Showing posts with label Washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Elevator Pitch: Why Care About Washington

­­My friend, Mark Leibovich — a New York Times reporter — has written a book about the inner watchworkings of Power Washington called This Town: Two Parties and a Funeral-Plus, Plenty of Valet Parking!-in America's Gilded Capital. Among the incestuous cognoscenti of the Capital City, This Town has more buzz than a top-bar beehive.

"His tour through Washington only feeds the worst suspicions anyone can have about the place — a land driven by insecurity, hypocrisy and cable hits, where friendships are transactional, blind-copying is rampant and acts of public service appear largely accidental," observes Carlos Lozada in The Washington Post.

"In a super-literal way, the city that I live in—where people live on the Green Line or in Bloomingdale/Eckington/LeDroit Park or out on H Street NE—is a very different city from the one Leibovich profiles," writes Matthew Yglesias in Slate. "It's become a city of principle, and a city where much less gets done in backroom deals. But it's also a city with much more vicious partisanship and much less of a spirit of 'let's compromise for the public good.' It's a city that people have come to hate for whole different reasons and in whole different ways."

Lozada and Yglesias are both Washingtonians. As are many of the people who are at once drawn to and repelled by the behavior described in This Town.

So my question to Mark: Why in the world would anyone Outside the Beltway care to read about Washington's wretched ways? You've got 30 seconds. Go.

"People from out of town should read This Town because no one truly knows what the whole giddy carnival here has become. All of the vanity, opportunism and shamelessness that ever was has been amplified by so much big money and so much New Media. It captures a moment — meaning, the nation's capital in the 21st century — that people don't fully appreciate in all its decadence. It's a serious story. But people seem to be laughing hard at it, so that's good, too..."

Further Reading:

The Payoff: Why Wall Street Always Wins by Jeff Connaughton, a 2012 Washington scather by a former aide to Vice President Joe Biden

What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception, a 2008 tell-some by Scott McLellan, former press secretary to Pres. George W. Bush

Thursday, 4 July 2013

'Scandal' Star Kerry Washington Secretly Weds NFL Player Nnamdi Asomugha


Kerry Washington is a new bride.

The Scandal star, 36, secretly wed her San Francisco 49ers cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha, 31, on June 24 in Hailey, Idaho, according to People, which obtained a copy of their marriage license.

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The news of the wedding -- and even the relationship itself -- came as a big surprise to fans of the actress, who doesn't talk about her personal life.

According to People, the couple listed the witnesses as her parents.

A rep for Washington declined comment.

Sports gossip site Terez Owens first reported the unconfirmed news of the nuptials, claiming the couple began dating last summer. E! News was the first outlet to report it had confirmation of the wedding.

This is the first marriage for Washington, who was previously engaged to actor David Moscow. Her recent film credits include Peeples and Django Unchained.

Asomugha has appeared in such TV shows as The Game, Friday Night Lights and Leverage.

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

Gabrielle Union Starring in BET's Being Mary Jane After Losing Scandal Role to Kerry Wa

BET is giving Gabrielle Union her very own Scandal. The 40-year-old actress is starring in the new movie/TV series Being Mary Jane, which is set to premiere as a two-hour special on Tuesday, July 2 on BET -- and become a series in January 2014.

For Union, landing the lead role in the new BET show is a big career win. In an interview with The Associated Press, the Deliver Us From Eva actress revealed that she lost the lead role on ABC's Scandal to Kerry Washington.

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"I said to myself, 'Oh my God, these roles are out there.' It showed me that you don't have to settle. Luckily, the success of her and the show bred more work," she explained. "Just from the audition process, I knew that I couldn't go backward."

"I didn't get Scandal, but I got something better -- which is my own show," Union added. "It's all about building a legacy. This new opportunity is something I feel that can grow."


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In her new show, Union plays Mary Jane Paul, a successful TV news anchor balancing work and relationships. "If you loved me for one thing and may not have liked me in something else, this role gives the audience a chance to see that I can do more than one thing," the Think Like a Man star said.

And Union hopes that her fans will support her by watching the premiere. "It's finally here! Do. Not. Miss," she tweeted. "Being Mary Jane TONIGHT on BET at 10:30 p.m.!"

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Watch the preview for Union's Being Mary Jane above and tell Us: Will you be watching?

Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Missing Washington DC panda located

  Rusty could bite if he feels threatened or scared, zookeepers warn A red panda missing from the US National Zoo in Washington DC has been found in a residential area about a mile away, a spokeswoman has said.

Rusty was found in a bush in the Adams Morgan neighbourhood. He had last been seen on Sunday evening, and a search was launched at 08:00 EST on Monday.

Rusty has been taken to an animal hospital for a check-up, the zoo said.

Unlike giant pandas, red pandas are not part of the bear family. They are only slightly larger than domestic cats.

Rusty is not known to be an aggressive animal, although zookeepers warn he could bite if he feels threatened or scared.

The red panda arrived at the National Zoo, part of the federally funded Smithsonian Institution, from the zoo in Lincoln, Nebraska, in April. He has been on display in the zoo's Asia Trail in Washington DC since June.

Rusty, who will turn one in July, was brought to Washington DC to mate with a female red panda called Shama.

Red pandas are native to the Himalaya Mountains and parts of southern China.