Tuesday 22 April 2014

New Homes For Sale in Myrtle Beach

New Homes For Sale in Myrtle Beach 

Myrtle Beach  is a vibrant and upcoming city with attractive opportunities for business and employment. It is an important city in the state of South Carolina and is also the largest city inside Myrtle Beach Area. The city has an attractive landscape of modern and architecturally interesting buildings. As a result, many Surfside Beach, Garden City, Murrells Inlet, Pawleys Island, Little River and North Myrtle Beach.
People have totally different reasons for buying a new home in Myrtle Beach homes for sale. Built with newest construction materials and placed in a very extremely  affordable price range, these new homes for sale in Myrtle Beach are a great investment opportunity,  If you wish to buy a new home in Myrtle Beach homes fo sale,  Here provides you complete details of the homes for sale on their official website http://www.myrtlebeachmlssearch.com/.

Why People Should Buy Myrtle Beach Homes For Sale


Why People  Should Buy Myrtle Beach Homes For Sale

Buying a Myrtle Beach home for sale  is one of the most important investments anyone can get at it both can affect your financial status and quality of life. Selecting from completely different properties can be very frustrating and time-consuming when considering comparable market values, proposed zoning changes, funding options, location advantages,  moreover as taxes, amenities and maintenance prices. However, Myrtle beach is a very special place that could give you the kind of life you wanted to live.  

It is very easy to buy Myrtle beach homes for sale provided that you already make the necessary preparations for it.. There are many aspects of home shopping for a method that may simply frustrate even those experience homebuyers.In home buying the personal specifications of the buyers are very important. As a buyer of Myrtle beach  homes for sale,  you have got to grasp your motivation in owning your new home.Finally, citizen of this lovely town  want to be here just to be a part of the terrific lifestyle the town should provide.. The scenic beauty, tolerable climate and first class facilities are hard to beat anywhere in the world. so if you wish to buy  homes for sale on Myrtle beach, logon to http://www.myrtlebeachmlssearch.com/ today !.

Are you looking for Condos for sale?


Many million dollar condos for sale are in the market, particularly in the area of Myrtle beach. If you're looking for condos for sale, check the listing of real estate properties in www.myrtlebeachmlssearch.com. As one of the most luxurious and fascinating cities in the world,  thousands of tourists flock to Myrtle beach. There are several stylish shop and restaurants as well as resorts and amusement spots in the area.

Besides having the best amenities and furniture in the condominium unit, the guests and the residents will certainly relish the sports area, fitness facilities, underground parking, swimming pool yet as 24 hour security and housekeeping employees. Most of those condominiums offer wireless internet connection. Spas,  landscapes and community rooms are accessible in the majority luxury condominiums. 

For the first time homeowners, condominiums are an excellent choice. A condo unit is more spacious than flats. There are several advantages in owning a condominium unit such as being in mark of the renovation and style. The fee that you pay monthly goes to the outside maintenance, thus you wish not worry about anything else. www.myrtlebeachmlssearch.com is the best real estate website where you'll see the numerous listings of condominiums for sale.

Saturday 19 April 2014

Myrtle Beach International Film Festival strengthens ties to the Carolina

Myrtle Beach International Film Festival strengthens ties to the Carolina


The Carolina connections to the ninth annual Myrtle Beach International Film Festival are bountiful.

Sasha Carrera has found what she called magic in picking up a keyhole urchin, better known as a sand dollar, on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. The writer, co-producer and star of “Mr. Hopewell’s Remedy,” a comedic short produced and directed by Kathi Carey, said having the film premiere in the noon-2 p.m. block April 26 completes a journey for the project.

The fest, with 48 films, opens Wednesday for four days through April 26 at Carmike Cinemas’ Broadway 17, at Broadway at the Beach.

Carrera, who grew up in Virginia and loved family summer vacations in Sunset Beach and Bird Island, N.C., said finding such a perfect sand dollar near her home in Santa Monica, Calif., took her back to days trolling for them in the Carolina surf.

“I didn’t even know there were sand dollars on the Pacific coast,” she said. “Most people have never seen one here. This one had nothing cracked, and the flower pattern was on the back. I took that as a sign.”

Carrera said that discovery marked a “kindred spirit” and turnaround in the production, that “the stars are lining up,” because on that day, plans to shoot “Mr. Hopewell’s Remedy” looked at risk, but all the pieces came together last year, all leading to its debut next week.

“The whole feeling of the thing,” Carrera said of the film about a man’s quest to find a cure for sorrow, “is very kind of Mayberry. ... A surreal, beautiful, magical realm with a very quiet kind of town that time forgot.”

She also thought back to a theater professor’s prescient words that “everything you do is autobiographical,” but you might not know it at the time, and this film has proven it for her.

Lowcountry charm

Mason Thomas Freeman, an independent filmmaker from Charlotte, went south one state to shoot his narrative short, “The Painter,” all in Beaufort, he said, because a plantation was sought, and “we needed for it to have the feel of a period piece.”

The film, screening in the 2:30-4:30 p.m. block April 25, focuses on an 11-year-old artist, who after losing a loving parent and wanting a family feeling again, encounters a traveler, played by Emmy Award-winner GregAlan Williams who gives her hope.

Freeman said the draw of the Carolinas to make movies, especially with the opening in 2010 of EUE/Screen Gems Studios Atlanta, has only added to the Carolinas’ appeal for locations to film. He cited “Homeland” TV drama being shot in Charlotte, and Wilmington’s continued popularity.

“The area itself is sort of like Hollywood East, almost,” he said.

Freeman called South Carolina’s Lowcountry “a filmmaker’s best friend” and that Beaufort boasts a “really nostalgic aura about it.” The Palmetto State’s accessibility and landscape also help, so much that a producer can film at a plantation in the morning, the beach in the afternoon, and the mountains at night.

He’s ready to revisit Myrtle Beach after seeing “The Painter” premiere last week at the Bare Bones International Film and Music Festival in Muskogee, Okla.

Freeman views the Myrtle Beach film fest as “one of the most respected” by indie filmmakers in the country and that “people on the circuit” know about it.

He also said taking a story “from paper to the screen,” many people help out, “ sharing “a passion to tell a great story.”

Molding history to tell

A historical documentary, “Discovering Dave: Spirit Captured in Clay” will round out the 2:30-4:30 p.m. block April 25.

A co-producer of the film, George Wingard of Warrenville, and fellow staff members of the Savannah River Archaeological Research Program unearthed a piece of pottery at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site in Aiken. The vessel was signed in 1862 simply by “Dave.”

Research led to details about this man, who was born into slavery in about 1801 in the Edgefield area, in South Carolina’s western Piedmont. Wingard and filmmaker Mark Albertin of Scrapbook Video Productions sketched the framework of Dave’s life from interviews with artists, scholars, writers, historians and archaeologists. Wingard said the 21/2-year effort evolved for “outreach purposes.”

Wingard treats this story as “greater” than within South Carolina’s boundaries, for school systems in such states as Nebraska and Indiana have sought to play the film for students, a Dave-inspired play has taken root at the University of Delaware, and just maybe, other schools can “build a curriculum” around this true-life story.

From the perspective “of archeology and history,” this documentary serves as “an ambassador,” Wingard said, as the pot, measuring 11 to 13 inches, is taken for presentations to schools along with showing the 47-minute film.

“It’s just so easy to see it,” he said. “Most of these vessels are in museums, behind glass or in private collections. this one goes out.”

Wingard remains amazed how this Dave pot was found in a trash pile from the 1950s, when 6,000 people were relocated by the Atomic Energy Commission for a development project, but the art piece has endured the times and change.

“It’s not part of my history,” Wingard said, “but I am part of its history.”

Film festivals also help spread the word, even globally, with a story bound to be just as valuable 100 years from now.

“I had someone from an Italian film festival out of the blue contact me,” Wingard said, “asking, ‘Can you send me a copy?’ That’s pretty impressive.”

Hunkering for horror again

Tommy Faircloth of Columbia can’t wait for the S.C. premiere for “The Cabin,” a half-hour horror he wrote and directed. Part of the 2:30-4:30 p.m. block April 25, this film will be its roughly 25th screening at a festival, he said, but this marks only its second that’s not just one genre, in contrast to the San Antonio Horror Film Festival, where it won for best short in its world premiere.

Faircloth said he has shot two other horrors, both in South Carolina, released in the late 1990s on VHS, then got into documentary fare related to theme parks and roller coasters. The previous horrors were shot on film, in his 20s, in a time when production was so much more costly.

Still a VHS fan with boxes of tapes – highlighted by a copy of “Hairspray” signed by John Waters – Faircloth said a fellow filmmaker doing a documentary about the VHS mode renewed a bite to tackle another horror. “The Cabin,” he said, took only a week to write, and a weekend to film, in the Carolinas and Tennessee, with “just a skeleton crew.”

“It has been so well-received everywhere,” Faircloth said, glad to assemble “creepy, jump-out-of-your-seat kind of stuff” that even his mother lauded for its lack of cursing.

The small cast, Faircloth said, localizing this story even more, includes a Coastal Carolina University theater graduate, Jason Vail.

“Every time I turn around,” Faircloth said, “he’s on TV.”

Work is about to start on a new feature, “Crinoline Head 2: Dorchester’s Revenge” across the state, for what Faircloth said is the sequel to his very first horror when he was studying at the University of South Carolina, and Vail is cast in this as well.

Steady festival growth

Jerry Dalton, founder and director of the Myrtle Beach film festival, said he’s excited to broaden the reach of this festival and its components every year.

He said taking a version of this festival also has been staged in Michigan in each of the past two years. Seeing a booklet in a store there prompted him to put together a 34-page printing for the 2014 festival in Myrtle Beach.

“People are always looking for full descriptions of movies,” Dalton said, appreciating “this little magazine that shows every movie and gives a brief synopsis of each. ... It’s convenient for the film enthusiast, something they can carry around.”

Repeating early evening social hours with some local establishments’ complimentary bites and beverages on April 25 and 26, with an open invitation for local artists to exhibit all-age appropriate works, Dalton also has added networking events at hotels to close the festival’s first two nights so visiting film producers, directors and personnel have quality time to mingle.

“Film, food and art – it’s all art,” Dalton said.

One film that fuels his fervor is “The Starfish Throwers,” closing the 5-7 p.m. block April 26, for it covers how a five-star chef in India, a retired middle school teacher, and Katie Stagliano, a then-9-year-old vegetable garden planter from Summerville who started with one cabbage, each pioneered approaches to help reduce global hunger in their own worlds.

Dalton said the screening of this documentary will be the first time that Stagliano’s “whole family has seen it.”

This festival also stands out, he said, because “whatever comes in that is good, we play – we don’t block things with agendas.”

He said “Jihad in America: The Grand Deception” played at the 2013 festival, after its producers found it refused for some other gatherings. Besides winning top documentary honors in Myrtle Beach, it went on to claim awards at festivals in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles and New York, among other European accolades.

“After we played it,” Dalton said, “it opened the doors for them.”

This year, he drew a possible parallel in poignancy to the documentary “Off Your Knees, Germany,” playing in the 2:30-4:30 p.m. block April 26. It covers a case of a German-Canadian activist incarcerated for seven years across three countries and two continents.

Dalton voiced a pledge “to keep freedom of speech alive and well,” because movies provide a vital outlet for expression.

“We love freedom,” he said. “What is more American than that?”

With any such movie with a strong message, Dalton said, “I don’t care whether I agree with it. .... As long it’s well done.”

Bob Bestler | God is not dead

Bob Bestler | God is not dead


It was back in the ’60s that Time magazine, in a controversial cover story, declared: “God is Dead.”

I’m a longtime and loyal subscriber to Time, both as a news magazine and as a tracer of trends, but I do believe its declaration was a bit premature.

You only have to check out the various churches tomorrow, Easter Sunday, to realize that we are still very much a people that worship God.

My own Episcopal church in McClellanville is pretty small, and on Christmas and Easter it is standing room only as people cram together to celebrate the two holiest days on the Christian calendar.

But the same is true of churches throughout the country – not to mention the nondenominational places of worship that fill up most every weekend.

A large, newly constructed nondenominational opened about two years ago in nearby Mount Pleasant; already it is building an addition and carving out a second parking lot – an indication that people, often young families, are seeking a relationship with the Almighty on a regular basis.

You don’t have to stop there.

Look at the current spate of biblical-themed movies coming out of that godless bastion of liberalism known as Hollywood (see O’Reilly, Bill).

There’s “Noah,” of course, which offers a harsher and more realistic look at the struggle in getting hundreds of animals on an ark – as opposed to the happy, smiling cartoons going aboard in various children’s books.

“God’s Not Dead” is another in theaters today, as is “Son of God.” Both have been box-office hits. On the way are two more: “Heaven is for Real” and “Exodus: Gods and Kings,” starring Christian Bale.

And then there’s Pope Francis. I don’t know exactly where he fits in, but he certainly has become a cultural phenomenon.

Any Christian religious leader with his charisma, humility and honesty certainly must give a lot of people a reason to seek out a place to worship.

And you’ve got to admit: Pope Francis makes for a much holier role model than George Burns.

Delay won't quell 2014 wrangling over Keystone XL

Delay won't quell 2014 wrangling over Keystone XL


Democrats sweating this year's elections may be hoping that the Obama administration's latest delay to the proposed Keystone XL pipeline takes a politically fraught issue off the table for the midterms.

Fat chance.

An indefinite extension of the government's review of the contentious oil pipeline, announced late Friday by the State Department, almost certainly pushes a final decision past the November elections, keeping the project in a politically expedient holding pattern. But it is doing little to quell posturing over the project, which has taken on a life of its own as climate change activists battle with energy advocates from both parties.

Republicans jumped at the chance to paint Democrats as powerless to rein in their own party's president. Keystone opponents were split, with some praising the delay and others chiding President Barack Obama for not vetoing the project outright.

"It reinforces how ineffective, powerless and without influence senators like Mary Landrieu, Mark Begich, Mark Warner and Kay Hagan are," said Brad Dayspring of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, rattling off vulnerable Democrats up for re-election in November.

For Democrats competing in Republican-leaning states, winning those votes will require putting distance between themselves and Obama. The State Department's announcement that a decision on Keystone XL won't come any time soon offers a prime opportunity to bash the leader of their party.

"I am frankly appalled at the continued foot-dragging by this administration on the Keystone project," said Begich, D-Alaska, adding that the delay "means we'll miss another construction season, and another opportunity to create thousands of jobs across the country."

On the opposite end of the spectrum, some environmentalists were equally miffed, arguing that Obama should muster the courage to nix the project rather than hold out the prospect that he'll approve the pipeline, which would carry oil from western Canada's tar sands to refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast.

"While we're at it, the State Department should also request that physics delay heat-trapping operations for a while, and that the El Nino scheduled for later this spring be pushed back to after the midterms," said Bill McKibben of the group 350 Action in a statement dripping with sarcasm.

Word of the latest in a string of delays to Keystone XL came Friday as Washington was winding down for Easter. The State Department said it will give federal agencies more time to weigh in on the matter but declined to say how much longer. Officials said the decision will have to wait for dust to settle in Nebraska, where a judge in February overturned a state law that allowed the pipeline's path through the state.

Nebraska's Supreme Court isn't expected to hear an appeal of that ruling until September or October, and there could be more legal maneuvering after it does so. Obama will almost surely have until after the elections to make the final call about whether the pipeline should be built.

Rejecting the pipeline before the election would have put Democrats like Landrieu and Begich in a tough spot, while approving it would have risked rankling Obama's allies and donors in the environmental community — some of whom are already pledging to spend huge sums this year helping candidates who have publicly opposed the pipeline.

"There's no winning decision here," said Democratic pollster Celinda Lake. "In a situation where you're between a rock and a hard place, it's better to postpone and then let everybody complain."

For Landrieu, whose competitive race in Louisiana will help determine whether Democrats retain control of the Senate, the delay comes at a particularly sensitive moment. Landrieu recently took the helm of the Senate Energy Committee, and has been using her new position to argue that she offers voters in oil-dependent Louisiana the best chance to influence energy policies — including approval of Keystone XL.

"Turns out that Landrieu isn't influential at all," Dayspring quipped after the latest delay was announced Friday.

The pipeline project has become a proxy for a larger battle pitting efforts to combat climate change against efforts to promote American energy. The 1,179-mile pipeline, which has been waiting for more than five years for approval, would travel through Montana and South Dakota to a hub in Nebraska, where it would connect with existing pipelines to carry more than 800,000 barrels of crude oil a day to Texas refineries.

Keystone XL proponents argue it will create thousands of jobs and reduce reliance on Mideast oil. But Obama and environmental groups dispute the notion that the pipeline would create many permanent jobs or have a substantial economic impact.

DNC raises $10.3M in March, has $14M in debt

DNC raises $10.3M in March, has $14M in debt


The Democratic National Committee raised $10.3 million last month but still has more than $14 million in debt.

The central party on Friday released its March financial report that shows the DNC has almost $9.8 million in the bank. The DNC debt peaked last March at $22.6 million.

The DNC in March raised slightly more than the Republican National Committee, which posted a $10.2 million month. But the RNC has no debt and is sitting on $12 million in the bank.

The RNC has outraised the DNC in 10 of the last 15 months. But the DNC has bested the RNC in five of the last seven months.

Since the 2012 campaign, the DNC has raised $89 million. The RNC has raised almost $106 million during that same time.