhymes, and Fat Joe.

This isnt the first time Drake has been involved in a physical fight with another celebrity. In June 2012, the rapper allegedly threw a glass bottle at Brown at a Manhattan nightclub.

Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/diddy-punches-drake-miami-nightclub-details-2014812



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Monday, December 8, 2014

NFL Playoff Picture Week 15: San Diego Chargers' Scenarios



Robert Hanashiro-USA TODAY Sports

The San Diego Chargers hopes of making the 2014 AFC playoffs were diminished slightly when they lost to the New England Patriots 23-14 on Sunday. The good news for the Bolts is that some of the other NFL teams they are competing against to make the playoffs lost as well. With losses by the Kansas City Chiefs and Miami Dolphins this past weekend, the Chargers would theoretically make the playoffs as the No. 6 seed if the season ended today.

Unfortunately for them, however, they most likely have no hope of getting higher than the No. 2 seed now. If they had beaten New England and then gone on to beat the Denver Broncos next week, they would have been in prime position to lock down home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. With New England having a two-game lead on them and a head-to-head advantage, that hope is all but gone. And with Denver winning yesterday, the Bolts are in a must-win situation this weekend if they have any hope of winning the AFC West and getting at least a No. 2 seed.

As it sits now, the Chargers would be facing the Indianapolis Colts on the road, a matchup most fans of the Chargers would not relish. They would much rather be the No. 5 seed and playing the Cincinnati Bengals, a team they beat last year in Cincinnati in the playoffs and have a lot of confidence against. If the Chargers cant get higher than a Wild Card, this is the matchup they need to hope plays out.

A win this weekend against the Broncos and the Chargers shrink the deficit to one game with two to play. San Diego would still need some help to get that No. 2 seed, but at least they would have eliminated the head-to-head advantage Denver has over them. A loss would officially end any hope of winning the division as Denver would have a three-game lead over them with two to play. If the Chargers want to even make the playoffs, however, they need a win in general as the group of teams just behind them and in the hunt are growing. A win by the Houston Texans, Baltimore Ravens, Dolphins or Chiefs combined with a Chargers loss would knock San Diego out of their No. 6 seed position for the week.

There is still three weeks to go, but San Diego needs to focus solely on Denver if they want to bolster their hopes of getting into the NFL playoffs. They have a lot to lose if they dont win this Sunday.

Jonathan George is an NFL writer forRantSports.com. Follow him onTwitter@jonageorge. Like him onFacebookor add him to your network onGoogle.

Source: http://www.rantsports.com/nfl/2014/12/08/nfl-playoff-picture-week-15-san-diego-chargers-scenarios/



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Detroit Lions hit Bucs QB Josh McCown so hard, they felt sorry for him



DETROIT -- How badly did the Detroit Lions beat up Tampa Bay quarterback Josh McCown?

They were actually feeling sorry for the guy after a 34-17 win at Ford Field.

"I felt sorry for him," defensive end George Johnson said. "We beat him up pretty good."

Defensive end Ezekiel Ansah did the most damage, hitting McCown four times and sacking him once. Star defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh certainly did his part too, with three hits and one sack.

"Those are the guys you have to be concerned with," coach Jim Caldwell said, "and you'd better find different ways to block them because you get one, and the other guy's loose."

Johnson and Andre Fluellen added one sack apiece. Even linebacker DeAndre Levy, who entered the game with 1.5 career sacks, dropped McCown twice.

Add it all up, and Detroit sacked McCown six times, plus hit him 14 times.

The Lions' defensive line has been among the league's best, but this was their most dominant effort since sacking Minnesota's Teddy Bridgewater eight times in October.

Bridgewater will be at Ford Field next week, as it happens, and might feel a little queasy watching film of McCown get battered more times than he could count.

"I don't know,' McCown said, when asked if this was the most he'd ever been hit. "I have to look at the tape and see, but I don't know."

Even McCown's receiver felt bad for him.

"I'm going to take him out for a nice dinner when we're all (done) here this year," Vincent Jackson said. "Maybe help him get some ice bags and have them sent to his house."

Detroit's defense was so successful against the pass in part because they knew it was coming. Tampa Bay, just like every other team the Lions face, simply could not run the ball.

The Bucs attempted just 14 runs for 26 yards. That's one week after the Bears attempted just eight runs for 13 yards.

Detroit is the first team since 2006 to allowed fewer than 40 yards rushing in back-to-back games, and could become the first team since 2006 to allow fewer than 1,000 yards in a season.

The Lions are on pace to allow 1,004 rushing yards this year.

"It seemed like we got off schedule so much that we were pulled out of the run game," McCown said. "That's what happens when we get behind the sticks. You can't get your runs up."

-- Download the Detroit Lions MLive app for iPhone and Android -- Follow Kyle Meinke on Twitter-- Like MLive's Detroit Lions Facebook page

Source: http://www.mlive.com/lions/index.ssf/2014/12/detroit_lions_hit_bucs_qb_josh.html



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Sunday, December 7, 2014

Years after Pearl Harbor, Annapolis holds reminder of USS Maryland



The bell on the south lawn of the State House in Annapolis recalls the men who served aboard "Fighting Mary" also known as "Big Mary" and "Mighty Mary." Its crew called the ship by those names; civilians knew the 32,600-ton battleship as the USS Maryland.

Seventy-three years ago Sunday, the bell and the Maryland were a considerable distance from Annapolis 4,855 miles, to be exact, moored on Battleship Row at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Dec. 7, 1941, the day of the Japanese attack that pushed the United States into World War II.

The Maryland was protected that day by its position in the harbor. The ship was next to the USS Oklahoma, which took heavy torpedo damage and sank, with a loss of 429 lives. The USS California, to the forward of the Maryland, and the USS West Virginia, to the stern, also sustained serious damage.

"The other battleships around her shielded the Maryland from a direct torpedo hit. ... Two [USS Maryland] crewmen and two officers died in the attack, killed by the explosions from two Japanese bombs," according to a 1991 Sun article recounting events 50 years before. In the article, Navy veteran Clyde Oney, who had served aboard the Maryland, recalled smoke and fire, and the shouted warning of the master at arms as the Japanese planes attacked.

A week later, the Maryland, damaged hull repaired, was the first battleship to leave Pearl Harbor. Commissioned in 1921, the ship survived other attacks during the war and suffered a reported 53 crew casualties before being decommissioned in 1947.

"The battle-scarred veteran has been under as heavy ... bombardment as any warship of the fleet. Her 16-inch guns, the first ever mounted on a United States battleship, plastered the enemy at Tarawa, Kwajalein, Saipan, Peleliu, Leyte and Okinawa," reported The Evening Sun.

The Maryland was sold for scrap in 1959.

The bell, however, found a new home in 1961, when it was formally installed as the centerpiece of a memorial on the State House grounds.

"This simple shrine for the bell is the design of architect Ian MacCallum," The Sun wrote in 1961. MacCallum was quoted as saying the bell "symbolizes the indomitable spirit of the USS Maryland. For this reason, the design shows the bell statically suspended in space for all time, over earth and sea."

Copyright 2014, The Baltimore Sun

Source: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/anne-arundel/annapolis/bs-md-ar-pearl-harbor-bell-20141207-story.html



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Mary Landrieu Falls to Bill Cassidy in Louisiana Runoff



Senate Republicans expanded their majority in the upcoming Congress on Saturday when Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy defeated Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu in a runoff election.

The Associated Press called the race for Cassidy, who enjoyed substantial help from outside groups determined to knock off another Democratic incumbent senator this election cycle.

Democrats, however, had largely given up on Landrieu once it became clear they no longer would retain control of the Senate. After the November 4 primary, liberal groups aired just 100 television ads in support of the three-term senator, whereas conservative groups aired 6,000, according to the Center for Public Integrity.

Cassidy stuck to the GOP's successful strategy of tying Landrieu with President Barack Obama in a state Obama lost by 17 points in his 2012 re-election. He repeatedly said she voted with the president 97 percent of the time and painted her as the "deciding" vote for the Affordable Care Act.

Exit polls from the primary showed troubling signs for Landrieu, even though she won a plurality of the vote running against Cassidy and another Republican. She earned the support of just 18 percent of white voters, significantly less than the 33 percent she got during her 2008 election.

The daughter of former New Orleans mayor and the sister of the current one has come out on top of tough races before, but this election she struggled to define herself as an independent-minded Democrat.

Her message during the runoff election was that Senate control has already been decided and voters must now choose who is best for the Pelican State. Landrieu told supporters that replacing her with Cassidy is like replacing popular New Orlean Saints quarterback Drew Brees with a rookie.

But her veteran leadership was not enough to pass the Keystone XL pipeline last month when the bill failed to get Senate approval by one vote.

"I came here 18 years ago, fighting to get here, fighting to stay here, and I'm going to fight for the people of my state until the day that I leave I hope that will not be soon," a defeated Landrieu said after the vote. "There's only joy in the fight. Where I come from, we just never talk about quitting, and we don't talk about whining."

Landrieu's loss means Southern states no longer have a Democrat representing them in the Senate, a remarkable shift in a region the party used to firmly control.

First published December 6 2014, 6:27 PM

Andrew Rafferty

Andrew Rafferty has been a political reporter for NBCNews.com since 2013. Rafferty writes and reports on politics for the web, and shoots and produces video for all NBC platforms.

Prior to joining NBCNews.com, Rafferty was a campaign reporter covering the 2012 presidential election. Rafferty was on the road for both the Republican primaries and general election, providing content for both the web and television.

Rafferty began at NBC News through a fellowship at "Meet The Press."

He is from Buffalo, N.Y., and attended John Carroll University in Ohio.

... Expand Bio

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/elections/mary-landrieu-falls-bill-cassidy-louisiana-runoff-n262801



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'Wild': Laura Dern on feeling 'vulnerable' as Reese Witherspoon's mom



Laura Dern is having a mother of a year. In the spring, Dern played a cheery, soothing parent to cancer patient Shailene Woodley in the hit teen weepie "The Fault in Our Stars." In the fall festival darling "99 Homes," which will be released next year, Dern is mom to evicted construction worker Andrew Garfield.

And in "Wild," which just arrived in theaters in New York and Los Angeles this week, the Academy Award-winning actress has one of the year's most significant maternal roles, as the mother of memoirist Cheryl Strayed, played by Reese Witherspoon.

In the bestselling book and the new film directed by Jean-Marc Vallee, Dern's character, Bobbi Strayed, is the soul of the story, an ethereal, optimistic woman whose untimely death helps spark her daughter's breakdown and subsequent decision to hike 1,100 miles alone.

When Dern was first cast in the meaty part the news raised eyebrows in age-conscious Hollywood; at 47 she's only nine years older than Witherspoon. On the industry news website Deadline.com, commenters questioned the logic of the decision -- "Her mother?Is this a comedy?It seems like a bad joke," one wrote.

There is, in fact, logic to the casting -- Bobbi's scenes unfold in flashback, as Cheryl is recalling her while hiking the Pacific Crest Trail.

In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Dern said the age difference never occurred to her until another actor brought it up over a meal.

"After we did it we went to dinner with a mutual girlfriend whos an actor too, and she was like, 'I cant believe you did that. Arent you nervous about doing that?'" Dern said. "I was like, 'Wait, wha?' It didnt give me pause before, but after I felt maybe vulnerable that somebody else pointed it out."

Dern, whose own mother, actress Diane Ladd, is from Meridian, Miss., said she felt a "kindred spirit Southern family kind of thing" with the New Orleans-born Witherspoon.

"Laura came at this with absolutely no ego," Witherspoon said of her costar's casting. "Ego is the death of creativity."

In the film, Dern, herself a mother of two, acts opposite Strayed's real-life 9-year-old daughter, who is named Bobbi, after the grandmother she never met. The scenes provided an opportunity for some closure for Strayed.

"Cheryl was so heartbroken that her mother would never meet her children and when she saw Bobbi run into my arms on the first day ... she watched her daughter meet her grandmother for the first time," Dern said.

Copyright 2014, Los Angeles Times

Source: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/moviesnow/la-et-mn-wild-laura-dern-reese-witherspoons-mother-20141206-story.html



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Dear Dana White: Send CM Punk Back to the WWE�UFC Doesn't Need Him



Fights happened at UFC 181. Titles were defended. Blood spilled. But all that went down in a very large shadowdeposed WWE wrestling kingpin CM Punk is coming, per an announcement during the pay-per-view Saturday night,to the UFC Octagon.

Punk, whose real name is Phil Brooks, left the WWE on bad terms in January. He's been the subject of whispers ever since, rumors of his eventual signing with the UFC swirling around for months before the company finally pulled the trigger Saturday.

Brooks, who will compete as either a middleweight or a welterweight, appeared on the UFC 181 broadcast to discuss his multi-fight deal with announcer Joe Rogan.

I have a background in kempo, and Ive been doing Brazilian jiu-jitsu for a long time," Brooks said. "This is my new career, 100 percentI'm going to go full steam ahead, all systems go after today, and it's going to be fun.

"I have nothing but respect for everybody here at the UFC, everybody who steps in the Octagon to fight.And when it's all said and done, when I'm finished, everybody's going to have to respect me because I have come here to fight."

It was a move that shocked the combat-sports world, me included. To be honest I never gave a potential Punk signing much thought. It simply seemed too far-fetched to warrant much brain power. Sure, Punk was a noted MMA fan who trains with Rener Gracie. And, yes, he's expressed some interest in giving MMA a try.

But in the UFC?The Super Bowl of mixed martial arts?

It just didn't seem feasible. After all, this is a man with no history of athletic success, no track record in martial arts competition and a laundry list of injuries than made continuing his career as a wrestling showman untenable.

Giving fighting a shot is Punk's choice. Putting him in the Octagon, where ostensibly the best cage fighters in the world compete, is White's. And it's nothing more than a sideshow, the kind of hucksterism the UFC was supposedly escaping when it ran towards respectability and away from its early reputation as human cockfighting.

This is a publicity stunt and a n***d cash grab. The UFC is eschewing sport for spectacle, walking the opposite path it followed to grow the "sport" to this point. But there's no underestimating the levels Dana White and company will sink to in the name of American capitalism.

The UFC is struggling in the American market. Television numbers are down. Pay-per-view numbers are reportedly at the lowest levels since the dawn of The Ultimate Fighter in 2005. It's, no doubt, pretty scary to ponder the future these days. They've bet it all, everything White and his partners have built over more than a decade, on successful foreign expansion.

And that's a bet that will be slow paying offif it does at all. In the meantime, with it's top stars either in decline like Anderson Silva, pondering a movie career like Ronda Rousey or in an extended public spat with the promotion over drug testing and other issues like George St-Pierre, the UFC is desperate for something to click with their fans.

Enter CM Punk.

The UFC has seen the potential power of a professional wrestler at the box office before. When former (and current) WWE champion Brock Lesnar signed with the company in 2008, it lit a fire that burned hot and fast. The promotion broke box-office records behind Lesnar, riding his success to unthinkable heights.

It's tempting to compare the two men because of their WWE backgrounds. But Lesnar was an athletic marvel, a former NCAA champion wrestler who once tried out for the Minnesota Vikings on a whim and impressed even NFL scouts with his raw ability.

Comparing Punk to Lesnar rings hollow. At best it's naive. At worst it's manipulative and dishonest. Punk has no athletic credentials. He never even played sports in high school. And, while he's had some training in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, he's never competed at a high level in that art either. He's a complete unknown.

If he wants to fightfine. But putting him in the hallowed UFC Octagon, once meant only for the best of the best, turns a sport into a carnival show, especially if he's fighting in a high-profile bout. Is this athletics? Or is it celebrity fantasy camp?

Even worse, from a moral standpoint, is Punk's age and history of injuries. The 36-year-old entertainer, though not a sportsman, did travel the world with the WWE, sacrificing his health and well-being in thousands of televised wrestling collisions and slams.

They took their toll. In a revealing podcast interview, Punk said not only had he torn his meniscus, PCL, MCL and injured his ACL, he also had serious troubles with his elbow. Worse still, he had suffered more than a dozen concussions in his career, and it was affecting him nightly (transcribed by Cageside Seats):

I worked Luke Harper in a match and I got hit with something and it f------g rung my bell and I got a concussion. But we were leaving for Europe the next day. So Doc was leaning on me going 'do you want me to... do you have a concussion or can you go to Europe' kind of thing. And I was just like 'you f-----g... you pigs.

I'll go to Europe. Whatever.' That's on me. That's my fault. I probably shouldn't have.

After the European tour, the whole European tour, I'm dry heaving after every match. I mean, luckily I was in tags.

It was me and Daniel Bryan vs. The Wyatts and they were awesome, and they were fun -- the parts I remember -- but I'm on all fours after every match and I'm either puking for real or I'm just dry heaving because I don't have anything in my stomach. I have no appetite. I don't know what is up and what is down. I can't sleep. I can't f-----g train. It's like a bus, a hotel, a cold building.

This doesn't sound like a man who needs to be competing in a brutal sport like mixed martial arts. This sounds like a man who should be taking measures to protect his brain for what willhopefullybe a long and productivelife.

It will ultimately be an athletic commission's job to decide whether Punk is fit to fight. Of course athletic commissions let Muhammad Ali fight into the 1980s, long after it was clear he was doing himselfirreparableharm. Ifthere's money to be made with CM Punk, the UFC will find a way to get him in the cage.

Does CM Punk Deserve to Fight in the UFC?

Will CM Punk make the UFC money? In the short term, I have no doubt. While he wasn't a great box-office PPV attraction for WWE, no one was giving up on him, which is how they ended up creating the WWE Network, he is asignificantstar toan audience of several million wrestling fans.

People will watch CM Punk, at least once or twice. The question, then, is whether his signing will further degrade MMA's standing in the broader sports mainstream.

No other sport would even consider signing a celebrity to compete at the highest level or try to pass one off as an equal to their hardworking professionals. Even Michael Jordan, arguably the greatestathleteof his era, wasforced to give baseball a try in the minor leagues, not for the Chicago White Sox.

Jordan, famously, failed. So, too, will this. The UFC will cash in on Punk at the cost of their hard-earned credibility.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2291848-dear-dana-white-send-cm-punk-back-to-the-wwe-ufc-doesnt-need-him



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