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POLL: #Massachusetts U.S. #Senate Primary. REPLY to THIS tweet with: #Markey, #Lynch, #Gomez, #Sullivan, #Winslow or #DontCare.
— Steve Garfield (@stevegarfield) April 30, 2013
The #Massachusetts U.S. #Senate special election primaries are Tuesday. Who will you vote for? Lynch, Markey, Gomez, Sullivan, or Winslow?
— Steve Garfield (@stevegarfield) April 29, 2013
A riveting, detailed account: 102 hours in pursuit of Marathon suspects b.globe.com/184WPuV
— The Boston Globe (@BostonGlobe) April 28, 2013
Book of Mormon in Boston: Can you ask for donations to onefundboston.org instead of broadwaycares.org #bostonstrong
— Steve Garfield (@stevegarfield) April 24, 2013
@stevegarfield - They collected for onefundboston.org on 4/18 when I went.
— Ange Reese (@angereese) April 24, 2013
Audiences tend to come away from "Book of Mormon" feeling they’ve had an out-of-body musical experience or that they’ve been offended and let down. For the record, it’s possible to land somewhere in between. The show could probably serve as a kind of Rorschach test on where people stand in terms of pop culture.
It’s as if the creators asked themselves what three elements could we combine that people could never imagine together. They came up with Mormonism, a splashy, joyous Broadway musical, and the most troubled corner of Africa.
They also seemed to reason that if they kept things energetic and upbeat enough that they could get away with pushing the limits of offensiveness, and audiences would love it.
Read more: http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/news/x935163469/Theater-Review-Book-of-Mormon-entertains-by-pushing-limits#ixzz2RUwWMY5b
THE BOOK OF MORMON is not the first show to send up musicals, but SPAMALOT and THE PRODUCERS are infinitely more clever, sophisticated, ebulliently imaginative– and FUNNY. My condolences to the cast who have to wallow in this muck — especially the charismatic and vocally gifted Samantha Marie Ware as a young beautiful Ugandan who sparkles in a number about “baptism” as sexual climax. And then there are the talented Mark Evans and Christopher John O’Neill who play a pair of Mormon Elders as mismatched as Abbott and Costello. Now they were funny.
As for THE BOOK OF MORMON– I’m throwing the book at this one.
Short Attention Span Music. Twitter #music Listening to iTunes Previews music.twitter.com/i/chart/popular NEXT NEXT NEXT ;-)
— Steve Garfield (@stevegarfield) April 18, 2013
Twitter currently gathers its music from three sources: iTunes, Spotify, and Rdio. By default, users hear previews from iTunes when exploring music in the app, and Rdio and Spotify subscribers can log in to their accounts to listen to full tracks available through those services. Twitter noted that it will continue to explore and add other music services.
@elpelontaqueria CNN hoping to get the word out about #bostonhelp offers -- want to share your info here? at.cnn.com/3YsGtOY — CNN iReport (@cnnireport) April 16, 2013
Rounding out the updates is a mild reworking of the navigation functionality. While mapping data will remain the same, the system has been tweaked to display more street names, and the logic behind destination routing has been revamped.
Cadillac’s VP of marketing Don Butler says that consumer feedback to CUE has been “overwhelmingly positive,” but “some things, like responsiveness, we continue to work on.”Nice.
“We had to take that bold step, and as an innovator and as a leader, that’s always the risk we have to take,” says Butler. “You might move to a place that might be uncomfortable for a lot of users.”
That comfort level is something Cadillac is looking into, with Butler admitting that a hybrid approach – using both touchscreens and traditional knobs and dials – is in the cards for future vehicles.
“Is there supplementation for mechanical controls? Yes, that’s something you’ll be seeing in the future,” says Butler.