Saturday, June 30, 2012

Best Driver





 So this is it, the final ten. But what order do they finish in, and which is the greatest drivers' car of all? We took them to you favourite Welsh roads to find out



  
Decisions have to be made and scores awarded. Never in all of the group tests and eCotys over the years have I seen so much agonising. Usually there might be a split, but individuals will know in their own minds which is the winner for them. This time everyone seems to have two or three cars that they want to see sharing the top step.

But it isn’t the Evo VI Tommi Makinen Edition, which ends up four-wheel drifting its way to tenth place in the top 100. ‘It’s brilliant when you’re on it, but just a bit ordinary when you’re pootling around,’ says Barker. Simister was very impressed by its ‘steering, handling and remarkably absorbent ride’ and admits that the Makinen is ‘a truly lovely Evo’, even though he ‘doesn’t really get the whole Evo cult thing’. Metcalfe sums it up with: ‘A very desirable bit of kit if you like this sort of thing, but I think greater driver rewards are to be found elsewhere.’

Ninth is the Mazda MX-5. Everyone admired the balance and accessibility of the Mazda. ‘Light, delicate, agile, adjustable, comfortable. A car that sets itself realistic targets and hits every one plumb in the middle,’ says Vivian. But as Metcalfe comments, ‘There isn’t enough fire in its belly,’ so you enjoy it rather than get excited about it.

Screaming into equal seventh place at 9000rpm is – and this might be a shock – the Ferrari F50. ‘Old school’ was a phrase used by most and ‘wide’ was another word that cropped up a lot. ‘It is very hard, noisy and mechanical, but unerringly honest and communicative,’ says Vivian, before declaring it ‘a proper, hairy-balled supercar’. Which goes some way to explaining why Hayman loved it and has it third on his list (written on the back of a packet of Lambert & Butler).

By the way, if any of the comments as we run down the final ten seem harsh or nitpicking, that’s because they are. They have to be. This is the top ten – all these cars are brilliant and wonderful to drive. Don’t be upset that your F50 has only come seventh – we’re not denigrating, merely differentiating. Now, on to the truly rubbish Clio Trophy. Only joking.

It’s equal on points with the Ferrari, but if there was a prize for enthusiasm then the Clio would win hands down. It isn’t the most pure or sophisticated car here but it is ridiculous fun. The suspension seems to have oodles of pitch and roll and what Hales describes as ‘a lot going on in the transients’ (like when changing  direction), but the only time it really loses out is when people start talking about another Renault…

Time-warping into sixth place is the Elan. ‘It is a fluent joy and its small size makes it very handy on tight roads,’ says the equally diminutive Simister. ‘The mechanical grip it can create from such minuscule tyres is little short of miraculous and the liberties you can take are little short of astonishing,’ says Metcalfe. That the original showed Mazda’s modern incarnation a clean pair of heals might seem incredible, but the genius of Colin Chapman should never be underestimated.

The Mégane R26.R is the fifth greatest drivers’ car. ‘A beautifully sorted front-wheel-drive car,’ enthuses Hales. ‘The slightly larger dimensions [than the Clio] make all the difference to the way the chassis reacts and the way it puts down the power.’ Barker goes further still: ‘Magic from the moment the wheels turn to when they come to rest again. Exceptional damping and everything else matches – grip, steering feel and weight… everything.’

Which takes us into the final four. You really could make a case for any one of these cars winning, but the scores show that in fourth place it’s the Caterham Seven. Barker, Hayman and I all had it top of our lists for its purity and the fact that you can’t get any closer to actually being connected to a car when driving. But Hales best sums up its brilliance and also why it doesn’t win: ‘There’s no denying the wonderful steering, which is sharp and more direct than the thought which commands it, or the way the front points without scaring you, or the way the tail then announces the onset of a slide while inviting you to keep your foot in. However, not everybody wants to be deafened and shaken, then probably soaked as well.’

Many would have tipped the GT3 to win, but Stuttgart will have to settle for third this time. I have to confess that I love the 996 GT3 so much that I’ve spent long evenings thinking about spending what I was saving for a house deposit on a swoopy spoilered wonder instead. But as Barker says, ‘Although it is a drivers’ car for life – everyday practical, and with a depth of quality and reward that you would never tire of – it felt a bit “muffled” after the lightweights.’

If being the greatest drivers’ car meant having the world’s best steering then the Lotus 340R (or any mk1 Elise/Exige) would be standing on the top step. ‘The 340R is like an Elise turned up to 11,’ says unlikely Spinal Tap fan Metcalfe. ‘The chassis composure when really pushed is beyond brilliant; it’s close to unbelievable’. John Simister has the 340R at the top of his list ‘for its speed, purity, transparency and compactness. It provides a huge visceral buzz yet doesn’t assault you with the wrong sort of “noise”.’ ‘Sublime,’ says Barker.

And so, with a drum roll provided by art director Paul Lang via the medium of his hands and the plastic rear windows of the Mégane, it is an honour to announce the winner as… the Pagani Zonda F. Here’s how the praise stacks up. ‘A car that can comfortably live up to all the hype,’ says Metcalfe. ‘A supercar you really can drive as if it was an Elise, yet which gives you the full-scale Panavision, HD, Technicolor supercar experience. A car to melt the heart of the coldest, most stubborn supercar critic…’ says Barker, before handing over to that very critic in the form of Simister, who admits that ‘it appears to weigh nothing, it’s both visceral and forgiving and you feel in total control’. ‘Overwhelming, shattering, utterly addictive,’ concludes Vivian.

When you see a Zonda it is easy to treat it as art, something to be looked at and occasionally driven between backdrops, but next time try to look past all the carbonfibre confection because underneath is a truly, wonderfully fabulous drivers’ car. The greatest, in fact.

* This is the much shortened online-sympathetic version of the Top Ten Shootout. Full uncut version available in issue 135. Back issues hotline 0844 844 0039
Huge thanks to Joe Macari Performance Cars for the F50 (for their latest stocklist visit joemacari.com), Darragh Walsh for the GT3, Chris Short for the Evo, Peter Esders for the MX-5 and Leigh for the Zonda F.

Candace Cameron Bure's Struggle to Get Healthy


Candace Cameron Bure, 34, best known for her role as DJ Tanner on the sitcom Full House, struggled with bulimia after the show's eight-year run ended. Moving from California to Montreal to live with her husband, hockey player Valeri Bure, was a life-altering experience, and she sought comfort and fulfillment in food. Now, 15 years later, Cameron Bure has a healthy relationship with food and fitness, and has never felt better. Her story and inspirational strategies from her new book, Reshaping It All: Motivation for Physical and Spiritual Fitness, stress the importance of spirituality and understanding to living a well-rounded, healthy life. Today she lives in Los Angeles with Valeri and their three children, Natasha, Lev, and Maksim. She stars in Make It or Break It, whose third season premiered March 28. She also appears alongside David James Elliott in the upcoming TV film Truth Be Told, premiering April 16 on Fox.

candace-cameron-full-house
Struggling with bulimia
I didn't have an eating disorder when I was on Full House. My unhealthy relationship with food had nothing to do with physical insecurities, but emotional issues I was struggling with after getting married, moving to a new city, and no longer working. Almost every element of my life had radically changed. I was happy to be a newlywed and to be at home, but my husband traveled a lot and I found myself very lonely at times. I turned to food as a comforter. Like anyone struggling with an eating disorder, it easily took over. I felt out of control, like I wasn't the one making choices. At my worst, binging and purging felt like an automatic response to the emotions I was feeling. Somehow, it made me feel like I was able to regain control.

Overcoming her eating disorder
I didn't go through treatment to get help, but experienced two major turning points before I began to change my ways. The first time, I was caught purging. The shame and humiliation of being caught forced me to quit. It was such an embarrassing thing to go through and really stopped me in my tracks. I felt like I was dishonoring and displeasing the people around me. I didn't necessarily understand how unhealthy my actions were. A few years later, I had a relapse. That was the actual turning point for me because I finally realized that I was using food as a comforter. Every time something was tough in my life, I was turning to food instead of God. When my relationship with God became strong, I realized how I was filling voids in my life with food.

How to Get Your Metabolism Moving

 Does your metabolism grind to a halt after 35? Can certain foods rev it up? Answers ahead—and they’re good.

 How to Estimate Carbs in 10 Common Foods

Here’s something to feel good about: Your body is a calorie-burning machine. You’ll even torch a few while reading this article. The point is, every single thing you do—from breathing to eating to sleeping—uses energy. The number of calories it would take just to lie in bed all day is called your resting metabolic rate. And just like your curly hair or warm personality, yours is unique.

"There are so many factors that determine your metabolic rate," says Janet Rankin, PhD, professor of human nutrition, foods, and exercise at Virginia Tech. Among them: your height and weight (bigger people burn more calories), your gender (women have slower metabolisms than men), your age (your metabolic rate declines as you get older), how much muscle or fat you have (muscle burns more calories than fat does), and your DNA.

Although you can’t rewire your double helix or switch back the clock, there’s still plenty you can do to be a fast burner, Rankin says. All you need to do is remember these four research-backed truths.

Cardio revs your metabolism for hours afterward
Resistance training often hogs the metab-boosting spotlight. It’s no wonder, since a pound of muscle at rest fries three times as many calories as a pound of fat. However, cardio is every bit as crucial for keeping your metabolism humming. New research explains why: In a study published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, people pedaled a stationary bike as hard as they could for 47 minutes. The finding: They slashed 190 calories above their resting metabolic rate for 14 hours after their workout. Add that to the 519 calories, on average, the cyclists scorched from the workout itself, and that’s one heck of a sweat session. "If you do just two to three vigorous bouts of exercise per week for 45 minutes, you could lose a pound of fat every two weeks from the combination of calories expended during exercise plus what you burn afterward," says study author David Nieman, PhD, a professor of exercise science at Appalachian State University.

So how can you tell if you’re pushing hard enough? Any sweat-inducing activity you can sustain for 45 minutes will do the trick.

Skimping on sleep stalls your calorie-burning
You’d think that more hours awake means more opportunities to sizzle calories, but the truth is that more sleep makes for a quicker metab. In fact, a single sleepless night reduces your resting metabolic rate by about 5% several hours into the next day, according to a study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. What’s more, the morning after skipping sleep you burn 20% fewer calories from diet-induced thermogenesis—the number of calories your body uses to break down and digest food.

As if that wasn’t enough to encourage you to power down your iPad early, scientists have found that women consume 329 more calories, on average, after snoozing for four hours than they do when they sleep for nine. To keep your cravings in check while preventing your engine from sputtering, try to get seven to eight hours of sleep per night.

Snowflake magnified 36000 times



Below you can see pictures of what a snowflake looks like when you magnify it 36000 times. These beautiful and amazing pictures show step by step magnification from 93x to 36000x.

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Texas Children’s Hospital

Texas Children’s Hospital pioneers use of MRI-guided laser surgery for revolutionary new epilepsy treatment

New procedure significantly reduces risk of patient complications and recovery time
HOUSTON - July 18, 2011 - Texas Children’s Hospital is the first hospital in the world to use real-time MRI-guided thermal imaging and laser technology to destroy lesions in the brain that cause epilepsy and uncontrollable seizures.
According to hospital experts, this new surgical approach offers a safer and significantly less invasive alternative to craniotomy, currently the most commonly used cranial surgical treatment for epilepsy. For high-risk patients with deep brain lesions, this new technique can be particularly life-changing because the MRI-guided laser probe utilizes a much smaller pathway through the brain to reach a deep lesion. This reduces the risk of patient complications related to contact with surrounding brain tissue. In addition, the MRI-guided laser probe is inserted through a hole in the skull that is only 3.2 mm (about the diameter of a pen) versus the removal of a larger area of skull bone for a craniotomy. Because it is a less invasive procedure, patient recovery time is much shorter.

More than three million people in the U.S. are affected by epilepsy, including about 300,000 children under the age of 14. Uncontrollable seizures can affect a child’s memory, concentration, motor skills, school performance and quality of life. Drug therapies control seizures in about 60 percent of those with epilepsy. Invasive craniotomy, nerve stimulation and special diets are treatment options for patients who do not respond to medication.

“Based on our experience, we believe the use of MRI-guided laser surgery will change the face of epilepsy treatment and provide a life-changing option for many epilepsy surgery candidates --- both children and adults,” said Dr. Angus Wilfong, director of Texas Children’s comprehensive epilepsy program and associate professor of pediatrics and neurology at Baylor College of Medicine.

The first surgeries were performed by Dr. Daniel Curry, Texas Children’s director of pediatric surgical epilepsy and functional neurosurgery and assistant professor of neurological surgery at Baylor College of Medicine, with Dr. Wilfong.

Five surgeries using this MRI-guided laser procedure have been successfully performed at Texas Children’s Hospital on pediatric epilepsy patients ranging in age from five to 15 years old, with widely varied types of brain lesions. In all cases, patients have been seizure-free since surgery and most were released within one to five days.

“While we have been successful in curing epilepsy through open cranial surgery for quite some time, the benefits of this new approach in reducing risk and invasiveness while providing instant therapeutic effect may open the door for more epilepsy patients to see surgery as a viable option,” said Curry.

The surgery is performed by first mapping the area of the brain where the lesion is located using magnetic resonance imaging. The catheter is inserted through the skull in the operating room and then the patient is transferred to an MRI unit where the ablation of the lesion is performed. The MRI confirms probe placement in the target, and the magnetic resonance thermal imaging allows the surgeon to see the ablation of the lesion by the laser heat as it happens with an automatic feedback system that shuts the laser off when the heat approaches nearby critical brain structures.

Wilfong noted that MRI-guided laser surgery has been successfully used in treating brain tumors and that he and Curry saw that its same attributes would apply to deep seated epilepsy-causing lesions. The neurologist and neurosurgeon introduced a first-of-its-kind trial of the treatment to pediatric epilepsy patients at the Blue Bird Circle Clinic for Pediatric Neurology at Texas Children’s Hospital.
Changing the life of a young patient
A recent example of the effectiveness of this new surgery is nine-year-old Texas Children’s Hospital patient Keagan Dysart, of Converse, Texas, who suffered from two types of epileptic seizures when he was diagnosed with a hypothalamic hamartoma in his brain. The gelastic seizure caused him to giggle and laugh uncontrollably two or three times an hour. Keagan would also periodically experience a tonic seizure, with generalized body stiffening and loss of awareness that caused him to fall asleep for sometimes up to an hour afterward. Keagan’s case was particularly high risk because his lesion was located in the hypothalamus, near the brain stem. In this highly sensitive region, there are a myriad of potential, serious complications from surgery including loss of sight, damage to the pituitary gland, stroke from artery damage or development of diabetes insipidus (DI), a potentially fatal condition where the kidneys are unable to conserve water because of disruption to the area of the brain that releases the body’s anti-diuretic hormone.

The location, size and complexity of Keagan’s brain lesion made him an ideal candidate for the new surgical procedure, which was successfully performed in March without any surgical complications. He is now seizure-free.

“Knowing the complexity of Keagan’s case, the decision to go forward with this surgery was the toughest decision and the best decision we ever made,” said Khris Dysart, Keagan’s father.

Ranked among the nation’s top four hospitals for pediatric neurology and neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report, Texas Children’s Hospital provides specialty care for a wide range of neurological disorders delivered by leading experts. Equally committed to leadership in research, the hospital also operates the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s Hospital, the first institute in the world devoted to basic research of childhood neurological diseases including extensive research on epilepsy.
About Texas Children's Hospital
Texas Children’s Hospital, a not-for-profit organization, is committed to creating a community of healthy children through excellence in patient care, education and research. Consistently ranked among the top children’s hospitals in the nation, Texas Children’s has recognized Centers of Excellence in multiple pediatric subspecialties including the Cancer and Heart Centers, and operates the largest primary pediatric care network in the country. Texas Children's has completed a $1.5 billion expansion, which includes the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute; Texas Children’s Pavilion for Women, a comprehensive obstetrics/gynecology facility focusing on high-risk births; and Texas Children’s Hospital West Campus, a community hospital in suburban West Houston.  For more information on Texas Children's, go to www.texaschildrens.org. Get the latest news from Texas Children’s by visiting the online newsroom and on Twitter at twitter.com/texaschildrens.

Austin Surgical Hospital

Welcome to Austin Surgical Hospital - Your Austin Hospital

Austin Surgical Hospital is dedicated to providing superior patient care in a comfortable, safe and peaceful environment.
We know you have a choice in the selection of facilities for your healthcare needs and we appreciate the opportunity to care for you. By offering distinguished surgeons, spacious and private patient rooms, and individualized care from our specialized staff, Austin Surgical Hospital has become the hospital Austin trusts for superior healthcare. Working together with Austin's board certified surgeons, our hospital is committed to innovation and clinical quality. Austin Surgical Hospital is an Austin regional hospital with a 23-bed facility that offers the best quality care in the area. The overall goal of our environment is to reduce stress and foster a sense of well-being, which aides in your recovery.
The facility is a Texas Department of State Health Services (SHS) licensed hospital with Accreditation from the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) and Medicare Certification (October 2009).


Services Offered by Our Austin Medical Center

We know you have a choice when selecting an Austin medical center and we appreciate the opportunity to serve you. Austin Surgical Hospital offers experienced surgeons, large private rooms, and individualized patient care from a team of experts ranging from leading Austin ENT specialists to OB/GYN care providers. Working together with Austin’s top board certified surgeons, our hospital is committed to innovation and clinical quality. Austin Surgical Hospital is a 23-bed facility that offers a specialized team of healthcare professionals who understand your needs and concerns. The overall goal of our environment is designed to reduce stress and foster a sense of well-being, which aides in your recovery.





About Austin Surgical Hospital

What makes Austin Surgical Hospital the health clinic Austin relies on for superior patient care? Austin Surgical Hospital is a Texas Department of State Health Services licensed hospital with Joint Commission Accreditation and Medicare Certification. As a leading health clinic in Austin Texas, Austin Surgical Hospital specializes in inpatient surgery and outpatient procedures. The hospital offers an advanced imaging department and a specialized clinical team who provides the highest quality patient care.

Facility Information

  • 6 operating rooms for inpatient and out patient surgery
  • 21 private inpatient rooms, each with personal balcony
  • ICU with 2 patient rooms
  • Emergency services
  • Advanced radiological and diagnostic imaging facility
  • Wound care and hyperbaric center
  • 2 room sleep lab
  • Onsite chef and culinary team

Physician Owned

The surgical hospital model focuses on excellence in surgical health care, diagnostic imaging and all related services. As compared to a large general hospital, Austin Surgical Hospital has a more specialized focus, is owned and managed by local physicians and has a high nurse-to-patient ratio. Each physician plays an active role in creating the mission and philosophy for the hospital. Every doctor has a personal interest in the day-to-day operations and plays an integral role in developing the quality, spirit and direction of the hospital.
Austin Surgical Hospital believes that the best medical care involves patient choice. We believe you have the right to choose your physician, your treatment AND you have the right to choose your hospital.
The entire Austin Surgical Hospital family understands and appreciates the trust you have placed in us by allowing us to care for you. Our intention is to merit your continued confidence through the strong commitment to service and clinical excellence.

The results… surgical hospital studies report

  • Low infection rates
  • High nurse to patient coverage ratio
  • High inpatient, physician and employee satisfaction
...all for the benefit of the patient! With the focus on you--the patient--we can develop a care plan that best meets your medical needs and surpasses your expectations.






Physician Directory

Austin Surgical Hospital is dedicating to maintaining its status as the medical center Austin trusts for the highest quality patient care. The following directory lists physician names and specialty for our physicians. Click on the physician name to see practice and contact details.
Physician Name Specialty
Abikhaled, John A. M.D. General Surgery
Albrecht, Michael M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Asfouri, Souhail M.D. Gynecology (GYN)
Blais, Robert M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Brady, Bridget M.D. General Surgery
Breazeale, Nathan M. M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Briggs, Russell MD ENT Service
Bruce, Jinnie A MD Weight Loss Surgery
Buck, Brian M.D. Pain Management
Buster, Edwin R. M.D. Spine Surgery
Clark, Stephen S MD Weight Loss Surgery
Clement, Robert M.D. Plastic Surgery
Crawford, Lauren M.D. Plastic Surgery
Cunningham, F. Kelly M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Dillawn, Patrick C MD Weight Loss Surgery
DuBois, Craig M.D. Pain Management
Elenz, Douglas R. M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Fass, Steven M.D. General Surgery, Weight Loss Surgery
Faulkenberry, Timothy M.D. General Surgery, Weight Loss Surgery
Fernandez, Jim B. M.D. Pain Management
Fuller, Rob M.D. General Surgery
Ganta, Sashidhar M.D. Weight Loss Surgery
Garcia Jr., Peter M. M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Gorman, William M.D. Plastic Surgery
Gupta, Rajat M.D. Pain Management
Hall, Jeffrey M.D. Plastic Surgery
Haydon, Michael M.D. Plastic Surgery
Hyde, Carolyn M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Kilbride, Earl M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Kim, Stanley M.D. Spine Surgery
Krych, Steven DPM Podiatric Surgery
Longoria, Mario A MD Weight Loss Surgery
Mahendru, Vivek M.D. Pain Management
Malone, III, C. Bruce M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Manuel, Jacob Orthopedic Surgery
Marquez, Nancy G MD Weight Loss Surgery
Martinez, Kelly M.D. General Surgery
Meynig, Jeffrey T. M.D. General Surgery
Moghadam, Kenneth Infertility & Reproductive Endocrinology; In-Vitro Fertilization
Moore, Frosty M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Oliver, Paula M.D. General Surgery, Weight Loss Surgery
Oswalt, Charles M.D. General Surgery
Patel, Anant M.D. Spine Surgery
Pearce, John M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Pearce, Stephen M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Savage, David M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Schoch, III, Eugene M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Sherrod, Mark M.D. General Surgery, Weight Loss Surgery
Smith, Scott M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Smoot, J. Brannan M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Stierman, Karen MD ENT Service
Sullivan, Brian M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Tibbetts, Ryan Orthopedic Surgery
Tsourmas, Nicholas M.D. Orthopedic Surgery
Von Rueden, Kurt M.D. Spine Surgery
Wilder, Alfred M.D. Plastic Surgery
Wills, Robert M.D. Pain Management
Windler, E. Carey M.D. Orthopedic Surgery








Lockdown, USA

Lockdown, USA
“‘Lockdown U.S.A,’ … is both a fierce ‘j’accuse’ against the Rockefeller drug laws and a semi-intimate portrait of the nascent political clout exhibited by Hip-Hop Nation.
- Newsday
Simmons’ battles to raise awareness about the destructive impact of these laws.
- NY Times
Loaded with stars like 50 Cent and Mariah Carey—to get the word out, raise public awareness and try to get the laws reformed.
- Cinemablend.com
… a valuable viewing experience for any person or group advocating social change.
- Monsterandcritics.com
  • Premiered at Tribeca Film Festival in May 2006.
  • Screened at Silverdocs Documentary Festival June 2006.
  • Won the Special Jury Award at Cinequest Festival 2007.
  • Was shown on IFC May 5th, 2008.
  • Became Available on iTunes May 6th, 2008
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“Lockdown, USA” is a feature documentary set on the front lines of the dramatic campaign to end the “War on Drugs” and repeal the Rockefeller Drug Laws. The film follows Wanda Best, whose husband was sentenced 15 years to life, as a first time non-violent drug offender. She is now raising five children on her own. The documentary will interweave the story of the Best family with a behind the scenes look at Hip Hop Impresario, Russell Simmons’ colorful, unorthodox campaign to reform the Drug Laws. In 1973, New York State enacted the Rockefeller Drug Laws, which are the harshest drug control measures ever passed in any democratic nation. President Reagan declared the National “War on Drugs” in 1982 and cited The Rockefeller Laws as the model for new drug regulations. By 1983, 48 states had passed drug control measures based on the Rockefeller Drug Laws. These laws have resulted in the US prison population quadrupling and prisons becoming a thriving, profitable industry.
There are currently over two million people behind bars in America. One out of every 38 Americans is currently in prison or on parole and or probation. The US now spends over $100,000,000 dollars a week building new prisons.In the fall of 2001, Darrell Best was convicted of possession of cocaine. Darrell had been doing handy work at his uncle’s house and signed for a Fed-Ex that was addressed to a neighbor. The package contained a pound of cocaine. The District Attorney offered Darrell Best a one-year plea bargain, if he admitted guilt. Darrell refused to take the plea, insisting on his innocence and claiming he wanted to set an example of integrity and honesty for his children. The Judge apologized as he read Darrell Best his sentence, 15 years to life; the minimum sentence he could give Darrell under the Rockefeller Drug Laws. The film will bare witness to the devastating impact Darrell’s incarceration has had on his family and the noble fight his wife Wanda has launched, in an effort to bring him home. In the spring of 2003, the Best family got a glimmer of hope. An unusual Coalition, helmed by Russell Simmons, assembled to fight the “War on Drugs” and declared that the first battle would be to repeal the Rockefeller Drug Laws.
The film follows Russell Simmons as he orchastrates a high profile campaign, to raise awareness around the Rockefeller Drug Laws, with the intention of creating tremendous public pressure, forcing the politicians to enact reform. Russell recruits high profile artists such as P Diddy, Jay-Z, 50 Cent, Mariah Carey and Tim Robbins to join the campaign and speak out on the issue; he rallies tens of thousands of people and works throughout the night in heated behind the scenes negotiations with New York State Governor George Pataki and the State’s top politicians. The question remains, will they be able to make a deal?”Lockdown, USA” captures the stranger than fiction, historic series of events as they have unfolded; where the political establishment has been forced to reconcile with the burgeoning power of hip-hop.