Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Making Money Program


Wait, didn’t Rachel Maddow assure us on Friday that, unlike those mercenary wingnuts at Fox News who let Republican guests pitch donation URLs on the air, MSNBC is “not a political operation”? Six full minutes of fact-checkin’ fun here via Johnny Dollar, who not only spent hours piecing this lowlight reel together but has an accompanying post delving further into the hypocrisy. Somehow, Hannity and Palin raising money for conservatives is qualitatively different from Ed Schultz and Harold Ford doing the same for liberals. Which, I guess, is true: When Hannity and Palin push their side, they’re playing politics, whereas when Schultz and Ford push theirs, they’re making news. Please do take time to read his post and watch the clip; I promise, you’ll enjoy every minute.


As for the return of the modern-day Murrow to his perch atop Serious Newsman Mountain, this is simply too good not to be true:


“Keith is furious about the way this has all been handled and insisted that MSNBC bosses apologize to him before he would agree to return,” a network insider tells me. “Keith sees himself as the star of MSNBC, the person who put them on the map and discovered fellow network anchors Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell. To be treated like this by the network he helped shape, he considers disgusting.”…


“Keith clearly won this battle. Not only has he got the bosses to say sorry, but he’s also got the company to review its ethic rules,” a friend of Keith’s tells me. “You watch — his rating on Tuesday when he returns will be bigger than ever, giving him even more power at MSNBC.”


Jeff Bercovici at Forbes declares that this cements Olby’s status as the most powerful man at MSNBC, the thought of which seems to have Ace feeling depressed but which makes me perfectly happy. Remember, this is a guy whose buffoonery is such that even some JournoListers are left cringing at it. MSNBC’s hyperpartisan election night coverage was straight out of the Olby playbook, and predictably so alienating to everyone except far-left liberals that more than one TV critic acknowledged with teeth gnashed that Fox’s coverage was more balanced. Why wouldn’t you want him in charge? They should make him program director and give him extra airtime so that he doesn’t have to pare down his lists of who’s worse than Al Qaeda due to time constraints. And besides, as I said on Friday, his suspension was stupid to begin with. All’s well that ends well!











After suspending the host of Countdown over unauthorized campaign contributions, MSNBC decided to cut short its star's punishment and get him back on the air. Howard Kurtz on the light sanction.


Keith Olbermann’s suspension didn’t last long.


He will be back hosting MSNBC’s Countdown on Tuesday night, having missed all of two programs.


The liberal commentator caused a media furor by donating the maximum $2,400 to three Democratic candidates in the final weeks of the campaign—and sparked a fascinating debate about how far news channel personalities should be able to go in pursuit of partisanship. MSNBC President Phil Griffin suspended his biggest star for flouting network rules against making political contributions. But Griffin issued this statement Sunday night:





Mark J. Terrill / AP Photo


“After several days of deliberation and discussion, I have determined that suspending Keith through and including Monday night's program is an appropriate punishment for his violation of our policy. We look forward to having him back on the air Tuesday night.”


Olbermann, who had been uncharacteristically quiet, tweeted the following on Sunday: “Greetings From Exile! A quick, overwhelmed, stunned THANK YOU for support that feels like a global hug.”   


The suspension prompted some overheated speculation that Olbermann might be fired or resign, both of which seemed unlikely for a man in the midst of a four-year, $30-million contract. Olbermann supporters said that commentators should be able to make political donations and that the situation was more egregious at Fox News, where Sean Hannity, Karl Rove and Dick Morris have raised money for Republican candidates or conservative groups. Fox, however, does not prohibit such activity by contributors and talk show hosts.


Politico, citing unnamed sources, said Olbermann was suspended—“indefinitely” was the original description—after refusing to make a public apology.   


It’s still hard for me to understand why Olbermann made these donations, knowing full well they’d eventually emerge in federal election records—and knowing he was kicking in cash to Raul Grijavla’s campaign on the same day he was interviewing the Arizona congressman. It’s not like it was enough money to make a difference in any of the races; it was more of a statement.   


Olbermann is smart, talented and has a well-documented tendency to clash with his bosses. When he was with ESPN in 1997, he was suspended for two weeks for appearing on the Daily Show and referring to the sports channel’s Bristol, Conn. headquarters as a “Godforsaken place.”    


He soon left to join MSNBC, where he launched The Big Show with Keith Olbermann. When it turned into a nightly obsession with the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he made a speech saying the story gave him the “dry heaves” and his role in it would “make me ashamed, make me depressed, make me cry.”   


Olbermann quit and wound up at Fox Sports, where he was fired in 2001—because, he claims, he reported on rumors that Fox boss Rupert Murdoch was planning to sell the Los Angeles Dodgers. Murdoch’s eventual explanation: “I fired him…He’s crazy.”   


But not so crazy that he couldn’t get media outlets to rehire him. Olbermann returned to MSNBC in 2003, where Countdown began as an irreverent news program and later morphed into an hour of unbridled liberalism and Republican-bashing, sometimes tinged with anger. Keith would proclaim his nightly Worst Persons of the World, pulling the plug on that segment only last week after Jon Stewart criticized him, along with the likes of Glenn Beck, at the comedian’s Washington rally.   


In short, the same passions that have made Olbermann a hero on the left have also made him a royal pain for his superiors—including Griffin, who began working with him when they were sports guys at the fledgling network CNN in the early 1980s.   


The latest flareup has sparked a substantive argument over whether networks should place any limits on their opinion-mongers. It’s hardly a surprise that Olbermann favors Democrats, right? And Fox seems to have no problem with Hannity headlining GOP fundraisers—or interviewing Rep. Michele Bachmann after donating to her campaign—as Rachel Maddow pointed out in a heartfelt defense of her colleague. Fox contributor and Weekly Standard Editor Bill Kristol took Keith’s side, writing: “He’s not a reporter. It’s an opinion show. If Olbermann wants to put his money where his mouth is, more power to him.”


I happen to believe there ought to be boundaries. Commentators are still functioning in a journalistic role; Olbermann, in fact, was MSNBC’s lead anchor on Election Night (joined by fellow libs Maddow, Chris Matthews, Lawrence O’Donnell and Eugene Robinson). Any argument about their constitutional rights is fatuous; you give up certain rights in exchange for a journalistic soapbox.  


And if it’s all right for commentators to give money to the politicians they cover, is it also okay to help them prepare for a debate (as George Will famously did with Ronald Reagan in 1980 before praising his performance)? At what point do they cease to be observers and become nakedly partisan players?   


Olbermann says he hadn’t made political donations before; perhaps this was a single instance of flawed judgment. I look forward to hearing his explanation once he comes off the bench.   


In the end, MSNBC made its point that Olbermann had to play by the same rules as everyone else—but without keeping him off the air for very long.


Howard Kurtz is The Daily Beast's Washington bureau chief. He also hosts CNN's weekly media program "Reliable Sources," Sundays at 11 am ET. The longtime media reporter and columnist for The Washington Post, Kurtz is the author of five books.


Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.


For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.








benchcraft company scam

First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


bench craft company scam

Wait, didn’t Rachel Maddow assure us on Friday that, unlike those mercenary wingnuts at Fox News who let Republican guests pitch donation URLs on the air, MSNBC is “not a political operation”? Six full minutes of fact-checkin’ fun here via Johnny Dollar, who not only spent hours piecing this lowlight reel together but has an accompanying post delving further into the hypocrisy. Somehow, Hannity and Palin raising money for conservatives is qualitatively different from Ed Schultz and Harold Ford doing the same for liberals. Which, I guess, is true: When Hannity and Palin push their side, they’re playing politics, whereas when Schultz and Ford push theirs, they’re making news. Please do take time to read his post and watch the clip; I promise, you’ll enjoy every minute.


As for the return of the modern-day Murrow to his perch atop Serious Newsman Mountain, this is simply too good not to be true:


“Keith is furious about the way this has all been handled and insisted that MSNBC bosses apologize to him before he would agree to return,” a network insider tells me. “Keith sees himself as the star of MSNBC, the person who put them on the map and discovered fellow network anchors Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell. To be treated like this by the network he helped shape, he considers disgusting.”…


“Keith clearly won this battle. Not only has he got the bosses to say sorry, but he’s also got the company to review its ethic rules,” a friend of Keith’s tells me. “You watch — his rating on Tuesday when he returns will be bigger than ever, giving him even more power at MSNBC.”


Jeff Bercovici at Forbes declares that this cements Olby’s status as the most powerful man at MSNBC, the thought of which seems to have Ace feeling depressed but which makes me perfectly happy. Remember, this is a guy whose buffoonery is such that even some JournoListers are left cringing at it. MSNBC’s hyperpartisan election night coverage was straight out of the Olby playbook, and predictably so alienating to everyone except far-left liberals that more than one TV critic acknowledged with teeth gnashed that Fox’s coverage was more balanced. Why wouldn’t you want him in charge? They should make him program director and give him extra airtime so that he doesn’t have to pare down his lists of who’s worse than Al Qaeda due to time constraints. And besides, as I said on Friday, his suspension was stupid to begin with. All’s well that ends well!











After suspending the host of Countdown over unauthorized campaign contributions, MSNBC decided to cut short its star's punishment and get him back on the air. Howard Kurtz on the light sanction.


Keith Olbermann’s suspension didn’t last long.


He will be back hosting MSNBC’s Countdown on Tuesday night, having missed all of two programs.


The liberal commentator caused a media furor by donating the maximum $2,400 to three Democratic candidates in the final weeks of the campaign—and sparked a fascinating debate about how far news channel personalities should be able to go in pursuit of partisanship. MSNBC President Phil Griffin suspended his biggest star for flouting network rules against making political contributions. But Griffin issued this statement Sunday night:





Mark J. Terrill / AP Photo


“After several days of deliberation and discussion, I have determined that suspending Keith through and including Monday night's program is an appropriate punishment for his violation of our policy. We look forward to having him back on the air Tuesday night.”


Olbermann, who had been uncharacteristically quiet, tweeted the following on Sunday: “Greetings From Exile! A quick, overwhelmed, stunned THANK YOU for support that feels like a global hug.”   


The suspension prompted some overheated speculation that Olbermann might be fired or resign, both of which seemed unlikely for a man in the midst of a four-year, $30-million contract. Olbermann supporters said that commentators should be able to make political donations and that the situation was more egregious at Fox News, where Sean Hannity, Karl Rove and Dick Morris have raised money for Republican candidates or conservative groups. Fox, however, does not prohibit such activity by contributors and talk show hosts.


Politico, citing unnamed sources, said Olbermann was suspended—“indefinitely” was the original description—after refusing to make a public apology.   


It’s still hard for me to understand why Olbermann made these donations, knowing full well they’d eventually emerge in federal election records—and knowing he was kicking in cash to Raul Grijavla’s campaign on the same day he was interviewing the Arizona congressman. It’s not like it was enough money to make a difference in any of the races; it was more of a statement.   


Olbermann is smart, talented and has a well-documented tendency to clash with his bosses. When he was with ESPN in 1997, he was suspended for two weeks for appearing on the Daily Show and referring to the sports channel’s Bristol, Conn. headquarters as a “Godforsaken place.”    


He soon left to join MSNBC, where he launched The Big Show with Keith Olbermann. When it turned into a nightly obsession with the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he made a speech saying the story gave him the “dry heaves” and his role in it would “make me ashamed, make me depressed, make me cry.”   


Olbermann quit and wound up at Fox Sports, where he was fired in 2001—because, he claims, he reported on rumors that Fox boss Rupert Murdoch was planning to sell the Los Angeles Dodgers. Murdoch’s eventual explanation: “I fired him…He’s crazy.”   


But not so crazy that he couldn’t get media outlets to rehire him. Olbermann returned to MSNBC in 2003, where Countdown began as an irreverent news program and later morphed into an hour of unbridled liberalism and Republican-bashing, sometimes tinged with anger. Keith would proclaim his nightly Worst Persons of the World, pulling the plug on that segment only last week after Jon Stewart criticized him, along with the likes of Glenn Beck, at the comedian’s Washington rally.   


In short, the same passions that have made Olbermann a hero on the left have also made him a royal pain for his superiors—including Griffin, who began working with him when they were sports guys at the fledgling network CNN in the early 1980s.   


The latest flareup has sparked a substantive argument over whether networks should place any limits on their opinion-mongers. It’s hardly a surprise that Olbermann favors Democrats, right? And Fox seems to have no problem with Hannity headlining GOP fundraisers—or interviewing Rep. Michele Bachmann after donating to her campaign—as Rachel Maddow pointed out in a heartfelt defense of her colleague. Fox contributor and Weekly Standard Editor Bill Kristol took Keith’s side, writing: “He’s not a reporter. It’s an opinion show. If Olbermann wants to put his money where his mouth is, more power to him.”


I happen to believe there ought to be boundaries. Commentators are still functioning in a journalistic role; Olbermann, in fact, was MSNBC’s lead anchor on Election Night (joined by fellow libs Maddow, Chris Matthews, Lawrence O’Donnell and Eugene Robinson). Any argument about their constitutional rights is fatuous; you give up certain rights in exchange for a journalistic soapbox.  


And if it’s all right for commentators to give money to the politicians they cover, is it also okay to help them prepare for a debate (as George Will famously did with Ronald Reagan in 1980 before praising his performance)? At what point do they cease to be observers and become nakedly partisan players?   


Olbermann says he hadn’t made political donations before; perhaps this was a single instance of flawed judgment. I look forward to hearing his explanation once he comes off the bench.   


In the end, MSNBC made its point that Olbermann had to play by the same rules as everyone else—but without keeping him off the air for very long.


Howard Kurtz is The Daily Beast's Washington bureau chief. He also hosts CNN's weekly media program "Reliable Sources," Sundays at 11 am ET. The longtime media reporter and columnist for The Washington Post, Kurtz is the author of five books.


Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.


For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.








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First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


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First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


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Wait, didn’t Rachel Maddow assure us on Friday that, unlike those mercenary wingnuts at Fox News who let Republican guests pitch donation URLs on the air, MSNBC is “not a political operation”? Six full minutes of fact-checkin’ fun here via Johnny Dollar, who not only spent hours piecing this lowlight reel together but has an accompanying post delving further into the hypocrisy. Somehow, Hannity and Palin raising money for conservatives is qualitatively different from Ed Schultz and Harold Ford doing the same for liberals. Which, I guess, is true: When Hannity and Palin push their side, they’re playing politics, whereas when Schultz and Ford push theirs, they’re making news. Please do take time to read his post and watch the clip; I promise, you’ll enjoy every minute.


As for the return of the modern-day Murrow to his perch atop Serious Newsman Mountain, this is simply too good not to be true:


“Keith is furious about the way this has all been handled and insisted that MSNBC bosses apologize to him before he would agree to return,” a network insider tells me. “Keith sees himself as the star of MSNBC, the person who put them on the map and discovered fellow network anchors Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell. To be treated like this by the network he helped shape, he considers disgusting.”…


“Keith clearly won this battle. Not only has he got the bosses to say sorry, but he’s also got the company to review its ethic rules,” a friend of Keith’s tells me. “You watch — his rating on Tuesday when he returns will be bigger than ever, giving him even more power at MSNBC.”


Jeff Bercovici at Forbes declares that this cements Olby’s status as the most powerful man at MSNBC, the thought of which seems to have Ace feeling depressed but which makes me perfectly happy. Remember, this is a guy whose buffoonery is such that even some JournoListers are left cringing at it. MSNBC’s hyperpartisan election night coverage was straight out of the Olby playbook, and predictably so alienating to everyone except far-left liberals that more than one TV critic acknowledged with teeth gnashed that Fox’s coverage was more balanced. Why wouldn’t you want him in charge? They should make him program director and give him extra airtime so that he doesn’t have to pare down his lists of who’s worse than Al Qaeda due to time constraints. And besides, as I said on Friday, his suspension was stupid to begin with. All’s well that ends well!











After suspending the host of Countdown over unauthorized campaign contributions, MSNBC decided to cut short its star's punishment and get him back on the air. Howard Kurtz on the light sanction.


Keith Olbermann’s suspension didn’t last long.


He will be back hosting MSNBC’s Countdown on Tuesday night, having missed all of two programs.


The liberal commentator caused a media furor by donating the maximum $2,400 to three Democratic candidates in the final weeks of the campaign—and sparked a fascinating debate about how far news channel personalities should be able to go in pursuit of partisanship. MSNBC President Phil Griffin suspended his biggest star for flouting network rules against making political contributions. But Griffin issued this statement Sunday night:





Mark J. Terrill / AP Photo


“After several days of deliberation and discussion, I have determined that suspending Keith through and including Monday night's program is an appropriate punishment for his violation of our policy. We look forward to having him back on the air Tuesday night.”


Olbermann, who had been uncharacteristically quiet, tweeted the following on Sunday: “Greetings From Exile! A quick, overwhelmed, stunned THANK YOU for support that feels like a global hug.”   


The suspension prompted some overheated speculation that Olbermann might be fired or resign, both of which seemed unlikely for a man in the midst of a four-year, $30-million contract. Olbermann supporters said that commentators should be able to make political donations and that the situation was more egregious at Fox News, where Sean Hannity, Karl Rove and Dick Morris have raised money for Republican candidates or conservative groups. Fox, however, does not prohibit such activity by contributors and talk show hosts.


Politico, citing unnamed sources, said Olbermann was suspended—“indefinitely” was the original description—after refusing to make a public apology.   


It’s still hard for me to understand why Olbermann made these donations, knowing full well they’d eventually emerge in federal election records—and knowing he was kicking in cash to Raul Grijavla’s campaign on the same day he was interviewing the Arizona congressman. It’s not like it was enough money to make a difference in any of the races; it was more of a statement.   


Olbermann is smart, talented and has a well-documented tendency to clash with his bosses. When he was with ESPN in 1997, he was suspended for two weeks for appearing on the Daily Show and referring to the sports channel’s Bristol, Conn. headquarters as a “Godforsaken place.”    


He soon left to join MSNBC, where he launched The Big Show with Keith Olbermann. When it turned into a nightly obsession with the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he made a speech saying the story gave him the “dry heaves” and his role in it would “make me ashamed, make me depressed, make me cry.”   


Olbermann quit and wound up at Fox Sports, where he was fired in 2001—because, he claims, he reported on rumors that Fox boss Rupert Murdoch was planning to sell the Los Angeles Dodgers. Murdoch’s eventual explanation: “I fired him…He’s crazy.”   


But not so crazy that he couldn’t get media outlets to rehire him. Olbermann returned to MSNBC in 2003, where Countdown began as an irreverent news program and later morphed into an hour of unbridled liberalism and Republican-bashing, sometimes tinged with anger. Keith would proclaim his nightly Worst Persons of the World, pulling the plug on that segment only last week after Jon Stewart criticized him, along with the likes of Glenn Beck, at the comedian’s Washington rally.   


In short, the same passions that have made Olbermann a hero on the left have also made him a royal pain for his superiors—including Griffin, who began working with him when they were sports guys at the fledgling network CNN in the early 1980s.   


The latest flareup has sparked a substantive argument over whether networks should place any limits on their opinion-mongers. It’s hardly a surprise that Olbermann favors Democrats, right? And Fox seems to have no problem with Hannity headlining GOP fundraisers—or interviewing Rep. Michele Bachmann after donating to her campaign—as Rachel Maddow pointed out in a heartfelt defense of her colleague. Fox contributor and Weekly Standard Editor Bill Kristol took Keith’s side, writing: “He’s not a reporter. It’s an opinion show. If Olbermann wants to put his money where his mouth is, more power to him.”


I happen to believe there ought to be boundaries. Commentators are still functioning in a journalistic role; Olbermann, in fact, was MSNBC’s lead anchor on Election Night (joined by fellow libs Maddow, Chris Matthews, Lawrence O’Donnell and Eugene Robinson). Any argument about their constitutional rights is fatuous; you give up certain rights in exchange for a journalistic soapbox.  


And if it’s all right for commentators to give money to the politicians they cover, is it also okay to help them prepare for a debate (as George Will famously did with Ronald Reagan in 1980 before praising his performance)? At what point do they cease to be observers and become nakedly partisan players?   


Olbermann says he hadn’t made political donations before; perhaps this was a single instance of flawed judgment. I look forward to hearing his explanation once he comes off the bench.   


In the end, MSNBC made its point that Olbermann had to play by the same rules as everyone else—but without keeping him off the air for very long.


Howard Kurtz is The Daily Beast's Washington bureau chief. He also hosts CNN's weekly media program "Reliable Sources," Sundays at 11 am ET. The longtime media reporter and columnist for The Washington Post, Kurtz is the author of five books.


Like The Daily Beast on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for updates all day long.


For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.








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Old Slave Mart Museum by lourileylive


benchcraft company scam

First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


bench craft company scam

Old Slave Mart Museum by lourileylive


benchcraft company scam

First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


bench craft company scam

First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


benchcraft company scam

First Solar <b>News</b>, Rumors: CIGS, Mercury, Tellurium : Greentech Media

First the news... Apollo Solar Energy (OTC: ASOE), a vertically integrated miner, refiner and producer of high purity tellurium (Te), announced a five-year purchase contract between Apollo Solar Energy and a major worldwide solar panel ...

Bullpen <b>News</b>: Benoit, Choate, and Friedman - DRaysBay

The more news that comes out like this, the more likely it is that he won't be a Ray next season. I am surprised that Randy Choate is garnering such strong interest, but he was one of the more effective, proven left-handed relievers on ...

Denver Broncos <b>News</b>: Horse Tracks - 11/17/10 - Mile High Report

Your Daily Cup of Orange and Blue Coffee .. Horse Tracks.


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