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Topics - Controversial

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61
SW.net and if Warrior Nation is still in existence, should get first dibs on tickets for national team games, WC, Caribbean Cup, WCQ, International Friendlies etc..

People complain that band waggonists outnumber true supporters, well we as members with the owners of the forum should lobby to be granted the right to buy tickets first at a reasonable price. Lower price to generate interest once more and get the grass roots fans back to the game.

All members of the board should get this first option, then the rest of tickets released to the public in T&T and internationally. It should go even further to other football fraternities as well.

Everyone who really cares about T&T football should lobby for this, it will take a joint effort and there is no room for lazy supporters in this equation. That will separate the sheep from the goat.

Just an idea... at least that will eliminate any excuses...


62
Football / Why couldn't Ronaldhino make this Brazillian WC Team?
« on: July 12, 2014, 03:24:12 PM »
Can anyone answer that question?

Because a 33 year old Dinho could still tear most of these guys in pieces and contribute to the national team.

Sometimes I question Brazil's selection for WC teams. I'm watching some of these mids from Brazil and they are ordinary, nothing special, not in Dinho's class, who still has it.. Since when is 33 over the hill?

63
Football / FIFA proposes to move WC 2022 to Canada and US...
« on: June 26, 2014, 10:51:26 PM »
FIFA propose to move 2022 World Cup from Qatar to USA and Canada

Vikesh ShetVikesh Shet

Jun 24 2014 57703


Change of the 2022 World Cup venue is imminent.

FIFA have made a proposal to move the 2022 FIFA World Cup to USA and Canada. The hosting rights were originally given to Qatar in controversial circumstancesand it has long been under the hammer of suspicion. FIFA could soon make it public that no Arab country will host the World Cup.

The chief governing body has put forward USA and Canada as the hosts to replace Qatar in 2022. Qatar on the other hand is still continuing with the construction of the ultra-modern stadiums for the World Cup, though it is increasingly appearing they would not be put to use anytime for the mega event.

Qatar was in a cloud of suspicion over allegations of buying of votes and corruption during the time of voting. Mohammed bin Hammam, a former Qatari official for FIFA, paid up to $5 million to influential African leaders to garner their votes. According to reports, there is evidence that hundreds of faxes, emails and invoices were exchanged between Qatari officials and leaders around the world. Australia, one of the main contenders to the 2022 World Cup bid only registered 2 votes and were recently reported to be considering suing FIFA over the $40 million loss they incurred from the bidding process.

Recently, Jim Boyce, vice-president of FIFA, had confirmed a re-vote would take place if the Qatar bid was riddled with corruption saying, “If Michael Garcia, the investigating officer finds any evidence of illegal activity, we will discuss it seriously.”

Qatar has been subjected to strong criticism about the poor working conditions at construction sites of mostly non-Qatari people with a reported 1200 people dead and it is expected to rise to 4000. The International Trade Union Confederation had demanded the FIFA to impose a number of conditions to uphold the Qatar World Cup choice.

Sepp Blatter, FIFA president recognized that “it was a mistake” to choose Qatar as the venue and the international agency is very close to announce USA and Canada as venue for the event. 

http://www.sportskeeda.com/football/fifa-propose-move-2022-world-cup-qatar-to-usa-canada/

64
Olga Kurylenko To Star In Action Thriller ‘Little Mizz Innocent’

By JEN YAMATO | Friday June 20, 2014 @ 5:42pm PDT

Olga Kurylenko To Star In Action Thriller ‘Little Mizz Innocent’ EXCLUSIVE:

Quantum of Solace Bond girl Olga Kurylenko is set to star in her own action pic for director Marc Forby (Princess Kaiulani). She’ll lead the cast of indie thriller Little Mizz Innocent, about a seemingly innocent UN interpreter caught in a power struggle between the FBI and a criminal dynasty. Filming is set for this summer in Toronto, the U.K., and China. It’s the first major feature for Goldove Entertainment, a film and music shingle founded by former banking pros Hudson and Lynda McKoy, who will produce the film alongside son Gino, who wrote the script. Kurylenko’s recent credits include Oblivion, To The Wonder, Vampire Academy, and Russell Crowe’s upcoming directorial debut The Water Diviner. She’s repped by Tavistock Wood and CAA.


http://www.deadline.com/2014/06/olga-kurylenko-little-mizz-innocent/

http://nukethefridge.com/2014/06/20/bond-girl-olga-kurylenko-star-little-mizz-innocent/

http://www.movieweb.com/news/olga-kurylenko-takes-the-lead-in-action-thriller-little-mizz-innocent

65
So how much money pass to T&T players in the wc in 2006? How much money pass to keep Latas on the bench? Or to keep T&T losing matches in qualifiers, when certain players staying at separate hotels than others, making them more subject to match fixing...

And if some of you feel our players are immune to this type of corruption, you are naive and wrong. T&T probably could have made more WCs but match fixing was probably a part of our downfall as the players are not paid enough and have an opportunity to strike it rich...


You ever wonder why the other nations call us the perennial underachievers? So much talent to dominate the region, but money talks and match fixing is real, been saying this for years. A good start for an investigation would be the Guyana qualifier.

Will match-fixers target World Cup in Brazil?

In a 2008 interview, FIFA president Sepp Blatter said, “You want to speak to me about the Asian match-fixers? I have known about this problem for years.”

By: Declan Hill Special to the Star, Published on Mon Jun 09 2014

It was one of the biggest soccer matches on the planet: the third-place game of the 1994 FIFA World Cup. It took place at the end of a seemingly successful tournament played in the United States. The weather had been mostly hot and sunny; the stadiums largely full. The games exciting and broadcast to billions of people around the world. There were hundreds of millions of dollars in sponsorship deals.
Yet there was a gang of match-fixers at the tournament who targeted the third-place match between Bulgaria and Sweden, offering hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes to players to throw the game. Some of those players suspect they may have succeeded.

The World Cup in Brazil, which begins June 12, will be a $4-billion extravaganza of television rights, sponsorship deals, sold-out stadiums and exciting soccer. However, its credibility is under threat from Asian match-fixers linked to a sports gambling market worth hundreds of billions dollars.

The fixers linked to the people who targeted the 1994 tournament have returned many times and to almost every international soccer tournament in the last 20 years.

As an investigative journalist, I was able to go to Asia and infiltrate the gang of fixers and hear their stories of fixing top-level matches. Now in this Toronto Star investigation based on corroborating interviews with players, coaches, referees, gamblers and some of the highest officials in the soccer world, we report that the gang of match-fixers, who successfully fixed soccer leagues around the world, have been at the Under-17 World Cup, the Under-20 World Cup, the Olympic soccer tournament, and the women’s and men’s World Cups.

The fixers are helped by a largely unspoken dilemma at the heart of international soccer: some of the players at the big tournaments do not get paid.

Despite all the fans, all the sponsorship deals, all the television broadcasts — there will be players in Brazil who won’t be paid a penny. Some of them may look around the sold-out ground and probably think something like, “Someone around here is making an awful lot of money, and it ain’t me!”
FIFA, the international football federation that organizes the tournament, pays each participating country’s soccer federation $9 million (U.S.) to cover tournament expenses. Most deals are arranged so that $1 million covers hotels, airfares, etc.; the remaining $8 million is supposed to be divided between the players, coaches and the federations.

In many countries, agreements between the players and their federation are concluded in advance of the tournament. However, in some countries there are long rounds of haggling that do not always end well.
During the last World Cup in 2010, host nation South Africa agreed on players’ salaries and bonuses just days before the opening game.

After the tournament, the Nigerian government was so disappointed in its team’s performance, and over the allegations of corruption around it, that it launched an official inquiry into its soccer officials. The government discovered that the entourage of coaches and physiotherapists had swelled by dozens of unrelated hangers-on. As well, the team’s hotel had been cancelled, flight plans disrupted and there had been an argument over players’ bonuses.Host nation South Africa agreed on players’ salaries and bonuses just days before the opening game of the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

At the 2006 World Cup in Germany, the entire Togo team threatened to strike in the middle of the tournament. The players refused to play their final game, claiming their officials were withholding their bonuses. High-ranking FIFA officials had to intervene and pay the players directly before Togo would take the field.

Throughout international soccer there are examples of badly organized financial scandals relating to player payments. Even players from the United States went on strike in 2005 to hammer out a pay deal. The Honduran team at the 2010 World Cup — which had qualified out of Canada’s CONCAFF group — had a months-long argument over the nonpayment of a $1-million bonus scheme to their players and coach.
For years, match-fixers based in Malaysia and Singapore have been going to international soccer events in Africa, Australia, Asia, North America, Latin America and Europe. The fixers corrupted international games played in Singapore, including four players on the Canadian national team who were charged with taking money in a game against North Korea in 1986.

In the early 1990s, they gathered in the stadiums where illegal bookmakers would take bets on the joint Malaysian and Singaporean soccer league. The fixers destroyed the league. A Royal Malaysian Police Force investigation discovered there were cartels of players fixing on almost every team. One former player said the corruption was so bad that during one game there was a fight at halftime in the dressing room between players working for different fixers.

The fixers use associates — called “runners” — to approach players or referees to get them to fix. The fixers organize the game and then, like brokers, sell the fix to high-level gamblers. Above the fixers are influential businessmen who back the more expensive fixes and pay the muscle to make the network run smoothly.

These men are mostly Asian, however, a group of Russian criminals has joined the syndicate in the last few years. Little is known about this group as they generate such fear. One of the European fixers told a police officer who interrogated him, “I will tell you everything, except the Russians (sic). If I talk about the Russians I will die.”

Yet in the early days of the match-fixers, there was one king. In interviews, fixers or their associates have spoken about “Uncle Frankie,” an Indonesian-Chinese businessman who figured out the global expansion of soccer meant lots of fixing opportunities.

At the 1994 World Cup, four Swedish players, days before the bronze medal match, were approached by a man who called himself “Frankie Chung” with a business proposition: lose the tournament’s second most important game and get lots of cash.

Years later, four Swedish star players spoke out about the approach. Tomas Brolin, Lars Eriksson, Klas Ingesson and Anders Limpar say they were too frightened to say anything at the time. They told the Swedish magazine Offside that Chung, whose identity has never been confirmed, was staying at the same hotel. He was very confident and friendly. He gave them his business card and invited them to his room. There, Chung pulled out wads of $100 bills and got on a mobile phone to another fixer who was, allegedly, approaching some of the Bulgarian players.

The Swedes said they immediately refused and left. Yet, in the Offside article, the goalkeeper Eriksson said he had wondered about the game, saying some of the Bulgarian team appeared listless for long periods at the end of the first half when Sweden scored three unanswered goals.
Wilson Raj Perumal, a convicted Singaporean fixer who has confessed in court to fixing games across the world, writes about “Frankie Chung,” whom he calls “Uncle Frankie,” in his recently self-published autobiography, Kelong Kings (Kelong is a slang Malay word for fixing).

“Guys like Uncle were the bigger crooks: what I do now, they were already doing back then. I grew up watching these big fish fix matches under everybody’s noses. I learnt from them: they were my masters . . . I thought if they could do it, then so could I.”

Uncle Frankie used the same techniques the next year at the Under-20 World Cup in Qatar. Two Portuguese players were approached by a young woman from Thailand. She invited them to her room with “an interesting proposition.” There, they discovered a table covered with money, several Cameroonian players and Uncle Frankie. The Portuguese players immediately left and reported the incident. Top Asian soccer officials would later confirm that the fixers had approached players from Cameroon, Portugal, Honduras and Chile.

Years later, Kwesi Nyantakyi, the president of the Ghana football federation, was unsurprised when it was discovered there had been an attempt to fix an international match featuring his team. He said in an interview, “In every competition, you find gamblers around. Yes, every competition, every competition, they are there. In all the major tournaments, World Cup, Cup of Nations. The gamblers are not Africans, they are Europeans and Asians. So, they have a lot of money to bet on these things.”

Ghana players, including their former international captains Stephen Appiah and Yussif Chibsah, said in interviews that match-fixers approached their team at the 1997 Under-17 World Cup in Malaysia, the 2004 Olympics in Athens and the 2006 World Cup in Germany. The Ghanaian women’s team at the World Cup in China in 2007 was also approached. The players said they turned down all offers but were never surprised to receive them.

FIFA knows about this problem. During an interview in February 2008, its president Sepp Blatter began by saying, “You want to speak to me about the Asian match-fixers? I have known about this problem for years.”

The World Cup in Brazil, which begins June 12, will be a $4-billion extravaganza of television rights, sponsorship deals and sold-out stadiums. However, its credibility is under threat from Asian match-fixers linked to a sports gambling market worth hundreds of billions dollars.
Andre Penner/AP PHOTO

The World Cup in Brazil, which begins June 12, will be a $4-billion extravaganza of television rights, sponsorship deals and sold-out stadiums. However, its credibility is under threat from Asian match-fixers linked to a sports gambling market worth hundreds of billions dollars.

FIFA’s attitude seemed to have been that these fixers were the unluckiest tourists in the world. The fixers went to all these tournaments around the world, where they approached players, coaches and officials — but, FIFA insisted, they never succeeded in bribing anyone. Yet they kept returning.

However, in January of this year, Ralf Mutschke, a former German police officer who is FIFA’s head of security, told the newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung that fixers may attend the World Cup in Brazil and may approach players and teams. Certain key matches (third games in the opening round, for example) would be in serious jeopardy. He outlined measures FIFA will take to protect soccer’s credibility. Guaranteeing players a minimum salary and bonuses, however, was not one of the FIFA measures.
The German Organized Crime Task Force, based in the small city of Bochum, has been investigating match-fixing gangs since 2008. The Bochum detectives now estimate that fixers succeeded in corrupting at least 150 games between 2009 and 2011 — about one international game a week.

“These games we have found are simply the tip of the iceberg,” Friedhelm Althans, a Bochum police detective, told a Europol press conference in 2013.

Even top international matches in Europe have been fixed, according to the judge presiding at the trial of Croatian brothers Ante and Milan Sapina.
The trial was the first, real spotlight into the world of match-rigging. The investigation started in October 2008, when German police officers heard on a wiretap a mobster threatening the life of a daughter of a prominent prosecutor.

The police moved fast and the investigation eventually involved hundreds of police officers across Europe. They discovered an independent link to a global match-fixing network run out of a small Berlin café — Cafe King. At its heart were the Sapina brothers.

At the end of their trial, in a dramatic confession, Ante Sapina read a list of 47 games that he helped fix, including World Cup qualifying matches and European nations Championship games. Both Sapinas are serving lengthy prison terms in German jails.
20 years of match-fixing in soccer
International soccer tournaments with the confirmed presence of match-fixers:
1994 - World Cup (USA)
1995 - Under-20 World Cup (Qatar)
1996 - Olympics (Atlanta, USA)
1997 - Under-17 World Cup (Malaysia)
2004 - Olympics (Athens)
2006 - World Cup (Germany)
2007 - Women’s World Cup (China)
2008 - African Nations Cup (Ghana)
2010 - World Cup (South Africa)
2011 - Gold Cup (Mexico)

The Sapinas would link up with Singaporean match-fixers who placed bets on the crooked games on the sports gambling market in Asia. This market is huge. Patrick Jay, a senior executive for the Hong Kong Jockey Club, one of the most profitable sports gambling companies in the world, says, “FIFA likes to talk about $4 billion at the World Cup. We have a word for the day when the Asian sports gambling market clears $4 billion. We call it — ‘Thursday.’ ”

For soccer fans it gets worse. Much worse. According to a confidential FIFA investigation report obtained by the Star, the Asian match-fixer who was so inspired by the man who approached the Swedish players — Wilson Raj Perumal — was fixing games in South Africa days before the start of the last World Cup.
He had help from some — as yet unknown — South African football official. According to the FIFA investigators, some of the same people who were helping organize the last World Cup were, “complicit in a criminal conspiracy to manipulate these matches” and “Were the listed matches fixed? On the balance of probabilities, yes!”

In these circumstances, it is difficult to think that the match-fixers will not be in Brazil trying their luck.
Declan Hill, an investigative reporter based in Ottawa, is the authoritative voice in journalism about/on match-fixing in soccer. His book, “The Fix: Soccer and Organized Crime” (2008), is a best seller in 21 languages, and his journalism on the fixing scandals can be found in the New York Times, the Guardian and the Toronto Star. He obtained his doctorate on the study of match-fixing from the University of Oxford and, following his infiltration of the Asian gangs he has testified before the Council of Europe and the International Olympic Committee. His latest book, “The Insider's Guide to Match-Fixing in Football,” was published in November.

http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/06/09/will_matchfixers_target_world_cup_in_brazil.bb.html

66
General Discussion / Since when does Jay-Z have Trinidadian Roots?
« on: June 13, 2014, 12:44:54 AM »
Check out who is at the top of the list of Americans with Trinidad and Tobago Heritage..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinidadian_and_Tobagonian_American

The funny thing is, is the list is 100% accurate when it comes to everyone else but Jay-Z???

67
Real low of the people to pay the people to do that if it is true... It have people hungry in Trinidad and the government does stand by and do nothing... read sad and disheartening.. Using the people to propagate this racism, instead of just giving them money to get something to eat.. >:(

http://www.guardian.co.tt/news/2014-05-29/homeless-man-i-was-paid-carry-racist-placard

69
that's the talk on cc.com, let's see what happens, if it is true, I am happy for Ramdin

71
The insecure remarks and negative, pessimistic nature of the local population in T&T is sickening. There are a few who do not harbor this deep rooted inferiority and have the confidence, self esteem and intelligence to overcome obstacles and challenges. But sadly, the vast majority are stuck in a mindset that doesn't allow them to see the bigger picture and realize that we are all equals.

Despite language, ethnicity and culture, football can be a very unpredictable sport. It's the team that shows up on the day and it is played between 11 men on each side that involves one keyword "Team". Whether the opposition has the best or best players in the world, it doesn't make a difference. It boils down to confidence, strategy and hard work as a unit, on that given day.

Someone who is highly insecure would indeed resort to giving up before the match has even been played or even before the players have been selected. This stems from lack of self belief and self confidence in oneself and their nation, their peers.

How do we defeat this mentality, well there is only way, blocking it out and proving to the naysayers that something is definitely wrong with them and that society as a whole in Trinidad needs to re-examine itself and their approach to life and sport.

You cannot win with some of these people verbally or in writing, because their ignorance knows no bounds. You have to win on the field and that will speak louder than words.

I am not preaching that you must not respect and underestimate your opponent and be prepared for them but you must believe in yourself first and believe you can win before stepping on that pitch. You must also  block out the negative energy of individuals who are insecure and have this inferiority complex about themselves and their nation.

As true fans of T&T football, we need to unite against negativity and support our football team and its coach to do well in 2014 and that God will always be our guide in footballing journey. Win, lose or draw you must always think of yourself as a winner...

72
Ramdin has earned it and Johnny for VC...

The final 11 should be without hesitation:

Gayle
Barath - Needs to replace Powell, Braithwaite and Kirk and partner with Gayle...
Sarwan
Bravo Jr.
Chanderpaul
Bravo Sr. - VC
Pollard
Ramdin - Captain
Roach
Rampaul
Narine

12th man - Dwayne Smith

73
Football / What's Next for the Warriors and Harty?
« on: September 09, 2013, 01:43:57 PM »
I was thoroughly impressed with the performance in the tournament, they showed grit and determination. Plus they were entertaining to watch.

SH has them playing some good football and they will continue to blossom into a team that can place in the top 3 in CONCACAF for 2018.

So what's next for the team? Are we going to play a string of friendlies on the next FIFA dates or will the TTFA and gov't get into a bitter battle once more? I hope the former is the story and the latter is history.

If it is one thing we have learned as supporters over the years is that nothing can be more debilitating than vindictive fighting and actions that stunt the progression of our football.

Despite doing well, we have a lot of room for improvement and I believe Harty will focus on that in order to strengthen our weak areas.

This tourney was a good lesson for us, as we see what our players can do under a great coach, and what makes it sweeter is he is Trinbagonian to boot.

So what's the boards consensus as to what's next for the Warriors and our beloved new coach.

74
12 Things You Were Not Taught in School About Creative Thinking

By Michael Michalko – psychologytoday.com

1. You are creative. The artist is not a special person, each one of us is a special kind of artist. Every one of us is born a creative, spontaneous thinker. The only difference between people who are creative and people who are not is a simple belief. Creative people believe they are creative. People who believe they are not creative, are not. Once you have a particular identity and set of beliefs about yourself, you become interested in seeking out the skills needed to express your identity and beliefs. This is why people who believe they are creative become creative. If you believe you are not creative, then there is no need to learn how to become creative and you don’t. The reality is that believing you are not creative excuses you from trying or attempting anything new. When someone tells you that they are not creative, you are talking to someone who has no interest and will make no effort to be a creative thinker.

2. Creative thinking is work. You must have passion and the determination to immerse yourself in the process of creating new and different ideas. Then you must have patience to persevere against all adversity. All creative geniuses work passionately hard and produce incredible numbers of ideas, most of which are bad. In fact, more bad poems were written by the major poets than by minor poets. Thomas Edison created 3000 different ideas for lighting systems before he evaluated them for practicality and profitability. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart produced more than six hundred pieces of music, including forty-one symphonies and some forty-odd operas and masses, during his short creative life. Rembrandt produced around 650 paintings and 2,000 drawings and Picasso executed more than 20,000 works. Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets. Some were masterpieces, while others were no better than his contemporaries could have written, and some were simply bad.

3. You must go through the motions of being creative. When you are producing ideas, you are replenishing neurotransmitters linked to genes that are being turned on and off in response to what your brain is doing, which in turn is responding to challenges. When you go through the motions of trying to come up with new ideas, you are energizing your brain by increasing the number of contacts between neurons. The more times you try to get ideas, the more active your brain becomes and the more creative you become. If you want to become an artist and all you did was paint a picture every day, you will become an artist. You may not become another Vincent Van Gogh, but you will become more of an artist than someone who has never tried.

4. Your brain is not a computer. Your brain is a dynamic system that evolves its patterns of activity rather than computes them like a computer. It thrives on the creative energy of feedback from experiences real or fictional. You can synthesize experience; literally create it in your own imagination. The human brain cannot tell the difference between an “actual” experience and an experience imagined vividly and in detail. This discovery is what enabled Albert Einstein to create his thought experiments with imaginary scenarios that led to his revolutionary ideas about space and time. One day, for example, he imagined falling in love. Then he imagined meeting the woman he fell in love with two weeks after he fell in love. This led to his theory of acausality. The same process of synthesizing experience allowed Walt Disney to bring his fantasies to life.

5. There is no one right answer. Reality is ambiguous. Aristotle said it is either A or not-A. It cannot be both. The sky is either blue or not blue. This is black and white thinking as the sky is a billion different shades of blue. A beam of light is either a wave or not a wave (A or not-A). Physicists discovered that light can be either a wave or particle depending on the viewpoint of the observer. The only certainty in life is uncertainty. When trying to get ideas,  do not censor or evaluate them as they occur. Nothing kills creativity faster than self-censorship of ideas while generating them. Think of all your ideas as possibilities and generate as many as you can before you decide which ones to select. The world is not black or white. It is grey.

6. Never stop with your first good idea. Always strive to find a better one and continue until you have one that is still better. In 1862, Phillip Reis demonstrated his invention which could transmit music over the wires. He was days away from improving it into a telephone that could transmit speech. Every communication expert in Germany dissuaded him from making improvements, as  they said the telegraph is good enough. No one would buy or use a telephone. Ten years later, Alexander Graham Bell patented the telephone. Spencer Silver developed a new adhesive for 3M that stuck to objects but could easily be lifted off. It was first marketed as a bulletin board adhesive so the boards could be moved easily from place to place. There was no market for it. Silver didn’t discard it. One day Arthur Fry, another 3M employee, was singing in the church’s choir when his page marker fell out of his hymnal. Fry coated his page markers with Silver’s adhesive and discovered the markers stayed in place, yet lifted off without damaging the page. Hence the Post-it Notes were born. Thomas Edison was always trying to spring board from one idea to another in his work. He spring boarded his work from the telephone (sounds transmitted) to the phonograph (sounds recorded) and, finally, to motion pictures (images recorded).
 
7. Expect the experts to be negative. The more expert and specialized a person becomes,  the more their mindset becomes narrowed and the more fixated they become on confirming what they believe to be absolute. Consequently, when confronted with new and different ideas,  their focus will be on conformity. Does it conform with what I know is right? If not, experts will spend all their time showing and explaining why it can’t be done and why it can’t work. They will not look for ways to make it work or get it done because this might demonstrate that what they regarded as absolute is not absolute at all. This is why when Fred Smith created Federal Express, every delivery expert in the U.S. predicted its certain doom. After all, they said, if this delivery concept was doable, the Post Office or UPS would have done it long ago.

8. Trust your instincts. Don’t allow yourself to get discouraged. Albert Einstein was expelled from school because his attitude had a negative effect on serious students; he failed his university entrance exam and had to attend a trade school for one year before finally being admitted; and was the only one in his graduating class who did not get a teaching position because no professor would recommend him. One professor said Einstein was “the laziest dog” the university ever had. Beethoven’s parents were told he was too stupid to be a music composer. Charles Darwin’s colleagues called him a fool and what he was doing “fool’s experiments” when he worked on his theory of biological evolution. Walt Disney was fired from his first job on a newspaper because “he lacked imagination.” Thomas Edison had only two years of formal schooling, was totally deaf in one ear and was hard of hearing in the other, was fired from his first job as a newsboy and later fired from his job as a telegrapher; and still he became the most famous inventor in the history of the U.S.

9. There is no such thing as failure. Whenever you try to do something and do not succeed, you do not fail. You have learned something that does not work. Always ask “What have I learned about what doesn’t work?”, “Can this explain something that I didn’t set out to explain?”, and “What have I discovered that I didn’t set out to discover?” Whenever someone tells you that they have never made a  mistake, you are talking to someone who has never tried anything new.

10. You do not see things as they are; you see them as you are. Interpret your own experiences. All experiences are neutral. They have no meaning. You give them meaning by the way you choose to interpret them. If you are a priest, you see evidence of God everywhere. If you are an atheist, you see the absence of God everywhere. IBM observed that no one in the world had a personal computer. IBM interpreted this to mean there was no market. College dropouts, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, looked at the same absence of personal computers and saw a massive opportunity. Once Thomas Edison was approached by an assistant while working on the filament for the light bulb. The assistant asked Edison why he didn’t give up. “After all,” he said, “you have failed 5000 times.” Edison looked at him and told him that he didn’t understand what the assistant meant by failure, because, Edison said, “I have discovered 5000 things that don’t work.” You construct your own reality by how you choose to interpret your experiences.

11. Always approach a problem on its own terms. Do not trust your first perspective of a problem as it will be too biased toward your usual way of thinking. Always look at your problem from multiple perspectives. Always remember that genius is finding a perspective no one else has taken. Look for different ways to look at the problem. Write the problem statement several times using different words. Take another role, for example, how would someone else see it, how would Jay Leno, Pablo Picasso, George Patton see it? Draw a picture of the problem, make a model, or mold a sculpture. Take a walk and look for things that metaphorically represent the problem and force connections between those things and the problem (How is a broken store window like my communications problem with my students?) Ask your friends and strangers how they see the problem. Ask a child. How would a ten year old solve it? Ask a grandparent. Imagine you are the problem. When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.

12. Learn to think unconventionally. Creative geniuses do not think analytically and logically. Conventional, logical, analytical thinkers are exclusive thinkers which means they exclude all information that is not related to the problem. They look for ways to eliminate possibilities. Creative geniuses are inclusive thinkers which mean they look for ways to include everything, including things that are dissimilar and totally unrelated. Generating associations and connections between unrelated or dissimilar subjects is how they provoke different thinking patterns in their brain.  These new patterns lead to new connections which give them a different way to focus on the information and different ways to interpret what they are focusing on. This is how original and truly novel ideas are created. Albert Einstein once famously remarked “Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.”

And, finally, Creativity is paradoxical. To create, a person must have knowledge but forget the knowledge, must see unexpected connections in things but not have a mental disorder, must work hard but spend time doing nothing as information incubates, must create many ideas yet most of them are useless, must look at the same thing as everyone else, yet see something different, must desire success but embrace failure, must be persistent but not stubborn, and must listen to experts but know how to disregard them.
About the Author

Michael Michalko is the author of the highly acclaimed Thinkertoys: A Handbook of Creative Thinking Techniques. His newest book Creative Thinkering: Putting your Imagination to Work has just been released and is now available at most major bookstores. www.creativethinking.net

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IMHO I believe with the addition of these players to the national team it will enable us to be an a lot more attacking side and shore up our defense as well.

Harty knows this as well and thats why he mentioned a few of their names. I am excited to see Guerra and Peltier play together, with Jones. It will create a dynamic front line and adding youth is always a plus because we must think about the future.

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http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/lord-woodbine-the-forgotten-sixth-beatle-2015140.html

Great Story... It makes you think of the many talented Trinidadians that have influenced world music on the whole, from Reggae to rock, to hip hop, my next venture will be a feature doc on the great artists and musicians of T&T and how they shaped world music.

Lord Woodbine: The forgotten sixth Beatle
Lord Woodbine taught the Fab Four the blues– but was written out of pop history. Yasmin Alibhai-Brown and James McGrath pay tribute

THURSDAY 01 JULY 2010

A homeless black man lived under one of the arches near Waterloo station until about five years ago, when he and his box vanished. His name was Samuel (pronounced to rhyme with Danielle). Most of the time, he talked to himself or slept, but on some summer evenings he would start clapping and sing lines from songs by Marley or The Beatles, or reminisce about Liverpool, where he was born and raised. His deep voice rose from a reservoir of cigarette tar and pain. One story he returned to again and again was that of another Liverpudlian, the calypso singer, songwriter and music promoter Lord Woodbine. For Samuel, Woodbine was just one more talented black man, used then cast aside by the white world, just like those impoverished blues singers in New Orleans, and countless R&B, reggae and rap artists who never got their due: "Who know today that Woodbine, he make the Beatles. Who wants to know a black man did that?" Who, indeed.

When the lads were just starting out, dreaming, green and crazy about music, they, said Woodbine, "made themselves orphans, deliberately" and followed him like motherless chicks, hanging around the joints he either part-owned or played at, always trying to have a go on the steel pans. "Woodbine's Boys", they called them, Paul, John, George, Stuart Sutcliffe (bass player and "fifth Beatle") and, after Woodbine persuaded them they needed a drummer, Pete Best.

Woodbine was not ambitious; The Beatles were, and like most young people, they were takers and triers. The Trinidadian helped guide them through their formative musical years, an inadvertent father figure, an accidental hero. They found each other – the uncut band-players, often unwashed too, getting acquainted with cannabis and their somewhat unconventional role model, who part-owned shebeens and strip clubs, ran up debts and loved making music. Speaking to the musician Tony Henry, the Welshman Allan Williams, the first promoter of the group, admitted that without his old business partner Woodbine, there would have been no Beatles. It was Williams who parted with the group just as they were beginning to get popular. Woodbine's chicks flew away. Brian Epstein, their next father figure, stepped in and the rest is history.

Only one substantial article was ever written about Woodbine – by Henry in 1998. He managed to interview the man himself, who, even then, was reluctant to intrude into the established Beatles legend. Maybe it was pride or humility, or both, or that Woodbine didn't want the whole black Liverpudlian contribution to The Beatles projected on to him. There were others, of whom more anon. There were some poignant moments in the interview when Woodbine couldn't hold back his bruised feelings, his disappointment that he was so casually overlooked by his boys.

As the years went by he had to endure further indignities, reminders that he was Mr Nobody. The worst blow came in 1992 at the Liverpool Playhouse, where he was invited to see Imagine, a play about The Beatles. The backdrop was a photograph taken in 1960, at the Arnhem Memorial, Germany. In the original, Woodbine – who had hired the van – was in the photo with Allan and the band minus John, who stayed in the van because he was a pacifist. The Trinidadian had been airbrushed out: "It really hurt me. Maybe the great Beatle publicity machine did not want any black man associated with their boys."

And it carries on. Woodbine is virtually absent from the many books on Beatlemania. Biopics are as myopic. There is an interminable line of films on The Beatles, the latest of which was the BBC's Lennon Naked, with Christopher Eccleston playing Lennon in a white suit. Liam Gallagher is making the next Beatles movie. Will it drop in on Toxteth? Best not to hope, as many say in that part of Blighty.

Biographers have passed over the black Liverpudlian who inspired and supported the fledgling band. The role of Liverpool, too, is often underestimated. In 2002, McCartney told the Liverpudlian writer Paul Du Noyer: "Liverpool was a huge melting pot. And we took what we liked from it." Various witnesses saw this happening. The black Liverpudlian band-leader George Dixon remembers the boys watching him and the guitarist Odie Taylor at the White House pub. The Nigerian-Liverpudlian singer Ramon Sugar Deen recalls the way their music developed: "I heard them jamming in the Cavern club and the rhythm had changed. They'd got some chords off Odie."

Greg Wilson, an enthusiastic promoter of black music, believes it is impossible to determine "influences" on artistes, the mix inside them, how their own talent responded to the sounds and thoughts of others. However, in accounts of the Merseyside four, credit is always given to Motown, Ravi Shankar and individuals such as DJ Greg Wilson. Only the musicians of Liverpool 8 have no place in the narrative. They have been Tipp-Exed out. Woodbine was the first singer-songwriter Lennon and McCartney ever met, yet one writer said that the Trinidadian had only a "walk-on part" in The Beatles' story.

Born in Trinidad in 1928, his real name was Harold Phillips. When only 14, he lied about his age and joined the RAF. After the war, he went back home and then retuned to England in 1948 on the famous SS Windrush, which carried the first boatful of hopeful West Indian immigrants to their motherland. Though they faced raw racism and hostility, most of these immigrants had spirit and song and a buoyancy that not even the bitter cold could drag down. Woodbine knew how to enjoy life, whatever it chucked at him. He was part of the first professional steel band in this country. They played in clubs and shebeens in Liverpool 8, where in the Eighties, race riots would erupt. He made up a delightful calypso about various characters named after cigarettes. His chums, probably as a joke, renamed him Lord Woodbine. It stuck.

He perished in a house fire in Toxteth with his wife 10 years ago this July. The inferno ended an extraordinary life. He was 72 and by all accounts as skint as he had always been, though generous till the end. In his time he had been a lorry driver, railway engineer, builder, decorator, shopkeeper, TV repairman, a barman, club owner, songwriter, singer and musical mentor.



In 1958 he was with the All-Steel Caribbean Band, led by a fellow Trinidadian, Gerry Gobin. At the Joker's Club, where the band often played, the musicians noticed two white lads who seemed keen. They were Lennon and McCartney, wide-eyed and restless kids, like many others on rock and dole. The steel-pannists moved to the popular Jacaranda Club in Liverpool 1 and The Beatles followed. Gobin, unimpressed by their music, was initially irritated by these hangers-on. Candace Smith, then Gobin's partner, was also suspicious of them: "Bloody white kids, trying to horn in on the black music scene."

Marylee Smith, Jamaican, 81, used to visit her cousins in Liverpool. Interviewed for this article, she recalled Toxteth's music scene then: "They was there all the time, you know, all the time, like they was looking for some black magic, pushing in, rough boys, unwashed sometimes. Jumping on to the stage, playing the pans like it was theirs. Some of us didn't like that. But the musicians, they didn't mind so much." Woodbine was bohemian, free, left wing, incautious. He even had the boys performing in his strip club. It must have been madly exciting.

In 2008, McCartney recalled those times in Mojo magazine: "Liverpool being the first Caribbean settlement in the UK, we were very friendly with a lot of black guys – Lord Woodbine, Derry Wilkie, they were mates we hung out with." More than that, actually. George Roberts, part Arab and another Liverpudlian promoter, observed that Paul and John not only liked being with people of colour, they were getting to know deep musical traditions and skills: "They had two passions. One was to learn authentic R&B and the other was to become famous. Lennon would never have got that in Menlove Avenue; McCartney would never have got R&B with his upright piano and dad."

Other Toxteth musicians brought on the two wannabes. The Somali-Irish guitarist Vinnie Tow was seen showing John and Paul the seventh chord in the Chuck Berry style, says Roberts: "John was always asking Vinnie, 'Show me this, show me that.'" The Guyanese guitarist Zancs Logie was another willing teacher. In 1995, Woodbine told Derek Murray, author of a forthcoming book on black music: "Zancs was always showing Lennon something. Until he died [1994] he was proud of how he taught Lennon to play guitar." George Dixon thought The Beatles were "three-chord wonders. We were playing sophisticated 15-chord numbers. But The Beatles progressed and others didn't so I admire them."

Williams and Woodbine got The Beatles to Hamburg, then a happening place hungry for new talent. Williams had found some cash left behind in a club – instead of blowing it on themselves, they sent for the boys, shacked up in shabby rooms and got them bookings. The group fell out with Williams when they made a return trip to Hamburg and got bookings without giving him a cut. Later, as The Beatles found fortune and fame, people in Liverpool would say to Woodbine: "See your boys doing great, Woody", and he did feel chuffed. He needed them less than they once needed him. That is a kind of victory.

That affection was not fully reciprocated. True, The Beatles always took a strong stand against racism. When he bumps into black Liverpudlians, Paul McCartney spontaneously remembers his "old friend Woodbine" and others. He has done an admirable amount for black and white musicians in his old city. But when Woodbine burnt to death in 2000, McCartney left it to his press office to issue a statement. The surviving band-members should have attended the funeral, or at least had a public memorial to honour the man. Better still, surely they should have seen him right when he was alive?

Fame brings all kinds of past and present hangers-on – people making wild claims of previous intimacies. Woodbine and the others who helped The Beatles never did. Their protégés were too busy, too wary, too rich, too famous to feel any sense of obligation to those who taught them to fly high with their musical wings. It is forgetfulness more than malice, but still can wound.

And so Woodbine's becomes another sad story perhaps to turn into a blues song. Dr Helen Davies, lecturer in cultural studies, believes that he dramatises the way "'authentic' history is constructed. We see time and time again that the voices that are recorded are white, male and middle class."

Not good enough, says the sociologist Max Farrar, who remembers the Toxteth clubs: "We were listening to black music – it was the start of the, some would say curious, some dubious, love affair that white people like me have with black people and the emancipatory culture they have created. It's high time this debt was properly acknowledged." If it was, we might get to celebrate Liverpool 8, its struggles, appeal, and the fantastic cross-cultural creativity that made The Beatles.

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Football / Where Coache, he in the Toilet? Latrine Maybe?
« on: July 09, 2013, 05:11:20 PM »
He disappear from the board?

I thought he would be around to condemn Stevie and apply for the head coaching position.

Where mr fightdown himself? He eat a bad food or wha? After he see the improvement with Harty, coache hadda run for the toilet or latrine...

Like the man get a bad belly pain, he belly start to gripe him with the vast improvement, some serious belly wuk after he see what Harty do in a matter of weeks, hard luck dey coache

enjoy your time in there coache, ponder on some things  :D

79
There shouldn't be any qualms about that swap because neither player are up to international level in dribbling, passing or keeping possession.

That left back j jones that man was bawling about on this board is a waste of time. That spot should be Samuel spot and that garbage I hear about Mohammed holding a vendetta against him better end bc that lessening our chances of winning in the future.

80
Aside from the Hollywood features and music, I was recently asked to co-produce and write for a new tv series based on North American Football (Soccer). The series will air on selective sporting networks to start off with later this year in the US, Canada, with negotiations for Mexico currently in the infancy stages. 

The TV series focuses primarily on the lives of players, coaches and teams but is unique in many ways from other series that are currently on TV.

We will see how it progresses after this first season, if it is successful on a nationwide scale, we will focus on other regions in the Western Hemisphere and hopefully the coming World Cup in Brazil.

I wanted to let the board know, because I am one of the main creative executives and producers for the series and would welcome players, coaches, admin, etc of T&T background playing in the football leagues in North America and Mexico to reach out to me, as well as any other nationalities that are actively involved in football in North America.

I would also encourage sw.net to reach out to me, as I believe it will be good publicity for the board, Flex, Tallman and T&T football as a whole. The Caribbean is slated as one of our next endeavors for the series which I am developing currently.

I will keep everyone posted with details of all the networks that will be carrying the series and also the website and any other vital information.

 :beermug:

81
General Discussion / Trinidad Rum sold out in LCBO for Xmas Season?
« on: December 24, 2012, 03:53:18 PM »
just went into the lcbo and all trinidad rum was sold out, wow, all the other countries still have rum on the shelves

wow, need to check another one, anyone else had this problem for the season in toronto?

82
General Discussion / SW.net members that post as more than one Username...
« on: December 23, 2012, 01:12:53 PM »
We have so many new members over the years and some of them write identical to others, meaning, your reading some ole talk on the forum and you realize that the reaction of some posters is almost the same, their method of cussing and picong, it makes you wonder.

I remember back in school we did some forensic document examination and touched on graphology to help aid us in our study of textual criticism. So I see similarities in some posters...

For example, the writing style of half baked aka Bakes for example is very similar to that of truetrini, and also daft trini, mal jeux in certain posts also comes across as having the same style of writing, same style of cussing... can jack horner be an alter ego of tt?? lol  :rotfl:

It makes you wonder if they are one and the same and if others have adopted alter egos on the board, now in order to convince the audience, they would not only post on the same thread, be it from another computer and ip address but also engage in an argument to further convince the members that they are indeed another person entirely.

It is just a theory, so truetrini, doh get too vex breds, bear in mind you must have a certain level of intellect to pull this off  ;D with a right amount of madness as well...

83
General Discussion / 2013 - 110 Years of " The Talented Tenth"
« on: December 06, 2012, 12:15:28 PM »
From Henry Sylvester William's ground breaking ideologies to the influential W.E.B DuBois, the term coined by DuBois in his essay "The Negro Problem" celebrates 110 years this year. I would like to extend my congrats to my friends who are apart of such a great society and have had tremendous success for the diaspora.


85
Football / "EAT AH FOOD" The New Slogan for TTFF
« on: November 30, 2012, 02:42:43 PM »
ah padnah ask me what should be the new slogan for ttff, since so many believe its a new dawn for the organization

well ah believe its fitting that they adopt the slogan "EAT AH FOOD"

When the heads running the show sit down to talk to a padnah, the padnah does tell them, you don't worry about everyone else nah, "EAT AH FOOD" breds, doh study them and they fight down.

When the heads writing a cheque to themselves and players and management can't get a uniform wash or a meal ticket, the heads does say, "EAT AH FOOD" king, doh study them

When the new president get anointed, notice i not saying appointed, but yes, anointed, government, private sector and his drinking padnahs telling him, "EAT AH FOOD" daddy, doh study them.

I find its only fitting the new ttff slogan be "EAT AH FOOD"...

ent allyuh agree?


86
General Discussion / The World's Most Educated Country is????
« on: October 11, 2012, 11:23:53 AM »
http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/09/27/and-the-worlds-most-educated-country-is/

Snagging the number two most-educated spot was Israel, which trailed Canada by 5%. Japan, the U.S., New Zealand and South Korea all ranked with more than 40% of citizens having a higher-education degree. The top 10 most-educated countries are:

1. Canada

2. Israel

3. Japan

4. United States

5. New Zealand

6. South Korea

7. United Kingdom

8. Finland

9. Australia

10. Ireland




87
General Discussion / Presdiential Debate 2012 for anyone interested
« on: October 03, 2012, 11:08:47 AM »

88
I will be doing some research on the Jewish families in Trinidad and Tobago. In that research there was also a synagogue that was operational in T&T before, I am not sure if it is still in operation.

My grandfather was a Jewish businessman from Suriname that migrated to T&T, he had a few Jewish friends that resided in T&T as well, one being Samuel Oslack who also owned and operated a business in T&T.

I have also found out that a lot of the Portugese diaspora in the Caribbean are sephardic in origin, however I will have to do my research.

Anyone with any information, add away. I will be adding to this thread and other topics over the coming months.

89
check on the debut single on www.goldove.com, spread the word..... Debut album "Step Forward" to be released in late 2012....

Also on www.youtube.com/GoldoveEntertainment







90
Goldove Entertainment Ventures into Film, Music & Fashion Corporation

By Lynda McKoy (President & CEO of Goldove Entertainment)

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www.youtube.com/GoldoveEntertainment

ABOUT GOLDOVE

Goldove Entertainment is a multinational corporation specializing in multimedia. Our areas include, music production (Goldove Records), music publishing (Goldove Publishing), feature film production (Goldove Pictures), special effects, gaming, animation (Goldove Digital), comic book publishing & movies (Goldove Comics) and fashion designing (Lydgio Fashion Group).
 
Goldove Entertainment is devoted to delivering high-quality content and products to mainstream audiences worldwide and building our portfolio of commercial products and marquee media properties.  Additionally, the corporation makes strategic alliances with and investments in multimedia and entertainment related companies and assets.
 
Currently, Goldove Entertainment has ten feature film projects in the developmental stages for proposed worldwide releases over the next five years. In addition, within the next two years, Goldove Records will be releasing two full length music albums and several projects slated for late 2012 in our other specialized divisions.

check out www.goldove.com for more information...

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