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KK 10-7

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Posts posted by KK 10-7

  1. I want with everything for the Giants to win. But I know the Pat's will take it. And it sucks.

     

    I just find it so messed up at the begining of the season there caught taping everyone's crap and then they get a "perfect season"....go figure and now there in the Super Bowl and everyone is acting like nothing happened.

     

    I could win at chess to if I knew all the moves my friend was going to make...

  2. ....Wow...Just to see the changes in the trees is surreal. Looking from then to now, it's insane! Not only seeing the trees growing in the park though just the pics as a whole, you can see the quality changing over time. Awesome update guys. You always seem to blow me away with your updates.

     

    Biggest change though, well the best change in my own opinion is Bug's Bunny National Park and Wiggles World. After looking through the before and after pics of those two sections, it shows how much those areas needed updating and how awesome they look now.

  3. Aaaaa....Harry....You say to Danian next year will be better but then you finish it off with a drowning emoticon? Hahahaha

     

    Well he is either drowning or holding on for dear life.

    Where on Route 33?

     

    Peanut Buster Parfait is a sundae from DQ

     

    Wawa rules!

     

    Aaaa, DQ Eh? I will have to stop in sometime an order one.

     

    If you know where "Gus's" Diner is on 33, it's like literally right across the street. It's somewhat by the Freehold Mall. All I gotta say is the place is heavenly. They serve Chinese....not any Chinese, the best Chinese I think I've ever had Chinese. Yeah. THAT kind. But I will say unless your going at lunch prepare for a wait. I went at lunch time and the place was dead, literally. I think we were one of like three tables. Also it's like half price. But at dinner time. O god. I could get on Ka quicker. But there is a difference. I would rather wait for this place, because it's worth it. Ka on the other hand....Ha.

     

    And yes Wawa is amazing.

  4. Peanut Buster Parfait is good :Icecream:

    Give me the recipe!! I love peanut butter!

     

    I had chicken corn chowder for lunch.

    One of if not the best soups ever. Espcially from Wawa. It is Godly from there.

     

    The Bruins absolutely suck tonight.

    What's the difference between tonight and any other night?

     

    Owned.

    I hope the Bruins get it together before I go see them.

    I wouldn't get your hopes up.

     

    The Peking Pavillion on Rt. 33 is amazing.

  5. Show goes on for Grinch musical

    _44254801_grinch_203ap_body.jpg

    The musical is very popular with children The show will go on for Broadway musical Dr Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas! after a New York judge ordered it to re-open.

    Jujamcyn Theatres decided to shut The Grinch at its St James' theatre until a new labour agreement was reached with striking Broadway stagehands. But this was despite the fact that stagehands employed on The Grinch had agreed to continue working. State Supreme Court Justice Helen Freedman said the show should resume. She granted an injunction sought by the show's producers against the shutdown, saying her decision was "for the sake of this city". 'Busy period' "I think that one Grinch in this city is enough," she added. "We got our miracle on 44th Street," said producer James Sanna. _44231857_picket_afp203b.jpg

    Broadway is considered one of New York's main tourist attractions

    Mr Sanna is not a member of The League of American Theatres and Producers, which the stagehands' union Local One are in dispute with. A union spokesman said the stagehands wanted The Grinch to continue so Mr Sanna could avoid financial ruin. Jujamcyn Theatres owns four other theatres which have been affected by the strike. The judge's decision means that 11 Grinch shows over the Thanksgiving weekend - one of Broadway's busiest periods - are going ahead. The show will then continue until the end of its run on 6 January. Stagehands work with lighting, sound, scenery and special effects. The strike began earlier this month after three months of negotiations between producers and a union about pay and working conditions failed to produce an agreement. The dispute has largely been over work rules that govern how many stagehands must be called for work, how long they work, and what kind of tasks they can perform. The League of American Theatres and Producers wants more flexibility in those rules so as to avoid paying for workers who have nothing to do.

     

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7107264.stm

  6. As Stagehands Strike, Shows Don’t Go On

     

    strike1.600.jpg

     

    After a morning of confusion and anxiety during which members of Local One, the stagehands union, met and the producers waited to see what would happen, the stagehands strike has officially begun. Union members are holding picket signs in front of theaters and the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, the parent union of Local One, issued a statement confirming the walkout.

     

    The stagehands took their picket signs to the wet sidewalks around 10 a.m. today, after a meeting of Local One, their union, at the Westin New York on West 43rd Street.

     

    The Saturday matinee traffic of tourists and theatergoers was thrown into chaos, with busloads of students sitting unhappily outside of “The Color Purple,” and nervous restaurant workers contemplating a Saturday night with no dinner rush.

     

    “Customers may show up but they will be grumpy and won’t tip well,” said Laura Cosentino, as she stood on West 46th Street handing out menus for Rachel’s, a theater district restaurant.

     

    Twenty-seven Broadway shows, including “Wicked,” “Jersey Boys” and “The Lion King” were shuttered, starting with “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical” which was to raise its curtain at 11 a.m.

     

    Only eight shows, which are in theaters on a separate contract with the union, are still running: “Cymbeline,” “Mary Poppins,” “Mauritius,” “Pygmalion,” “The Ritz,” “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” “Xanadu” and “Young Frankenstein.”

     

    Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg released a statement saying: “I had hoped that the theater owners and the stagehands’ union would resolve their differences without a strike. While this is a private labor matter, the economic impact is very public and will be felt far beyond the theaters closed today. It is in everyone’s interest for both sides to come together and resolve their differences. I have spoken to both the theater owners and the stagehands and the city continues to stand ready to help in any way we can.”

     

    This is the second strike on Broadway in less than five years; the four-day musician walkout in 2003 was the first in almost three decades. But this is the first time Local One, a 121-year old union, has called a strike on Broadway.

     

    Producers have made plans to give refunds to people who have bought tickets to shows that would be canceled. The first show to be shuttered by the walkout is “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical,” which begins performances at 11 a.m.

     

    On Thursday, after two long days of negotiating with the League of American Theaters and Producers, the stagehands’ union was given the authority to strike by its parent union, the last step necessary before a strike can be called.

     

    A session scheduled for Friday did not take place, and all around Broadway, producers, stagehands and just about everyone else in the industry were buzzing with theories about when or if the stagehands would walk out.

     

    Local One officials had been expected to give a few days’ notice before a strike was called, though a note on the union’s Web site said that the parent union, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, would advise Local One as to when the strike would begin.

     

    The talks, which have been going on since before the union’s contract expired in July, broke down over the issue of work rules.

     

    The contract with Local One has strict rules governing how many stagehands must be called to work, what kind of tasks they can perform and how long the work calls can be scheduled. League members say the rules inevitably lead to long periods of time when stagehands are on the clock with nothing to do.

     

    The league has been pushing for more flexibility in deciding how many stagehands are needed for work and when they are needed, and they have offered a package of raises in return for that flexibility.

     

    James J. Claffey, the president of the union, has said that the stagehands would be willing to make changes to the rules in return for benefits of equal value. But there is no way to tell how much work the stagehands would lose under the rules the producers are proposing, Mr. Claffey said, and so it would be difficult to gauge the value of what the league has been offering in return.

     

    It is unclear how long a strike would last. League members have privately speculated that the pressure to get Broadway up and running again would keep the strike from going longer than three or four days. Union officials say that a strike could go for weeks if necessary; Mr. Claffey has already turned down an offer from Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg to help in the negotiations.

     

    By taking a few cents out of every ticket over the past few years, the producers have amassed a $20 million fund to help weather a shutdown by covering fixed costs, like insurance. But for shows that do not have much in the way of advance sales — sales that could be refunded — a strike that went on for more than a few days could be fatal.

     

    Local One, which has around 2,200 members, roughly a quarter of whom work on Broadway, has accumulated its own $4.1 million emergency stockpile. The union has set aside an additional $1 million to help members of the other unions that will be out of work during a strike.

     

    Union officials also point out that there are more than a thousand non-Broadway jobs in Local One that stagehands can rotate into while they are not working on Broadway, but that rotation system has become more complicated now that the strike by the Writers Guild of America has left Local One members in the television industry without work as well.

     

    Kate Hammer contributed reporting.

    Article

     

    Which shows are cancelled?

     

    A Bronx Tale

    A Chorus Line

    August: Osage County

    Avenue Q

    Chicago

    The Color Purple

    Curtains

    Cyrano de Bergerac

    Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas

    The Drowsy Chaperone

    Duran Duran: Red Carpet Massacre

    The Farnsworth Invention

    Grease

    Hairspray

    Is He Dead?

    Jersey Boys

    Legally Blonde

    Les Miserables

    The Lion King

    The Little Mermaid

    Mamma Mia!

    The Phantom of the Opera

    Rent

    Rock 'n' Roll

    Spamalot

    Spring Awakening

    The Seafarer

    Wicked

     

    Which shows are playing as scheduled?

     

    The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

    Cymbeline

    Mary Poppins

    Mauritius

    Pygmalion

    The Radio City Christmas Spectacular

    The Ritz

    Xanadu

    Young Frankenstein

     

    In addition, all off-Broadway productions are playing as scheduled, including:

     

    Altar Boyz, Blue Man Group, Die Mommie Die, The Fantasticks, Forbidden Broadway, Frankenstein, Fuerzabruta, The Glorious Ones, I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change, Jump, Make Me a Song, Speech & Debate, Stomp and Things We Want.

  7. Danian looks like you caught the only showing of the Grinch.

     

    I wonder if the famed Christmas Spectacular will still be going on.....?

     

    As Stagehands Strike, Shows Don’t Go On

     

    strike1.600.jpg

     

    After a morning of confusion and anxiety during which members of Local One, the stagehands union, met and the producers waited to see what would happen, the stagehands strike has officially begun. Union members are holding picket signs in front of theaters and the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, the parent union of Local One, issued a statement confirming the walkout.

     

    The stagehands took their picket signs to the wet sidewalks around 10 a.m. today, after a meeting of Local One, their union, at the Westin New York on West 43rd Street.

     

    The Saturday matinee traffic of tourists and theatergoers was thrown into chaos, with busloads of students sitting unhappily outside of “The Color Purple,” and nervous restaurant workers contemplating a Saturday night with no dinner rush.

     

    “Customers may show up but they will be grumpy and won’t tip well,” said Laura Cosentino, as she stood on West 46th Street handing out menus for Rachel’s, a theater district restaurant.

     

    Twenty-seven Broadway shows, including “Wicked,” “Jersey Boys” and “The Lion King” were shuttered, starting with “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical” which was to raise its curtain at 11 a.m.

     

    Only eight shows, which are in theaters on a separate contract with the union, are still running: “Cymbeline,” “Mary Poppins,” “Mauritius,” “Pygmalion,” “The Ritz,” “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” “Xanadu” and “Young Frankenstein.”

     

    Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg released a statement saying: “I had hoped that the theater owners and the stagehands’ union would resolve their differences without a strike. While this is a private labor matter, the economic impact is very public and will be felt far beyond the theaters closed today. It is in everyone’s interest for both sides to come together and resolve their differences. I have spoken to both the theater owners and the stagehands and the city continues to stand ready to help in any way we can.”

     

    This is the second strike on Broadway in less than five years; the four-day musician walkout in 2003 was the first in almost three decades. But this is the first time Local One, a 121-year old union, has called a strike on Broadway.

     

    Producers have made plans to give refunds to people who have bought tickets to shows that would be canceled. The first show to be shuttered by the walkout is “Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical,” which begins performances at 11 a.m.

     

    On Thursday, after two long days of negotiating with the League of American Theaters and Producers, the stagehands’ union was given the authority to strike by its parent union, the last step necessary before a strike can be called.

     

    A session scheduled for Friday did not take place, and all around Broadway, producers, stagehands and just about everyone else in the industry were buzzing with theories about when or if the stagehands would walk out.

     

    Local One officials had been expected to give a few days’ notice before a strike was called, though a note on the union’s Web site said that the parent union, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, would advise Local One as to when the strike would begin.

     

    The talks, which have been going on since before the union’s contract expired in July, broke down over the issue of work rules.

     

    The contract with Local One has strict rules governing how many stagehands must be called to work, what kind of tasks they can perform and how long the work calls can be scheduled. League members say the rules inevitably lead to long periods of time when stagehands are on the clock with nothing to do.

     

    The league has been pushing for more flexibility in deciding how many stagehands are needed for work and when they are needed, and they have offered a package of raises in return for that flexibility.

     

    James J. Claffey, the president of the union, has said that the stagehands would be willing to make changes to the rules in return for benefits of equal value. But there is no way to tell how much work the stagehands would lose under the rules the producers are proposing, Mr. Claffey said, and so it would be difficult to gauge the value of what the league has been offering in return.

     

    It is unclear how long a strike would last. League members have privately speculated that the pressure to get Broadway up and running again would keep the strike from going longer than three or four days. Union officials say that a strike could go for weeks if necessary; Mr. Claffey has already turned down an offer from Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg to help in the negotiations.

     

    By taking a few cents out of every ticket over the past few years, the producers have amassed a $20 million fund to help weather a shutdown by covering fixed costs, like insurance. But for shows that do not have much in the way of advance sales — sales that could be refunded — a strike that went on for more than a few days could be fatal.

     

    Local One, which has around 2,200 members, roughly a quarter of whom work on Broadway, has accumulated its own $4.1 million emergency stockpile. The union has set aside an additional $1 million to help members of the other unions that will be out of work during a strike.

     

    Union officials also point out that there are more than a thousand non-Broadway jobs in Local One that stagehands can rotate into while they are not working on Broadway, but that rotation system has become more complicated now that the strike by the Writers Guild of America has left Local One members in the television industry without work as well.

     

    Kate Hammer contributed reporting.

    Article

     

    Which shows are cancelled?

     

    A Bronx Tale

    A Chorus Line

    August: Osage County

    Avenue Q

    Chicago

    The Color Purple

    Curtains

    Cyrano de Bergerac

    Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas

    The Drowsy Chaperone

    Duran Duran: Red Carpet Massacre

    The Farnsworth Invention

    Grease

    Hairspray

    Is He Dead?

    Jersey Boys

    Legally Blonde

    Les Miserables

    The Lion King

    The Little Mermaid

    Mamma Mia!

    The Phantom of the Opera

    Rent

    Rock 'n' Roll

    Spamalot

    Spring Awakening

    The Seafarer

    Wicked

     

    Which shows are playing as scheduled?

     

    The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

    Cymbeline

    Mary Poppins

    Mauritius

    Pygmalion

    The Radio City Christmas Spectacular

    The Ritz

    Xanadu

    Young Frankenstein

     

    In addition, all off-Broadway productions are playing as scheduled, including:

     

    Altar Boyz, Blue Man Group, Die Mommie Die, The Fantasticks, Forbidden Broadway, Frankenstein, Fuerzabruta, The Glorious Ones, I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change, Jump, Make Me a Song, Speech & Debate, Stomp and Things We Want.

     

    Sweet, the Christmas spectacular is still on!

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