Federer makes history with French Open triumph

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Roger Federer makes history, winning the French Open completing the Career Slam and tying Pete Sampras' record. And, just as important, suddenly, it doesn't look like he's done winning anytime soon. We like our heroes to show resilience? After losing the 2008 Wimbledon final -- conceding the top ranking, and showing some mortality, facing so many doubts -- Federer has won two of the last three Slams and may well regain the No. 1 spot. And, somehow, it was fittingAndre Agassi presented him with the trophy.

So a month ago, Federer had yet to win a title, appeared annoyed and distracted, and his new wife was expecting. Nadal -- winner of the previous Major -- was building his points lead by racking up clay-court titles, as per usual. If I were to have told you one of the guys would beat the other to win Madrid, win the French Open and come to Wimbledon on a hot streak while the other would drop two straight tournaments and pull out of a tune-up with an injury, who would have made the correct identifications? Gotta love this era in the men's game.

Quite apart the title, Federer's absurd streak of twenty straight Major semifinal appearances was thrown into sharp relief by the losses of Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. To me, this streak bolsters his GOAT candidacy as much as the Career Slam achievement.

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Bonnie Richardson Defends 1A Team Track Title

The best small high school track team in Texas is once again a freckle-faced girl named Bonnie Richardson. Valedictorian of her 14-student senior class in the tiny farming town of Rochelle, Richardson won the Class A girls team state title by herself for the second consecutive year Saturday by single-handedly beating 56 other schools.

Her reward was a second state championship trophy she won't have to share with anyone — there are no other girls on the Rochelle High School track team. "It's great. It's over. It's done," Richardson said. "It's nice that I can relax now."

The daughter of a Rochelle High teacher and a rancher, Richardson won four individual medals in five events: gold in the long jump and high jump, silver in the discus and bronze in the 200 meters. She also finished fourth in the 100 meters. Since becoming the first girl in state history last year to win a team title solo, her celebrity has put her in national magazines and gotten her a Texas A&M track scholarship. It may even lure more than one girl next year to replace Richardson on the Lady Hornets team. For Richardson, repeating the feat Saturday was perfect until she stood atop the medal stand and the public address announcer implored the crowd to applaud this amazing accomplishment by ... Bonnie Singleton?

Richardson laughed. Besides, she's now looking forward to some anonymity.
"I still get phone calls, and that kind of creeps me out because I don't know how they got my number," she said.Rochelle is a small, unincorporated farming town about 140 miles northeast of Austin. The high school doesn't even have a proper track for Richardson to train. She runs on a circular path of hard, rutted caliche — a type of soil — that the McCulloch County commissioner smooths out about a once a year. So eager were other coaches to groom their own one-athlete team that they called Rochelle's school wondering about this track surface they never heard of.
"They read in the paper that she runs on caliche, and they call saying, 'How do we get one of those caliche tracks?'" said Steve Butler, superintendent of the Rochelle school district. "They think it's something fancy. They can have this one."

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Television's King Norman Lear

"All In The Family" was a huge hit for Norman Lear - KING LEAR, you could call him, considering the respect that he enjoys in the world of entertainment. Bill Whitaker has a Sunday Profile:
There's gotta be story behind the hat … and there is.

Norman Lear's wife bought him his signature hat to keep him from scratching his head while he writes.

But he's a man who has worn many hats over the years: TV, movie & music producer, political activist, family man. At 86, you'd assume he'd done it all. But ask Norman Lear and he'll tell you he's only just begun.

"No, there's no slowing down," Lear told Bill Whitaker.

"Why not? You've earned the right to say, 'You know, I want to sit back and watch all these things come to fruition.'"

"I've earned the right to do what I want to do,' is another way of saying what you just said," Lear responded. "And what I want to do is wake up every morning of my life to do something that I think matters."

The man best known for creating hit after TV hit in the 1970s is occupied these days with music. He bought into a record company 10 years ago, and today his greatest passion is Concord Record group's latest project: Playing for Change, little-known street musicians recorded separately around the world, brought together in song.

It's had 12 million hits on the Internet, a tour is planned … a CD. Profits help build schools for music in the third world.

Lear wants nothing less than to inspire - no, change the world through music.

"I've never shown that - [and] I've shown it to a lot of people - where they haven't been emotionally connected when it was over," he said.

Lear has been connecting with audiences for decades. He grew up with TV, writing for stars like Jerry Lewis, making us laugh at his characters while making us look at ourselves.

Lear first became a household name back in 1971 with his insurgent little sit-com, "All in the Family." The language was shocking; the topics - racism, rape, homosexuality, miscarriage - never seen on TV before, all spinning around the unapologetically politically incorrect, working class, blowhard, bigot next door, Archie Bunker, played by the late Caroll O'Connor.

It was the number one show for five straight years.

"What made you think that bigotry could be funny?" Whitaker asked.

"It wasn't bigotry per se," Lear said. "It was the state of the man's mind. He was afraid of tomorrow."

Lear took our anxiety at the social upheaval at the time - Vietnam, the women's movement, civil rights - and invited us to face it with a laugh, always pushing our buttons, and always pushing the envelope.

In the mid-'70s he had seven hit shows on the air: "Sanford & Son," "Maude," "Good Times," "The Jeffersons," "One Day at a Time," and the late night soap opera spoof, "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman."

He was probably the hardest working man in show business, running from one taping to the next. He even did the warm-up acts.

It paid off. Some weeks four of the top-five shows were Lear's.

"Did you plan to topple old taboos when you put these shows on the air?" Whitaker asked.

"No. You know, you could hear anything we were saying in a schoolyard. What was the big surprise?"

"I think the big surprise was that you put it on TV, the first to do it."

"OK, I 'fess up," he said.

"For him to say that he didn't have an impact on not only television, but society is, you know, it's a little too humble," said Rob Reiner.

Reiner got his show business break when Lear tapped him to play Archie's foil, Michael Stivic. Later, Lear produced Reiner's first string of hit movies and remains a friend and mentor.

"We were a nation of 200 million people, and we were drawing 45 million people to watch our show every week," Reiner said. "Now we're a nation of over 300 million and if you get 15, 20, 25 million you're a massive hit. He was the king of television at a time when television was more important, or at least more viewed, that it is now even."

But in 1980 the king turned his back on his TV empire to go in a completely different direction.

He grew alarmed as evangelical Christian preachers grew more visibly and vocally involved in politics, with views and tactics he found divisive. He responded the way he knew best - on television.

His TV advertisement ("There's gotta be something wrong when ministers try to tell you you're good Christians or bad Christians depending on your political point of view") spawned People for the American Way, his grassroots civics organization to keep Americans aware and protective of their rights.

"You are not saying that religious people should not be engaged in political life?" Whitaker asked.

"No, I'm saying anything but that," Lear said.

He says all voices should be heard. As proof, he turns to the original document: one of 25 remaining original printings of the Declaration of Independence, which he bought for $8.1 million.

"I never know whether I'm going to cry or just tear up," he said, showing the document, which he called "our nation's birth certificate."

"'All men are created equal, endowed by their creator with the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.' I mean, come on!"

And just as this original sheet was used in 1776, Lear takes it around the country for as many Americans as possible to see and read its message.

We were with him the night he brought it to students at the USC communications school, which, by the way, has a research center named for Lear.

Buying the Declaration spawned Declare Yourself, a Lear organization that has registered more than 4 million young voters - in states red and blue - since 2004.

And while his own politics are decidedly liberal, he preaches that democracy only truly works when everyone is involved. His latest endeavor: Born Again American, using song to get Americans off the sidelines and engaged in civic life.

"It's totally bipartisan," he said. "I think of myself, by the way, as a bleeding heart conservative. You will not mess with my Bill of Rights!"

He defends everyone's rights: those like him, who support President Obama ("Barack, you know? Who could have guessed five years ago we were going to have an African American as president?") and those who don't.

"What would Archie Bunker say [about a black president]? Boy, I've thought about that," Lear said. "You know, I think he'd find some way of saying, 'The guy isn't really black.' Ha ha ha! You know? 'He's half-black, that's a big difference. And you don't know if that ain't the biggest half.'"

But that's looking backward.

"You know, I'm occupied with 'now' and 'next,'" he said - more voters to register, more movies, more music.

"I want to matter every day," Lear said. "That brings me great pleasure."

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Thai Rath publishes disturbing photographs of David Carradine

The family of the late David Carradine seem to be outraged over the pictures of David’s dead body that were published by the Thai newspaper Thai Rath.

The Thai Rath newspaper, which is a regional newspaper published in Bangkok in Thai language, ran disturbing pictures of Carradine’s corpse in the front and as well as in its inside pages. The pictures published on the Saturday cover of the newspaper Thai Rath shows a naked body of Carradine suspended from a clothes bar in a suite closet. The hands apparently bound together above the head and feet on the floor. While the face is blacked out, other more explicit parts of the picture are censored. And, the relatives of late Carradine do like any part of it.

“The family is outraged about the release of these photos,” said the lawyer for the Carradine family. The lawyer further added that the “family will be filing a suit for invasion of privacy and emotional distress if the David Carradine death photo is run in a United States publication.”

Carradine’s dead body discovered on Thursday, 4th June inside the closet of his suite by a chambermaid at the Bangkok’s Swissotel Nai Lert Park Hotel. The authorities were immediately alerted, who after some investigations, ruled out foul play saying that the cause of death could be suicide.

However, the family is not satisfied with the investigations done by the Thai police. According to Mark Geragos, an attorney to Carradine’s half brother Keith Carradine, “The family will seek an independent autopsy by famed forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden to determine whether another person could have been involved.”

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Roger Federer vs Robin Soderling: French Open final 2009

Head to head: Federer leads Soderling 9-0, which includes a 2-0 mark when matches are played on clay.

Here is my problem with tomorrow's final everyone: Federer should win this thing no doubt, but when the factor of pressure is put into play, the outcome may not be as clear cut as once thought.

Roger has undoubtedly proven his ability to deal with all the obstacles that have been thrown at him (except Rafa Nadal of course), during his long and illustrious career.

But the one missing achievement which has haunted the 13-time grand slam champ up until this point has been his faux pas in France.

Although losing to Nadal in four consecutive French finals, is nothing to be ashamed of ...losing to Robin Soderling (regardless of his current level of play) would be catastrophic.

The favorite role is often times the most difficult card to play; because if you win, you were expected to; lose, and the scrutiny begins.

Soderling has one huge element going for him in the tomorrow's final, which is he has nothing to lose. He has exceeded all expectations to the highest degree, and anything from here on in, is well... gravy.

He may never get another chance like he has on Sunday (see Martin Verkerk), and must optimize his efforts and execution. He has lived and died with his go-for-broke game style thus far, and one has to think that tomorrow will be no different.

In terms of strictly a match up, Federer's domination over Soderling has primarily consisted of the exact same advantage he had in his most recent victory over del Potro: movement.

Soderling at times looks like a laboring duck trying to cover court on Chatrier; with Federer's liquid and graceful strides having no close second.

The good news for Soderling is that he does one or two up Federer in many categories. He gets a check for brute power factor, with his backhand being far superior.

The Swede can also hit thunderous serves at will; eclipsing Roger's mph averages by a wide margin. So why has this guy lost nine in a row to Federer?

Well simply put Roger loves pace; he eats it up frankly. Federer has always dealt well with the likes of Roddick, Blake and Karlovic, because they play perfectly into the strike-zone of the Swiss.

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Glorious night of TV on the Radio

It's hard to know, exactly, where to begin when talking about everything TV on the Radio did right at a sold-out House of Blues Thursday night. Or why the Brooklyn quintet's breathless cross-pollination of rock, funk, electro-pop, and soul worked so wonderfully, seamlessly, well.

Was it the band's gritty energy and brash command of groove that hit you not just in the legs and solar-plexus (where it should), but also the head? Was it the outfit's internalized mastery of older sounds wrapped in new sonic threads - the nimble keyboards and Prince-ly falsettos that made "Crying" gallop gleefully as dance music for the indie-rock set?

Could it have been frontman Tunde Adebimpe's old-school soul revue showmanship - his feverish shimmies across the stage, arms twisting toward, and beckoning the audience on "The Wrong Way"? Or, with a jerking thrust of his arm, punctuating a satisfying guitar riff from the epically bearded Kyp Malone on "Wolf Like Me"? Or perhaps it was David Sitek's pedal-pushing electric architecture, coaxing squalls and walls of feedback from his guitar like the Jesus & Mary Chain crashing a P-Funk party on "Halfway Home"?

The fact that drummer Jaleel Bunton, in perpetual motion, and bassist Gerard Smith, who lent a marvelous thrum and thump to every song he touched, were greased cogs at the core of TVOTR's polyglot mix of machinery goes without saying.

Ultimately, what made the band's 80-minute performance Thursday so brightly and brilliantly charged with electricity was all of the above elements, hard-wired to connect through, and to, multiple outlets. When a band makes you think of Sly Stone and Gnarls Barkley ("Red Dress") as easily as it does Phil Spector and sleigh bells ( "Family Tree" and "Young Liars"), you've got a unique group on your hands.

The last time TVOTR was in Boston, playing the Wilbur Theatre in October, it brought a horn section. This time, stripped back to the formidable essentials, the band sounded like a glorious street symphony, an orchestra unto itself.

"Well, there's a golden age comin' round," sang Adebimpe in his fluttering tenor, repeating the last two words like a mantra, as if willing the promise real. Meanwhile, the tune's dancing melody bopped infectiously around him, engulfing him and enveloping us. "Let it move right in. Let it kiss your face. Let it sow your skin in perpetual embrace. . . . The age of miracles. The age of sound . . . Comin' round, comin' round, comin' round."

Suddenly in that instant, in the glorious sway and bend of sound, the waiting was over. The moment - golden and gleaming - had finally, fully arrived

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David Carradine Death Photo - David Carradine Hanging Photos

An American Hollywood Actor David Carradine recently death in June 3, 2009. He was body found in his room at the Swissotel Nai Lert Park Hotel on Wireless Road, in central Bangkok, Thailand on June 4, 2009.

The BBC reports that a hotel maid discovered the American actor in a closet with a rope around his neck and body. A Thailand police official said he was found hanging by a rope in the room's closet and the Bangkok Post reported that his body was found curled up in the wardrobe with a shoelace tied around his genitals and neck.

Carradine 72-years-old actor famous for his work in the 1970's television series Kung Fu and recently in the Kill Bill films. He workedmoe than 100 films and he was nominated four times for a Golden Globe Award.

David Carradine’s family is horrified that a photo has been published that shows the dead actor hanging, according to a RadarOnline.com report.

A tabloid newspaper in Thailand published Carradine photo Saturday, shadowing much of the body, but still showing explicit details of the death scene.

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