Wednesday, 31 July 2013

San Francisco 49ers NFL tickets are a steal...for now

Vivid Seats

A snapshot of National Football League average home game ticket prices for the 2013-2014 season, according to ticket marketplace Vivid Seats.

The looming National Football League season will be the San Francisco 49ers' last at Candlestick Park, and cost-conscious fans might want to get in on the action now.

According to an analysis by online ticket marketplace Vivid Seats, the Niners have the No. 13 most expensive average home game tickets out of the league's 32 teams. But if the team's season ticket and seat license prices at the new Levi's Stadium are any indication, expect the team to rank higher next year.

Across the NFL, the average ticket price for the 2013 season is $203.75. For home games at Candlestick Park this upcoming season, 49ers' tickets are going for an average $216, according to Vivid Seats.

That's much lower than the top teams for home game ticket sales, like the New England Patriots, which are going for an average of $431. However, Niners games are significantly higher than the Oakland Raiders' average $120 ticket price, which sends the East Bay team to the bottom of the spendy list, at No. 29.

The 49ers' new $1.3 billion Santa Clara stadium project ? slated for completion next summer ? has already generated more than $800 million in revenue from early seat license and box sales.

Seat license costs at Levi's Stadium, which are not figured into average ticket prices, range from $2,000 to $12,000. Season ticket prices range from $850 to $2,000 or more for suites.

For those keeping score, a ticket to the 49ers' game at the Seattle Seahawks on Sept. 15 is currently the No. 11 most expensive single game of the upcoming season, with tickets averaging $418, according to Vivid Seats.

Lauren Hepler covers economic development, sports, and hospitality for the Silicon Valley Business Journal. She can be reached at 408.299.1820

Source: http://feeds.bizjournals.com/~r/vertical_24/~3/SDUHiSUvQrE/san-francisco-49ers-nfl-tickets-are-a.html

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Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Scott Raab on the MLB trade deadline, Browns training camp story lines and Sports PR ? WFNY Podcast ? 2013-07-29

WFNY Podcast LogoAlways nice to start the week with some sports talk with Scott Raab. We talked about training camp story lines, the MLB trade deadline involving the Indians and a lot more.

  • The pear trees in my yard and the dogs that eat them
  • False memory studies in MIT
  • Training camp storylines
  • Tape recorders vs. audio recorders
  • Training camp storylines and how the ?summer superlatives? have begun
  • The obsessed sports fans and how little was available in the past
  • Pat Shurmur?s year-over-year change
  • Pierre Garcon thinks the Redskins can be the best offense ever
  • Over 4400 Browns fans at Training Camp yesterday
  • Chris Antonetti?s sales job to the Cleveland fans
  • Lonnie Chisenhall?s performance since being brought back up
  • Defining ?all in? at the trade deadline
  • Lefty relievers and using Joe Smith against lefties
  • The Indians are a good fun team and that?s why they should add talent
  • How much of this is Chris Antonetti?s bad sales job?
  • Managing expectations with the fanbase and what the Indians need to do
  • Is this the last gasp of Mark Shapiro and Chris Antonetti?
  • The NFL, and elusive parity with the Cleveland Browns
  • The Browns cap space and what it means for Browns fans
  • McFadden should be a player
  • Dick Jauron can be good even while you pine away for Ray Horton
  • Getting after the quarterback
  • Joe Namath and his iconic figure status
  • Frank Ryan and his PHD in mathematics
  • Chip Kelly and giving all the credit to Pat Shurmur
  • HGH testing and blood tests
  • Biogenesis lab and how young people were to get in there
  • Jimmy Haslam?s cases and trying to settle everything

Source: http://www.waitingfornextyear.com/2013/07/scott-raab-on-the-mlb-trade-deadline-browns-training-camp-story-lines-and-sports-pr-wfny-podcast-2013-07-29/

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WaPo's Milbank, Politico's Glueck Make Strained Comparisons of GOP Politicians to Weiner

The situations involving disgraced and relapsed former Congressman Anthony Weiner and Ben Quayle, who hasn't been in politics for about a year, are very analogous. Just ask Katie Glueck at the Politico. Oh, and the the Weiner situation is also very analogous to that of Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, who has returned $21,000 worth of gifts he should never have taken from a businessperson. Just ask Dana Milbank at the Washington Post.

There appears to be some kind of unwritten rule that you can't attempt to analyze a Democrats' scandalous involvement without dragging a Republican into the mix, no matter how distant or irrelevant the connection. First, let's look at Glueck with Quayle and Weiner?(bolds are mine throughout this post):

TheDirty.com: First Ben Quayle, now Anthony Weiner

Mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner catapulted back into the spotlight this week when a gossip website posted graphic, sexually charged allegations about the contender. But this isn?t the first time thedirty.com has rocked the political world.

In 2010, right before the Arizona GOP primary, POLITICO reported that then-congressional contender Ben Quayle had previously served as a contributor to DirtyScottsdale.com, the forerunner to thedirty.com. The son of former Vice President Dan Quayle had operated under a pseudonym.

Quayle did acknowledge that he knew Richie and had connected him to an intellectual property attorney. ...

Quayle, for his part, went on to win his 2010 races before losing his seat last year in a Republican primary. He is now a senior director in the government and public affairs division at Clark Hill PLC, a law firm.

Meantime, thedirty.com has a section devoted to ?dirty politics? which this week is dominated, naturally, by Weiner. A woman has alleged on the site that she and the former Democratic congressman had a sexually explicit online relationship that started last summer and stretched until the winter.

This is such thin comparative gruel that several Politico commenters rightly lambasted Glueck:

"Politico has to make liberals feel better about Weiner by making half of their story about a Republican who had a scandal three years ago."

"Way to go, making this story mostly about a 3 year old non scandal."

What is the story here? Slow day?

Milbank's Friday write-up is arguably worse, as he invented a term ("McWeiner") to try to make Weiner's and McDonnell's situation equivalent. Of course they aren't. Here are excerpts:

The McWeiners of the world

... that brings me to this week?s McWeiner controversy.

Most news accounts treated these as two separate scandals: Anthony Weiner, the disgraced Democratic congressman and would-be mayor of New York, had been exposed again as a digital flasher, sending ?selfie? pictures of his privates to women. Bob McDonnell, the Republican governor of Virginia, was found to be taking gifts and loans from a businessman McDonnell had helped.

Their offenses ? particularly their responses upon being caught ? are much the same.

By coincidence, both men found themselves apologizing for their misdeeds on the same day, July 23. McDonnell?s was cowardly, done via Twitter while he was out of the country; Weiner?s was handled in yet another bizarre news conference. But both were reluctant, their statements less expressions of contrition than naked efforts to make the problems go away. These were the apologies of narcissists.

?I want you to know that I broke no laws,? McDonnell wrote in a statement expressing regret not for the gifts he took but for ?the embarrassment? ? which occurred when he was found out.

Weiner, though acknowledging his misbehavior, quickly pivoted to blaming others. ?With 49 days left until primary day, perhaps I?m surprised that more things didn?t come out sooner,? he said. ?This was a very public thing that we had happen to us,? he added, as if somebody else had forced him to send out photos of his genitals.

Well, let's see, Dana. For starters, I don't recall McDonnell, who definitely shouldn't have done what he did, running to the New York Times with his wife for a lengthy write-up falsely pretending to be reformed.

Second, assuming McDonnell is right in saying that he broke no laws, the same can't be said of Weiner if he did any sexting or lewd form of communication with any underage person. There is more than a little evidence that he did just that, and in fact that "Weiner?s potentially inappropriate contact with underage girls was the ultimate reason he was forced to resign."

I don't recall the press feeling obligated to drag discussions of Willam "Cold Cash" Jefferson into reports or analyses of corrupt Republican former Congressman "Duke" Cunningham, both of whom went to prison last decade for bribery. Unlike the two forced comparisons above, there were genuine parallels between what Jefferson and Cunningham did. The press eagerly identified Cunningham as a Republican. But with Jefferson, there was clear avoidance of even giving him significant coverage, and an especially strong reluctance to tag him as a Democrat.

Source: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer/2013/07/28/wapos-milbank-politicos-glueck-make-strained-comparisons-gop-politicians

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Sunday, 28 July 2013

Video: 'You can't bet against' Amazon: Pro

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52588656/

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President Obama's foreign policy

Although the President chose not to press charges for war crimes against those who irresponsibly took us to war in Iraq ?torture at Abu Ghraib, torture connected to rendition and the continuing injustices at Guantanamo ? he nevertheless has shown extraordinary common sense and forbearance in conducting the foreign policies which he has initiated, ?drone strikes notwithstanding.

In Afghanistan, Libya, Egypt and now Syria he is cautiously wending his way through a mine field of no-win situations and thus far has refused to repeat the disastrous American interventions as happened in Vietnam and Iraq. Hooray for Gen. Martin Dempsey for laying out the truth about the no-win costly options in Syria. It?s about time some of our leaders learned from history.

As columnist Steve Chapman wisely pointed out, the president overall has pursued a foreign policy ?that errs on the side of caution, patience, restraint and economy. As for the critics, you know what? We tried their way.? (?Obama and the power of no,? Column, July 21)? Their way is the neo-con warmongering way, futile invasion where we?re not wanted, incorporating criminal behaviors, loathed by the fair-minded.

? Marion J. Reis, Wheaton

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/chicagotribune/voiceofthepeople/~3/KtfezyjCrlI/chi-20130726-reis_briefs,0,4819991.story

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Friday, 21 June 2013

Obama: 'Lives have been saved' by NSA programs

BERLIN (AP) ? Trying to tamp down concerns about government over-reach, President Barack Obama on Wednesday defended U.S. Internet and phone surveillance programs as narrowly targeted efforts that have saved lives and thwarted at least 50 terror threats.

"This is not a situation in which we are rifling through ordinary emails" of huge numbers of citizens in the United States or elsewhere, the president declared during a news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. He called it as a "circumscribed, narrow" surveillance program.

"Lives have been saved," Obama said, adding that the program has been closely supervised by the courts to ensure that any encroachment of privacy is strictly limited.

Merkel, for her part, said it was important to continue debate about how to strike "an equitable balance" between providing security and protecting personal freedoms.

"There has to be proportionality," she said. She added that their discussion on the matter Wednesday was "an important first step" over striking a balance.

Merkel appeared to be looking to avoid a public rift with Washington over the surveillance program, particularly since Germans benefit from U.S. intelligence. Much of the German criticism of the program has come from her junior coalition partners, facing the prospect of losses in the September election and looking for an issue.

The two leaders spoke to the media after meeting privately on a range of issues confronting U.S. and European leaders, including the fragile effort to bring peace in Afghanistan, where peace talks with the Taliban are in the offing to find ways to end the nearly 12-year war. Earlier Wednesday, Afghan President Hamid Karzai suspended talks with the United States on a new security deal to protest the way his government was being left out of the initial peace negotiations with the Taliban.

Obama said the U.S. had anticipated "there were going to be some areas of friction, to put it mildly, in getting this thing off the ground. That's not surprising. They've been fighting there for a long time" and mistrust is rampant.

Karzai said Wednesday that peace talks cannot begin amid "fighting and bloodshed." But Obama said it was important to pursue a parallel track toward reconciliation even as the fighting continues, and it would up to the Afghan people whether that effort ultimately bears fruit.

On another world trouble spot, the 2-year-old Syrian civil war, the president declined to provide details on the type of military support the U.S. will provide to opposition forces. But he said the administration had been consistent in working toward the over-riding goal of a Syria that is "peaceful, non-sectarian, democratic, legitimate, tolerant."

"I cannot and will not comment on specifics around our programs related to the Syrian opposition," he said.

The president said while world leaders at the just-completed Group of 8 summit in Northern Ireland could not agree on whether Syrian President Bashar Assad must go, he believes Assad cannot regain legitimacy.

And the president offered reassurances on another issue of particular concern in Germany. In response to a question from a German reporter, Obama said the United States doesn't use Germany as a launching point for unmanned drones to strike terrorist targets. He said he knows there have been some reports in Germany speculating that was the case, but it's not so.

Later Wednesday, Obama planned to draw attention to his plan for a one-third reduction in U.S. and Russian arsenals, rekindling a goal that was a centerpiece of his early first-term national security agenda.

His 26-hour whirlwind visit to the German capital caps three days of international summitry for the president and marks his return to a place where he once summoned a throng of 200,000 to share his ambitious vision for American leadership.

Obama will make the case for his nuclear plan during a speech at Berlin's iconic Brandenburg Gate. His address comes nearly 50 years after John F. Kennedy's famous Cold War speech in this once-divided city, and five years after Obama spoke in the city during his 2008 run for president.

The president has previously called for reductions to the stockpiles and is not expected to outline a timeline for this renewed push. But by addressing the issue in a major foreign policy speech, Obama is signaling a desire to rekindle an issue that was a centerpiece of his early first-term national security agenda.

Five years later, Obama comes to deliver a highly anticipated speech to a country that's a bit more sober about his aspirations and the extent of his successes, yet still eager to receive his attention at a time that many here feel that Europe, and Germany in particular, are no longer U.S. priorities. A Pew Research Center poll of Germans found that while their views of the U.S. have slipped since Obama's first year in office, he has managed to retain his popularity, with 88 percent of those surveyed approving of his foreign policies.

Obama also has an arc of history to fulfill.

Fifty years ago next week, President Kennedy addressed a crowd of 450,000 in that then-divided city to repudiate communism and famously declare "Ich bin ein Berliner," German for "I am a Berliner." Since then, presidents from Ronald Reagan to Bill Clinton have used Berlin speeches to articulate broad themes about freedom and international alliances.

Obama, fresh from a two-day summit of the Group of Eight industrial economies, placed his hand over his heart outside the sunny presidential palace as a German military band played "The Star-Spangled Banner," the American national anthem. He and German President Joachim Gauck inspected a lineup of German military troops before entering the palace, stopping to greet children who waved American and German flags.

The visit was attracting widespread attention in Germany. People waved and snapped photos as Obama sped by after his arrival and a thick cluster awaited the motorcade as it passed the Brandenburg Gate. An evening news show in Berlin devoted itself to the president's visit, highlighting "Das Biest," or "The Beast," as the president's armored limousine is called.

There have been a few small protests, including one directed against the National Security Agency's surveillance of foreign communications, where about 50 people waved placards taunting, "Yes, we scan."

Merkel has said she was surprised at the scope of the spying that was revealed and said the U.S. must clarify what information is monitored. But she also said U.S. intelligence was key to foiling a large-scale terror plot and acknowledged her country is "dependent" on cooperating with American spy services.

For Merkel, the visit presents an opportunity to bolster her domestic standing ahead of a general election in September.

The U.S. and the Germans have clashed on economic issues, with Obama pressing for Europe to prime the economy with government stimulus measures, while Merkel has insisted on pressing debt-ridden countries to stabilize their fiscal situations first.

But the two sides have found common ground on a trans-Atlantic trade pact between the European Union and the U.S. At the just-completed G-8 summit, the leaders agreed to hold the first talks next month in the U.S.

___

Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Robert Reid and Frank Jordans contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-lives-saved-nsa-programs-114733804.html

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Thursday, 20 June 2013

WHO: Third of women suffer domestic violence

LONDON (AP) ? About a third of women worldwide have been physically or sexually assaulted by a former or current partner, according to the first major review of violence against women.

In a series of papers released on Thursday by the World Health Organization and others, experts estimated nearly 40 percent of women killed worldwide were slain by an intimate partner and that being assaulted by a partner was the most common kind of violence experienced by women.

"Violence against women is a global health problem of epidemic proportions," WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan said in a statement.

WHO defined physical violence as being slapped, pushed, punched, choked or being attacked with a weapon. Sexual violence was defined as being physically forced to have sex, having sex because you were afraid of what your partner might do and being compelled to do something sexual that was humiliating or degrading.

The report also examined rates of sexual violence against women by someone other than a partner and found about 7 percent of women worldwide had previously been a victim.

In conjunction with the report, WHO issued guidelines for authorities to spot problems earlier and said all health workers should be trained to recognize when women may be at risk and how to respond appropriately.

Globally, the WHO review found 30 percent of women are affected by domestic or sexual violence by a partner. The report was based largely on studies from 1983 to 2010. According to the United Nations, more than 600 million women live in countries where domestic violence is not considered a crime.

The rate of domestic violence against women was highest in Africa, the Middle East and Southeast Asia, where 37 percent of women experienced physical or sexual violence from a partner at some point in their lifetime. The rate was 30 percent in Latin and South America and 23 percent in North America. In Europe and Asia, it was 25 percent.

Some experts said screening for domestic violence should be added to all levels of health care, such as obstetric clinics.

"It's unlikely that someone would walk into an ER and disclose they've been assaulted," said Sheila Sprague of McMaster University in Canada, who has researched domestic violence in women at orthopedic clinics. She was not connected to the WHO report.

"Over time, if women are coming into a fracture clinic or a pre-natal clinic, they may tell you they are suffering abuse if you ask," she said.

For domestic violence figures, scientists analyzed information from 86 countries focusing on women over the age of 15. They also assessed studies from 56 countries on sexual violence by someone other than a partner, though they had no data from the Middle East. WHO experts then used modeling techniques to fill in the gaps and to come up with global estimates for the percentage of women who are victims of violence.

In a related paper published online in the journal Lancet, researchers found more than 38 percent of slain women are killed by a former or current partner, six times higher than the rate of men killed by their partners. Heidi Stoeckl, one of the authors at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the figures were likely to be an underestimate. She and colleagues found that globally, a woman's highest risk of murder was from a current or ex-partner.

Stoeckl said criminal justice authorities should intervene at an earlier stage.

"When a woman is killed by a partner, she has often already had contact with the police," she said.

Stoeckl said more protective measures should be in place for women from their partners, particularly when he or she has a history of violence and owns a gun.

"There are enough signs that we should be watching out for that," she said. "We certainly should know if someone is potentially lethal and be able to do something about it."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/third-women-suffer-domestic-violence-131011699.html

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