Saturday, February 07, 2009

Gone in Sixty Seconds

A moment exists… In this moment, intensity is inconsequential. Motivation is unimportant. Power is pointless. Resolve is worthless. Strength is useless. Will is irrelevant.

On February 1, Rafael Nadal defeated Roger Federer 7-5, 3-6, 7-6 (7-3), 3-6, 6-2. The epic consumed four hours and twenty-seven minutes. “I was a little bit tired,” said Nadal. “I was little bit worried about my physical performance because [when] I trained, it was tough to keep up the concentration. I spoke with my coach before the match and he told me to go out there and fight all the time and believe in the victory.”

Federer’s reaction was poignant. “I mean, it's more like, in the first moment you're disappointed, you're shocked, you're sad, you know, then all of a sudden it overwhelms you,” said Federer. “The problem is you can't go in the locker room and just take it easy and take a cold shower. You're stuck out there. [During the trophy presentation] It's the worst feeling. ... it's rough.”

During his career, Nadal has recorded six grand slam titles. He has registered eight grand slam finals appearances. Conversely, Federer has amassed thirteen grand slam titles. He has accrued eighteen grand slam finals appearances.

In the fifth set, Federer eyed Nadal. Federer craved victory. He possessed intensity, motivation, power, resolve, strength, and will. Unfortunately, he could not win. Nadal owned the moment.

The Age of Serena

On January 31, Serena Williams defeated Dinara Safina 6-0, 6-3. With her victory, Williams accrued her fourth Australian Open championship. “It was definitely one of my most dominant performances, especially considering it was a final,” said Williams. “I was able to just lift the level of my game.”

During her career, Williams has amassed ten grand slam titles. She has registered thirteen grand slam finals appearances. “It was first time for me to play not only for the Grand Slam, but also for No. 1 spot,” said Safina. “I never been through this situation, and she was already. Serena was too good ... I was just a ball boy on the court today.”

Dynasties are continuous. They may not own every season. Yet, they are omnipresent. From 1999-2003, Williams scored six titles and seven finals. From 2004-2009, she secured four titles and six finals. Williams never vanished. She merely allowed competition.

Western Relocation: Bobcats Swap Morrison

On Saturday, the Charlotte Bobcats traded Adam Morrison and Shannon Brown to the Los Angeles Lakers. As reciprocation, the Bobcats received Vladimir Radmanovic.

During his career, Morrison has registered 9.1 points per contest. Conversely, Radmanovic has averaged 9.2 points per contest.

In college basketball, prospects are not unique. Each season, fifty emerge. Twenty establish themselves. Ten sustain excellence. Despite infinite potential, Morrison’s career imploded. His statistics never equaled expectations. Ultimately, Morrison will be remembered and disregarded.

Fox News: Will Party For Job

The bar was crowded with well-dressed professionals enjoying drinks and conversation, a typical evening -- except that many of them had no job. The event was a Wall Street Pink Slip Party, where the unemployed mix with recruiters and curious bystanders to network, look for work, and share their stories.

With employers shedding 600,000 more jobs in January, the undercurrent at this party in a Manhattan bar was decidedly glum. "Wall Street, directly or indirectly, has ruined the best 10 years of my life," said Susan Lange, speaking of colleagues and friends she lost on Sept. 11, 2001, and the sense now, after being laid off from her job as an AIG training manager, that her world has again turned on its head.

"I'm devastated," the 39-year-old woman said.

Figures released Friday showed that the unemployment rate hit 7.6 in January, a month with more layoffs than at any other time since 1974. Jobseekers are gathering in bars, delving into the business networking Web site LinkedIn, waiting in lines at city help centers, and even starting up hopeful conversations with prosperous-looking strangers on commuter trains -- all in the hope of landing jobs in what seems to be a shrinking pool of opportunity.

"Places have hiring freezes. And they have cutbacks. And they have layoffs. There are a lot more people in the job market," said 32-year-old Ana Arrendell, who has been searching for work since August.

At first, she was looking only for a job in her field, graphic design. But as the months have gone by, Arrendell has lowered her expectations. "Right now, I'll take anything," she said Friday as she left a New York City-run office that offers resume-writing assistance and interview training.

Already having given up hope for a Wall Street job making $80,000 per year right out of college, recent graduate David Gunther is getting creative as he tries to expand his business network. The 23-year-old has begun hanging around commuter ferries and suburban trains, chatting up professional-looking types traveling to areas where executives live. Recently, at an electronica concert -- a wildly different atmosphere than at the career services office at his university -- he talked to some fans who introduced him to an entertainment-industry manager. Now he's preparing for a job interview with the man.

Gunther isn't the only one looking for new ways to meet people. Among the groups using the networking service Meetup, the NYC Job Seekers & Career Strategy group has more than doubled in size to 454 people since September, with more than 95 joining since the first of the year. Worldwide, Meetup has seen a boom in career-related groups; more than 2,000 were started in January, compared to about 500 a month over the summer, said spokesman Andres Glusman.

Chandlee Bryan, a resume writer and career coach who acts as facilitator for the New York group, says she has seen it transform. Initially, people attending the meetings were pondering a career switch out of a desire for something new. Now, participants in talks on online networking and interviewing techniques are more often being forced into the hunt, either because they've been laid off or because they believe they might be.

Bryan says the meetings help people fight off the solitude that comes with being jobless. "There's a great deal of isolation," she said. "That complicates the process and makes it harder, given that the majority of people find their jobs through networking."

That's the point of the Wall Street Pink Slip Party -- modeled after similar events held following the dot-com bust. Since the reincarnation was launched in November, the intensity at the parties is increasing, says organizer Rachel Pine. The first event drew a mix of people, only a quarter of them laid off. By the Feb. 4 event, 85 to 90 percent of the 400 people were looking for work.

The scene at the bustling Public House bar on Wednesday night was varied, as men and women in a mix of suits and corporate casual wear -- and pink glow-in-the-dark wristbands that marked them as jobseekers -- homed in on recruiters wearing green wristbands. Some were approaching their job search with equanimity, figuring they could rely on savings socked away during the flush years. Others seemed more desperate, counting their change after paying for the coat check. Some, drink in hand, sounded almost bitter about their personal economic downturn.

Andrea Bouwman recounted watching the Super Bowl with a growing sense of ire, as she saw the millions of dollars that her former employer PepsiCo had spent on advertising instead of salaries. "They kind of compromised people for the actual advertising," said the former marketing manager, adding that since she got her pink slip she's been drinking only Coca-Cola.

Options are more limited back at the city employment center in Brooklyn, where 43-year-old Desmond Moulton, who held jobs as a retail salesman, recounts months of dashed hopes. Most recently he returned to the job placement center, only to see a once-enthusiastic counselor turn somber as she studied his prospects. "She clearly wanted to help me. She clearly wanted to have some good news to give me," he said. "But she had none."

Friday, February 06, 2009

Mr. President, Shut Up

In January, 598,000 jobs were lost. President Obama, America needs solutions. Attitude, overconfidence, and partisianship are inappropriate.

Chiefs Enlist Cardinal Coordinator

On Friday, the Kansas City Chiefs hired Arizona Cardinals Offensive Coordinator Todd Haley. “I feel we've hired two of the finest football minds in the National Football League and collectively they know 20 or 30 or 40 times more than I know about football,” said Owner Clark Hunt. “The organization is best served if I fulfill my role on the business side and let them do what they do best.”

According to General Manager Scott Pioli, Haley is compatible. “Todd is very bright,” said Pioli. “He's extremely dedicated and very strong-willed. Those are the qualifications I was looking to partner with, Clark Hunt was looking to partner with, and we really feel Todd is the right guy and is going to do a heck of a job here.”

This offseason, the Denver Broncos hired New England Patriots Offensive Coordinator Josh McDaniels. The Detroit Lions hired Tennessee Titans Defensive Coordinator Jim Schwartz. The St. Louis Rams hired New York Giants Defensive Coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. The New York Jets hired Baltimore Ravens Defensive Coordinator Rex Ryan. Clearly, impact hire is franchise specific.

Monologue Joke of the Evening

“Monday is the annual Westchester Dog Show. These dogs are scrutinized and judged by appearance, silky coat, firm hind quarters . . . it’s also how John McCain chose his running mate.”

Late Show with David Letterman

Vice President Acknowledges Catastrophe

Vice President Biden: “But when we do [approve it], I'm sure you're going to be nailed in ads, 'Well they voted on that' 30 second ads. I promise you as [a colleague] once said to me, 'I'll come campaign for you or against you, whichever will help you the most in your district.' And so will the president because, again, we're all in this together.”

“If we do everything right, if we do it with absolute certainty, there's still a 30 percent chance we're going to get it wrong. The only thing we can get wrong is not reaching a consensus among ourselves ... and demonstrating to the American people that we're thinking small and politically -you [House Democrats] have not, you've thought big. Not since World War II has a caucus gathered with so many challenges facing our country and the stakes so high. The slope is pretty steep. The opportunities are great.”

Monologue Joke of the Evening

“Unemployment is high; the foreclosure rate is high; Michael Phelps is high . . .”

Late Show with David Letterman

Phelps Prattle Presists

Michael Phelps: “It's not my decision. It's theirs. I have nothing to say, but if that's they want to do, that's their choice. It's something that USA Swimming came up with. It's fair. Obviously, for a mistake you should get punished. It was bad and stupid judgment, and something I'll always live with.”

NEW RULE

Marijuana is criminal.

Whatever one’s opinion, one must remember the obvious. Marijuana is illegal. If marijuana were legalized, crime and violence could diminish. They would not disappear.

Worth A Read

The Daily Smak

Hey, didn’t you used to be Michael Phelps?

In Canada, a sixty-year-old woman had twins. Congratulations, Candice Bergen…

Today’s top five or this weekend’s attractions (1) Grammy Awards, (2) Lakers at Cavaliers, (3) Memphis at Gonzaga, (4) Spurs at Celtics, (5) Budweiser Shootout

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Bong Voyage

Michael Phelps embarrassed admirers and supporters. His actions were not immoral. They were simply moronic. Phelps was stupid. For this, he merits punishment.

On Thursday, Phelps was suspended for three months. According to USA Swimming, disappointment was the rationale. “This is not a situation where any anti-doping rule was violated, but we decided to send a strong message to Michael because he disappointed so many people, particularly the hundreds of thousands of USA Swimming member kids who look up to him as a role model and a hero,” they said. “Michael has voluntarily accepted this reprimand and has committed to earn back our trust.”

Coach Bob Bowman’s reaction was supportive. “Michael's been through a lot and he's learned a lot, hopefully,” said Bowman. “I support him and I want to see him do better. I'm here, as always, to try to help him move forward. He's learned some tough lessons and he's disappointed a lot of people, me included. I certainly understand USA Swimming needed to take action. We will certainly abide by everything they've put down.”

In his career, Phelps’ accomplishments are monumental. Fourteen gold medals. Two bronze medals. Seven world championships. Thirty-eight national championships. Thirty-two world records. Thirteen Olympic records.In the Olympics, Phelps owns the gold record. He does not own the overall record. Larissa Latynina possesses eighteen triumphs. Between 1956-196, the gymnast garnered nine gold medals. She scored five silver medals. She bagged four bronze medals. She also won two individual all-around competitions.

Phelps’ sin was not mortal. His sin was venial. Yet, his sin was inexcusable. If Phelps apologizes and atones, he should return. If appeasement continues, his suspension should also.

NEW RULE

Michael Phelps was wrong.

Ignore marijuana and youth. Acknowledge this. Phelps is idolized. Anonymous stoners are not.

Phelps embarrassed admirers and supporters. His actions were not immoral. They were simply moronic. Phelps was stupid. For this, he merits punishment.

Graham Garrotes Obama

Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC): “This process stinks. We're making this up as we go and it is a waste of money. It is a broken process, and the president, as far as I'm concerned, has been AWOL on providing leadership on something as important as this. Scaring people is not leadership. Writing an editorial that if you don't pass this bad bill we're going to have disaster -- we've had enough presidents trying to scare people to make bad decisions. I like President Obama, but he is not leading. Having lunch is not leading ... and doing TV interviews is not leading.”

Pat’s Worth: 1,000 Wins

On Thursday, Pat Summitt scored her one-thousandth victory. As previously stated, gender should be irrelevant. John Wooden is a legend. Summitt deserves similar recognition.

Monologue Joke of the Evening

“Yesterday, Barack Obama said people were sick and tired of being rewarded for failure. Is he talking about me?”

Late Show with David Letterman

The Daily Smak

Hey, didn’t you used to be the Rubik's Cube?

In Barry Bonds’ case, evidence was unsealed. The evidence included syringes, tapes, and Tom Daschle’s tax statements.

Today’s top five or Madison Square Garden’s finest (1) Kobe Bryant, (2) Lebron James, (3) Paul Pierce, (4) Dwight Howard, (5) Vince Carter

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Fiscal Discipline

Via executive order, President Obama restricted executive compensation. If corporations accept economic resuscitation, CEO’s income is $500,000.

I applaud President Obama. I am not an interventinalist. I am not a socialist. Corporations are irresponsible and insensitive. Retribution was required.

President Obama Signs SCHIP

Another Perfect Non-Apology

Michael Phelps: “It's obviously bad judgment and it's something I'm not proud of at all. I will say that with the mistakes that I've made in my life, I've learned from them. Every one of them. And I've become a better person. That's what I plan to do from here. It's definitely not what I wanted, and it's clearly not what my mom wanted.”

“This was stupid, and I know this won't happen again. I've been waking up to guys yelling into megaphones outside my window at 7 o'clock in the morning. I've been through just about everything you can go through. I've had paparazzi people following me from my house to my mom's house. People knocking on the door. What I've gone through in the last week, no one wants to go through.”

“I have a relationship with all of my sponsors and they are really like family. It's been like that for our whole partnership together. And it's good to have support in a time like this. This is when you most need it. Right now, at a time like this, this is when you really know who are your real friends and family. At a time like this, you really notice who is there in good times and in bad. And I have had a lot of support and that is something I am thankful for.”

Monologue Joke of the Evening

“Tom Daschle, who President Obama wants as his secretary of Health and Human Services, apparently did not pay $128,000 in taxes that he owes to the government. Do you realize Obama hasn’t had a Cabinet member with an embarrassing tax problem like this since . . . the last guy they appointed?”

The Tonight Show

Afghan Ambiguity?

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev: “Russia and other (alliance members) are ready for full-fledged comprehensive cooperation with the United States and other coalition members in fighting terrorism in the region. This fight must be comprehensive and include both military and political components. Only in the case will this have a chance to succeed.”

“It is necessary to form a full-fledged political system, keeping in mind, cultural and historic traditions. Democracy cannot be forced upon (a country). It must grow from within. It's not the number of bases that matters. It would be good if that would help reduce the number of terrorists, but the fight against terrorism is not limited to building up military forces.”

NEW RULE

Al Davis must resign.

On Tuesday, the Oakland Raiders retained Coach Tom Cable. Cable may select plays. He may select players. However, he is irrelevant. Al Davis controls the Raiders. Davis is certifiable. Until he resigns, the Raiders’ implosion will proceed.

In 2000, former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue approached Cincinnati Bengals Owner Mike Brown. Tagliabue’s message was simple. Brown was an embarrassment. Commissioner Roger Goodell, Davis warrants a similar statement.

Worth A Read

NH Political Capitol

Informed analysis and commentary.

The Daily Smak

Hey, weren’t you Secretary of Health and Human Services Tom Daschle?

On Tuesday, Manny Ramirez rejected $25 million. Today, Wells Fargo issued this statement: “Can we have the money?”

Today’s top five or college basketball’s surprises (1) Minnesota, (2) Clemson, (3) Xavier, (4) Memphis, (5) Utah State

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Haughty Hoax Scuttled

For Secretary of Health and Human Services, former Senator Tom Daschle renounced his nomination. “I don't think the effort slows down for health care reform, and I think Senator Daschle and others would admit that the effort is far bigger than any one individual,” said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.

Daschle’s expertise and reputation are irrelevant. Daschle did not err. He did not gaffe. He flouted the law. Daschle’s actions were arrogant, pretentious, and superior. His resignation is appropriate. His nomination was asinine.

Commerce Correction

On Tuesday, President Obama announced Judd Gregg (Secretary of Commerce). “As one of the Republican Party's most respected voices and skillful negotiators, Judd is a master of reaching across the aisle to get things done,” said Obama. “He'll be an outstanding addition to the depth and experience of my economic team, a trusted voice in my Cabinet, and an able and persuasive ambassador for industry who makes it known to the world that America is open for business.”

From 1981-1989, Gregg was a United States Representative. From 1989-1993, he was Governor. Since 1993, he has been a United States Senator. “This is not a time for partisanship,” said Gregg. This is not a time when we should stand in our ideological corners and shout at each other. This is a time to govern and govern well. And therefore, when the President asked me to join his administration and participate in trying to address the issues of this time, I believed it was my obligation to say yes, and I look forward to it with enthusiasm.”

Gregg’s nomination is impressive. He epitomizes bipartisanship and compromise. He projects pragmatism and trust. Hopefully, he will possess prominence. The economic crisis requires collaborative solutions.

Russia Recommitted

In Kyrgyzstan, Manas Air Force Base will close. In Moscow, Kyrgyzstan President Kurmanbek Bakiyev made this announcement.

As previously stated, Russia is a menace. They possess oil. They possess weaponry. With Bakiyey’s puppetry, Russia’s intention is obvious. Hoist the Sickle and Hammer...

Yahoo: Bury America?

"Buy American" provisions in the economic stimulus legislation moving through Congress have foreign leaders threatening retaliation and academics warning that the globe could soon go through the kind of tit-for-tat protectionism that helped deepen the Great Depression. The stimulus bill passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate measure being voted on this week contain a provision that directs builders and general contractors to use only U.S.-made steel and iron.

Proponents insist that these provisions already exist in U.S. law and simply echo a 1982 policy that requires federal transportation spending to favor U.S.-made iron, steel and manufactured goods. Opponents warn that these terms in the stimulus legislation may violate international trade treaties and present an affront to nations already reeling from entanglement in America's financial-market meltdown. Both are right.

In today's interconnected — and badly bruised — world, the perception of rising protectionism in Washington may be as important as a reality that suggests otherwise. A number of economic stimulus programs are being forged in capitals around the world — from Beijing and London to Brasilia and Canberra — that could launch a new wave of what some will call protectionism, others self preservation. If they emulate the U.S. "Buy American" national favoritism, not only will U.S. firms miss opportunities to sell to them, but the pattern of closing off commerce to non-nationals could expand.

The Buy America provision "is starting small, but of course our whole financial crisis started small, with subprime (mortgages). You've got the same thing in the trade area — you can start small, but it is a license to every country to protect" its domestic industries, said Gary Hufbauer , a senior fellow for the Peterson Institute for International Economics , a pro-trade research organization.

Indeed, that's the pattern of history in the missteps that helped bring about the Great Depression. Congress passed the Smoot-Hawley Act in 1930, raising to record levels the tariffs on more than 20,000 imported goods. European nations responded in kind. The tit-for-tat nationalistic trade war brought a plunge in commerce between nations, and rising hardship fed nationalistic tensions that eventually erupted into War World II.

Many U.S. trading partners will be judging the final shape of America's stimulus legislation as a measure of President Barack Obama's worldview. "If Buy America becomes part of the stimulus legislation, the United States will lose the moral authority to pressure others not to introduce protectionist policies," warned Michael Wilson , Canada's ambassador to the U.S., in a letter this week to Senate leaders.

Complaints from Canada , China and Europe have all hinted at retaliation. However, proponents of the "Buy America" language in the stimulus legislation are correct in saying these provisions are nothing new. The stimulus language is virtually identical to a number of U.S. laws, most notably the 2005 reauthorization of funding for highway programs. The highway bill language and the terms in the stimulus legislation are identical in restricting funds from use in projects "unless all of the iron, steel, and manufactured goods used in the project are produced in the United States ."

The new language is also identical in how waivers to the rules are granted — by presidential decree, if materials are unavailable in the U.S. or if they would raise the cost by 25 percent or more. The only substantive difference in the stimulus legislation as introduced is a requirement that the reasons for granting a waiver be published in the Federal Register .

So if this language just repeats existing law, what's the problem? Why all this talk of trade wars and a return to the Great Depression? "They're constructing a scenario that is not going to happen in the real world," said Scott Paul , executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing , a lobby group for small U.S. manufacturers and steelworker unions. "What I think is happening here is a lot of bluster on this issue to try to leverage the Obama administration on more pressing issues down the road."

That's because during the presidential campaign, Obama was cool to free trade. A new round of global trade liberalization has been deadlocked for several years, and in this time of crisis, Americans aren't exactly begging for it. "People need to understand their chances of talking the American public out of this kind of attitude are zero," Rep. Barney Frank , D- Mass. , chairman of the influential House Financial Services Committee , told reporters Tuesday. "There is now a deeply rooted anger on the part of the average American at what he or she thinks is a very unfair set of arrangements."

The Obama administration, besieged with problems getting appointees confirmed, is trying to keep a foot in both camps of the Buy American debate. "We're looking at the specific provisions and the specific language," Larry Summers , the head of Obama's National Economic Council , told reporters Tuesday. "But the president's been very clear that he wants this to be a bill that supports the American economy, but at the same time his bill is not going to be an excuse for America breaking its international commitments or embracing any new kind of protectionism."

Monologue Joke of the Evening

“So cold, down in Washington, D.C., President Obama had Vice President Joe Biden go outside and take his smoking break for him.”

Late Show with David Letterman

Christian Bale… Crazy Bitch

NEW RULE

Publication is precise.

Michael Phelps never admitted. He never apologized. His language was ambiguous. His statement was succinct. Super Bowl XLIII muddled the story. Ben Roethlisberger, Santonio Holmes, Kurt Warner, and Larry Fitzgerald nullified the story.

Phelps’ publicists were perfect. Phelps recited their version. You heard their version. Their version has elapsed.

The Daily Smak

Hey, weren’t you Senator Judd Gregg?

President Obama’s cabinet includes three Republicans. Democrats are upset. How serious is the situation? Today, Nancy Pelosi threatened to throw shoes.

Today’s top five or greatest Super Bowl contests (1) Super Bowl XXV, (2) Super Bowl XXXVIII, (3) Super Bowl XLIII, (4) Super Bowl XXIII, (5) Super Bowl XXXIV

Monday, February 02, 2009

Circling the Sponsors

Omega: “The current story in the press involves Michael Phelps' private life and is, as far as Omega is concerned, a non-issue.”

Speedos: “In light of Michael Phelps' statement yesterday, Speedo would like to make it clear that it does not condone such behavior and we know that Michael truly regrets his actions. Michael Phelps is a valued member of the Speedo team and a great champion. We will do all that we can to support him and his family.”

Pure Sport: “We applaud the fact that he has taken full and immediate responsibility for his mistake and apologized to us, his fans and the public and we support him during this difficult time.”

Hilton: “We continue to support Michael Phelps as an athlete whose numerous athletic feats outshine an act of regrettable behavior.”

NEW RULE

Recreations are unwarranted.

In “Hero on the Hudson,” players can pretend pilot. If their water entry is even, the crowd cheers. If their water entry is uneven, the plane sinks. This is ridiculous. September 11, Titanic, and US Airways Flight 1549 were calamities. They were not video game inspirations. Captain Chesley Sullenberger is a valiant professional. His valor merits praise… not parody.

Worth A Read

Marketing Pilgrim

Blogging internet advertising. Featuring news, reviews, and rumors.

The Daily Smak

Hey, didn’t you used to be Phil Mickelson?

Weird Wedding… A woman did not invite her sister. Her sister appeared and attacked her. Why is the sister upset? Pamela Anderson has held three weddings.

Today’s top five or Atlantic Coast Conference’s finest (1) North Carolina, (2) Wake Forest, (3) Duke, (4) Clemson, (5) Virginia Tech

Sunday, February 01, 2009

Roethlisberger, Steelers Attain Select Status

Elite competitors exceed each other. One competitor garners acclaim. His opponent garners awards. One competitor sets a record. His opponent shatters that record. One competitor owns a contest. His opponent owns the conversation.

In Super Bowl XLIII, the Pittsburgh Steelers defeated the Arizona Cardinals 27-23. With their victory, the Steelers garnered their sixth Super Bowl. They won their thirty-first playoff contest.

With 11:30 remaining, the Steelers led 20-7. Kurt Warner completed eight consecutive passes. Larry Fitzgerald caught the touchdown. The Cardinals’ deficit was 20-14. With 3:04 remaining, Ben Roethlisberger converted a critical third down. Unfortunately, Justin Hartwig held. The Cardinals received a safety. Their deficit was 20-16.

Seventeen seconds subsequent, Warner and Fitzgerald connected again. Fitzgerald sprinted 64 yards. The Cardinals led 23-20. Roethlisberger and Santonio Holmes stood impervious. Their connections measured thirteen, fourteen, and six yards. Their climax was a six-yard spectacular.

Troy Aikman, Terry Bradshaw, John Elway, and Joe Montana won multiple Super Bowls. Akin to them, Roethlisberger imparts composure and confidence. Akin to them, Roethlisberger rescues improbable victories.

Super Bowl Reaction

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Late Drive Wins Sixth Super Bowl

Arizona Daily Star
Steelers rally to beat Cardinals 27-23

Philadelphia Inquirer
Steelers beat Cardinals in a classic

Philadelphia Daily News
Steelers Super once more

Greensburg Tribune-Review
STEELERS WIN SIXTH SUPER BOWL!!

Casa Grande East Valley Tribune
Steelers end Cardinals' dream season

GAME BALLS (Super Bowl XLIII Edition)

Santonio Holmes (WR – Steelers): 9 receptions, 131 yards, 1 td
(Win: 27-23 vs. Cardinals)

Super Bowl XLIII Ad Rates

Commercials, aired between kickoff and post game, listed by break. Rating scale between one lowest and ten highest.

Bud Light (Boardroom) 7
Audi (Car Theft) 5

Pepsi (Generations) 7
Doritos (Crystal Ball) 3

Bud Light (Conan O’Brien) 2

Bridgestone (Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head) 8
Castrol (Grease Monkeys) 6

Doritos (Magic) 4
Go Daddy (Shower) 1

Pepsi Max (I’m Good) 10
Pedigree (Adoption Pride) 8
Budweiser (Fetch) 10

Budweiser (Horse Love) 7

Gatorade G (Athletes) 8
Cars.com (David Abernathy) 8

Hyundai (Pronunciation) 3
E-Trade (Golden Pipes) 1

Bud Light (Snowboard) 5

H&R Block (Death) 5
Teleflora (Talking Flowers) 4

Cheetos (Kiss) 5

Sobe (Athletes and Lizards) 9

Toyota (Fire) 5
Priceline (Language) 6
Overstock (Carlos Boozer) 7

Coke (Metamorphosis) 6
Bridgestone (Space) 4
Denny’s (Grand Slam I) 1
Monster (Classical Music) 1

Budweiser (Clydesdales Lineage) 7

Career Builder (It’s Time) 2

Coke (Insects) 7

Hyundai (Contract) 2
Cash For Gold (Clients) 4

Sony (Stimulus) 1
General Electric (Wizard of Oz) 7

Hulu (Alex Baldwin) 8

General Electric (Eco imagination) 4
Pepsi (McGruber) 2

Bud Light (Line) 6
Go Daddy (Roger Clemens Parody) 1

E-Trade (Baby Golf) 1
Denny’s (Grand Slam II) 1

Springsteen’s Showcase Honors Halftime

Faith Hill’s performance was excellent. Jennifer Hudson’s national anthem was poignant. However, Bruce Spingsteen’s halftime owned this evening. His energy was epic. His interaction was incredible. His song selection was stellar.

Post Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake, halftime has been ridiculed. Springsteen ignored this. He reinstated two truisms. Genius is eternal. Talent transcends generations.

Betting the Pass Line (Season: 47-37 Playoffs: 6-4)

Super Bowl XLIII
Steelers vs. Cardinals (+7)

Kurt Warner amasses three hundred yards. Larry Fitzgerald scores two touchdowns. However, the Steelers win the contest.

REGRETTABLE

Michael Phelps: “I engaged in behavior which was regrettable and demonstrated bad judgment. I'm 23 years old and despite the successes I've had in the pool, I acted in a youthful and inappropriate way, not in a manner people have come to expect from me. For this, I am sorry. I promise my fans and the public it will not happen again.”

Fox News: Federal Ex-cession?

Companies are cutting jobs by the tens of thousands. State and local governments are penny-pinching, too. So what about Uncle Sam? Tough times for him as well? Not exactly. In fact the number of federal workers is on the rise. That might seem strange to the 11 million people in the U.S. who are out of work -- and the millions more who fear they soon will be. Shouldn't Washington pare down too?

But it is unlikely that President Obama will put any of the nearly 2 million federal civil servants out in the street in the middle of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. His proposed $800-plus billion economic aid plan, which includes heavy spending on public works, is expected to increase the ranks of federal workers, although mostly at the state and local level. That measure is working its way through Congress just as Microsoft Corp., Pfizer, Caterpillar, Home Depot and scores of other companies are shedding workers, and governors are asking or ordering state workers to accept furloughs, salary reductions, truncated workweeks or reduced benefits.

"Federal belt-tightening would worsen the problem right now," said Kevin Hassett, director of economic policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. "Most economists agree that the federal government is a built-in stabilizer," said Hassett, a former adviser to GOP presidential campaigns.

Simply letting federal workers go is "penny-wise and pound foolish," said Max Stier, president of the Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit group that works to revitalize the government and its work force. "We had a situation where we had a single person monitoring toys coming in from abroad. End result: You get lead-tainted toys coming in to the country," Stier said. "We need people looking out for the public good."

Paul Light, professor of public service at New York University, also thinks more, not fewer, federal workers on needed on the front lines. He said other steps could be taken to trim costs. The Obama administration has suggested reducing the number of managers at the middle levels, he said. "That would be a good thing," Light said. "What he hasn't suggested is that we reduce political appointees at the senior level. I just think you could do some things to say to the public, `Look, the federal government is going to make its share of sacrifice and it's more than just having energy-efficient buildings."'

The government's civilian, nonmilitary work force peaked in the late 1960s at about 2.3 million. It was 2 million or more through the mid-1990s, when the government cut more than 400,000 jobs -- many through military base closings. Since 2001, civilian employment in the executive branch, excluding postal employees, has edged upward from 1.7 million to about 2 million, largely because of new homeland security jobs. More federal job openings are on the horizon.

A report released in January by Christina Romer, head of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, and Jared Bernstein, an economic policy adviser to Vice President Joe Biden, predicted that more than 90 percent of the 3 million to 4 million jobs that Obama proposes to save or create would be in the private sector. But the report also estimated that 244,000 government jobs -- some at the federal level, but more at the state and local level -- would be created or saved.

That was based on a $600 billion stimulus package; the one being debated in Congress is more than $800 billion. Moreover, many baby boomers who are getting government paychecks are at retirement age. The Office of Personnel Management estimates that 58 percent of supervisory and 42 percent of nonsupervisory workers who were on the federal payroll as of October 2004 will be eligible to retire by the end of next year. The financial meltdown, however, has prompted some to delay retirement.

Cynthia Bascetta, 56, director of health care at the Government Accountability Office, has 31 years of federal service under her belt. She said she thought retiring in these troubled economic times was too risky. So she will wait at least a year to retire, even though she recently moved to Fredericksburg, Va., and now has to commute by train to her job in Washington. "I know of a few people who feel as though they need to stay because they have children they need to put through college, and they've lost a lot in college funds," she said. "Others are just anxious about their financial situation."

Other older workers are seeking federal jobs, which come with job security, health and life insurance, a federal retirement program, paid vacations and leave and other benefits. When the national job market began tightening in the first quarter of last year, FedJobs.com, a business that has been helping federal job hunters since 1974, started hearing from 50- to 65-year-olds instead of 25- to 40-year-olds.

"All of a sudden, it's a much older clientele calling up saying they're interested in government work because they lost their jobs, their companies merged, their companies went bankrupt and they're looking for stability," said Ross Harris, sales and marketing director for the site. "The perception is that federal work is more stable -- that there aren't as many layoffs."

Rising unemployment and excitement about working for Obama combined to motivate about 350,000 people to apply for 3,000 to 4,000 political appointee positions in his new administration. Jumping to the federal payroll, however, doesn't necessarily mean moving to the nation's capital; more than 80 percent of federal civil workers are employed outside the Washington metro area. "Workers in the private sector are being laid off at an alarming rate," said Richard Brown, president of the National Federation of Federal Employees, one of the three largest unions representing federal civilian employees. "That is making the federal sector, where employment levels have been mostly stable, more attractive. Obama is calling American workers to public service and has said he wants to `make government cool again."'

Federal employment has not completely escaped the impact of the economic downturn, While no government-wide hiring freeze has gone into effect, some departments and agencies are taking belt-tightening moves. Obama, for example, froze the pay of some White House employees. "During this period of economic emergency, families are tightening their belts, and so should Washington," Obama said.

But it was a symbolic move. The pay freeze only affects roughly 100 White House employees earning more than $100,000 a year.

Communication & Cooperation

On Sunday, Fox News Sunday interviewed Republican National Chairman Michael Steele. Subsequently, ABC’s This Week hosted a discussion. George Stephanopoulos’ guests included Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC), Representative Barney Frank (D-MA), Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and Fed Ex CEO Fred Smith.

Concerning the former, Steele’s statements appropriate. He must expand, modernize, and sell the party. Concerning the latter, the employment crisis is universal. Collaborative solutions are required.

The Big Five

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The Hot Five

A quintet of sizzling conversation starters.

Line of the Morning


Representative Barney Frank (D-MA)

“Everyone is familiar with the term collateral damage. You try to kill some bad guys and unfortunately, you kill some good guys. The reverse has happened in the credit market… Collateral benefit…”