Daily Archives: January 24, 2010

Walmart to Cut 11,200 Sam’s Club Jobs

Like the incredibly stupid business model from Starbucks,  Wal-Mart had the brilliant idea of opening Sam’s Clubs in close proximity to Costco stores. Brilliant! Why would anyone in their right mind go to a Sam’s Club when there is a Costco right next door? Ed.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s largest retailer, will eliminate about 11,200 jobs at its Sam’s Club membership warehouse clubs as it hires an outside company to demonstrate products.

About 10,000 demonstration employees, most part-time, will lose their jobs when Shopper Events takes over sampling, Sam’s Club Chief Executive Officer Brian Cornell told employees today in a memo. The company also is cutting about 1,200 membership recruiting jobs, or about two in each of the club’s U.S. stores.

Sam’s Club is working with Shopper Events to develop in- store demonstrations, such as food sampling, currently performed by Sam’s employees, Cornell said. The effort is aimed at improving demonstrations in the areas of food and beverages, personal wellness and electronics, according to the memo.

These cuts are separate from Walmart’s announcement on Jan. 11 that it will close 10 Sam’s Club locations and eliminate about 1,500 jobs, David Tovar, a spokesman for Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart, said today in a telephone interview. The chain, the second-largest membership warehouse club after Costco Wholesale Corp., employs about 110,000 people, Tovar said.

Shopper Events, based in Rogers, Arkansas, plans to hire roughly the same number of workers that Sam’s Club is firing, Cornell said in the memo. Employees can apply for Shopper Events jobs, he said.

Shopper Events already handles food-sample demonstrations inside Walmart’s U.S. stores, according to its Web site.

Walmart rose 2 cents to $52.94 on Jan. 21 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares dropped 4.7 percent last year, compared with a 23 percent advance in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

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Abby Sunderland Begins Attempt of Sailing Record

“We’ll go to Starbucks when you get back!” a friend yelled from a yacht full of well-wishers, as it pulled away from Abby Sunderland’s sailboat and began the short trip back to port.

That might have been the last statement issued to the 16-year-old Thousand Oaks mariner, who, at about noon on a sun-drenched Saturday atop a rolling sea, waved goodbye to family and friends for a final time and began to pursue the horizon by herself.

The words seemed to float across the water like a stark reminder of what an otherwise jubilant Marina del Rey send-off was really about.

Sunderland, who cannot legally drive a car but aspires to become the youngest person to sail around the world alone, is not coming home for at least five months, and there’s no guarantee she’ll make it safely home.

There will be no going for coffee, no home-cooked meals, no socializing or playing with siblings, and no warm bed; just a 40-foot sailboat with a small bunk, a water-maker and a store of freeze-dried food and, on the not-too-distant horizon: the savagely cold and treacherous Southern Ocean.

“Every little kid wants to be a doctor or a princess or a firefighter,” Sunderland said during a pre-launch news conference, while trying to explain the motivation behind her controversial excursion. “But watching my own brother go out and actually do it; it really made me realize that you can do things like this.”

Sunderland’s older brother Zac made history in July when he returned, at 17, from a 13-month solo-circumnavigation aboard a 36-foot sailboat. He briefly held the distinction of being the youngest person and still is the youngest American to have sailed around the world.

But whereas Zac made many stops and utilized a more temperate westerly route, Abby will try to sail nonstop on a journey that involves traveling down the Pacific and around Cape Horn at South America’s tip, then easterly across the Southern Ocean — above Antarctica — and ultimately back up and across the Pacific.

It’s a far more dangerous route as far as weather is concerned, but it’s a swift route largely free of vessel traffic and, perhaps worse, pirates. “And personally, pirates terrify me, so while I’m going to freeze, it’s a good trade-off,” Sunderland said, trying to deflect criticism.

There has been ample criticism, and a few glaring questions lingered as Sunderland’s orange-and-yellow racing yacht, named Wild Eyes, gained the horizon and became smaller and lonelier:

Is the girl strong enough for such a grueling trek? Should she be allowed to try such a difficult feat? How could her parents let their daughter venture to a climate so harsh even the father describes it as “an ugly, horrible cold that just eats right through you”?

Sunderland said you’d have to be a sailor to understand the romantic pull of the ocean, and that this has been her dream — and something she has been preparing for — since she was 13.

Laurence Sunderland told reporters that during the last three years he has tried to dissuade his daughter by taking her sailing in nasty weather, but she only became more determined.

The father said of his children: “As they grow into young adults and they have different talents and different passions, it’s great to be able to encourage them in something that’s noble and of good character, and help them with those ambitions as opposed to throwing water on the flames of excitement in life.”

Zac encountered suspected pirates in the Indian Ocean, spent sleepless nights in gales and was beaten ashore by a hurricane. But he became a hero and inspiration to schoolchildren and fans, and wouldn’t trade his experience for anything.

He was the youngest person to sail alone around the world until England’s Mike Perham, a slightly younger 17, completed his journey five weeks later.

Now Perham’s record is being jeopardized by Abby and Jessica Watson, her slightly older Australian counterpart, who is halfway through her Southern Ocean excursion, and Friday night endured 70-knot winds and multiple knockdowns, meaning her 34-foot pink sailboat was literally knocked sideways and the mast touched water.

That Watson survived the eight-hour ordeal is testament to her ability, but it also underscores the danger associated with sailing in extreme latitudes.

In light of this, Laurence and Marianne, who have seven home-schooled children with another child on the way, remain optimistic their oldest daughter will handle whatever Mother Nature delivers.

“At first I wasn’t as supportive as I was with Zac — with him I never had a doubt,” Marianne said. “But with Abby I’ve seen over the last months this incredibly tough and determined young woman in the place of the sweet girl she had always been. So, honestly and truly, I am really excited for her because this has been something she’s been talking about for years.”

Some in the sailing community, however, have expressed mixed feelings.

Seattle’s Karen Thorndike, who in 1998 became the first American woman to sail around the world alone via the Southern Ocean, has some concerns about Sunderland’s age.

“I could not have done it at 16,” Thorndike said. “I would not have wanted to face that at 16, voluntarily.”

Thorndike was 63 when she embarked on what she hoped would be a nonstop sail, but boat and weather issues forced delays and her trip lasted three years. She cited fatigue and sleep deprivation as major obstacles for Sunderland.

Charlie Nobles, executive director of the American Sailing Assn., said he’s concerned about timing. Sunderland’s departure, because of various issues, occurred much later than planned, so when she reaches the southern Indian Ocean the Southern Hemisphere, summer will have given way to fall. As she approaches New Zealand, icebergs might pose navigation hazards.

“Ideally, she should have left a month ago,” Nobles said. “Obviously, we want to see her make the trip and have the greatest success, but there are some serious challenges with her voyage.”

Laurence Sunderland said his weather team will route his daughter in the safest possible manner and expressed full confidence she’ll succeed despite the late start.

Toby, her 12-year-old brother, was not as convincing. “She’s a girl ,” he said with a playful laugh. “My brother’s my brother and he’s this huge strong guy and my sister, I don’t know . . . she’s a GIRL . But I know that she can do it.”

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Jay Leno Delivers at La Jolla Charity Auction

When Jay Leno came to La Jolla Saturday night, he shone the spotlight somewhere other than his ugly dispute with Conan O’Brien over NBC’s late-night lineup – on educating San Diego’s homeless and at-risk youth.

While the comic headlined a benefit for the Monarch School, he took a jab at just about everyone but NBC’s executives. Including Tiger Woods.

“I’ve got to tell you, I’m exhausted. I was in a foursome today with Tiger Woods,” Jay Leno said. “He’s now doing a Christmas movie, it’s called “It Was a Wonderful Life.”

Then there was Sarah Palin.

“The rumor of course, Sarah Palin may run for president in 2012. As you know, she is a former beauty queen and if she wins it would make history because it would be the first time a beauty queen could actually bring about world peace. They’ve all talked about it. When she and McCain would stand together I would call them beauty and the deceased.”

There was also Senator John Edwards.

“My favorite democrat of the past year was Senator John Edwards. Wow, a personal injury attorney who turned out to be a sleaze ball. Who could have seen that coming?”

And then the President.

“Then we have our Vice President, Joe Biden, a man with 35 years of experience in Washington. You combine that with Barack Obama, you’re looking at 36 years of experience. And as you know, President Obama’s first official act at becoming President – closing Guantanamo Bay. See that’s when you know the economy is in bad shape, when even terrorists are losing their homes.”

The Gala benefiting the Monarch School of San Diego is put on every year by the Century Club as part of the kickoff to next week’s golf tournament.

Tom Wornham, the President and Chairman of the Century Club, says Monarch does a tremendous job of giving kids in San Diego who are homeless a great safe place to have an education.

“If you were to close your eyes for a moment and imagine a place where you’re homeless. Nobody really cares about where you were today or where you are tomorrow. But you needed an education, Monarch provides that. Open your eyes now. You have a future. You have an opportunity. You have people around you that care about you. They’re going to follow up on what you do tomorrow, the next day and the day after,” Wornham said.

Last year the auction raised more than $350,000.

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Brad Pitt Angelina Jolie split rumors false

We kind of wondered about this one. They are both kinda nutty, and birds of a feather flock together.

From People Magazine reports,

While reports are swirling that Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are headed for a split, multiple sources close to the family tell PEOPLE that the rumors are false.

“Everything is fine” with the couple, who are parents to six kids, a source says.

Another source says the split reports, which were first published in a British tabloid, are “totally false.”

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Los Angeles sportscaster Keith Olbermann apologizes over Scott Brown remarks

Obama sycophant and former Los Angeles sports reporter Keith Olbermann apologized for his remarks about Scott Brown. Olbermann seemed to be having an issue with the rejection of the socialist Obama agenda in the Brown victory. Keep in mind that Olbermann has a degree from Cornell in COMMUNICATIONS. His only qualification is as a sportscaster. Ed.

Keith Olbermann apologized for his comments about Massachusetts Senator-Elect Scott Brown Friday night just one day after being called out by Jon Stewart over the remarks.

Monday night, Olbermann described Brown as “an irresponsible, homophobic, racist, reactionary, ex-nude model, tea-bagging supporter of violence against women and against politicians with whom he disagrees.”

The comment was immediately met with criticism from the right, most notably from Olbermann’s own MSNBC colleague Joe Scarborough, who described the comment as “reckless.”

Olbermann responded to that criticism by doubling down the next night, adding “sexist” to his litany of complaints against Brown.

But on Thursday’s “Daily Show,” Stewart described Olbermann’s comments as “the harshest description of anyone I’ve ever heard uttered on MSNBC” and performed an impression of Olbermann’s trademark special comments.

Friday, Olbermann played Stewart’s critique in full, offered himself as a guest for “The Daily Show,” and responded with an apology.

“You know what, you’re right,” Olbermann said to Stewart. “I have been a little over the top lately. Point taken. Sorry.”

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