Archive for September, 2009

George Clooney's Close Encounter of the Gay-Stripper Kind

Haha, how hilarious is this, poor George getting sexually harassed while at a press conference. He does a great job of dealing with the guy I have to admit. I’m not sure I could hold my composure as well. I wonder if this guy thought he had a genuine chance or if he just figured he would get on the news. Since he is a fan, George should at least thrown a couple dollars at him, haha… -Greg

Tue., Sep. 8, 2009 3:32 PM PDT by Marcus Errico

George Clooney came prepared to the Venice Film Festival.

Buzzworthy new flick. Check. Hot Italian girlfriend. Check. Crazy gay fanatic. Check and double check.

Clooney was fielding queries during a televised press conference for his new movie, The Men Who Stare at Goats, when he got an eyeful from a male questioner.

“I am gay, George, and I think I am in love with you…Please take me,” the dude said, stripping down to his underwear. “May I kiss you, please. Just one kiss?”

The ever chill Clooney didn’t miss a beat. ”It’s hard when you take a big chance and it doesn’t really work,” he chuckled.

“It’s always embarrassing when you take one real big swing for the fences and it just falls flat,” said Clooney, who was decidedly not persuaded to do some switch-hitting. “It was a good try, though.”

Thompson to open Hall’s doors for Jordan

I know that this story is a headliner for Yahoo today, but I couldn’t resist such a great story about a hero of mine. Michael Jordan is a worldly known name and to be given the honor by him to help honor him, has to be huge. I could not imagine getting a phone call to find out that Michael Jordan was inspired by me.  Thompson was not a name I was familiar with, until I read this story and now knowing that he was the Michael Jordan before Michael Jordan, must been a site to watch him play. -Greg 

By Marc J. Spears, Yahoo! Sports Sep 7, 3:56 am EDT

Michael Jordan had his pick. Dean Smith. Phil Jackson. Maybe even his good friend Charles Barkley.

Each would have been an understandable choice to present Jordan during his induction Friday into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Smith was Jordan’s legendary coach at North Carolina. Jackson helped guide Jordan to six NBA titles with the Chicago Bulls. Barkley shared the role of rival and running buddy.

Jordan passed on all of them. Instead, he chose someone who had never coached him or played with or against him.

He chose David Thompson. The former NBA high-flyer who had starred at North Carolina … State.

“I got a call from the Hall of Fame and they asked me if I was willing to be a presenter for someone,” Thompson recently told Yahoo! Sports. “I said, ‘Yeah.’ I didn’t know who it was. … They said Michael Jordan. I was like, ‘Wow.’ He told them that he was a big fan of mine and I was the one that really inspired him. Being that there was so many North Carolina people he could’ve chose, I was honored.

 “I was kind of surprised, and also was really flattered that he chose me over Coach Smith. You know how important he is?”

To Jordan, Thompson’s college ties didn’t matter as much as his game. Before Jordan became Air Jordan, David Thompson owned the skies.

Thompson grew up in Shelby, N.C. Jordan was just 11 when Thompson led the Wolfpack to their first NCAA championship in 1974. Nicknamed “Skywalker,” he captured Jordan’s imagination – and that of the rest of the nation – with his 48-inch vertical leap and acrobatic dunks. Thompson went on to play for the Denver Nuggets, and was the runner-up to Julius Erving in history’s first dunk contest during the 1976 ABA All-Star weekend. He once scored 73 points on the final day of the regular season. Drug and alcohol problems shortened his career and kept him from realizing his potential, but he recovered and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1996.

“Even when I go out to speak, that’s how they introduce me, ‘Michael Jordan before Michael Jordan,’ ” Thompson said. “Charles Barkley once said, ‘[Thompson] took the game to the air. … He got people out of their seats.’ I saw a lot of my game in Michael Jordan’s game.”

Thompson first began to hear about Jordan when Jordan was playing at Laney High School in Wilmington, N.C. He knew Jordan was not only considering North Carolina, but N.C. State, too, in large part because Thompson played there. The Wolfpack, however, never asked Thompson to help recruit Jordan, who went to help lead the Tar Heels to the NCAA title as a freshman in 1982. The Wolfpack won the national championship a year later.

“We would have had a couple more championship banners up there if he came,” Thompson said.

Thompson met Jordan for the first time during the 1984 Final Four in Seattle. Jordan was there to receive a National Player of the Year award while Thompson was in the midst of the final season of his NBA career with the Seattle SuperSonics.

“My friend took a picture of us together while saying, ‘These are the two best to ever play in the ACC,’ ” Thompson said. “A couple years later he ran into Michael and had the picture on him. Michael got a kick out of it, especially since he had hair back then.”

Thompson said Jordan went out of his way to help him while he was a community ambassador for the Charlotte Hornets in the early 1990s. Then with the Bulls, Jordan would sometimes arrive hours early for road games in Charlotte to meet with underprivileged children.

“The kids treated him like he was the Beatles or Michael Jackson,” Thompson said. “Little girls would shake. He was really good with the kids.

“They didn’t really know who I was, but once he told them I was an inspiration for him they would look at me in a different light. They wanted my autograph. One kid said, ‘You must have been really good if Michael Jordan said that about you.’ ”

Thompson won’t have to give a lengthy speech for Jordan; those days are over for the Hall, replaced by video tributes. But NBA Entertainment recently interviewed Thompson for an hour for Jordan’s introduction, and Thompson will attend all the ceremonies in which Jordan is honored, and stand with him during his induction speech.

Thompson is still overwhelmed Jordan picked him to help celebrate his greatest honor. Over Smith, Jackson, Barkley and everyone else.

“I’ve been smiling ever since,” Thompson said. “I’ve been telling people and they’ve been congratulating me like I was getting in. I’m already in.”

Come this weekend, the game’s greatest legend will be inducted alongside his own idol. Even Michael Jordan knows the importance of recognizing those who came before him.

“I built my talents on the shoulders of someone else’s talent,” Jordan wrote in his 1998 autobiography, “For the Love of the Game.” “I believe greatness is an evolutionary process that changes and evolves era to era. Without Julius Erving, David Thompson, Walter Davis, and Elgin Baylor, there would never have been a Michael Jordan. I evolved from them.”

Toyota Creating Anti-Drunk Driving Device

Wow Toyota, you guys are really innovative! I mean a device that would be installed in your automobile and would detect alcohol levels once blown in. This is something right out of The Jetsons. So if I get this right, a person when entering their vehicle and then after inserting their key into the ignition, would then have to blow in this device and after it tests for alcohol in your breathe, will then allow you to start the vehicle. This is great, Toyota you have done it again, first the 22r and now this!! This could be a great idea for alcohol related driving offenses. The judicial system could court order these things to be installed on an offenders car to help fight possible repeat offenders. Wait…. Wait…. OMG it just hit me THEY ALREADY DO THIS… haha Toyota you guys are “ra-tards” this is NOT a new technology its been around for years.. I’m guessing someone at Toyota watched 40 Year Old Virgin and then ran into the office the next with a “GREAT” idea. Stupid Toyota. I would like to say in closing this isn’t an altogether bad idea, alcohol realted deaths are ever increasing and it does need something to help stop it. -Greg

 

Toyota is testing a system that will detect alcohol levels in the driver’s breath and lock the ignition.

By Kevin Parrish, published on August 31, 2009 at 2:00 PM
Source: Tom’s Guide US

Toyota Motor Corporation announced earlier today (pdf) that it is diligently working on means to “eradicate” drunk driving by working with developer TMC in testing a new ignition-interlock system. Currently the system aims to reduce drunk driving problems for companies and organizations, but eventually the technology could be incorporated into consumer-level automobiles.

According to Toyota, the company has installed the new system on selected trucks and other vehicles, and will begin testing tomorrow, September 1; the test will conclude on November 30. The system comprises of a hand-held unit that provides a breathalyzer and a digital camera to identify the driver’s face. After taking a small breath sample, the system will warn the driver or lock the vehicle’s ignition if a specific level of alcohol is detected.

“The system thus prevents drivers from operating vehicles in an inebriated state, while follow-up instructions given by fleet administrators aim to further reduce the possibility of alcohol-related traffic accidents,” the company said. “In conjunction with the tests to be conducted by TMC and Hino, the Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transportation and Tourism (MLIT) will install the system in a vehicle under lease from TMC and conduct tests during everyday use.”

The company said that the test would verify ease-of-use in the real world and verify system functionality. TMC plans to use the test results in order to improve the system.

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