Sunday, December 2, 2007

Tin Man



Airs Next: SciFi at Sunday 9:00 PM (360 min.)

Status:

Mini-Series

Premiered:

December 2, 2007


Show Categories:
Drama, Science-Fiction







Tin ManMore Pictures




This is a bizarre, post-modern version of The Wizard of Oz . Zooey Deschanel stars as DG, the main character who finds herself trapped in a place called O.Z. - the Outer Zone. She wants to get home and is joined in her travels by Glitch - a man with only half of a brain, Raw - a beast-like man that lacks confidence, and Cain - a "Tin Man" (which is the name of the police force in O.Z.) who...




The Wizard of Oz. Zooey Deschanel stars as DG, the main character who finds herself trapped in a place called O.Z. - the Outer Zone. She wants to get home and is joined in her travels by Glitch - a man with only half of a brain, Raw - a beast-like man that lacks confidence, and Cain - a "Tin Man" (which is the name of the police force in O.Z.) who seeks revenge for the damage done to his heart.', 'This is a bizarre, post-modern version of The Wizard of Oz . Zooey Deschanel stars as DG, the main character who finds herself trapped in a place called O.Z. - the Outer Zone. She wants to get home and is joined in her travels by Glitch - a man with only half of a brain, Raw - a beast-like man that lacks confidence, and Cain - a "Tin Man" (which is the name of the police force in...');">Full Summary [+]













Imus' return to radio loaded with drama


Radio personality Don Imus appears on Rev. Al Sharpton's radio show in New York in this file photo of April 9, 2007. Imus returns at 6 a.m. Monday, Dec. 3, 2007 after a 7 1/2 month absence from the airwaves, since being fired by CBS Radio in April after calling the Rutgers University women's basketball team a bunch of 'nappy-headed hos.'  (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

AP Photo:
Radio personality Don Imus appears on Rev. Al Sharpton's radio show in New York in...


By ADAM GOLDMAN, Associated Press Writer Sun Dec 2, 5:05 AM ET

NEW YORK - Will Don Imus be defiant or contrite? Will he mock his skeptics while making his triumphant return to radio Monday. Or will he muzzle his mouth?


"That question is part of the drama of his reemergence," said Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers magazine, an industry trade journal. "Imus faces some choices."

Imus isn't talking, yet, but it's safe to say radio's best-known curmudgeon will have lots to say when his show kicks off at 6 a.m. EST Monday on WABC-AM and other Citadel Broadcasting Corp. stations around the country, ending his nearly eight-month banishment from the air.

The morning show will be simulcast on cable's RFD-TV, owned by the Rural Media Group Inc., and rebroadcast on radio in the evenings.

Monday's four-hour premiere will be broadcast from Town Hall in Times Square, where $100 tickets were sold to benefit the Imus Ranch for Kids With Cancer. After its debut, the Imus spectacle will be on 6-9 a.m. weekdays, from a studio across the street from Madison Square Garden.

Not much is known about the show's format, other than at least one black person will participate regularly, along with longtime newsreader Charles McCord. Imus, through a spokesman, declined to comment.

Whether this will temper his staunchest critics, like as Rev. Al Sharpton, is unclear. Sharpton's spokeswoman said the civil rights leader wasn't commenting. In Boston on Friday, a group of black community leaders protested a local station's plan to air the Imus program.

MSNBC and then CBS Radio jettisoned Imus in April after he called the Rutgers University women's basketball players "nappy-headed hos."

Imus' nemesis, Howard Stern, told The Associated Press in a recent interview that his acerbic competitor's career had peaked.

"At this point, I don't think he's very relevant," Stern said. "People will tune out within a week. I defy you to listen. It's like a rodeo — you know, see how long you can ride a bull? See how long you can keep listening to Imus."

The people who helped orchestrate the Imus comeback believe he'll succeed and say he's learned his lesson since the Rutgers debacle.

"I don't have any doubt on his future," said Phil Boyce, WABC-AM program director. "He'll obviously be wiser, smarter and a bit more careful. He's learned from this. I'm not concerned that he'll have a repeat."

"Obviously we are doing this because we think we can make more money," Boyce said. "There's an opportunity to charge more for our advertising rates. I am not ashamed of saying it is about the money. We are running a business."

RFD reaches nearly 30 million homes, but with Imus on board the 24-hour cable network hopes to boost that number to 50 million over the next two years.

Rural Media Group Inc., which caters to a rural audience, hopes to crack urban markets with the mass appeal of Imus. Love him or hate him, people will tune into Imus, said Patrick Gottsch, founder and president.

"There is a real void in the morning with Don Imus not on the air," Gottsch said. "He's apologized heavily for the comments. He knew he made a mistake. You learn, you move on and I think most folks already have forgiven him."

Neither Boyce nor Gottsch would reveal how much money Imus is getting.

"It's the biggest deal by far we've ever done," Gottsch said. Imus signed a five-year agreement with RFD.

Boyce said he's paying to get the real Imus, and expects that to be the personality that emerges Monday.

"I'm not too worried that we're not gonna get the real deal," Boyce said.

But listeners might experience a different Imus, the same one who has morphed over the years, according to Harrison.

"Imus is just an interesting character," Harrison said. "I don't think that he is premeditated. I think he is a creature of the moment. He's a spontaneous human being. This is what he is. He has evolved over the years. Imus has been never stagnant. The tenets of his performances changed over there years by reinventing himself as the times demanded."

"If they're expecting him to stumble, they're going to have to wait for a long time," Harrison said.




Saturday, December 1, 2007

WHAT IS AIDS?

WHAT DOES "AIDS" MEAN?
(source from http://www.aidsinfonet.org/factsheet_detail.php?fsnumber=101)
AIDS stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome:

  • Acquired means you can get infected with it;
  • Immune Deficiency means a weakness in the body's system that fights diseases.
  • Syndrome means a group of health problems that make up a disease.

AIDS is caused by a virus called HIV, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus. If you get infected with HIV, your body will try to fight the infection. It will make "antibodies," special molecules to fight HIV.

A blood test for HIV looks for these antibodies. If you have them in your blood, it means that you have HIV infection. People who have the HIV antibodies are called "HIV-Positive." Fact Sheet 102 has more information on HIV testing.

Being HIV-positive, or having HIV disease, is not the same as having AIDS. Many people are HIV-positive but don't get sick for many years. As HIV disease continues, it slowly wears down the immune system. Viruses, parasites, fungi and bacteria that usually don't cause any problems can make you very sick if your immune system is damaged. These are called "opportunistic infections." See Fact Sheet 500 for an overview of opportunistic infections.
HOW DO YOU GET AIDS?

You don't actually "get" AIDS. You might get infected with HIV, and later you might develop AIDS. You can get infected with HIV from anyone who's infected, even if they don't look sick and even if they haven't tested HIV-positive yet. The blood, vaginal fluid, semen, and breast milk of people infected with HIV has enough of the virus in it to infect other people. Most people get the HIV virus by:

  • having sex with an infected person
  • sharing a needle (shooting drugs) with someone who's infected
  • being born when their mother is infected, or drinking the breast milk of an infected woman

Getting a transfusion of infected blood used to be a way people got AIDS, but now the blood supply is screened very carefully and the risk is extremely low.