South Dakota capital braces for Missouri River flooding

Posted by DewRoc | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 29-05-2011-05-2008

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SALMON, Idaho |
Sat May 28, 2011 6:39pm EDT

SALMON, Idaho May 28 (Reuters) – Troops and residents in
Pierre, South Dakota scrambled on Saturday to build earthen
levees to protect the capital from Missouri River flood waters,
and the state’s governor warned of worse to come.

Rainstorms forecast over the Memorial Day weekend are
expected to swell the river and its tributaries to new highs,
adding to an already grim forecast for flooding across the U.S.
Northern Plains and Northern Rocky Mountains.

The regions are battling floods stemming from heavy rains,
record snow melt and water releases designed to ease pressure
on brimming dams and lessen the damage to communities
threatened by topped-out reservoirs.

Preparations for what may prove to be historic flooding of
the Missouri basin have been under way for days in South
Dakota, where cities like Pierre and Fort Pierre — which have
a combined population of around 15,000 people — are on the
river corridor.

South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard said that forecasts
by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers showed that flooding will
be more severe than anticipated as the agency is forced to
release more water.

“I know this bad news will be somewhat disheartening, but I
encourage South Dakotans to have heart,” he said from during a
news conference in Pierre.

With water submerging some roads in Fort Pierre on
Saturday, Daugaard stepped up the pace of efforts to protect
public infrastructure, including drinking water supplies,
sewage treatment plants, roads and utilities.

Daugaard urged residents of the state capital and
downstream communities to be self-reliant and to prepare to
evacuate. The governor said large-scale, multimillion-dollar
projects to raise roads and build new levees might not
withstand the expected flood waters.

He said he had activated more soldiers to add to the ranks
of state National Guard troops that arrived on Friday in Pierre
and Fort Pierre, where they are helping exhausted residents
fill sandbags.

Daugaard is the third governor in as many days to call up
National Guard soldiers because of high water in the Missouri
basin
.

Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer on Saturday sent National
Guard soldiers to the Crow Indian Reservation to deter hundreds
of displaced residents from attempting to return to their homes
in inundated areas considered to be dangerous.

On Friday, Wyoming Governor Matt Mead directed the Wyoming
National Guard and the state’s emergency management agency to
deploy teams to help counties facing floods.

In Idaho, Governor Butch Otter on Friday declared an
emergency from flooding as tributaries of the Columbia River
breached their banks in the eastern and northern parts of the
state.

North Dakota also is bracing for flooding from the
Missouri
.

High water in the Columbia and Missouri follows major
flooding of the Mississippi in the Midwest and South.

The Missouri is a major tributary to the Mississippi,
compounding flooding fears in the downstream states of Iowa,
Nebraska and Missouri.

(Editing by Tim Gaynor and Greg McCune)

© 2011 REUTERS (www.reuters.com)

Originally Published On: www.reuters.com – Original Article Here

The Oprah effect

Posted by DewRoc | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 27-05-2011-05-2008

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One of the most-watched programmes in US history, The Oprah Winfrey Show, is ending after 25 years. But the impact of its hostess goes far beyond television.

But some 4,560 episodes later, the likes of Madonna, Beyonce and Tom Hanks have been lining up to appear at her farewell show, which is broadcast on Wednesday.

Winfrey's largest television audience came when she interviewed Michael Jackson at the height of his fame.

American stand-up comedian, television host and actress Ellen DeGeneres came out publicly as a lesbian in an appearance on the show.

As well as underlining Winfrey's reputation as confidante-in-chief, it also relaunched the career of DeGeneres, who went on to host her own chatshow.

Winfrey's inspiration to other women has been much debated.

"She is feminist in that she has made her own empire and her example has caused other women to do the same," says Greer.

"She is clearly a force of nature, very intelligent and savvy and has done some good. Everyone wishes her well, and so do I.

"But she has levelled the public discourse to the level of soap opera in which there is ultimately nothing but good and evil."

Despite her admissions about weight and abuse, and her ability to get others like DeGeneres to open up, it is surprising how little we know about Winfrey herself, says Greer.

"Everybody close to her is locked down. Omerta. She is the one public figure in America that we know everything about and nothing. Quite a feat in the land of free speech."

All 276 members of the studio audience went home with a Pontiac car, complete with heated leather seats, worth $28,400 (£17,200).

It was a huge deal, says AOL television critic Maureen Ryan, formerly of the Chicago Tribune, because it marked the start of Winfrey's fairy godmother period, showering her audience and guests with gifts.

The show had already evolved into one marked by a New Age spirituality, she says, but this took it in a more materialistic direction.

In post-Katrina New Orleans, this altruism was an obvious force for good, as Winfrey seemed to be able to do more than the authorities in helping those in need, says Ryan. But the constant gift-giving became a bit of a turn-off.

"You would tune into Oprah's Favorite Things [the annual product giveaway] and the hysteria was like the Beatles at Shea Stadium, because people were going to get all these free things from Oprah."

Maybe the most memorable Oprah moment was Tom Cruise in a fit of giggles, jumping up and down on her sofa as he proclaimed his love for new girlfriend, Katie Holmes, now his wife.

His antics have since been mocked, dissected and parodied. This is the moment that defines his career, ahead of Top Gun, Cocktail or Mission: Impossible, says Teeman.

"Oprah looked absolutely terrified, thinking 'What is he doing?' His career did plummet for a while but he has come back."

Celebrities go on Oprah to expel a demon or make a confession of love, he says, and they know she won't give them a hard time because it's a love-in.

"It should have been an open goal for Tom Cruise but it became a train wreck."

One of Winfrey's most profound influences has been in the world of publishing, with her book club credited with making millions for authors whose books appear in it.

Nowhere was her power more brutally wielded than in the case of James Frey. His gritty memoir A Million Little Pieces, which told the story of his recovery from drug addiction, became a bestseller after featuring on her show.

But in 2006, after doubts were cast on how faithful Frey had been to events in his own life, Winfrey invited the author back for questioning, which led to a fiery exchange and Frey's public dressing down.

Despite Winfrey recently expressing some regret about how she handled it, the lesson here is not to cross her, says Teeman. Her show is all about goodwill, and the price for betraying that trust is humiliation.

Winfrey's Leadership Academy, near Johannesburg, was opened in 2007 at a cost of $40m (£25m).

She had pledged to build the academy after meeting former South African President Nelson Mandela in 2002. Winfrey personally interviewed many of the South African girls from low-income families who applied for the initial 150 places at the school.

Last year, the former matron of the school was cleared on charges of abusing girls there.

Winfrey expressed her disappointment at the verdict but said she was proud of the girls for having the courage to testify.

Her philanthropy is famed, and her Oprah Winfrey Foundation has donated millions of dollars to projects in the US and abroad, while her public charity Oprah's Angels has raised about $80m (£50m).

At a rally in Iowa in 2007, Oprah Winfrey gave her support to Barack Obama who at the time was vying for the Democratic presidential nomination with Hillary Clinton.

Winfrey's backing was viewed as highly significant in a closely fought contest because of the huge influence she wields. But her choice was questioned.

"When she backed Obama for president her audience, which is middle-aged white women, supported Hillary Clinton and so she found a lot of push-back by people who thought she was choosing her race ahead of her gender," says Eric Deggans, TV critic of the Petersburg Times in Florida.

Her immense popularity in the black community took a knock when she condemned rap music for its misogynistic lyrics.

She has always walked that tightrope of being authentically black but not so much to turn off the mainstream audience, says Deggans.

But Winfrey has showed, in the same way as Bill Cosby did before her and Barack Obama afterwards, what is possible for an African-American.

"By reaching such heights in television, Oprah has shown you can become an iconic figure as a black person.

"She became a voice for middle-aged white women in a way that no-one else has, and for black people to see an African-American accepted so wholeheartedly is very important."

The recording of one of Oprah Winfrey's final shows at the United Center in Chicago became a night filled with tears, appreciation and A-list celebrities such as Tom Cruise, Will Smith and Madonna.

"A clear part of her appeal has always been someone who collects star friends," says Deggans.

"The thing about Oprah that's really interesting is that she has been able to create this brand that is an embodiment of many contradictions.

"She's your down-to-earth friend whose pals are Julia Roberts and Tom Cruise. She's the spiritual leader who is a workaholic and does an episode a year about all the expensive stuff she loves.

"She's a spiritual leader who doesn't choose a specific church. She's a woman who stands up for motherhood and family values but doesn't have kids."

These contradictions appeal to women, he says. "They appreciate the fact they can turn on Oprah and see someone who seems like their best friend but gives them access to this amazing world."

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here

BBC criticised over star salaries

Posted by DewRoc | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 26-05-2011-05-2008

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The BBC is dragging its heels on the issue of disclosing star salaries, a new parliamentary report has claimed.

The Culture, Media and Sport Committee said it was "disappointed that banded information on talent salaries is still not in the public domain".

Its report is also critical of how the licence fee settlement was agreed last year, saying the BBC and the government had had a "short, private negotiation".

In response, the BBC Trust said it did not underestimate the challenges ahead.

The committee's findings form part of a wide-ranging report into the BBC that coincides with the new chairman of the Trust, Lord Patten, taking up his post.

The report says the former cabinet minister, EU commissioner and governor of Hong Kong "has got a lot to get to grips with".

The committee said it was "essential" that arrangements be made for the National Audit Office (NAO) to make an independent assessment of how the BBC spends licence fee money.

It is also highly critical of the decision to hire executive Guy Bradshaw from the US to oversee its move to its new northern HQ at Salford Quays, near Manchester.

"The decision – particularly regrettable in the current climate – to appoint a change manager who had to commute from the United States cannot be dismissed as an inconsequential gaffe," it said.

The appointment, it states, opened the BBC up to "self-inflicted and predictable ridicule".

The BBC has defended the appointment saying it was "satisfied that Guy Bradshaw was fulfilling his duties as migration manager" and that "he continues to be an essential member of the team as the move to Salford Quays begins".

Other issues of concern include whether S4C, the Welsh language channel, will be able to retain its independence after the BBC agreed to fund it out of the licence fee.

It was "extraordinary", the committee went on, that "the government and the BBC should agree such wide-ranging changes without consultation or giving S4C any notice or say at all".

In its response, the BBC Trust said its "new financial reality" would involve "tough choices" and that it would "consult the public before any final decisions are taken".

Regarding the issue of star salaries, the Trust said it "is committed to greater transparency in the pay of the BBC's top talent, on and off screen".

It added that in January "we agreed plans to publish the BBC's talent spend in the CMS Select Committee's anonymous bands in the forthcoming annual report".

Last year's settlement secured the licence funding until 2017 but involved the BBC taking on a number of extra financial burdens, including fully funding the World Service.

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here