Thursday, October 17, 2013

So What Happens If The Movement To Label GMOs Succeeds?





Labels on bags of snack foods indicate they are non-GMO food products.



Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images


Labels on bags of snack foods indicate they are non-GMO food products.


Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images


I have a story on All Things Considered Wednesday (click on the audio link above to hear it) about the campaign to put labels on food containing genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. The idea is gaining ground in the Northeast — Maine and Connecticut passed labeling laws this summer, though they won't take effect unless more states do the same. And GMO labeling is on the ballot this November in Washington state.


One aspect I didn't have room for in the radio story is the question of what might happen if the movement succeeds. In the U.S., something on the order of 70 percent of our food already contains at least some GMO ingredients, so the GMO label would suddenly become ubiquitous on most grocery shelves. How would consumers react?


The foes of genetic engineering hope America's experience will mirror Europe's. GMO food is legal, there, but it has to be labeled, and marketers are wary of consumer backlash. So GMO foods are rare.


But America isn't Europe. For one thing, Americans have been eating GMO foods since 1996, without strange side effects. Critics say GMOs haven't been tested enough, but the verdict of mainstream science is that they're safe to eat. Just last month, Scientific American ran an editorial emphasizing this point and decrying "unfounded fears."


Even Michael Pollan agrees on that front. "I haven't seen any evidence that's persuaded me that there's any danger to health," says the food journalist, who's become a kind of hero for the organic and local-food movements. He doesn't like GMOs, and he's quick to add that he thinks they need more testing. But he says arguments about possible health effects miss the larger point.


"I don't think this is a fight about science, he says. "I think it's a fight about transparency — people who want to know where their food comes from should have this information."


And one other thing to keep in mind is that the U.S. already has a de facto "Non-GMO" label: organic. Organic foods may not contain any genetically modified organisms. It may turn out that the consumers who would avoid GMO labels have already taken their business to Whole Foods.


Proponents of mandatory labeling say that's not enough. Andrew Stout, founder of Full Circle farm, an organic produce company outside Seattle, says people who don't have access to organic food — or can't afford it — still deserve to know whether they're eating GMOs.


"It's no different than just having sodium, salt, artificial flavors and artificial colors, country of origin," Stout says. "Consumers look for that kind of information and make their own individual choices."


But genetic engineering is different. It's not an ingredient — it's a technique. Genetic modifications can change plants and animals in any number of ways: Corn modified to resist a certain weed killer is not the same as rice that's been reprogrammed to contain more vitamin A. They're beneficial — or risky — in completely different ways. Mandatory labels might mislead consumers to lump all GMOs together.


That's one of the main arguments presented by the anti-labeling campaigns. The other is the potential increase in production costs. That's the concern of former Washington state agriculture director and full-time farmer Dan Newhouse. As a farmer who grows some GMO and some non-GMO, he says it's going to be hard work keeping them separate. He imagines moving a harvester from a field of one kind of corn to the other.


"I'd have to be able to clean that harvester so well, that there's not one kernel of [GMO] corn on that machine," Newhouse says. "So I would not be able to guarantee that there's no commingling."


Opponents of mandatory labeling say the extra effort would increase the price of food by an average of $450 a year, for a family of four. While an independent study by the Washington State Academy of Sciences agreed that labeling would come with a cost, it noted that it's impossible to calculate how much that cost would be.


Given the prevalence of GMO ingredients in American food, some manufacturers may skip the cost of keeping things segregated, and simply slap a GMO label on everything. That option may become especially attractive if it turns out consumers aren't put off by the label. (You know those err-on-the-side-of-safety warnings about candy bars that are made in a facility that also processes nuts? Just substitute "GMO" for nuts, and you see where this might go.)


"The psychological research ... suggests that when you give people choice over risk, they're less afraid of it," says David Ropeik, a writer who specializes in how people assess risk. "Assuming that [the label] was something short of a skull and crossbones, it's likely that many people would accept it and say, 'Fine, I'll buy it!' "


If you doubt it, he says, then think about all the other things that come with scary labels — things you end up buying anyway.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/10/16/235525984/so-what-happens-if-the-movement-to-label-gmos-succeeds?ft=1&f=1053
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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Fiscal Fight's Winners And Losers





Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell arrives at the Capitol on Wednesday. The Kentucky Republican helped forge a late-hour deal with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to sidestep financial chaos.



J. Scott Applewhite/AP


Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell arrives at the Capitol on Wednesday. The Kentucky Republican helped forge a late-hour deal with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to sidestep financial chaos.


J. Scott Applewhite/AP


The White House is insisting, publicly at least, that nobody emerged victorious from the government shutdown/debt crisis debacle.


"There are no winners here," White House spokesman Jay Carney said Wednesday after Senate leaders announced they had a deal to end the budget impasse.


"And nobody's who's sent here to Washington by the American people can call themselves a winner," Carney said, "if the American people have paid a price for what's happened."


Well, yes and no.


As the curtain comes down on the latest, but certainly not the last, partisan convulsion, there's no question that the shutdown and debt crisis will affect the political calculus in Washington.


Here's our list of winners and losers. Let us know if you have suggestions of your own.


Winners


Kentucky's Senators


Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, the state's wily senior senator, and his junior GOP colleague, Sen. Rand Paul, both emerged from their party's awful interlude with reputations intact, if not enhanced. McConnell employed his sharp political instincts, and once again forged a late-hour deal with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to sidestep financial chaos. And Paul astutely tended to his 2016 presidential ambitions by largely steering clear of the doomed defund-Obamacare-or-else strategy embraced by Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.


GOP Sen. Ted Cruz


The Texas senator held a fake filibuster, persuaded like-minded House members to jump off the shutdown/debt crisis ledge, harvested Tea Party cash and gathered names for fundraising lists. Wednesday's Pew Research Center poll results show his popularity among Tea Party Republicans soaring — and he's solidified his role as the undisputed face of the Obamacare resistance and the voice of a motivated and aggravated slice of the party's base.


GOP Speaker John Boehner


In allowing his more conservative members to drive a losing battle, the Ohio Republican has enhanced his standing with that faction and solidified his hold on the GOP conference. Boehner on Tuesday looked every inch the blundering loser; by Wednesday, his speakership remained secure, and he was basking in the praise of some of the hardliners who have been making his life so difficult.


GOP Rep. Tom Graves


Graves, a conservative from north Georgia, emerged from national obscurity to win notice as a leader of the defund Obamacare movement in the House. He leveraged the crisis to go from "Representative Who?" status — he was first elected in a 2010 special election — to a seat at television talk show tables and a reputation as a leading Tea Party voice.


GOP Rep. Devin Nunes


The California Republican won national attention for his now-famous characterization of fellow party members willing to shut down government over Obamacare as "lemmings with suicide vests." After that memorable description, Nunes became a go-to Republican for the media because of his willingness to criticize his party's positions while remaining loyal to leadership.


Obamacare


How could we list the Affordable Care Act as a winner, when its rollout has been beset by such enormous problems? It's simple: think of all the "president's health care launch is an unmitigated fiasco" stories that weren't written, or received minor play, because the program start coincided with the government shutdown. Thus the administration has had cover while it hustles to fix the worst of the problems.


Senate Women


GOP Sen. John McCain of Arizona was among those who gave props to his female colleagues for their role in leading a bipartisan group of 14 senators (it included six women) to help provide Reid and McConnell a framework for their deal to end the government shutdown. Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine won particular notice. "Leadership, I must fully admit," McCain said, "was provided primarily by women in the Senate."


Wall Street, Eventually


A late Wednesday headline on CNN said it all: "Debt Ceiling Deal Sends Stocks Soaring."


Senate Chaplain Barry Black


In Senate floor prayers during the crisis, the 64-year-old former Navy chaplain drew national attention — and inspired a Saturday Night Live skit — with his ardent pleas for reason and faith. "Save us from the madness," he prayed one day, "and deliver us from the hypocrisy of attempting to sound reasonable while being unreasonable."


Robert Costa


No one covered the crisis with more consistency and insight than the National Review's Washington editor, Robert Costa. He used his must-read Twitter feed to break news, and provided deep, dispassionate insight into Republican strategy for his conservative publication. Costa, 28, was one of five conservative journalists who Obama invited to the White House for a private briefing.


Losers


(In addition to the American people, federal and government contract employees, tourists and those with businesses reliant on the visitors to the nation's national parks.)


GOP Sen. Ted Cruz


Yes, the Texas senator was both a winner and a loser. He's been excoriated by members of his own party over his approach, and Wednesday's Pew Research Center poll results show his popularity dropping among those not aligned with the GOP Tea Party wing. While he's established himself as a Tea Party force, Cruz lost the immediate battle, and may have fatally damaged his general election brand.


GOP Speaker John Boehner


Bad boy political columnist Roger Simon in a widely read piece this weak took aim at Cruz and Boehner for allowing, if not orchestrating, the shutdown and leading the nation to the brink of financial calamity. Boehner, he wrote, "does not bend to the will of his Kamikaze Caucus because he is an evil man. He does so because he is a weak man. To borrow a line from Theodore Roosevelt, I could carve a better man out of a banana." In allowing his more conservative members to drive a losing battle, Boehner looked weak, blundering and barely in control of his conference. And in the end, he opened the door to a deal that will likely require a majority of Democrats to get passed.


House GOP Hardliners


It took the Wall Street Journal to lay it out succinctly: "They picked a goal they couldn't achieve in trying to defund ObamaCare from one House of Congress," it editorialized Wednesday, "and then they picked a means they couldn't sustain politically by pursuing a long government shutdown and threatening to blow through the debt limit."


The Tea Party Brand


Pew Research Center poll results released Wednesday showed that unfavorable views of the Tea Party have nearly doubled since 2010. Negative opinions have accelerated in recent months, particularly among moderate and liberal Republicans, and now nearly half of the American public has an unfavorable view of the Tea Party.


Immigration Overhaul


Remember that? President Obama says he does, and this week told Univision's Los Angeles affiliate that he's going to push for House Speaker John Boehner to take up the Senate-approved immigration overhaul bill. But here's how one conservative House Republican framed the upcoming debate on Wednesday: "If the president is going to show the same kind of good faith efforts that he has shown in the last couple of weeks, I think it would be crazy for the House Republican leadership to enter into negotiations with him on immigration," said Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho. "He has tried to destroy the Republican Party and I think that anything that we do right now with this president on immigration will be with that same goal in mind, which is to destroy the Republican Party and not to get good policies."


Ken Cuccinelli


Cuccinelli, the Republican candidate for governor in Virginia, was in a pretty close race with Democrat Terry McAuliffe before the Oct. 1 shutdown and impending debt crisis. But polls show that support for the social conservative has eroded in the past two weeks, driven in part by antipathy of many of the huge swath of federal workers living in the purple state Obama won twice.


Vice President Joe Biden


The garrulous vice president was a key player in brokering a bipartisan deal to avoid the nation's last almost-default two years ago. This time, he's been nowhere to be seen - except during a shopping trip Tuesday to the local Brooks Brothers. The White House insists he in the loop, and attended meetings with members of Congress. But it's been reported that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other Democrats weren't so crazy about former Sen. Biden's last deal, and preferred to go it alone.


Michelle Obama's Garden


The nation's most famous vegetable plot has gone to seed, literally, during the shutdown. With no groundskeepers or gardeners working to keep up the garden and White House grounds, vegetables on the 1,500-square-foot plot are rotting, weeds are taking over, and critters are having a ball, reports the blog Obama Foodorama.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/10/16/235612260/the-fiscal-fights-winners-and-losers?ft=1&f=1003
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Superbright Supernovas' Cause Potentially Revealed



The cause of a mysterious, long-lasting, superbright form of supernova, the most energetic stellar explosion in the universe, may now have been discovered, astronomers say.



Surprisingly, these outbursts may be driven by the birth of magnetars, dead stars that rank among the most powerful magnets in the cosmos, according to a study published online today (Oct. 16) in the journal Nature.



Supernovas result from the deaths of stars. These explosions can briefly outshine all of the other stars in their galaxies. [Supernova Photos: Great Images of Star Explosions]



More than a decade ago, scientists first detected a new, extremely rare class of supernova. These incredibly bright explosions, known as superluminous supernovas, are up to 100 times brighter than other types of stellar outbursts.



A number of these explosions fade very slowly, matching theoretical models of what are called pair-instability supernovas. Astrophysicists suspected that within the extremely massive stars thought to give rise to pair-instability supernovas — ones more than 140 times the mass of the sun — conditions are just right for gamma-rays, the highest-energy form of light, to convert into pairs of electrons and their antimatter counterparts, known as positrons.



These gamma-rays normally exert pressure that helps support the star against the crushing effects of its own gravity. However, as gamma-rays get converted to matter, the star loses this support and collapses in on itself. This, in turn, causes a runaway explosion that completely obliterates the star.



Scientists had suggested these slow-fading explosions generate huge amounts of radioactive matter, enough to equal several times the mass of the sun. This debris produces superluminous supernovas' slowly dimming light through radioactive decay, according to the idea.





Now, however, researchers have discovered two superluminous supernovas whose slow-fading light was apparently not generated by radioactive decay. Instead, these supernovas may be caused by a type of explosion that creates extremely magnetic neutron stars known as magnetars.



Astronomers discovered two superluminous supernovas named PTF 12dam and PS1-11ap, which lie about 1.6 billion light-years and nearly 10 billion light-years from Earth, respectively. The light from these explosions was blue in color and increased rapidly to their peaks over the course of about two months, whereas pair-instability supernovas should be redder and increase more slowly.



Computer models suggest explosions that create magnetars could generate the light patterns seen from these newfound supernovas. Magnetars are a kind of neutron star, remnants of dead stars that are only about as large as a city but contain at least as much mass as the sun.



Magnetars possess magnetic fields up to 5,000 trillion times more powerful than that of the Earth. Magnetars that expel glowing matter in vast amounts more than 10 to 16 times the mass of the sun during their births could explain these newfound supernovas, researchers said.



"It was exciting to find such a great match to the predictions of the magnetar model, which also fits most of the fast-declining superluminous supernovas," study lead author Matt Nicholl, an astronomer at Queen's University Belfast in Northern Ireland, told SPACE.com. "Two types of supernova which previously looked very different can actually both be explained quite nicely by this model."



The brightness and colors of PTF 12dam and PS1-11ap are similar to another recently observed superluminous supernova, SN 2007bi, originally suggested to be a pair-instability explosion. This suggests that pair-instability explosions may be even rarer than before thought, accounting for less than one out every 100,000 supernovas.



SN 2007bi was only thought to be one of a handful of pair-instability supernovas. These new findings could banish pair-instability supernovas back to the realm of theoretical possibility, although they do not rule them out, Nicholl said.



Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on SPACE.com.



Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/superbright-supernovas-cause-potentially-revealed-170823457.html
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When Will The Government Run Out Of Money?


In the course of any given month, the government collects billions of dollars in taxes, spends billions more, and borrows money to cover the difference between what it collects and what it spends.


If Congress doesn't raise the debt ceiling very soon, the government won't be able to borrow money to cover the difference anymore, and won't be able to pay all of its bills.


Treasury Secretary Jack Lew has said that, after Oct. 17, the government can't guarantee that it will be able to make all its payments. But the government won't run out of money on the 17th; it will still have about $30 billion left.


The Bipartisan Policy Center predicts the money will run out some time between Oct. 22 and Nov. 1. This graph shows some major payments the government has to make during that window. Note the pile of bills due on Nov. 1.





Notes


The government has many other payments due over this time; this sample shows upcoming bills that are among the largest.




It's unclear exactly when the government will run out of money. That's because the amount of money the government collects in taxes on any given day can vary a lot. Spending can vary, too.


As the Bipartisan Policy Center wrote recently:




For example, in October of last year, about $3 billion in revenue was collected on one Tuesday, just over $6 billion was received on another Tuesday, and almost $11 billion arrived on yet another Tuesday. Furthermore, while spending is subject to less uncertainty than revenue, it still varies. For example, on some days, Medicare spending can exceed $2.5 billion while on other days, it is closer to $1 billion.




NPR's John Ydstie has more on this story today on Morning Edition.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2013/10/15/234881198/when-will-the-government-run-short-of-money?ft=1&f=1003
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Apple Announces October 22nd Media Event

Apple Announces October 22nd Media Event
Apple sent out invites to its next product-filled media event, which will be held on October 22nd. We're expecting a whole lot of iPad news and OS X Mavericks on the agenda.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/NOwW3BH9Yt8/
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Second Dry Ice Bomb Goes Off At L.A. Airport





A photograph taken last month of the south concourse of L.A. International Airport's Tom Bradley International Terminal.



Reed Saxon/AP


A photograph taken last month of the south concourse of L.A. International Airport's Tom Bradley International Terminal.


Reed Saxon/AP


Authorities in Los Angeles were investigating a dry ice bomb that went off at the city's international airport late Monday, causing no damage or injuries. The explosion of the relatively harmless device was the second in as many days.


Monday night's incident occurred outside the airport's Tom Bradley Terminal.


There were no reports of any injuries, authorities said and The Associated Press reports that there's no immediate word where either bomb was located.


Two other devices also were found at the airport but they did not explode, Detective Gus Villanueva said, according to the AP.


NBC Los Angeles describes dry ice bombs as "relatively harmless and simple" consisting of a plastic bottle and dry ice. The device on Monday went off about 8:30 p.m. PST.


The Los Angeles Times writes:




"On Sunday night, a dry ice bomb exploded about 7 p.m. in a restroom at Terminal 2, which is home to several international and domestic airlines.


Officials said an airport employee heard an explosion in a men's room and went to investigate. He discovered a 20-ounce plastic bottle that had contained the dry ice. The blast did no damage, and no injuries were reported.


That area is also off limits to the public, police officials said.


On Monday night, detectives from the Los Angeles Police Department's Criminal Conspiracy Section were investigating how the bombs were placed in security areas.


'Apparently there is no nexus to terrorism right now,' LAPD Det. Gus Villanueva told The Times.


The FBI was assisting the LAPD in the investigation."




Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/15/234649675/second-dry-ice-bomb-goes-off-at-l-a-airport?ft=1&f=1003
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NewsGator tunes social collaboration suite for 'Aha!' moments


NewsGator wants its Social Sites add-on for SharePoint to handle companies' innovation cycles with a beefed-up set of capabilities for brainstorming, idea evaluation, concept development and execution.


Social Sites, an ESN (enterprise social networking ) product, has an existing "ideation" module that's called Idea Stream and is mainly for brainstorming, but NewsGator released on Tuesday a broader "innovation" edition of the full suite.


[ Discover what's new in business applications with InfoWorld's Technology: Applications newsletter| For a quick, smart take on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief -- subscribe today.]


With Social Sites for Innovation, NewsGator wants to tap further into the demand for enterprise software that lets companies solicit ideas from employees, collect and manage their contributions and distill the suggestions into concrete plans.


In fact, last month Mindjet, which makes project-based collaboration software, merged with Spigit, which specializes in innovation management, to offer enterprises tools that help from idea creation to completion of projects. Other NewsGator rivals provide various levels of innovation management functionality for their broader ESN suites.


Social Sites for Innovation can be used with on premises and private cloud implementations of SharePoint 2010 and SharePoint 2013.


The product replaces the existing, more limited Idea Stream module, which costs $5 per user per year, according to Jen Keyerleber, senior solutions manager at NewsGator.


"Current customers who own the Idea Stream module are able to expand their innovation process by purchasing the new [Social Sites for Innovation], which accesses of all of their existing ideation campaigns to take advantage of [its] end-to-end innovation capabilities," she said.


Ahead in the roadmap are plans to extend Social Sites for Innovation for use not only internally among employees but also by a company's customers and partners, Keyerleber said.


Social Sites for Innovation can be bought via a subscription or a perpetual license, which are both priced per user. Cost depends on the size of implementations.


For example, a subscription for 5,000 users to Social Sites for Innovation is $12.50 per user per year, on top of the $17.50 per user per year for the core Social Sites suite, which is required.


Juan Carlos Perez covers enterprise communication/collaboration suites, operating systems, browsers and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Juan on Twitter at @JuanCPerezIDG.


Source: http://podcasts.infoworld.com/d/applications/newsgator-tunes-social-collaboration-suite-aha-moments-228807?source=rss_applications
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Days of Gray: Reykjavik Review




The Bottom Line


Promising debut offers an enviable vehicle for the music of Icelandic band Hjaltalin.




Venue


Reykjavik International Film Festival, Icelandic Panorama


Cast


David Laufdal Arnarsson, Dilja Valsdottir, Viktoria Ros Antonsdottir, Gudmundur Ingi Thorvaldsson, Bryndis Petra Bragadottir, Margret Helga Johanssdottir


Director-Screenwriter


Ani Simon-Kennedy




REYKJAVIK — Envisioning a post-civilization existence in the primordial landscapes of Iceland, Ani Simon-Kennedy's Days of Gray makes the most not just of an untouched setting but of Hjaltalin, a local band yet to be discovered by American fans who've made successes of Icelandic groups like Sigur Ros and Mum. The entirely dialogue-free project, first imagined as a long-form music video for the band, grew into a standalone narrative during preproduction; while its fable-like simplicity makes it a specialty item in commercial terms, it represents an assured debut that should attract attention on the fest circuit and could connect with musical tastemakers.



In this far-future scenario, both spoken and written language have been abandoned. Families live in isolation from each other, seemingly communicating via cryptic pictures viewed on magic-lantern slides. It's left to the audience to imagine events that might cause humanity to give up words, but such conditions certainly suit the emotional atmospherics of Hjaltalin, whose excellent all-instrumental score gives emotional support to the child actors carrying the film.


Centering on one family whose son (David Laufdal Arnarsson) is approaching adolescence, the plot is essentially a coming-of-age tale in which he must overcome his community's rejection of the outside world: As if in superstitious imitation of earlier generations who endured a pandemic, the family wears clearly useless breathing masks whenever they go outside; they shun strangers; and they destroy the artifacts from the past he unearths when scouting the countryside.


Contrast this with the girl he meets (Dilja Valstoddir), a wild-haired creature who lives in a cave and hoards circuit boards and plastic fragments that, in this earth-toned environment, scream with man-made color. Keeping their friendship secret, he goes off to meet her and silently mimics what seem to be yoga exercises but later prove to have a very practical purpose.


With cinematographer Cailin Yatsko, Simon-Kennedy makes the most of the landscape's alien, out-of-time qualities. (Both filmmakers are New Yorkers who'd never been to Iceland before discovering Hjaltalin's music.) The cobbled-together aesthetic of Nell Tivnan's production design sits in between sci-fi and a post-disaster survival film, but the picture's heart isn't in fleshing out its sketchily imagined world's rules. Rather, it identifies strongly with a hero looking to transcend them.


Production Company: Bicephaly Pictures


Cast: David Laufdal Arnarsson, Dilja Valsdottir, Viktoria Ros Antonsdottir, Gudmundur Ingi Thorvaldsson, Bryndis Petra Bragadottir, Margret Helga Johanssdottir


Director-Screenwriter: Ani Simon-Kennedy


Producers: Alice Bloch, Ani Simon-Kennedy, Cailin Yatsko


Executive producers: Kjartan Thor Thordarson, Kristinn Thordarson


Director of photography: Cailin Yatsko


Production designer: Nell Tivnan


Music: Hjaltalin


Costume designer: Christian Kjaerulf Praksti


Editor: Perry Blackshear


No rating, 79 minutes


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/film/~3/B4uPicbJBs8/days-gray-reykjavik-review-648527
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Trouble's brewing in Android land



The Android OS dominates the mobile landscape, outselling all rivals combined in most countries. The only serious challenger, Apple's iOS, earns much more money for Apple than Android earns for Google and all its hardware partners combined, but when it comes to market share, Android is king. So why does the Android ecosystem appear to be troubled?


HTC is in disarray, as its Android sales struggle in the face of the dominant Samsung, which is the only Android device maker to profit from Android. Google's Nexus devices have so-so sales, perhaps because they tend to be middle-of-the-road devices that don't inspire large populations the way Samsung and Apple do. Ditto for its Motorola Mobility unit. In fact, Google seems to have backed off on Android, focusing instead on Chrome OS and its array of data-mining services, which is where the company actually makes its money.


[ InfoWorld picks the best office apps for Android. | Keep up on key mobile developments and insights via Twitter and with the Mobilize newsletter. ]


Then there's Samsung, which sells by far the most Android devices and makes real money from them. Yet it apparently has stolen secret Apple information in defiance of the courts, cheats on industry benchmarks, and abuses the patent system to undermine Apple, a key customer if also a key competitor. It also stoops to announcing all-but-nonexistent products, such as the curved-glass Samsung Round last week, a pathetic attempt to pretend to be first. (HTC plans a similar product, so Samsung cobbled together a prototype that may never actually reach the market.) Such actions reek of desperation, not success.


What's going on in Android land is a series of sometimes unrelated events that intertwine in ways that aren't good for Android's future.


HTC's desperation to matter again
For example, HTC's troubles are not so much about Android but about not delivering compelling products regularly. HTC was the first company to offer a compelling Android device, the Droid Eris, in 2009, then all but disappeared in terms of innovation for the next three years. Its products were run-of-the-mill, inspiring little passion. And users have complained for years that HTC smartphones tend to break after a year of operation. Although this year's HTC One is a stylish smartphone that's a personal favorite of mine, it has done little to make HTC a leader in the Android market.


As a result, the company is in chaos, according to news reports. It's losing money, has laid off employees, and may need to get an infusion of cash from another company, ending its independence.


Samsung's misguided and perhaps unethical strategy
Samsung holds the leadership role in Android, thanks to strong efforts in 2011 and 2012 to make innovative, compelling products, such as the Galaxy Note series of smartphones, the Note series of tablets, and the very nice Galaxy S III. This year's Galaxy S 4 may have jumped the shark, despite its improved physical design, because of its mishmash of partially completed software, but Samsung still has plenty of momentum from those earlier products in buyers' minds.


Source: http://akamai.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/troubles-brewing-in-android-land-228603?source=rss_mobile_technology
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Brotherhood of Tears (La Confrerie des larmes): Film Review




The Bottom Line


A somewhat diverting genre exercise that loses it in the final reels.




Opens


Wednesday, Oct. 9 (in France)


Director


Jean-Baptiste Andrea


Cast


Jeremie Renier, Audrey Fleurot, Melusine Mayance, Bouli Lanners




PARIS – “Whatever you do, don’t open the briefcase” are the ominously cliched instructions guiding the protagonist -- and much of the plot -- of the high-concept French thriller Brotherhood of Tears (La Confrerie des larmes). Yet while filmmaker Jean-Baptiste Andrea is hardly treading new ground in this classic good guy-wrong place scenario, he manages to keep things relatively engaging, tossing out lots of twists and red herrings until things fly off the rails during an inevitably silly third-act reveal. Francophone slots and VOD action await this mid-sized European co-production, with possible overseas interest among genre specialists.



Despite what many will consider a bogus and only-in-France kind of conclusion, the director and co-writer Gael Malry smartly keep their MacGuffin under wraps until way late in the game, focusing mostly on the tribulations of former Paris detective Chevalier (Jeremie Renier), whose mounting gambling debts and failure to hold down a job send him on nightly fits of binge drinking. He’s also got a pesky tweenage daughter (Melusine Mayance) who gives him hell for being such a deadbeat dad, even if his mess of a life is shown to be less the result of choice than of circumstance.


PHOTOS: The 21 Best Movies About Whistleblowers


Just when it looks like Chevalier is headed straight for the gutter, an opportunity pops up in the form of an anonymous, extremely well-paid job which, at least at first, consists of merely sitting for 8 hours a day in an empty office. Thrilled to be cashing in on such an easy gig, the ex-cop goes on shopping sprees, buys a Porsche and gets a makeover -- behavior that seems all-too naive for someone who’s clearly been through the ringer many times.


Finally the real work begins when Chevalier is asked to deliver a set of mysterious briefcases to various clients across the globe. The only rule: never, ever open them. Yet anyone who’s seen films like Robert Aldrich’s Kiss Me Deadly or even Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction knows that the temptation is always too strong, and as Chevalier grows increasingly nosy about his employment, the bodies start piling up around him until things eventually come to a head in ways that are both surprising and downright ridiculous.


For at least the first hour, Andrea -- who directed the 2006 David Schwimmer-Simon Pegg starrer Big Nothing -- reveals a certain knack for building suspense out of a few basic elements, as cheesy as some of them may be. And as long as the guessing game is on, Brotherhood of Tears provides some light thrills despite much heavy-handedness, especially in scenes involving Chevalier and his daughter, not to mention the budding romance he has with a cop (Audrey Fleurot) who happens to be his biggest fan.


It’s like an Alfred Hitchcock movie with neither the penetrating humor nor the formidable craft, which basically leaves a plot that works up to a certain point and a main character who tends to feel more like a cog in the machine than a real person -- even if Dardennes brothers regular Renier (The Kid with a Bike) deserves points for a cagey performance that never discredits the material.


Budgeted at €7M ($9.5M), the film makes fine use of its multiple locations, hopping around between Turkey, Belgium and France, with DP Jean-Pierre Sauvaire (Taxi) giving the action a gritty and handheld sheen. A busy score by Laurent Perez del Mar (Zarafa) takes its cues from John Powell’s theme for The Bourne Identity, although Brotherhood is far from that kind of franchise and more like a mildly entertaining one-off whose staying power lasts as long as the end credits.


 


Opens: Wednesday, Oct. 9 (in France)


Production companies: Full House, Red Lion, Saga City, D8 Films, uFilm


Cast: Jeremie Renier, Audrey Fleurot, Melusine Mayance, Bouli Lanners


Director: Jean-Baptiste Andrea


Screenwriters: Jean-Baptiste Andrea, Gael Malry


Producers: Laurent Baudens, Didar Domehri, Gael Nouaille


Director of photography: Jean-Pierre Sauvaire


Production designer: Christina Schaffer


Costume designer: Nathalie Leborgne


Music: Laurent Perez del Mar


Editor: Antoine Vareille


Sales agent: Films Distribution


No rating, 99 minutes  


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/u-RyM0b7xXM/story01.htm
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Alibaba to transform China's 'e-conomy' with $500 billion marketplace


By Paul Carsten


HANGZHOU, China (Reuters) - Alibaba Group's plans to revolutionize China's retail industry, investing $16 billion in logistics and support by 2020, will open up China's vast interior and bring access to hundreds of millions of potential new customers.


With an extra $15 billion or so in its pocket from a likely IPO, Alibaba and partners such as delivery service firms and life insurers will pump cash into revamping China's fragile supply chains and big new data centers to process reams of consumer information.


While Alibaba sees itself as a catalyst for change, its plans also lay the groundwork for retail rivals to chip away at its business further down the line. By encouraging retailers to be more Internet-savvy, and by building the networks to distribute goods nationwide, Alibaba is showing bricks and mortar rivals how to grow online without depending on its sites.


Companies such as GOME Electrical Appliances, Haier Electronics Group Co and Chow Tai Fook Jewellery Group have branched into e-commerce, riding Alibaba's coattails and reaping the rewards with their own online stalls on Alibaba's websites.


CEO Jonathan Lu says Alibaba expects to nearly triple the volume of transactions on its marketplaces to about 3 trillion yuan ($490 billion) by 2016, overtaking Wal-Mart Stores Inc as the world's biggest retail network.


And the message to retailers from the group's sprawling campus headquarters in Hangzhou, less than an hour's train ride southwest of Shanghai, is simple: adapt or die.


"The old companies that aren't willing to transform will be wiped out by competition," said Zeng Ming, Alibaba's chief strategy officer. "Most traditional retailers now understand if they don't move online, their time is limited."


Analysts predict e-commerce will account for a fifth of total retail sales in China within 5 years, up from just 6 percent last year.


"The pot is huge and most retail growth, and the fastest growth, is going to be in e-commerce," said Boaz Rottenberg, managing director of China-based market researcher Maverick China. "If you look at all consumer spending, a big chunk is online. It's disproportionate compared to other countries."


NEXT LEVEL


As China's economy slows from years of double-digit growth, and where government policies have failed, Alibaba aims to level out an uneven distribution of wealth, where rural villagers have few opportunities and small businesses struggle to get loans.


Using data to gauge supply and demand, Alibaba plans to pinpoint where to invest resources, such as new warehouses, and how best to shift the goods traded on its online marketplaces Taobao and Tmall - think e-Bay and Amazon.com - which accounted for 3 billion of the 5.69 billion parcels moved around China last year.


With its logistics and data firepower, Alibaba aims to deliver products faster and to more people than anyone else. It is also creating a network of financial services to facilitate online commerce, through which buyers can pay for their purchases, and companies and individuals can take out loans.


"Alibaba is responsible for making the e-commerce market as big as it is. By building logistics and support systems around it, it's a way of transforming the entire retail industry and taking it to the next level," said Gartner analyst Praveen Sengar.


Alibaba, which was founded in 1999 and has grown from a small business-to-business site, is uniquely positioned to do this. Jack Ma, the group's billionaire founder and former CEO, has the ear of China's ruling Communist Party, and met Premier Li Keqiang over two days last year to discuss the future of Chinese private enterprise.


Ma's group has fought off foreign rivals to dominate China's e-commerce sector, and now controls over three-quarters of a market that is forecast to grow at 32 percent a year up to 2015, according to Bain & Co. With less than half the population online, there is huge growth potential. Traditional and Internet retailers have struggled to reach China's vast hinterlands where infrastructure is poor and Internet penetration is just 28 percent.


"We are creating for the first time a truly nationwide, cross-territory single market across China. We are liberating its consumption power," says Alibaba Vice President Brian Li.


RISKS


Other retailers are alive to the opportunities.


Haier's e-commerce revenue jumped almost six-fold to 633 million yuan ($103.4 million), or 2 percent of total revenue, in the first half of this year, while Suning Commerce Group's e-commerce business doubled to 10.6 billion yuan over the same period. GOME's online revenue now accounts for 5-6 percent of its total first half revenue of 27 billion yuan.


"Consumers will start to demand better customer experience, and both market places and branded websites will have to respond to differentiate from the competition," said Andrew Stockwell, vice president of Asia Pacific at Forrester. "Brands, especially for luxury and high-profit margin products, would prefer to have customers transact with them on their own websites."


Businesses bypassing Alibaba's services would take more of the profits on transactions, own customer data and control the overall customer experience.


GOME sees Alibaba's plans improving logistics for both traditional retailers and e-commerce firms. "The essential thing about retail is the supply chain. That and logistics networks take years to build, and we have built them for 20 years," said Helen Song, a spokesperson. "The pressure on GOME is not from e-commerce, it's from the fact that we didn't do our own thing well enough."


And Alibaba isn't the only e-commerce company investing in logistics and data.


JD.com, or Jingdong, holds a near one-fifth share of China's business-to-consumer market, and its courier services allow it to distribute its high-value products to customers in big cities within 24 hours - giving it an edge over Alibaba, which sells mainly lower-cost items, said Forrester's Bryan Wang.


"(Alibaba's plan) is nice, eye-catching, grand stuff, but Jingdong can offer 24-hour delivery for many cities now. Do they really need 24-hour delivery to the middle of nowhere?" he said. Instead, Alibaba's efforts may be about much-needed improvements to customer experience as it comes under pressure from Jingdong and others. "Alibaba is already at its peak," Wang said.


BIG DATA


To expand its own e-commerce business, Alibaba recognizes it has to do more than just e-commerce.


Through its range of products, customers can pay for online purchases and invest their savings in funds through AliPay; businesses can get loans, and companies and local governments can store data on Alibaba's cloud computing services. It also has an online shopping search engine, a mobile operating system, Internet TV set-top boxes, a digital mapping service, and an 18 percent stake in Sina Weibo, China's most popular micro-blogging service.


The data from these businesses is crucial to Alibaba.


Alibaba has three data centers in China, and in a single day can process more than 1 petabyte of data - three times what it takes to store the entire U.S. population's DNA.


"There's great value in pulling together data about users," says Alibaba's Zeng. "We have a unique understanding of how to leverage the power of technology to really push economic transformation in China."


($1 = 6.1220 Chinese yuan)


(Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/alibaba-transform-chinas-e-conomy-500-billion-marketplace-210046956--sector.html
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Monday, October 14, 2013

APNewsBreak: Son of slain Sikh to challenge Ryan

In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, film director and producer Amardeep Kaleka poses for a photo in Los Angeles. Kaleka, whose father Satwant Singh Kaleka, the president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was slain at the Oak Creek temple shooting in Milwaukee suburb in 2012, plans to challenge Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election. Kaleka says he'll file paperwork Oct. 16 to form an exploratory congressional committee. The 35-year-old Democrat plans to announce his candidacy formally next month. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)







In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, film director and producer Amardeep Kaleka poses for a photo in Los Angeles. Kaleka, whose father Satwant Singh Kaleka, the president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was slain at the Oak Creek temple shooting in Milwaukee suburb in 2012, plans to challenge Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election. Kaleka says he'll file paperwork Oct. 16 to form an exploratory congressional committee. The 35-year-old Democrat plans to announce his candidacy formally next month. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)







In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, film director and producer Amardeep Kaleka poses for a photo in Los Angeles. Kaleka, whose father Satwant Singh Kaleka, the president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was slain at the Oak Creek temple shooting in Milwaukee suburb in 2012, plans to challenge Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election. Kaleka says he'll file paperwork Oct. 16 to form an exploratory congressional committee. The 35-year-old Democrat plans to announce his candidacy formally next month. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)







In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, film director and producer Amardeep Kaleka speaks in Los Angeles. Kaleka, whose father Satwant Singh Kaleka, the president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was slain at the Oak Creek temple shooting in Milwaukee suburb in 2012, plans to challenge Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election. Kaleka says he'll file paperwork Oct. 16 to form an exploratory congressional committee. The 35-year-old Democrat plans to announce his candidacy formally next month. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)







In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, film director and producer Amardeep Kaleka poses for a photo at Neverending Light, his Emmy Award winning film and television production company in Los Angeles. Kaleka, whose father Satwant Singh Kaleka, the president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was slain at the Oak Creek temple shooting in Milwaukee suburb in 2012, plans to challenge Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election. Kaleka says he'll file paperwork Wednesday to form an exploratory congressional committee. The 35-year-old Democrat plans to announce his candidacy formally next month. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)







In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, film director and producer Amardeep Kaleka poses for with a photo of his family in Los Angeles. Kaleka, whose father Satwant Singh Kaleka, the president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was slain at the Oak Creek temple shooting in Milwaukee suburb in 2012, plans to challenge Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election. Kaleka says he'll file paperwork Oct. 16 to form an exploratory congressional committee. The 35-year-old Democrat plans to announce his candidacy formally next month. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)







MILWAUKEE (AP) — The son of a slain Sikh temple president plans to challenge U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan in next year's congressional election, in a Wisconsin district where support for the 2012 Republican vice presidential nominee has been strong but slipping.

Amar Kaleka, 35, told The Associated Press he'll file paperwork Wednesday to form an exploratory congressional committee. He plans to formally announce his candidacy as a Democrat next month.

Kaleka said he wants to bring accountability and transparency back to Washington. He blamed the government shutdown on Ryan, who's the House Budget Committee chairman, and his GOP colleagues. He said citizens are tired of career politicians who care more about staying in power than serving the people.

"There's a fever in the nation, and specifically in this district, for our leaders to stop playing politics and do their jobs," Kaleka said. "All I want to do is bring democracy — a government of, for and by the people — back to America."

Kaleka's father, Satwant Singh Kaleka, was a small-business owner who founded the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin in suburban Milwaukee. On Aug. 5, 2012, a white supremacist walked into the temple and opened fire, killing Kaleka and five others before taking his own life. The FBI was unable to determine a motive.

That was a turning point for Amar Kaleka, who grew up in Milwaukee and has been making documentaries in southern California for the past four years. He won an Emmy for his 2010 direction of Jacob's Turn, about a 4-year-old boy with Down syndrome who joins his first T-ball team.

He said he used to dream of running for public office when he was in his 50s or 60s but decided to seek office sooner following his father's homicide.

Sympathy and cash donations poured in from around the globe following the Sikh temple shootings, and several federal officials expressed their condolences. First lady Michelle Obama visited the temple to comfort the families and Attorney General Eric Holder spoke at the funeral.

But President Barack Obama, who has visited sites of other mass shootings, never came. His absence bothered Kaleka, an Obama supporter who hoped the president's presence would help advance the cause of stronger gun regulation.

Kaleka suspected that Obama stayed away to sidestep a controversial issue during an election year. To Kaleka, that meant the president was putting politics before people — a trend he saw repeated by other lawmakers every time he visited Washington, D.C.

He cites polls showing that 90 percent of Americans favored stronger background checks for gun buyers, yet even then Congress failed to act. That disgusted him.

"They're more concerned with the groups, the corporations that are giving them money than with what the people want," he said.

Kaleka knows he'd be taking on a formidable candidate. Ryan has so much political clout that he raised $1.7 million in the first six months of the year, nearly three times more than any other member of Wisconsin's congressional delegation.

Kaleka hopes to counter in part by tapping into the wealthy Indian and Arabic communities that he said encouraged him to run in the first place. If he can demonstrate his fundraising chops he expects the national Democratic Party, which he said supports his candidacy, to step in with another $1 million to $2 million.

Ryan, an eight-term congressman, has been popular in his district that covers the southeastern corner of the state. But his support declined last year.

He won every congressional race since 2000 with at least 63 percent of the vote, including 68 percent in 2010. But last year, after he gained prominence for drawing up an austere budget blueprint that would reshape Medicare, his support dropped to a career-low 55 percent. However, that year he had to balance his congressional campaign with his vice presidential run.

A message left with Ryan's congressional office Monday was not immediately returned.

Ryan's opponent last year was Rob Zerban, a former Kenosha Board supervisor. Zerban has formed another exploratory committee this year but hasn't said whether he'll take another run at Ryan.

The death of Kaleka's father — and the way he died — continue to weigh on Kaleka. He said he's running in his father's memory, but he wants people to vote for him not out of sympathy but because of his position on the issues.

"I'll agree my father's death has put me in a position where people listen to me more. But it's not that I'm taking advantage of that situation," he said. "I'm trying to further his dream of building the community and leading in a way that's very democratic. That's what drives me."

___

Dinesh Ramde can be reached at dramde@ap.org.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-14-Congress-Ryan%20Challenger/id-dbb9f8da4b1f47b7bc74fc4f5f21a4d5
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Saturday, October 12, 2013

Half of a Yellow Sun: London Review




The Bottom Line


An earnest period piece set in 1960s Africa.




Venue


London Film Festival


Cast


Thandie Newton, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Anika Noni Rose, Joseph Mawle, John Boyega


Director-screenwriter


Biyi Bandele, based on the novel by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie




Half of a Yellow Sun is the kind of ambitious literary adaptation that wants it all kinds of ways, not all of them compatible. On the one hand, it offers a bluffer’s guide to the Nigerian civil war that briefly created the Republic of Biafra between 1967 and 1970, and on the other, a chance to see Thandie Newton wearing lovely period shifts, occasionally accessorized with colorful indigenous-patterned scarves. The long stretches where characters debate Marxist doctrine lie uneasily next to its soap-opera style shenanigans where women weep over faithless men, sisters fall out with each other, mothers-in-law meddle, and heavy artillery disrupts a picturesque wedding, although admittedly that last bit is one of the film’s best scenes.



Granted, the intersection of the personal with the political is the key point of Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s well-received source novel, but first-time writer-director Biyi Bandele hasn’t managed to sand down the joins quite finely enough.


Politely but not especially enthusiastically received in Toronto, Yellow Sun will continue to attract festival programmers drawn to its exotic African setting, epic-on-a-budget production values, and name cast (especially Chiwetel Ejiofor, currently packing serious awards heat for 12 Years a Slave). However, the film will need imaginative marketing by potential distributors to maximize its assets and tap potential niches in select territories.


Readers who were impressed by the novel’s inventive shuffling of different time periods might be the folk most critical of the way Bandele’s script reorders the story into an accessible but banal chronological trudge, starting in 1960 and ending with the resolution of the war in 1970. Likewise, where the book refracted the action through the eyes of very different characters, including an Englishman and a servant boy, there’s never any doubt that the film is mostly interested in the ups and downs of Olanna (Newton). She’s a soigné rich girl from one of Lagos’ wealthiest families who chooses to defy familial expectations and convention not only by becoming a sociology professor herself, but also by shacking up with firebrand academic Odenigbo (Ejiofor) in college town Nsukka.


Although Olanna and Odenigbo share a passion for undoing the shackles of Nigeria’s colonial legacy and each other’s clothes, things get rocky when Odenigbo’s battleaxe mother (Onyeka Onwenu) comes to visit. An uneducated village woman with a nasty, scheming streak, Mama is determined to split up the cerebral love birds up any way she can, and nearly succeeds.


Meanwhile, a B-plot follows, with considerably less commitment, the relationship between Olanna’s more pragmatic but equally beautiful twin sister Kainene (an underused Anika Noni Rose, best known for her theater work and the film version of Dreamgirls) and white English novelist manqué Richard (Joseph Mawle, from Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter). Off to the side, literally, Odenigbo’s manservant Ugwu (John Boyega, Attack the Block) observes the romantic pushing and shoving from a bemused distance. Unlike the book where his point-of-view has near equal weight with Olanna and Odenigbo, he has relatively little to do here apart from fretting over how to cook jollof rice properly and later getting into danger.


Inevitably, given how much information has to be relayed for the benefit of viewers unfamiliar with recent Nigerian history and the complexities of inter-tribal relations, the script is studded with great leaden lumps of expository dialogue, while garlands of black-and-white newsreel footage further drape the backstory. The effect is curiously old-fashioned, an impression enhanced by the use of graphical maps to show how the characters are shifting about the country from one city to another.


Bandele, a Nigerian native who has worked mainly in theater hitherto, has a surer touch in creating atmosphere in the domestic scenes, evoking a strong sense of how these people live their lives day-to-day, and how devastated they are when war and all its atrocities rip that fabric apart. Indeed, the big action scenes are appropriately shocking, energetic and wallop packing. Throughout, the period details are consistently on the money, from the clingy European cut of the wealthy women’s dresses to the background music, the latter a pleasing mix of Afro pop from the likes of Miriam Makeba and American ditties like “Santa Baby” by Eartha Kitt.


The young director’s touch is a little less assured with the actors, who are fine but not at their very best here. Newton gives good hysteria, but her Olanna occasionally grates with her princessy airs and isn’t always entirely sympathetic. In some ways the best work is to be found in the supports, especially Mawle as the guilt-ridden outsider, Rose as the sharp-tongued Kainene, and Onwenu as the fabulously hissable Mama.


Venue: London Film Festival (Dare), Oct. 10, 2013


Production companies: A Slate Films production in association with Ealing Metro International., Lipsync Prods., Kachifo.


Cast: Thandie Newton, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Anika Noni Rose, Joseph Mawle, John Boyega
Director: Biyi Bandele
Screenwriter: Biyi Bandele, based on the novel by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Producers: Andrea Calderwood
Executive producers: Yewande Sadiku, Muhtar Bakare, Gail Egan, Norman Merry, Peter Hampden
Director of photography: John De Borman
Production designer: Andrew McAlpine
Music: Ben Onono, Paul Thomson
Costume designer: Jo Katsaras
Editor: Chris Gill
Sales: Metro International Entertainment
No rating, 106 minutes.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/film/~3/Lgr-TXgfq88/a-yellow-sun-london-review-647828
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Plante Moran forms real estate investment advisory unit | Crain's ...

Originally Published:   Modified: October 04, 2013 7:13 AM



The Southfield-based accounting and consulting firm of Plante Moran PLLC has formed a business unit to offer advisory services to private and institutional organizations that invest in real estate.

Plante Moran Real Estate Investment Advisors will work with Plante Moran's wealth-management and family-office practices to provide a range of services for investors with significant real estate holdings.

Marty West, who recently joined Plante Moran, will serve as president of of the new group.

West said Plante Moran jointly owns the new business unit with "another entity," but declined to identify that entity.

He also said one of the new group's roles will be to "step in the (building) owner's shoes to represent them in the oversight of their real estate holdings."

Plante Moran's real estate division, Plante Moran Cresa, offers services such as project management and brokerage to building tenants.

Most recently, West was with Alex Brown Realty, a private equity investment firm in Baltimore. Previously, he spent more than 20 years in the real estate industry in Southeast Michigan.


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If you enjoy the content on the Crain's Detroit Business Web site and want to see more, try 8 issues of our print edition risk-free. If you wish to continue, you will receive 44 more issues (for a total of 52 in all), including the annual Book of Lists for just $59. That's over 55% off the cover price. If you decide Crain's is not for you, just write "Cancel" on the invoice, return it and owe nothing. The 8 issues are yours to keep with no further obligation to us. Sign up below.










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