I understand Chicken Fried Steak...but is Chicken Fried Chicken really necessary?

9.10.07

Ike Hanson's Pulmonary Embolistic Episode!

After undergoing surgery Thursday in Dallas to remove multiple blood clots from his arm, neck area and lungs, Isaac Hanson and his brothers Zac and Taylor were back home in Tulsa on Saturday, eager to resume their national tour, "The Walk," on Monday."I'm lucky to be here," Isaac Hanson said as he patted the elastic bandage that covered his right forearm at a press conference on the banks of the Arkansas River where the brothers endorsed the 0.4 percent sales tax proposal for river improvements on Tuesday's ballot."Downtown Tulsa is a gem and river development is what we need to magnify that downtown beauty," he said.The brothers were performing Tuesday night at the House of Blues in Dallas when Isaac Hanson, a guitarist, noticed sudden swelling and stiffness in his arm about halfway through the show, he said."I just left for a couple of minutes and walked backstage and said, 'Something's going on,' " he said.Zac Hanson noticed, too. "His arm was black and blue. It was pretty obvious that it was serious," he said during an interview Saturday.
Isaac Hanson was taken to Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas early Wednesday, and the band postponed its Tulsa homecoming show, scheduled for that night, to Nov. 11."The only other time we've canceled a show was because of a hurricane," Taylor Hanson said. "So, yeah, our fans understood this was serious."Isaac Hanson, 26, said this wasn't the first time he has developed blood clots that have traveled to his lungs -- a condition called pulmonary embolism. His first diagnosis was at age 23."And I was really young for that," he said. "Usually it happens to people into their 30s."Doctors who examined him last week also found that he has thoracic outlet syndrome, or "Paget-Schroeder syndrome," a rare condition caused by compression of blood vessels and nerves in the area of the collarbone. It causes pain, numbness and loss of grip strength, he said.The condition also made him more susceptible to potentially deadly blood clots, he said.About 15 percent of people who develop clots will also develop pulmonary embolism, he said.
When Hanson completes its current leg of its national tour in December, Isaac Hanson will make time to have surgery to permanently correct the problem, he said.In the meantime, it means "no heavy lifting" and changing the way he plays guitar, he said."My guitar techs on the road are always onto me because I'm notoriously hard on my guitars," he said. "I will break two or three strings at a time."He said thoracic outlet syndrome often appears in pitchers, tennis players and swimmers because of overdevelopment of muscles around the affected area.Isaac Hanson said the surgery to remove his clots involved an AngioJet -- a tube inserted into the affected area to break up clots and suction them out.The procedure is relatively new, he said."This time, the surgery and hospital stay was two days," he said. "Last time it took three weeks."He is also taking blood thinners to help prevent further clotting, he said."If this happened 10 years ago, I likely could have died," he said. "And if I didn't, I'd likely never be able to play guitar again. . . . But now, I'm really excited to be back so soon -- and I'm ready to play."His quick recovery was helped by the support of his fans, the brothers said."People have called us from halfway around the world, and we've received thousands of supportive messages," Taylor Hanson said."It's been a huge, heart-wrenching thing to know that our brother was suffering from something so serious," he said. "The support, the action that our fans have taken is overwhelming."Isaac Hanson agreed. "It's a hard thing to know -- that what you do for a living can cause a life-threatening illness," he said.The American Academy of Family Physicians' Web site says an estimated 300,000 Americans a year suffer pulmonary embolism.Of those who have it, 2 percent die within the first day, and 10 percent will develop the condition again. Of that 10 percent, nearly half -- 45 percent -- die of it."Parents, athletes, if you ever notice any symptoms, get to a hospital immediately," Isaac Hanson said.Taylor Hanson said the postponed tour dates haven't stopped fans from following in the brothers' footsteps when it comes to social activism.
"Instead of gifts, fans have donated to TOMS Shoes; they have continued the one-mile walks in our name," he said.At each stop on the tour, the Hansons are walking one mile with fans to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS and poverty in Africa. TOMS Shoes, which makes footwear, will donate a pair of shoes to poor African children for every pair it sells, Taylor Hanson said.So far, fans have walked more than 17 miles.The Hansons will go to Africa in November to deliver the 50,000 shoes they plan to have collected by that time, he said.
By JENNIFER CHANCELLOR World Scene WriterTulsaWorld

7.10.07

Art Appreciation: Daniel Edwards--The Controversial Sculptor

Daniel Edwards is a talented sculptor with a lot to say about pop culture. Today I stumbled across his name and was stunned to see some of his artwork. Everything I have seen so far is outrageously controversial, but it seems to be getting his point across. Take a gander, this is all I could find so far.








"Monument to Pro-Life: The Birth of Sean Preston"
It symbolized Spears' decision to put childbirth ahead of her career. **************************************
"Suri's Bronzed Baby Poop"

On August 28, 2006, Edwards unveiled a sculpture entitled purported to be the actual first bowel movement, or meconium, of the baby of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes. The sculpture was to be auctioned on eBay, and Edwards was commissioned to produce a limited-edition plaster replica. Sources disagreed on whether the bronze sculpture actually contained Suri's excrement: some reported that it did, while others reported the story as being a hoax.
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"Paris Hilton Autopsy with Tinkerbell"
This life-size sculpture of Paris Hilton depicts the heiress as a dead prom queen, naked with her legs spread. She is wearing a tiara and clutching a mobile phone. Her pet Chihuahua, Tinkerbell, also wearing a tiara, is featured resting its front paws on her breast. The sculpture is aimed at stopping young women from drinking and driving, a crime of which Hilton had previously been found guilty and subsequently sentenced to jail after breaking probation.
The sculpture also has an open abdominal cavity with removable life-size organs and twin fetuses, which visitors to the exhibition may hold if they wear special gloves. The publicity around this work even attempted to incorporate a participatory element, with a contest for viewers to submit their own essays about drunk driving.
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"Iraq War Memorial Featuring the Death of Prince Harry, the Martyr of Maysan Province"
The sculpture features Harry in his army uniform, a holstered pistol at his side, his head resting on a bible and pennies covering his eyes. A vulture stands at his feet, and Harry is clutching the flag of Wales. Edwards was inspired by the prince's willingness to go to Iraq with his regiment, a request which was ultimately turned down. The memorial honors "those willing but unable to serve in the Iraq conflict," according to the press release. Edwards suggests that the sculpture shows how Prince Harry "must have died the day they told him he couldn't serve"




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"Presidential Bust of Hillary Rodham Clinton: First Woman President of the United States of America"

This one took me a minute to process.













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"Fidel Castro's Deathbed Portrait"
Large enough to belong to a 25 foot man, the sculpture comes from Harlem, New York’s acclamation for Castro’s contributions to civil rights. “Harlem is perhaps the only community in the U.S. that proclaims an admiration for Castro - the Central Park unveiling of his portrait is an attempt to bring Harlem’s adoration for Castro to the rest of the world,” said a spokesman for the unveiling. “With respect to Harlem, the portrait celebrates Castro’s humanitarianism and with respect to Miami, it celebrates the end of a long regime,” said Kesting. Reportedly, Miami’s Little Havana celebrated in the streets to wild rumors from anti-Castro exiles that Castro had died while Harlem celebrated Castro’s 80th birthday in August.

Interesting News: 13 Year Adventure, 2 Headed Turtles, Cobra Shoes, The Navy Remodels, & Plus Size Model

On Saturday, British adventurer Jason Lewis finally came home, completing a 13-year, 46,000-mile human-powered circumnavigation of the globe. The 40-year-old carried his 26-foot yellow pedal craft the last few miles up the River Thames, pushing it across the Meridian Line at Greenwich, where his expedition began in 1994. "I'm overwhelmed," Lewis told Sky News television after arriving. He struggled for words as he described his feelings at the close of an odyssey that took him around the globe, powered only by his arms and legs - on a bicycle, a pedal boat, a kayak and inline skates. "It's been my life, for 13 years, I've put everything into this," he said. "To be honest I didn't know it was going to happen. There were many times in the trip where it should have failed." Lewis was recruited by fellow adventurer Steve Smith, who first dreamed up the idea of going around the world using only human power in 1991. The pair had little experience at sea, but Lewis thought the prospect of hiking and biking across the world was "wildly romantic." "The three and a half years the expedition was projected to take sounded like an acceptable amount of time to rejuvenate from the wearisome London scene without totally going AWOL," Lewis wrote on the expedition's Web site. Trouble began early. After two years of planning and fundraising, the pair set out in July 1994 only to get "horribly lost" on their way to the English coastal town of Rye, where their pedal boat was waiting. After crossing the English Channel to France and then cycling to Portugal, the pair pedaled their boat in shifts across the Atlantic Ocean, reaching Miami in February 1995. Along the way, they survived close encounters with a shrimping trawler, a whale and a giant wave that swept Smith overboard. By the time they reached America, the two adventurers had been cooped up in a broom closet-sized space for 111 days with little in the way of food, and their relationship had begun to deteriorate. They crossed the U.S. separately, with Lewis strapping on his inline skates for the 3,500-mile trip to San Francisco. It was on this leg of the journey that he was hit by a car in Pueblo, Colo., breaking both legs. He spent nine months recuperating. Smith and Lewis reunited in San Francisco and eventually pedaled from the Golden Gate Bridge to Hawaii, where the two split for good. Smith went on to write a book, "Pedaling to Hawaii," while Lewis continued on to Australia. He biked across the Australian outback, dodged supertankers in the Singapore straits and hiked the Himalayas. From Mumbai, India, he pedaled his boat across the Indian Ocean to Djibouti and made his way north by bicycle through Sudan and Egypt. Accidents and sickness dogged the trip. The collision in Colorado nearly cost Lewis his leg. The trip across the Pacific left him sore, inflamed and depressed. While kayaking across the Barrier Reef off Australia, he was attacked by a crocodile, which bit off a piece of his paddle. Local authorities were a problem, as well. Lewis logged "interesting experiences" with Alabama police and gun-wielding locals in the United States. He had to cycle through Tibet at night to avoid detection by Chinese roadblocks. And when he crossed into Egypt from Sudan, he was thrown in jail by the military on suspicion of being a spy. After his release from prison, he biked through the Sinai desert and across Jordan, Syria and Turkey. He then powered through Europe over the summer, arriving in Greenwich, in southeast London, to cheers from family, supporters and the Duke of Gloucester, the expedition's British patron. Lewis broke the trip up into 16 legs and took breaks ranging from several weeks to several months in various parts of the world. He also picked up corporate sponsors for each leg of the trip, including sports clothing, gear and supplement companies; satellite phone and global positioning system firms; and M&M's, which provided chocolate for the trip across the Pacific. Lewis said he hoped to use the expedition to raise funds for humanitarian causes and draw attention to environmental issues. He has already raised $66,000 for causes ranging from an orphanage in East Timor to kindergartens in Bangkok. "Instead of running away from England (as I think I was at the beginning) it is now more a question of riding forward on the back of ideas that I feel passionately about," he wrote on his Web site in April.
Net: Expedition 360: http://www.expedition360.com
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.
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Store manager Jay Jacoby displays a two-headed red slider turtle Sept. 26 at Big Al's Aquarium Supercenter in East Norriton, Pa.






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A live Egyptian cobra guards a shoe from designer Rene Caovilla at Harrods in London Sept. 10. The pair of sandals are valued at $125,872 and feature a cobra-shaped jewel made of rubies, sapphires and a 3.5-carat diamond.


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The U.S. Navy plans to spend as much as $600,000 to modify a barracks complex that resembles a swastika from above, officials said. Satellite images from Google Earth revealed the shape.





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Travelers check out a sculpture of a giant woman with her head stuck in a photo booth at Victoria Station in London Sept. 21.

First Try!

Hey all, this is my first time trying to start up any kind of page, so here goes! Let's see if I can figure this out...