Jumat, 01 Juni 2012

SpaceX capsule completes historic mission

SpaceX capsule completes historic mission

About 563 miles west of Baja California, SpaceX's Dragon space capsule successfully splashed down after spending nine days in outer space.

When the unmanned cone-shaped capsule hit the water at 8:42 a.m. Pacific time Thursday, it marked the end of a historic mission carried out by the Hawthorne company officially known as Space Exploration Technologies Corp. It was the first privately built and operated spacecraft to dock with the International Space Station.

"Welcome home, baby," said Elon Musk, SpaceX's founder and chief executive, in a news briefing from company headquarters.

After the two spacecraft connected in space May 25, astronauts aboard the space station unloaded half a ton of cargo, water and clothes. The Dragon spent six days attached to the station and was refilled with 1,455 pounds of cargo for the trip back to Earth. The cargo will be delivered to NASA.

Astronauts sent the capsule back in the pre-dawn hours Thursday for a trip that lasted about five hours.

After the capsule reentered Earth's atmosphere, the three main parachutes billowed open about five minutes before splashdown. The orange-and-white-striped parachutes, each 116 feet in diameter, slowed the spacecraft's descent to 16 to 18 feet per second.

The craft bobbed in the water until an 80-foot boat, two 25-foot rigid-hull inflatable boats and a 185-foot barge equipped with a crane made the recovery. The capsule is set to arrive Monday at the Port of Long Beach.

Dragon's mission, which began March 22 when the Falcon 9 rocket it sat atop lifted off in the predawn hours from Cape Canaveral, Fla., is considered the first test of NASA's plan to outsource space missions to privately funded companies now that the U.S. fleet of space shuttles has been retired.

Next on the launchpad for a shot at the space station is Orbital Sciences Corp. of Dulles, Va., which has a test flight of its commercial rocket set for this year.

william.hennigan@latimes.com

Hollywood's Ari Emanuel talks tough on piracy

Hollywood's Ari Emanuel talks tough on piracy

RANCHO PALOS VERDES -- William Morris Endeavor Entertainment co-chief executive Ari Emanuel used the platform of the Wall Street Journal's All Things Digital Conference to call on Silicon Valley and Hollywood to work together to curb Internet piracy -- in his own provocative style.

"I'm going to get a lot of people [angry]," Emanuel said at the onset of his remarks, noting that Southern California's entertainment industry "probably screwed this up" and contributed to an impasse by pressing Congress to adopt the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act. The measure flatlined earlier this year amid fierce opposition from some of the largest Web companies and civil liberties groups.

Northern California's technology companies, meanwhile, have failed to do their part to curb rampant online piracy of movies and TV shows, which threatens the economic underpinnings of the entertainment industry, Emanuel said.

"We should be able to figure this out together," said Emanuel. "I actually don't think Northern California wants to do it."

Emanuel called on search giant Google Inc.and video distributors such as ATT and Verizon to block access to pirated content in the same way they do for other objectionable material, such as child pornography.

The conversation about online piracy ultimately will take place, Emanuel predicted, when these Internet players realize that they need the high-quality content created by his clients, which include "The Social Network"writer Aaron Sorkin, "Curb Your Enthusiasm" creator Larry David and "Family Guy" animator Seth MacFarlane.

"Eventually, I think people are going to pay for not two cats on a couch, they’re going to pay lot more money for  Aaron Sorkin,  they’re going to pay a lot more money for Seth MacFarlane.  Eventually, this conversation has got to happen."

William Morris End eavor, meanwhile, has been investing in digital startups that play at the intersection of technology and entertainment.

The agency acquired a minority stake in online and mobile marketing firm Red Interactive Agency in Santa Monica, funded a social publishing group called "The Audience" and backed a Los Angeles-based visual effects company called OToy Inc.

Indeed, convergence has been a major new focus for the agency since the venerable William Morris Agency merged with Emanuel's Endeavor.  And it attracted investment from Silver Lake, a private equity firm with stakes in Groupon, Skype and Zynga.

"We spent a lot of time in Silicon Valley, kind of figuring out how we could start coming together with what we do and what Silicon Valley does," Emanuel said.

Indeed, Emanuel talked about potentially capitalizing on the latest fund-raising craze, crowd sourcing, to raise money for a new film, inspired by the critically acclaimed television series about foo tball in Texas, "Friday Night Lights."  He said the project could draw contributions from the show's million-plus Facebook fans, or spark interest by posting story-boards on the photo sharing social network site Pinterest.

"I could go the traditional route, put the cast together and have a conversation with the studio, or I could go back to the studio and say I have X-amount of money," Emanuel said. "I would like to figure out if we could do that, change paradigms."

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Bruce Springsteen berates bankers — in German

Bruce Springsteen berates bankers — in German

"Wrecking Ball" is perhaps the most politically outspoken album of his career, repeatedly attacking a system that props up megalithic financial institutions while devaluing the working person and the roots of his beloved Americana. Berlin is an apt city for him to revisit populist themes â€" his famous 1988 concert in East Berlin (seen by a reported 160,000 people) is sometimes cited as one contributing factor in the buildup of popular pressure to tear down the Berlin Wall in 1989. 

His recent L.A. sets, by comparison, were more upbeat and revivalist affairs. But this packed Berlin show proved that the Boss' message translates in any language. 

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â€"August Brown

Photo: Bruce Springsteen performs in the Olympic Stadium in Berlin on May 30. Credit: Britta Pedersen / EPA.

Review: 'High School' — get it? It's a stoner comedy

Review: 'High School' — get it? It's a stoner comedy

With "High School," director/co-writer John Stalberg Jr. attempts to make the ultimate teen stoner comedy, but the movie winds up a disappointing buzz kill.

A potential valedictorian (Matt Bush) tries marijuana for the first time only to discover his maniacal principal (Michael Chiklis) is imposing mandatory drug testing on everyone at the school. This launches an ill-conceived idea from the red-eyed pal (Sean Marquette) who got him high in the first place to get the entire student body baked on pot brownies to throw off the results, a bit of stoned logic that also requires ripping off the local weirdo dealer (Adrien Brody).

There's been plenty of weed in high school movies â€" even "The Breakfast Club" used it to accelerate the bonding among its young Americans. But "High School" lacks the oddball inventiveness of the "Harold and Kumar" films or other genuine pot comedies. Stalberg Jr. seems more interested in using the weed-world's codes and behaviors as simply a vehicle for an outsized comedy rather than any sort of actual subcultural exploration.

Lacking real kick, "High School" winds up as irksome as a bag of ditch weed and as lame as the pun of the film's title.

-

"High School"

MPAA rating: R for pervasive drugs and language, crude and sexual content, some nudity â€" all involving teens

Running time: 1 hour, 33 minutes

Playing: In general release

calendar@latimes.com

John Edwards not guilty on 1 count, mistrial declared in other 5

John Edwards not guilty on 1 count, mistrial declared in other 5

GREENSBORO, N.C. -- Former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards was found not guilty Thursday on one of the six counts of campaign finance fraud against him. The jury deadlocked on the other counts, and the judge declared a mistrial.

U.S. District Judge Catherine Eagles had sent the jury of eight men and four women back to resume deliberations earlier in the afternoon after the foreman reported that jurors had reached a verdict on one count, but not the other five.

The jurors, already in their ninth day of deliberations, returned after 20 minutes.

The judge asked, "Would further deliberations have any reasonable chance of a unanimous decision on the other counts?"

The foreman replied, "No, your honor."

Edwards, who was handed the foreman's note before it was read by the clerk, showed no emotion upon doing so. When the verdict was announced, however, he smiled, then reached over and hugged his daughter Cate and his parents. He also gave a bear hug to his attorneys, saying, "Thank you, thank you all."

Edwards' father, Wallace Edwards, when asked how he felt, pointed to a  big smile on his own face and said, "This says it all." His mother, Bobbie Edwards, said: "We prayed for this, and God answered our prayers."

The government now must decide whether to seek a new trial on the five counts for which a verdict was not reached.

The trial featured two main characters who were exposed in testimony as liars with tarnished reputations -- Edwards and his fo rmer aide, Andrew Young.

Edwards lied about his affair with Rielle Hunter and falsely denied that he fathered their daughter. The prosecution portrayed him as a manipulative politician who orchestrated payments totaling $925,000 from two wealthy benefactors to cover up the affair and thus save his campaign from collapsing in scandal.

Prosecutors built their case around Young, who testified under a grant of immunity. Young said Edwards solicited the payments, kept abreast of the scheme and even persuaded Young to falsely claim that he had fathered Hunter's child. But testimony revealed that Young and his wife kept much of the money for themselves, and kept phony records to cover it up.

The money came from Rachel "Bunny" Mellon, 101, a billionaire heiress and ardent Edwards supporter, and from Fred Baron, a wealthy Texas lawyer who was Edwards' campaign finance chairman. Baron died in 2008. Mellon, who has failing eyesight and hearing, was not called to testi fy.

In three weeks of testimony by 24 witnesses, prosecutors focused on the tawdry details of the affair and the attempts to keep it secret. Jurors heard salacious details of trysts between Edwards and Hunter, and descriptions of madcap trips across the country to hide a pregnant Hunter -- and later her daughter -- from pursuing National Enquirer reporters.

The case was unprecedented; no major political candidate has been charged with campaign finance corruption for attempts to hide a mistress. Hampton Dellinger, a North Carolina lawyer who has taught election law at Duke University and who attended the trial, said Edwards is the most prominent American lawyer put on trial since Clarence Darrow.

There was no smoking gun, no body, and not even a distinct crime scene. In fact, the defense argued that there was no crime at all -- only a philandering husband desperately trying to hide an affair from his wife.

Witnesses described how Mellon sent "Bunny money" checks to an interior decorator, Bryan Huffman, who endorsed them and sent them to Andrew Young. His wife, Cheri Young, then deposited the checks in the couple's accounts, using her maiden name.

Jurors heard how some of the money from Baron was spent to support Hunter's lavish lifestyle. With the Youngs and their small children in tow, Hunter was flown to expensive hotels and homes in exclusive neighborhoods in an attempt to escape tabloid reporters determined to expose the affair.

Edwards, 58, a former U.S. senator and 2004 vice presidential nominee, was charged with six counts of violating federal election laws. Prosecutors said he "knowingly and willingly" solicited the payments and knew they were illegal. One count charged Edwards with conspiring to accept the payments and to conceal them from the Federal Election Commission through "trick, scheme or device."

The defense said the payments were private gifts intended to hide the affair from Edw ards' wife, Elizabeth Edwards. Witnesses testified that Elizabeth Edwards, who died of cancer in 2010, had become increasingly suspicious of her husband, monitoring his bank accounts and phone calls.

Edwards' lawyers mounted a two-pronged defense. They attempted to discredit Young as an opportunist seeking revenge against his former boss. They tried to convince jurors that under federal election law the payments were private gifts not directly related to the campaign.

The chief financial officer for Edwards' 2008 campaign, for instance, testified that the FEC did not require her to report the payments as campaign contributions -- even after Edwards was indicted last year. And a former FEC commissioner, Scott Thomas, testified that in his 37 years of experience with federal election laws, no one had been prosecuted for payments from a third party used to cover up an extramarital affair.

Bill Clinton joining Wisconsin recall battle against Scott Walker

Bill Clinton joining Wisconsin recall battle against Scott Walker

Bill Clinton will stump in Wisconsin on Friday for that state’s Democratic gubernatorial challenger, the latest in a series of high-profile campaign roles for the former president.

Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz announced Thursday that Clinton would be campaigning with Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett as he looks to unseat Gov. Scott Walker in next week’s recall. The former president will take part in a rally with Barrett, according to the Barrett's website.

Clinton has recently emerged as the party’s go-to utility player. On Monday, he will appear with President Obama at three consecutive fundraisers in New York, including a small dinner at the home of hedge fund manager Marc Lasry (whose fund once employed Chelsea Clinton) and a gala at the Waldorf Astoria. Topping off the evening will be a Broadway concert featuring performances by stage luminaries such as James Earl Jones, Tony Kushner, Patti LuPone and Angela Lansbury.

The events are being held a little more than a month after Clinton appeared with Obama at another fundraiser for the president’s reelection campaign, held at the Virginia home of former Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe.

And Clinton is scheduled to headline yet another fundraiser in Beverly Hills on June 14 â€" this one to raise money for the host committee organizing the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C. The midday lunch will be at the home of media entrepreneur Haim Saban, a major fundraiser for Hillary Rodham Clinton’s 2008 presidential bid.

Guests are being asked to pony up as much as $100,000 per couple to attend the event, in exchange for hotel rooms in Charlotte and convention credentials. It’s one of the first major high-dollar events for the Charlotte host committee, which has been laboring to raise money under rules imposed by the Democratic National Committee that prohibit donations from for-profit corporations, political action committees and registered lobbyists.

But as we reported last month, organizers have found a way for monied interests to play a role in financing the event. Convention officials have encouraged corporate executives to write personal checks. They have suggested that corporations can donate goods and services to the convention, and give up to $100,000 through a corporate foundation. Lobbyists can also bundle money in exchange for perks such as credentials. And union money is not prohibited.

In addition, a separate committee called New American City accepts unlimited sums from corporations. That fund pays for all the host committee’s administrative overhead â€" including the costs of producing fundraisers such as the one Clinton will headline â€" and welcome parties for the media and delegates.

Convention officials have declined to release the tally of how much the host committee has raised so far, but spokeswoman Suzi Emmerling said Thursday that fundraising is “right on track.”

matea.gold@latimes.com

Edwards not guilty on 1 count, mistrial on others

Edwards not guilty on 1 count, mistrial on others

Former presidential candidate John Edwards was found not guilty on one of six campaign fraud charges Thursday, and the jury could not reach a verdict on the other counts, leading the judge to declare a mistrial on them.

Edwards was accused of masterminding a plan to use money from two wealthy donors to hide his pregnant mistress during his run for the White House in 2008.

It was not immediately clear whether prosecutors would retry Edwards on the other counts.

Edwards did not react when the verdict and mistrial were announced, but he was happy and smiling about an hour earlier when the jury said it had reached a verdict on one count after nine days of deliberations.

The acquittal and mistrial highlighted a day of confusion when the judge mistakenly believed jurors had reached a verdict on all six counts.

Instead, the jury told the judge they had a unanimous decision on only one charge, and the panel was sent back to the jury room for more talks. About an hour later, the jury sent the note to the judge saying it had exhausted talks.

Prosecutors accused Edwards of knowing about roughly $1 million being funneled to former aide Andrew Young and the candidate's mistress Rielle Hunter. They also said he was well aware of the $2,300 legal limit on campaign donations.

The weeks-long trial has gone into the most intimate details of a sordid sex scandal that effectively ended Edwards' political career and the elaborate cover-up that involved his most trusted aide, the aide's wife, and the two wealthy donors.

Edwards' lawyers have argued that the ex-U.S. senator never knew that taking the money violated campaign finance law, and that his personal transgressions weren't illegal.

The jury has made more news in recent days of the trial, as Eagles has closed the court to discuss unspecified issues with jurors. Four alternate jurors began wearing matching colored shirts to court and one of them was said to be exchanging smiles with Edwards. Eagles told the alternates on Wednesday that they no longer needed to come to court during deliberations.

The jurors, whose identities have been withheld throughout the trial, asked to see dozens of trial exhibits during deliberations, relating to Mellon and Baron's donations.

Mellon, who is 101 years old, did not testify. Baron died in 2008.

Elizabeth Edwards died in late 2010.