Oreo cookie maker Mondelez gives CEO $10M stock award








The company that makes Oreo cookies is sweetening the pay for its CEO with a special stock award valued at $10 million.

Mondelez Inc. says in a regulatory filing that the reward recognizes Irene Rosenfeld for "top-tier performance," including the recent "highly successful" spinoff of its Kraft Foods grocery business.

Mondelez, which also makes Cadbury chocolates and Trident gum, says the pay also is intended to give her incentive to continue delivering strong results. It includes restricted stock that will vest after three years and restricted stock based on the company's performance.





AP



Irene Rosenfeld





Rosenfeld, who took over as CEO in 2006, received a pay package worth $15.7 million as CEO of Kraft Foods Inc. last year, according to an Associated Press calculation.

Mondelez is based in Deerfield, Ill.










Read More..

Miami-Dade jobless rate drops to 8.4 percent; Florida rate drops to 8.1 percent




















Florida’s unemployment rate dropped to 8.1 percent for November, down .4 percent over the previous month, bring it to November 2008 levels. It was the largest drop in month over month rates since October 1992, reported the state’s Department of Economic Opportunity.

In Miami-Dade County, the unemployment rate dropped to 8.4 percent when adjusted for seasonality; that represents a drop of .3 percent from October 2012 and 1.8 percent from November 2011.

In Broward County, the jobless rate dropped to. 7.0 percent, down .1 percent from October and down 1.8 percent from November 2011; seasonally adjusted numbers will not be released for Broward until later in the month.





Statewide, the total number of job postings increased sharply in November 2012 compared to the previous November by 29,522 (an increase of 12.4 percent), for a total of 267,310 openings (seasonally-adjusted), according to the Help Wanted OnLine data series from the Conference Board, Gov. Rick Scott’s office reported.

Broward County showed its first gain in construction jobs in 66 months. Miami-Dade continued to lose construction jobs for a 62th month.

Jane Wooldridge





Read More..

Religious leaders, students in South Florida remember Newtown tragedy with observances




















South Florida religious leaders will be remembering the 20 children and six adults killed in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

On Friday, all Archdiocese of Miami schools will have a moment of prayer at 9:32 a.m. The archdiocese’s churches also will ring their bells 26 times in observance of those killed.

On Sunday, Temple Judea in Coral Gables will offer an interfaith service that will be open to everyone. Rabbi Edwin Goldberg said the idea was to offer a chance for the community to come together after what happened in Newtown.





“The point of the service is to come together and find comfort and hope,” Goldberg said.

Here are some of the observances:

•  Interfaith service organized by South Florida Muslim community, 2:30 p.m. Friday, Darul Uloom Institute, 7050 Pines Blvd. in Pembroke Pines.

•  Spiritual bouquet for Newtown students by the students of St. Rose of Lima in Miami Shores, prayer service at 10 a.m. Friday.

•  Prayer jar by students at Good Shepherd School in Southwest Miami-Dade to be sent to Newtown students.

•  Interfaith service, 4 p.m. Sunday, at Temple Judea, 5500 Granada Blvd. in Coral Gables.





Read More..

Who Is Miss Universe Olivia Culpo?

It was an exciting Wednesday night for Americans as Miss USA Olivia Culpo became Miss Universe. But how well do we know this New England beauty?

Here are five little-known facts about the beauty queen:

5. The 2012 Miss Rhode Island USA pageant was the first beauty contest Culpo had ever entered.

4. Culpo is the first winner from the U.S. to become Miss Universe since Brook Lee in 1997.

3. Miss Universe is rumored to be dating Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte. In fact, the athlete was so smitten with Culpo, he told E!, "She is beautiful. I love hanging out with her. She has a great sense of humor. She makes me laugh."

2. A cellist since the second grade, Culpo has played at the Boston Symphony Hall, Carnegie Hall and in England.

1. What does Miss Universe crave food-wise? She told Shape magazine, "This is such a random craving, but all throughout the pageant I was craving peanut butter and jelly! Oh my goodness, it is so good. I could live off of it."


Does Miss Universe have your vote?

Read More..

BMG nears $90M deal for Sony/ATV song catalog








BMG Rights is close to a deal for Sony/ATV’s Rosetta music publishing catalog, several sources told The Post.

One executive said the music publishing firm had offered around $90 million for the rights to some 30,000 songs.

Rosetta is packed with ’80s hits from acts such as Tears for Fears, Culture Club and Devo, along with British songstress Duffy’s “Mercy.”

Sony/ATV, a joint venture of Sony Music and the estate of Michael Jackson, agreed to sell the catalog to win European Union approval for its $2.2 billion purchase of EMI’s publishing arm.

BMG Rights is backed by German media giant Bertelsmann and private-equity firm KKR.





AP



Duffy





Other bidders for the catalog included Warner Music Group and G2 Investment Group, as well as Saban Capital, Canada’s Ole and Paris indie Because Music.

A spokesman for Sony ATV couldn’t be reached.

catkinson@nypost.com










Read More..

Carnival fourth-quarter profits tumble




















MIAMI (AP) – Cruise operator Carnival Corp. said Thursday that its fiscal fourth-quarter net income tumbled 57 percent, hurt by lower ticket prices and higher fuel costs.

Despite the drop, the results beat Wall Street predictions. But the Miami-based company issued a lower-than-expected profit prediction for the full year, and its shares fell 6 percent in morning trading.

Cruise line operators entered 2012 thinking they could start charging passengers more again after offering widespread discounts following the 2007-2009 recession. But just two weeks into the year, 32 people died when Carnival’s Costa Concordia sank off the coast of Italy. Bookings slumped even as cruise companies lowered prices.





For the quarter ended Nov. 30, Carnival earned $93 million, or 12 cents per share, down from $217 million, or 28 cents per share, in the same quarter last year. Excluding one-time items, the company, which operates Holland America Line, Princess Cruises and Carnival Cruise Lines, said it posted an adjusted profit of 13 cents per share.

Revenue fell 3 percent to $3.58 billion from $3.7 billion.

Analysts, on average, expected a profit of 11 cents per share on $3.49 billion in revenue, according to a FactSet poll.

Carnival’s revenue yields, which measure the amount a cruise company makes from its passengers after removing expenses, fell 4.5 percent, but were better than the 5 to 6 percent drop the company projected in September. In addition, fuel prices rose 5.4 percent to $716 per metric ton, but weren’t as high as the $739 per metric ton the company expected.

Those factors helped offset an increase in operating costs, resulting in the better-than-expected quarterly results, the company said.

For the full year, Carnival earned $1.3 billion, or $1.67 per share, down from $1.91 billion, or $2.42 per share, in the previous fiscal year. Revenue fell to $15.38 billion from $15.79 billion.

Carnival said that over the past six weeks, booking volumes for the first three quarters of this year were about the same as they were at the same time last year, with slightly lower prices. But overall advance bookings for 2013 continue to trail levels a year ago at slightly lower prices, the company said.

Carnival said it currently expects full year 2013 net revenue yields, excluding the effects of currency exchange rates, to rise between 1 and 2 percent. The yields are expected to decline 2 to 3 percent in the first quarter, but then improve sequentially during the rest of the year as ticket prices and occupancy for the North American brands and Costa recover.

Taking those expectations into account, Carnival projected an adjusted 2013 profit of $2.20 to $2.40 per share. Analysts had expected $2.47 per share.

The company also projected a fiscal first-quarter profit of 3 to 7 cents per share, while analysts expect a profit of 5 cents per share.

Carnival shares fell $2.15, or 6 percent, to $36.91 in morning trading.





Read More..

New poll: Many Florida voters say they wouldn’t re-elect Scott as governor




















Gov. Rick Scott continues to suffer from poor approval ratings despite an improving economy and lowering unemployment, and a majority of voters say they wouldn’t vote to re-elect him, a new poll shows.

The poll found, among other things, that many voters are crediting the Obama administration with an improving economy, rather than Scott.

A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday showed Florida voters disapprove by 45-36 percent of the job Scott is doing, and 52 percent said he doesn’t deserve a second term, compared to just 30 percent who told pollsters Scott should be re-elected.





The poll also found that 55 percent of voters — including 53 percent of Republicans — say they’d like another Republican to challenge Scott for the GOP nomination in 2014.

Republican voters do give Scott a positive 63-19 percent job approval rating, however, and GOP voters say by a 55-26 percent margin that he deserves a second term.

“Obviously, the governor has almost two years to go until the election and anything is possible, but he faces a herculean task in changing public opinion to his favor,” said Quinnipiac pollster Peter Brown.

Scott, who has struggled with negative approval ratings since being elected in 2010, plans to seek re-election next year. The only declared candidate challenging him is Democratic former state Sen. Nan Rich. Former Republican Gov. Charlie Crist, who is now a Democrat, is considering a run, and Democrat Alex Sink, who narrowly lost to Scott in 2010, is thought to be mulling a rematch.

Crist, who was governor as a Republican from 2007 to 2011 and lost a bid as an independent in 2010 for the U.S. Senate, has a 47 percent favorable rating and 33 percent unfavorable mark among all voters, according to the Quinnipiac poll. His favorability among Democrats is 65 percent and among independents is 48 percent, but only 28 percent of Republicans have a favorable view of Crist, compared to 56 percent who have an unfavorable view.

Crist on Wednesday said he has no timetable for deciding whether to run for governor. Of Scott’s poor rating he said, “I would attribute the downturn to this voting issue,” meaning the election law Scott signed that is still controversial.

Asked what factors he would use to decide, he said: “I love my state and my heart bleeds for the people of Florida right now. I think we can do better with education in our state, with the environment in our state. …”

Sink overall is viewed favorably by just 27 percent of voters and unfavorably by 14 percent, but 57 percent of respondents didn’t have an opinion.

Among four other possible Democratic challengers the poll asked about — Rich, Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, former Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio and South Florida businessman and former lawmaker Jack Seiler — none has a favorability score of more than 17 percent and the overwhelming number of respondents said they didn’t know enough about them to have an opinion.

The only other Republican the pollsters tested was Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam, thought by many to be a likely candidate for governor in the future. But 80 percent of voters don’t have an opinion currently about Putnam, a longtime former Congressman and former state legislator.

Respondents said they dislike Scott’s policies by 52 percent to 32 percent, though nearly half of voters say they’re at least somewhat satisfied with the way things are going in Florida — the highest so far during Scott’s term. The poll didn’t ask specifically what policies voters don’t like.

Scott has staked his success on creating jobs, and has been able to boast about a falling unemployment rate for several months. Florida’s jobless rate fell in October to 8.5 percent, its lowest level since December 2008, and non-farm employment has grown for more than 27 straight months. When Scott got elected, unemployment in the state was at 12 percent, so he has made good to some degree on his main promise of getting people back to work.

Pollsters found, however, that many voters are crediting the Obama administration with the improving economy. Twenty-seven percent of respondents said the president deserves “a lot” of the credit for the improving economy, to just 16 percent who think Scott deserves “a lot” of the credit. Similarly, though, those voters who believe the economy is getting worse, overwhelmingly blame Obama rather than Scott.

The poll also found a 52-30 percent approval rating for U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican, and a 51-31 percent approval rating for U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, a Democrat. The Legislature, generically, is seen negatively by 44 percent of respondents with just 35 percent approving of lawmakers on the whole.

The poll included 1,261 registered voters and was taken Dec. 11-17. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.8 percentage points.





Read More..

Shooting renews argument over video-game violence






WASHINGTON (AP) — In the days since the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., a shell-shocked nation has looked for reasons. The list of culprits include easy access to guns, a strained mental-health system and the “culture of violence” — the entertainment industry’s embrace of violence in movies, TV shows and, especially, video games.


“The violence in the entertainment culture — particularly, with the extraordinary realism to video games, movies now, et cetera — does cause vulnerable young men to be more violent,” Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., said.






“There might well be some direct connection between people who have some mental instability and when they go over the edge — they transport themselves, they become part of one of those video games,” said Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado, where 12 people were killed in a movie theater shooting in July.


White House adviser David Axelrod tweeted, “But shouldn’t we also quit marketing murder as a game?”


And Donald Trump weighed in, tweeting, “Video game violence & glorification must be stopped — it is creating monsters!”


There have been unconfirmed media reports that 20-year-old Newtown shooter Adam Lanza enjoyed a range of video games, from the bloody “Call of Duty” series to the innocuous “Dance Dance Revolution.” But the same could be said for about 80 percent of Americans in Lanza’s age group, according to the Pew Internet and American Life Project. Law enforcement officials haven’t made any connection between Lanza’s possible motives and his interest in games.


The video game industry has been mostly silent since Friday’s attack, in which 20 children and six adults were killed. The Entertainment Software Association, which represents game publishers in Washington, has yet to respond to politicians’ criticisms. Hal Halpin, president of the nonprofit Entertainment Consumers Association, said, “I’d simply and respectfully point to the lack of evidence to support any causal link.”


It’s unlikely that lawmakers will pursue legislation to regulate the sales of video games; such efforts were rejected again and again in a series of court cases over the last decade. Indeed, the industry seemed to have moved beyond the entire issue last year, when the Supreme Court revoked a California law criminalizing the sale of violent games to minors.


The Supreme Court decision focused on First Amendment concerns; in the majority opinion, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that games “are as much entitled to the protection of free speech as the best of literature.” Scalia also agreed with the ESA’s argument that researchers haven’t established a link between media violence and real-life violence. “Psychological studies purporting to show a connection between exposure to violent video games and harmful effects on children do not prove that such exposure causes minors to act aggressively,” Scalia wrote.


Still, that doesn’t make games impervious to criticism, or even some soul-searching within the gaming community. At this year’s E3 — the Electronic Entertainment Expo, the industry’s largest U.S. gathering — some attendees were stunned by the intensity of violence on display. A demo for Sony’s “The Last of Us” ended with a villain taking a shotgun blast to the face. A scene from Ubisoft’s “Splinter Cell: Blacklist” showed the hero torturing an enemy. A trailer for Square Enix’s “Hitman: Absolution” showed the protagonist slaughtering a team of lingerie-clad assassins disguised as nuns.


“The ultraviolence has to stop,” designer Warren Spector told the GamesIndustry website after E3. “I do believe that we are fetishizing violence, and now in some cases actually combining it with an adolescent approach to sexuality. I just think it’s in bad taste. Ultimately I think it will cause us trouble.”


“The violence of these games can be off-putting,” Brian Crecente, news editor for the gaming website Polygon, said Monday. “The video-game industry is wrestling with the same issues as movies and TV. There’s this tension between violent games that sell really well and games like ‘Journey,’ a beautiful, artistic creation that was well received by critics but didn’t sell much.”


During November, typically the peak month for pre-holiday game releases, the two best sellers were the military shooters “Call of Duty: Black Ops II,” from Activision, and “Halo 4,” from Microsoft. But even with the dominance of the genre, Crecente said, “There has been a feeling that some of the sameness of war games is grating on people.”


Critic John Peter Grant said, “I’ve also sensed a growing degree of fatigue with ultra-violent games, but not necessarily because of the violence per se.”


The problem, Grant said, “is that violence as a mechanic gets old really fast. Games are amazing possibility spaces! And if the chief way I can interact with them is by destroying and killing? That seems like such a waste of potential.”


There are some hints of a sneaking self-awareness creeping into the gaming community. One gamer — Antwand Pearman, editor of the website GamerFitNation — has called for other players to join in a “Day of Cease-Fire for Online Shooters” this Friday, one week after the massacre.


“We are simply making a statement,” Pearman said, “that we as gamers are not going to sit back and ignore the lives that were lost.”


Gaming News Headlines – Yahoo! News





Title Post: Shooting renews argument over video-game violence
Rating:
100%

based on 99998 ratings.
5 user reviews.
Author: Fluser SeoLink
Thanks for visiting the blog, If any criticism and suggestions please leave a comment




Read More..

Tina Fey Amy Poehler Golden Globes Commercial Second

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are back with their second Golden Globes promo and for the second time, it's funnier than most comedies Hollywood released all year.

VIDEO - Fey & Poehler Auction Off Friendship

In it, they make several promises as to what the evening will be: splendid, wondrous, clever, drunken and that's just the red carpet!


The Golden Globes will air January 13 at 8 p.m. on NBC.

Read More..

'Golden Eagle Snatches Kid' video probably a fake








A video of a purported golden eagle swooping from the skies of Montreal to snatch a toddler off the ground flew its way across the internet this morning, instantly becoming a viral sensation.

But on closer review, the video, which has over one million views on YouTube already, is full of clues that might lead you to believe it is a fake.

The eagle-eyed viewers should notice the first clue in within seconds of the 1 minute video when the right wing of the bird appears to get cut in half only for it to reappear fully feathered an instant later.

The eagle's wing appears to have been clipped.The purported eagle is above the man's right shoulder, but has no corresponding shadow on the ground.A moment later and a shadow for the eagle appears on the ground.

YouTube

The eagle's wing appears to have been clipped.






If that's not enough to convince you, skip ahead to the eleventh second of the video as the bird is half way through it's dive bomb attack.

At first you can see pedestrians and trees on the ground with shadows to the left of their bodies, but the bird's shadow is conspiciously absent only for it to appear as if by magic a moment later.

The eagle's wing appears to have been clipped.The purported eagle is above the man's right shoulder, but has no corresponding shadow on the ground.A moment later and a shadow for the eagle appears on the ground.

YouTube

The purported eagle is above the man's right shoulder, but has no corresponding shadow on the ground.



The eagle's wing appears to have been clipped.The purported eagle is above the man's right shoulder, but has no corresponding shadow on the ground.A moment later and a shadow for the eagle appears on the ground.

YouTube

A moment later and a shadow for the eagle appears on the ground.



The final clue comes from the fact that the video is the first to be uploaded by user MrNuclearCat, a bad sign in the world of YouTube, and that Montreal is one of the digital effects capitals of the world.










Read More..