Friday, August 7, 2009

Bishop Wesley Wiley Presents Girl Get Out That Box Women's Conference


(e3media)-- Bishop Dr. Wesley Wiley presents Girl Get Out That Box Women's Conference this September 19, 2009. This coneference is for all women- Daughters, Granddaugters, Sisters, First Ladies, Aunts, Business Women, Mothers, Godmothers, Wives. The ticket price is $40.00 and will be held at the Brooklyn Marriot located at 333 Adams Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201.

Bishop Wesley Wiley is the Senior Pastor at The Resurrection Temple Of Our Lord located at:
784-786 Rogers Ave
Brooklyn, New York 11226


For information please contact the Resurrection Temple at 718-287-7450

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Chris Brown's sentence for beating up Rihanna delayed by judge

(e3media)--A Los Angeles judge postponed sentencing singer Chris Brown on Wednesday, saying she wants documents guaranteeing he'll do roadside cleanup or other hard labor for beating up Rihanna.

Judge Patricia Schnegg told the R&B star that she doesn't want him doing easy community service but rather 1,400 hours of "community labor" for smacking around his ex-girlfriend.

"I do not favor community service," said Schnegg, explaining that she wants to see Brown, 20, outdoors picking up trash or cleaning up graffiti.

Brown pleaded guilty June 22 to assaulting Rihanna, 21, after they left a pre-Grammy gala in Los Angeles on Feb. 8.

Instead of jail time, Brown plea bargained for five years' probation, 180 days of community labor and 52 weeks of domestic violence counseling.

Schnegg agreed to allow the "Forever" and "Kiss Kiss" recording artist to do his community labor in Virginia, where he lives.

The judge told Brown she was delaying his sentencing to Aug. 27 because she had yet to receive documents from the State of Virginia specifying the type of community labor he'll be assigned.

Dressed in a pink shirt and a charcoal-colored suit, Brown answered "Yeah" when asked if he agreed to the postponement.

Rihanna's lawyer, Donald Etra, appeared at the hearing to ask the court to ditch an order of protection barring Brown from coming within 50 yards of Rihanna. Etra did not get a chance to make the request Wednesday.

"We were obviously hoping that all proceedings would be concluded today. We're just going to have to wait until Aug. 27," said Etra, adding that Rihanna "is doing great."

Mayor Bloomberg, other pols hoping campaign commercials are spot on

(e3media)--Billionaire Mayor Bloomberg's long been flooding the airwaves with his pitches for a third term.

Starting Thursday, the mayor's got some company: The first of the down-ballot candidates - Eric Gioia of Queens - is out of the starting gate with his own ad.

Gioia, a Democratic city councilman running for public advocate, is hitting the airwaves with "Been There," an introductory spot that seeks to convince viewers that he can understand and solve their problems because his own life experiences mirror theirs.

"For every New Yorker who's gone to public schools, who's worked the late shift or worried about making the rent, there's one Democrat for public advocate who's been there, too. Eric Gioia," a narrator says.

Gioia is competing for the Democratic nomination against former Public Advocate Mark Green, Brooklyn City Councilman Bill de Blasio and civil rights lawyer Norman Siegel.

As of his last campaign finance filing, Gioia - who attended elementary and secondary public schools and Catholic high school - had raised more than $2 million, far more than any of his foes.

A Gioia aide said "Been There" will debut with "hundreds" of airings on a variety of cable shows.

"Eric [has] a story that [is] really going to resonate with people, and has done an amazing job raising money that [is] going to give him a chance to tell that story," the aide said.

Gioia needs that chance to build up name recognition: The poll-leading Green has held the job twice, run for many other offices, written books and held down a regular TV pundit gig.

While Gioia may be among the first to go on the small screen, expect plenty more TV, print, radio and Web advertising in the weeks before the Sept. 15 primary.

For some - Democratic mayoral hopeful William Thompson, controller candidate David Yassky and Manhattan district attorney contender Leslie Crocker Snyder - filming's already underway. Controller candidate John Liu goes to air in a matter of weeks.

For the average candidate, "You want to maximize the punch" by waiting until voters are focused on the race - usually right before the election, one politico said.

"None of us quite have the resources that Mike Bloomberg does," he added dryly.

'American Idol' fans jittery as Paula Abdul's future could include 'So You Think You Can Dance'

(e3media)--Paula Abdul's shocking decision to leave "American Idol" left fans reeling Wednesday - and she may already be on her way to a new gig.

Former "American Idol" producer Nigel Lythgoe told the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday that he's talked with Abdul about coming to Fox's "So You Think You Can Dance."

"With Paula's background as a dancer, choreographer and reality judge now, I don't know anyone more qualified than Paula Abdul," he said, adding they would meet in Las Vegas this weekend.

The Lythgoe-Abdul discussion added a new twist to the quickly moving story, which began Tuesday night when she revealed she wasn't returning to "Idol" after failing to reach a new contract deal with producers.

"I am a huge Idol fan and I think the producers made a mistake here," wrote a fan at DailyNews.com. "Paula brought a certain amount of intrigue to the show because she was so unpredictable and sweet."

Abdul had been on the show since its launch in 2002, and often provided the comedic and occasionally bizarre moments on the hit singing competition.

"I can't believe it," "Idol" judge Randy Jackson told TV's "Extra."

Abdul used the Twitter.com social networking site to tell fans she was leaving.

"With sadness in my heart, I've decided not to return to Idol," Abdul "tweeted" Tuesday night.

Abdul's deal expired at the end of last season. She was reportedly seeking $12 million a year, up from the $4 million she had been making.

While it appeared she would return, the process turned sour recently, and her new manager David Sonenberg told the Los Angeles Times that "very sadly, it does not appear that she's going to be back on "Idol."

She told the world she was leaving just a day after Fox announced Kara DioGuardi would be back this season.

Show producers recently signed host Ryan Seacrest to a three-year, $45 million deal to host and produce other shows.

E! News staffer Guiliana Rancic Wednesday was urging people to tweet "Save Paula!"

They're not alone in being shaken by the news. A whopping 65% of the Daily News readers who voted online Wednesday said the show wouldn't be the same without Abdul.

A Fox spokeswoman had nothing new to say Wednesday beyond Tuesday night's comment that execs were "saddened that she has decided not to return to the show."

There was no hint of whether show producers will replace her on the judges panel, now occupied by Simon Cowell, Jackson and DioGuardi- or leave it at three. There was some criticism this past season that four was one too many judges.

Abdul's spokesman did return request for comment.

While Abdul is out at "Idol," it's unlikely she's going to go hungry.

NBC officials also said on Wednesday Abdul would be welcome there: "Paula is an exceptional piece of talent," NBC executive vice president of alternative programming Paul Telegdy said at the Television Critics Association press tour in Pasadena.

"We have no specific plans for her but I wouldn't rule anything out. As a viewer, I'll miss her on the show," he said.

Scott Sternberg, who produced Abdul's reality show "Hey Paula," said he was surprised by her decision not to renew.

"As a big fan of the show I am sad to see her leave," Sternberg said, "but Paula's a great talent and I am excited to see what's next for her."

Gunman in Pittsburgh gym massacre, George Sodini, planned shooting for months, his journal reveals

(e3media)--They are the musings of a monster.

The frustrated loner who murdered three women at a suburban Pittsburgh gym before killing himself wrote a vile journal that revealed he planned the massacre for months - and "chickened out" on his first try.

Suicidal suspect George Sodini complained he'd had "no sex since July 1990" and blamed his parents, his siblings - even his preacher - for the fact that "girls and women don't even give me a second look ANYWHERE."

He placed a date of death - Aug. 4 - atop his Web site. He made it clear he didn't care who read his words.

"I will not be embarased [sic], because, well, I will be dead," he wrote in his final entry Friday. "Death lives!"

On Tuesday, Sodini strolled into an LA Fitness gym with four guns in a duffle bag and headed for a room where an aerobics class was underway.

Sodini pulled out two guns, both bought legally. Then he flipped off the lights and started shooting, police said.

Cops said he fired 35 times before turning a .45-caliber revolver on himself.

When it was over, three women were dead, nine others were injured and yet another disturbed gunman had etched his name in blood in the annals of American crime.

"He had no relationship with anyone at the club that we know of," local police Superintendent Charles Moffatt said. "He was hell bent on doing what he did."

Sodini's words confirm that. "Why do this? To young girls?" began his 4,610-word journal. "Just read below."

Sodini's first entry on Nov. 5, 2008, was a racist rant about President Obama and black men. The seeds of slaughter were sown in subsequent entries, where he complained about not having had a girlfriend "since 1984."

"Who knows why," he wrote. "I am not too ugly or too weird."

Sodini dismissed his dad as a "useless sperm donor." He raged against his "useless bully" brother. He called his mother "The Central Boss." He blasted his former pastor.

"This guy teaches (and convinced me) you can commit mass murder then still go to heaven," Sodini wrote.

A software developer for a Pittsburgh law firm, Sodini also ripped a colleague, writing that the "worst people by far are the religious types."

Sodini first tried to commit mass murder at the gym on Jan. 6 but lost his nerve. He wrote about trying to calm himself by drinking or getting high.

"I just need to use common sense, can't drink and drive etc.," he wrote.

Then, on May 18, Sodini wrote that he "actually had a date today" with a woman he met on the bus. And yet, in the same entry, Sodini wrote he was "TOTALLY ALONE."

In his final hours, Sodini added to his site the name of a woman who "had my baby in early 1991." She appears to have died five years ago.

Addressing his readers, Sodini concluded, "Maybe all this will shed insight on why some people just cannot make things happen in their life."