With news breaking Tuesday that long-time Fox News analyst Dick Morris has not had his contract renewed by the cable network, all eyes are turning to Morris’ upcoming appearance on CNN Wednesday night.
Morris is slated to join CNN’s Piers Morgan for his 9 p.m. (EST) show to discuss his mysterious disappearance from Fox since shortly after last November’s election.
On Tuesday, Fox confirmed rumors Morris would not have an official role at the network. Morris’ contract with Fox expired this past Sunday.
“His contract is up and we will not be renewing it, ” a Fox spokesperson said.
The Morris announcement comes in the wake of Fox’s decision not to renew Sarah Palin’s contract.
The network did announce that former Bush White House adviser Karl Rove had been renewed as a contributor. The network also signed on former Democratic Congressman Dennis Kucinich as a contributor.
Morris, reached via email, told Newsmax he is looking forward to his appearance on CNN Wednesday night.
“Piers and I have a lot to talk about, and I am excited that Piers is giving me this opportunity,” Morris wrote cryptically. “You won’t be disappointed, so tune in.”
Fox’s ratings have fallen dramatically in the wake of last year’s election. Press reports indicate the cable channel is re-evaluating its approach after President Obama’s strong re-election victory, despite the fact a number of Fox hosts and analysts predicted otherwise.
California police have launched a manhunt for a former LAPD officer who is suspected of having gunned down five people, three of which were killed. Los Angeles Police already shot two innocent people while trying to detain the suspect.
Fear has struck the Los Angeles Police Department as authorities frantically search for the man who murdered their colleagues and promises to target anyone in uniform.
Former LAPD officer and US Navy reservist Christopher Jordan Dorner, 33, began his shooting spree with the killing of a young couple. Monica Quan, 28, and her 27-year-old fiancé, Keith Lawrence, were found dead in their car on Sunday night – an act of violence that Dorner called “a necessary evil that I do not enjoy but must partake and complete for substantial change to occur within the LAPD.”
The young woman was the daughter of Randal Quan, a former LAPD captain and current lawyer who represented Dorner in front of the Board of Rights, which ruled against him when he was fired from his job in early 2009. Even though Quan represented Dorner before the board, he was unsuccessful in securing his client’s employment.
The other three shooting victims were all LAPD police officers, one of which suffered fatal gunshot wounds Wednesday evening. In a 20-page manifesto published online, Dorner promised to continue killing, and specifically targeted police officers he believes were involved in his dismissal from the LAPD, where he worked from 2005 to 2008.
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Good new playwrights are hard to come by these days. To discover a new and talented playwright is the fervent prayer of producers and director the world over. The search by Southern California artistic directors may have ended at The Old Globe Theatre’s Sheryl and Harvey White stage with “The Brothers Size” written by Tarell A. McCraney.
McCraney, is best known for his acclaimed trilogy, “The Brother/Sister Plays: ‘The Brothers Size’, ‘In the Red and Brown Water’ and ‘Marcus: or the Secret of Sweet’. The label “new playwright” may be a little misleading, in that McCraney has a handful of plays that already have been produced, both in Europe and the United States. Perhaps, a more apt description should read McCraney is an emerging but seasoned playwright.
The Old Globe’s production of “The Brothers Size” is directed by award winning director Tea Algic. Algic is a very seasoned and a highly respected professional director originally from the Balkans. It’s not the first time the Globe has enjoyed a Balkan connection. Former Artistic Director Darko Tresnjak was born in Zemun, Yugoslavia, and grew up in Poland and the United States.
McCraney’s play is a story about “love” – as are most good stories. In this case, it’s a love story between two African American brothers, and the ancient and tribal mythic traditions that bind them as a family. The Older brother Ogun Size (wonderfully and sympathetically played by Joshua Elijah Reese) is a study in sacrifice in this cautionary morality tale.
Oshoosi, the naive young brother (winningly played by Okieriete Onaodwan) has just been released from prison. While Ogun is the owner of an auto repair shop who is trying to catch a piece of the American dream, Oshoosi is more a case of the American dream interrupted. Besides, Oshoosi is just not interested, at the moment, in rejoining mainstream America. He’d rather seek the pleasures of the flesh first, then, he’ll think about what to do with the rest of his life.
There is a third character in this powerful, yet poignant, triangle of life and love in the Louisiana Bayou; one who is loaded with symbolism. Antwayn Hopper is absolutely riveting in his portrayal of Elegba, a fellow prisoner who has been released with Oshoosi. Or is he merely a figment of Oshoosi’s imagination? Hopper plays him bare-chested throughout the play, exuding a sexuality that is simmering just beneath his skin; awaiting an opportunity to rise up and tempt unsuspecting victims.
Although not technically an actor in the production, Percussionist Jonathan Melville Pratt performs live African drumming and original music throughout the performance that makes him an integral member of the cast. His contribution to the production could be likened to the role of the special effects and/or the sound editor in films. Pratt’s musical touches are not only hypnotic but help pace the show by underscoring the story’s modern setting and its character’s ties to African roots, despite a five hundred year history of living in America.
The inspired direction of Tea Alagic, and the talent of the performers, is what make this production work. Of course, it helps that Alagic has had a working relationship with McCraney, both as an actor and a director of several years standing and is one who completely understands the material and the dramatic intentions of the playwright. Also, she has directed this play several times, both in Europe and here in the States.
As a twentieth century critic, now trapped in the twenty-first century theatrical scene, it’s apparent that the structure and form that served the theatre well for so many years (linear plays: beginning, middle, and end) is now undergoing changes in content and in the way plays are being written and accepted by new audiences. “The Brothers Size” is loaded with F-bombs and N-bombs. The vernacular is the method of communication these days. And there is nothing wrong with this change. It just takes a little time for these changes to kick in for society in general.
When I shared my thoughts on new and emerging playwrights with the Globe’s new Artistic Director, Barry Edelstein, I mentioned how much I admired the late, great, African American playwright August Wilson. Edelstein commented that perhaps McCraney is on the cusp of becoming the next August Wilson for the 21st Century. He certainly has the talent and a way with story, style, and method in telling his stories. Perhaps, he might indeed, become the next August Wilson. He is only thirty-three years old. Time will tell…
“The Brothers Size” performs on the White stage through February 24th, 2013.
A powerful 8.0-magnitude earthquake struck the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific on Wednesday, reportedly flattening villages and prompting a “potentially destructive” tsunami wave.
The epicenter of the tremor was located at a shallow depth of 5.8 km in the area of the Santa Cruz Islands, the US Geological Survey reports. It was shortly followed by two strong aftershocks – one rated at magnitude 6.4 and another at 6.6.
A tsunami wave measuring 0.9 meters reportedly hit the Solomon Islands. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a tsunami warning for the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, New Caledonia, Kosrae, Fiji, Kiribati, and Wallis and Futuna islands.
“Sea level readings indicate a tsunami was generated,” the Hawaii-based Pacific centre said. “It may have been destructive along coasts near the earthquake epicentre and could also be a threat to more distant coasts.”
A medical official on the main Santa Cruz island of Ndende said that there were reports of destruction. “The information we are getting is that some villages west and south of Lata along the coast have been destroyed, although we cannot confirm this yet,” the director at Lata Hospital, told AFP.
A Syrian has attacked Iranian President Ahmadinejad in front of Al-Hussein mosque in Cairo, Al Arabiya reported, quoting local media. The leader is in the Egyptian capital on a visit.