Wade on Birmingham

Archive for 'Bama'

Heisman Trophy goes to Auburn’s Cam Newton

Saturday, December 11th, 2010

Star quarterback earns third Heisman for school

Video: Cam Newton accepts the Heisman Trophy.

Auburn is on a roll.

Cam NewtonAn undefeated season. An SEC championship. A spot in the BCS National Championship Game. And tonight, its junior quarterback Cam Newton has won the Heisman Trophy, college football’s highest individual honor.

This season, the Atlanta native threw for 2,589 yards, which includes 28 touchdowns and six interceptions. Oh, and he ran for 24 touchdowns, too. Newton had been the odds-on favorite this week leading up to the award presentation.

The runners-up were running back LaMichael James of Oregon and quarterbacks Andrew Luck of Stanford and Kellen Moore of Boise State. Newton and James will face each other again in the BCS game.

Bo Jackson won the previous Heisman for Auburn in 1985, and Pat Sullivan won it in 1971.

The state of Alabama has seen two Heisman winners in a row: Alabama running back Mark Ingram won the school’s first trophy in 2009. The Crimson Tide at the time last year was also undefeated and headed for the national championship game.

Auburn is currently No. 1 in the BCS and plays Oregon on Jan. 10

Committed advances past round No. 2 on “The Sing-Off”

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Video: Committed performs “Apologize” by OneRepublic
on Wednesday’s episode of “The Sing-Off.”

Huntsville a cappella group Committed has made it into the Top Six on the NBC reality competition, “The Sing-Off.” In Wednesday’s show, Eleventh Hour and the Whiffenpoofs were eliminated.

The Christian/jazz sextet performed “Apologize” by OneRepublic for the show’s theme, hit songs. They had performed Maroon 5’s “This Love” on Monday’s premiere.

The celebrity judges had nothing but praise for the group: Boyz II Men member Shawn Stockman said, “That’s what it’s about, man!” and alternative rocker Ben Folds called it “amazing.” Nicole Scherzinger, lead singer for the Pussycat Dolls, said she “had a musical climax” (don’t ask).

Committed flew to Los Angeles today to tape more episodes. This week’s episodes were filmed in August.

The remaining shows will air from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday and Wednesday, with the live finale on Dec. 20, all on Alabama’s 13.

• • •

More coverage of “The Sing-Off.”

Huntsville group Committed part of NBC’s “The Sing-Off”

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

Survives first round double elimination

Video: Huntsville’s Committed performs “This Love”
by Maroon 5 on the season premiere of “The Sing-Off.”

Huntsville has something to sing about. The a cappella Christian/jazz group Committed made its national debut on Monday’s premiere of “The Sing-Off.” The NBC reality competition returned for its second season, offering the winning group a $100,000 cash prize and a Sony recording contract.

Committed performed last, singing Maroon 5’s “This Love” to the delight of the celebrity judges. Two of the 10 groups were eliminated: Men of Note and Pitch Slapped.

The group formed as a quartet in an Orlando high school, adding members after starting at Oakwood University in Huntsville. Members Dennis “DJ” Baptiste, Alain “Tommy” Gervais, Geston Pierre, Robert “Robbie” Pressley Jr., Maurice Staple and Theron “Therry” Thomas sing gospel and jazz, and four members can play instruments.

The remaining shows will air from 7 to 9 tonight, Monday, Dec. 15 and 20 (live finale) on Alabama’s 13.

• • •

More coverage of “The Sing-Off.”

Auburn to face Oregon for BCS National Championship

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Other state teams headed to bowls; high school champions crowned

Video: Auburn coach Gene Chizik and Oregon coach
Chip Kelly look ahead to the big game.

Auburn has had a perfect season, looking to cap it with a couple of important victories.

• First, Heisman Trophy finalists will be announced at 5 tonight, and quarterback Cam Newton is considered the one to beat this year. The winner will be announced at 7 p.m. Saturday on ESPN. Should Newton succeed, he’ll be Auburn’s third Heisman winner after QB Pat Sullivan in 1971 and running back Bo Jackson in 1985. It would also move Auburn up to a five-way tie for fourth place among all-time Heismans by school. Update: Newton is one of four Heisman finalists, along with LaMichael James, running back for Oregon.

• Second, the No. 1 Tigers head to Glendale, Ariz., to take on No. 2 Oregon on Jan. 10 in the BCS National Championship Game. Auburn earned its trip after crushing South Carolina 56-17 in the SEC Championship Game on Saturday. This marks the Tigers’ first appearance in the BCS title game and the school’s shot at a second national championship, the first in 1957. The game airs at 7:30 p.m. on ESPN and in 3D where available.

See Auburn’s SEC victory across
newspaper front pages
from Alabama.

Other bowl games announced Sunday (all airing on ESPN):

  • R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl: Troy (7-5) takes on Ohio (8-4) at 8 p.m. Dec. 18 in the Superdome. It’s the Trojans’ third trip to the New Orleans Bowl.
  • Capital One Bowl: BCS No. 16 Alabama (9-3) faces BCS No. 9 Michigan State (11-1) at noon on New Year’s Day in Orlando. Alabama’s Nick Saban coached at Michigan State from 1995 to 1999; the Spartans’ coach, Mark Dantonio, was an assistant coach under Saban at that time. The two teams have not played against each other, and are scheduled for games in 2016 and 2017.
  • BBVA Compass Bowl: Kentucky (6-6) meets Pittsburgh (7-5) at 11 a.m. Jan. 8 at Legion Field. The Wildcats make their fifth straight bowl appearance, with just two SEC wins this season.

Plus, the schedule and the networks for all 35 bowl games.

The AHSAA Super 6 football championships featured three teams from the Birmingham area. The Thursday and Friday results from Auburn:

  • 6A: Daphne 7, Hoover 6
  • 5A: Spanish Fort 14, Briarwood Christian 0
  • 3A: Leeds 42, Hamilton 32

The Green Wave of Leeds won its second title, its first recently in 2008. All six games are available for viewing online.

Auburn defeats South Carolina for 2010 SEC Championship: newspapers’ front pages

Sunday, December 5th, 2010

A look at today’s front pages showing Auburn winning the SEC Championship Saturday evening over South Carolina, 56-17. This marks the Tigers’ seventh conference championship, their first since 2004. Auburn is headed to Glendale, Ariz., to play the Oregon Ducks on Jan. 10 for the BCS National Championship. Both teams are undefeated.

Bowl game pairings will be announced tonight, and Alabama and Troy are also expected to play in the post-season.

Alabama

Anniston Star

The Anniston Star

Birmingham News

The Birmingham News

Decatur Daily

The Decatur Daily

Dothan Eagle

Dothan Eagle

Florence Times Daily

The (Florence) Times-Daily

Gadsden Times

The Gadsden Times

Huntsville Times

The Huntsville Times

Montgomery Advertiser

The Montgomery Advertiser

(Mobile) Press-Register

(Mobile) Press-Register

Opelika Auburn News

The Opelika-Auburn News

Tuscaloosa News

The Tuscaloosa News

South Carolina

The Beaufort Gazette

The Beaufort Gazette

The Island Packet

The Island Packet

(Charleston) Post and Courier

(Charleston) Post and Courier

The State (Columbia)

The State (Columbia)

(Florence) Morning News

(Florence) Morning News

(Spartanburg) Herald-Journal

(Spartanburg) Herald-Journal

Video: Highlights from the 2010 SEC Championship Game.

Also:

EXCLUSIVE – Crime Watch: Birmingham drops, but still in Top 10 for crime ranking

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

The crime rate continues to drop in Birmingham, and with it, the city’s spot on the CQ Press’ annual city crime rankings released today. It fell three spots from No. 7 in 2009 to No. 10 this year.

Wade on Birmingham - Crime WatchThe city has bounced around in the rankings in recent years: No. 8 in 2008 and No. 6 in 2007 and 2006.

Violent crimes have continued to fall in Birmingham and across the nation. Birmingham police chief A.C. Roper has been credited with much of the success in his 3-year tenure.

To date, Birmingham has had 51 homicides in 2010, putting it on pace for 57 by year’s end, compared to 72 homicides in 2009.

For comparison: In the FBI Uniform Crime Report for 2009, Birmingham ranked No. 4 among cities with populations of 100,000 or more. It had been No. 3 in 2008.

CQ Press, based in Washington, uses FBI crime data for murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary and auto theft to compile its crime rate rankings.

Other Alabama cities ranked:

  • 99. Montgomery (previously No. 152)
  • 106. Mobile (previously No. 136, making it the only Alabama city to climb in the rankings)
  • 109. Huntsville (previously No. 95)
  • 183. Tuscaloosa (previously No. 140)

St. Louis topped the list at No. 1.

Metro rankings

In looking at the 2010 Metropolitan Crime Rate Rankings:

  • 19. Mobile (previously No. 20)
  • 28. Anniston-Oxford (not previously ranked)
  • 35. Birmingham-Hoover (previously No. 21)
  • 67. Montgomery (previously No. 101)
  • 80. Tuscaloosa (previously No. 64)
  • 122. Huntsville (previously No. 123)
  • 150. Gadsden (previously No. 141)
  • 219. Florence-Muscle Shoals (not previously ranked)

(Not available: Auburn, Decatur, Dothan.)

Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn, Mich., is No. 1 on the list.

See, print or download the City and Metropolitan Crime Rate Rankings for 2010 below.

• • •

Visit our Crime Watch page.

Vote 2010: Alabama, better off red?

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

Robert Bentley, Dianne Bentley

Robert and Dianne Bentley on Election Day.

The mandate from Alabama’s voters on Election Day could not be more clear: Turn everything, and I mean everything, over to the Republicans for at least the next 2 years.

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2010Let them screw things up for awhile.

The Democrats have screwed up plenty in the previous 136 years, and really, could the GOP do much worse? Alabama continues to trail in health, per capita income, transportation, education, crime, your category here. If this red state becomes any redder, you’d hope it would be from embarrassment rather than another shift to the right.

Not that conservatives haven’t been in control since the days of the Gipper. Essentially, most state races came down to the conservative Democrat or Republican since Ronald Reagan entered the White House. Which flavor of conservative suits you best?

• • •

Winners and losers from Tuesday
around Alabama and metro Birmingham.

• • •

So while the brand names may change, what can we really expect from the Republicans in power?

The new crew, including Gov.-elect Robert Bentley, has promised ethics reform out of the gate. We shall see, though my cynical side expects only token changes. Politicians are politicians after all, and you can hardly expect Republicans to clean up the cesspool in Montgomery if it also hides their fattened pockets.

Look back a mere month, and relive that infamous day when the FBI arrested four state senators (two Democrats, one Republican, one independent) in connection with selling votes on a gambling bill. Alas, the bingo bots and the mafia will have to try again in 2 to 4 years.

The mandate must include more jobs and a better economy. Like the president, the governor will likely receive an undue share of the credit or blame, though one leader has little say in global economic dynamics. Still, continuing to attract industry must remain a priority.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

• • •

With an all-Republican government, are we headed for sideshows popular in Texas and Arizona, from illegal immigration to revising school textbooks to repealing national health care? Let’s hope not, with more pressing issues such as constitutional reform and education funding.

Er, scratch that. Forget constitutional reform for at least another 4 years (sigh) and don’t hold your breath for an education miracle, though Gov.-elect Bentley has vowed to switch to a budget that determined by the previous year’s numbers (holds breath anyway). He took money from the Alabama Education Association and later lied about it. Such petty sins aren’t enough to keep you out of the governor’s mansion; likely, they are the only path to it.

Just imagine if it had been the learned Bradley Byrne had led the Republican charge instead.

Rural voters swept the new legislators into power and didn’t much care for the citified Byrne. City folk aren’t well represented in the new Republican regime. As a member of the city folk, I cast a wary eye at my country cousins calling the shots, probably no less menacingly then they’ve eyed us with suspicion.

They found a kindred spirit in Bentley, the dermatologist from Tuscaloosa. As he leads a unified party and state government, let’s pray feverishly that it marks the start of 136 years of progress and prosperity.

Otherwise, red state Alabama could end up dead state Alabama.

Wade Kwon is publisher of Wade on Birmingham.

• • •

More post-election thoughts:

• • •

What can we expect from the Republicans in charge? Tell us in the comments.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

Vote 2010: Alabama general election results

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2010Election results from today’s general election in Alabama and the Birmingham metro area …

More election coverage in our Vote 2010 special report.

(Updating throughout the evening.)

(Contested races only)

  • D = Democrat | I = incumbent | R = Republican
  • Winner in red

How did we do on our Facebook election predictions? Out of 13 races, nine predicted correctly for a 69.2 percent rate of accuracy.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

Vote 2010: Stop reading and go vote, or read this, then vote

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

Election Day at long last. Get out and vote. You have till 7 tonight to cast your ballots for candidates in state and county races.

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2010Q: Where do I vote?

A: Call Jefferson County: (205) 325-5550, Jefferson County (Bessemer only): (205) 481-4105, Shelby County: (205) 669-3913.

Or use this handy widget by typing in your home address.

Wade on Birmingham:
Join us for complete election coverage tonight!

Remember, if you have problems at your polling place:

  • Notify a poll worker immediately.
  • Call the state attorney general at 1-800-831-8814 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and Wednesday or fill out this online form.
  • Call the secretary of state at 1-800-274-VOTE (8683) or visit her site, StopVoterFraudNow.com.
  • And tell the probate court for Jefferson County (205-325-5203) or Shelby County (205-669-3713).
  • E-mail us at Vote2010[at]wadeonbirmingham.com.

Q: What can I expect to see on the ballots?

A: Check out these sample ballots for each county.

You’re voting for governor, U.S. Senator, U.S. Representative, state and county officials, plus several state constitutional amendments.

Q: Who should I vote for?

A: You still have time to check out the candidates and a slew of endorsements.

Going to vote? Tell us who you want to win and who will win in the comments.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

Vote 2010: Roundup of election picks, endorsements and predictions

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Be thankful it’s almost over.

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2010The long march to Election Day 2010 ends Tuesday with some of us going to the polls, and many of us staying far away. Come on, people, is it really that difficult to vote once every couple of years?

Decision time is here, but if you’re like us, maybe you’re a little behind on your homework. Who’s still running? What’s in Amendments 1 through π?

Fret not. We have your cheat sheets.

First stop, the Vote 2010 special reports page:

  • See the list of races.
  • Determine your polling place with our shiny new widget.
  • Read back through this year’s coverage.

Second, take a look at your sample ballots for Jefferson and Shelby Counties. (John Archibald of the Birmingham News says the 164 variations of the Jefferson County ballot reflect the fractured nature of local government.)

Third, see if Facebook can predict the results of state races.

Fourth, our list of resources for the discriminating voter

Bhamwiki

Doc’s Political Parlor

The World Around You

The Birmingham News

Bama Fact Check

  • Journalists offer Truth Ratings on statements made by elected officials and candidates.

Alabama Right to Know

  • A website that tracks money from political action committees to candidates, along with completion of campaign promises. The tool is from the Alabama Policy Institute, a Birmingham-based nonprofit, non-partisan research organization that advocates free markets, families and limited government.

Endorsements and predictions from partisan bloggers …

  • The Attack Machine: Parts one, two and three
  • Flashpoint
  • Note: None of the Democrat/liberal blogs we know of made endorsements or predictions. Let us know if we missed one.

Update: Jennifer Foster of the Opelika-Auburn News makes her case for write-ins instead of Robert Bentley or Ron Sparks for governor.

• • •

Are you ready to vote on Tuesday? Discuss in the comments.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

Vote 2010: Can Facebook predict the outcome of Alabama races?

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Video: Karen Hughes talks about social media
in modern campaigns

Facebook is the king of social media outlets, but can it predict elections?

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2010Karen Hughes serves as Global Vice Chair of Burson-Marsteller, a public relations firm, but before that, she was an undersecretary in the State Department and campaign manager for George W. Bush’s Texas gubernatorial run. At BlogWorld 2010, her keynote mentioned an interesting study.

Looking at 10 Senate and 10 House races, the number of Facebook Likes on the candidates’ pages correlated with the primary results. Many candidates with more Likes than their opponents won their races.

Using that assumption, we looked at the races for Congress, for state office and for Jefferson County, tallying Facebook Likes for candidates to predict winners. (In several instances, a candidate used his profile page, making it an apples-to-oranges comparison of Likes vs. Friends.)

We’ll see how accurate these predictions are next week.

Election Day is Tuesday.

• • •

Update Nov. 2: ABC 33/40 interviewed me for Monday’s 6 p.m. newscast.

• • •

Update Nov. 9: With nine of 13 races predicted correctly, the Facebook election predictor debuted with a 69.2 percent rate of accuracy.

• • •

Key:

  • D = Democrat | I = Incumbent | R = Republican
  • * – Facebook profile page | ** – Facebook group page
  • If a candidate had both a Facebook campaign page and profile page, the Likes from the former were used.
  • red = leading in Facebook Likes

Check out the actual election results.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

Vote 2010: Wait, still time for one more gubernatorial debate tonight. Sigh.

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Rejoice! Or repent. Republican Robert Bentley and Democrat Ron Sparks will have one final, final debate tonight.

Wade on Birmingham - Vote 2010The Alabama gubernatorial candidates will clash at 7 at Athens State University. It’s airing in Huntsville on WHNT channel 19.2, and will live-stream on AL.com.

Check out clips from the Oct. 19 debate at Auburn University. (See the entire debate.)

Video: Campaign and ethics reform

Video: Jobs

Video: Public school funding

• • •

Who will win the debate, Bentley or Sparks? And who will win next Tuesday? Tell us in the comments below.

• • •

More Vote 2010 coverage.

Airing tonight: “The Spill” from PBS’ “Frontline”

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Video: Preview of “The Spill,” “Frontline”

Some of you may recall way back in the spring of this year, a teensy weensy little petroleum spill somewhere out to sea.

It started with an oil drilling platform explosion in the Gulf of Mexico killing 11 workers and blossoming into the worst U.S. environmental disaster ever. Portions of the Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida coastlines suffered natural and economic damage.

Relive those heady days of early 2010 tonight when “Frontline” presents “The Spill,” a look inside the seemingly reckless practices of BP, the platform’s owner.

BP chief executive officer Robert Dudley said Monday, “I do not believe that BP is an unsafe company. There will be some documentaries run, I think tomorrow night in the U.S., that paints that picture of the company.”

The report airs at 9 tonight on Alabama Public Television, repeating at 1 a.m. Sunday. It will also be available for viewing online.

Caution: Watching this news documentary may cause vomiting, but don’t worry, BP will clean that up, too.

Video: “The Spill” investigates BP’s history of lax inspections
and equipment upgrades and maintenance.

‘Top Model’: Being Vera Wang

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

“America’s Next Top Model” special report

By Nadria Tucker

Awards shows. Designer impostors. Drinking binges. This episode of “America’s Next Top Model” has it all!

America's Next Top ModelKendal Brown of Northport wants to move ahead at the turning point in this competition. But does she really want to “be here”? And do the girls really know their fashion history?

What goes best with white wine? Drama! See more, after the jump …

(more…)

BREAKING: Kendal Brown finishes in eighth place on ‘America’s Next Top Model’

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Kendal Brown, America's Next Top Model

America's Next Top ModelKendal Brown, the 24-year-old contestant from Northport, was eliminated in tonight’s episode of “America’s Next Top Model.” She was in the Bottom Two with Esther Petrack of Boston.

In the previous week, the judges had praised Brown in her photos, but the seventh week of competition proved disastrous for her.

We’ll have more soon in Nadria Tucker’s full recap.

• • •

On the runway: more on “America’s Next Top Model.”