Monday, September 7, 2009

Yes I often joke about the Surete du Quebec, but this is not funny

Cop killed after losing control of her car

 

21-year-old officer was responding to emergency call

 
 
 

MONTREAL – A 21-year-old police officer died Monday morning after losing control of her patrol car and smashing into a pillar supporting an overpass just outside of Quebec City.

The officer was responding to an emergency call when the accident occurred shortly after 8 a.m. along Highway 20 in the municipality of Lévis.

A second police car, headed to the same location, was not involved in the crash.

A section of Highway 20 remained closed in both directions Monday morning as police tried to determine the cause of the accident.

Darcy Allan Sheppard / Michael Bryant: 50/50

Memorial ceremony held for cyclist Darcy Allan Sheppard
FACEBOOK
Darcy Allan Sheppard spent his childhood in foster care in Alberta.
 




Sep 07, 2009 05:06 PM
 

The father of a cyclist killed during an altercation on the streets of Toronto joined native leaders in smoking a peace pipe during a traditional ceremony to commemorate his son.

About 50 people gathered in a hall at the Native Canadian Centre in Toronto this afternoon to pay respects to 33-year-old Darcy Allan Sheppard.

Sheppard was the bike courier who died after a high-profile altercation in downtown Toronto a week ago.

Former Ontario Attorney General Michael Bryant is charged with criminal negligence causing death and dangerous operation of a vehicle causing death. He is due in court next month, but says he is innocent in the charges he faces.

On Sunday, members of Toronto's aboriginal community beat a drum, sang traditional songs, lit sage and tobacco and passed around a peace pipe in a ceremony to mark Sheppard's passage to the spiritual world.

Sheppard, who is of Cree, Metis and Ojibwa heritage, was remembered as a friendly, car-hating, troubled and generous character with a lust for life.

Sheppard's aunt, Sylvia Segal, read a message from the cyclist's father, Allan Sheppard Senior, who flew from Alberta to collect his son's body and bring it to Edmonton, where his son was raised.

The father's message acknowledged his son's tumultuous past, speaking of his son's teen years spent in a secure treatment facility, his time as a squeeze guy in Toronto, and the time he asked his father for money, only to give it to a friend sleeping on the street and dying of AIDS.

"My son probably wanted the money I gave him to feed his demon of the moment, but he was still willing to share it with someone whose need was greater than his."

He said his son was a proud courier who wanted to make a difference in the community by advocating membership in the Canadian Union of Postal Workers for bicycle messengers.

"He knew firsthand the conditions under which bicycle messengers work, and he wanted to do something to make those conditions better."

Outside, a sacred fire wafted scents of cedar onto the busy downtown streets, while about 10 police officers with bicycles waited in a nearby alley.

Darcy Allan Sheppard died after he was seen hanging onto the side of a convertible sports car following an altercation with the driver. Witnesses said Sheppard slammed into a mail box before falling off the vehicle.

Rocky Mount Serial Killer


The blatant racism of these cases is...

... all too predictable. 

And by that I mean the way it has failed to capture the national imagination because:

1.   The victims are minorities

2.   The victims have been branded drug abusers and prostitutes.

Sound familiar?  It recalls the litany of cases that have come before: 




- I would also add my sister, Theresa Allore's case. From the beginning she was branded an English victim in a French microcosm; she never got the justice she deserved (I've never addressed the racist element in Theresa's case, but maybe now is a good time to do so.):

Victim's family wants serial investigation expanded



By MIke Hixenbaugh 
Rocky Mount Telegram


Thursday, September 03, 2009

The family of a 2003 Rocky Mount murder victim believes there could be more to the story of five women murdered and abandoned in fields the past four years.


Natasha Battle said Thursday she wonders why her sister, Denise Williams, hasn’t been included in a task force investigation looking into the deaths of at least five black women.


Williams, much like the other victims, was found murdered a few miles outside the city in Edgecombe County. A fisherman found her body June 2, 2003, floating in the Cokey swamp a week after her mother reported her missing to police.


Edgecombe County Sheriff James Knight almost immediately ruled the death was a homicide, but the case remains unsolved.

Williams – a 21-year-old black female from East Rocky Mount who had an on-again, off-again drug problem – matches the profile of five other Rocky Mount women who have been killed in similar circumstances the past four years. That case has drawn national media attention in recent weeks.


“I think my sister’s murder could be connected, but nobody has contacted us,” Battle said Thursday. “We haven’t heard anything from the sheriff since they found her.”


Rumors of a serial killer stalking poor women have spread through East Rocky Mount the past few months, ever since June when authorities publicly connected the dots between the murders of at least five women from the community. A sixth potential victim found inside city limits has yet to be identified, but that case has not been ruled a homicide.


Family members of the victims and community organizers rallied to raise awareness about the murders Thursday, marching through the East Rocky Mount neighborhoods where the women lived and calling out for anyone with information about the deaths to come forward.


Women like Denise Shae say the story, which broke in local media early this summer, is not new to them.


Shae, who met most of the victims as a prostitute working the streets of East Rocky Mount, said women like her have been going missing for more than a few years, but the stories have rarely spread beyond the neighborhood.


“We’ve been talking about a serial killer for 15 years now,” said Shae, whose name has been changed for confidentiality.


Rocky Mount NAACP President Andre Knight said he is calling on deputies to release a complete list of Rocky Mount women who have been found dead in and around the outskirts of town during the past 20 years.


“I believe there’s more to this,” Andre Knight said. “That 2003 case, Williams, was a classmate of mine. We grew up together. I believe they need to expand this investigation beyond 2005. That should have been done a long time ago.”


Sheriff Knight is leading the task force investigation of FBI profilers, the State Bureau of Investigation and the Rocky Mount Police Department into the murders of the five confirmed victims. Sheriff Knight could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Police Chief John Manley said his department is working with the other agencies to solve the crimes and is willing to speak with any resident who have concerns about the probe.


“There is a lot of emotion around this case,” Manley said. “But the truth is, we’re willing to address any concern that anyone might have. Nobody has been in touch with me or anyone else in my department about expanding this investigation.”


Because all the women have been found dead in Edgecombe County, the sheriff’s department has had jurisdiction over the investigation, as well as Williams’ case.


“We’re still willing to do whatever we can to help these families,” Manley said.


Bodies of all the women – Taraha Nicholson, 28, Jarniece Hargrove, 31, Ernestine Battle, 50, Jackie Nikelia Thorpe, 35, and Melody Wiggins, 29 – were found between 2005 and early this year along the same rural stretch outside the city.


Authorities charged 31-year-old Antwan Pittman this week with Nicholson’s murder and are continuing to investigate to determine if he was involved in any of the other cases.


Police are searching for three other missing women – Yolanda “Snap” Lancaster, 37, Joyce Renee Durham, 46, and Christine Boone, 43 – in connection with the investigation.


Deputies have not said if they had considered Williams’ murder in connection with the other cases. Williams’ mother, Helina Williams, thinks they should.


“I don’t know what’s going on,” Helina Williams said. “I do know there are lot of unsolved murders out (in Edgecombe County) that they should be looking at. I wish I could find out who put my girl in that swamp.”

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Micheline Charron: and curiouser

Micheline Charron found alive

Sat, 2009-09-05 16:38.
Richard Deschamps

Micheline Charron, the 62-year-old woman who went missing last Sunday from the lower Laurentian community of Entrelacs, has been found alive in a wooded area not far from there.

She was found just before 4 o'clock on Saturday afternoon, alive, but somewhat confused. She was spotted by a man hiking in the woods, who recognized Charron from her description, and immediately alerted the SQ.

Anne Marie Lemieux with the SQ says they're glad she's alive, and now they're trying to figure out what she's been up to this whole week.

She was taken to hospital to be checked out, and by then, police are hoping to find out more about what happened, and whether there was any sort of foul play.

Theresa Allore at her prom with Terry D

Friday, September 4, 2009

Thank you CBC, for dividing the country... Again.

Brave CBC under fire on the Plains of Abraham
CBC executive producer Mark Starowicz describes the documentary as “an act of history and journalism.

 
QUEBEC BUREAU

MONTREAL–It's the battle no one wants to fight – except the CBC.

Canada's national broadcaster will mark the 250th anniversary of the Battle of the Plains of Abraham with a documentary on the decisive British-French conflict, months after threats from hardline separatists forced the cancellation of a planned re-enactment in Quebec City.

The one-hour documentary, set to air during prime time next Thursday, is already ruffling the feathers of those who opposed the real-life re-enactment.

"Why is the CBC choosing to invest money from the Canadian government to reconstruct such a painful moment of Canadian history, one that caused so many deaths, assassinations, fires, and thefts?" said Jean-Paul Perreault, president of Impératif français.

"It's the battle no one wants to talk about because it's perceived to be too politically charged," said CBC documentary unit executive producer Mark Starowicz.

"It's quite striking that one of the principal turning points ... in Canadian history is going by in a very muted way."

The CBC's French sister network, Radio-Canada, said it's not planning anything special to mark the anniversary.

Asked whether that decision had anything to do with the previous controversy, a spokesperson said "absolutely not."

Perreault, who helped plan a Parliament Hill protest against the planned re-enactment in Quebec City, said its cancellation by National Battlefields Commission was an excellent idea. "It's bizarre the CBC" would air a re-enactment, he said.

Organizers and participants of the Quebec City event received threats from separatist fringe groups that raised fears of violence.

The groups felt a re-enactment of the battle would have been a disrespectful reminder of the defeat of their French ancestors, which set the stage for British dominance in North America.

They vowed to disrupt the event. The militant separatist Réseau de Résistance du Québécois warned tourists would "not forget their visit for a very long time."

Commission president André Juneau said his agency couldn't guarantee the safety of the public at the event.

"We don't want it to become a clash. There was one in 1759 and we don't want another," he said at the time.

The battle will now be marked on its Sept. 13 anniversary with the simple unveiling of a monument. A poetry and prose reading is also being organized.

The re-enactment became an orphan of sorts after the commission nixed it. Offers were made to hold it in Ontario, but then Premier Dalton McGuinty told Radio-Canada that he disapproved of it taking place in his province.

Mario Beaulieu, president of the St. Jean Baptiste Society, which also protested the re-enactment, said the subject is still sensitive because the defeat marked the beginning of an assimilation and political domination of French Canadians.

"The battle is still not finished because in Quebec the future of French (culture and language) is not assured," Beaulieu said.

In Battle for a Continent, CBC viewers will see the largest reconstruction of the battle ever made, said Starowicz, which required years of research, 2  1/2 days of filming, and re-enactors from the U.S., Quebec and the rest of Canada. It was completed for the epic TV series, Canada: A Peoples' History, and has been re-edited and narrated for the documentary.

The characters in the documentary speak in English, with English or French accents. There were 180 actors in the reconstruction, versus about 4,400 English soldiers and 5,000 French.

"I regret we have a constructed amnesia," Starowicz said. "It was a vast story on a human scale that deserves to be remembered and respected regardless of what side you're on."

He said most don't know about the fact there were two battles on the plains, or the "Dresden-like" destruction of the city for nine weeks, or that one-quarter of the British navy was sent to the battle.

Responding to the criticism, he adds, "There's no argument about hiding one's national history. Where are we going to go after that? Never speak about what happened to aboriginal people in this country?

"This is an act of history and journalism by a documentary unit and people should understand what happened. It's not a celebration of anything."

Starowicz also emphasized that the documentary plainly outlines the brutalities committed mostly by the British, and makes sure to highlight the subsequent French victory in the Battle of Sainte-Foy.

One of the loudest voices against the re-enactment, Patrick Bourgeois, said in an interview that since it's the CBC, he expects the documentary to be politically biased, whitewashing British atrocities in order to "promote unity."

When told of Starowicz's description, however, he changed his tune. "Then I have nothing to say!" he laughed.

The documentary will run on Sept. 10 at 8 p.m. on the main CBC network.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Guy who threatened to go all "Man Who Would Be King" on Harper gets 14 years

What? It's a different guy? Well, he's like that guy... what with the threats, and the killing and the "Hey Lady!"



Autumn: and time for the harvesting of bodies from the Richelieu

Every year the same thing! The Richelieu gets infested with these things:

SQ search for another body on the Richelieu River

Updated: Thu Sep. 03 2009 8:15:31 AM

ctvmontreal.ca

The Sûreté du Québec and firefighters will continue to search Thursday for a body spotted in the Richelieu River.

A witness saw the body from a few metres away and was able to provide the SQ with a detailed description. Police began the search in Sorel-Tracy, about 90 kilometres northeast of Montreal, Wednesday afternoon and will continue Thursday.

Last Wednesday, firefighters pulled two other bodies from the Richelieu River in the same area.

Search continues for Micheline Charron

Stranger Homicide or someone who knew her: 50/50:


SQ searches for missing woman north of Montreal

Updated: Wed Sep. 02 2009 6:00:29 PM

ctvmontreal.ca

The Surete du Quebec says it fears for the safety of a woman whose car was abandoned with the engine running Sunday morning near her home.

62-year-old Micheline Charron was last seen in her home in Entrelacs, about 100 kilometres north of Montreal.

Fifty people have spent three days searching a wooded area.

Her family is puzzled by the disappearance.

Charron's sister Monique says she was not depressed, did not drink, and did not have any money problems.

"We miss her a lot," said Monique. "We just want her back with us."

Charron was last heard from near midnight Saturday, when she called a friend to say she was nervous.

The friend came to Charron's home and found the door open, the lights on, and her dog barking, but no sign of Charron.

A neighbour says she saw Charron driving away Saturday night, and that she was moving much faster than usual.

Police officers found Charron's Hyundai Accent in a ditch near her home the next morning.

"The car was running, the keys were inside and the purse was on the passenger seat. Everything was in it," said Sgt. Benoit Richard of the SQ.

People in the town of Entrelacs find the disappearance shocking, because Charron was known as a pillar of the community.

She volunteered at the local food bank and could be regularly seen walking her dog.

Charron is described as 5'4", 141 pounds with blue eyes and brown hair.

Anyone with information on her whereabouts is asked to call the SQ at 1-800-659-4264.

Quick, someone unfreeze Ted Williams!

Hey, I hear Ben Affleck and Tom Scholz from Boston are running too. And while we're at it, isn't it about time to thaw Ted Williams?

Curt Schilling mulls bid for Senate

Curt Schilling, the former major league pitcher who won the allegiance of Bostonians by leading the Red Sox to the 2004 World Series, said that he has "some interest" in running for the seat held for nearly 50 years by Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

Schilling, a registered independent and longtime Republican supporter, wrote on his blog that "to get to there, from where I am today, many, many things would have to align themselves for that to truly happen."

Arrest in case of missing Rocky Mount Women

This is good news:


Arrest gives Edgecombe County families hope

Juray Tucker drives around with fliers posted in her car windows that ask for information about her missing daughter, Yolanda Lancaster.

"It has been heart wrenching. It tears me up," Tucker said Tuesday. "Every day the phone rings, I'm scared to pick it up. It's terrible."

Lancaster, 37, is one of three missing Rocky Mount women at the center of a special task force's investigation into the disappearances, as well as six homicides spanning the past four years.

Authorities have yet to identify one of the victims.

Each of the known victims, however, was black, had a history of drug use, prostitution or both and had been reported missing before their bodies were discovered in the same rural area of Edgecombe County.

Like the known victims, the missing share similarities. Family and friends have also said that many of the women knew one another.

Tucker reported her daughter missing on March 30. The last time she saw her was Feb. 5.

The Tuesday arrest of Antwan Maurice Pittman in the death of one of the slain women, Taraha Nicholson, has Lancaster's family hoping it leads to more information for them.

"We would like this to come to an end, as soon as possible, and bring her home so we can move on with our life," Lancaster's stepfather, Bruce Tucker said.

Life for Corneta Battle hasn't been easy either, and she too is looking for answers.

A farmer discovered the remains of her sister, 50-year-old Ernestine Battle, on March 14, 2008, along Seven Bridges Road.

Corneta Battle reported her sister missing more than a month earlier. She is also optimistic after Tuesday's arrest.

"I'm hoping this is a break in the case, so we can find out who's doing all the murdering," she said. "If he's guilty, he needs to pay. Justice needs to be done."

Authorities, however, have only charged Pittman in Nicholson's death, and citing the sensitivity of their investigation, they won't say whether he is a suspect in any of the other slayings or in the missing persons cases.

"The task force (made up of Rocky Mount police, Edgecombe sheriff's investigators and the State Bureau of Investigation) is still active, and the investigation is still continuing," SBI special agent Renee Robinson said Tuesday. "We're following up on leads as they develop."

Family members have said they will continue to press authorities for information and continue to hope that something more comes out of the arrest.

In the meantime, community leaders have said they will not stop. The grassroots group Murdered or Missing Sisters plans to continue raising awareness with billboards with the women's photos.

"It is a beginning but it's not an end," Rocky Mount City Councilman Andre Knight said.

Knight was among the first to call for federal authorities to get involved in the investigation. Although encouraged by Pittman's arrest, he said the investigation should push forward at full force.

"We're going to continue to rally until the perpetrator who is responsible for all the murders is caught."

And for the women who are still missing – Juray Tucker just hopes for some kind of closure.

"I would be so happy. It has been so hard for me to go through daily life, not knowing one way or the other," she said. "It's a struggle."

OPP join SQ in year-long search for missing Maniwaki-area teens

OTTAWA — A year ago two native girls from the Maniwaki area went missing.

Thursday morning, investigators from the Surete du Quebec and the Ontario Provincial Police will provide an update about the on-going search for Maisy Odjick and Shannon Alexander.

The OPP has recently joined the effort to find the two.

So far there has been little to go on in the search for these two teens, and the relatives of the two are reported to be growing frustrated and impatient.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Does this really constitute a nightmare?

Ahhh, nothing says "Fall in Quebec" like and exciting story about SQ traffic control on the Autoroutes:

Traffic nightmare on Montreal's Highway 15

Montreal  Northbound traffic on the Laurentian Autoroute was disrupted Wednesday afternoon when a trailer truck transporting a house got stuck as it tried to drive under an overpass known as the Viaduct Grand Héron near St. Jérôme.

The accident happened at 1:45 p.m. It was exacerbated when a truck carrying a back hoe was unable to brake and smashed into the stuck truck.

Nobody was injured, but two of three northbound lanes were closed, said Sûreté du Québec Sgt. Claude Denis. Southbound traffic was not affected.

Turn on, tune off, drop out

In a timely piece of back page editing Newsweek publishes 8 suggestions for breaking the Internet. Given my recent frustrations with Google I say, "bring it down, baby". It is the Matrix predicted that would enslave us all, a videodrome narcotic evolved to subdue our idle noggins. Unplug, unplug...

Millions of miles of terrestrial and undersea cables connect computer networks worldwide. These are the weak links—and your best shot at bringing down the Web.

TAKE UP FISHING

NETS pulling up undersea cables are the single biggest cause of Internet breakages. (Make it look like an accident.)

GRAB A HACKSAW

FOLLOW the lead of vandals near Santa Clara, Calif., who cut through underground fiber-optic wires, halting all service to the area.

PRAY FOR AN UNDERWATER EARTHQUAKE

PREFERABLY, a repeat of the quake that took down cables carrying 75 percent of Internet traffic between Europe and the Middle East last December.

BECOME THE HEAD OF ICANN

ONCE in charge of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers—the organization that coordinates the global system of IP addresses—you can redirect traffic at will.

BREAK INTO AN INTERNET DATA CENTER

THERE are thousands of centers housing computer servers in the United States alone. Take your pick and get mischievous.

SABOTAGE A FEW BOATS

INTERNET providers like Verizon lease fleets equipped to locate and repair broken cables. Stop the ships and you stop the fix.

WAIT 29 YEARS

ON Jan. 19, 2038, the internal clock for Unix, the operating system for many servers, will overflow, Y2K style. Big meltdown or big letdown? Only time will tell.

TRAIN SHARKS

THE stealthy sea creatures have been known to gnaw through a few cables.

Surete du Quebec seek help on missing L'Entrelac woman

Is it too much to ask for a better shot of this woman? This one looks like it was taken in the 60s:

Police are searching for 62-year-old Micheline Charron. She vanished from her home in the municipality of L'Entrelac Sunday night.

Police are seeking the public's help in locating a 62-year-old woman who disappeared Sunday night from her home in the municipality of L'Entrelac, about 30 kilometres northeast of Sainte-Adele.

Micheline Charron reportedly called a friend shortly before midnight in a panic, telling her she needed a ride, but would not say where she wanted to go. When the friend arrived at the house about 15 minutes later, police say the doors were unlocked and the lights were on, but Charron's Hyundai Accent was gone and she was nowhere in sight. Sûreté du Québec officers found the car at 7 a.m. Monday morning, parked on the side of the road not far from Charron's home. The motor was running, the doors were unlocked and her purse was on the seat.

According to SQ Sgt. Claude Denis, none of Charron's personal belongings, cash or credit cards appeared to be missing.

“At this point, we have many more questions than we have answers,” said Denis.

Charron is described as five-foot-three, 140 pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes.

Anyone with information related to her disappearance is asked to phone the SQ at 1-800-659-4264

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Disney buys Marvel

Of course Disney now inherits all those great Marvel CGI moments.

Hulk's fake pants (I believe Jamie Lee Curtis wore these in Perfect):

The Oh-So-Realistic-Looking Green Goblin (Christ, wasn't William Dafoe scary enough!)


For my money neither top the creme-de-la-creme in CGI - yes it's the battle with the Troll from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.  This one makes Ray Harryhausen's Clash of the Titans look dignified: 

Man or The Mouse?

In considering the merger of Disney and Marvel it is important to compare apples to apples.

Don't stack Mickey up against Ironman, Spidey and the X-Men. There's only one measure that counts:

Captain Jack Sparrow.



Jack's got more testosterone than professional eunuch, Peter Parker (the girlie-man Will Turner of the franchise, if you will):

 

And I'm not even going to address a Superhero who runs around in his Underoos:



But what will Jack do when he faces Corsair?



From this morning's  LA Times:

Disney's $4-billion deal for Marvel Entertainment isn't simply an acquisition. It's a reinvention.   
The future of Chairman Bob Iger's media conglomerate had been turning increasingly cloudy as family entertainment, especially in the movies, has evolved from old-fashioned, squeaky-clean Disney fare to the edgier, more unsettling PG-13 universe populated by Marvel's arsenal of comic superheroes.   

But Monday's purchase gives Disney access to Marvel's voluminous library of superheroes, which include Spider-Man, Iron Man, the X-Men, Captain America, Thor and the Fantastic Four and about 4,995 other comic-book characters.   

The Marvel deal, like the $7.4-billion 2006 pact Iger negotiated to bring Pixar into the Disney fold, is another sign that Disney's top brass realizes that the company's reign as an original creative engine for mass entertainment is over. Once an idea factory full of brilliant animators and imagineers, Disney is now a mass merchandising machine in search of exploitable product, whether it comes from Marvel, Pixar or DreamWorks, which will be releasing its upcoming slate through Disney as well.   

The signals of Disney distress have all been visible for some time.   The Pixar deal was a frank admission that Disney's venerable animation factory had run out of gas. Not long after Disney bought Pixar, John Lasseter gave an especially revealing interview to Fortune magazine, where he told of Iger experiencing a remarkable epiphany when attending an opening-day parade at the ceremonial launch of Hong Kong Disneyland. As Lasseter recalled: "[Bob] was watching all the classic Disney characters go by, and it hit him that there was not one character that Disney had created in the past 10 years. Not one. All the new characters were invented by Pixar."   Iger clearly had a similar moment of brutal corporate clarity when he made an unusually frank admission to media analysts this year when attempting to explain why Disney had such an abysmal quarter with its theatrical releases when the other studios were enjoying near-record box-office returns. "It's about choice of films and the execution of the films that have been chosen for production," Iger confessed. "We've had a rough year. So in that case, it's not the marketplace. It's our slate."   

While Pixar is now around to bolster the animation side of the business, the live-action end has been in the doldrums. In fact, since the studio's lucrative "Pirates of the Caribbean" series premiered in 2003, Disney hasn't been able to launch another broad-appeal international franchise. That would be a huge gaping wound for any studio but especially for Disney, which needs new mass appeal product to feed its real profit centers -- its merchandising division, theme parks and TV channel.   

What went wrong? And can Disney fix it?   The studio's biggest failures in the past year showed Disney's inability to reach the new family audience that has supplanted Disney's traditional customers. Last Christmas, Disney thought it had a big winner with "Bedtime Stories," which attempted to broaden the studio's traditional family brand by marrying a kid-friendly concept to the young-male appeal of Adam Sandler. The studio tried a similar strategy recently with "G-Force," another kid-friendly film produced by Jerry Bruckheimer in a bid to connect Bruckheimer's broader-edged action brand to the traditional Disney animated audience.   

Despite spending millions in TV advertising reaching out to the older-skewing (Disney-owned) ESPN sports audience, the movie failed to reach an older audience. As with "Bedtime Stories," Disney found itself unable to age up its films.   Iger goes to the movies, so he must have realized what was happening. The sweet-natured vibe of older Disney films is losing its appeal. In recent years, parents have become comfortable with a new, more intense level of violence and action. And, of course, it is Marvel more than any other film producer that has tapped into that new sensibility with its "Spider-Man," "Iron Man" and "X-Men" franchises.   

"The real difference maker with Marvel," says one rival studio chief, "is that it makes movies where the parents are just as excited to see the film as their kids. That's the difference between a movie barely making $100 million -- like a lot of Disney's homegrown products -- and a movie making $300 or $400 million. It's a whole different playing field."   

The purchase of Marvel allows Disney to broaden its brand.   It can now be the studio that encompasses every niche of family entertainment, from "High School Musical" to "Pirates of the Caribbean" to "Toy Story" to "Spider-Man." For years, everyone has tried to take all of the risk out of the movie business. For Disney, this latest purchase is a way to take all of the unbranded -- meaning risky, obscure or experimental -- material out of its wheelhouse. The studio is now a giant collection of familiar, easily accessible brands -- Marvel, Pixar, Spielberg and Bruckheimer -- all under one large, even more familiar umbrella brand: Disney. It is a sprawling company that will probably someday look a lot more like Procter & Gamble than a movie studio.   

Change doesn't happen overnight. While Disney won't get to distribute Marvel's movies until 2013 (when Marvel's distribution deal with Paramount comes to an end after Paramount releases an "Iron Man" sequel in 2010, "Thor" and "First Avenger: Captain America" in 2011 and "The Avengers" in 2012), it will enjoy most of the proceeds from those films. And Disney will immediately start tapping into the merchandising revenues from those releases as it figures out how to exploit the titles via its other businesses.   

But what the Marvel deal really means is that Disney is radically restructuring its creative aspirations. Once a company that drew inspiration from within, it is now paying top dollar to buy mature businesses -- first Pixar and now Marvel -- to feed its merchandising assembly lines. It will be years before anyone can say whether Disney overpaid for access to all this outside creative energy. Let's just say that once it was on the open market, Marvel was clearly worth more to Disney than it was to Fox, Sony, Viacom or any other possible suitors.   

There will be plenty of bumps in the road, since Disney will eventually have to make room in its movie-release calendar for an increasingly wide range of product and brands, including Pixar, Bruckheimer, Marvel and DreamWorks. Iger and his studio lieutenant Dick Cook will have to referee all sorts of release-date disputes as well as prickly creative autonomy issues. But with one bold move, Disney has accepted an uncomfortable reality: that the foundation of the family entertainment business has shifted under its feet. If the studio wants to stay at the front of the pack, it will have to change with the times. 

In many ways, Marvel is the modern-era version of Disney, the repository of adolescent dreams and fantasies that has helped shape today's pop culture. It will be Disney's challenge not just to absorb all of Marvel's unruly superheroes but to understand why they have as strong of a hold on today's young audiences as any of Disney's own creations. 

Some suggestions for people whose blogs have been deleted by Google / Blogger

If you are a blogger who uses Blogger (your blog ends in "blogspot") you may have recently had your entire site removed by Google / Blogger due to inappropriate content. 

The main culprit appears to be a linking application called Bloglinker. Bloglinker has been around at least for the 6 years I've been doing this (when I started blogging Blogger had no such gadget, but now they do). Anyway recently it started spreading spam so in early August Google / Blogger started shutting down blogs.

You could make an appeal to Google (follow the labyrinth down the rabbit hole, take the red pill and I'm sure you'll find the appropriate party). I did and was shortly notified that my blog had been "verified" and that I should see whokilledtheresa.blogspot.com  appearing on blog rolls shortly. Problem being, how could it appear in search engines if it no longer exists? (you know the drill, go to any of the infected sites and you are met with a prompt that that site is available for registration (I'm sure we all want to start all over again from scratch). 

So I was notified on August 19th. It's been over 10 days and still nothing. Nothing for anyone for that matter, if you check this thread you will see there are many of us in the same boat.

Going forward, here are my suggestions for restoring some of you content (and sanity):

1. read through the thread so you'll see you're not alone (again, this one's for your sanity)

2. Start a petition demanding that Google / Blogger restore the content (I'm not hopeful, but protesting always makes me feel good).

3. Check blog archives for old copies of your content (Wayback Machine). I was able to find three complete years, though some content still can't be located.

4.   Pony-up cheapskate and start paying for a domain and host (now you'll own the content, and "The Man" can't mess with it). Go Daddy has really good rates, and you can edit with Wordpress.

Though you are currently reading this on a Blogger site, this is just a way-station until my new domain is up and running. I am soon to blow this Popsicle stand and say goodbye to Blogger forever.

Hope this helps.