Daily Archives: February 1, 2010

2010 RAZZIE NOMINATIONS

Box-office blockbuster “Transformers;Revenge of the Fallen” and the Will Ferrell flop “Land of the Lost” lead nominations on Monday for the annual Razzies, a tongue-in-cheek commemoration of the year’s worst movies.

Leading the pack among this year’s RAZZIE® contenders are one of the year’s biggest money-makers and the year’s biggest money-loser, each with seven nods. RAZZIE® Repeat Offender Michael Bay helped lead the over-loud, over-long, uber-stupid TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN to a huge box office take…and to a huge haul of RAZZIE® nominations as well. In addition to Worst Director and Worst Picture, the film is up for Worst Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel, Worst Screenplay, Worst Supporting Actress (Julie White as the stoned, screaming mother of Shia Le Bouf), Worst Screen Couple (Le Bouf and EITHER Megan Fox OR Any Transformer) and Worst Actress (Fox again, dually nominated for this film and JENNIFER’S BODY). Keeping up with TRANNIES, TOO in the RAZZIE® race (but decidedly not at the box office) is Last Summer’s Biggest B.O. bomb, LAND OF THE LOST, also with 7 shots at taking home spray-painted gold. LOST star Will Ferrell is listed in both Worst Actor and Worst Screen Couple (Ferrell & Any Co-Star, Creature or “Comic Riff”) and the film itself is also nominated for Worst Picture, Worst Director, Worst Screenplay, Worst Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel and Worst Supporting Actor (the screaching Jorma Taccone as the monkeylike Cha-Ka). Rounding out the Worst Picture list are the Disney dud OLD DOGS, the awful “action-figures-come-to-life” 9-Year-Old-Boy-Movie G.I. JOE: THE RISE OF COBRA and the So-Good-It-Was-Held-Back-from-Release-for-2-Years “comedy” ALL ABOUT STEVE (whose star, Worst Actress nominee Sandra Bullock, could pull off the unprecedented feat of “winning” a RAZZIE® one day before winning an Oscar®).

Other well-known names shamed as being last year’s worst include 2010 Oscar® co-host Steve Martin (Worst Actor for PINK PANTHER 2), Beyonce (Worst Actress for OBSESSED), Worst Actor of the Decade contenders Eddie Murphy (up for Worst Actor of 2009 in IMAGINE THAT) and John Travolta (Worst Actor of 2009 for OLD DOGS) as well as the twitty Dizz-Knee ’tween idols Miley Cyrus (Worst Actress for HANNAH MONTANA: THE MOVIE) and any two or more of the Jonas Brothers, nominated jointly for Worst Actor and Worst Screen Couple — for their documentary JONAS BROS. A 3-D CONCERT EXPERIENCE. A complete list of nominees is included with this press release.

Nominees were determined by mailing ballots to 647 Foundation members in 46 U.S. states and 19 foreign countries. The RAZZIES® were created in 1980 as a logical antidote to Tinsel Town’s annual glut of self-congratulatory awards by John Wilson, author of THE OFFICIAL RAZZIE® MOVIE GUIDE and EVERYTHING I KNOW I LEARNED AT THE MOVIES. The Barnsdall Gallery Theatre is a facility of the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Breaking News, To Good to be True

No-Bid Contract Violates Obama Campaign Pledge

In another colossal Obama blunder, the president canceled a 24 million dollar no-bid contract awarded to friend and Obama campaign donor Vincent Checchi.

The recent awarding of a lucrative federal contract to a company owned by a financial contributor to the Obama presidential campaign — without competitive bidding — “violated” President Obama’s many campaign pledges to crack down on the practice, a top State Department official told Fox News.

Assistant Secretary of State P.J. Crowley, familiar to many Americans from his erudite delivery of the State Department’s daily press briefings, made the admission in a telephone interview Saturday night.

Reminded of Obama’s many pledges during the 2008 campaign to crack down on the use of no-bid contracts, and of the memorandum the president signed last March instructing the Office of Management and Budget to curb the practice, Crowley said: “You make a valid point. If you want to say this violates the basis on which this administration came into office and campaigned, fair enough.”

The contract in question, worth more than $24.6 million, was awarded on Jan. 4 by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to Checchi and Company Consulting, a Washington, D.C.-based firm owned by economist and Democratic Party donor Vincent Checchi. The deal called for Checchi’s firm to train lawyers and judges in Afghanistan and thereby strengthen the “rule of law” in the war-torn country.

Crowley confirmed that the contract has been “terminated” because the circumstances under which it was awarded “violated the Competition in Contracting Act.” Crowley said the contract was actually a renewal of a $44 million contract first awarded to Checchi and Company in October 2004 by the Bush administration — after a competitive bidding process — and will now be put out for competitive bids.

The existence of the Checchi contract was first publicly reported by Fox News on Jan. 25.

However, Crowley insisted the cancellation of the contract had nothing to do with Fox News’ reporting but rather was the result of a protest lodged by ARD Inc., a Vermont-based competitor of Checchi and Company. Crowley said the contracting officer in Kabul decided to renew the contract to Checchi and Company on a no-bid basis without being aware of ARD’s protest.

“What was missing here,” Crowley said, “was a determination that there was an urgent and compelling reason” for the contracting officer to have arrived at that decision. Crowley added: “No one is saying that the performance by Checchi over the last five years has been anything but satisfactory.

Yet when USAID first responded to Fox News’ questions about the Checchi deal, more than 72 hours after the agency was first contacted by a Fox News reporter, USAID Director of Public Information Joseph A. Fredericks made no mention of ARD’s protest, nor of the decision to cancel the contract.

Instead Fredericks defended the no-bid process as proper in the circumstances. “As the incumbent,” Fredericks told Fox News in a Jan. 25 e-mail, “Checchi was rewarded [sic] a renewed contract to allow for work on the ground to continue.”

Moreover, some concerned parties have indeed been critical of Checchi’s performance in the admittedly difficult circumstances in Afghanistan. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told Fox News, after learning about the contract renewal: “It’s hard to say that [Checchi and Company] has done such a great job of bringing the justice system in Afghanistan up to snuff that they should somehow not have to go through a competitive bidding process.”

Issa has written to USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah requesting that copies of all documents relating to the Checchi contract be submitted to the House committee on or before Feb. 5.

Likewise, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., who chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee’s Subcommittee on Contracting Oversight, told Fox News she, too, wants to know more about the circumstances surrounding the Checchi contract.

“She has posed questions to USAID about the situation and is pursuing full answers,” said Maria Speiser, a spokeswoman for the senator. “If she doesn’t get answers, she’ll be ready to take action.”

Federal campaign records show Checchi has been a frequent contributor to liberal and Democratic causes and candidates in recent years, including to Obama’s presidential campaign. The records show Checchi has given at least $4,400 to Obama dating back to March 2007, close to the maximum amount allowed.

The contractor has also made donations to various arms of the Democratic National Committee, to liberal activist groups like MoveOn.org and ActBlue, and to other party politicians like Sen. John F. Kerry, former presidential candidate John Edwards and former Connecticut Senate candidate Ned Lamont.

As a candidate for president in 2008, then-Sen. Obama frequently derided the Bush administration for the awarding of federal contracts without competitive bidding.

“I will finally end the abuse of no-bid contracts once and for all,” the senator told a Grand Rapids audience on Oct. 2. “The days of sweetheart deals for Halliburton will be over when I’m in the White House.”

Those remarks echoed an earlier occasion, during a candidates’ debate in Austin, Texas on Feb. 21, when Obama vowed to upgrade the government’s online databases listing federal contracts. “If [the American people] see a bridge to nowhere being built, they know where it’s going and who sponsored it,” he said to audience laughter, “and if they see a no-bid contract going to Halliburton, they can check that out too.”

Less than two months after his inauguration, President Obama signed a memorandum that he claimed would “dramatically reform the way we do business on contracts across the entire government.”

Flanked by aides and lawmakers at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building on March 4, Obama vowed to “end unnecessary no-bid and cost-plus contracts,” adding: “In some cases, contracts are awarded without competition….And that’s completely unacceptable.” The March 4 memorandum directed the Office of Management and Budget to “maximize the use of full and open competition” in the awarding of federal contracts.

Although Obama suggested in his remarks on March 4 that he hoped particularly to address problems associated with defense contracting, an Associated Press analysis last July found that the Defense Department frequently awards no-bid contracts under the aegis of the $787 billion stimulus program, and often at higher expense to U.S. taxpayers.

According to The AP, more than $242 million in federal contracts, or roughly a quarter of the Pentagon’s contract stimulus spending, was awarded through no-bid contracts. And while procurement officers say competitive bidding can actually cost the taxpayers more because it involves delays and can thereby subject pricing for services and equipment to inflation — the AP analysis found that defense-related stimulus contracts awarded after competitive bidding saved the Pentagon $34 million, compared with $4.4 million when no bidding was involved.

Figures kept by OMB Watch, a non-profit research and advocacy group that tracks federal spending, show that no-bid contracts have been common under administrations controlled by both parties.

During fiscal years 2000 and 2001, for example, when Bill Clinton was president, as much as $139.2 billion in federal contracts was awarded without competitive bidding. The OMB Watch figures show that the practice appears to have accelerated sharply during the Bush administration, but the figures are not adjusted for inflation.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Breaking News, It's the Economy Stupid!, Nadcicles, Nitwits, Obama, Opinion, Platitudes, Political humor, Politics, Stupid Human Tricks, To Good to be True

Nancy Pelosi using Air Force to jet kids around America

Nancy Pelosi witch funnyWhat else would we expect from a woman that spent two million dollars flying herself around the world in a private jet and one hundred thousand dollars on food and drink for her and her staff? We here at the BrokenCountry can’t understand why she doesn’t just fly them around on her broom. JD

Using Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, Judicial Watch uncovered thousands of pages of travel documents related to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s use of military aircraft.

What hasn’t been revealed so far is that military aircraft are being used to shuttle Pelosi’s kids and grandkids between DC and San Francisco without any Congressional representatives even onboard! Put simply, the United States Air Force is serving as a multi-billion dollar chauffeur- and baby-sitting service for Nancy Pelosi’s kids and grandkids — presumably because commercial travel is beneath the families of the autocrats.

1 Comment

Filed under Breaking News

Rip Torn arraigned after drunken bank incident

Rip Torn Mug Shot drunk alcoholic

Rip Torn is led into court in cuffs.

BANTAM, Conn. — Actor Rip Torn was taken in handcuffs this morning to a Connecticut courthouse, where he’ll face allegations later today that he broke into a bank with a loaded revolver while intoxicated.

Torn made a brief appearance in the courtroom this morning after his arrest on gun and burglary charges on Friday night.

A disheveled Torn walked into the courtroom with his wrists and ankles shackled to several other prisoners — wearing cowboy boots, black pants and a Navy blue jacket.

Torn, 78, was armed with a loaded gun when he broke a window and entered the Litchfield Bancorp in Salisbury on Friday, officials said.

The actor was so drunk he had no idea he was in a bank, the sources said. Torn’s lawyer could not be reached for comment.

Bank President Mark Macomber said that no one was in the bank during the break-in and that the only damage was the smashed window in the back of the building that Torn apparently thought was his front door.

Torn’s family has staged multiple interventions over the past couple of years with little to show for it but court dates and embarrassing headlines, sources close to the actor said.

According to one source, Torn figured he had made significant progress by cutting back from four pints of alcohol a day to a single pint.

It doesn’t help that he likes guns almost as much as he likes booze, the source said.

Torn, whose real name is Elmore Torn, has starred in scores of films and television shows over six decades. He won an Emmy for “The Larry Sanders Show” in 1992 and was nominated for an Oscar in 1983 for “Cross Creek.”

Leave a Comment

Filed under Breaking News, Stupid Human Tricks