Archive for June 14th, 2009

Off day notes, Bobcats broke, ‘Zo and Whitlock go off …

No regrets from Stan Van Gundy in off day media availability session. None from Phil Jackson, either, but you’d get the feeling you’d be laughed out of the conference call if you asked him if there was anything about Game 4 that he’d take back.

And, as you’d expect, either side played the part of the coach of a team either up 3-1, or down 1-3.

Van Gundy still charges that fouling the Lakers with 11 seconds to go in Thursday’s Game 4 would have been too early (forgetting, of course, that Trevor Ariza(notes) and Derek Fisher(notes) had the ball in their hands with seven and six and five seconds to go), while defending his decision to banish Rafer Alston(notes) to the end of the bench after a game-changing third quarter that saw the Magic only score 14 points.

On Jameer Nelson(notes) playing for the entire fourth quarter:

“Obviously in any kind of loss people are going to question anything; that’s fine. But our fourth quarter unit functioned a lot better than our third quarter unit did, so I stuck with what was working.”

He admits to not thinking about possibly giving a defensive-minded guard like Courtney Lee(notes) a shot in the last defensive possession of the game, he doesn’t want to be quoted as blaming Rafer Alston for the struggles in the third quarter (conveniently leaving out the fact that Hedo Turkoglu’s(notes) absence, more than Rafer’s poor play, contributed to the pathetic offense).

Van Gundy also still claims he’s not upset at Dwight Howard’s(notes) free throw frustrations because they were balanced out by the other aspects of his game (rebounding, and an NBA Finals-record nine blocks).

All in all, in was a pinched, frustrated, shoulders-shrugged bit of analysis.

Phil Jackson — and I swear I should have this phrase saved on my clipboard — was typically serene. Wistfully looking back to the struggles of his post-playing days, trying to find secure employment in and out of basketball, musing aloud about how the journey is the thing, how fun this ride has been, and how much he appreciates his team.

On the upcoming Game 5, as you’d expect, the Lakers coach is hoping his team busts out with a singular focus, rather than reacting to largeness of the moment, or Orlando’s desperate crowd.

“The big key is that if we can match that play and the energy that they throw out there on the floor, then we give ourselves a chance. To do that we have to be focused, which is always a coach’s cry, ‘get focused.’ We have to reach the energy level or the emotional level of the game in a way that matches what the crowd and the Orlando team put out there on the floor.”

He mentioned that his players were giddy after Game 4, happy to be this close to a championship, while taking on an even cheerier tone following Friday’s film session.

“What I told them is there’s a chance tomorrow’s practice may be the last practice of the season. That’s also something that gets them pretty excited because practice for players is something that is — at this level of the game, having gone through hundreds or probably more than a hundred-some practices, they’re excited about not having to come to practice again.”

Jackson also gave another mention of Derek Fisher reminding the team about how the Indiana Pacers sent it back to Los Angeles with a Game 5 win in 2000.

That cracks me up, seeing as how just about every player on the Lakers save for Kobe and Fisher was well into their teenage years when that happened (Andrew Bynum(notes) was 12, Pau Gasol(notes) was 17; hell, I had just turned 20), I can’t imagine many or any of those players even remembering that game. I do, but I had a Behind the Box Score to write. Seriously.

***

Discussing the “idea” that Kobe Bryant(notes) is actually the real coach behind these Los Angeles Lakers is a bit like trying to convince someone that the NBA isn’t fixed, or that the sun doesn’t revolve around the Earth. What more is there to say beyond, “you’re daft,” before moving on?

And Alonzo Mourning(notes) is daft, here. He’s never liked Phil Jackson, it’s always been cool to pump up current, hip, players while putting some older guy down, and if you give more than two seconds thought to Mourning’s claims that Bryant “is doing all the work” and that Phil “is just showing up” — honestly, you’re taking unmitigated idiocy to an entirely different level.

To just get into the hours upon hours of work that detailing an offense, breaking down game tape, studying motivation techniques, self-improving so that you can advise others on self-improvement, 40 years of hoarding plays so that you know exactly what to call in a pinch, working endlessly on game preparation so that you can boil that knowledge down and put it across effortlessly to your team in 15 minutes during a walk-through before they lose interest, the ability to … I’ll just stop.

How do you convince someone that they’re wrong, when they’re wronger than anyone’s ever wronged before? You can either write a series of almanacs on the subject, or you can make it the second item in a notes column, 300 words or less. It’s sunny out. I’m going with the latter.

***

Scary news if you’re a Bobcats fan. The team might not even be able to afford a summer league team this year, which kind of strikes me as odd.

I know the economy isn’t at its best, I know the Bobcats have a payroll that probably goes beyond the realm of the fiscally sound, and I understand that the team isn’t exactly raking in the profits from attendance or local TV/radio, and I understand that summer league runs cost quite a bit of money, often for a payoff that isn’t so profound.

But I can’t help but wonder, given owner Robert Johnson’s NBA naïveté heading into his venture as owner of this pathetic team, if this is more of a choice than an end-result. And wonder if there haven’t been teams in tougher financial straights that still managed to make a summer league turn happen. That’s just me, though.

***

If Stan Van Gundy “needs his ass beat,” then where does that leave Jason Whitlock?

Deservedly run over by a cement mixer? Appropriately drawn and quartered? Stuck thrashing around for relevance over the last five years as the rest of the sporting world finally comes to regard him as the prat that he is? If Van Gundy made his mistake at the spur of the moment, what’s Whitlock’s excuse for being allowed time to think and re-think that line?

If this isn’t the biggest tip off that the sporting media absolutely and unabashedly roots for the underdog because they get bored with a game they don’t understand, then I don’t know what else to give you.

Jason Whitlock did not watch an Orlando Magic game until May, but now he’s emotionally invested in the team because — like the fair-weather dorks down at your local sports pub — he’ll root for an underdog winning over a close and entertaining contest regardless of outcome.

And when his underdog fails, he turns into a churlish, childish whiner. And in lieu of actual analysis, he blames the coach. Because it’s the easiest thing to do in sports, a shocking turn run by a columnist who has done nothing but take up the easiest sides in sports for years. And because he’s alone on an island desperate for hits, they allow comments like “Stan Van Gundy needs his ass beat” to run.

Do you think he could tell you, last October, who the coach of the Magic was? I’m sure he’d heard of and remembered Stan Van Gundy, but wouldn’t you bet a week’s pay that Whitlock’s answer to that question would run along the lines of, “hold on … I know this … don’t tell me …”?

You think he knows anything about the history of not fouling when up three points? You think he was angry beyond belief during the regular season when teams didn’t try it? Or in the first round of the playoffs?

You think he felt bad for Lawrence Frank in the regular season when Frank tried, and as the exception to the rule, it came back to bite New Jersey in the ass? You think Whitlock is poring over any NBA statistician’s research on the issue, bound and determined to get NBA coaches to favor the statistics on this issue, and foul?

Or did he just want the plucky underdog to win, and because it didn’t, ranted away like a spurned message board denizen. And will any other “please foul when you’re up three points” rant ever get the sort of exposure Whitlock’s “needs his ass beat” comment will get? No way.

Jason? Who does JaVale McGee(notes) play for? No idea? Then can it, kindly, regarding the NBA.

Or, better yet, give us something we haven’t heard. Discuss this situation intelligently. Don’t make a point to draw attention with foul-mouthed twaddle like that.

You’re the online equivalent of a frat boy, half-watching the Cubs game on WGN on another TV, turning into an NBA genius in June over his four Miller Lites, just in time to forget about the league for another 11 months. Why anyone would give that line of thinking a forum is beyond me.

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Saturday’s media availability roundup

A day before what could be the last game of the 2008-09 season, the press was in a reflective mood during Saturday’s media availability. Nothing wrong with that, we all have stories to write, but it is funny how this script seems to repeat itself year after year on what might be the last chance the media has at an extended sit-down until October.

So there were questions about Phil Jackson’s legacy, Red Auerbach’s record in the Finals, Kobe Bryant’s(notes) individual legacy, Derek Fisher’s(notes) thoughts on whether or not he has distinct memories from each of his Finals wins, Orlando’s season-long history of bouncing back; and, once again, a wonderful rant from Stan Van Gundy about how the media much prefers to write a story about nebulous, intangible things rather than just focusing on the game of basketball.

Most affecting was Phil Jackson’s needed, well-versed history on Red Auerbach’s time with the Boston Celtics. A lot of fans and media alike seem to regard Auerbach as springing out of the womb with a signed contract from Bill Russell in hand, but the truth goes a little deeper than that, evidenced by Phil speaking about Auerbach for over a minute without even getting to his championship years (the very years he was asked about).

Auerbach was a less-than-successful coach with the Washington Capitols before essentially changing the way the game was played before acquiring Russell for the Celtics. The pre-Russell Celtics were a Phoenix Suns-style running team (right down to being contenders, but championship also-rans) before there were many of those, with an All-Star (Ed Macauley) already in the pivot. Trading Macauley to St. Louis for Russell’s draft rights, Jackson noted, was a huge gamble; and yet it put Boston over the top.

Jackson then pointed out how Auerbach could have won “two or three more championships,” but that he handed over the coaching reigns to Russell because it was the best thing for the Celtics, if not Auerbach personally. All down the line, he praised Auerbach’s instincts and guts, essentially, as a player evaluator. It was a thoughtful, appropriate, tribute; coming at a time where most in the media room wanted Phil to talk endlessly of his own accomplishments.

Phil then went on to praise Mitch Kupchak and Jimmy Buss as personnel evaluators, telling the press that Jimmy (owner Jerry’s son) desperately wanted and secured Andrew Bynum(notes) despite his limited high school playing history and 17-years of age. He also pointed out that Kupchak had been hot on Pau Gasol’s(notes) heels for a year, over Jackson’s mild objections that Gasol might not have the strength necessary to battle inside as Jackson saw fit.

Again, more effusive praise and deflecting of credit, rather than essentially re-telling the introductory chapters to his best-selling books. A very impressive afternoon out, for Phil.

Oh, yeah. Basketball. He also discussed why he likes to take the ball out in the backcourt in late-game situations, admitting that “it’s not that usual in this game,” and that he doesn’t like to in-bound the ball in the frontcourt because it often results in a “stagnant” possession.

Stan Van Gundy, on the other hand, and by his own admission, is not “a big storyteller,” and his attempt at re-telling Greg LeMond’s comeback win in the 1989 Tour de France fell a bit short.

What Van Gundy is brilliant at is chasing away reporter’s dreams, and their attempts at an easy column storyline. Consider:

“Which team in this situation is more loose? You guys are usually, but the Lakers have the cushion, but you guys are in survival mode.”

“I would say to that I think it’s irrelevant. I don’t think being loose, being tight, that’s not going to have anything to do with it. I don’t think our guys will play tight. We’ll just play.”

“You think you’ve faced these questions of players all season, how mentally tough they are. Do you think this postseason forever puts that to rest, or do you have to keep - ”

“No, it never puts anything to rest because whatever ââ look, whatever people’s perceptions are of certain players, certain teams, whatever, I mean, it’s like they say about anybody with sort of first impressions, they just never go away no matter how many times you prove it to the contrary. And plus I always stand in amazement of a lot of people’s ability to continue to have opinions that absolutely stand in the way of all facts and evidence. I mean, it’s an amazing quality some people have to be able to ignore every piece of evidence and fact and still have their opinion.”

Van Gundy mused aloud about the oddity behind there being more negativity surrounding a team that most recently lost a game in the Finals that a squad “that has been home for two months.” He continued:

“There’s no problem with any of those players, they’re all winners. But the guys who are here and lose in The Finals, then we’ve got to find something wrong with them.”

In a complete (and understandable) turnaround from his mood after Game 4, when he criticized his own team’s “stupidness” (throwing himself in that mix, it should be pointed out), Hedo Turkoglu(notes) was rather cheerful following Magic practice.

He answered “why not?,” when asked about being the first squad to win a Finals after being in a 1-3 hole, and told the press that “right now I’m just happy to be in this situation.”

Why?

“Because it’s a good time to show our character as a group. It’s a good time right now. We’re a good team. We’ve bounced back from a lot of difficulties, so this is a good one to learn from. So I hope everybody really responds their best and we’ll get the win and go back to LA.”

Kobe Bryant, shockingly, was all basketball in his sit-down session. He (kindly, it should be noted) chased away any insinuation that he would opt out of the remaining year of his contract this summer, dismissed any thoughts about even attempting to match Bill Russell’s 11 or Michael Jordan’s six NBA championships (”I’m just trying to get this damn fourth one”).

He talked up Dwight Howard’s(notes) strength, talked down the significance of Mickael Pietrus’(notes) late-game foul on Pau Gasol, and delicately handled a Chinese reporter’s mention of the number eight as “a lucky number in China,” despite Bryant (who wore that number for the first ten years of his career) wearing number 24 since 2006.

Bryant did this with an ease and sense of humor that we haven’t seen in a few weeks, losing that perpetual scowl that has been a post-game and off-day trademark since the Finals began. We’ll see how that translates to Sunday’s potential close-out Game 5.

UPDATE: Though we have seen the clip of Jackson talking to Doris Burke between quarters one and two of Game 4, and thought it obvious he was complaining about the refereeing, it didn’t feel like a finable offense. And we can’t remember what Jackson said well enough to quote him. Either way, Stu Jackson didn’t like it, and fined Jackson and the Lakers $25,000 each.

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Phil, at ease

Even by his own, flip-flops-at-practice, standards, Phil Jackson sure seems a lot more relaxed these days than he has been in the past.

This doesn’t really have anything to do with where we’re at in the Finals, either, with the Lakers up 3-1 and potentially a few hours removed from winning their first NBA championship in seven years.

There’s something else going on with this guy. Maybe the times have come up around him, maybe he’s at peace with most of the civilized world realizing that he may have had just as much to do with all those championships as the superstars he coached. Maybe he picked up himself up a nice pair of shoe inserts. I’m not entirely sure.

What I can tell you is, after two decades of observing this guy from afar, he actually, publicly, looks the part of the contented Zen master the cliché-ready press wearyingly love to describe him as.

There are no more press conference battles, no messages through the media meant not for quotability, but to hit the intended targets (the NBA’s league office, the next game’s refereeing crew, opposing coaches, certain power forwards). No more smirking, very little bemusement as a defense (there’s bemusement, mind you, just not used as an alternative to yelling at people), and nobody’s being warily regarded.

That doesn’t mean there aren’t battles to be won with the intended targets mentioned in the parenthesis above. And that certainly doesn’t mean there aren’t members of the press that Jackson can’t stand.

There is a certain Los Angeles columnist, name sort of rhymes with “Mee-May Whimers,” who tries to bait and match wits with Jackson in every press conference. And, I’m sorry, but while I don’t mind Mee-May as a writer and certainly don’t mind his efforts to tweak and twist, he fails miserably every time out.

In the past, Jackson would shoot this guy down. In 2009, you get the sense that he’s not worth Jackson’s time, even without Jackson having to go out of his way to let everyone know that he’s not worth Jackson’s time. Years ago, this would have been a big deal. But right now, unless you’re at the press conferences or an avid NBA TV watcher at two in the afternoon on a weekday, you have no idea that this is going on.

Have I been at these press conferences, myself, for years? No, but we’ve been able to see Jackson’s post-game press conferences on cable TV since the mid-1990s, and just about all of his playoff pressers since the outset of this decade. And there’s something different about it. More candid, without being brutally honest. More at ease. More direct, without directing.

Even in the best of times in his run with the Chicago Bulls, the guy still seemed unnerved by something. Even with the outcome really never in doubt, he still seemed pinched. Not quite frantic or hurried, but aggrieved about something that he never decided to expound on.

Perhaps it was the way the Bulls had to wonder every June if they’d be back for another go the following year. Perhaps it was his domestic life, surely none of our business, but something that we know sadly soon unraveled for good once the Bulls won their last championship in 1998.

And while it seemed to go away once Jackson came out to Los Angeles — working under the sun and winning a title in your first year will do that — it was replaced by more bemusement in place of something, and all that smirking. Jackson’s press conferences never seemed … typical? Is that the word? And is that even right?

Atypical, compared to what? Gregg Popovich’s smart-alecky tone? Jeff Van Gundy’s sarcastic droning? Stan Van Gundy’s exasperated, to the point, analysis? Every other coach in this league seems to go out of his way to warily regard most league-mandated media sessions, often for good reason, so why does Phil’s stand out when he bemusedly regards them? When he makes the best of what can be a frustrating situation?

It probably, like it is with all the greats, has more to do with us than him.

Hell, I often find myself thinking and acting like the bemused Jackson at children’s birthday parties, or while observing my girlfriend after she and her girlfriends have had one too many, and can’t keep themselves from laughing about fanny packs. Noting the silliness of the situation in your mind, not giving it too much credence, while just trying to stay aware and good-natured in a setting that could drive you batty if you don’t stay in the moment.

Yet, in this turn, Jackson seems completely different, again. His manner both before and after games, and during off-days, suggests someone who is completely and utterly removed from the game itself. Separate, certainly not unsentimental, but secure and unattached enough to soberly and accurately describe exactly what has gone on without letting emotion or even pro-Laker bias get in the way. It’s been remarkable to watch, whether in the comfort of my living room, or just a few feet away.

We can’t possibly pin this on Los Angeles’ likelihood to win it all, be it entering the postseason, the Finals, or Sunday evening, because he’s had it easier with teams both in Los Angeles, and Chicago. He has a team that seems to fully grasp what he’s after on both sides of the court without much pleading from the sidelines, but he’s also had that in other places, on other teams, the symbiotic relationship between coach and rotation just as strong.

So really, all I’m left to assume is that we have a new stage of Jackson to deal with, irrespective of the on-court goings-on. One where every word, taken literally, is enough. Fewer mind games. Fewer ploys. And I’m only writing “fewer” instead of “no,” because there is that persistent if not expected overwhelming chance that I just don’t know what the hell I’m on about.

It’s an odd thing to feel good about the perceived sunnier state of someone’s mind when you don’t even know them. But that’s a by-product of seeing someone’s post-work thoughts broadcast nationally, or documented for the record. That’s just how it goes.

Of course, if he responds to a win or a loss in Game 5 with his best approximation of Allen Ginsberg’s famous rant, you didn’t hear it from me. Blame the humidity. It’s hot down here.

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Obama eyes tighter controls on banks, Wall Street

President Barack Obama is ready to roll out an overhaul of the intricate rules and systems that govern America’s troubled financial institutions, proposing the most ambitious revision since the Great Depression.

The goal is to prevent a recurrence of the economic crisis that erupted in the United States and exploded last fall with devastating consequences still reverberating around the world.

Unlike the government’s temporary ownership stake in automakers and major financial companies, the regulatory changes set to be announced Wednesday are designed to be permanent. They could result in a major realignment of power and authority among government agencies that set the rules for banking, lending and investing and touch American lives through daily transactions, from credit cards to mortgages and mutual funds.

The proposals already are the source of a spirited debate in Congress over whether Obama’s measures will prove too timid or place too heavy a hand on the levers of capitalism.

At issue is a 21st century system of high-stakes swaps and trades, bets and losses where trillions of dollars worth of investment products have grown too intricate for a 20th century regulatory structure.

Imagine today’s financial transactions as an athletic contest where the referees have lost their vantage point. Plays occur out of their sight and fouls go undetected. Some referees halt play while others let it go on.

Even the players have had enough.

“On a macro-basis, we’re very supportive of reform,” said Tim Ryan, president and chief executive of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

In devising new regulations and oversight, the administration is looking to address four perceived weaknesses in the current system:

_The lack of an all-seeing federal entity to detect institutional stresses that threaten the financial system, and the government’s inability to step in and unwind large institutions before they choke the system. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. can do this with banks. But the government lacked the power to do the same with a behemoth such as the insurer American International Group Inc.

_The undercapitalization of large financial institutions. Heading into the financial crisis, too many banks were leveraged with significantly more debt than equity. “If you give people enough leverage, they can lose an unbelievably large amount of their own money and that of their clients,” Obama’s chief economic adviser, Lawrence Summers, said last week.

_The emergence of large, lightly regulated markets, such as hedge funds, and of big insurers, such as AIG, without a federal overseer. The administration wants large private investment funds to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission and is weighing the creation of a federal charter for insurance firms.

_Consumers and lenders whose unwitting or reckless credit and borrowing decisions placed families under staggering debts and contributed to the instability of the financial system. Obama is likely to recommend creating a financial services consumer protection body with oversight powers over mortgages and credit cards and other consumer financial products.

Internally, the administration has vacillated over whether to streamline the vast array of regulatory agencies.

At one point, Treasury and White House officials floated the idea of a single financial services regulator to oversee banks and certain insurers. But it didn’t get a warm reception from the chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee or the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

The administration backed away from the idea.

But last week, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., a key player in financial issues, called on Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to include a single banking regulator in the administration’s overhaul plan. House Republicans want streamlining, too, but would take power away from the Federal Reserve and the FDIC.

The administration considered merging the Securities and Exchange Commission, the powerful stock market regulator, and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, which oversees commodity futures and some options markets. But the move would have meant congressional and regulatory turf battles. At a dinner two weeks ago, Geithner told key lawmakers he would not propose the merger.

“The Obama administration — because they’re working in a more realistic environment — are into the art of the possible,” Ryan said.

One way or another, the Fed could be a winner in the administration’s plan.

The administration and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke would like the central bank to be the overarching “systemic risk” regulator, lording over the financial system in search of flaws and weak stress points. Such a role would give the Fed exceptional authority as both the manager of monetary policy and the overseer of the enterprises with the biggest financial footprint in the country, if not the world.

Industry officials now expect Obama and Geithner to propose a system that makes the Fed a supervisor of systemic risk assisted by a council of regulators that would advise the central bank about potential dangers.

Also in the debate is how to handle failing institutions that pose a threat to the entire financial system. The administration wants a beefed up FDIC to carry out that function provided such intervention is triggered by Fed or Treasury regulators.

Republicans prefer that companies be restructured or liquidated in bankruptcy court.

Alabama Rep. Spencer Bachus, the top Republican on the House Financial Services Committee, urged lawmakers to reject a regulatory system “that depends on the infallibility of the government regulators, who have so far shown themselves unable to anticipate crisis, let alone prevent them.”

In a speech Friday to the Council on Foreign Relations, Summers offered the administration’s counterpoint: “Any financial institution that is big enough, interconnected enough or risky enough that its distress necessitates government writing substantial checks, is big enough, risky enough or interconnected enough that it should be some part of the government’s responsibility to supervise it on a comprehensive basis.”

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Pakistan: Suspected US missile, bomb kill 13

A suspected U.S. missile strike killed at least five people Sunday in a tribal region where Pakistan’s top Taliban commander is based, intelligence officials said, breaking a lull in such attacks and posing a test for growing anti-Taliban sentiment in the country.

The strike came as violence raged elsewhere in the volatile northwest region bordering Afghanistan: a bombing at a market killed at least eight people, while officials said clashes between the Taliban and security forces killed at least 20 militants in a tribal region supposedly cleared of insurgents months ago.

Local media have reported that the Taliban claimed responsibility for several recent attacks in Pakistan, including one that killed a moderate cleric, calling them revenge for the army’s offensive in the northwestern Swat Valley.

The attacks seem to have bolstered growing anti-Taliban sentiment in Pakistan, something the U.S. hopes will translate into support for sustained military action against extremists who use Pakistani soil to plot attacks on Western troops in Afghanistan.

But U.S. missile strikes could undermine that sentiment because they are deeply unpopular among Pakistanis. The government has publicly protested such strikes, fired by unmanned drone aircraft, saying they violate the country’s sovereignty, even though many analysts suspect the two countries have struck a secret deal to facilitate the attacks.

The U.S. rarely acknowledges or discusses the missile strikes.

The latest strike — the first since mid-May — occurred in South Waziristan, hitting three vehicles in an area not far from Makeen, a village considered a stronghold of Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud. It was not clear who the five people killed were. Two Pakistani intelligence officials confirmed the attack on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to media.

South Waziristan, which also is an al-Qaida stronghold, is believed to be the target of Pakistan’s next offensive against militants. Mehsud has been linked to bombings on both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and U.S. defense officials said last week that Pakistan intends to go after him, though no timeframe was given.

In recent weeks, militants and security forces have repeatedly skirmished in South Waziristan, though the army insists it is merely responding to attacks.

In a statement, the army said it killed some 30 militants in South Waziristan in Saturday strikes aimed in part at avenging the death of cleric Sarfraz Naeemi. Naeemi, killed in a suicide bombing Friday, had denounced the Taliban as murderers.

The market bombing Sunday occurred in Dera Ismail Khan, a town not far from South Waziristan.

Government official Inayat Ullah said 11 to 13 pounds (5 to 6 kilograms) of explosives were planted in a fruit vendor’s hand-pulled cart. Police official Mohammad Iqbal put the death toll at eight, with 20 wounded.

At a hospital where some of the wounded were taken, wails and cries filled the air.

“It was crowded there when something big exploded,” said 30-year-old Ilyas Ahmad, whose legs were wounded. “It was a big noise. Everybody was crying. Bodies were lying there. People were lying around blood.”

Iqbal said the attack had to be a response to the Swat operation. On Saturday, senior provincial minister Bashir Bilour said the latest attacks could also be the work of militants in Waziristan ahead of “an imminent army operation” in the region.

Fighting on too many fronts could tax Pakistan’s military, not to mention government resources. The latest clashes in the Bajur tribal region underscore the challenges facing the military in holding territory it claims to have cleared.

Pakistani security forces used jets, helicopters and artillery to pound suspected Taliban hideouts in Bajur over the weekend.

Zakir Hussain Afridi, the top government official for Bajur, said the fighting was in the Charmang valley, a stretch he described as largely under Taliban control. Jamil Khan, his deputy, put the militant death toll at 20 since Friday.

Bajur was the main theater of operations against the militants before Swat. After some six months of fighting, the army said in February that the Taliban there had been defeated. But reports have occasionally surfaced since then of ongoing militant activity.

Afridi told The Associated Press that the military had used airstrikes in the past in Charmang but that there were no ground troops — army or paramilitary — in that part of Bajur.

Pakistan had relied heavily on local tribes in Bajur to raise their own militias to force out local Taliban, but Afridi said that concept had not taken off well in Charmang.

Military officials could not immediately be reached for comment Sunday.

The military says its operation dating to late April has killed more than 1,300 militants in Swat and surrounding areas. But the Swat offensive has already displaced more than 2 million civilians, a huge humanitarian test for Pakistan. More battles along the Afghan border could swell that number.

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NKorea warns of nuclear war amid rising tensions

North Korea’s communist regime has warned of a nuclear war on the Korean peninsula while vowing to step up its atomic bomb-making program in defiance of new U.N. sanctions.

The North’s defiance presents a growing diplomatic headache for President Barack Obama as he prepares for talks Tuesday with his South Korean counterpart on the North’s missile and nuclear programs.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak told security-related ministers during an unscheduled meeting Sunday to “resolutely and squarely” cope with the North’s latest threat, his office said. Lee is to leave for the U.S. on Monday morning.

A commentary Sunday in the North’s main state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper, carried by the official Korean Central News Agency, claimed the U.S. has 1,000 nuclear weapons in South Korea. Another commentary published Saturday in the state-run Tongil Sinbo weekly claimed the U.S. has been deploying a vast amount of nuclear weapons in South Korea and Japan.

North Korea “is completely within the range of U.S. nuclear attack and the Korean peninsula is becoming an area where the chances of a nuclear war are the highest in the world,” the Tongil Sinbo commentary said.

Kim Yong-kyu, a spokesman at the U.S. military command in Seoul, called the latest accusation “baseless,” saying Washington has no nuclear bombs in South Korea. U.S. tactical nuclear weapons were removed from South Korea in 1991 as part of arms reductions following the Cold War.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry issued a statement Sunday demanding the North stop stoking tension, abandon its nuclear weapons and return to dialogue with the South.

On Saturday, North Korea’s Foreign Ministry threatened war on any country that dared to stop its ships on the high seas under the new sanctions approved by the U.N. Security Council on Friday as punishment for the North’s latest nuclear test.

It is not clear if the statements are simply rhetorical. Still, they are a huge setback for international attempts to rein in North Korea’s nuclear ambitions following its second nuclear test on May 25. It first tested a nuclear device in 2006.

In Saturday’s statement, North Korea said it has been enriching uranium to provide fuel for its light-water reactor. It was the first public acknowledgment the North is running a uranium enrichment program in addition to its known plutonium-based program. The two radioactive materials are key ingredients in making atomic bombs.

On Sunday, Yonhap news agency reported South Korea and the U.S. have mobilized spy satellites, reconnaissance aircraft and human intelligence networks to obtain evidence that the North has been running a uranium enrichment program.

South Korea’s Defense Ministry said it could not confirm the report. The National Intelligence Service — South Korea’s main spy agency — was not available for comment.

North Korea said more than one-third of 8,000 spent fuel rods in its possession has been reprocessed and all the plutonium extracted would be used to make atomic bombs. The country could harvest 13-18 pounds (6-8 kilograms) of plutonium — enough to make at least one nuclear bomb — if all the rods are reprocessed.

In addition, North Korea is believed to have enough plutonium for at least half a dozen atomic bombs.

North Korea says its nuclear program is a deterrent against the U.S., which it routinely accuses of plotting to topple its regime. Washington, which has 28,500 troops in South Korea, has repeatedly said it has no such intention.

The new U.N. sanctions are aimed at depriving the North of the financing used to build its rogue nuclear program. The resolution also authorized searches of North Korean ships suspected of transporting illicit ballistic missile and nuclear materials.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the new U.N. penalties provide the necessary tools to help check North Korea’s continued pursuit of nuclear weapons.

The sanctions show that “North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons and the capacity to deliver those weapons through missiles is not going to be accepted by the neighbors as well as the greater international community,” Clinton said Saturday at a news conference in Canada.

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Ahmadinejad defends vote as ‘real and free’

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Sunday his re-election was “real and free” and cannot be questioned — despite accusations of mass voter fraud.

Ahmadinejad made the comments Sunday during a press conference — his first since the government announced that he was re-elected to a second term in a landslide victory during Friday’s vote.

But his top opponent accused the government of voter fraud and many of his supporters have clashed with police in Tehran’s streets. About a mile away from Ahmadinejad’s press conference, young Iranians set trash bins, banks and tires on fire as riot police beat them back with batons.

“In Iran, the election was a real and free one. The election will improve the nation’s power and its future,” he told a packed room of Iranian and foreign media.

Several Iranian journalists who asked questions first congratulated Ahmadinejad for his victory. When asked about the allegations of voting irregularities, the hard-line president brushed the claims off, calling them unimportant.

“Some believed they would win, and then they got angry. It has no legal credibility. It is like the passions after a football match. It is not important from my point of view,” he said.

“The margin between my votes and the others is too much and no one can question it.”

Ahmadinejad also accused foreign media of launching a “psychological war” against the country.

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Week Ending June 7, 2009: DMB Chases The Stones

Dave Matthews Band’s Big Whiskey And The GrooGrux King enters The Billboard 200 at #1 with first-week sales of 424,000 copies. It’s the group’s fifth consecutive studio album to debut at #1 with first-week sales north of 400,000 units. This streak started with Before These Crowded Streets in May 1998 and has continued with Everyday, Busted Stuff, Stand Up and now Big Whiskey. Only four other groups have reached #1 with five or more consecutive studio albums. The Rolling Stones rang the bell with eight consecutive studio releases, from 1971’s Sticky Fingers to 1981’s Tattoo You. The Beatles scored with seven straight studio albums, from 1965’s Beatles ‘65 to 1969’s Abbey Road. Metallica has topped the chart with its last five studio albums, from 1991’s Metallica to last year’s Death Magnetic. The Kingston Trio also topped the chart with five straight studio albums, from 1958’s The Kingston Trio to 1960’s String Along.
Three other groups had five consecutive #1 albums, but they weren’t all regular studio releases. Chicago’s streak from 1972 to 1975 included the compilation Chicago IX-Chicago’s Greatest Hits. Paul McCartney & Wings’ volley from 1973 to 1977 included the live Wings Over America. U2’s run from 1987 to 1997 included the Rattle And Hum soundtrack. (While we’re at it, the Beatles followed Abbey Road with another #1 album, Let It Be, which I’m classifying as a soundtrack rather than a studio album. I know: picky, picky.)
Big Whiskey is dedicated to DMB founding member LeRoi Moore, the band’s sax player, who died Aug. 19 from complications stemming from an ATV accident in June. The album’s first-week tally of 424,000 copies is the third biggest opening so far in 2009, following Eminem’s Relapse, which bowed with 608,000 two weeks ago, and U2’s No Line On The Horizon, which opened with 484,000 in March. More than 134,000 copies of Big Whiskey were sold digitally, the second highest tally of 2009 (trailing only U2, which sold 155,000 digital copies in its first week).
In addition to the DMB releases, Matthews has released one studio album as a solo artist. 2003’s Some Devil debuted and peaked at #2, with first-week sales of 469,000.
The Comeback Trail: Whitney Houston’s first studio album in nearly seven years is due Sept. 1. Houston’s last studio album, Just Whitney…, debuted (and peaked) at #9 in December 2002. It has sold 737,000 copies to date, a disappointment by Houston’s standards. (Houston’s previous studio album, 1998’s My Love Is Your Love, has sold a healthier 2,753,000 copies.) The diva’s first two albums, Whitney Houston and Whitney, were both blockbusters. They logged a combined total of 25 weeks at #1. The Houston-dominated 1992 soundtrack to The Bodyguard has sold 11,807,000 copies, which makes it the fifth best-selling album of the Nielsen/SoundScan era (which began in 1991). Will the new album dominate the charts like prime Whitney or make a fleeting impression like Just Whitney…? That’s the million-dollar question.
Houston was just 21 when her debut album was released. She’ll be 46 by the time this album comes out. But that doesn’t mean it can’t or won’t happen. Tina Turner was also 46 in 1984 when she made her dramatic comeback with the #1 smash “What’s Love Got To Do With It.” Houston’s cousin Dionne Warwick was 45 in 1986 when she hit #1 with “That’s What Friends Are For” (which wasn’t really a comeback hit, but close enough). It’s a little strange to think that Houston is as old as those women were back then, but that’s what happens. So how will the album do? I think Whitney will get a shot, but the album will have to be great. “Pretty good” won’t be enough. Is that fair? To quote the title of a 1999 Houston hit, “It’s Not Right But It’s Okay.”

Nickelback’s Dark Horse tops the 2 million mark in U.S. sales this week. It’s the Canadian rock band’s fourth album in a row to top the 2 million sales mark. But it took considerably longer to get there than the band’s last three albums did. Dark Horse took 29 weeks to reach the 2 million mark. 2001’s Silver Side Up and 2005’s All The Right Reasons both rang the bell in 14 weeks. 2003’s The Long Road took 13 weeks.
Last week, Twilight became the first theatrical movie soundtrack to top the 2 million mark since 2003’s Chicago. Twilight has sold 2,037,000 copies. Chicago is up to 2,339,000. Twilight rebounds from #17 to #15 in its 31st week on The Billboard 200. The album has ranked in the top 20 for its entire run.
Black Eyed Peas’ “Boom Boom Pow” logs its 10th week at #1 on Hot Digital Songs. Only one other song has topped the chart this many times since the chart’s 2004 launch. “Low” by Flo Rida featuring T-Pain had 13 weeks on top. But “Boom Boom” has been out front from its first week. “Low” took five weeks to reach #1. “Boom Boom” sold 205,000 downloads this week, bringing its 10-week total to 2,586,000.
Song Scorecard: The All-American Rejects’ robust “Gives You Hell” tops the 3 million mark in paid downloads this week. The group’s current album, When The World Comes Down, has sold 422,000 copies.

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June 8-15: Glambert Comes Out, Glam-Rocker Bret Michaels Gets Knocked Out

Many would not even consider the news of American Idol runner-up Adam Lambert’s long-awaited/long-expected confirmation of his homosexuality to be “news” at all, since certain widely circulated, Bill O’Reilly-criticized leaked JPEGs of Adam smooching other boys in drag tipped the Internet-proficient public off to this somewhat obvious fact several months ago. But Adam’s provocative Rolling Stone interview–complete with that sexy, sooty-eyed “trouser snake” cover photo–nevertheless topped headlines this week. Say what you will about Adam, but this is one savvy star who knows how to keep people (from the most devoted Glamberts to his many equally passionate haters) talking.
Perhaps more surprising, and newsworthy, than Adam’s actual acknowledgment of the “pink elephant” in the room were his other expletive-riddled confessions in Rolling Stone–having to do with his drug dalliances, his wild European-travel escapades, his decision to audition for Idol while attending the psychedelic desert festival Burning Man, and even his past crush on Idol winner Kris Allen, among other shockers.
One might assume that Adam’s latter confession might make things a little uncomfortable when the two former Idol roommates and supposed BFFs, occasionally known as Kradam, bunk up together again on the Idols Live tour bus starting next month. But married, heterosexual, good-humored Kris took the news of Adam’s unrequited man-crush in his characteristically laid-back stride, telling People: “I’m flattered. And think it’s hilarious.” (As do we!)
Meanwhile, another glam-rock reality star, Bret Michaels, had his own shocker–deemed hilarious by many, actually–when his band Poison rocked out live at the Tony Awards. During a medley of performances that included Poison doing “Nothin’ But A Good Time” from the ’80s-metal musical Rock Of Ages, Bret was whacked on his bandanna-swathed head by a descending set piece, resulting in a busted lip, fractured nose, most certainly a very bruised ego. Before the Tonys broadcast was even over, the incident was the joke heard ’round the Web, with YouTube loops of the mishap being IM’d and Facebooked at lightning-quick speed, and even Tonys emcee Neil Patrick Harris quipped on-air that Bret “gave headbanging new meaning.”
Spokespeople for the Tony Awards were quick to report that Bret was unharmed, and even blamed Bret for the accident, saying he “missed his mark” and implying that he’d grandstanded onstage for too long. But Bret later denied this, saying on his website (which also featured somewhat disturbing, bloody photos of Bret’s facial injuries): “First, I thought, ‘what mark?’ as there was no official mark, just a retracting drum riser and an overhead prop being rapidly lowered which was out of my view.”
Bret’s publicist also expressed disdain over how Tonys officials reacted to the accident, somewhat justifiably stating: “I feel had this incident happened to [fellow Tony Awards performers] Liza Minnelli, Dolly Parton, or Elton John, the Tonys would have at least issued a letter of concern.”
However, in the end Bret, like much of America, was able to see the undeniable comedy here. He blogged, “I am trying to remain very positive and somewhat humorous about the whole situation,” and recalled the surreal post-accident backstage scene thusly: “Somebody handed me a towel to wipe the blood from my face and in my dazed state I recall staring at what seemed to be Shrek, a talking goat head, and several monkey-like creatures.” (Sounds like the cast of an ’80s Poison video, actually…)
In other gender-bending news, it was revealed this week in Us magazine that Cher’s out-and-proud lesbian daughter, Chastity Bono, is undergoing a sex change, transitioning from female to male, and will from now on be known as Chaz Bono. “Yes, it’s true–Chaz, after many years of consideration, has made the courageous decision to honor his true identity,” publicist Howard Bragman told Us. “He is proud of his decision and grateful for the support and respect that has already been shown by his loved ones. It is Chaz’s hope that his choice to transition will open the hearts and minds of the public regarding this issue, just as his ‘coming out’ did nearly 20 years ago. We ask that the media respect Chaz’s privacy during this long process, as he will not be doing any interviews at this time.”
Meanwhile, amid numerous tabloid reports that pop star/actress Lindsay Lohan had reconciled with her on/off lesbian lover, superstar deejay Samantha Ronson, L.Lo lashed out again TV medical guru Dr. Drew Pinsky of Loveline/Celebrity Rehab fame, responding to controversial comments Dr. Drew made during an interview with Parade. Dr. Drew had said, “I’m really convinced that something horrible is going to have to happen to [Lindsay] before she really gets over it and embraces sobriety. She needs to give it up. And it’s going to be a while before she does. I have this image that she’s going to lose a limb or something before she does. And it scares me.”
This apparently did not sit well with Lindsay, who spoke out as seemingly all un-self-censored celebs do nowadays: on her Twitter page. “I thought REAL doctors talked to patients in offices behind closed doors. Am I wrong?” she tweeted. “Hmmm I think not.” As of this writing, Dr. Drew has not directly tweeted back.
Meanwhile, Miley Cyrus and her onetime boyfriend, Justin Gaston, used their own Twitter feeds to publicly address their own recent breakup. Soon after her split from Justin, an underwear model and ex-Nashville Star contestant, the tween tweeted that she was at the movies with another famous ex-beau of hers, Nick Jonas of the Jonas Brothers. “I’m in a dark theater writing a song with nick j who is rockin a faded eggplant shirt! :)” she tweeted giddily.
Was she just trying to make Justin jealous? We’re not sure, but Justin’s own Twitter posts indicated he was taking the breakup way harder than Miley was. “How many tears are in there? They’ve gotta run out soon right?” Justin tweeted, adding a forlorn John Mayer lyric: “Do I have to fall asleep with roses in my hands?”
Oh, young love is so bittersweet. Or is that bittertweet?
And finally, while Miley and Nick’s new post-breakup duet, “Before The Storm,” circulated on the Internet (it’ll be featured on the JoBros’ new album, out next Tuesday), another new song created an even bigger stir this week: Jay-Z’s comeback single “Death Of Auto-Tune,” an open attack on all the computer-enhanced robot vocals currently dominating hip-hop music.
In the song, Hova complained that he’s had enough of the hip-hop scene’s current obsession with ringtones, and rhymed that current rap artists are “T-Pain’ing” too much on their singles. But apparently Auto-Tune king T-Pain didn’t take offense, as he good-naturedly paid Jay-Z a surprise onstage visit last Sunday, showing up unannounced while Jay-Z was performing “Death Of Auto-Tune” at Hot 97’s Summer Jam concert in New York.
And while that particular news item does not mark the death of That’s Really Week, it does mark the end of this particular entry. So come back next Friday for more headspinning headlines, and until then, goodnight and good music.

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