Friday, November 24, 2006

Company Recalls Turkey and Ham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An Ohio-based company is recalling 46,941 pounds of turkey and ham products that officials fear could cause listeriosis, a potentially fatal disease, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said on Friday.

HoneyBaked Foods Inc. is voluntarily recalling the meat, which includes cooked, glazed and sliced ham and turkey, USDA said in a statement.

The meat, which was produced between September 5 and November 13, may be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, which can bring about high fever, headaches, neck stiffness and nausea, USDA said.

Healthy individuals are not usually susceptible to the illness, but it can cause infections to infants, the elderly, or people with HIV or cancer. It can also cause miscarriages.

The meat was sold at the company's retail stores and kiosks around Toledo, Ohio, and to customers across the country over the Internet and through the company's catalog.

USDA said it considered the situation a high risk to human health, but it has not received any reports so far of illness related to the meat products.

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Yikes, just what I needed to hear after all I ate yesterday! Just don't buy their brand, I always say. However, it seems we have had a real rash of tainted food in the last few months. A whole lot of tainted food. Maybe I should just not eat? Or maybe just not go shopping? It;s Black Friday, folks. Get out your plastic and consume mass quantities.




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Thursday, November 23, 2006

Hollywood Celebrities Serve Meals To The Homeless

Celebrities Serve Meals to L.A. Homeless


LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Spartacus" star Kirk Douglas, who turns 90 next month, joined volunteers on Thanksgiving eve to dish up turkey feasts to thousands of street denizens outside the Los Angeles Mission.

Tony Danza, Minnie Driver, Kevin Nealon, Sally Kirkland, Jason Ritter, Judy Tenuta and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa were among those on hand Wednesday to help Douglas and his wife, Anne, deliver holiday cheer to the homeless and the less fortunate.

"I'm in the position of such fortune in my life, and as far as I can see, it's not very many steps away from being homeless," Driver said as she helped dish out food.

Turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, cranberry sauce, rolls and pumpkin pie were on the menu for the four-hour 5th Street event held in the heart of downtown's Skid Row. More than 3,000 people were expected to be served.

The Los Angeles Mission Community Clinic also provided foot care and medical exams.

"It's a wonderful party," said Mission President Herbert Smith.

At the nearby Fred Jordan Mission, volunteers were expected to serve about 2,000 Thanksgiving meals to the homeless.

The Los Angeles Mission is home to the Anne Douglas Center for Women, which was created more than a decade ago. In June, the Douglases were on hand when 10 computers were donated to the center. City National Bank, Nestle and mission staff contributed to the purchase.

The computers are used by former homeless women for job training.

"It's a pleasure to have them here," Smith said of Kirk and Anne Douglas. "They have been wonderful supporters of the mission for years."

The Los Angeles Mission has served Skid Row for more than a half-century, providing emergency services such as shelter, food, clothing and medical services. The mission also offers long-term residential rehabilitation programs, including job training, placement and counseling.

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Thank you fellas. I needed something like this to restore my faith in my fellow human beings. Happy Thanksgiving, all.

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Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Thanksgiving Travelers



WASHINGTON - Today is the day when the Thanksgiving holiday travel begins in earnest. AAA says 38.3 million Americans will travel at least 50 miles from home, an increase of nearly three percent from last year.


And despite increasing prices for hotel rooms, rental cars and airfares, AAA expects airports and highways will be busier than ever.

Nearly 32 million travelers will be on the roads. They'll pay an average of $2.23 for a gallon of gas, about nine cents cheaper than a year ago.

AAA expects nearly five million people to travel by airplane, and almost two million by train, bus or another mode of transportation
____________________________

Wherever you go, however you get there, BE CAREFUL. You are someone's loved one and we don't want anything to happen to you. Have a warm and loving Thanksgiving with lots of good things to eat and all of your loved ones right there with you. Let there be the beginnings of peace throughout our troubled world. Let greed be put aside for love of one's fellow human beings. Just for once let us think of others before we think of ourselves. Be at peace with all who have wronged us and with those whom we have wronged. Be thankful for our lives as they are; as we have caused them to be. Have care that we do not deny ourselves the wonder of the love of our own existence; the curiosity of who we are and how we got here. The joy of life's movement.

Happy Thanksgiving
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Por todas partes donde van, no obstante hay, TENGAN CUIDADO.
Son algún uno les gustó uno y no queremos llegar nada ustedes. Tenga
un calor y a el Thanksgiving afectuoso con un buen número de buenas
cosas que deben comerse y todo el vuestro le gustaron los bien allí
con ustedes. Dejado haya los principios de la paz en todo nuestro
mundo preocupado. Deje la avaricia dejarse de lado para el amor de sus
seres humanos de camarada. Exactamente para una vez dejan piensan
otros antes de que pensáramos a nosotros mismos. Esté a la paz con
todos lo que los hicieron de la culpa y con los que hicimos la culpa.
Esté agradecido durante nuestras vidas ya que son; como los hicimos
ser. Tenga un cuidado que nosotros mismos no rechazamos a la maravilla
del amor de nuestra propia existencia; la curiosidad de quien somos y
cómo obtuvimos aquí. La alegría del movimiento de la vida.

Thanksgiving feliz

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Partout où vous allez, toutefois vous y arrivez, FASSE ATTENTION.
Vous êtes quelqu'un avez aimé un et nous ne voulons rien arriver à
vous. Ayez un chaud et le Thanksgiving affectueux avec un bon nombre de
bonnes choses à manger et tout le votre a aimé ceux bien là avec
vous. Laissé il y ait les commencements de la paix dans tout notre
monde préoccupé. Laissez l'avarice être mis de côté pour l'amour
de ses êtres humains de camarade. Juste pour une fois laissez-nous
pensent à d'autres avant que nous pensions à nous-mêmes. Soyez à
la paix avec tous ce qui nous ont faits du tort et avec ceux que nous
avons faits du tort. Soyez reconnaissant pendant nos vies car ils sont
; comme nous les avons faits être. Ayez un soin que nous ne refusons
pas nous-mêmes à la merveille de l'amour de notre propre existence ;
la curiosité de qui nous sommes et comment nous avons obtenu ici. La
joie du mouvement de la vie.

Thanksgiving heureux

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Wohin Sie gehen, gleichwohl Sie dort erhalten, GEBEN acht. Sie sind
jemand liebten ein und wir wünschen nicht nichts, Ihnen zu geschehen.
Haben Sie ein warmes und liebendes Thanksgiving mit Losen guten Sachen
zum zu essen und den ganzen Ihr liebte eine nach rechts dort mit
Ihnen. Gelassen gibt es die Anfänge des Friedens während unserer
gestörten Welt. Lassen Sie Habsucht für Liebe irgendjemandes
Mitmenschen beiseite gesetzt werden. Gerade für einmal lassen Sie uns
denken an andere, bevor wir an uns selbst denken. Seien Sie am Frieden
mit allen, die uns geschadet haben und mit denen, denen wir geschadet
haben. Seien Sie für unsere Leben dankbar, da sie sind; wie wir sie
veranlassen haben zu sein. Haben Sie Obacht, die nicht wir selbst dem
Wunder der Liebe unseres eigenen Bestehens verweigern; die Neugier von
wem wir sind und wie wir hier erhielten. Die Freude an der Bewegung
des Lebens.

Glückliches Thanksgiving
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Kie ajn vi iras, tamen vi alven, ESTI ZORGEMA. Vi estas ies amato kaj ni ne dezir io al fariĝ al vi. Havas varmetan kaj am Dankado kun multaj bonaj aferoj manĝi kaj la tutaj viaj amatoj prav tie kun vi. Las tie esti la komencaĵoj de paco tra la tuta nia ĝenata mondo. Las avareco esti flankenmet por amo al onies samrangulo homoj. ĉifoje se ne plu ni ..u pripensas aliulojn antaŭ nin pripensas nin. Esti paca kun ĉiuj kiuj(n) havas ofenditan nin kaj kun tiuj, kiujn ni havas ofenditan. Esti danka por niaj vivoj kiel ili estas; kiel ni havas kaŭz ili esti. Havas prizorgon ke ni ne malhavigi (al) ni la scivol de la amo la propra ekzisto; la scivoleco de kiuj(n) ni estas kaj kiel ni akiris tie ĉi. La ĝojo de viva movado.

Feliĉa Dankado

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Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Film Director Robert Altman Dead At 81



LOS ANGELES (AP) - Robert Altman, the caustic and irreverent satirist behind "M*A*S*H," "Nashville" and "The Player" who made a career out of bucking Hollywood, has died at 81. The director died Monday night at a Los Angeles Hospital, Joshua Astrachan, a producer at Altman's Sandcastle 5 Productions in New York City, told The Associated Press.

The cause of death wasn't disclosed. A news release was expected later in the day, Astrachan said.

A five-time Academy Award nominee for best director, most recently for 2001's "Gosford Park," he finally won a lifetime achievement Oscar in 2006.

"No other filmmaker has gotten a better shake than I have," Altman said while accepting the award. "I'm very fortunate in my career. I've never had to direct a film I didn't choose or develop. My love for filmmaking has given me an entree to the world and to the human condition."

Garrison Keillor, who starred in Altman's last movie - this year's "A Prairie Home Companion" - said Tuesday that Altman's love of film clearly came through on the set.

"Mr. Altman loved making movies. He loved the chaos of shooting and the sociability of the crew and actors - he adored actors - and he loved the editing room and he especially loved sitting in a screening room and watching the thing over and over with other people," Keillor said in a statement to The Associated Press. "He didn't care for the money end of things, he didn't mind doing publicity, but when he was working he was in heaven."

Elliot Gould, who starred in "M-A-S-H," said Altman's legacy would "nuture and inspire filmmakers and artists for generations to come."

"He was the last great American director in the tradition of John Ford," Gould said. "He was my friend and I'll always be grateful to him for the experience and opportunities he gave me."

Altman had one of the most distinctive styles among modern filmmakers. He often employed huge ensemble casts, encouraged improvisation and overlapping dialogue and filmed scenes in long tracking shots that would flit from character to character.

Perpetually in and out of favor with audiences and critics, Altman worked ceaselessly since his anti-war black comedy "M-A-S-H" established his reputation in 1970, but he would go for years at a time directing obscure movies before roaring back with a hit.

After a string of commercial duds including "The Gingerbread Man" in 1998, "Cookie's Fortune" in 1999 and "Dr. T & the Women" in 2000, Altman took his all-American cynicism to Britain for 2001's "Gosford Park."

A combination murder-mystery and class-war satire set among snobbish socialites and their servants on an English estate in the 1930s, "Gosford Park" was Altman's biggest box-office success since "M-A-S-H."

Besides best-director, "Gosford Park" earned six other Oscar nominations, including best picture and best supporting actress for both Helen Mirren and Maggie Smith. It won the original-screenplay Oscar, and Altman took the best-director prize at the Golden Globes for "Gosford Park."

Altman's other best-director Oscar nominations came for "M-A-S-H," the country music saga "Nashville" from 1975, the movie-business satire "The Player" from 1992 and the ensemble character study "Short Cuts" from 1993. He also earned a best-picture nomination as producer of "Nashville."

No director ever got more best-director nominations without winning a regular Oscar, though four other men - Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Clarence Brown and King Vidor - tied with Altman at five.

In May, Altman brought out "A Prairie Home Companion," with Keillor starring as the announcer of a folksy musical show - with the same name as Keillor's own long-running show - about to be shut down by new owners. Among those in the cast were Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin, Kevin Kline, Woody Harrelson and Tommy Lee Jones.

"This film is about death," Altman said at a May 3 news conference in St. Paul, Minn., also attended by Keillor and many of the movie's stars.

He often took on Hollywood genres with a revisionist's eye, de-romanticizing the Western hero in 1971's "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" and 1976's "Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson," the film-noir gumshoe in 1973's "The Long Goodbye" and outlaw gangsters in "Thieves Like Us."

"M-A-S-H" was Altman's first big success after years of directing television, commercials, industrial films and generally unremarkable feature films. The film starring Donald Sutherland and Gould was set during the Korean War but was Altman's thinly veiled attack on U.S. involvement in Vietnam.

"That was my intention entirely. If you look at that film, there's no mention of what war it is," Altman said in an Associated Press interview in 2001, adding that the studio made him put a disclaimer at the beginning to identify the setting as Korea.

"Our mandate was bad taste. If anybody had a joke in the worst taste, it had a better chance of getting into the film, because nothing was in worse taste than that war itself," Altman said.

The film spawned the long-running TV sitcom starring Alan Alda, a show Altman would refer to with distaste as "that series." Unlike the social message of the film, the series was prompted by greed, Altman said.

"They made millions and millions of dollars by bringing an Asian war into Americans' homes every Sunday night," Altman said in 2001. "I thought that was the worst taste."

Altman never minced words about reproaching Hollywood. After the Sept. 11 attacks, he said Hollywood served as a source of inspiration for the terrorists by making violent action movies that amounted to training films for such attacks.

"Nobody would have thought to commit an atrocity like that unless they'd seen it in a movie," Altman said.

Altman was written off repeatedly by the Hollywood establishment, and his reputation for arrogance and hard drinking - a habit he eventually gave up - hindered his efforts to raise money for his idiosyncratic films.

While critical of studio executives, Altman held actors in the highest esteem. He joked that on "Gosford Park," he was there mainly to turn the lights on and off for the performers.

The respect was mutual. Top-name actors would clamor for even bit parts in his films. Altman generally worked on shoestring budgets, yet he continually landed marquee performers who signed on for a fraction of their normal salaries.

After the mid-1970s, the quality of Altman's films became increasingly erratic. His 1980 musical "Popeye," with Robin Williams, was trashed by critics, and Altman took some time off from film.

He directed the Broadway production of "Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean," following it with a movie adaptation in 1982. Altman went back and forth from TV to theatrical films over the next decade, but even when his films earned critical praise, such as 1990's "Vincent & Theo," they remained largely unseen.

"The Player" and "Short Cuts" re-established Altman's reputation and commercial viability. But other 1990s films - including his fashion-industry farce "Ready to Wear" and "Kansas City," his reverie on the 1930s jazz and gangster scene of his hometown - fell flat.

Born Feb. 20, 1925, Altman hung out in his teen years at the jazz clubs of Kansas City, Mo., where his father was an insurance salesman.

Altman was a bomber pilot in World War II and studied engineering at the University of Missouri in Columbia before taking a job making industrial films in Kansas City. He moved into feature films with "The Delinquents" in 1957, then worked largely in television through the mid-1960s, directing episodes of such series as "Bonanza" and "Alfred Hitchcock Presents."

Altman and his wife, Kathryn, had two sons, Robert and Matthew, and he had a daughter, Christine, and two other sons, Michael and Stephen, from two previous marriages.

When he received his honorary Oscar in 2006, Altman revealed he had a heart transplant a decade earlier.

"I didn't make a big secret out of it, but I thought nobody would hire me again," he said after the ceremony. "You know, there's such a stigma about heart transplants, and there's a lot of us out there."

___
An era has passed. Robert Altman is quite possibly the greatest and most successful film director of our time. How many Hollywood stars owe their twinkle to Mr Altman? Countless. Ask Alan Alda, for instance. Without the M*A*S*H TV series, Alda would not be the prominent Holloywood fixture he now is. A very large chunk of Americana has died and there is no one to replace him.

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Monday, November 20, 2006

Michael "Kramer" Richards Makes Racial Slur in Comedy Club Act




LOS ANGELES - Michael Richards said Monday he spewed racial epithets during a stand-up comedy routine because he lost his cool while being heckled and not because he’s a bigot.

“For me to be at a comedy club and flip out and say this crap, I’m deeply, deeply sorry,” the former “Seinfeld” co-star said during a satellite appearance for David Letterman’s “Late Show.”

“I’m not a racist. That’s what’s so insane about this,” Richards said, his tone becoming angry and frustrated as he defended himself. A clip from the show played on CBS before “Late Show” aired Monday night.

Richards described himself as going into “a rage” over the two audience members who interrupted his act Friday at the Laugh Factory in West Hollywood. Richards responded to the black hecklers with repeated use of the “n word” and profanities.

Jerry Seinfeld, who had issued a statement saying he was “sick over this horrible, horrible mistake” and calling it offensive, was scheduled as a Letterman guest Monday. He encouraged Richards to make a satellite appearance to talk about the incident, a CBS publicist said.

Richards, 57, who played Seinfeld’s eccentric neighbor Kramer on the hit 1989-98 sitcom and whose major credit since was a failed 2000 comedy, hadn’t spoken publicly about his remarks before “Late Show.” Calls to his representatives were not returned Monday.

His on-stage remarks were condemned by industry colleagues.

Comedian Paul Rodriguez, who was at the Laugh Factory during Richards’ performance, said he was shocked.

“Once the word comes out of your mouth and you don’t happen to be African-American, then you have a whole lot of explaining,” Rodriguez told CNN. “Freedom of speech has its limitations and I think Michael Richards found those limitations.”

Shocking remarks
His Laugh Factory tirade began after the two clubgoers shouted at him that he wasn’t funny. A videotape of the incident was posted on TMZ.com.

Richards retorted: “Shut up! Fifty years ago we’d have you upside down with a f------ fork up your a--.”

He then paced across the stage taunting the men for interrupting his show, peppering his speech with racial slurs and profanities.

“You can talk, you can talk, you’re brave now mother------. Throw his a-- out. He’s a n-----!” Richards shouts before repeating the racial epithet over and over again.

Moderating his tone at one point, Richards tells the audience, “It shocks you, it shocks you” and refers to “what lays buried.”

While there is some chuckling in the audience throughout the outburst, someone can be heard gasping “Oh my God” and people respond with “ooh” after Richards uses the n-word.

Eventually someone calls out: “It’s not funny. That’s why you’re a reject, never had no shows, never had no movies. ‘Seinfeld,’ that’s it.”

On Monday, about a half-dozen community activists gathered at the club to denounce Richards’ remarks and demand an apology.

“These kind of comments hurt all of us,” said protester Lita Sister Herron of the Youth Advocacy Coalition. She called Richards’ comments hate speech.

Club owner expresses remorse
The protesters also demanded an apology from the Laugh Factory. At a news conference a short time later, club owner Jamie Masada expressed remorse and said Richards will not be back at the club until he says he’s sorry.

“This is one thing we don’t tolerate. ... I personally apologize. I apologize from my heart,” Masada said Monday.

Richards did appear at the club Saturday, without incident, but that was because he had told the club he intended to apologize, according to a Laugh Factory statement Monday.

Rodriguez, also at the news conference, said: “I kept expecting a punch line. It didn’t come.”

Veteran publicist Michael Levine, whose clients have included comedians George Carlin, Sam Kinison and Rodney Dangerfield, called Richards’ remarks inexcusable. Comics often face hecklers without losing their cool, he said.

“It’s never seen anything like this is my life,” Levine said Monday. “I think it’s a career ruiner for him. ... It’s going to be a long road back for him, if at all.”

Daryl Pitts, a Laugh Factory audience member interviewed by CNN, compared the incident to another recent celebrity controversy.

“You think about Mel Gibson and what he said, and put that in the context of this, it’s very upsetting,” Pitts said, referring to Gibson’s anti-Semitic outburst during his arrest for drunken driving.

Scrutiny of Richards’ remarks likely will continue but won’t match the level prompted by Gibson’s behavior because Richards is far less famous, Levine said.

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Just what am I supposed to say? Michael Richards really let loose with the "Mel Gibsonisms", didn't he? I find racism appalling and as I have boycotted all of Mel Gibson's movies and refused to buy or rent any of his DVDs for the very same reason, (Gibson's a self-confessed BIGOT). All I have to say is I will not go to any of his shows again and I will not watch any movie, TV show, or otherwise unless he apologizes publicly to his fans. No more "Seinfeld" reruns for me until he does. If you'd like to see a video clip of just what Richards said, click on the Title of this blog and it will take you to the MSNBC site where you can view and judge for yourself. Michael, Michael, what were you thinking?

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Good Guys DO Finish First in NASCAR

Jimmie Johnson Wins NASCAR's NEXTEL CUP



HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) -- Jimmie Johnson's California cool turned to euphoria when he won the Daytona 500. At Indianapolis, his emotions were overwhelmed again after a win he never expected.

Still, Johnson had won races before.

A first NASCAR championship? For the driver who had everything but, nothing could have come as a bigger relief.

"It's going to take a little bit of time for this to soak in, just to think what this team has accomplished and the year we've had," Johnson said. "Being a champion, it's the only thing I ever wanted to be."

He finally got his wish Sunday, wrapping up an overdue Nextel Cup title with his ninth-place finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway. It sealed his championship by 56 points over Matt Kenseth, who finished the race ahead of Johnson, in sixth.

Greg Biffle won the Ford 400 for the third straight season, beating rookies Martin Truex Jr. and Denny Hamlin to the finish line. Kasey Kahne was fourth and Kevin Harvick rounded out the top five.

Juan Pablo Montoya, making the first Nextel Cup start of his budding NASCAR career, ran as high as 13th, but his race ended in a fiery wreck 16 laps from the finish.

When this Chase got rolling 10 weeks ago, few thought Johnson would win it. The most dominant driver of the regular season had wrecked out of the first Chase race, dropped to ninth in the standings and knew he'd need a furious rally.

"I think we knew in our hearts we could do it all along, we just got into some bad luck at the beginning," Johnson said. "That's what let us get the momentum, let us sleep well at night, is because we knew this team was capable of winning a championship. We just had to have some good luck."

But even with a little luck, it still looked bleak: He was 165 points out after the third Chase race.

That's when Johnson and his Hendrick Motorsports crew turned it up a notch, reeling off five straight wins of second or better. It moved them back on top of the leaderboard -- where they spent 22 of 26 weeks of the regular season -- and sent them into Homestead poised to win the title.

He didn't need to be perfect to do it, either. To lock this one up, Johnson needed only to finish 12th or better.

Sounds easy enough. But in typical Johnson fashion, it was anything but.

Flying debris ripped a hole in the grill of the No. 48 Chevrolet a mere 15 laps into the race, then his team couldn't find the tape to patch it. He almost pulled out of his pit with a loose lug nut, but crew chief Chad Knaus noticed it and frantically stopped Johnson from pulling away.

Then he had to avoid Robby Gordon's spinning car.

"We've been ducking them all day," Knaus sighed after Johnson scooted past Gordon.

But on Sunday, the little things that sunk Johnson in the past turned out to be mere annoyances. Johnson was twice a championship runner-up, and a cut tire caused him to fall to fifth in last season's bid.

"I knew we had a good team. I knew we'd be able to do things right. But you just can't control the outside variables," Johnson said. "Today I was around three or four wrecks and had a piece of debris go through the front of the race car, which we had to fix on pit road.

"There was a lot of crazy stuff going on, and luckily we missed all those problems."

The race was delayed nearly eight minutes to clean the track after Montoya's wreck, briefly postponing Johnson's long-awaited celebration. But with the title right in front of him, he wasn't too worried -- he'd worked all that out of his system long before the race even began.

"Once I fired the car off, I was in my element and my place to be, and things really mellowed out for me," Johnson said. "My mind really played games with me in the hours leading up to the race."

How he stayed calm -- considering all his issues -- is a mystery.

When caution came out with 62 laps to go, Knaus wanted to change all four tires and stretch it to the end. But Johnson wasn't convinced, and demanded his crew copy whatever Kenseth did.

With his spotter keeping a close eye on Kenseth, who took only two tires, Knaus quickly adjusted and ordered the same service. It put Johnson in ninth place on the restart with 58 laps to go, but a stack of traffic behind him on four fresh tires.

"Drive it like you stole it, homie," Knaus encouraged him.

Johnson held his position, then copied Kenseth again on a final round of pit stops. Kenseth was in fifth and Johnson was in sixth on the re-start with 16 laps to go, and it would take only a catastrophe at that point to deny Johnson the title.

But two late cautions -- Montoya's wreck, followed by good buddy Casey Mears blowing an engine -- again prolonged the celebration.

Finally, the race was restarted for a two-lap shootout to the end.

"It was such a long day to get here," he said in Victory Lane. "There were times when we were down and out, and in the back, and had to come back through. This just means the world to me, it's the most amazing day of my life."

Jeff Gordon, the four-time series champion who befriended Johnson and convinced car owner Rick Hendrick to give his new protege a ride, celebrated on the cool-down lap by bumping into the side of Johnson's car.

"I don't like to take much of the credit because Jimmie is a heck of a race car driver," Gordon said. "Somebody was going to pick him up, and I'm just really thankful that the opportunity presented itself to us. I think he'll be one of the best champions we've ever had because he cares so much about it."

Knaus received a celebratory hug from Hendrick, who won his sixth championship as a car owner, and another from Ray Evernham, the championship crew chief turned rival car owner who taught Knaus much of what he knows.

"This team has really come into its own over the last year," Knaus said. "I just couldn't be prouder. We had to battle back from a lot of weird stuff this year, and they held strong."

It started with the season-opening Daytona 500, when Knaus was caught cheating in race preparations. He was sent home and forced to watch Johnson win the biggest race of the season on TV. And he was still at home, finishing up his four-race suspension, when Johnson scored his dramatic win in Las Vegas.

They finally reunited in late March, but needed five more races to make it to Victory Lane together. They did it in Talladega, conquering a track that had tormented Johnson throughout his career and threatened to tarnish his squeaky-clean image with a series of Johnson-caused accidents.

Then they won at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in August, giving Johnson same-season victories at NASCAR's two historic venues. It automatically made Johnson the favorite to win the title: Five of the past eight Brickyard champions parlayed their wins into a championship.

Now it's six of nine.

Hamlin finished third in the final Chase standings and was followed by Harvick and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Gordon was sixth, Jeff Burton was seventh and Kahne, Mark Martin and Kyle Busch completed the Chase field.

Reigning champion Tony Stewart, who failed to make the Chase but won three of its races, finished 15th Sunday and finished 11th in the standings to earn the $1 million payout.

Johnson earned $6.2 million in race winnings, but his payday doesn't end there -- the final prize money is announced Dec. 1 at NASCAR's end-of-year banquet in New York City. Last year, Stewart totaled more than $13 million for his title.

______________________________

And who, exactly, ever said that good guys don't finish first? Jimmie Johnson is my personal idol in NASCAR. It's so good to see a guy who is so patient with his fans and who really, really deserves this title actually win. Jimmie is a Californian and a super nice guy. Congratulations, Jimmie on a job well done and a championship title more than deserved. Hope Jimmie is back on Letterman soon.

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Sunday, November 19, 2006

Tom And Katie Exchange Vows In Italy

Cruise, Holmes Exchange Vows in Italy

Published: 11/19/06, 1:05 AM EDT
By MARIA SANMINIATELLI




BRACCIANO, Italy (AP) - Officially, they got married in Los Angeles, but the spectacle of the wedding between Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes was here, in a 15th-century castle that evoked fairy tales and lit up with red, white and green fireworks for a cheering, celebrity-laden crowd.

There were fireworks inside, too, a "never-ending kiss" between the betrothed after they exchanged vows Saturday. The kiss lasted so long it caused guests to shout "stop, stop!" said Giorgio Armani, who attended the wedding and designed the outfits of the bride, the groom and their baby, Suri.

The ceremony was a lavish apex to perhaps the celebrity world's most closely watched relationship, proclaimed with Cruise's leap on Oprah Winfrey's couch, bestowed with the nickname "TomKat" and raised to a new level seven months ago when Holmes gave birth to their daughter.

The evening wedding was performed by a Scientology minister in front of more than 150 relatives and friends, the couple's publicists said.

Oil-fed torches and tiny candles flickered from the battlements and windows of the Odescalchi castle in this lakeside town as the couple and guests gathered for the ceremony in the town about 45 kilometers (27 miles) northwest of Rome. Suri, dressed in white, arrived in her mother's arms.

The wedding party included Cruise's two children, Isabella and Connor, from the superstar actor's previous marriage to Nicole Kidman, the publicists said in a statement. The best man was Cruise's best friend David Miscavige and the matron of honor was Holmes' sister Nancy Blaylock.

Holmes wore a black dress and boots before she changed into Armani's off-the-shoulder ivory silk gown. Her father, Martin Holmes, walked her down the aisle and she carried a bouquet of flowers made by Armani including calla lilies.

Cruise, who sported dark shades and waved to fans as he rode through the castle gates in a van, wore a single breasted navy blue Armani handmade suit for the wedding, with an ivory silk French collar shirt of the same fabric as the bride's gown.

Armani told The Associated Pre

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Kate Hudson and Chris Robinson File For Divorce

Chris Robinson to Divorce Kate Hudson

Published: 11/18/06, 1:25 AM E



LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rocker Chris Robinson filed for divorce from Kate Hudson on Friday, citing irreconcilable differences. The 39-year-old frontman for the Black Crowes has been married to the 27-year-old actress for nearly six years. They announced their separation in August.

According to the Superior Court filing, Robinson is seeking shared custody of the couple's son, Ryder Russell Robinson, who will turn 3 in January.

Hudson, daughter of Goldie Hawn, was nominated for a supporting-actress Oscar for her role as rock groupie Penny Lane in 2000's "Almost Famous." Other screen credits include "You, Me and Dupree" and "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days."

A call to Hudson representative Brad Cafarelli for comment after business hours Friday was not immediately returned.

Robinson's band formed in 1990 and released its first CD, "Shake Your Money Maker," that year.

Its hits include "Hard to Handle" and "She Talks to Angels."

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