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October 24, 2010

Manage Show Players on mrjyn blip.tv

Elvis crushed his fucking skull (Best Elvis Video Ever!)

As I awoke this morning
when all sweet things are born
A robin perched on my window sill to greet the coming dawn
He sang his sweet song so sweetly

and paused
for a moments lull

Download now or watch on posterous
Elvis_Ode_To_A_Robin.mp4 (2166 KB)

I gently raised the window and crushed his fucking skull.

handwritten poem by Elvis, recorded just days after his release from Baptists Memorial Hospital, November 1973.

http://post.ly/yJIH
http://whatgetsmehot.posterous.com/tj-hooker

http://whatgetsmehot.posterous.com/elvis-ode-to-jerry-lee-lewis-tj-hooker

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Subject: jerry lee on t.j. hooker: happy christmas: could you please send me that jerry lee lewis on t.j. hooker clip again?


Fri, Dec 25, 2009 at 2:48 PM, Facebook
Subject: jerry lee on t.j. hooker




Tom sent you a message.

--------------------
Subject: jerry lee on t.j. hooker


happy christmas, mempian.  could you please send me that jerry lee lewis on t.j. hooker clip again?  my friend asked about it.
Jerry Lee Lewis

William Shatner

T.J. Hooker

(My Fav. Episode!)

this is the shorter version but with the better sound. (It's always been a fantasy of mine to turn you guys on to this, but I kept putting it off and off; however, TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT! as Rod Stewart sang. Those of you that know me a little, know my association with the Killer and Family and have probably put up with a lot more Jerry Lee Lewis than you ever thought you might sit through. But this one sort of is the Great Equalizer...He's still young and Dangerous and it's got the Universal Appeal of William Shatner--however for the die hards: he does perform a 'song'. And for the Angelenos it is filmed at the Palomino Club in North Hollywood--a club I never made it to even though it's Killer's CA Club--to to Nudies though and got a pair of Knee High Cowboy Boots with Hearts and Eagles...)

Jerry Lee Lewis as himself

(1 episode, "Deadly Ambition" 1982


Jerry Lee Lewis William Shatner T. J. Hooker "Deadly Ambition"
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=142035352496937

For the Hard Cores:
T.J. Hooker Establishing Shot and Full C.C. Rider
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=142060889161050

Jerry Lee Lewis High on Eskatrol "How Do You Know?"
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=142060909161048

Jerry Lee Lewis William Shatner T.J. Hooker
 (It's always been a fantasy of mine to turn you guys on to this, but I kept putting it off and off; however, TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT! as Rod Stewart sang.  Those of you that know me a little, know my association with the Killer and Family and have probably put up with a lot more Jerry Lee Lewis than you ever thought you might sit through.  But this one sort of is the Great Equalizer...He's still young and Dangerous and it's got the Universal Appeal of William Shatner--however for the die hards: he does perform a 'song'.  And for the Angelenos it is filmed at the Palomino Club in North Hollywood--a club I never made it to even though it's Killer's CA Club--to to Nudies though and got a pair of Knee High Cowboy Boots with Hearts and Eagles...) 

Jerry Lee Lewis as himself (1 episode, "Deadly Ambition" 1982 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0715416/


    * William Shatner as Sergeant Thomas Jefferson "T.J." Hooker
    * Adrian Zmed as Officer Vince Romano (seasons 1 - 4)
    * Heather Locklear as Officer Stacy Sheridan (seasons 2 - 5)
    * Richard Herd as Captain Dennis Sheridan
    * James Darren as Officer Jim Corrigan (seasons 2 - 5)

Hooker and Romano's radio call sign for their "black and white" was "4-Adam-30", and radio calls were very similar to those of Los Angeles Police Department, using three bursts of a 900 Hz tone, using LAPD-type radio codes, and the officers acknowledging with roger. The series itself was produced in the Los Angeles area, and the call sign denoted a two-officer unit ("Adam") based in the LAPD's Hollenbeck division ("4"), with "30" as a supervisor unit.

Jerry Lee Lewis William Shatner T. J. Hooker "Deadly Ambition" http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=142035352496937

For the Hard Cores:
T.J. Hooker Establishing Shot and Full C.C. Rider
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=142060889161050

Jerry Lee Lewis High on Eskatrol "How Do You Know?"
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=142060909161048
* William Shatner as Sergeant Thomas Jefferson "T.J." Hooker
* Adrian Zmed as Officer Vince Romano (seasons 1 - 4)
* Heather Locklear as Officer Stacy Sheridan (seasons 2 - 5)
* Richard Herd as Captain Dennis Sheridan
* James Darren as Officer Jim Corrigan (seasons 2 - 5)

Hooker and Romano's radio call sign for their "black and white" was "4-Adam-30", and radio calls were very similar to those of Los Angeles Police Department, using three bursts of a 900 Hz tone, using LAPD-type radio codes, and the officers acknowledging with roger. The series itself was produced in the Los Angeles area, and the call sign denoted a two-officer unit ("Adam") based in the LAPD's Hollenbeck division ("4"), with "30" as a supervisor unit.

Jerry Lee Lewis William Shatner T. J. Hooker "Deadly Ambition"


thanks, and enjoy the day.

mad dog

--------------------

Posted to See Ya At What Gets Me Hot via Dogmeat

Elvis's Doctor's Defender, James Neal dies in Memphis » The Commercial Appeal

JamesNeal

JamesNeal

NASHVILLE -- Outside the courtroom, James F. Neal had an amiable, backslapping way with friends and foes alike. Inside the chamber, the face of one of America's greatest trial lawyers often became fixed in a steely gaze.

The attorney who regularly grabbed national headlines -- whether prosecuting Jimmy Hoffa or key Watergate figures, or defending Elvis Presley's doctor or the Exxon Corp. after the Alaska oil spill -- died Thursday night in Nashville. He was 81.

In the words of Fred Thompson, already a lawyer in real life before he became one on TV, "Jim Neal was the greatest trial lawyer of his time."

For former Vice President Al Gore, Mr. Neal was a "brilliant attorney" and close friend. "As a prosecutor, he served our nation with brilliance and dedication at a time when his skill was greatly needed by the American people," Gore said in a statement.

And prosecute, by all accounts, was something Mr. Neal did well.

The government had tried four times to convict the Teamsters president Hoffa before Mr. Neal got it done in 1964 in a jury-tampering case. As a special prosecutor, Mr. Neal later put Watergate conspirators John Mitchell, Robert Haldeman and John Erlichman behind bars in the twilight of the Richard Nixon presidency.

In private practice, Mr. Neal successfully defended Ford Motor Co. against reckless homicide charges in Indiana after the gas tank of a 1973 Ford Pinto exploded, killing the car's driver.

In 1981, he successfully defended Dr. George Nichopoulos of Memphis against charges that he overprescribed drugs to the late crooner Presley.

Mr. Neal's rise to prominence began in 1964. As a special assistant to then-U.S. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy, Mr. Neal succeeded in convicting Hoffa, sending him to prison.

In private practice, Mr. Neal developed a reputation for his dogged defense of clients facing a tide of adverse public opinion.

After actor Vic Morrow and two others died in 1982 during filming of the movie "Twilight Zone," Mr. Neal successfully defended director John Landis in 1987 against charges of involuntary manslaughter.

No lawyer wins all his cases, though, and neither did Mr. Neal.

He was hired in 1990 to represent the Exxon Corp., which was charged with polluting the Alaska shoreline with the Exxon Valdez oil tanker spill. The company settled for what was then a record $1 billion and pleaded guilty to four misdemeanors.

Mr. Neal, who grew up on a Tennessee farm, was a graduate of the University of Wyoming and Vanderbilt University School of Law in Nashville.

He received his Master of Law degree from Georgetown University in Washington.

He was U.S. attorney for Middle Tennessee from 1964 to 1966. Mr. Neal then entered private practice and in 1973 was called to Washington to become chief trial lawyer for the Watergate special prosecutor's office.

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Karl Lagerfeld Commandeur de la Légion d’Honneur

Karl Lagerfeld, Commandeur de la Légion d’Honneur.

Juste avant son défilé mardi dernier, Karl Lagerfeld a reçu un appel de Nicolas Sarkozy, lui annonçant qu’il venait d’être nommé Commandeur de la Légion d’Honneur !

Click here to download:
karl_legion_dhonneur.mp4 (0 KB)
Download now or watch on posterous
mademoiselle_jean.mp4 (22304 KB)

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Nos gagnants: How do you say, 'I want to have sexual relations with you' in French?| Le Vif Weekend

October 23, 2010

Bob Guccione, Penthouse Magazine Founder, Dies at 79 - Bloomberg

Penthouse Magazine Founder Bob Guccione Dies at 79

late Penthouse founder Bob Guccione pictured in 2003. Photographer: D. Herrick/FilmMagic

Penthouse Magazine’s Founder Bob Guccione Dies at 79

Bob Guccione, center, attends a Penthouse Pet Video Release party at Club USA in New York City, in 1994. Photographer: Steve Eichner/Getty Images

Penthouse Magazine Founder Bob Guccione Dies at 79

Late Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione in 1984. Photographer: Ted Thai/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images

Penthouse Magazine Founder Bob Guccione Dies at 79

Late Penthouse founder Bob Guccione poses with Penthouse Pets in 1989. Photographer: Ron Galella/WireImage

Bob Guccione, who founded Penthouse magazine and built a fortune on adult entertainment before the rise of pornography on the Internet, died yesterday in Plano, Texas, the Associated Press reported, citing a statement from his family. He was 79.

Guccione died at Plano Specialty Hospital after combating cancer, his family said.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1930, Guccione started Penthouse in the mid-1960s. By the 1980s, he had created a $300 million media business, and Penthouse, which offered more- explicit photographs than rival Playboy, had a circulation of 4.7 million, according to the New York Times.

Guccione made Forbes magazine’s list of richest Americans, with an estimated fortune of $200 million in 1984 and $300 million in 1988.

He said fears of AIDS sent more and more people to the relative safety of adult entertainment.

“People are more fearful of casual sex today than ever before, and voyeurism -- the means of enjoying sex vicariously - - has become a much more prominent pastime in this country, directly as a result of AIDS,” he told United Press International in 1989. “So magazines, videos, books, motion pictures, are getting a great deal of attention, more attention than they ever got before.”

Internet Effect

Throughout the 1990s, the growing availability of pornography on the Internet undercut Guccione’s empire, which suffered on other fronts as well. He lost money on unsuccessful plans to build a Penthouse casino in Atlantic City and on a hard-core film, “Caligula.”

In 2003, Penthouse’s publisher, General Media Inc., which was 85 percent owned by Guccione, filed for bankruptcy. The magazine is now published by FriendFinder Networks Inc., which runs adult websites.

Penthouse’s first issue hit newsstands in the U.K. in 1965 and went on sale in the U.S. in 1969, according to Biography.com. The magazine challenged the popularity of Playboy, a men’s magazine that had gained widespread following, by featuring photos and content that were intended to be more explicit and provocative.

‘Pornography as Art’

Neither Playboy nor Penthouse pushed as far as Larry Flynt’s Hustler magazine, however. Guccione and Playboy founder Hugh Hefner “always tried to masquerade their pornography as art and justify it by including articles that were supposed to have had so-called ‘redeeming social value,’” Flynt wrote in “An Unseemly Man,” his 2008 memoir. “But as transparent as the strategy was, it worked.”

Guccione was once an altar boy in the Catholic Church who spent several months in a seminary before dropping out, according to Biography.com. He harbored dreams of becoming an artist before beginning a career in media, the site says.

Penthouse sparked controversy in 1984 by publishing nude photos of Vanessa Williams, the first black woman crowned Miss America. Williams relinquished the title after the issue was released.

In 2000, the magazine ran an interview with and nude pictures of Paula Jones, the former Arkansas state employee who accused President Bill Clinton of sexual harassment. In March 2008, Penthouse offered Ashley Alexandra Dupre, the prostitute who was paid $4,300 to have sex with then-New York governor Eliot Spitzer, the chance to pose on its Web site, host a video chat or take part in a live Web-cam session.

To contact the reporter for this story: Vivek Shankar at vshankar3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net; Peter Elstrom in New York at pelstrom@bloomberg.net.

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