Sunday, January 22, 2012

Rushdie cancels India visit after death threat warning (Reuters)

JAIPUR (Reuters) ? Salman Rushdie will not attend a literature festival in India after authorities warned the controversial author he was a potential target of assassins at the event, following threats of protests from Muslim groups at his planned appearance.

Opposition from some Indian Muslim groups erupted this month after Rushdie was invited to attend Asia's largest literature festival, and senior Muslim leaders called on the government to prevent the 65-year-old author from entering the country.

"I have now been informed by intelligence sources in Maharashtra and Rajasthan that paid assassins from the Mumbai underworld may be on their way to Jaipur to eliminate me," Rushdie said in a statement read out by the festival producer.

"While I have some doubts as to the accuracy of this intelligence, it would be irresponsible of me to come to the festival in such circumstances."

The British-Indian author, whose 1988 novel the Satantic Verses is banned in India, was due to speak on the first day of the five-day Jaipur Literature Festival but organizers removed his name from the schedule last week.

Rushdie would instead participate via a video-link, festival director William Dalrymple told Reuters Friday.

"This is the result of a tragic game of Chinese whispers. The reality of Rushdie's writings are completely different from the way they have been cartooned and caricatured," Dalrymple told reporters.

The festival's directors had previously asserted that the invitation to Rushdie still stood after rescheduling his planned appearance after Muslim leaders in Jaipur threatened to protest.

"The Muslims of Jaipur were planning a protest against Rushdie. Since he is not coming, we have cancelled it," Abdul Haq Shamshi, member of the Jaipur Jama Masjid committee told Reuters.

"If he is deceiving us, and if he comes, we will protest at a minute's notice," he said, adding that thousands of protesters would take to the streets if the author arrived in the city.

HEAVY POLICE PRESENCE

Earlier Friday, thousands of guests arrived for the first sessions of the festival, which aims to showcase the best of Indian, South Asian and international writing in one of the world's fastest-growing publishing markets.

Michael Ondaatje, author of The English Patient, was the main draw Friday morning, at a festival expected to draw around 70,000 visitors and world-famous names such as Oprah Winfrey, Tom Stoppard, Richard Dawkins and Ariel Dorfman.

Scores of police officers guarded the festival entrance on Friday morning, as visitors queued to pass through X-ray scanners, a new addition to the 2012 festival.

Some 560 officers were stationed in and around the festival site, Rajendra Jhala, Jaipur's deputy commissioner of police, told Reuters, adding that hundreds of others had been deployed at major road junctions and locations across the city.

"I guess this is what you get for inviting Salman Rushdie," remarked one delegate in the security queue.

The publication of Rushdie's Satanic Verses over 20 years ago sparked a wave of protests and death threats around the world after Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini claimed that the novel's portrayal of the prophet Mohammad insulted Islam.

The vice-chancellor of India's Darul Uloom Deoband seminary said last week that Rushdie should be banned from the country, accusing the author of the Booker Prize-winning Midnight's Children of offending Muslim sentiments.

"This festival at no point wants to offend any one religion, any one people. We stand by the freedom of expression," festival producer Sanjoy Roy told reporters.

(Editing by John Chalmers)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120120/wl_nm/us_india_rushdie

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Newsmaker: Megaupload a story of Dotcom boom and bust (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Among the roll-call of hip-hop artists and other celebrities plugging Megaupload.com's digital storage services in an online promotional video, a cameo from the website's founder would have gone unnoticed by many.

As the voiceover boasts of the site's billion users and four percent share of all Internet traffic, a colossal figure clad in black appears in a music studio.

"Bit by bit, it's a hit, it's a hit!" founder Kim Dotcom booms in a slight accent that hints at his German roots.

The hits may have just run out for Dotcom, also known as Kim Schmitz and Kim Tim Jim Investor, who spent his 38th birthday on Saturday in a New Zealand jail after 70 police raided his country estate and cut him out of a safe room he had barricaded himself in.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which requested the raid, says Dotcom masterminded a scheme that made more than $175 million in a few short years by copying and distributing music, movies and other copyrighted content without authorization.

Megaupload's U.S. lawyer said the company merely offered online storage, would "vigorously defend itself" and was trying to recover its servers and get back online.

The arrest marks the latest twist in the checkered story of Dotcom, a former hacker who got his first computer at nine before going on to build an Internet fortune and friendships with music stars including Alicia Keys, Will.i.am and P.Diddy who appeared on the Megaupload.com promo video.

EARLY STARTER

Born in the German city of Kiel, Dotcom -- who was then known as Schmitz -- grew up in northern Germany.

As a child, he made copies of computer games to sell to his friends, and in the early days of the Internet, began hacking into computers via telephones, according to reputed German daily Die Welt.

Schmitz has made no secret of his controversial past as a cyber-raider, hacking into computer networks at NASA, the Pentagon and at least one major bank.

As the hacker pioneer generation came of age, so did Schmitz. After being convicted of computer hacking in 1998, he made a fortune providing computer security consulting and venture capital investment via the firm Kimvestor.

According to German magazine Der Spiegel, Schmitz once boasted he would become one of the richest men in the world. How was he so sure? "I'm smarter than Bill Gates," he said.

Schmitz, who also called himself Kimble after the wrongly convicted doctor-on-the-run in the film "The Fugitive," became well known for his lavish lifestyle as much as his computer skills.

He briefly became a fixture in Germany's nouveau riche party scene and made his own film, shot with a hand-held camera, Kimble Goes Monaco. The hulking Schmitz -- reportedly two meters tall and weighing more than 130 kg -- was often shown in Germany's tabloid press with fast cars and a model on his arm.

Schmitz's website at one point featured photographs of him racing cars, shooting an assault rifle and flying around the world in his private jet on lavish vacations.

"I have a different attitude towards money than those who rather hoard it," he said during an appearance on the Harald Schmidt Show, a popular late-night talk show in Germany. "I would rather spend it and have a lot of fun."

A documentary about the outlaw Gumball 3000 road race of 2001 by German TV station RTL filmed Schmitz driving the Russian leg of the rally in excess of 240 kph (150 mph) in a 480-horsepower Mercedes sedan, and then laughing when an opponent is pulled over by police in Finland. "Our competition is out of the way!" he says in jubilation.

Schmitz liked promoting himself through stunts such as offering up to $10 million for information leading to the arrest of Osama bin Laden in the wake of terror attacks against the United States.

THE NAME'S DOTCOM. KIM DOTCOM

But in 2002, he was convicted in what was then the largest insider-trading case in German history.

Prosecutors said Schmitz bought shares in an online business and drove up the share price by announcing plans to invest millions to rescue the company from insolvency. After selling his shares for a profit, he fled to Thailand, was arrested and deported.

A Munich court sentenced the then 28-year-old to 20 months probation and a 100,000-euro fine.

After his conviction, Schmitz disappeared from public view, reappearing a couple of years ago in New Zealand, having legally changed his name to Dotcom.

He and his family moved into a multimillion dollar mansion outside Auckland and were granted residency after promising to invest at least NZ$10 million ($8 million) in New Zealand.

The leased 20-hectare property, set in rolling hills northwest of Auckland, is one of the largest and most expensive in the country, featuring manicured lawns, fountains, pools, palm-lined paths and extensive security.

In an interview with the New Zealand Herald Newspaper last year, Dotcom said residency would allow him, his wife, Mona, and their three children to live in a country that would become a "rare paradise on Earth."

"I might be one of the most flamboyant characters New Zealand has ever seen but my intentions are good and I would like to see New Zealand flourish to its fullest potential," he said.

Dotcom reportedly paid $500,000 for a massive New Year's Eve fireworks display over Auckland which he and Mona watched from their private helicopter.

The FBI estimates that Dotcom personally made around $115,000 a day during 2010 from his empire. The list of property to be forfeited, including almost 20 luxury cars, one of them a pink Cadillac, hints at a lavish lifestyle which may be about to be put on hold.

Dotcom and three fellow accused will appear in a New Zealand court on Monday and face extradition to the United States. ($1 = 1.2433 New Zealand dollars)

(Reporting by Lincoln Feast in SYDNEY and Sarah Marsh in FRANKFURT; Additional reporting by Peter Maushagen in FRANKFURT, Mantik Kusjanto in WELLINGTON and Brian Rohan in BERLIN; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120122/wr_nm/us_internet_megaupload

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Video: Perry calls Gingrich a ?conservative visionary?



>> reporter: thinks may be too liberal for the party.

>> thank you, john. let's bring in steve who endorsed newt.

>> good to see you.

>> let's start off with what happened here, 34 votes. rick santorum said i am the victor here. we have new sound from him. let me play it and get your thoughts on the other side.

>> there have been two primaries held now. we have won one. it's been certified in iowa. i think it's important to understand not only if you win the certified vote, but if you add the other vote, we'd win by more.

>> did rick win this even though you have the missing ballots out there?

>> maybe i went to public school , but i thought certify the results and one person had more votes than the other, that means they won. i don't know. maybe we become a banana republic overnight. i think he can safely assume he won.

>> how does that impact south carolina ?

>> i think it has a huge impact in south carolina just because you have to look at it in the context of the rest of the vents events that you were talking about. this might be the week mitt romney lost the republican nomination. he won an election where half the vote were democrats and independents. now he's turning tail in south carolina . newt gingrich is surging there. they are beginning to colease. they understand mitt romney is more like obama.

>> you say the conservatives are starting to coalesce. this comes for an interesting time of the guy you want to back. gingrich's ex-wife has given an explosive interview. let me play an excerpt and what newt said this morning in anticipation of this fire storm . what he said on the " today show ". let's play them both.

>> he said, yes, but you want me all to yourself. calista doesn't care what i do.

>> what was he saying?

>> he was asking to have an open marriage and i refused.

>> he wanted an open marriage ?

>> yeah. that i accept the fact he has somebody else in his life.

>> and you said?

>> no. no. that is not a marriage.

>> i'm not going to say anything negative about mary ann . my two daughters have sent a letter to the president of abc news saying this is totally wrong. they think abc should not air anything like this.

>> let me get your thoughts on what marianne had to say.

>> it's always heartbreaking any time a marriage comes to an end. we're talking about things that happened a decade, if not more than that a long ago. i start thinking about the person i was 15 years ago. i think my wife would say i'm a lot different compared to the person that she married. some of the things that she wants to allege about newt are probably things i would have been if favor of 15 years ago. i'm a different person and i've grown up then.

>> you would have been in favor of open marriage . i don't want to get in your business.

>> listen, 15 years ago before god saved me and gave me a new life, i would have tried to see if i could have a bigger porn collection than ron jeremy . i was a different guy. never in a million years do did i think i would be sitting here taking positions i am now. that's the difference faith makes in your life. i think your do two daughters and two sons-in-law, they know you best over the long haul. those are some pretty powerful character witnesses.

>> you're saying what rick perry said when he decided to endorse newt gingrich in believes his faith allows him to forgive and you can turn your life over and present a new human being . we know that newt has a difficult time attracting female voters. that, yes, you may be a different person ten years later, however, to see his wife talk about the woman he is currently with who is standing by him, who he refers to today in every other sentence and this notion of respecting and honoring mairj, at that time, he had very little, if her story is true, respect or regard now wants to define or accept the definition of marriage in some sanctimonious way. ten years in his time is not that much of time.

>> everything you said makes sense but there's grace. you look at some of the great figures in the judaoe christian tradition . peter was a coward and a liar. david was an adulterer. we have seen this. this is the way god works. he works the greatest thing through the most broken people. if people want to look at newt's life and they don't think they see enough of that sort of change then voters have the right to make that call. i've seen that evidence of that change.

>> i don't want to get into a debate over religion because that's anyone's thought to believe and share their thoughts. this is the same person who on stage appears to show very little compassion or in your words, grace, for poor people . this is the same man who appealed to an audience to applaud when a gay soldier was featured in a debate or when conversation about health care and someone dying, what should be done for this individual, he did not stand up and say for the grace that has granted me the person that i am now have grace on these people. he worked it for the audience to applaud him. where is that grace then?

>> i don't think there's anything more graceful for your fellow human beings to brake the shackle ls and meet your god given potential. there's nothing more compassionate than telling somebody you are better than where you are now. we can put the policies and things in place for you to reach that god-given potential. god has a better plan of your life than to be a ward of the state .

>> will newt gingrich pull out a victory in south carolina ?

>> i believe he's going to win on saturday, yes.

>> i hope to see you on saturday. very interesting day. thank you.

>> thank you.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/newsnation/46059899/

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

A year later, Egypt activists seek more revolution

A woman holds a placard that reads, in Arabic, "if it wasn't for the revolution, the National Democratic Party would still be there," during a protest in the Shubra neighborhood in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, nearly a year after the 18-day uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. Egypt is nearing the first anniversary of the start of protests that toppled Hosni Mubarak, and activists are trying to garner public support to reinvigorate the revolution, now to pressure the ruling military and the powerful Muslim Brotherhood. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

A woman holds a placard that reads, in Arabic, "if it wasn't for the revolution, the National Democratic Party would still be there," during a protest in the Shubra neighborhood in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, nearly a year after the 18-day uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. Egypt is nearing the first anniversary of the start of protests that toppled Hosni Mubarak, and activists are trying to garner public support to reinvigorate the revolution, now to pressure the ruling military and the powerful Muslim Brotherhood. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

In this Thursday, Jan. 19, 2012 photo, Egyptian artists post an art piece made by Sad Panda, unseen, on a wall in Cairo, Egypt. Egypt is nearing the first anniversary of the start of protests that toppled Hosni Mubarak, and activists are trying to garner public support to reinvigorate the revolution, now to pressure the ruling military and the powerful Muslim Brotherhood.(AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)

Protesters chant slogans at a rally honoring those killed in clashes with security forces in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, nearly a year after the 18-day uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. Activists are now trying to energize the public to demand that the ruling military step down. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

A protester holds a placard depicting Egypt's ousted President Hosni Mubarak encircled in a noose that reads, in Arabic, "rule of the people," at a rally honoring those killed in clashes with security forces in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, nearly a year after the 18-day uprising that ousted Mubarak. Activists are now trying to energize the public to demand that the ruling military step down. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

(AP) ? A crowd of anti-military activists suddenly converged on a bustling Cairo boulevard, erecting screens and showing videos of soldiers beating protesters, dragging women on the ground, partially stripping one and stomping on her chest. Their flash mob's message for the passers-by who stopped to watch: The generals ruling Egypt have to go.

The activists who led the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak last year have been holding hundreds of such flash mobs around the country in the past weeks, in a public campaign titled "Liars" ? referring to the military. The campaign to direct show people recent abuses by the military, they say, has injected new public support behind their demands the generals quickly surrender power.

But it also raises questions.

"What do they want?" one passer-by, Mohammed Ali, asked about the activists at the flash mob earlier this week.

"Even if (the military) are liars... we are going to get power transferred to civilians in six months, that is not bad," the 30-year-old said. "It doesn't deserve all this noise. Let's wait and see."

Egypt on Wednesday marks the first anniversary of the start of the 18-day wave of protests that toppled Mubarak. Activists are trying to turn public discontent over lack of change into support for continuing revolutionary protests. But they face the task of explaining to Egyptians who are sick of turmoil: Revolution for what?

The revolution's second year, they say, must pressure both the ruling military, which they say is as authoritarian as Mubarak, and the Muslim Brotherhood, which dominates the new parliament and which they fear is allying itself with the generals.

The Jan. 25 anniversary itself shows the tensions. Each of the country's powerbrokers has its own plans to mark the day, underlining the stark differences over the very meaning of the revolution and raising the potential for a clash. State and pro-military media blare warnings that the protesters aim to "burn the country," raising concerns over a crackdown.

The activists are organizing new major nationwide protests for the occasion. Thousands rallied in Tahrir on Friday, starting what they say will be several days of demonstrations, including Monday when parliament convenes and on the Wednesday anniversary.

The military has put together its own elaborate Jan. 25 celebrations, declaring the day a national holiday. It plans a nationwide airshow, including flyovers by warplanes that it boasts will be bigger than those it holds for anniversaries of the 1952 coup that first brought the generals to the helm of Egyptian politics. Other planes will drop gift coupons to the public. Officers will be decorated for their role helping the anti-Mubarak protests.

The military's message is that it supported the anti-Mubarak uprising, but the time for revolution is over.

"Stability is the first goal," said Maj. General Ismail Etman, a member of the military council that took power after Mubarak's Feb. 11 fall. "If there is tension between the people and the Armed Forces, it must be removed ... We want the big family to enjoy love and stability."

For many in Egypt and the activists, the army celebrations aim to co-opt their movement.

"We are not going down to celebrate, we are going to finish our revolution," activist Ahmed Imam said at a press conference by youth movements this week. "We will not celebrate while the blood of martyrs is shed without retribution ... We will not celebrate, because they are liars."

Critics say the military is keeping the status quo with a slight reshuffle of the cards but with the same authoritarianism and abuses by security forces, if not worse. They point to almost 100 protesters killed in military crackdowns since Mubarak's fall, some run over by armored vehicles. Nearly 12,000 civilians have been tried by military tribunals, and female protesters have been subjected to humiliating "virginity tests."

They say the revolution's vision of "freedom, social justice and dignity" have been aborted in favor of an emerging ruling coalition between the Islamists and the military.

The difficulty for the activists is that a transition plan is in place, set by the generals and backed by the Brotherhood.

The military promises to transfer power to an elected civilian president by the end of June. Before that, a constitution is to be written by a committee chosen by the Islamist-controlled parliament while the generals are still in charge.

Brotherhood officials deny any alliance with the military. They argue that they want the army to step down, but that parliament not protests can ensure they do so. They suggest protesters endanger the process by creating turmoil

Ahmed Abou Baraka, a leading Brotherhood member, said the revolution against Mubarak aimed "to grant the people sovereignty and build a state based on the rule of law."

Protests must be "within the law and ...uphold the higher interests of the state," he said.

The "Liars" campaign ? "Kazeboon" in Arabic ? have been a new way for revolutionaries to reach out to a skeptical public.

Hundreds of impromptu street shows highlighting military abuses have been put on around the country in past weeks, sometimes more than 10 a day. The campaign has mobilized thousands of volunteers, a sign of activists' increasing reach, said Rasha Azab, an organizer.

"Kazeboon is a bridge between the street and the square ... They are now seeing that Tahrir is no longer the only expression of the revolution," she said. "They cornered us in the square, now there are 50 squares."

Many of the gatherings have been harassed by hecklers activists believe are hired. At this week's flash mob in Cairo's Mohandessin district, young men tried to disrupt the show. One shouted that the screen and video projectors had to be packed up in five minutes. Across the street, another shouted, "Down with revolution."

Activists' alternative to the military's transition plan remains hazy. They want the military to step aside, but are divided whether it should hand executive powers to the parliament, a president or perhaps to a council of civilians.

Some fear handing power to the parliament would further strengthen the Brotherhood.

"We would replace a tyrant with no popularity and a corrupt majority, with a tyrant supported by religious legitimacy and an organized majority," said Abdel-Gelil el-Sharnoubi, a former Brotherhood member who since last year's revolution became a fervent opponent.

Ahmed Maher, of the April 6 activist movement, counters that it is the best tactic to draw the Brotherhood away from the military.

"They are civilians. We will argue with them, negotiate, fight, whatever," said Maher. "But with the military council, they will drive over us with armored vehicles."

Despite disagreements, the activists' main intention remains to use street pressure for the long haul.

"It is hard...(but) we are creating a new country, we are creating the future," said Lobna Darwish, an activist with Mosireen, a media collective that produces most Kazeboon videos. "It is not even a choice ? when you see people die ... you feel this is a commitment to go on."

At the Kazeboon rally, Mostafa Abou-el-Wafa parked his motorcycle and joined the crowd. He intends to attend the activists' anniversary rallies, his first ever protest.

Nothing has changed under the military, the 26-year-old delivery man said, pointing to a recent bribe he had to pay to get his motorcycle licensed.

"The military council has no shame," he said. "I will go with what these people are saying."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-20-ML-Egypt-Revolution's-Second-Year/id-452488824a47415492176df821e3226e

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Radiation, rusty metal seen in tsunami-hit reactor (AP)

TOKYO ? Radiation-blurred images taken inside one of Japan's tsunami-hit nuclear reactors Thursday showed steam, unidentified parts and rusty metal surfaces scarred by 10 months' exposure to heat and humidity.

The photos that were the first inside look since the disaster found none of the reactor's melted fuel or its cooling water but confirmed stable temperatures and showed no major damage or ruptures caused by the earthquake last March, said Junichi Matsumoto, spokesman for the plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co.

Pipes and grates inside the reactor's containment vessel were seen in some images. Other photos were dark and blurry, resembling abstract paintings. Experts are studying the most obscured photos to identify which reactor parts are there. Radiation was visible as static, or electronic interference with the equipment being used.

The photos also showed the inner wall of the container had been heavily deteriorated by the high temperatures and humidity, Matsumoto said.

TEPCO workers inserted the endoscope ? an industrial version of the kind of endoscope doctors use ? through a hole in the beaker-shaped container at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant's No. 2 reactor, hoping the first look inside since the crisis would help them better assess reactor conditions and make repairs.

High temperatures and radiation leaks had prevented the close-up view until now. Results of the 70-minute operation were mixed.

"Given the harsh environment that we had to operate, we did quite well. It's a first step," Matsumoto said. "But we could not spot any signs of fuel, unfortunately."

He said it would take more time and a better technology to get to the melted fuel, most of which has fallen straight down into the area that the endoscope could not reach. TEPCO hopes to use the endoscope to look inside the two other reactors that had meltdowns but that also would require customization of the equipment and further reduction of radiation levels.

The endoscope failed to find the water surface, indicating less-than-expected levels inside the primary containment vessel and questioning the accuracy of water monitors, Matsumoto said.

Radiation-tainted cooling water has been leaking from all three damaged reactors, pooling in massive amounts around the nuclear plant. Determining the No. 2 reactor's water levels could have helped locate cracks or damage causing some of the leaks.

Better assessment will help workers know how best to plug holes and cracks in the containment vessel ? a protective chamber outside the core ? to contain the radiation leaks and gradually work toward dismantling the reactors.

Three of six reactors at the Fukushima plant melted down after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami knocked out the plant's cooling systems and set off the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.

TEPCO and nuclear officials have said that melted fuel probably fell to the bottom of the core in each unit, most likely breaching the bottom of the core and falling into the primary containment vessel, some dropping to its concrete floor.

Experts have said those are simulation results and that exact location and condition of the fuel could not be known until they have a first-hand observation inside.

The probe Thursday successfully recorded the temperature inside the containment vessel at 44.7 Celsius (112 F), confirming it stayed below the boiling point and qualifying a "cold shutdown state," the stable condition that the government had declared in December despite skepticism from experts.

The government has said that it would take 40 years until the Fukushima plant is fully decommissioned.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_nuclear

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Katy Perry Lost A Husband But Gained A Video Game (VIDEO)

Katy Perry Lost A Husband But Gained A Video Game (VIDEO)

Katy Perry, who recently split from husband Russell Brand, has been turned into a video game character. The singer will be appearing in a new [...]

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2012/01/17/katy-perry-lost-a-husband-but-gained-a-video-game-video/

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AP source: Obama campaign seeks ad rates in states

(AP) ? President Barack Obama's re-election campaign has requested advertising rates in a number of key states, a sign that it could be close to airing its first television commercials of the 2012 race.

The president's campaign has sought the advertising information in 14 states, including Florida, Ohio and Virginia, expected to be heavily contested by Obama and his Republican opponent, according to a person familiar with the request. The person was not authorized to speak publicly about the campaign's internal deliberations and requested anonymity.

No decision has been made on when to begin putting television ads on the air, the person familiar with the request said.

Obama's campaign has worked to position itself for the general election, using top advisers and party leaders to portray Republican front-runner Mitt Romney as eager to change his position on key issues to advance his political interests while pushing an agenda that would benefit the wealthy. But the Obama campaign has avoided a large ad blitz, limiting its advertising to Web videos and online advertising on the websites of newspapers in Iowa and New Hampshire, the two early nominating states.

By making the inquiries for ad rates, the campaign is laying the foundation to begin a television advertising campaign in states that will be prized by both Obama and Romney in the general election. The campaign has requested the ad rates in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Obama has raised more than $220 million for his campaign and the Democratic National Committee, money that will be used for a massive ad campaign and get-out-the-vote operation for the November election.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-17-Obama-Campaign/id-c8173a9b13474a5eb1ebefb0694934e2

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