Watch: Author Urges Parents to 'Break the Silence' on Sex

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Would You Let Your Teen Have Sex at Home?

Patty Skudlarek strives to be a responsible parent. That's why she says she told her 18-year-old son that if he wants to have sex, not only is she okay with it, but she'd prefer that he do it in the family home.

"I'd rather he … do it here than somewhere else," Skudlarek told "Good Morning America." "With the kids having sex at home, it's a safer environment, because, you know, it's clean … and usually the place they keep the condoms are in their bedroom.

"So then they're close by. And it's just ... an environment they're familiar with, as opposed to a motel, a car or a park, or wherever they're doing it, these days."

Skudlarek isn't alone. The Internet message boards are abuzz, telling the story of a small but growing number of parents who are allowing their teenagers to have sex at home.

Heather Blackmore is aware of the chatter. An article she posted this month about a woman who allows her teenage son to have sex with his girlfriend in his bedroom set off a firestorm, with some accusing the mother of running a "cheap motel."

Blackmore says that was not the woman's intent.

"I think … it was more of the attitude, 'Well, kids are going to do it anyway. Why not make it so that it-- it's in a comfortable, safer environment,' as opposed to in a woods," she said.

Some parents – like Chloe Foreht – say allowing teens to have sex at home ensures they have somewhere to run if anything goes wrong. She allowed her 17-year-old daughter to engage in a sexual relationship with her longtime boyfriend in the family home.

"I was okay with her having sex in my home because of the relationship she was in, because of the teenager that she is … her boyfriend would sleep over probably once a week. And I was comfortable with that," Foreht said.

She joined three other parents of teens to discuss the issue with "Good Morning America" contributor Elisabeth Hasselbeck.

Ritchie Steinmann, the father of two teens, was against the idea.

"I draw the assimilation between sex in the home and drinking … You don't drink in my home. You know, you don't bring home a girl or a boy, you know, and close the door and run around in my home. You know, it's the decency and sanctity of what we call home," he said.

Foreht disagreed.

" I think that they're really completely different issues. And I think that, you know, my daughter … does have respect for our home."

She also said she believed that hidden sex could be more risky.

"If they're having it outside the home … who knows who they're having it with? You know, it's -- there's a bigger chance, I think, of less safe sex, maybe more different partners. You know, not understanding that it is something that is okay if you're doing it with somebody you really care about and you want to do it and, you know, you're not all drunk at a party."

Some of the panelists seemed to long for earlier times when teens would steal away to have sex in the back seat of cars.

"I'm not sure that I personally would feel comfortable being at home knowing that my teenager is having sex in the next room," Carolyn Meyer-Wartels, who has two teens, said, laughing. "And I think that parents do need to create boundaries in the home and say things like, 'I don't think you're ready to be doing this. I don't think you're ready to be doing this here or anywhere, for that matter. '"

Steinmann worried other about consequences.


View the original article here

Michael Symon

Michael Symon cooks with soul. Growing up in a Greek and Sicilian family, the Cleveland native creates boldly flavored, deeply satisfying dishes at his four restaurants in America's heartland: Lola, Lolita, Roast and B Spot. He also shares his exuberant, approachable cooking style and infectious laugh with viewers as an "Iron Chef" on the Food Network.

Give one of his meaty recipes a try at home:

Pork Roast with Warm Cabbage, Mustard and Champagne

Fat Doug Burger

Grilled Hanger Steak with Steak Sauce


View the original article here

January Jones' Baby Daddy: Prime Suspects

Top 5 Prime Suspects for January Jones' Baby Daddy - ABC News ABC News/ EntertainmentFacebook?ESPN?ABCHot Topics:
Space Junk?Rick Santorum?Troy DavisHomeVideoNewsPoliticsInvestigativeHealthEntertainmentMoneyTechGood Morning AmericaWWYD?20/20This WeekNightlineWorld NewsMore Entertainment: Charlie SheenThe OscarsKaraoke Battle USA Lindsay LohanLady GagaStar ScandalsCelebrity Photos Home> EntertainmentTop 5 Prime Suspects for January Jones' Baby DaddyBy LUCHINA FISHERSept. 22, 2011

"Mad Men" star January Jones welcomed her first child last week, a baby boy, but we're no closer to learning who the father of the baby is.

Jones gave birth to son Xander Dane Jones Sept. 13, her rep confirmed to People.

That explains her absence from Sunday's Emmy Awards, where "Mad Men" picked up a fourth award for best drama.

But it's the drama surrounding her son's father that has tongues wagging.

"I think you can allow people to know as much as you want them to know," her co-star, Elizabeth Moss, told E! online. "And I've seen many people do it very successfully. ... Some people don't mind and some people mind."

Jones seems to fall into the second camp, but that doesn't stop us from listing who the prime suspects for her mystery baby daddy might be. Click through to see the top five.

PHOTO: Matthew Vaughn arrives at the premiere of 'Kick-Ass', Hollywood, California April 13, 2010.GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty ImagesMatthew Vaughn

E! Online first reported that Matthew Vaughn, the director of Jones' most recent film, "X-Men: First Class," had a "very close" relationship with the actress on set.

Vaughn, who is married to former supermodel Claudia Schiffer, strongly denied any affair.

Still, he remains a prime suspect after he "abruptly" left town, according to E!, around the same time Jones made her surprise announcement in April that she was expecting.

He also skipped a screening of the film, claiming "severe" tonsillitis, although E! claimed he was talkative during "X-Men" interviews earlier that day.

PHOTO: Jason Sudeikis visits 'Late Night With Jimmy Fallon' at Rockefeller Center, New York City, Sept. 1, 2011.Theo Wargo/Getty ImagesJason Sudeikis

Jones was most recently linked to "SNL" actor Jason Sudeikis, although he claims not to be the father.

A tongue-tied Sudeikis told a Washington Post reporter when asked at the White House Correspondents Dinner whether he had any comment about Jones' baby bump: "I'd rather -- yes but no."

When the reporter asked Sudeikis if he was surprised to find out Jones was pregnant, he stammered, "No, I -- no, I didn't have anything [else to say]."

PHOTO: Actor Michael Fassbender of 'Shame' poses during the 2011 Toronto Film Festival at Guess Portrait Studio, Toronto, Canada, Sept. 12, 2011.Matt Carr/Getty ImagesMichael Fassbender

Jones was still filming "X-Men: First Class" at the beginning of the year, leading many to suspect that her baby daddy was one of her famous co-stars.

The man most in contention was Michael Fassbender, the German-born Irish actor best known for his role in Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds."

Even though Fassbender reportedly began dating another "X-Men" co-star, Zoe Kravitz, that hasn't stopped some gossip websites from speculating that Kravitz is just a cover to take the heat off Fassbender as a possible baby daddy for Jones.

PHOTO: Bobby Flay, attends the 137th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs, Louisville, Kentucky May 7, 2011.Michael Hickey/Getty ImagesBobby Flay

Sure, grillmaster Bobby Flay seems like a long shot to be Jones' baby daddy.

Then again it was odd when Flay was the person Jones called for help after she crashed her Range Rover into several parked cars in June. For one thing, Flay is married to actress Stephanie March.

Flay's publicist, Jennifer Baum, said he was watching the Lakers-Celtics game with Jones and a group of friends earlier in the evening at the London West Hollywood Hotel. Although they had met only once before -- when Jones gave Flay her number because she wanted to remodel her kitchen -- she called on Flay for help after the crash.

Baum said Flay went to the scene to check on her.

PHOTO: Actor Xander Berkeley arrives at Fox's '24' Series Finale party held at Boulevard 3, Hollywood, California, April 30, 2010.Kevin Winter/Getty ImagesXander Berkeley

This one seems way to obvious.

Married actor Xander Berkeley did the film "Seeking Justice" with Jones last year, but it seems unlikely she would name her baby after Berkeley if she were trying to keep an affair between them secret.

Then again, stranger things have happened in Hollywood.

More from ABC News Ryan Phillippe, H'wood's Mystery Baby Daddy?January Jones Pregnant: Who's the Daddy?Is Hollywood Ganging Up on January Jones? PHOTOS: Emily Deschanel Has a Baby BoyNo Love for January JonesJanuary Jones: Mad for Sharks More Video » Comment & ContributeDo you have more information about this topic? If so, please click here to contact the editors of ABC News.   Watch Mornings on ABCSister WivesWatch the Full EpisodeGMA: 'Sister Wives' ReturnsRobin Roberts Recommendsrobin PHOTOS: Meet the New 'Charlie's Angels'Birds and Bees: Tips for Having ‘The Talk’ With Kids WATCH: Michigan Car Bombing: Was it Random? ABC News on Facebook Follow UsTwitterTwitter FacebookFacebookMobileMobileRSSRSS ABC News NewslettersMore Newsletters » More you'll love on Karaoke Battle USA Who is ABC's at home Karaoke King and Queen? Vote nowThe Lying Game Watch ALL NEW Mondays at 9/8c. Get a sneak peek now. Click here. Today in ABC NewsABC News Home »1PreviousNext ABCNews.comExternal links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.Back to top

Sections

NewsPoliticsInvestigativeHealthEntertainmentMoneyTechnologyTravelRecipesBehind the Scenes

Shows

Good Morning AmericaWorld News with Diane SawyerNightlineThis Week with Christiane Amanpour20/20PrimetimeWhat Would You Do?ABC News NowABC.com

Tools

iPad AppMobileRegisterSign InFacebookTwitterBlogsEmails & News AlertsMessage BoardsRSS Headlines

About

Contact UsFeedbackAdvertisingPrivacy PolicyInterest-Based AdsTerms of UseABC News StoreSite Map function fbInit(){if(!window.fbLoaded || window.fbLoaded == undefined){FB.init({ appId : 'fa71b3ce3ced40d47a4850f185b245d9', channelUrl: 'http://a.abcnews.go.com/assets/static/perm_cache/channel.html', cookie: true, xfbml : true // parse XFBML});fbLoaded = true;}}

View the original article here

Watch: Troy Davis Executed In Georgia Amid Controversy

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

True or False: Wednesday is the Cheapest Day to Fly?

True, according to travel experts flying Wednesday is in fact the cheapest day to fly.

According to leading airline ticket comparison websites, choosing to fly midweek will have you purchasing cheaper tickets than choosing to fly any other time of the week. People look to purchase tickets to fly on or around the weekend, causing flights to be more expensive because of this high demand. So, your best bet is to avoid high traffic days and focus on traveling on days that are less in demand, Wednesday. The next best day is Tuesday, however due to a lesser amount of airplanes in use this day prices may be slightly higher.

Source: http://traveltips.usatoday.com/cheapest-day-week-travel-61429.html Source: http://www.farecompare.com/travel-advice/tips-from-air-travel-insiders/


View the original article here

Gary Busey, Ted Haggard to Swap Spouses

Because they can't seem to get enough of reality TV, Gary Busey and disgraced pastor Ted Haggard will swap partners for an upcoming episode of "Celebrity Wife Swap."

Haggard, the former New Life Church pastor, and his wife, Gayle, will appear in the spinoff of the ABC reality series, along with bad boy actor Busey and his baby mama Steffanie Sampson.

The episode will tape today at the GLBT Pride Center in Colorado Springs, according to ColoradoSprings.com.

Neither Haggard nor Busey are strangers to reality television. After Haggard saw his life crumble when he was caught in an affair with a gay male prostitute, he made appearances on countless talk shows, including "The Oprah Winfrey Show." He and his wife also appeared on a 2009 episode of "Divorce Court."

Now admitting he may be bisexual, Haggard was also featured in documentaries on TLC and HBO.

Busey is an alum of both "Celebrity Rehab" and "Celebrity Apprentice."

Besides having reality television in common, both claim to be reformed bad boys.

Busey, a born-again Christian, is an active minister with Promise Keepers. Haggard has returned to the ministry as pastor of the non-denominational St. James church in Colorado Springs


View the original article here

Watch: Maury Povich Celebrates 25 Years of Wild TV

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Watch: Disney Opens Aulani Resort in Hawaii

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Michigan Dad: 'My Car Blew Up With Two Kids'

Through excruciating pain, Erik Chappell called 911 and told the dispatcher: "My car blew up with two kids."

Chappell and his sons, 11 and 13, were the victims of a car bombing on Tuesday. Chappell's Volvo exploded as he drove the boys to football practice in Monroe, Mich.

"I've got two significant leg injuries...they're chewed up pretty good," he told the 911 dispatcher. "Deep tissue wounds. They are bleeding. I need someone here now."

Chappell and his sons are expected to survive the attack.

The sons' principal posted a statement on the school website saying that she had spoken with Chapell's wife, and that her husband and sons were doing well and recovering.

"They are all in stable conditions and are in good spirits," Michelle Sontag wrote. "All are expected to have a full recovery. I have spoken with Mrs. Chappell twice today, and she has kept me abreast of their improving conditions."

Sontag said that the family is asking for prayers for healing and comfort.

Authorities believe the bombing was a criminal attack and not terrorism. Police say whoever planted the bomb placed it in such a way that it would inflict as much damage as possible.

"They were very, very blessed not to have been killed. They're seriously injured, but they're still alive and that means everything," said Donald Dawkins, spokesman for Michigan's Bureau of Alcohol,Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Erik Chappell

Chappell, 42, is a lawyer who primarily handles business litigation in Ohio and Michigan. He also practices family law and is known to handle messy divorce cases.

When the car erupted into a fireball, burning down to just its metal frame, several panicked witnesses called 911.

"By the time I got there, the car was completely engulfed," said witness Edwin Holly. "The one boy said, oh daddy, my foot keeps hurting... well, he couldn't understand, I don't think. I think he was probably still in shock or whatever."

Somehow Chappell was able to pull his boys out of the car. Police are still searching for who is responsible for planting the car bomb.

The ATF is offering a $10,000 reward for information that could lead to the suspect's capture.

"They're going to be looking at this most likely as a targeted attack. They're going to look at his personal and professional life…who his former clients are, who his current clients are, what are his most controversial cases," said ABC News' legal analyst Dan Abrams.

Abrams said that one big asset in the investigation is Chappell himself. Since he was lucky enough to survive the attack, he'll be able to aid investigators.


View the original article here

Troy Davis Executed After Stay Denied

By COLLEEN CURRY and MICHAEL S. JAMES abcnws_fw_params = {siteSectionId: 'nws_us', siteSectionIdType: 0, siteSectionNetworkId: 168234, siteSectionFallbackId: 109523, customVisitor:'', keyValues:'pageType=story'}; pc.fwSeg();pc.fwAppendKeyValues('show=gma');pc.getSWID();pc.subsectionOverride();function fw_config(){return abcnws_fw_params;}if (tq.videoOverrideContext != null) {jsvideoViewEventProp16Value = tq.videoOverrideContext;} else {jsvideoViewEventProp16Value = "none";}if (jsvideoViewEventProp16Value == "none") { jsvideoViewEventProp16Value = ""; }jsvideoViewEventEvar20Value = jsvideoViewEventProp16Value;kdp_embed_default = {doKdpEmbed : function() {// Should only be changed if you are running Kaltura On Prem / Kaltura CE:var service_url = "http://cdnapi.kaltura.com/";// logic cascade for deciding which entry to loadvar entry_id = this.getEntryIdFromUrl() || this.getEntryIdFromDataAttr() || this.fallback_entry;flashembed(this.placeholder_id,{// attributes and params:id :"kaltura_player_default",src : service_url + "/index.php/kwidget/wid/_" + kdp_embed_default.partner_id + "/uiconf_id/" + kdp_embed_default.uiconf_id + "/entry_id/" + entry_id,height :361,width :640,bgcolor :"#000000",allowNetworking : "all",version :[10,0],expressInstall :"http://cdn.kaltura.org/apis/seo/expressinstall.swf",wmode: "transparent"},{// flashvars (double-quote the values)externalInterfaceDisabled : "false",jsInterfaceReadyFunc :"jsInterfaceReady",contentType: "video",//"restrictUserAgent.restrictedUserAgents": "GoogleTV",referer : "http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/troy-davis-executed-georgia-amid-controversy-14579027","omniture.videoViewEventEvar15Value" : "player|storypage","omniture.videoViewEventProp18Value" : "player|storypage","omniture.videoViewEventProp16Value" : jsvideoViewEventProp16Value,"omniture.videoViewEventEvar20Value" : jsvideoViewEventEvar20Value,"omniture.adStartEvar15Value" : "player|storypage","omniture.adStartEvar20Value" : jsvideoViewEventEvar20Value,noThumbnail: true,"shareBtnControllerScreen.enabled" : "true",debugMode: true})},onFail : function() {alert("FLASH EMBEDDING FAILED");},getEntryIdFromUrl : function() {if(location.hash.indexOf(kdp_embed_default.url_param_name) != -1) {// get the entry id from the url document fragment (aka hash):return location.hash.split("#")[1].substring((kdp_embed_default.url_param_name.length+1));}else if(location.search.indexOf(kdp_embed_default.url_param_name) != -1) {// get the entry id from the url parameters (aka querystring):return location.search.split("?")[1].substring((kdp_embed_default.url_param_name.length+1));}else {// use the default video defined in "fallback_entry" below://return kdp_embed_default.fallback_entry;return false;}},getEntryIdFromDataAttr : function() {var data_attr_val = document.getElementById(this.placeholder_id).getAttribute("data-entryid");if(data_attr_val && !(data_attr_val

Troy Davis was executed this evening for the murder of an off-duty policeman after the U.S. Supreme Court denied a last-minute stay of execution amid widespread public doubts about his guilt.

Davis, 42, died at 11:08 p.m. ET, according to a Georgia Department of Corrections official. His death by lethal injection came after an approximately four-hour delay for legal review.

Eyewitnesses described the mood in the execution chamber as "somber" as Davis was wheeled in strapped to a gurney. He declared his innocence a final time in the 1989 murder as witnesses and relatives of the victim -- off-duty Savannah, Ga., policeman Mark MacPhail -- looked on.

"I'd like to address the MacPhail family," Davis said, according to The Associated Press. "Let you know, despite the situation you are in, I'm not the one who personally killed your son, your father, your brother. I am innocent.

"The incident that happened that night is not my fault," he added. "I did not have a gun. All I can ask ... is that you look deeper into this case so that you really can finally see the truth.

"I ask my family and friends to continue to fight this fight," he said. "For those about to take my life, God have mercy on your souls. And may God bless your souls."

Witnesses said Davis' eyes fluttered as he received his first injection and lost consciousness, and that the entire process of lethal injection lasted about 15 minutes.

"Justice has been served for Officer Mark MacPhail and his family," state Attorney General Sam Olens said in a statement.

Joan MacPhail-Harris, the widow of Mark MacPhail, told The Associated Press that "it's a time for healing" now that Davis' execution has occurred, that she saw "nothing to rejoice" over in Davis' death and that she was praying for his family.

"I will grieve for the Davis family because now they're going to understand our pain and our hurt," she told the AP in a telephone interview from Jackson.

"I'm kind of numb. I can't believe that it's really happened," MacPhail's mother, Anneliese MacPhail, told the AP in a telephone interview from her home in Columbus, Ga. "All the feelings of relief and peace I've been waiting for all these years, they will come later. I certainly do want some peace."

Members of the MacPhail family are convinced Davis was guilty, but many other observers are not.

Davis had his execution stayed four times over the course of his 22 years on death row, but multiple legal appeals during that time failed to prove his innocence.

Public support grew for Davis based on the recanted testimony of seven witnesses from his trial and the possible confession of another suspect, which his defense team claimed cast too much doubt on Davis' guilt to follow through with an execution.

A growing tide of celebrities, politicians and social media users called for the execution to be delayed because of "too much doubt" present in his case.

Up to and beyond the moments of execution, the criticism continued. "Strange Fruit," a classic song about lynching, trended on Twitter, celebrities tweeted their disapproval and, after it was over, an Amnesty International official released a written statement condemning the execution.

"Killing a man under this enormous cloud of doubt is horrific and amounts to a catastrophic failure of the justice system," said Larry Cox, executive director of Amnesty International AIUSA. "Our hearts are heavy, but we have not lost our spirit of defiance. Millions of people around the world now know of Troy Davis and see the fallibility of the U.S. justice system."

The execution was delayed more than four hours as the U.S. Supreme Court weighed last-minute arguments from Davis' legal team and the state of Georgia over whether his execution should be blocked.

The court's decision to deny the stay came without comment after 10 p.m. ET.

Troy Davis Backers in Frantic Last Minute Efforts to Stop Execution

At 7:05 p.m. ET, five minutes after his scheduled death, Davis' supporters erupted in cheers, hugs and tears outside the jail in Jackson, Ga., as supporters believed Davis had been saved from the death penalty. But Davis was granted only a temporary reprieve as the Supreme Court considered the decision.

At a protest in front of the White House today, at least 12 Howard University students were arrested for failing to move off the White House sidewalk, according to ABC News affiliate WJLA. The protest there was expected to last until 7 p.m.


View the original article here

Watch: Minka Kelly: New 'Charlie's Angel'

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Watch: Enter GMA's Aloha Aulani Sweepstakes

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Facebook Changes Look and Everyone Hates It

Take a look at your Facebook page today, if you’re a user, and let us know if you laughed or smashed your screen. Facebook has changed its look, adding a “top story” listing of the newest postings by your online friends, and the reaction is … well, mixed.

“Starting today, it will be easier to keep up with the people in your life no matter how frequently or infrequently you’re on Facebook,” wrote Mark Tonkelowitz, an engineering manager at Facebook, in a post on the company’s blog.

The idea, Facebook says, is that if you’ve been away from the site for a few days, you won’t be in danger of missing the most important posts friends put up. Though Facebook isn’t offering many details on how its software will figure out which posts are most likely to be of interest to you, and keep them up at the top of the page.

“We use a variety of things to decide whether a story might be interesting or important,” said a Facebook spokesperson in an email. “For example, this may include changes about your employer, school, relationship status or city, as well as things like the number of likes or comments on a post. For example, if a friend’s posts get dozens of comments or likes, it’s likely to be a top story.”

“News Feed will act more like your own personal newspaper,” said Tonkelowitz. “You won’t have to worry about missing important stuff. All your news will be in a single stream with the most interesting stories featured at the top.”

There are other changes:

New posts that went up since you last logged on are marked with small blue triangles in the upper left, as if you had folded down the corner.There’s a moving “ticker” along the right margin: “See what your friends are up to right now.”Photos are larger.

Do you like what you see? On Facebook’s blog this morning, people were voting against the changes by a two-to-one margin. One annoyed comment: “Quite frankly I don’t want Facebook deciding who is most important in my life. I want my news feed to just go chronologically and if I want to hide posts from someone, I will. Stop changing.”

The “top story” on my own page was a one-liner from an old college friend: “Packing my FB bags and headed for Google+. This sucks.”

Actually, it will now be easier for him to do that. Google+, the social-networking service Google launched over the summer, is now open to anyone who wants to join. In its start-up phase, one could only join if invited by someone who already belonged. The strategy worked: in its first month Google+ claimed 20 million members.

Google “created a bit of a feeding frenzy that I think surprised a lot of us,” said Rob Enderle, a California-based technology analyst. “In a way they used social engineering to create initial demand and that was new to them.”

It’s natural for people to react negatively when there’s a change made to something with which they were comfortable; think how you react when a friend shows up with new glasses. In the meantime, Facebook will have to put up with comments like this:

“Facebook, you’re not near as smart as you think you are,” wrote a user from Texas. “Your algorithms for deciding what I want to see, who I want to talk to or what I think is important are 99.999% of the time the exact polar opposite of what I want.”

A staffer here at Nightline suggested adding the informal ballot below. Please feel free to click on it, or add a comment at bottom.

YWU2OTg4NzZkNzYzJm9mPTA= Facebook Changes Look and Everyone Hates New Ticker


View the original article here

Watch: 'Extreme Makeover: Home Edition' Returns for 9th Season

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Watch: Bob Ward Murder Trial: Defense Begins Its Case

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Maury Povich Gives $1M to Penn for Journalism

Talk-show host Maury Povich is donating $1 million to support journalism programs at the University of Pennsylvania, his alma mater.

The gift establishes the Povich Fund for Journalism Programs, which will fund seminars and other events at Penn's Kelly Writers House.

Povich and his wife, Connie Chung, established a writer-in-residence program at the university's Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing in 2006. The couple also own the Flathead Beacon, a weekly newspaper in Kalispell, Mont.

Povich graduated from Penn in 1962.


View the original article here

Watch: Markets Plunging After Fed Action

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Watch: Josh Elliott's Chair Gets YarnBombed

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Watch: Jailed American Hikers Set Free in Iran

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

Watch: Michigan Dad: 'My Car Blew Up With Two Kids'

ABCNews.com External links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.

View the original article here

'Charlie's Angels' Finds New Home in Miami

Miami is the new city of angels — at least the city of "Charlie's Angels."

ABC is jumping into the reboot game this fall with an updated version of the classic series that kicks off the network's Thursday night prime-time lineup. Moving its setting and production from Los Angeles to South Florida, the new show gets a fresh start in a new city.

The remake tries to distance itself from the camp of the 1970s version, striving to be a more grounded action series. The first episode begins with two Angels — a former thief played by Rachael Taylor and a disgraced police officer played by Annie Ilonzeh — seeing the third member of their team killed during a mission. Their boss Charlie Townsend and his assistant Bosley — played by Ramon Rodriguez — persuade the survivors to recruit a new Angel, a street racer played by Minka Kelly.

With Drew Barrymore — an Angel in the 2000 and 2003 films — serving as an executive producer, the show was developed by Al Gough and Miles Millar, the duo behind the hit WB show "Smallville," which followed the exploits of a young, pre-Superman Clark Kent. ABC had been planning to bring back "Charlie's Angels" for several years when Gough and Millar got involved last spring.

RACHAEL TAYLOR, MINKA KELLY, ANNIE ILONZEH In this undated image released by ABC, from left, Rachael Taylor, as Abby Sampson, Minka Kelly, as Eve, and Annie Ilonzeh, as Kate Prince, are shown from the ABC series, "Charlie's Angels," premiering Sept. 22 at 8:00 p.m. EST on ABC. The series is filmed in Miami. (AP Photo/ABC, Bob D'Amico) Close

They acknowledge that fans have certain expectations and will scream if they aren't met. The original "Charlie's Angels" was a cultural phenomenon when it debuted in 1976, making stars of Farrah Fawcett, Kate Jackson and Jaclyn Smith. Fawcett proved particularly popular, with boys posting her iconic poster in their rooms and girls copying her feathered hair. The first episode of the new "Charlie's Angels" is scheduled to air at 8 p.m. EDT Thursday, the 35th anniversary of the original's premiere.

"When you say you're going to reboot Charlie's Angels, you certainly are just hanging a big target on your back," Gough said. "What you want to do ideally is reconnect with an audience that loved the show when they were younger and also bring new fans to it."

But the new show starts fresh: These Angels aren't saints. In the original, the women had all trained to become L.A. police officers but sexism in the department had left them relegated to menial positions, so Charlie recruited them to be real detectives. In the new series, the Angels all have sketchy pasts. Charlie recruits them to give them a second chance, using the skills they developed as criminals to do good.

"They're sort of Angels with dirty faces," Gough said.

Taylor said she and her co-stars are looking forward to putting a modern twist on the mythology.

"Even though they were extremely cool and successful, we just want to do our own version," Taylor said.

According to Ilonzeh, the chemistry among the different characters is what drove the old series and the movies.

"The action and the cases and the bad guys and the explosions and all the sparks and the glamour and the fashion and the makeup, those are just the extras," Ilonzeh said. "But it's the relationship that's really going to grab everyone."

The new show promises plenty of action, but producers are trying to go for a more realistic feel, moving away from the gravity defying "Wire Fu" acrobatics featured in the films.

"We do a little bit of everything," stunt coordinator Artie Malesci said. "We're on the water. We're under water. We have boats. We have helicopters. We do some car work. We do a lot of fighting. We do a lot of gun play. We do a lot of scaling buildings."


View the original article here

US Hikers Freed From Iran Arrive in Oman

Shane Bauer and Joshua Fattal, the two U.S. hikers imprisoned in Iran for the past two years, sprinted to freedom today down the steps of a Royal Omani Air Force jet onto a tarmac in Muscat, Oman.

Looking healthy and upbeat, they were greeted by family and friends in an emotional scrum of smiles, hugs and tears, and a long kiss between Bauer and his fiancee, Sarah Shourd, a fellow American prisoner in Iran until one year ago this week.

"We are so happy we are free and so relieved we are free," Fattal, detained in Iran since 2009, told reporters upon arriving. "Our deepest gratitude to his majesty [Omani King] Sultan Qaboos [bin Said Al Said] for obtaining our release. We are sincerely grateful to the government of Oman for hosting us and our families."

Fattal, Bauer and Shourd were arrested two years ago while hiking along Iran's unmarked border with Iraq. They were accused of spying and last month Fattal and Bauer were sentenced to eight years in prison.

"Two years in prison is too long," Bauer told reporters, "and we sincerely hope for the freedom of other political prisoners and other unjustly imprisoned people in America and Iran."

The hikers' families have described the freeing of Bauer and Fattal as "the best day of our lives."

President Obama also hailed the development.

"I welcome the release of Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal from detention in Iran and am very pleased that they are being reunited with their loved ones," Obama said in a written statement. "The tireless advocacy of their families over these two years has won my admiration, and is now coming to an end with Josh and Shane back in their arms. All Americans join their families and friends in celebrating their long-awaited return home."

The men's release ends two years of diplomatic wrangling and, more recently, weeks of political infighting, as Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the country's judiciary argued about freeing the Americans.

Bauer and Fattal were released after an Iranian judge who had twice delayed their release today signed an order to free the men following deposits of $500,000 bail each.

"Today can only be described as the best day of our lives," their families said in a statement issued from Oman before the two men arrived. "We have waited for nearly 26 months for this moment and the joy and relief we feel at Shane and Josh's long-awaited freedom knows no bounds. We now all want nothing more than to wrap Shane and Josh in our arms, catch up on two lost years and make a new beginning, for them and for all of us."

News of the release came moments before Obama was set to address the United Nations General Assembly in New York City. Ahmadinejad is also in New York for the annual plenary.

Obama voiced his excitement about the hikers' release to a CNN camera as he left the U.N.

"Wonderful, wonderful news about the hikers," Obama said. "We are thrilled. And I could not feel better for the families and those moms we've been in close contact with. A wonderful day for them and for us."

Attorney Masoud Shafii, the lawyer representing Bauer and Fattal, told ABC News earlier today that, "The natural path has taken its course."

Shafii, along with the Omani and Swiss diplomats who've been negotiating the hikers' release, waited today inside the notorious Tehran prison where the pair was held to take them to their freedom. United States interests in Tehran are handled by Switzerland because there is no U.S. embassy there.

The delay of the hikers' release has been thought to be an attempt by Ahmadinejad's political rivals to prevent him from gaining traction on the world stage.

The Omanis played a key part in the negotiations of the hikers' release. Oman is the same place that their companion Sarah Shourd went when she was freed from Iran nearly a year ago to the day. Shourd was in Oman today to greet the men. she's engaged to Bauer.

Ahmadinejad announced plans to release Bauer and Fattal on $500,000 bail each last week. Although one judge had signed the paperwork Saturday, Ahmadinejad left for that meeting in New York Monday with the two Americans still behind bars.


View the original article here

Advertisement:

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below. Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser windowClick the Privacy tabAdjust your privacy setting if necessary
If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser. Open Internet ExplorerSelect 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser windowClick the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your changeClose your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your defaultYou can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

View the original article here

Watch: Facebook Users Don't Like New Changes

Facebook Users Don't Like New Changes | Video - ABC News ABC NewsNews Videos.displayName{position:absolute; top:24px;}.displayName .sectionText a{width:150px;left:-75px;top:20px;}Facebook?ESPN?ABCHot Topics:
Space Junk?Rick Santorum?Troy DavisHomeVideoNewsPoliticsInvestigativeHealthEntertainmentMoneyTechGood Morning AmericaWWYD?20/20This WeekNightlineWorld NewsWatch Video: Watch Full EpisodesMost PopularWorld News NowMoney & BusinessHealthPoliticsTechEntertainmentWild & WackyGMAThis WeekFacebook Users Don't Like New ChangesJohn Berman reports on public reaction to the social networking site's update.02:24 | 09/22/2011Related Links: Watch: Facebook Changes Its Look Watch: Facebook: The Future of Online Hiring?Up Next: NASA Predicts Falling Satellite Will Hit in OceanVIDEO: Teen boy who committed suicide complained of relentless cyber-bullying. Lady Gaga Calls for Anti-Bullying Law After DeathTeen boy who committed suicide complained of relentless cyber-bullying. VIDEO: Newsreader surprised after Josh Elliott's Chair Gets YarnBombedNewsreader surprised after "GMA" spruces up his typical office chair. VIDEO: John Berman reports on public reaction to the social networking site's update. Facebook Users Don't Like New ChangesJohn Berman reports on public reaction to the social networking site's update. VIDEO: NASA says it is still too early to know for certain where it will hit. NASA Predicts Falling Satellite Will Hit in OceanNASA says it is still too early to know for certain where space debris will hit. Apple will release the iPhone 5 in October. TechBytes (09.22.11)Apple will release the iPhone 5 in October. 1View CommentLike It. Tweet It. Digg It. Most Popular News VideosVIDEO: Davis is scheduled to be executed for the murder of a cop in Savannah, Ga.Supporters Rally to Save Troy DavisVIDEO: Troy Davis was convicted in the 1989 shooting death of Georgia officer Mark MacPhail.Cop Killer Troy Davis Denied ClemencySCOTUS OKs 'Obese' Inmate's Execution MORE VIDEOSectionsShowsVideo RSSsections:Most PopularU.S.WorldPoliticsBrian Ross InvestigatesHealthEntertainmentMoneyTechTravelExtreme VideoABC News AudioLive VideoPlaylist:SciTech NewsNature's EdgeTech This Out!Home > Video > Tech > SciTech NewsVIDEO: Teen boy who committed suicide complained of relentless cyber-bullying.

Lady Gaga Calls for Anti-Bullying Law After Death

Lady Gaga Calls for Anti-Bullying Law After DeathTeen boy who committed suicide complained of relentless cyber-bullying.VIDEO: Newsreader surprised after

Josh Elliott's Chair Gets YarnBombed

Josh Elliott's Chair Gets YarnBombedNewsreader surprised after "GMA" spruces up his typical office chair.VIDEO: John Berman reports on public reaction to the social networking site's update.

Facebook Users Don't Like New Changes

Facebook Users Don't Like New ChangesJohn Berman reports on public reaction to the social networking site's update.VIDEO: NASA says it is still too early to know for certain where it will hit.

NASA Predicts Falling Satellite Will Hit in Ocean

NASA Predicts Falling Satellite Will Hit in OceanNASA says it is still too early to know for certain where space debris will hit.Apple will release the iPhone 5 in October.

TechBytes (09.22.11)

TechBytes (09.22.11)Apple will release the iPhone 5 in October.VIDEO: A time-lapse video shows woman cast in silicone to make a wax mold for Ripley's.

Mexican Vampire Woman Cast in Wax

Mexican Vampire Woman Cast in WaxA time-lapse video shows woman cast in silicone to make a wax mold for Ripley's.VIDEO: Analytical Graphics animation of how UARS falls from orbit.

Animation: NASA Satellite's Final Plunge

Animation: NASA Satellite's Final PlungeAnalytical Graphics animation of how UARS falls from orbit.VIDEO: Facebook explains new features on its site.

Facebook Changes Its Look

Facebook Changes Its LookCompany explains new "top stories" and "ticker" in video.Google will defend itself on Capitol Hill against anti-trust charges.

TechBytes (09.21.11)

TechBytes (09.21.11)Google will defend itself on Capitol Hill against anti-trust charges.VIDEO: California seismologists test a warning system that saved lives in Japan quake.

Scientists Test High-Tech Earthquake Alerts

Scientists Test High-Tech Earthquake AlertsCalifornia seismologists test a warning system that saved lives in Japan quake.

Facial Recognition Ads Size-Up Consumers

Facial Recognition Ads Size-Up ConsumersNew technology scans faces to determine characteristics like gender and age.Google Wallet introduces new features even if only available on one smart phone.

TechBytes (09.20.11)

TechBytes (09.20.11)Google Wallet introduces new features even if only available on one smart phone.1 of 3 | Next ABCNews.comExternal links are provided for reference purposes. ABC News is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites. Copyright © 2011 ABC News Internet Ventures.Back to top

Sections

NewsPoliticsInvestigativeHealthEntertainmentMoneyTechnologyTravelRecipesBehind the Scenes

Shows

Good Morning AmericaWorld News with Diane SawyerNightlineThis Week with Christiane Amanpour20/20PrimetimeWhat Would You Do?ABC News NowABC.com

Tools

iPad AppMobileRegisterSign InFacebookTwitterBlogsEmails & News AlertsMessage BoardsRSS Headlines

About

Contact UsFeedbackAdvertisingPrivacy PolicyInterest-Based AdsTerms of UseABC News StoreSite Map function fbInit(){if(!window.fbLoaded || window.fbLoaded == undefined){FB.init({ appId : 'fa71b3ce3ced40d47a4850f185b245d9', channelUrl: 'http://a.abcnews.go.com/assets/static/perm_cache/channel.html', cookie: true, xfbml : true // parse XFBML});fbLoaded = true;}}

View the original article here