Sunday, January 4, 2015

Film about Selma march takes America back to the future



David Oyelowo, center, as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Carmen Ejogo as Coretta Scott King in Selma.(Photo: Atsushi Nishijima Paramount Pictures)

We cannot leave 2015 as we have entered it.

But to become changed, we must focus on what we keep doing over and over and stop doing it.

We must focus on those things in the circle of history that remain unchanged in any monumental way as we pass from century to century, from decade to decade. Yes, life is better for black Americans almost everywhere. But yes, racism and discrimination still exist.

Yes, there is a problem with the way authorities treat some black men, treatment that, too often, ends in death.

Now, we must decide, each of us, who we will be no matter our color and the role we will play no matter our color in doing what America has never done: Resolve our issue with race so that we can make our cities, our country, our families, better.

And things will not get better unless and until we actually meet each other where we are, and as the people we are. We cannot dismiss each other's thoughts or presence because our skin color differs. We cannot dismiss each other's point of view or history or culture because we are more comfortable reciting only our own.

Anyone who needs help understanding this concept can get it from a powerful new film, "Selma, which director Ava DuVernay uses to help us see each other as people. In "Selma," she recounts three civil rights marches in 1965 from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., to demand voting rights for black Americans. On March 7, nearly 600 demonstrators were attacked and beaten on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Those attacks on the marchers, who were brutally rebuffed under the orders of Gov. George Wallace, were captured on television and awoke a nation to the injustice it had had the luxury of ignoring until that point. Two days later, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. led a second march, but halted it to avoid violence. Two weeks later, President Lyndon Johnson called in the Alabama National Guard, which protected about 4,000 marchers on the 50-mile journey for a third time. Nearly 25,000 amassed at the State Capitol to hear King speak. Four and a half months later, Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Marchers cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma. On March 7, 1965, nearly 600 demonstrators were attacked and beaten as they marched for civil rights, the first of three marches from Selma to Montgomery, Ala.(Photo: Atsushi Nishijima Paramount Pictures)

Before the act, only 130 of 15,000 black Selma residents were registered to vote. Selma changed lives. And many leaders played a role. What DuVernay, in making the first feature film about King, does successfully is recount a piece of history that wasn't just about black people, or about just one man, but was about a country still at war a hundred years after the death of President Abraham Lincoln. She found a single moment in time that changed them all black, white, young and old. Film critics have praised making black people real and not just a color.

DuVernay said some didn't get the point.

Director Ava DuVernay, center, on the set of Selma. As a very little girl in Compton, my Aunt Denise used to take me to the theater at least once a week to see movies, movies of all kinds, and I just caught the bug, she said.(Photo: Atsushi Nishijima Paramount)

"When I read (reviews of the film and critics) talk about 'Wow, it's colorless or it's lovely to just humanize black people, I'm kind of like, 'It's not colorless. It's colorful. It's filled with color. It's just that we don't have to talk about it every single minute of the day.' "

She said her goal with this film as well as the one before it, "Middle of Nowhere" was to offer a different perspective, something Hollywood is sorely missing.

Background, from left: Tessa Thompson as Diane Nash, Omar Dorsey as James Orange, Colman Domingo as Ralph Abernathy, David Oyelowo as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Andre Holland as Andrew Young, Corey Reynolds as the Rev. C.T. Vivian and Lorraine Toussaint as Amelia Boynton in Selma.(Photo: Atsushi Nishijima Paramount Pictures)

"There is something radical about seeing black history as told through a black filmmaker's lens," she said. "That's why there is a difference between '12 Years A Slave' and films we've seen previously. That's why it's important that Lee Daniels was able to tell the story of 'The Butler' or why Ryan Coogler could make a film like 'Fruitvale Station.' There is a thing to be said for perspective. It's not better. It's not worse. It's just that films about people of color have long been made by people who are not people of color, and that is something I intend to challenge. There is something very textural, there is something energetic, there is something emotional about having the perspective of a person that's actually within the story. So that's what I try to do."

DuVernay, who grew up in Compton, Calif., loved films as a child and cited a relative's influence for her breadth of knowledge.

"Some people love music. Some people love books. Some people love sports. I was always a film geek," she said. "As a very little girl in Compton, my Aunt Denise used to take me to the theater at least once a week to see movies, movies of all kinds, and I just caught the bug."

DuVernay became a publicist and a familiar fixture on the sets of movies she was helping to promote. But one day, something changed and she suddenly saw herself behind a camera.

"Something about being in proximity to filmmakers on their sets, traveling with filmmakers around the world, talking to them, seeing the process of crafting the film. ... I thought, 'You know, this is not magic. This is hard work.' And I work hard."

But working hard also meant working smart. And when you're making a film about one of the most famous and revered men in history, it means finding a way to tell the story that hasn't been told and, for DuVernay, serving a higher purpose.

"King is this ambient in my household," she said when asked when she first became aware of King's power. "He was part of the atmosphere during my growing up with my great-grandmother.

"She had a picture of Jesus and King on the wall," DuVernay recalled with a laugh. "It's the same thing. Jesus is not higher on the wall. It's just the two. And from my great-grandmother who lived until I was 6 years old to my grandmother to my mother to my father, who's from Alabama, King was a part of households in the black community."

She said her job, particularly as horrified and fed-up residents in cities across America have taken to the streets and to die-ins to protest the deaths of black men at the hands of police officers, was to show that a person who stood up to lead in crisis was just a man, an imperfect, troubled, sometimes scared man.

"My primary goal was to deconstruct King," she said. "I was not at all interested in making a story about a speechmaker or a statue or a street or initials or a catchphrase or a holiday or all the things he'd been reduced to. It's unfortunate because he was a very dynamic man, a very charismatic man, an intellectual. He was a man of faith. He was unfaithful. He was guilty. He was oppressed. He had an ego. He was a prankster. He loved to laugh. He loved to eat. He was a human being."

To show the human being rather than the caricatured symbol, she chose tiny ways that make big statements, such as shooting him from the back when he was speaking or from his feet up.

"It was important to look at all the photographs of King from that time," she said. "Almost every picture you see of him, he's center frame. There's a camera in front of him, whether it's the 'I Have a Dream' speech or anything else. So to deconstruct that, the idea of that myth, I had to move the camera to places you're not usually standing, behind him, places you're not usually seeing, like in the scene when he turns around on the bridge."

In that scene, King halts the march, before anyone can be injured, by simply turning his back on baton-wielding law enforcement officers and walking back through the crowd. Slowly the crowd turns and follows him.

In another scene, DuVernay deals with King's infidelity in a single moment, in a single exchange between King and his wife, Coretta.

"I've heard other approaches in scripts that never got made, male filmmakers who were interested in seeing the act, seeing the deed that is being described by Coretta in the scene," DuVernay said. "My job as a woman filmmaker is 'What did your wife say when you came home.' That is a perspective of a woman filmmaker. That is why it's important to have different people behind the camera, different people telling the story."

We cannot leave 2015 as we entered it. We must work tirelessly to help people see people, not color, whether we're black, white, brown or yellow.

Perhaps when people see perspective and humanity, they can soon see leaders and friends.

Contact Rochelle Riley: rriley@freepress.com

'Selma'

Opens Friday; screenings Thursday night in some theaters

Rated PG-13 for disturbing themes, violence, a suggestive moment and language

2 hours, 7 minutes

'Selma' is based on the true story of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights marches of Selma, Alabama. David Oyelowo stars as Martin Luther King, Jr. VPC

Read or Share this story: http://on.freep.com/1IaADif

Source: http://www.freep.com/story/news/columnists/rochelle-riley/2015/01/04/nationwide-protests-recall-selma-march/21202191/



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Saturday, January 3, 2015

Paul McCartney plus Kanye West minus racial politics on 'Only One'



For at least the third time, Sir Paul McCartney has teamed up with a young African American man for a hit. McCartney and Kanye West just released Only One, a tribute to Wests deceased mother, on iTunes and Wests Web site.

Hello my only one, just like the morning sun, West sings over the former Beatles keyboard vamping. Youll keep on rising til the skyknows your name. The ballad runs 4:42 and ends with abouta minute of McCartney tickling the ivories solo in Lady Madonna mode.

A somewhat mystical statement issued with the song described what happened when the Walrus and Yeezus teamed up.

Kanye sat there with his family, holding his daughter North on his lap, and listened to his vocals, singing, Hello, my only one, a statement reported by Rolling Stone read. And in that moment, not only could he not recall having sung those words, but he realized that perhaps the words had never really come from him.The process of artistic creation is one that does not involve thinking, but often channeling. And he understood in that moment that his late mother, Dr. Donda West, who was also his mentor, confidante, and best friend, had spoken through him that day.

This is arguably the first of McCartneys duets with young black men not infused with racial baggage, overt or encoded. First, there was Ebony and Ivory with Stevie Wonder, released in 1982. Key question: Ebony and ivory live together in perfect harmony side by side on my piano keyboard oh lord, why dont we?

The following year saw the release of Say, Say, Say, McCartneys duet with Michael Jackson the video for which, some say, referenced minstrel shows.

One academic thought McCartney and Jackson toyed with blackface without taking it on.

The sequences of Say, Say, Say will initially dismay anyone concerned with the fate of peoples culture, wrote Smith professor W.T. Lhamon in Raising Cain: Blackface Performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop. What a loss that the whole cycle of blackface performance should funnel down to these capers in a cross-racial attraction played out among stars ashamed to utter its name aloud in public?

Lhamon also found fault with the video becauseMcCartney as Mac helps Jackson as Jac into a wagon.

In a just world, Jackson should be pulling McCartney onto the wagon, not the other way round, Lhamon wrote.

Though Only One is not about race, McCartneys alliance with West theauthorof New Slaves who said George Bush doesnt care about black people puts him in the studio with a performer whose provocative take on racial politics seems part of a different universe than those of previous collaborators Wonder and Jackson. McCartney, 72, cant beaccused of using young black performers to stay relevant. Even more than Elvis Presley or bandmate John Lennon, the man is arguably the most influential performer in the history of pop music, and need not polish his legacy.

However, McCartney has had to respond to accusations of racism in the past. In 1969, a version of the Beatles song Get Back known as No Pakistanis surfaced.Dont dig no Pakistanis taking all the peoples jobs, McCartney said on the recording.

In 1986, McCartney said the comment was not meant as a slight.

There were a lot of stories in the newspapers then about Pakistanis crowding out flats you know, living 16 to a room or whatever, McCartneysaid, as Salon reported in an exhaustive piece about No Pakistanis.

He added: If there was any group that was not racist, it was the Beatles. I mean, all our favorite people were always black.

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The Beatles: Let them be

Justin Moyer is the deputy editor of the Morning Mix.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/01/02/paul-mccartney-plus-kanye-west-on-only-one/



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'Beverly Hillbillies' star Donna Douglas dead at 81



"The Beverly Hillbillies" cast (l-r): Irene Ryan, Buddy Ebsen, Max Baer, Nancy Kulp, Raymond Bailey and Donna Douglas(AP)

Donna Douglas, the actress who won over TV viewers as Elly May Clampett on The Beverly Hillbillies, has died. She was 81.

The stars granddaughter told TMZ Douglas died in her Louisiana home surrounded by friends and family.

The cause of death was pancreatic cancer, her niece told The Associated Press.

Douglas appeared The Beverly Hillbillies, a comedy about a backwoods Tennessee family who moved to Beverly Hills after striking it rich from oil on their land. for all nine seasons of the show and reprised her role in a TV movie reboot of the series in 1981.

As Elly May, she seemed blissfully unaware of her status as a bumpkin blond bombshell. Typically she was clad in a snug flannel shirt and tight jeans cinched with a rope belt, and she seemed to prefer her critters to any beau.

Chosen from more than 500 other actresses, Douglas said she felt at ease playing the role because, like her character, she grew up a poor Southern tomboy. Her childhood in Pride, Louisiana, came in handy when she was asked during her audition to milk a goat.

"I had milked cows before," she recalled in a 2009 interview with The Associated Press. "I figured they were equipped the same, so I just went on over and did it."

The show was not only assailed by critics, but by the network president who put it on the air: "I HATED it," Michael Dann confided much later. "After screening the pilot, I don't think I ever watched another segment."

The public, however, felt quite the opposite: It ran for nine seasons, often in the Top 10. In their own way, the Clampetts were a forerunner of the `60s counterculture.

It wasn't much of a stretch for Douglas to fit into the troupe, said her cousin, Charlene Smith.

"She was always happy, and she really loved animals -- just like her character on `The Beverly Hillbillies.' She was a wonderful lady, a very good Christian lady."

Indeed, when Douglas gave her autograph, she included a biblical verse ("Trust in the Lord with all your heart..."), according to New Orleans TV station WAFB.

Douglas' career began with beauty pageants -- she was Miss Baton Rouge and Miss New Orleans -- followed by a trip to New York to pursue a career in entertainment.

"That was the first time I had ever been on an airplane," Douglas said.

While modeling didn't appeal to her -- "I didn't want to be that skinny" -- television did. Douglas was featured as the Letters Girl on "The Perry Como Show" in 1957 and as the Billboard Girl on "The Steve Allen Show" in 1959.

Throughout the 50s and 60s the 1957 Miss New Orleans winner appeared in series like The Twilight Zone and Mr. Ed. In 1966, she transitioned to film with a role opposite Elvis Presley in the movie Frankie and Johnny.

After "The Beverly Hillbillies," Douglas worked in real estate, recorded country and gospel music albums and wrote a book for children that drew on biblical themes.

In 2010 she sued CBS and toymaker Mattel over a Barbie doll that used Elly May's name and likeness. The suit was settled in 2011.

She said she never minded being typecast as her "Hillbillies" character.

"So many kinds of people relate to Elly May," Douglas said. "So many people love her, and that means a lot to me."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2015/01/02/beverly-hillbillies-star-donna-douglas-dead-at-81-reports-say/



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Ohio State quarterback Cardale Jones shakes off interception to figure out ...



Cardale Jones took the field Thursday night with the Mercedes-Benz Superdome lights glistening off the coat of fresh silver paint covering his helmet.

The glare was brighter than that reflecting off his Ohio State teammates. Their helmets were adorned with buckeye stickers, presented by coaches for good plays, which served to absorb much of the glow. But Jones helmet, at least on the right side, was bare a reminder that the man taking snaps for the Buckeyes was not the same man they intended to have leading their huddle during the Sugar Bowl.

During the week leading up to the game, Ohio State expressed confidence or at least hope the sophomore could get the job done after a strong performance in a win over Wisconsin in the Big Ten title game. Some believed it was wishful thinking. But what Alabama found out is that Jones possessed the goods to beat and badger it the same way he did Wisconsin, as the Buckeyes rode the sophomores arm to a 42-35 victory.

Ohio State will play Oregon in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game on Jan. 12 in Dallas. Oregon beat Florida State 59-20 on Thursday afternoon in the Rose Bowl.

This is not my story, this our team, Jones said. Its just been an emotional season for us all. ... Its not bad, but this game could have never turned out like this.

Like the stickers on his helmet, Jones performance was uneven. Early in the game, he looked the part of an inexperienced quarterback making his second start in the biggest game of his career. He appeared confused and baffled by the Alabama defense for much of the this first quarter and was forced into avoidable mistakes. It wasnt until he threw an interception with 10 minutes remaining in the second quarter, which led to Alabama taking a 21-6 lead, that Jones showed up.

And once he did, the Buckeyes transformed into a different team, one completely worthy of being in the playoffs a point that was the cause of contentious debate when the participants were announced.

Something about that mistake made Jones (18-of-35, 243 yards, one touchdown, one interception; 17 carries, 43 yards) lock in. Immediately after throwing it, he appeared more comfortable in the pocket and was able to more quickly progress through his reads.

It kind of settled us down a little, Jones said. Our teammates rallied around each other. We were saying, We got this, defensive guys saying, We got this.

On his next pass, Jones hit Jalin Marshall for a gain of 26 yards, then went to Marshall again for the same result later in the series to move inside the red zone, where Ohio State eventually scored on an Ezekiel Elliott run to make it 21-13.

After forcing Alabama to punt on its next series, Jones immediately went back to work, hitting Michael Thomas for a gain of 14 and Nick Vannett for 18 more yards. Jones then tucked the ball and ran 27 yards through the heart of the defense to put the Buckeyes at the 13-yard line.

Jones work for the first half was done. The next pass was thrown by wide receiver Evan Spencer to Thomas following a double reverse. The pass caused Thomas to go up in the air to retrieve it. As he was coming down, Thomas managed to turn his foot sideways and land inbounds to cut the Alabama lead to 21-20.

After that, any aerial highlights for Ohio State were created by Jones arm. And he didnt wait to pad his reel. On the first series of the third quarter, he gave Ohio State a 27-21 lead when he hit Devin Smith, who got open after defensive back Eddie Jackson slipped, for a 47-yard touchdown.

The one thing the new quarterback (Jones) does is he has a tremendous arm, Alabama coach Nick Saban said. They have very talented receivers. The two things that were very apparent is those things became very apparent in the last two games because of the quarterback.

But many of the lowlights suffered by the Buckeyes were also due to Jones. The same way the interception made him fall apart, the big pass to Smith made him regress back to his earlier state. In the second half, Jones completed just 5-of-11 passes, as the game became more about holding on than dictating the action until Elliott (20 carries, 230 yards) broke free for an 85-yard touchdown run with 3:24 remaining in the fourth quarter.

Jones wasnt supposed to be in this position. He was the break-glass option for a team that lost J.T. Barrett and Braxton Miller to injuries earlier in the season.

The selection committee was so concerned about Ohio States quarterback situation that it looked as though it was going to be left out of the playoff until Jones completed 12-of-17 passes for 257 yards and three touchdowns against Wisconsin.

And it initially appeared the committee might have erred by buying into Jones first start of the season. The sophomore missed on his first five passes, coming closest to completing a pass when wide receiver Spencer went up, extended his arm into the air, and nearly pulled in a one-handed catch on the first series of the game.

He then threw two incompletions and was stuffed on a run up the middle following a 54-yard run by Elliott that put Ohio State on the 5-yard line, forcing a field goal. Then, after connecting with Smith for a 40-yard gain to put the Buckeyes on the goal line in the first quarter, Smith fumbled a snap, causing the offense to move back 8 yards, and missed on a pair of passes. Ohio State had to settle for another field goal.

It appeared Ohio State was going to melt down after Jones underthrew Smith and was intercepted. But that moment somehow, improbably, led to the turnaround.

Last time we played was four weeks ago, Jones said. Shaking off the rust, Id say. It takes a little while.

As Jones left the field, he was provided several celebratory slaps and pats and hugs from his teammates.

The next time he takes it, the right side of his helmet should be covered with a fresh batch of stickers.

Source: http://theadvocate.com/sports/11230783-32/ohio-state-quarterback-cardale-jones



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Friday, January 2, 2015

Rose Parade warms up chilled crowd in Pasadena



Pasadena flaunted its annual floral extravaganza Thursday, as it narrowly missed a Rose Parade record for cold weather and carried on after the death of World War II legend and grand marshal Louis Zamperini.

The theme for the 126th Tournament of Roses Parade, "Inspiring Stories," spawned creations both poignant and whimsical: One float paid tribute to those who have died fighting Ebola, another featured a cast reunion of the 1970s TV series "Love Boat."

Amid ice-blue skies and temperatures that bottomed out at 36 degrees four degrees above the low set in 1952 children gasped as the petal-encrusted floats began sliding down the 51/2 -mile route.

"There they are!" exclaimed 3-year-old Jack LaVine, cradled in his father's arms.

"He's cold, but he's excited," said his father, Mark LaVine, 48.

Zamperini the USC track star from Torrance who became an Olympic runner, prisoner of war and subject of Laura Hillenbrand's book and the movie "Unbroken" died last summer of pneumonia at age 97, two months after he was named to lead the parade.

Baseball legend and onetime Pasadena resident Jackie Robinson was named an honorary grand marshal of the parade in 1999, years after his death, but Zamperini had planned to participate in the event just as the high-profile film hit the screen.

Traveler, USC's mascot horse, walked the parade route riderless to honor Zamperini. The grand marshal's car carried Zamperini's family, followed by the float from his hometown, which offered petal portraits of the "Torrance Tornado" at various stages of his life.

Zamperini's son, Luke, described the parade as a cathartic experience one more chance to honor their dad.

"We kept coming across people jumping up and down and screaming, 'Louis! Louis! Unbroken!'" he said. "We were nearly to the point of tears."

The Torrance float bearing the words "Louis Zamperini A Race Well Run" won the parade's theme trophy. Perhaps even more of a feat, the entry dragged a teenager along the parade route away from his phone.

"Oh, that's the guy from 'Unbroken,'" he said, looking up from his screen. "So cool!"

Authorities reported 18 arrests, including seven people protesting police violence who were held on suspicion of interfering with the parade. The other arrests were mostly for drinking in public, police said.

While protests were muted compared with recent years, the parade featured symbolic efforts to redress historical racial injustice.

Five Nisei veterans of World War II rode on Alhambra's entry. They included Masao Takahashi, who was interned at the Manzanar, Calif., camp where Japanese Americans were confined by the U.S. government during the war.

Eighty-three-year-old Joan Williams, who was kept out of the parade nearly 60 years ago because she is black, rode on the "banner" float conveying the "Inspiring Stories" theme at the beginning of the parade.

Other entries paid tribute to survivors and heroes of international disasters. Teenagers who lived through Japan's 2011 earthquake and tsunami shared American Honda Motor Co.'s float with U.S. military service members who assisted them.

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation sponsored a float memorializing those who have died fighting the Ebola virus in Africa.

A Wells Fargo executive presented a giant red key to a new home to retired Army Sgt. Dominic Perrotte III, a veteran of Afghanistan and Iraq who received a purple heart after his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb. Perrotte's wife sobbed as he accepted the donation from the Military Warriors Support Foundation, in Hampton, Va.

For many parade-goers, the early chatter focused on the cold weather, even if it failed to break the record. In the early morning darkness, it was still plenty bitter.

A Florida woman, Alla Lazareva, 43, said Pasadena was as cold as her native St. Petersburg the one in Russia.

"It's tough," she said, huddled in a corner of a coffeehouse at 6 a.m., sharing a cappuccino with her husband.

Families hunched over heat lamps and fire pits, roasting marshmallows for s'mores and grilling shish kebabs and carne asada for tacos. With people arrayed in gear ranging from the minimalist a piece of cardboard and a blanket to luxe a king-sized, 3-foot-high air mattress the flames drew envious looks.

Vivian Rivera, 42, of Koreatown sat one of her kids atop a container of hot chocolate. A father-and-son team, more enterprising than most, brokered a deal: two pieces of wood for a like number of tamales.

Others took the cold in stride.

"At least we get some sun, unlike in Portland where you get only rain during the winter," said Chris Parrott, one of a group of 300 who came to town from Oregon to watch the parade and Rose Bowl game pitting Oregon against Florida State.

------------

FOR THE RECORD: A previous version of this article said that Sue Zavala lived around the corner from the parade route. She lives in Porter Ranch.

------------

Sue Zavala, 65, of Porter Ranch, sat atop a 6-foot yellow ladder. Her boyfriend Jim Vigue, 72, who lives just around the corner from the parade route, was on a stool next to her.

With the grandkids grown up and gone, it was their least elaborate setup in years, but they couldn't stay away, Vigue said.

Added Zavala: "I got the best seat in the house!"

Mary Margarum came from New Jersey to see the parade in person for the first time with her daughter Courtney, newly relocated to Los Angeles.

"I've been watching since I was a kid," said Courtney, who remembered the parade from an episode of the TV show "Beverly Hills, 90210."

As the last marching band passed by, Hector Morales told his 5-year-old daughter, Rotce, "Se acab" (it's over). Rotce made a sad face.

The parade's beauty made up for the rugged temperatures, Morales said.

"It was great, great," he said. "From beginning to end."

marisa.gerber@latimes.com

Twitter: @marisagerber

javier.panzar@latimes.com

Twitter: @jpanzar

trevell.anderson@latimes.com

Twitter: @trevellandersonh

Times staff writers Gale Holland, Brittny Mejia, Samantha Masunaga, Taylor Goldenstein, Sarah Parvini and Kate Mather contributed to this report.

Copyright 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source: http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-rose-parade-20150102-story.html



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Streamers Unhappy as WatchESPN Down for Rose Bowl



Fans looking to watch the Rose Bowl on their tablets or computers got an error message during the first half instead of the WatchESPN stream.

The cable network's online feed of the first College Football Playoff game went down Thursday night, leaving anyone looking to watch the game anywhere besides a television out of luck.

The stream appeared to begin working again for at least some users during halftime.

ESPN spokesman Josh Krulewitz says the network is sorry for the inconvenience. He said during the third quarter of the Rose Bowl that the issues appeared to be largely resolved.

The stream feeds video services on tablets, phones, computers and other streaming devices like console game systems.

Incensed viewers sounded off on the issue on Twitter, where #watchespn began trending in the United States.

ESPN had promoted the playoffs on TV and online in an email during the first half.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/streamers-unhappy-watchespn-rose-bowl-27953047



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'Baby New Year 2015



ST. GEORGE-New Years Eve celebrations started out normal for Diamond Valley residents Heath and Britni Davis. While enjoying a friendly game of Pictionary with her family, Britni Davis soon realized that something unexpected was happening. What started out as a typical New Years Eve celebration was about to become a new born baby celebration.

(story continues below)

Videocast by Samantha Tommer, St. George News

It was definitely unexpected, Britni Davis said of the early arrival of Allison Kay Davis. The baby is the firstborn for the Davises, as well as the first grandchild born to very happy grandpa Tim Canfield. Baby Allison was also the first baby born at Intermountain Healthcare Southwest Regions Dixie Regional MedicalCenter in 2015. Her due date was not until Jan. 13.

Allison Kay Davis was born at 4:50 a.m. at Dixie Regional Medical Center making her the hospitals Baby New Year 2015, St. George, Utah, Jan. 1, 2015 | Photo by Samantha Tommer, St. George News

The Davises headed down the hill from Diamond Valley just a few minutes before midnight amid snowflakes and fireworks as they headed for the hospital. Approximately five hours later Allison Davis made her appearance, weighing in at 6 pounds, 6 ounces.

I think its pretty special, actually, Canfield said of his new granddaughter. Shes pretty perfect.

According to a press release from Dixie Regional Medical Center, Dixie Regional presents the family of Baby New Year a gift package of infant items which includes a $100 gift certificate to the hospitals gift shops.

Grandfather Tim Canfield with Dixie Regional Medical Centers Baby New Year 2015Allison Davis, St. George, Utah, Jan. 1, 2015 | Photo by Samantha Tommer, St. George News

Its always exciting to welcome Baby New Year, saidAmy Christensen, director of Dixie Regionals womens services.

Some of the families of previous Baby New Years have also made it a holiday tradition to present the current Baby New Year with gifts.

This year gift blankets and toys came from the parents of Baby New Years 2001 and 2002.

Though Allison Kay Davis is the years first baby born at Dixie Regional Medical Center, there will be many more to come. According to the hospitals press release, approximately 2,500 babies were born in the hospital in 2014.

Related Posts

Email:rtommer@stgeorgeutah.com

Twitter:@STGnews

Copyright St. George News, SaintGeorgeUtah.com LLC, 2015, all rights reserved.

Source: http://www.stgeorgeutah.com/news/archive/2015/01/01/rbt-sam-baby-new-year-2015-makes-early-arrival-at-dixie-regional-stgnews-videocast/



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