Showing posts with label fisher capital mananagement boiler room concert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fisher capital mananagement boiler room concert. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2011

BOILER ROOM LIVE MUSIC

http://www.thegrovehouse.com/ashevilleunderground/index.html


Asheville's Underground
Live Entertainment Venue
BOILER ROOM features a host of live music, and performance artists brought to you by Asheville locals and out-of town entertainers.
Located in the GROVE HOUSE Entertainment Complex
11 Grove Street, Downtown Asheville, NC
(828) 505-1612 www.thegrovehouse.com

fisher capital management>> Boiler Room- Funny Girl in Concert

http://digg.com/news/entertainment/fisher_capital_management_boiler_room_funny_girl_in_concert

boilerroomtheatre.com — Funny Girl in Concert April 29, 30, May 1 The Keeping Scores Concert Series will present its inaugural production, Funny Girl in Concert, at the Boiler Room Theatre in Franklin, Tennessee, April 29-May 1. Scott Logsdon will direct, with choreography by Laurie Gregoire and musical direction by Jamey Green. The musical, about the life of Fanny Brice, features lyrics by Bob Merrill and music by Jule Styne and a book by Isobel Leonart. Among the show's best-known hits are "People," "Don't Rain On My Parade" and "I'm The Greatest Star." Multiple actresses will portray the role of Brice: Nancy Allen, Erica Haines Cantrell, Joann Coleman, Lindsay Terrizzi Hess, Catherine Mai Holder, Bonnie Keen, Cori Laemmel, Alex Maddox, Corrie Miller, Sondra Morton, Laura Thomas-Sonn and Heather Trabucco. The show will also feature Bakari King (Nicky Arnstein), Annette de la Torre (Mrs. Brice), Bryan Wlas (Eddie Ryan), Corey Caldwell (Florenz Ziegfeld), Vicki White (Mrs. Strakosh), Jama Bowen (Mrs. Meeker/Mimsy) , Layne Sasser (Mrs. O'Malley), Brandy A. Rogers (Emma), Todd Rowan (Mr. Keeney/Mr. Renaldi), Lucas Phillips (John/Stage Director), and Will Sevier (the Ziegfeld Tenor). The ensemble will include Jefferson Carson, Devin Clevenger, Thomas Harton, Sarah Margaret Huff, Olivia Lee, Emma Jordan , Darci Wantiez and Chad Webb comprise the ensemble. The children's chorus will include Tyler Bond, Joshua Cleveland, Hayden Gill, Addison McFarlin and Kayte Miller. Funny Girl will be the first in a series of musicals in concert presented by Keeping Scores that will focus on shows with outstanding music that are not likely to by fully mounted locally because of size or for having titles that might not be well enough known to warrant a lengthy run. Performance Schedule: Friday, April 29 at 8 p.m. Saturday, April 30 at 8 p.m. Sunday, May 1 at 2 p.m. Seating: House opens 30 minutes prior to show time. Seating is open, in other words, the early bird gets the better worm. We do not, howeve Apr 27, 2011

Boiler Room

BY ROGER EBERT / February 18, 2000

cast & credits
Seth: Giovanni Ribisi
Chris: Vin Diesel
Abby: Nia Long
Greg: Nicky Katt

New Line Presents A Film Written And Directed By Ben Younger. Running Time: 119 Minutes. Rated R (For Strong Language And Some Drug Content).

"Boiler Room" tells the story of a 19-year-old named Seth who makes a nice income running an illegal casino in his apartment. His dad, a judge, finds out about it and raises holy hell. So the kid gets a daytime job as a broker with a Long Island, N.Y., bucket shop that sells worthless or dubious stock with high-pressure telephone tactics. When he was running his casino, Seth muses, at least he was providing a product that his customers wanted.

The movie is the writing and directing debut of Ben Younger, a 29-year-old who says he interviewed a lot of brokers while writing the screenplay. I believe him. The movie hums with authenticity, and knows a lot about the cultlike power of a company that promises to turn its trainees into millionaires, and certainly turns them into efficient phone salesmen.

No experience is necessary at J.T. Marlin: "We don't hire brokers here--we train new ones," snarls Jim (Ben Affleck), already a millionaire, who gives new recruits a hard-edged introductory lecture crammed with obscenities and challenges to their manhood. "Did you see `Glengarry Glen Ross'?" he asks them. He certainly has. Mamet's portrait of high-pressure real estate salesmen is like a bible in this culture, and a guy like Jim doesn't see the message, only the style. (Younger himself observes that Jim, giving his savage pep talks, not only learned his style from Alec Baldwin's scenes in "Glengarry" but wants to be Baldwin.) The film's narrator is Seth Davis (Giovanni Ribisi), an unprepossessing young man with a bad suit who learns in a short time to separate suckers from their money with telephone fantasies about hot stocks and IPOs. Everybody wants to be a millionaire right now, he observes. Ironically, the dream of wealth he's selling with his cold calls is the same one J.T. Marlin is selling him.

In the phone war room with Seth are several other brokers, including the successful Chris (Vin Diesel) and Greg (Nicky Katt), who exchange anti-Jewish and Italian slurs almost as if it's expected of them. At night the guys go out, get drunk and sometimes get in fights with brokers from other houses. The kids gambling in Seth's apartment were better behaved. We observe that both gamblers and stockbrokers bet their money on a future outcome, but as a gambler you pay the house nut, while as a broker you collect the house nut. Professional gamblers claim they do not depend on luck but on an understanding of the odds and prudent money management. Investors believe much the same thing. Of course, nobody ever claims luck has nothing to do with it unless luck has something to do with it.

The movie has the high-octane feel of real life, closely observed. It's made more interesting because Seth isn't a slickster like Michael Douglas or Charlie Sheen in "Wall Street" (a movie these guys know by heart), but an uncertain, untested young man who stands in the shadow of his father the judge (Ron Rifkin) who, he thinks, is always judging him.

The tension between Seth and the judge is one of the best things in the film--especially in Rifkin's quiet, clear power in scenes where he lays down the law. When Seth refers to their relationship, his dad says: "Relationship? What relationship? I'm not your girlfriend. Relationships are your mother's shtick. I'm your father." A relationship does grow in the film, however, between Seth and Abby (Nia Long), the receptionist, and although it eventually has a lot to do with the plot, what I admired was the way Younger writes their scenes so that they actually share hopes, dreams, backgrounds and insecurities instead of falling into automatic movie passion. When she touches his hand, it is at the end of a scene during which she empathizes with him.

Because of the routine racism at the firm, Seth observes it must not be a comfortable place for a black woman to work. Abby points out she makes $80,000 a year and is supporting a sick mother. Case closed, with no long anguished dramaturgy over interracial dating; they like each other and have evolved beyond racial walls. Younger's handling of their scenes shames movies where the woman exists only to be the other person in the sex scene.

The acting is good all around. A few days ago I saw Vin Diesel as a vicious prisoner in the space opera "Pitch Black," and now here he is, still tough, still with the shaved head, but now the only guy at the brokerage that Seth really likes, and trusts enough to appeal to. Diesel is interesting. Something will come of him.

"Boiler Room" isn't perfect. The film's ending is a little too busy; it's too contrived the way Abby doesn't tell Seth something he needs to know; there's a scene where a man calls her by name and Seth leaps to a conclusion when in fact that man would have every reason to know her name; and I am still not sure exactly what kind of a deal Seth was trying to talk his father into in their crucial evening meeting. But those are all thoughts I had afterward. During the movie I was wound up with tension and involvement, all the more so because the characters are all complex and guilty, the good as well as the bad, and we can understand why everyone in the movie does what they do. Would we? Depends.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Fisher Capital management Warning : Imperial Tobacco issues Spanish profit warning

Imperial Tobacco (IMT.L) today warned profits from its Spanish division could drop by up to £110 million for the year ending 30 September 2011 compared to previous guidance.
The cigarette manufacturer said it was responding to price cuts from competitors in recent weeks, which have impacted all market participants in the Spanish market, and the company has moved to protect its market position.
Included in the £110 million cut in forecast, the company said £40 million of this represented a one-off non-recurring impact on the logistics division.
The company’s share price dipped last month when members of the Spanish media reported that its Altadis subsidiary was planning to cut the price of its blonde tobacco brands following an aggressive pricing move by rival Phillip Morris.
In a statement delivered to the London StockExchange, the company said it is continuing to monitor the position closely.
Despite today’s announcement, Imperial maintained that the overall group performance is unlikely to be materially impacted when the financial results are released on 30 September, saying they remain in line with the board’s expectations.
Throughout Western Europe, Imperial has a presence in most markets through its Davidoff, West, JPS and Golden Virginia brands.
As at 0845hrs, Imperial Tobacco was already trading down at 2,059, 1.25 per cent down on Friday’s close.
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Fisher Capital Management Warning: Kellogg Gets Second FDA Warning on Listeria in 2 Years

A Kellogg Co. (K) cookie plant in Augusta, Georgia, was found to have a “persistent strain” of listeria during a February inspection, including on food-contact surfaces, according to a warning letter from U.S. regulators.
The Food and Drug Administration letter, dated June 7, was sent less than two years after a Kellogg Eggo waffle plant in the same state was shut for similar reasons.
The inspection found flies and pools of water, the FDA said. The letter from District Director John Gridley didn’t say that any products were tainted with listeria, yet said they were “adulterated” and “may have become contaminated with filth.” The Augusta plant makes Keebler and Famous Amos cookies, and is one of five cookie bakeries Kellogg operates in North America.
“While the FDA did not identify specific concerns with the food, we take this situation very seriously,” Kris Charles, a spokeswoman for Battle Creek, Michigan-based Kellogg, said in an e-mail. “We have undertaken a number of aggressive actions to address their concerns including comprehensive cleaning and extensive testing.”
Kellogg’s response didn’t include dates for taking action at the plant, the FDA said. The regulator gave Kellogg 15 days to outline specific remedies to avoid injunction or product seizure.

Eggo Production

Kellogg’s cookies are baked at a temperature high enough to kill any listeria present, according to Robert Gravani, a food science professor at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. The lack of an FDA product recall suggests that listeria was not found in the cookies, he said. FDA spokeswoman Tamara Ward declined to comment on a potential recall.
Listeria is a bacterium found in prepared foods and soil that can cause a serious infection in humans called listeriosis. It is particularly harmful to pregnant women, the young, the elderly, and people with weak immune systems, according to the FDA’s website.
Kellogg, the largest U.S. maker of breakfast cereals, fell 45 cents to $54.96 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have gained 7.6 percent this year.
The FDA in January 2010 ordered Kellogg to improve sanitation controls at the different Georgia plant after Eggo buttermilk waffles were found contaminated with listeria bacteria. That, along with flooding and equipment changes at another waffle factory in 2009, slowed production for months and caused Eggo’s market share to drop.
Kellogg in June 2010 voluntarily recalled about 28 million boxes of cereal including Froot Loops and Honey Smacks, citing unusual taste and odor coming from the liner of packages. The recalled boxes were made at an Omaha, Nebraska, facility. North American cereal sales dropped 5 percent in 2010, partly because of the recall.
To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Boyle in New York at Mboyle20@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Steve Walsh at swalsh@bloomberg.net

fisher capital management strategies: Morning after bin Laden dies, patriotism fuels economy

The killing of Osama bin Laden gave New Jersey’s economy an emotion-fueled boost Monday morning. But consumers and investors turned their attention to jobs, gasoline prices and inflation by Monday afternoon.

Myla Williamson gave a typical sober response when she said she was pleased to see the nation’s most wanted terrorist brought to justice. But for her, at least, the day was no different.
“I can’t spend what I don’t have,” said Williamson, 44, of Ocean Grove. “I’m trying to get out of debt.”

Bin Laden was killed Sunday in a U.S. operation that offered a chance for closure, particularly to Central Jersey residents who lost family, friends and co-workers in al-Qaida’s Sept. 11, 2001, plots.

It set off celebrations in New York and Washington, D.C. And it could in the long-term help to bring stability to the Middle East. But euphoria can only carry you so far, experts said.

“Does it make people feel better? Yes. And anything that makes people feel better and raises confidence is a boost,” said Joel Naroff, an economist based in Holland, Pa. “But ultimately it comes down to people’s pocketbooks.”
Some stores found themselves with a bigger advantage than others. Kempton Flags in Wall, for example, sold more American flags on Monday, including many to parents whose children are in the military, co-owner Shawn Kempton said.
But initial giddiness gave way to reality within just a few hours. For example:


  • The Dow Jones industrial average opened higher on Monday, but gave back its gains in the afternoon to close virtually unchanged. It closed at 12,807.36, down $3.18, or 0.02 percent, at 4 p.m. Monday.Investors were more concerned about the federal government’s debt ceiling, the aftermath of Japan’s earthquake and upheaval in the Middle East, said Doug Lyons of Trident Wealth Advisors in Bay Head.”There are more structural issues that would impact” the stock market, he said.