Friday, December 25, 2009

plus 4, 50 things that changed our lives in the Aughts - Daily Item

plus 4, 50 things that changed our lives in the Aughts - Daily Item


50 things that changed our lives in the Aughts - Daily Item

Posted: 24 Dec 2009 11:22 PM PST

50 things that changed our lives in the 2000s - Fosters Daily Democrat

Posted: 25 Dec 2009 12:12 AM PST

NEW YORK (AP) — Was it only a decade ago that a blackberry was a mere summer fruit? That green was, well, a color, and reality TV was that one show sandwiched between music videos on MTV?

There were, of course, huge political and social upheavals that roiled our world in the past decade. But there were also the gradual lifestyle changes that you don't always notice when they're happening — kind of like watching a child grow older. Here's an alphabetical look at 50 things that changed our lives since the beginning of the millennium:

AIRPORTS: Remember when you didn't have to take your shoes off before getting on a plane? Remember when you could bring a bottled drink on board? Terrorism changed all that.

ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE: From acupuncture to herbal supplements to alternative ways of treating cancer, alternative medicine became more mainstream than ever.

APPS: There's an app for that! The phrase comes from Apple iPhone advertising, but could apply to the entire decade's gadget explosion, from laptops to GPS systems (want your car to give you directions to Mom's house in Chinese, or by a Frenchwoman named Virginie? There was an app for that.)

AARP cards ... for boomers! Some prominent Americans turned 50 this decade: Madonna. Prince. Ellen DeGeneres. The Smurfs. Michael Jackson — who also died at 50. And some prominent "early boomers" turned 60: Bruce Springsteen and Meryl Streep, for example.

AGING: Nobody seemed to look their age anymore: Clothes for 50-year-old women started looking more like clothes for 18-year-olds, tweens looked more like teens, long hair was popular for all ages, and in many ways women's fashion seemed to morph into one single age group.

BLOG: I blog, you blog, he blogs ... How did we spend our time before blogging? There are more than 100 million of these Web logs out there in cyberspace.

BLACKBERRIES: Considered essential by corporate CEOs and moms planning playdates. Introduced in 2002, the smartphone version is now used by more than 28 million people, according to its maker, Research In Motion Ltd.

BOOK CLUBS: Thanks in part to Oprah Winfrey, the decade saw not only a profusion in book discussion clubs but a growing reliance on them by publishers.

CABLE: Cable 24-hour news made the evening network news seem quaint, cable dramas reaped Emmys ... and at decade's end, even Oprah was making the move to cable.

CAMERAS: Remember those trips to get film developed? Nope? Even your grandmother has a digital camera, and she's probably e-mailing you photos right now or uploading them to a photo-sharing site.

CELEBRITY CULTURE: Celebrity magazines fed a growing obsession with celebrities and the everyday minutiae of their lives. By decade's end, we were still obsessed, though Britney Spears and Angelina Jolie had ceded many covers to reality stars like Jon and Kate Gosselin. Celebrity Web sites like TMZ took hold mid-decade.

CELL PHONES: Cell phones are now used by more than 85 percent of the U.S. population and for some have replaced land lines entirely. On the downside, they've made cheating on a spouse more difficult — just ask Tiger Woods.

CHEFS: Chefs are hot! The Food Network, whose viewership tripled this decade, reeled in viewers with high-voltage personalities like Rachael Ray and Bobby Flay, Emeril Lagasse and Giada De Laurentis. Meryl Streep starred in a cinematic pean to the late Julia Child.

CONNECTIVITY: As in, we're all expected to be connected, wirelessly, all the time. Boss e-mails you on a Sunday? Better answer, unless you're off in Antarctica — you have no excuse.

COUGARS: A new TV series called "Cougar Town" focuses on a phenomenon that gained its name this decade: women dating younger men.

CROCS: Those ubiquitous plastic clogs debuted in 2002 and became the shoes you loved to hate. Kids love 'em, but there are Web groups dedicated to their destruction. Not to be deterred: First lady Michelle Obama, who wore them on vacation in 2009.

DANCING: Dancing never went out of style, but this decade saw the huge popularity of dancing contests like "So You Think You Can Dance" and "Dancing With the Stars."

DATING: Dating was transformed like everything else by Internet sites, rendering other ways of meeting people obsolete. And it wasn't just the territory of the relatively young: Seniors found love online, too.

DVRs: Suddenly, DVR-ing is a verb, and what it means is this: There's no reason to know anymore what channel your program is on, and what time.

EMBARRASSMENT ENTERTAINMENT: Embarrassment has always been part of comedy — you need only think of Don Rickles — but this is the decade of cringe-worthy Larry David in "Curb Your Enthusiasm," Ricky Gervais, and of course Sacha Baron Cohen, who as Borat and Bruno shamed perhaps the entire country.

FACEBOOK: Can you believe this social networking site was once limited only to Harvard students? Now it's a time-sucking obsession for more than 300 million users globally and a whole new form of social etiquette: Who to friend on Facebook?

FAT: This was the decade that fat became the enemy of the state. New York City banned trans fats, and Alabama — second in national obesity rankings — introduced a tax on overweight state workers.

FOODIE: It's not just that guy in the White House who liked arugula — this was the decade of the foodie, when we all developed gourmet palates. Even a burger became a gourmet item — as in Daniel Boulud's truffle burger, stuffed with foie gras and short ribs.

GOING GREEN: From the kind of light bulbs we use to the kind of shopping bags we carry to the cars we drive, "going green" took hold this decade. Now, it's not strange to hear a schoolkid tell a parent to use a cloth grocery bag.

GOOGLE: This was the decade that Google became a part of our brain function. You know that guy who was in that movie — when was it? Just Google it.

GPS: We can't get lost anymore — or at least it's pretty hard, with the ubiquitous GPS systems. But you'd better type in your location carefully: One couple made a 400-mile mistake this year by typing "Carpi" rather than "Capri."

HELICOPTER PARENTING: Translation: helicopters hover, and so do many parents. After years of obsessive attention to safety and achievement of the youngest children, some said a backlash was under way.

INFORMATION OVERLOAD: An explosion in Internet use led to an overload of information about practically everything. It's at our fingertips, but is it accurate? Some call it part of a larger phenomenon, namely ...

INSTANT GRATIFICATION: Otherwise known as being able to get anything you want within an instant. Often referred to as a theme of the decade.

IPODS: An icon of the digital age, it's hard to believe this portable media player was first launched in 2001. Six years later the 100 millionth iPod was sold.

LIFE COACHES: In the aughts, there's a coach for everything! So why not life itself? Some say life coaches are merely therapists without the license or regulations.

MUSICALS: They've been around forever, but this decade musicals came back to film, starting with "Moulin Rouge" and "Chicago." But for kids, it was Disney's extremely successful "High School Musical" franchise — three movies and counting — that brought back the musical magic.

NETFLIX: The DVD by mail service, established in 1997, announced its two-billionth DVD delivery this year. For many, those discs on top of the TV are just one more thing to procrastinate over.

ORGANIC: Americans rushed to fill their grocery carts with organic food, making it big business — now a $21 billion industry, up from $3.6 billion in 1997. At decade's end, Michelle Obama planted the first White House organic vegetable garden.

PREGNANCY CHIC: If you've got it, flaunt it: That was the new ethos of the pregnancy experience, with chic clothes that emphasized the bulging belly, personal pregnancy photos, and endless coverage of celebrity pregnancies.

REALITY TV: As a nation, we became addicted to reality TV, from the feuding Gosselins of "Jon & Kate Plus 8" to "American Idol" to "Project Runway." At decade's end, the Heenes of Balloon Boy fame and the Salahis of gatecrashing fame give reality TV some unwanted attention.

RECESSION CHIC: Fashion skewed to more severe styles — and much black — as so-called "recession chic" took hold in the latter part of the decade.

RETRO CHIC: Once you forget the smoking, the racism, the sexism and the homophobia, the early '60s depicted by the AMC series "Mad Men" sure looked good. The swinging Madison Avenue ad men make neckties cool again.

SEXTING: Combine texting with a cell phone's camera function and you get this parental nightmare. A survey from Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project found that 15 percent of teens ages 12-17 with a cell phone had received sexually suggestive images or videos.

STARBUCKS: It's a cliche that there's one on every block, but sometimes it seemed like it — and millions now consider it normal to spend $4 or so on a coffee drink in the morning, perhaps a venti half-caf half-decaf vanilla latte with an extra shot.

TATTOOS: It started innocently enough — maybe a butterfly on the shoulder or a tribal symbol on the bicep. A few characters from the Chinese alphabet later it seemed any hipster who really meant it had a full sleeve of tattoos. The trend extended to middle-aged moms and even tween idol Miley Cyrus.

TEXTING: R u still rding this sty? Hope u r. This is the decade we start communicating in the shorthand of text messages. Get used to it: E-mail is so '00s.

TV SCREENS: Television screens became bigger and flatter, making some ordinary living rooms and dens the equivalent of big-studio screening rooms. At the same time, though, people were watching movies and videos on the tiniest screens imaginable — on their iPods other mobile devices.

TWEEN CULTURE: Tweens, especially girls, became an economic force to be reckoned with, buying everything from clothes to electronic devices to music to concert tickets.

TWITTER: The new social network introduced tweets, retweets, follows and trending topics — as long as it fit in 140 characters.

UGGS: Not since the Croc (see above) has functional footwear created such a frenzy. The fur-lined snowboots were everywhere, no matter the climate. Los Angelenos insisted on wearing them with shorts.

WII: In a sea of ever-more-sophisticated video games, this simple console became the decade's breakout hit by appealing to the non-gaming masses. Wiis became a center of family gaming, home fitness and even senior socializing.

WIKIPEDIA: A boon to lazy students everywhere, the open-source encyclopedia used the masses to police its entries and keep them (mostly) (sometimes) accurate.

YOGA: Madonna, Gwyneth and other bendy celebrities brought the eastern practice mainstream. By the end of the decade, even Grandma could do downward-facing dogs on her Wii Fit.

YOUTUBE: Let's end this list and go kill some time by watching ... YouTube videos! The video-sharing site was born in 2005. Political candidates in 2008 even had their on YouTube channels. The most popular video yet: "Charlie Bit My Finger," in which baby Charlie bites the finger of his brother Harry.

GOT MORE? Tweet them to us at AP_Lifestyles

____

Associated Press Writer Lisa Tolin contributed to this report.

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Jackson's death was the entertainment story of '09 - Idaho Statesman

Posted: 24 Dec 2009 11:00 PM PST

It was a year of triumphant comeback and poignant loss. Few stories dominated the world's interest the way Michael Jackson's death did in June.

The summer became an ongoing tribute to the late superstar, restoring much of the goodwill lost during his latter-day legal troubles and thrusting his music back into the center ring: In the five months following his death, U.S. fans purchased more than 7 million Jackson albums and 10.2 million of his tracks, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

The loss of Jackson came as Detroit's Motown Records celebrated its 50th anniversary, a global tribute spoiled only by the lack of a big public party here.

It was a lively, bustling 2009. Eminem returned, Phish reunited, Oasis called it quits. We got our latest round of Beatlemania.

Our culture's intense, Internet-fueled fascination with celebrity continued apace. Chris Brown overshadowed the Grammys when word emerged that he'd beaten his girlfriend, Rihanna, the previous night. Kanye West stole the spotlight from the MTV Video Music Awards, though a massive public outcry left him with an overdue lesson in humility.

His target, young Taylor Swift, quickly moved on in a year when she firmly staked a place in the mainstream and further erased the line between country and pop. To their credit, Britney Spears and a resurgent Whitney Houston seemed eager for a divorce from the tabloids and a reunion with their music.

And one saucy British lady delivered the year's best fairy tale in a voice that tugged hearts, leading Susan Boyle to the top of the charts.

In the long haul, we may most remember '09 as the year Lady Gaga made her surge to the front. The glam-pop dynamo closed out the year with a sizzling sophomore album, brandishing genuine star power and setting herself up to be the pop queen of 2010.

In some ways, the decade ended as it began, with several familiar figures - Eminem, Britney, Beyonce, Jay-Z, U2 - in leading roles. But 2009 saw a dramatically transformed music industry, with album sales down at least 15 percent from 2008 - and a whopping 50 percent-plus since the decade's start. The scramble for a new business model went on. It's striking to recall that in 2000, licensing songs for commercials was still fairly taboo for artists - in 2009, it could be a badge of honor.

Online, the retail action began to blossom beyond its Apple core, as Google and Facebook took notable strides to break the iTunes stronghold. The content industry even made some headway in its long, frustrated battle against digital piracy, with several of the big file-sharing hubs scaling back or even shuttering for good.

All told, 2009 was marked by the same trends that have loomed large the past several years. History will look back on the '00s as the era that transformed the way we interact with music. There was the array of choices that could feel as overwhelming as it was intoxicating. The demise of the old gatekeepers. The ability to burrow into ever-more specialized niches, and the erosion of music's role as common culture.

But the good stuff was out there. And even if you personally weren't moved by much, there's always reason to hope. As we put a cap on '09 and head into the 2010s, it's a sure bet that right now somewhere - in some anonymous basement or bedroom or garage - there's a musically inclined kid gearing up to change the world, or at least yours. Keep your ears peeled.

Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.



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Why We Still Need Women’s Bookstores - The Frisky

Posted: 24 Dec 2009 09:56 PM PST

There's something comfortable and familiar about chain bookstores, like Borders and Barnes & Noble: The vanilla latte always tastes the same, the photography books are always near the fashion books, and there are always comfy chairs. I've probably spent thousands of dollars at chain bookstores and I spent many a weekend during my high school years at their poetry nights.

But the bookstore most dear to my heart is a tiny little place called Bloodroot, half vegetarian restaurant and half feminist bookstore. My brother-in-law took me to Bloodroot when I was a teenager and it became a part of my identity. I came of age in the late '90s and early aughties, when Britney Spears slithered around onstage and suburban kids wore Playboy bunny T-shirts to school, which, don't get me wrong, is all enjoyable, yet nauseating after a while.

Luckily, the bookstore at Bloodroot proved to be a godsend for the feminists and freaks and gay kids who were trapped in the suburbs until graduation. We could have something we didn't have anywhere else: a community.

That's why it absolutely devastates me that the Toronto Women's Bookstore, one of less than half a dozen feminist bookstores in Canada, is in dire financial straights. Despite the fact it supplies nearly all the women's studies textbooks for a nearby university, it is having difficulty staying afloat. The 36-year-old shop, which operates as a non-profit organization, needs roughly $120,000 to operate for the next year or else it may close.

But according to women's rights activists who spoke to the Canadian Press, it isn't a declining interest in women's rights issues that's to blame. A Canadian chain store called Chapters apparently dominates much of the market, which, surely combined with Amazon.com, means smaller bookstores aren't the destinations they used to be. Small bookstores—and feminist bookstores are all small bookstores—just can't afford to sell their books at deep discounts.

It's not just the Toronto Women's Bookstore that's in trouble. Recently, the store tweeted that in 1994, there were 125 women's bookstores worldwide, while now there are only 21. Considering the rise of internet retail, that's not surprising. But for women like me—or men, or queers, or whoever is looking to read books about gender and sexuality studies—that loss of community is startling. All the blogs and online communities in the world can't compare with the value of a physical space that hosts feminist and LGBT speakers, shows documentaries you'll never see at the local theater, or just plain exposes people to new ideas. One shelf at Barnes & Noble just isn't cutting it, either.

If women's bookstores are at all something you care about, I urge you to check out this list of feminist book stores on LitWomen.org. It was last updated in September 2004, so it's not up to date at all, but it's worth a look to see which bookstores could be in your area. I'd highly recommend poking around Bloodroot's website here—they have earned a Zagat Award of Distinction and post many of their recipes online.

The irony of this whole feminist bookstore saga is that the Toronto Women's Bookstore survived a firebombing in 1992, which was intended for the abortion clinic located downstairs. How sad is it that a bookstore that survived a bombing might fade out slowly and die? [Canadian Press]

(P.S. Yes, I have seen the "Feminist Bookstore" skits by Thundeant, a comedy duo composed of Sleater-Kinney's Carrie Brownstein and "SNL"'s Fred Armisen. And yes, I think they're funny.)

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Mickey Avalon - Dallas Observer

Posted: 24 Dec 2009 10:03 PM PST

Venue

AMPM

300 N Akard St.

Dallas, TX

214-969-5550

http://ampmdallas.com

Date/Time:Thu., December 31

Mickey Mania

MICKEY AVALON'S COME A LONG WAY FROM DRUG-SLINGING AND GAY PROSTITUTION

Christopher Lopez

Just because a star was bred in Hollywood doesn't necessarily mean he was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Just take Mickey Avalon, the unlikely king of Los Angeles' swanky clubs. He came from beginnings far beyond dubious and well into deranged, a fact he's celebrated in his music. His unique glam-punk take on hip-hop features lyrics forged of the most brutal honesty you've ever been bludgeoned with. "The easiest way for me to deal with my own shyness has always been just to jump into it," explains Avalon, born Yeshe Perl. "So it's always been easier to show the warts and all." And show the warts he does, speaking with utter candor about his upbringing. Song subjects have included his deceased father's heroin addiction (he died in an automobile accident), his mother's occupation as a pot dealer, and Avalon's own inevitable trip down that path. He, too, sold drugs and became a junkie, he openly admits. That's all fair game in his music. So is his former homelessness and his forays into gay prostitution (used to fund his addiction). "I used to work nights at HotCock.com," he raps in "Waiting to Die," from his 2006 self-titled debut album. "But then I got fired when my mom logged on." But it's not shock value that fueled Avalon's approach. "When you try to hide stuff, it seems like that's when people can kind of come after you," he says. "The more you put stuff out there, people can't really do anything, 'cause you take the power away from them." Avalon's upcoming sophomore release bears newfound focus, with a high-priced producer (Dr. Luke, who has worked with the likes of Britney Spears and Katy Perry) and the point of view now fixated on a distinctly more normal life. Still, he promises all the edge that fans have come to expect. "I don't talk about stuff that isn't relevant anymore," he explains. "Like 50 Cent talking about selling crack, and you know he hasn't sold crack in 10 years 'cause now he's a multimillionaire. I don't talk about living on the streets or anything like that. But it's still like a movie, and all the characters are still sordid people, like hookers and drug addicts and pimps and thieves and whatever. So it's still my shit, but just more sonic, I guess." Mickey Avalon has come a long way from selling himself for his next fix, but grime and grit remain his stock in trade. And his live shows continue to be the notorious displays of debauchery that made him famous (or infamous) in the first place. And to think, he seems like such a nice, wholesome guy when he speaks.

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