Police released video footage of the harrowing moment a 4-year-old girl narrowly escaped gunfire at an Arizona barbershop on Monday.
The video, posted on the Chandler Police Department’s Facebook page, showed the unidentified girl dancing around Paisanos Barber Shop before sitting on a chair near the window.
Soon, the 4-year-old is shown covering her face as at least two bullets fly through the glass window. She quickly gets up and runs away from the window.
One day later, Michael Hart, 23, and 21-year-old Rafael Santos were arrested in connection with the incident, according to police documents obtained by People..
Police said Hart,...
The video, posted on the Chandler Police Department’s Facebook page, showed the unidentified girl dancing around Paisanos Barber Shop before sitting on a chair near the window.
Soon, the 4-year-old is shown covering her face as at least two bullets fly through the glass window. She quickly gets up and runs away from the window.
One day later, Michael Hart, 23, and 21-year-old Rafael Santos were arrested in connection with the incident, according to police documents obtained by People..
Police said Hart,...
- 4/13/2017
- by Char Adams
- PEOPLE.com
The 69th Australian International Movie Convention has kicked off this morning with a spate of opening addresses from some of Australia.s key players in cinema.
Held at Jupiter.s Resort and Casino on the Gold Coast, the Aimc this year has drawn a record crowd, with over 100 of the 1,000+ attendees coming from overseas.
Executive Director of the National Association of Cinema Operators Australasia and Aimc host, Michael Hawkins, started proceedings with a welcoming address covering issues such as piracy, cinema marketing and, of course, box office, for which 2015 looks extremely promising.
.We suggested to you that this year.s convention was one not to be missed,. Hawkins said. .We have read from numerous sources that the box office for the 2015 and 2016 years will be record breaking. That the content will be mind-blowing and that the decisions you are required to make about what to put on your screens will be harder than ever.
Held at Jupiter.s Resort and Casino on the Gold Coast, the Aimc this year has drawn a record crowd, with over 100 of the 1,000+ attendees coming from overseas.
Executive Director of the National Association of Cinema Operators Australasia and Aimc host, Michael Hawkins, started proceedings with a welcoming address covering issues such as piracy, cinema marketing and, of course, box office, for which 2015 looks extremely promising.
.We suggested to you that this year.s convention was one not to be missed,. Hawkins said. .We have read from numerous sources that the box office for the 2015 and 2016 years will be record breaking. That the content will be mind-blowing and that the decisions you are required to make about what to put on your screens will be harder than ever.
- 10/13/2014
- by Emily Blatchford
- IF.com.au
Star gazing just got a whole lot better thanks to five green lasers punching a pentagon pattern 15 miles high in the sky.
Devised by an astronomy team in Arizona and funded by the National Science Foundation, scientists have created a method to get crisper views of larger swaths of the night sky. "The technologies we're investigating will be crucial to the full scientific exploitation of the next generation giant telescopes," said Michael Hart, an astronomer at the University of Arizona, Tuscon who led the study.
The technique goes something like this: Astronomers angle five lasers from a telescope mount to form a pentagon in the sky. The light is then reflected back to the telescope aperture in the lowest layer of the atmosphere. Then software picks out the common blurry portions and adjusts for it dynamically, canceling out the blur caused by atmospheric ripples, and giving astronomers a clear view.
Devised by an astronomy team in Arizona and funded by the National Science Foundation, scientists have created a method to get crisper views of larger swaths of the night sky. "The technologies we're investigating will be crucial to the full scientific exploitation of the next generation giant telescopes," said Michael Hart, an astronomer at the University of Arizona, Tuscon who led the study.
The technique goes something like this: Astronomers angle five lasers from a telescope mount to form a pentagon in the sky. The light is then reflected back to the telescope aperture in the lowest layer of the atmosphere. Then software picks out the common blurry portions and adjusts for it dynamically, canceling out the blur caused by atmospheric ripples, and giving astronomers a clear view.
- 8/5/2010
- by Lizette Chapman
- Fast Company
Plus Next Magazine gets Broadway Bares hunks in swim wear, say goodbye to SoapNet, and the latest Don't Ask Don't Tell news is from West Virginia?
Want to know how to make MTV’s version of Skins completely irrelevant? Make a movie with members from seasons 1-4 of the British cast. It’s in the works for a 2011 release, and I’m demanding they make it a hard R in the U.S. or what’s the point? There are a few parts of Mitch Hewer’s body I haven’t seen yet.
I’m having trouble deciding: Which Sex and the City 2 review is more scathing, Roger Ebert with his “As we return to the trivialities of their lives for a sequel, marriage is the issue. The institution is affirmed in an opening sequence at a gay wedding in Connecticut that looks like a Fred Astaire production number gone horribly over budget.
Want to know how to make MTV’s version of Skins completely irrelevant? Make a movie with members from seasons 1-4 of the British cast. It’s in the works for a 2011 release, and I’m demanding they make it a hard R in the U.S. or what’s the point? There are a few parts of Mitch Hewer’s body I haven’t seen yet.
I’m having trouble deciding: Which Sex and the City 2 review is more scathing, Roger Ebert with his “As we return to the trivialities of their lives for a sequel, marriage is the issue. The institution is affirmed in an opening sequence at a gay wedding in Connecticut that looks like a Fred Astaire production number gone horribly over budget.
- 5/27/2010
- by lostinmiami
- The Backlot
Here's one for the annals of experimental marketing: On Wednesday and Thursday a white van carrying a stack of powder-coated Real Good chairs by Blu Dot, a Minneapolis design firm started by three college friends, will patrol Manhattan neighborhoods dropping the chairs one-by-one on the street. No promotional material or sales pitch will accompany the drop-offs. The chairs will be free for the taking. But what the adoptive owners won't know is that Blu Dot will be watching them.
It sounds like one of the unconventional strategies from the pages of Free, Chris Anderson's book about the unlikely new routes from product to revenue. In fact, the event was planned to mark the first anniversary of Blu Dot's Soho store, with a nod to freegan culture.
"The idea came out of the curb mining culture in New York and other cities," said Michael Hart, co-founder of Mono, a Minneapolis...
It sounds like one of the unconventional strategies from the pages of Free, Chris Anderson's book about the unlikely new routes from product to revenue. In fact, the event was planned to mark the first anniversary of Blu Dot's Soho store, with a nod to freegan culture.
"The idea came out of the curb mining culture in New York and other cities," said Michael Hart, co-founder of Mono, a Minneapolis...
- 10/29/2009
- by Michael Cannell
- Fast Company
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