Thursday, January 22, 2015

'Supergirl' found: CBS casts 'Glee' actress



After an extensive search, CBS has cast itsSupergirl.The network has signedGleeactress Melissa Benoistin the starringrole ofKara Zor-El in its series version of the classic comic-book story.

Benoist played Marley Rose inseasons four and fiveof Foxs Glee and wasalso in the 2014 indie film Whiplash.The shows official description:Born on the planet Krypton, Kara Zor-El escaped amid its destruction years ago. Since arriving on Earth, shes been hiding the powers she shares with her famous cousin. But now at age 24, she decides to embrace her superhuman abilities and be the hero she was always meant to be.

Supergirl is thefirst super-hero showon CBS in 25 years (since 1990s short-lived The Flash) and follows up on sister-network building its audiencewithDC heroes like onArrow.At the TCA press tour earlier this month, CBS entertainment chairman Nina Tassler told critics the new Warner Bros.-produced seriesversion of Supergirl will be a crime procedural (naturally).The beauty of it is now with shows likeGood Wife and Madam Secretary, you can have serialized story elements woven into a case of the week, Tassler said. Shes a crime solver, so shes going to have to solve a crime. Shes going to get a bad guy.

Tassler further described the CBS version of the DC Comics icon as a very strong, independent young woman. Shes coming into her own. Shes dealing with family issues. Shes dealing with work issues. Its a female empowerment story. If you look at the strong female characters we have on the air, it really is resonant of that Were big feminists. Its her intellect, its her skill, its her smarts. Its all of those elements. Its not just her strength, which she does have.

Tassler also emphasized the actresshas to carry the series. Shes got to be an every woman, she said. Shes got to be specific. Shes got to be a terrific actor its looking for someone who embodies both the freshness and the exuberance of being a young woman in todays challenging climate and being someone who can carry this kind of series on her shoulders. Its a big, big show.

The executive added that Supergirls costume design is awesome. Until thats unveiled, well just have to enjoy this shot of Benoist in Glee and hope her newoutfit is better than this one:

Benoist is far from the first actress to don Supergirls red cape. Helen Slater portrayed the heroine in the 1984 eponymous film, while Laura Vandervoort suited up on The CWs Smallville. Even geek goddess Summer Glau (Dollhouse, Firefly) voiced Kara inthe direct-to-video animated film Superman/Batman: Apocalypse.

Previous: CBS talks Supergirl.

Source: http://insidetv.ew.com/2015/01/22/supergirl-melissa-benoist/



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Super Bowl 2015: 'Deflategate' Overshadowing Potentially Classic Matchup



The New England Patriots probably cheated in their AFC Championship win over the Indianapolis Colts. Eleven of 12 game b***s, approved by referee Walt Anderson two hours and 15 minutes before kickoff, per ESPN's Chris Mortensen, were deflated sometime before their usage in the 41-7 romp.

There are two explanations I can come up with for this:

1) A seismic activity explainable only by someone with the intelligence level ofNeil deGrasseTyson or Stephen Hawking deflated the ballsunbeknownstto anyone in the Patriots organization. Cuz, you know, global warming or something.

2) Someone knowingly deflating the b***s to give the Patriots an advantage.

I'll allow you to draw your own conclusions on that one. As will I allow you to continue the mind-numbingly inane and increasingly hot-takey debate about what a proper punishment would be, assuming the NFL doesn't hire Tyson to investigate how air-sucking particles got into 11 of those 12 footballs.

By now, everyone's made his mind up on the topic. There are a few general camps, none of which is particularly rational. Some believe the Patriots are habituated cheaters and deserve to be punished with force that would literally be unprecedented. Count Gregg Doyel of theIndianapolis Starand Chris Chase ofUSA Today,who believe the Patriots should be banned from the Super Bowl, in said camp.

Then there's the subsect of folks who think this is no big deal. That it's a borderline witch hunt rooted in jealousies about the Patriots' continued success. They'll point to Aaron Rodgers admitting he likes to over-inflate b***s, Eli Manning's longstandingadmission of doctoring footballs and other instances and wonder what's the big deal.

Most of these people are from Massachusetts and have "#Sox. #Pats. #Bruins. #Celts. #DunkinDonuts" or some variation in their Twitter bios.

Then there's the rest of us, hanging out on Twitter waiting for every last #hottake to drop so it can be mocked and ridiculed. As if it's not at leastkind of a big deal that an organization with a history of skirting NFL rules did so in one of the league's three biggest games.

Result asidethe Patriots would have beaten the Colts if their footballs were made of concretethis is a controversy worth about half as much coverage as it's getting. Which in today's society means it's a pretty big deal. "Deflategate" and "Spygate" are forever on the historical legacies of Bill Belichick and Tom Brady. The controversies will be reasonably high on the list of things we discuss when their careers are over.

Belichick is the greatest coach of his generation, closing in on the all-time Mount Rushmore. Brady's already a Rushmore candidate at quarterback. These are two men with otherwise unimpeachable resumes who are now twice linked to cheating scandals.

And that's a bummer. The whole situation is a bummer. The near-constant discussion, the hand-wringing about potential punishments, the eventual dissatisfaction with whatever punishment the league office decides to hand down. All of it stinks. Roger Goodell again finds himself consumed with a scandal that threatens the "integrity" of the game, which both makes me want to take acinder blockto my skull and makes medisappointed about howawesome the buildup to this game should have been.

After an absolute nightmare of a regular season, Goodell got what on paper looks like an Ali-Frazier I-level bout. The Seahawks and Patriots are the two best teams in football. Given the injuries to Aaron Rodgers and Peyton Manning late in the season, I don't think it's particularly close.

Football Outsidershad Denver and Green Bay separating No. 1 Seattle and No. 4 New England at the end of the regular season, but those numbers didn't account for the aforementioned injuries. Pro Football Reference's Simple Rating System had the Patriots first and Seahawks third. However you want to slice it, the game is shaping up as a matchup between the two no-doubt-about-it alpha dogs of their respective conferences.

The Patriots have their best all-around team since the 18-1 bunch in 2007. Josh McDaniels has implemented an offense that can run almost any style. The Patriots can break out a Chip Kelly-esque warp-speed spread and then pound you to death with six offensive linemen in the same game. Their downfield throwing options are nonexistent, but that's just fine for Brady, whose downfield accuracy has not-so-quietly been abysmal for a few years now.

Darrelle Revis, Brandon Browner and Kyle Arrington are providing the most stability New England's had in the secondary since the Ty Law era. A good deal of the Patriots' leap to 11th in defensive DVOA this seasonafter more than a half-decade of below-average play can be attributed to Revis' arrival. Praised at the time as a smart rental, Revis is the low-key MVP of turning New England into a Super Bowl team.

The Seahawks are the most complete team in football. Exempting wide receiver, it's hard to find a better-constructed roster in the Super Bowl era. You know, other than last year's Seahawks team.

Russell Wilson is (probably) a future Hall of Famer derided far too often for being a game manager. If you don't think Marshawn Lynch is about that action, you can hol...Marshawn Lynch is very good at football. Richard Sherman, Earl Thomas and Kam Chancellor being in the same secondary is so unfair it seems like something a seven-year-old would do to cheat inMadden. Bobby Wagner, Bruce Irvin, Michael Bennett, Russell Okungthe list can just keep going.

This is the type of matchup network executives, the commissioner's office and fans can all agree is great for the sport.WhatIfSports ran 1,001 simulations ofSuper Bowl XLIX and came away with, on average, a two-point separation in favor of the Seahawks.

What's more, one could argue this is the last, best chance for both teams to hoist the Lombardi Trophy with their current core. New England's reasoning is rather self-explanatory. Brady is 37. Revis will become a free agent this offseason. Rob Gronkowski made it through a whole season healthy for the first time in forever-and-a-half. The Pats are still relying on Julian Edelman and a bunch of castoffs at wide receiver. Their offensive line is shaky at best.

While the Seahawks have more talent and are a generally young team, having a whole bunch of good, young players eventually means paying them. With contracts already in place for Sherman and Thomas and a massive extension coming for Wilson during the offseason, the depth Pete Carroll and Co. have enjoyed the last couple seasons is about to go bye-bye. Seattle already watched Walter Thurmond, Golden Tate, Browner and others leave in free agency last offseason.

Simple cap logic has the Seahawks going from the deepest team in football to a top-heavy, star-laden bunch in no time. The Seahawks and Patriots both need this game because they have no idea whenor ifthey'll be back. Seattle wants its defensive core to go down among the greatest of all time before it's broken up. Belichick and Brady want to finally get that elusive fourth Super Bowl in their third try.

All that hype, all the "one last time" feel-good narratives that would have followed Belichick and Brady around, all the talk about Wilson's status among the best quarterbacks in football is gone. Here we are talking about pounds per square inch and ball deflation.A cheating scandal has tainted one of the few good things about this NFL season and threatens to hang a cloud over the sport's biggest day.

Given the way we started this season, it's only fitting we end this way. Football's a flat circle, man. (Especially when the Patriots are playing.)

Follow Tyler Conway (@tylerconway22) on Twitter

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2338090-super-bowl-2015-deflategate-overshadowing-potentially-classic-matchup



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UK's Chris Matthews a surprising Seahawks star



Jonathan Lintner, jlintner@courier-journal.com 1:45 p.m. EST January 20, 2015

The Seattle Seahawks' Chris Matthews and DeShawn Shead celebrate after an overtime win in Sundays NFC Championship game against the Green Bay Packers.(Photo: AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Chris Matthews, former Foot Locker worker and security guard, will on Feb. 1 become the 30th former University of Kentucky player to suit up for a Super Bowl team.

The Seattle Seahawks might not be headed to a meeting with the New England Patriots if not for Matthews, who recovered the pivotal onside kick during the fourth quarter of Sunday's overtime victory against the Green Bay Packers in the NFC Championship game.

Matthews, a backup Seahawks receiver, said he was looking to make a tackle before he realized the Packers' Brandon Bostick bobbled the kick. So he went up for the ball and made the biggest play of his career.

"It was just a surreal moment for me," said Matthews, who told Sports Illustrated he nearly skipped out on his chance to try out for an NFL team, which called one day this time last year and requested he fly to Seattle that same night.

"I don't get off of work until 9 p.m.," he told the Seahawks. "I don't know if I'll make it."

Of course, Matthews came to his senses. And though he made just three appearances at receiver this season and didn't catch a ball, the work paid off on that kick with 2:09 left to go in regulation Sunday.

The 6-foot-5 receiver transferred to UK from Los Angeles Harbor College in 2009. In his second and senior season as a Wildcat, Matthews broke out to catch 61 passes for 925 yards and nine touchdowns two more scores through the air than Randall Cobb, a college teammate who plays for the Packers and made this year's Pro Bowl.

Matthews' name wasn't called during the NFL draft, though. He was later cut from the Cleveland Browns' roster and instead signed on with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League, where he went on to become the Rookie of the Year.

An injury limited Matthews' second year, and then it was off to Foot Locker and working as a security guard at least until the Seahawks called.

"Man, I almost messed up, bad," Matthews told SI of nearly skipping the tryout. "And look at this now."

Seahawks teammate Jermaine Kearse, speaking at a press conference Monday, simply referred to the onside kick recovery as "the Chris Matthews play."

"That was huge," Kearse added. "I talk to Chris a lot and just to see his progression, even when he was on practice squad and when he got activated to the 53, just to see him maximize opportunities is definitely joyful."

Jonathan Lintner can be reached at (502) 582-4199. Follow him on Twitter @JonathanLintner.

Read or Share this story: http://cjky.it/1Bzvtha

Source: http://www.courier-journal.com/story/sports/college/kentucky/2015/01/20/ex-kentucky-football-player-chris-matthews-surprising-seattle-seahawks-star/22046805/



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Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Deflategate: Embrace the hatred



ESPN The NFL has found that 11 of 12 of the New England Patriots game b***s were inflated significantly less than the NFL requires, league sources involved and familiar with the investigation of Sundays AFC championship game told ESPN.

The investigation found the footballs were underinflated by 2 pounds per square inch of air less than whats required by NFL regulations during the Pats 45-7 victory over the Indianapolis Colts, according to sources.

Yet to be determined is what, if any, penalties may be imposed upon Patriots. One source described the league as disappointed angry distraught, after spending considerable time on the findings earlier Tuesday. Part of the investigation that still needs further vetting is how the 11 footballs became underinflated. The game b***s provided to each team for preparation were required to be inspected and approved by referee Walt Anderson two hours and 15 minutes before kickoff before they were returned to a ball attendant before the game.

Right now, as we sit here, Deflategate is in the We know what we dont know stage.

We dont know if Chris Mortensens report is correct, or if his source is someone with a vendetta against the Patriots fully invested in making them look bad. Certain brain-addled, pill-popping billionaire team owners, perhaps. We dont know how, assuming Mortensen is right, the b***s came to be underinflated. We dont know if they were inspected the way theyre supposed to be.

But we do know a few things.

For starters, we know that from the time the b***s were handing to the ball attendant until the confetti cannons were going off, they werent just supervised by some zit-faced high school kid. They were supervised by league officials, dozens of TV cameras, NFL Films and 70,000 people holding cell phone cameras in a TMZ world. The idea that the ball boy somehow in the middle of all that surveillance slipped a needle into the ball when no one was looking would be laughable if it wasnt so preposterous.

We also know that after every play those b***s got handled by officials more than Rob Gronkowskis at a bachelorette party. Julian Edelman goes out of bounds. He hands it to the side judge. He flips it to the line judge. He tosses it to Walt Anderson. If in all that not one of them noticed that the ball seemed a little saggy, then they are the worst officiating crew in the history of football and shouldve been fired at halftime.

We know that quarterbacks go past the league specs on air pressure all the time. And when a media darling like Aaron Rodgers does it, its harmless fun and the world has a big chuckle about it:

We also know that after DQwell Jackson picked off that Brady pass, decided the ball felt a little squishy and brought it to the attention of his coaches, this happened:

Tom Brady in the first half: 11-for-21, 52 percent completions, 95 yards, one touchdown, one interception, 60.6 passer rating

Tom Brady in the second half: 12-for-14, 86 percent completions, 155 yards, two touchdowns, zero interceptions, 157.3 passer rating

Patriots in the first half: Outscored the Colts 17-7

Patriots in the second half: Outscored the Colts 28-0

We know that none of this will shut up the fundamentalist Patriots-haters. IndyStars Gregg Doyel went on Dennis & Callahan Wednesday morning and not only doubled down on his ridiculous idea the Patriots shouldnt go to the Super Bowl, he said Green Bay should go. (Earlier in the week hed said the Colts should go, which is like saying atomic bombs are unfair so Japan should be declared the winner of World War II.) The same Green Bay that just lost to Seattle and whose MVP quarterbacks penchant for overinflated b***s had Jim Nantz and Phil Simms giggling like schoolgirls.

And we know that this is just a decimal point followed by a half dozen zeros of what were about to hear. The world will want Bill Belchick suspended for next year. Or suspended for the Super Bowl. Or lashed in the streets of Glendale like a Saudi Arabian blogger. No one will stop at the demand for fines or forfeited draft picks. Theyre out for blood.

I say bring it on. Embrace the hatred. Im semi-retiring from the business of defending Belichick and the Patriots and now Im going all in on accepting their inherent evilness. Its time to go from arguing with the anti-Patriots cyberbullies to going all wrestling heel on everybodys a*s:

Did the Patriots cheat? h**l yeah! d**n right they cheated! What about it, Indy? Are you going to cry now? They always cheat! They cheated when they ran the ineligible receiver play. They cheated when they messed with the clock in the 2011 championship game. They jam your quarterbacks radio. Videotape your signals. And youre d**n right they figured out a way to let the air out of b***s with the whole world watching. What are you going to do about it, NFL? Cancel the Super Bowl? Send the Colts and be a laughingstock? Theres nothing you can do except sit back helplessly and watch the most hated team in all of sports win a trophy theyll all call tainted but will look exactly like the trophy everyone else has ever won and no one in the six New England states (minus parts of Connecticut) will care. We cheat, but we cheat to win and nobody can stop us! Bwahahaha! Deflate that, America!

Because at this point, until we know what happened Sunday, its the only thing you can do. No ones else is ever going to like or respect the Patriots so its time to make the most of the hatred. Is it better to be loved or feared? Thats a good question. Its great to be both, but its very difficult. But if I had my choice, I would rather be feared. Fear lasts longer.

@JerryThornton1

Source: http://thornography.weei.com/sports/boston/2015/01/21/deflategate-embrace-the-hatred/



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Yolanda Foster Battles Lyme Disease: 'I Have Lost The Ability To Read, Write ...



TV personality and model Yolanda Foster, best known for starring on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, has been suffering from so-called chronic Lyme disease since 2012, she claims. Lyme disease is an infectious disease caused by bacteria often spread by the bite of an infected tick, and chronic Lyme disease referred to as neuroborreliosis by Foster is something that seems to happen afterwards, if the original Lyme isn't treated properly.

But here's the thing: no one is really sure whether the disease exists. Some doctors, such as Russell Saunders writing forThe Daily Beast, are pretty skeptical, arguing that Foster's doctors and healthcare providers are giving her erroneous treatment. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), meanwhile, seems to do best in clearing up the confusion: it's not chronic Lyme Disease, but rather Post-treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS); in other words a continuation of the feelings of fatigue, pain, or muscle aches after short-term antibiotic treatment of Lyme. The CDC states that PTLDS gets better over time, and that prolonged antibtioc treatment "has been associated with serious complications," citing a study that examined why a woman died from inappropriate therapy for Lyme disease.

Lyme disease is caused by the bite of an infected tick, and it causes fever, headache, and fatigue, as well as rashes in 70-80 percent of infected patients. It's normally treated with antibiotics over the course of a few weeks.

But on her Instagram and in a new blog post, Foster has been creating a war cry among fellow "Lymies" to open up research opportunities for "chronic Lyme disease."I have been battling Lyme disease for the past three years, she writes in the post. I wasted the first year trying to get diagnosed and spent the next two trying to find a cure. I have gone from the conventional long-term antibiotics to about every holistic protocol there is to offer. Unfortunately, I was only able to get to about a 60 percent recovery until I relapsed in early December and have not been able to find my way back.

Yolanda's Instagram is filled with images of her in the hospital, receiving some sort of treatment for her so-called "chronic Lyme disease." Instagram

"Another day at the office, tired but determined to turn this mess into a message for all my fellow Lymies who's voices can't be heard," Foster writes. Instagram

Foster appears to be getting strange treatment in Singapore. Instagram

"A positive attitude gives you power over your circumstances instead of your circumstances having power over you," Foster writes. Instagram

As tired and hopeless as I feel at times, I have an undeniable spirit that will continueto fight and travel the world until I have the proper answers, Foster writes. I keep remindingmyself that I was given this task for a greater purpose, which keeps me driven andmotivated to think outside the box to make a difference not only for myself butfor all my fellow Lymies suffering some form of this debilitating disease that weknow so little about.

Whether she truly has a disease we don't know about, will be up to the doctors whose care she is under until then, we'll all be wondering what's causing her strange symptoms.

Source: http://www.medicaldaily.com/yolanda-foster-battles-lyme-disease-i-have-lost-ability-read-write-and-watch-tv-318654



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Lyme disease support group meets Jan. 30



The Lyme disease support group for people of Vernon and neighboring counties will be held at the Hillsboro Public Library, 819 High Ave., Hillsboro, Friday, Jan. 30, from 6:30 to 8 p.m.

The support group meeting is held for the benefit of people who are curious about tick borne diseases, such as Lyme disease. The conversations at meetings cover things such as how these bacterias or microbes invade and affect the human body, treating the infections, living with the problems and many more related issues.

For more information, contact Gary Cepek at garycepek@yahoo.com, 608-489-2725 or S1468 Cepek Rd., Elroy, WI 53929.

Source: http://lacrossetribune.com/vernonbroadcaster/news/local/lyme-disease-support-group-meets-jan/article_a03f9642-30ee-5905-863b-24352931df2b.html



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Column: Vonn, for once an athlete truly deserving of "star"



But with fewer races back then, Moser-Proell had fewer opportunities than Vonn to make her mark and she won more frequently and from a younger age than Vonn.

The technology of skiing has changed, too. Perhaps not as drastically as in tennis, where Rod Laver's wooden rackets frustrate comparisons with Roger Federer. In winning gold at the 1980 Olympics, Moser-Proell sped downhill as fast as Vonn did 30 years later for her gold in Vancouver in 2010.

Still, how would Vonn and Moser-Proell have fared against each other with the same boots and skis? The differing eras make that impossible to answer with certainty.

Fairer to both, then, not to play one off against the other. It's how and why Vonn has reached this milestone, not the record alone or eclipsing Moser-Proell, which make her special.

TALENT'S NOT ENOUGH: Vonn's brain is missing the alarm bells that tell the rest of us to slow down or she has learned to ignore them. Speed simply doesn't scare her. "That's why I have so many speeding tickets in my car," she has said. For her, an icy corner on a precipitous mountain slope is an opportunity to go quicker than others who apply the brakes. Not crashing occasionally, she figures, must mean that she isn't pushing hard enough. "I'm just not afraid."

But she also was smart in realizing long ago, early in her career, that natural hard-wiring for speed wouldn't alone be sufficient. She became the dominant woman skier not simply by being quick but by training and working hard enough to exploit that talent.

NOT A QUITTER: There were plenty of points along the way when Vonn could have said, "enough." At 16, after failing to finish most of her races. At 21, when a back-crunching, cart-wheeling crash in training at the Turin Olympics made her realize, for the first time, "that at any second I could be done, not just in skiing, but in life." In 2013, when she tore two right-knee ligaments, the ACL and MCL, that keep our thighbones attached to our shinbones. Or again in November that year, when she re-tore one of those ligaments that had been rebuilt with a graft from her hamstring, eventually forcing her out of the 2014 Sochi Olympics and back into surgery.

Pain is as much a part of competitive skiing as snow. What is astounding about Vonn isn't her high tolerance for it but that she's winning again so soon after sweating her way back to health not once but twice from surgeries that emaciated her leg muscles. Only in September did her surgeon clear her to ski again. World Cup wins 60, 61, 62 and 63 have come in eight races since December. She has scars on her knee but her confidence and fearlessness seem remarkably intact.

"I'm not dead; I'm still here," Vonn says in a forthcoming TV documentary about her recovery. One day, that would make a fitting headstone.

OFF-PISTE PERSONA: Given that they have people who manage their public personas, who tweet and post for them, and otherwise make them sound and look good, it's silly to assume that the athlete on your cereal box is a model citizen in private, too. Michael Phelps' drunken driving, the revelation in 2009 of Tiger Woods' serial adultery or Lance Armstrong's doping to name just those three showed how success in sports is sometimes only half the story.

Vonn does the public side extremely well. All sports could do with more women like her, to balance out and end the undeserved dominance of men. She is articulate about skiing, making the sport easier to understand and so more attractive. She seems to understand and deal graciously with media curiosity about her personal relationship with Woods, helping rehabilitate his image somewhat. "He's a catch. He's a good boyfriend," Vonn said on the "Today" show after Woods sprang the surprise of turning up for her 63rd victory.

"For the most part, she's been remarkably scandal-free for her career," six-time Olympic medalist Bode Miller said this month of Vonn. "She does the right stuff all the time. She's a very clean-cut American superstar and that's an amazing title."

A true star.

John Leicester is an international sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jleicester(at)ap.org or follow him at http://twitter.com/johnleicester

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sports/2080237-155/story.html



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