Foes of Russia’s Putin plan million-man march

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Vladimir Putin’s opponents plan a “million-man march” in Moscow on Sunday to revive their flagging protest movement and renew pressure on Russia’s supreme leader on the eve of his return to the presidency. Exchange Server Key

But the opposition leaders’ first attempt to organize a big rally for two months could fall flat because protests against Putin have lost momentum since his election victory on March 4.

Many Russians are angry that Putin is extending his already 12-year domination of Russia and fear he will stifle political and economic reform, but numbers could be thin because it is a holiday weekend when Russians love to head for the countryside.

Although weeks of demonstrations until March won only limited concessions from Putin, the opposition wants to show it is still a force to be reckoned with before he is sworn in on Monday for a six-year Windows 7 Activation Key, third term as head of state.

“Putin was illegitimately elected … We cannot stay silent and watch this disgrace,” said Boris Nemtsov, a liberal opposition leader, referring to the allegations of electoral fraud that sparked the protests.

“People who are not indifferent will come to show Putin his inauguration is not a national holiday like he thinks, like a coronation, it is the funeral of honest politics.”

Putin has dismissed the allegations that widespread fraud helped him win the presidential election and secured victory for his United Russia party in a parliamentary poll in December.

Users of social networking sites reported attempts by the authorities in towns outside Moscow to prevent opposition supporters coming to the capital.

They said some activists were detained by police for petty questioning, and that some received phone calls from police suggesting they should abstain from travelling to Moscow. The reports of intimidation could not be independently confirmed.

Outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev has pushed only limited political reforms through parliament following the protests, which at their height attracted tens of thousands of people in Moscow and St Petersburg but did not spread outside big cities.

But the demonstrations have deprived Putin of his aura of invincibility and opposition candidates have been trying to get a foothold on power in municipal elections, encouraged by setbacks suffered by United Russia in recent mayoral races.

LACK OF CLEAR GOALS

City authorities have approved a march by up to 5,000 people to a square across the Moscow river from the Kremlin.

The organizers hope many more will show up but their goals are not clear to everyone now Putin is coming back as president after four years as prime minister, a post he took because of a constitutional ban on three successive terms as president.

“The time for mass demonstrations has passed in the absence of political events that can provoke mass indignation, only local issues remain,” said Alexei Mukhin, an analyst with the Moscow-based Centre for Political Information.

“I don’t expect a million, that’s for sure … Not to mention that ‘May-time barbecues’ is a magical term that makes any attempt to hold a mass demonstration unsuccessful Windows 7 Product Key,” he said, referring to Russians’ love of getting out into the country.

Alexei Navalny has sought to rally support by drawing attention to the Kremlin’s decision to award a state medal to the head of the Central Election Commission, Vladimir Churov.

Much of the criticism of the conduct of the December and March elections was aimed at Churov, whom the opposition dubbed “the magician”.

Media was excluded from the award ceremony at the Kremlin on Thursday and news of Churov’s medal was leaked to state news agency RIA by a source in the election commission. The award was a slap in the face for the opposition.

“What other cause or reason do you need to come out against such authorities?” Navalny wrote in a blog, calling on people to join Sunday’s protest.

In response to the planned demonstration, pro-Putin supporters have announced their own rally, saying they expect 50,000 people to gather at a park in southeast Moscow.

A computer hacker group, Anonymous, has said it will stage its own protest by attacking government websites to show their opposition to Putin’s return.

(Editing by Timothy Heritage)

World Russia

 

Jack Thompson to cross Blue Mountains

Actor Jack Thompson will join an authentic re-creation of the original Blue Mountains crossing he hopes will spark people's interest in Australian history.

Mr Thompson is a history buff and played Robert O'Hara Burke in a 1985 film about the famous explorer's ill-fated expedition from Melbourne to the Gulf of Carpentaria.

He was at Penrith, in Sydney's west, on Sunday with members of the St Mary's historical society and clad in colonial costume to promote next year's bicentennial celebration of the first crossing of the Blue Mountains by Gregory Blaxland replica watches, William Lawson and William Charles Wentworth.

The celebrations will include a genuine re-enactment of the 1813 crossing.

Enthusiasts will walk the original route taken by the three explorers and take the same number of horses, dogs and servants with them.

“I was surprised when my youngest son was at school, he wasn't taught a lot of Australian history,” Mr Thompson told AAP.

“When we were at school, I think that was the first thing we were taught in history – Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth.”

“If you don't have an understanding of your own history, you're probably going to make the same mistakes again.”

Mr Thompson said going over the mountains these days wasn't as challenging as it was for the originals.

“Imagine in 1813 when no-one had been in a country like this before,” he said.

“In most places if you follow a stream up the valley replica watches, you'll find a pass over the mountains.

“Here they followed the stream and came to waterfalls dropping of this huge escarpment.

“It was a while before they worked out how to get over there.”

The expedition will leave Blaxland's farm at South Creek replica watches, west of Liverpool on May 11 next year, exactly 200 years after the first expedition set out from the same location.

 

Hysteria Hysterical!

While Tanya Wexler’s new film Hysteria is at times a LOL-hysterical romantic comedy, it also skillfully navigates important issues about class and medical practices in the 1880s, and takes a good look at women’s rights in general.

The story takes place in London and has an interesting ensemble cast of characters that range from a former prostitute to a very wealthy and quirky inventor on up to sundry members of the elite British social class. Nestled in the midst of this is the earnest, handsome and likable Dr. Mortimer Granville (Hugh Dancy) who is, in fact, really, credited with “the invention of the first vibrator in the name of medical science.” After being dismissed from several hospitals and following a tireless search for employment, Dr. Granville is finally employed by a private physician — Dr Robert Dalrymple (Jonathan Pryce). His task is to assist the good doctor in his practice, which treats upper-class women suffering from hysteria. I remembered reading an article many years ago about the evolution of this area of medical science in the New York Times, and was curious as to how such a story would be “handled” — pardon the pun.

As it turns out Dr. Dalrymple has two beautiful daughters (played by Felicity Jones and Maggie Gyllenhaal) who represent very different perspectives on womanhood in this prim and proper Victorian era. One who embodies the conformity and conventions of the times and the other, well, therein lies the drama. The film has a sharp wit, is charming in that British way, and plays gleefully with what Clement Greenberg refers to as Kitsch: “that thing to which the Germans give the wonderful name of Kitsch: popular, commercial art and literature with their chromeotypes, magazine covers, illustrations Cheap Tattoo Guns, ads, slick and pulp fiction, comics, Tin Pan Alley music, tap dancing, Hollywood movies Tattoo Machines Supplies, etc.” “The precondition,” says Greenberg, “for kitsch, a condition without which kitsch would be impossible, is the availability close at hand of a fully matured cultural tradition, whose discoveries Rotary Tattoo Gun, acquisitions, and perfected self-consciousness kitsch can take advantage of for its own ends.” Wexler uses all of this to our advantage as she glides comfortably and seamlessly between scenes where women are being “massaged for therapeutic outcomes” to discussions of the suffrage movement.

Paroxysms, phrenology, ducks, Molly (Sheridan Smith) and Edmund St. John-Smythe (Rupert Everett) contribute to the hilarity while serious conversations about a woman’s rights over her own body take place. As the story unfolds we understand the more salient matters surrounding the fun facts about the invention of what we now call the vibrator. As our laughter subsides we are left with an important timeline of women’s rights, notions about living true to one’s real identity, one man’s destiny and its fulfillment, and even an exploration of what factors determine true love. This is informed and intelligent humor set forth by a woman director — all of which we need more of. Lots to laugh and think about in this film, and you can see it starting May 18th.

 

Chevron seeks bank records in Ecuador environmenta

MIAMI, May 4, 2012 (Reuters) — Chevron Corp went to federal court in Miami on Friday seeking to force an Ecuadorean bank to release records of alleged bribes the company says were paid to an independent expert in a multi-billion dollar environmental lawsuit against the oil company. A Chevron sign is displayed at a gas station in Buckeye Tattoo Gun Tattoo Designs, Arizona October 27, 2011. REUTERS/Joshua Lott

The company is seeking records of eight bank accounts at the Banco Pichincha, an Ecuadorean bank with a branch in Miami that Chevron says was a conduit for $360,000 in “illicit payments” to the independent expert, Richard Cabrera.

Cabrera was appointed by a court in Ecuador to examine oil exploration pits environmental groups say caused massive pollution to the surrounding rain forest and sickened indigenous residents. Chevron was sentenced by a court in Ecuador to pay $18 billion for environmental damages.

“What we are seeking is a little sunshine,” Andrea Neuman Tattoo Ink Colors, a lawyer for Chevron told U.S. District Court Judge William Turnoff. “We need to know what this money was used for.”

Chevron alleges that recent court-ordered discovery of documents have turned up “significant evidence of fraud and collusion” in the case.

“Evidence already obtained by Chevron shows that these accounts were likely used to secretly pay the supposedly independent court-appointed expert Richard Cabrera in furtherance of the plaintiffs’ scheme to obtain a corrupt judgment against Chevron,” said Chevron Corp spokesman Kent Robertson.

A lawyer for the bank argued that the request, if granted, would violate banking confidentiality laws in Ecuador and could result in the bank facing civil and criminal penalties. “They are asking the bank to violate the laws in Ecuador,” said Clinton Losego, a lawyer for Pichincha.

Chevron is engaged in a desperate fishing expedition in a bid to avoid having to pay to compensate indigenous peoples for environmental damages, said Karen Hinton, a spokeswoman for the Amazon Defense Coalition Tattoo needles, representing the plaintiffs.

“We won an $18 billion judgment against Chevron for massive oil contamination and are preparing to enforce it,” said Hinton.

“This latest court action is nothing more than 11th hour hysteria by a company that has tried and will try every imaginable legal maneuver money can buy to deny justice to suffering people in the Ecuadorian rainforest.”

There was nothing unusual about the payments to Cabrera, she said, explaining that the court ordered both the plaintiffs and Chevron to cover the costs of the independent expert’s work.

“Chevron was supposed to pay him as well, but they boycotted the process. Now they are trying to make something out of nothing,” she said.

The strands of litigation in the case have multiplied in the past three years. Chevron has brought the matter before an international tribunal, claiming Ecuador violated a trade treaty with the United States by not guaranteeing a fair trial for the company.

According to a quarterly financial filing by Chevron on Thursday, the tribunal decided last month it would hear by late November about the late-1990s settlement and release agreements between Texaco and Ecuador over the rainforest pollution, with the remaining issues to be heard later.

The original suit was between Ecuador and Texaco Inc. Chevron acquired Texaco for about $39 billion in 2001.

(Additional reporting by Braden Reddall in San Francisco; editing by Todd Eastham)

 

Housing plan for intellectually impaired defendant

Defendants who are declared intellectually unfit to stand trial will be detained in special accommodation rather than prison under a new State Government plan. Cheap DKNY Clothes

The government has announced it will spend around $18 million building two 10-bed justice centres in Perth.

Under existing laws Buy Herve Leger v neck, people who cannot face court proceedings because of intellectual or cognitive impairment can be sent to prison indefinitely if they are deemed a threat.

Disabilities Services Minister Helen Morton says there will now be a stronger focus on rehabilitation.

“The people who are there will gain the ability to develop daily living skills, the capacity to perhaps work, to go out and be involved in re-entry programs into the community,” she said.

Western Australian man Marlon Noble has an intellectual impairment and spent 10 years in prison over allegations he sexually assaulted two young girls.

He was never convicted as he was deemed unfit to stand trial, but was instead placed under an unlimited custody order and kept behind bars.

Ms Morton says it is possible Mr Noble may have been a suitable candidate for the accommodation, had it existed at the time.

The accommodation will be managed by the Disability Services Commission.

The location of the facilities has yet to be announced.

 

SPEED inks multi-year deal to keep 24 Hours of Le

SpeedTV has piped Le Mans racing action to American television sets since 1995, and with the signing of a new multi-year television deal Tattoo Supplies, the annual Frankish displays of 24-hour madness will continue to have a home on the cable network. The length of the deal wasn’t disclosed, but it does include expanded digital rights Tattoo Supplies, which we’ll hope is network code for “live streaming.” Now you know where to turn on June 16.

And in case you didn’t know, the channel also signed a deal with World Rally Championship for 30-minute recaps of each day’s action this year, starting with this weekend’s Rally Argentina. It will also be covering the MotoGP race in Spain this weekend and live-streaming qualifying on Speed2. So double hurray and yay for SpeedTV emerging yet further from its NASCAR shell.

 

Post-Baratic Stress Disorder

Today’s Obamaism:

Post-Baratic stress disorder (pohst buh-RAT-ik stres sin-drohm) n. A sporadic recurrence of giddiness typically displayed by those who have recently returned from an Obama rally.

Example: After she returned from Iowa Herve leger strapless sale, Shelley’s co-workers learned to tolerate her outbreaks of post-Baratic stress disorder Herve Leger gown sale, which they agreed were beyond her control.

Since Slate first launched its Encyclopedia Baracktannica in February Buy Karen Millen Dresses, more than 800 readers have written in with their own Obamaisms, from “Barack Ness Monster” to “Post-Baracalyptic.” The best of these entries Herve leger strapless sale, along with Slate’s original Obama neologisms Replica DKNY Clothes, are collected in a new book: Obamamania Cheap Herve Leger v neck! The English Language, Barackafied, available June 24.

In conjunction with the publication of the book, we will be publishing a new Obamaism every morning and adding it to the Obamamania widget below, which you can add to your Facebook or MySpace profile or Web site.

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Hyundai recalling nearly 140,000 new Sonatas

2011 Hyundai Sonata being recalled for steering issues – Click above for high-res image gallery
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It looks like the Hyundai Sonata is officially taking its place near the top of the midsize car category. We already told you how it has moved into third place in the sales race, and now it moves up the charts again… but on a much less desirable list. Hyundai has issued a recall of 139,500 Sonatas over steering issues.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) report at safercar.gov identifies the issue says “the steering column intermediate shaft universal joint connections may have been either improperly assembled or insufficiently tightened.” The consequence could be “a complete separation or compromised attachment of the connections Herve leger strapless sale, such that the driver could experience a loss of, or reduction in Replica Chanel Dresses, steering capability increasing the risk of a crash.”

The recall affects MY 2011 Hyundai Sonata sedans built between December 11 Buy Bandage dresses, 2009 and September 10 Discount White Herve leger, 2010. Dealers should begin sending out recall notices in October. They will inspect and re-torque the assembly, and update the steering software too, at no charge.

In the meantime, owners can contact the Hyundai Customer Assistance Center at 1-800-633-5151 Cheap Chloe Dresses, or the NHTSA vehicle safety hotline at 1-888-327-4236 (tty 1-800-424-9153). Hat tip to Ralph!

Related GalleryReview: 2011 Hyundai Sonata GLS
Photos by Steven J. Ewing / Copyright ©2010 AOL

[Source: NHTSA]

 

Too Many Gadgets Spoil the Kitchen

Click hereto read more from Slate’s wedding issue. 

Before we became the blissfully married couple we are today, my soon-to-be husband and I had our fiercest fights over stuff—whether to dispose of it or acquire it. This stuff included a futon, some mugs, a shoe rack, and a chips-and-dip plate featuring a three-dimensional lobster. Venal as it seems, the merging of said stuff when starting a home together can be hugely contentious. Mugs are no longer mugs, but fragments of one’s soul. Because of this, registering for wedding gifts can get complicated.

When we got through most of our bickering and decided to get married, we contemplated a gift registry. Like so many elements of weddings today, it all seemed uncomfortably acquisitive. In the end, though, we decided that if wedding guests—some of whom we didn’t know very well—would be giving us gifts, we might as well give them a sense of what we’d use. The old sparring over possessions remained an undercurrent as we made our list. I remember a certain glee when I realized I could toss my husband’s mismatched, circa 1982 Mikasa once we received the pristine set of white porcelain on our registry. Andrew got his dig in at my quest for purity by registering for a bright orange phone that to this day sings out “Voulez-vous coucher avec moi?”  every time we receive a phone call.

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Household gifts have long been customary at weddings, but back in the old days, you’d never know if guests’ gifts would clash. According to the Bride’s Book of Wedding Traditions, order was imposed on that process when in 1901 the China Hall of Rochester, Minn., invented the clever notion of a list of the bride’s desires, to be checked off as well-wishers bought presents. Department stores like Chicago’s Marshall Fields soon followed suit, outfitting the well-heeled with their home-entertaining needs. By encouraging guests to give a single place setting Replica Christian Audigier Clothing, it became feasible to get a whole set of pricy tableware. In the 1960s, Chuck Williams, founder of Williams-Sonoma, helped shift the focus of the registry from fine china to everyday items.

Now, of course, virtually every housewares store, from your cutesie local cookware shop to Crate and Barrel, is eager to fulfill your gifty desires, complete with Web sites that allow you to monitor your registry midstream, adding to it if your guests need more choices. Because of this ease, the temptation to overlist is great. Here’s a rare chance to receive pretty much everything you want—shouldn’t you take advantage of it? Why not get the bigger Kitchen-Aid stand mixer—isn’t bigger better? Of course you’d like to whip up crème brulée for a dinner party, so don’t you need a minitorch and 10 matching ramekins?

No. I urge a certain caution, both for the sake of modesty, and for the sake of sanity. The truth is, space, at least easily accessible space, will always be an issue, even in a dream kitchen. Don’t plan for the unlikely eventualities—the huge buffet that calls for chafing dishes. Instead Cheap White Herve leger, look at the realities of your life in your near future. Kitchenware stores are endlessly tempting with their hyper-specific appliances (like this margarita maker), but in most cases, something else more all-purpose—in this case, a blender—can do the job perfectly well. Value and versatility should be the ultimate litmus test for whether something belongs in your kitchen. If for some reason you suddenly find yourself in need of your own meat slicer, invest in it then.

While registering for your home is largely a question of personal style, I can tell you some of the anchors of your starter kitchen. In the New York Times a month ago, Mark Bittman did a bang-up job (article purchase required) of stocking a bare-bones kitchen for less than $200. But here are some crucial items worth investing a little money in—yours or somebody else’s—as well as some sidebars on additional pans, utensils, and appliances worth considering.

Pans
Plenty of people opt for cookware sets, but I’ve found it’s best to cobble together your own set, full of pans you’ll use regularly. (Added bonus: No single person is on the hook for a several-hundred-dollar set of pots.) My own desert-island pan would be a braising pan (aka wide sauté pan, aka sauteuse). These are the kind of pans that we fought over when I worked in restaurants. It should hold 3-4 quarts, be about 12 inches in diameter, and have sides 2-3 inches deep. The wide surface area means fewer batches if you are going to be browning ingredients, and faster reduction times if you’re a cook of the saucy variety. The medium-deep sides are good for catching spatters and hold a fair amount of liquid if you’re braising, say, a panful of chicken thighs in a green olive and preserved lemon sauce. You can even shallow fry in a pan like this. These pans often come in two configurations—with a single long handle, or with two shorter loop handles. Both have their advantages: The long handle is better for shaking the pan on the stove, and the short loops are easier for transferring into the oven. Splurge on this pan (or, rather, let someone splurge for you)—you want solid construction, a lining that won’t react with acidic ingredients (I like stainless), and most importantly, handles that can go into the oven. For a list of other pots I recommend, click

here.

Cutlery
Again, don’t go for a set. Unless you’re a knife geek (a wonderful thing to be) or a hunter, you really need only three kinds of knives: a make-you-giddy chef’s knife at least 8 inches long; a good bread knife; and a small, inexpensive paring knife. Spend good cash—yours or your wedding guests’—on the chef’s knife: You will use this for everything. The money will buy you a good factory edge that’s easier to revive with sharpening, too. In general, the now-standard German knives have been outflanked by thinner, more elegantly designed Japanese knives (even German giant Wüsthof now makes snub-nosed Santoku-style knives). Thinner knives make thin slices much easier. Although the highest-end Japanese knives are breathtakingly expensive, there are some great less-expensive options, including those from Mac (their swordlike bread knife has me in a thrall) and Ryusen. If you and your partner like to cook together, you might want to splurge on two chef’s knives. A great deal of superstition surrounds giving knives to newlyweds, but that’s plain silly, right?

Hand tools
The most useful kitchen tool is a pair of 9-inch tongs. With them you can flip meat Cheap Emilio Pucci Dresses, toss salads Replica DKNY Clothing, turn a pan around in the oven Cheap Hale Bob Dresses, and twirl elegant piles of spaghetti. Over the years Discount Missoni Dresses, I’ve been perfectly happy with plain stainless tongs, but now that I’m retired from restaurant kitchens, I don’t mind having a little rubber to cushion the grip. Make sure the blades aren’t easily bendable and that the tips meet snugly and securely. In general, kitchen utensils make great lower-cost gifts for your registry: For many more tool recommendations, click

here.

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Oh, How We’ve Missed You!

Click here for more from the Fall TV issue.

The start of fall TV season is a bit like a new school year: You get the chance to reunite with people you haven’t heard from all summer. Here, Slate writers and editors offer love letters to the TV personalities they’re looking forward to seeing again.

Tiki Barber, Football Night in America and The Today Show

Tiki Barber, Football Night in America; The Today Show (NBC) In February, Tiki Barber, the New York Giants’ three-time Pro Bowl running back, signed a multimillion dollar contract with NBC. This fall, he can be seen flashing his megawatt smile on the network’s Sunday evening football flagship, Football Night in America, and on The Today Show. Just a couple of weeks into the football pundit job, Barber already stands out: Next to his fellow ex-jock analysts Cris Collinsworth * and Jerome Bettis, Barber is practically Noel Coward-esque—sleek, witty, disdainful of the frat boy bluster that flies around pregame show studios. But it is in his capacity as Today’s “national correspondent” and occasional fourth-hour co-host that Barber is really riveting. Watch Today’s main man, Matt Lauer Replica Tissot Watches for Cheap, delivering his chipper banter with the hollow eyes of a zombie, and it’s clear the rot has set in: After all these years, Lauer knows that this is a silly gig. But Tiki has a rookie’s eager-beaver effervescence. He loves breakfast television; he believes in it. It’s a strange spectacle. A man who has already achieved more than Matt Lauer ever will—who on the football field displayed valor and a kind of genius—has been reduced to doing puff pieces and cooking segments Where buy best Replica Rolex Watches, and he thinks: Finally, I’ve arrived. Of course Replica Audemars Piguet Watches, he may not be wrong. Barber is rumored to have political aspirations, and why wouldn’t a bright, beautiful gridiron-hero-turned-TV-star be a seductive candidate? In the meantime, Tiki is a network executive’s dream: O.J. Simpson without the sociopathy.

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—Jody Rosen, music critic

Mary-Louise Parker, Weeds  

Nancy Botwin, Weeds (Showtime) Much has been made of the gnarled heart and sour visage of Dr. Gregory House, the physician played by Hugh Laurie on Fox’s hit medical drama. What a feat to build a show around a lead character so off-putting! Some feat. No matter how much House glowers in the elevator, it’s a breeze to root for him: He’s forever saving lives, with competence Wholesale Replica Wyler Watches, wit, and science on his side.

It’s easy to root for Nancy Botwin, too. But Nancy—a suburban widow with two kids and a fledgling pot dealership—is forever putting lives at risk. Mary-Louise Parker is magnetic in the role, capable of extracting favors with a bitten lower lip and an expectant smile. She’s also gutsy: If business demands it, she’ll commit insurance fraud or double-cross her supplier. At first glance this chutzpah seemed admirable, part of a whatever-it-takes effort to support a grieving family. But Nancy’s bravery has its roots in her deep sense of entitlement. She’s rich and white and pretty, and she’s used to solving problems with a “Gee, officer …” and wide eyes. By the end of last season, Nancy’s bad decisions had led to the disappearance of one son, the impending arrest of another, a death Wholesale Replica Piaget Watches, and a host of other problems too big to flirt your way out of. I’m still rooting for Nancy—that smile works on me, too. But I don’t feel good about it.

—Julia Turner, culture editor

State Sen. Clay Davis, The Wire (HBO)
You would think that after last year, when Slate did everything short of David Simon’s laundry to prove our infatuation with The Wire, I’d be embarrassed about slobbering over it again. You would be wrong. The Wire’s fifth and final season doesn’t air until January—so it’s not even fall TV—but it’s the only show I’m looking forward to. In particular, I eagerly await the return of state Sen. Clay Davis (and, of course, Omar, Snoop, Cutty, Bunny, Herc … and, oh, did I mention Omar?). Sen. Davis embodies none of the moral complexity that The Wire does so well. Davis is unapologetically and delightfully corrupt, happy to rake in his bucks from developers or drug dealers Replica U Boat Watches for Cheap, and to double-cross them, too. His amorality is irrepressible. You can’t keep a bad man down! And then, of course, there is Davis’ favorite word. Has any actor ever wrung so much emotion—disgust, amazement, glee, rage—from a single expletive as Isiah Whitlock Jr. does from the barnyard epithet? “Sheeeeee-it”—it must be heard to be believed. Watch Whitlock as Davis here, and watch a tribute to his shit-speaking here.

—David Plotz, Deputy Editor

Kelly Kapoor, The Office

Kelly Kapoor, The Office (NBC)

M E M O R A N D U M

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