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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Long History Of Child Abuse Haunts Island 'Paradise

Marks describes Pitcairn as a "male-dominated society, where men were doing exactly what they pleased." In 2000, police investigating an alleged of rape of a 15-year-old girl uncovered a trail of child abuse dating back at least three generations. Scarcely any of Pitcairn's 47 inhabitants were untainted by the allegations, and barely a girl growing up on the island had escaped abuse. Yet most islanders — including the mothers — had looked the other way.

British journalist Kathy Marks' new book, Lost Paradise, is a non-fiction account of the child abuse sex scandal that rocked a remote British Island.

Located in the South Pacific, Pitcairn Island is home to the descendants of Fletcher Christian and the crew of the Bounty, which fled there in 1789 after seizing their ship from Captain William Bligh (a story made famous in the movie Mutiny On The Bounty).


Marks describes the trials of the abusers as "one of the most unusual trials in British criminal history." The outside lawyers and judges wore long black gowns — a striking contrast to the defendants, who arrived at court in shorts and T-shirts.

In the end, 10 men went through the court system and nine were found guilty or pleaded guilty. But Marks describes the sentenced as "rather ludicrously short"; though several men were sentences to prison terms, and all but one of the defendants have been released from jail.


In December 1999, several Pitcairn girls claimed that they had been sexually assaulted by a visiting New Zealander. By chance, a British policewoman was on the island, and one of the girls confided that she had also been raped by two local men in the past. An investigation into those allegations developed into a major inquiry that saw British detectives crisscross the globe, interviewing dozens of Pitcairn women. Their conclusion was that nearly every girl growing up on the island in the last forty years had been abused, and nearly every man had been an offender.

At the same time, certain Pitcairners — including women on the island — were loudly denying that children had ever been mistreated. They claimed that Pitcairn was a laid-back Polynesian society where girls matured early and were willing sexual partners. Britain, they claimed, was trying to cripple the community and force it to close, thus ridding itself of a costly burden. Who was telling the truth, I wondered: the women describing their experiences of abuse, or those portraying the affair as a British conspiracy?\

The plan was to conduct two sets of trials: the first on Pitcairn, the second in New Zealand. Preparations got under way on the island, where the accused men helped to build their own prison. The locals wanted the press excluded; as a compromise, and to prevent the place from being swamped, Britain decided to accredit just six journalists. News organizations around the world were invited to make a pitch.

On holiday in Japan at the time, I submitted a rather hurried application, pointing out my long-standing interest in the story. I also mentioned that I would be able to file for the Independent's sister paper, the New Zealand Herald. Shortly afterward, I was informed that I had been chosen as a member of the media pool.


Battle of Grills: KFC and El Pollo Loco Fight with Free Chicken

KFC spokeswoman Laurie Schalow describes the cooking process as "slow grilling." She adds that the process keeps the meat moist as opposed to grilling over a flame, during which moisture can quickly evaporate. El Pollo Loco, however, also uses an oven during the initial cooking process. In a February 2006 article, Chain Leader Contributing Editor Lisa Bertagnoli reported that the Los

And so are the freebies. Fast-food chicken chains KFC and El Pollo Loco both are giving away chicken this week. On Monday, 5,300-unit KFC, headquartered in Louisville, Ky., offered a free piece of grilled chicken at participating restaurants throughout the United States. Not to be outdone, 417-unit El Pollo Loco is giving away two pieces of chicken on Tuesday in its biggest market, Los Angeles. The more generous El Pollo Loco deal, a leg and thigh, also comes with two tortillas and salsa.

In fact, he's right. The new product, "KGC," isn't grilled per se but cooked on a rack in a specially patented oven that took four years to develop, according to franchisee Eddie Sheldrake, who operates 15 KFC units in Orange County, Calif.

More importantly, El Pollo Loco launched two brash commercials Saturday that dispute KFC's claim that its new grilled chicken is actually grilled. El Pollo Loco CEO Steve Carley appears in the ad saying KFC's chicken is "cooked on a griddle. No open flames at all."

Karen Eadon, chief marketing officer at El Pollo Loco, says the smaller chain began thinking of ways "to protect and defend our business" when KFC announced last year it was testing grilled chicken in six markets, including nearby San Diego.

The El Pollo Loco commercials, created by Krueger Communications of Venice, Calif., emphasize that KFC prepares product in an oven, not over an open flame. Eadon claims El Pollo Loco's grilling process is the real deal. "Authenticity is becoming important, especially to Millennials. They are looking for authentic products," she says.

No confirmed swine flu in Orlando, Florida Hospital says

At a rushed press conference, Florida Hospital's vice president Dr. Scott Brady said there are no confirmed cases of swine flu in Orlando.

"In this case, if it was implied that it was swine flu, that was a misstatement," Brady said. "We have not had any confirmations from the CDC. We've had two or three cases of positive influenza. We should know about these in 48 hours."


An e-mail sent by one of Florida Hospital's top doctors sent health officials into a flurry today because he incorrectly confirmed the first case of the deadly swine flu in Orlando.

In the e-mail, Dr. Loran Hauck, Chief Medical Officer at Florida Hospital said, "a case was diagnosed here in Orlando today on a tourist from Mexico who came to Disney attractions two days ago to visit."

Ros said a tourist in Orlando was tested and the results are not back from the labs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is the only agency that can test for the particular strain of influenza that develops into swine flu.

Officials at Walt Disney World would not comment and referred all calls to the health officials.

Swine flu has killed 152 people in Mexico and thousands are hospitalized with influenza-like symptoms, the latest reports show. Mexico is suspected of being the center of the outbreak.


There are 64 confirmed cases of swine flu in the United States, mostly in New York.

Brady said the tourist met the criteria of being at risk because he had been in Mexico or had contact with someone from Mexico. State health officials are looking into the connection with Mexico.

So far, Florida Hospital Centra Care clinics have sent three swabs to the CDC labs in Jacksonville, officials said. They wouldn't say if it was from same person or three different people.

It will take about 48 hours to determine if the sub-type of influenza is the swine flu.

"We have released one suspect case that was sent to a state lab for testing and we're waiting to see what that is," Orange County Health Department spokesman Dain Weister said. "There may be more than one [case]. Any influenza-like cases are being sent and being looked at."

According to a Monday afternoon update posted by the CDC, there were no confirmed human cases of the swine flu infection in Florida.

Cincinnati Superhero Patrols Streets Fighting Crime

The man behind Shadowhare's mask is 21 years old and from Milford. Those are the only clues to his true identity that he will reveal. Shadowhare said he was abused as a child and grew up in foster homes, perhaps leading him to a life helping others.

"My message to Cincinnati is that there is still hope and all we have to do is stand together," he said.

Shadowhare is not alone in his quest to fight crime. He heads up a group of men -- and one woman -- called the "Allegiance of Heroes." The members communicate with each other in online forums. Among the members are Aclyptico in Pennsylvania, Wall Creeper in Colorado and Master Legend in Florida.

Cincinnati police have a new ally in their fight against crime, whether they want it or not.

He calls himself Shadowhare, and he wears a mask and a cape to conceal his true identity. He's Cincinnati's own version of a superhero fighting crime and injustice where he finds it.

Vote: What do you think of Shadowhare?

"We help enforce the law by doing what we can in legal standards, so we carry handcuffs, pepper spray … all the legal weapons," said Shadowhare. "We will do citizen's arrests. We will intervene on crimes if there is one happening in front of us."

And the authorities don't always take him seriously. In one encounter with a Hamilton County corrections officer, Shadowhare was greeted with a chuckle and a look of disbelief.

But Shadowhare said he and his team are not deterred by the criticism. He remains focused on trying to make Cincinnati a better place, whether it's fighting crime or feeding the homeless.

For now, the law is on Shadowhare's side.

It is legal in Ohio and Kentucky to make a citizens arrest, however, the arrester does face possible civil litigation if the person arrested turns out to be innocent.

RAW DATA: Biography of Sen. Arlen Specter

In earlier confirmation hearings he had the courage to cross party lines in opposing Judge Bork and disagreeing with conventional wisdom in supporting Justice Thomas after dissecting the contradictory and highly charged testimony.

As a consummate legislator, he has counseled compromise and conciliation in a Congress which has established new records for partisan discord. In foreign affairs, he has advocated dialogue and accommodation as an antidote to belligerency and saber rattling.


Since first elected in 1980, Arlen Specter has brought rugged individualism and fierce independence learned from his youth on the Kansas plains to become a leading Senate moderate.

His work as Philadelphia's tough district attorney gave him insights to write the Terrorist Prosecution Act, the Armed Career Criminal Act and co-author of the Second Chance Act. His legal background and experience in constitutional law provided the skills to chair the dignified confirmation hearings of Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito.


Arlen Specter's five terms have made him the longest-serving U.S. Senator in Pennsylvania's history. A voice of reason, his independence and balance have won endorsements from the AFL-CIO and high marks from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (100% in 2006), the National Association of Manufacturers (86% in 2006), and the Americans for Tax Reform (90% in 2006). Time Magazine listed him among the ten best Senators in 2006. Knowlegis rated him the second most powerful Senator in 2006 behind only Majority Leader Bill Frist.

A November 11, 2007 Philadelphia Inquirer editorial stated: "Senator Arlen Specter has more clout than some sovereign nations." Dedication to Public Service Senator Specter attributes his zeal for public service to his experience as a child when he saw the government mistreat his father, Harry Specter, who migrated to the U.S. from Russia in 1911. Private Specter, serving in World War I in the infantry, was seriously wounded in action in France's Argonne Forest. When the government broke its promise to pay World War I veterans a $500 bonus, the veterans marched on Washington. President Hoover called out the Army which fired on and killed veterans on the Mall in one of the blackest days in American history.


Judiciary Committee Since 1981, he has played a significant role in Supreme Court nomination hearings, for Chief Justice Rehnquist, Justices O'Conner, Scalia, Kennedy, Souter, Thomas, Ginsberg, Breyer and Judge Bork. Notwithstanding debilitating chemotherapy treatments in 2005, he stayed on the job as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee to preside over historic Supreme Court confirmation hearings. His work on the Judiciary Committee has included writing significant legislation on dealing with Constitutional law, civil rights and privacy.

Appropriations Committee: Health/Education On the Appropriations Committee, where he is one seat away from becoming Chairman with a change in Senate control, he led the fight to increase funding for the National Institutes of Health from $12 to $30 billion to expand medical research to find cures for cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and other maladies. He has supported expanding health care for seniors and children and has proposed legislation to cover the almost fifty million Americans who do not have health insurance.


He frequently argues in the International Trade Commission to assist the steel industry from being deluged with unfair foreign imports. His proposed legislation, endorsed by both business and labor, would create a private right of action in federal courts to stop subsidized or dumped products from being imported into the U.S. He has supported the coal industry by promoting legislation for clean coal technology and securing $100 million for a Schuylkill County project to turn sludge into high octane, environmentally safe gasoline. Recognizing the long-term effects of global warming, he has co-sponsored the Bingaman-Specter bill to reduce harm from carbon emissions.

As Chairman of the Intelligence Committee in the 104th Congress and a member of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign Operations, Sen. Specter has traveled extensively meeting with world leaders including Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev; French President Francois Mitterrand; Israel's Prime Ministers Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir, Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres, Benjamin Netanyahu, Ehud Barak, Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert; China's President Hu Jintao; Indian Prime Minister Singh; Pakistan's Prime Ministers Benazir Bhutto, Mohammad Zia and Pervez Musharraf; Jordan's Kings Hussein and Abdullah; and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.


Similarly, he has urged bilateral, as well as multi-lateral, negotiations with North Korea. Early in his Senate career in 1982, he was among the first to call for a US/USSR summit in a Resolution which passed the Senate 90 to 8. He participated extensively with the Senate observers at the Geneva Arms Reduction talks in the 1980's and led the fight for the broad interpretation of the ABM Treaty.

Sen. Specter has consistently supported appropriations to fight global aids and promoted worldwide support for underdeveloped countries including free trade agreements.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Reclusive Matrix Director Spotted

Lana was recently spotted departing the Los Angeles International Airport looking nothing like she did a few years back.

She’s now sporting blonde hair and has opted to get rid of her glasses.

And despite what anyone says, you know if you saw her at the airport, you would have never guessed she was born a dude.You’re looking good Lana. Go on with your fierce self!


As we first mentioned almost two years ago, the Wachowski brothers, famous for creating The Matrix franchise, were going through some changes. Primarily Larry Wachowski was transitioning to become a woman.

And, by the looks of things, Larry, who goes by Lana now, seems to have transitioned well!


Hopefully Wachowski will use his celebrity to create more awareness for transgender people and issues.

And, by the way, we spotted a wedding ring on her finger.

Is she hitched or engaged?


Ex-Nets star Jayson Williams 'suicidal' at Manhattan hotel; Tasered after showdown with NYPD cops


Police were called to the Hilton Embassy Suites in Battery Park City at 4 a.m., after a female friend called security to report a disturbance in Williams' 15th-floor suite, the sources said.



Williams, 41, trashed his room, forcing Emergency Service Unit officers to subdue the former All-Star with a Taser gun, sources said. It took two sets of handcuffs to restrain the husky star, cops said.



Cops Tasered ex-NBA star Jayson Williams Monday after the troubled hoopster tried went nuts in his luxury Manhattan hotel room, police sources said.



The popular New Jersey Nets center, who beat the rap trial for shooting his chauffeur in 2002, was rushed to St. Vincent's Hospital in handcuffs after cops found suicide notes and empty bottles of pills in his room, sources said.



"He was barricaded, drinking, taking pills. He was overwhelmed," a police source said. "It all came crashing down."


In 2006, a New Jersey appeals court ruled Williams could be retried on that charge. No trial date has been set. The hoop star paid Christofi's family $2.75 million to settle a wrongful death suit.



"He had a lot of demons, a dark side that would surface every now and then," said a person who knew Williams when he played eight seasons for New Jersey.



The Nets source said Williams is usually a gregarious and fun-loving person, but seems to need a structured lifestyle.



"He needs something to fill his time," the source said. "You hate to see him hurt himself, but this was a guy with a lot of demons."


Cops found several suicide notes, including a message scrawled on the wall. They said he was distraught over his divorce, his parents' illnesses and his impending retrial in the chauffeur-shooting case.



Guests arrived home to find the posh hotel transformed into a crime scene. "There were about cop cars and an ambulance outside," said Annette Peters, 29, of Minneapolis.



It was not immediately known if he injured himself or if he was armed.


A few hours later, Williams' manager insisted the troubled ex-athlete was on the mend.



"Jayson is doing fine. He said he was fine," said Akhtar Farzaie, his manager and friend, outside the hospital emergency room. "All of us are here to be by his side as friends."

Strong earthquake felt in Mexico City


Televisa television network quoted Mexico City officials saying there were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

The quake rattled nerves in a city already nervous about a swine flu outbreak suspected of killing as many as 149 people nationwide.

"I'm scared," said Sarai Luna Pajas, a 22-year-old social services worker standing outside her office building moments after it hit. "We Mexicans are not used to living with so much fear, but all that is happening _ the economic crisis, the illnesses and now this _ it feels like the Apocalypse."


A strong earthquake struck central Mexico on Monday, swaying tall buildings in the capital and sending office workers into the streets.

The quake had a magnitude of 5.6 and was centered near Chilpancingo, about 130 miles (210 kilometers) southwest of Mexico City or 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the resort of Acapulco, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.


Co-worker Harold Gutierrez, 21, said the country was taking comfort from its religious faith, but he too was gripped by the sensation that the world might be coming to an end.

"If it is, it is God's plan," Gutierrez said, speaking over a green mask he wore to ward off swine flu.

USGS earthquake analyst Don Blakeman said the quake was felt strongly in Mexico City because the epicenter was relatively shallow and the ground under the capital _ which is built on a former lake bed _ tends to intensify shock waves.

"Distant quakes are often felt" strongly in the city, he said.

The USGS revised the quake's magnitude down from its preliminary estimate of 6.0, and said its depth was 30 miles (50 kilometers).

Pletcher hopes Dunkirk can lift his Kentucky Derby daze

Quality Road missed a planned breeze at Belmont Park on Monday, and Jerkens, along with the colt’s owner, Edward Evans, said that Quality Road might now aim for the Preakness Stakes on May 16 and Belmont Stakes on June 6, depending on how quickly he recovers from a quarter crack, or split hoof wall, in his right front foot. “It’s not terribly bad; it’s just not right,” Jerkens said.

“I don’t know if I’d ever get another horse into the Derby with his credentials,” he said.

The quarter crack was the second for Quality Road; he developed the first one, in his right rear hoof, while winning the Florida Derby.

The hoof specialist Ian McKinlay said that the split in the front hoof was more severe.

Quality Road, who has been troubled by foot problems since running away with the Florida Derby on March 28, will miss the Kentucky Derby, his trainer, Jimmy Jerkens, said Monday morning.

“He’s tender in the heel; it never went away,” said McKinlay, who worked on a similar injury sustained by Big Brown before the Belmont Stakes. “As big as he is, he is aggravating it because of how hard he hits the ground.”

McKinlay fitted Quality Road with a three-quarters shoe on Monday and expected him to be on his way to recovery by the weekend.

Free Today: KFC's New Kentucky Grilled Chicken

Apparently, the new recipe is just as top-secret as the Colonel's original fried chicken recipe. It's marinated and seasoned with a blend of six herbs and spices, then slow-grilled in a proprietary oven. I've been curious about this healthier version of chicken ever since it first came out a few weeks ago, so today will be the perfect chance to put it to the test.

To celebrate the highly anticipated launch of its new Kentucky Grilled Chicken, fast food chain KFC is giving away gratis pieces of grilled chicken to customers today

Apparently, people just don't think "non-fried" when they go to KFC. If they don't sell enough to keep it fresh in restaurants, they'll take this off, too. Hopefully, enough partners of people going for the fried who want something healthier will keep the grilled chicken alive. I mean, I do love fried chicken and I love KFC's -- I'm a Kentucky Colonel, too! -- but everything in moderation.

Kentucky Fried Chicken to stubborn folks like myself -- is launching a new grilled chicken entree. April 27 is being called "UNFry Day," and stores will give a free piece of grilled chicken to anyone coming by the store that day. They have had non-fried items before, like Tender Roast, Oven Roast, Rotisserie Gold, etc., but they didn't sell well.

Former boxing champ Greg Page dies at 50

The March 9, 2001, fight left Page in a coma for nearly a week. He then had a stroke during post-fight surgery. He was paralyzed on his left side and received intensive physical therapy.

Page won a $1.2 million settlement in 2007 with Kentucky boxing officials over the lack of medical personnel at the fight. Boxing officials also agreed to establish a medical review panel for the Kentucky Boxing and Wrestling Authority to check the health conditions of people involved in the sport who may be at risk for injury.


He turned to professional boxing and lost his first shot at the WBA heavyweight championship in 1984 to Tim Witherspoon. In December of that year, Page knocked out Gerrie Coetzee in the eighth round of their bout in South Africa to claim the title, but lost on points to Tony Tubbs five months later.

Page continued boxing through 1993, then took two years off after being knocked out by Bruce Seldon. He started again in 1996.


Greg Page, a former heavyweight boxing champion who suffered a severe brain injury in a 2001 fight, has died at his Louisville home. He was 50.

His wife, Patricia Page, said she found the one-time World Boxing Association champion in his bed Monday morning. Patricia Page said he died of complications related to injuries he suffered in the fight.

Page told The Associated Press her husband "is in a better place now."


Page continued boxing through 1993, then took two years off after being knocked out by Bruce Seldon. He started again in 1996.

Page was 42 and had a 58-16-1 career record going into the $1,500 fight against Dale Crowe at Peels Palace in Erlanger, Ky., near Cincinnati. Crowe was 24 and an up-and-coming boxer. Page went down after 10 rounds and didn't get up.

Patricia Page said Monday that funeral arrangements were pending.

Rivals Moskowitz and Weingarten will debate this week on NY1

The crux of the disagreement between the women is Moskowitz’s contention that the teachers union prevents progress in educating children by opposing innovations like charter schools. The union has opposed the growth of charter schools and filed a lawsuit recently meant to block charter schools from replacing traditional public schools. Members of Weingarten’s union say that these efforts are necessary to counter people like Moskowitz, who they say alienate and vilify teachers and seek to bust unions. They also criticize charter schools as divisive because they sometimes have lower portions of needy students, such as those who receive special education students and those who haven’t yet mastered English.

A vice president of the teachers union, Carmen Alvarez, said Saturday at a panel on school governance that I moderated that the parade was meant to counter negative statements about traditional public schools in Harlem. Governor David Paterson was among those who marched in the parade.

The beef began with Moskowitz’s career as chair of the City Council’s education committee, where she took on everything from the Bloomberg administration’s claims about rising test scores to the role that union-negotiated contracts play in constricting school leaders. When Moskowitz lost her battle to Scott Stringer to become the borough president of Manhattan, she said that the election outcome was a result of union’s vociferous campaign against her

Two education leaders who have been via bristling and in Harlem will come face-to-face this week, in a debate broadcast on NY1, the local TV news channel, spokespeople for both leaders have confirmed.

Randi Weingarten, the leader of the politically powerful teachers union, is preparing to debate Eva Moskowitz, the former City Council member-turned-charter school operator, on Dominic Carter’s evening talk show, “The Road to City Hall.”

The teachers union spokesman, Brian Gibbons, said that NY1 contacted Weingarten and asked her to appear on the show with Moskowitz. Weingarten said yes.


Tech DE Williams among Cowboys draftees


Following Jason Williams, they chose Ball State offensive lineman Robert Brewster (6-foot-4, 325 pounds). He played tackle in college but projects to be a guard in the NFL. In the fourth round, the Cowboys snagged Texas A&M quarterback Stephen McGee. He is the first quarterback drafted by the Cowboys since Quincy Carter in 2001 and just the second since 1991.

And after trading down with Tampa Bay in the fourth round and gaining an extra seventh round pick, the Cowboys stayed closer to home with Texas Tech's Brandon Williams, who went to high school at Fort Worth South Hills. Williams played defensive end in college but he will move to outside linebacker in the NFL. Williams, who left Texas Tech after his junior year, recorded 13 sacks in 2008, earning first-team All-Big 12 honors.

The Cowboys finally make their first pick in the third round of the NFL Draft on Sunday, choosing Western Illinois linebacker Jason Williams.


The Cowboys are looking for interior line depth and want to groom someone to eventually replace left guard Kyle Kosier.

The 6-1, 241-pound Jason Williams wasn't invited to the combine. But his stock rose steadily in the days and weeks leading up to the draft after he clocked a time of 4.49 seconds in the 40-yard dash at the Western Illinois Pro Day.


The Cowboys used their second fourth-round pick to choose another linebacker, Oregon State's Victor Butler. He played defensive end in college but projects to an outside linebacker in the Cowboys' 3-4 scheme. He is versatile and he can get to the quarterback. Butler recorded 22.5 sacks the past two years, including 12 as a senior when he was named first team all-Pac 10.

The Cowboys finally addressed their secondary needs in the fifth round with the selection of Cincinnati cornerback De Angelo Smith and safety Mike Hamlin. Smith gives the Cowboys another body at a thin cornerback position, but he also will bring much needed help to the return game (he returned punts and kicks a senior).

They stayed close to home in the sixth round, taking TCU strong safety Stephen Hodge. While there is a question as to whether Hodge can play safety in the NFL or should move down to inside linebacker, his initial impact will be on special teams. He, too, visited the team facility two weeks before the draft.

The Cowboys' final selections were tight end John Phillips (Virginia) in sixth round, and Cincinnati cornerback Mike Mickens and Oklahoma receiver Manual Johnson in the seventh.

Mickens was projected to be a fourth-round pick by some analysts, so he should give the Cowboys a lot of value in the seventh. He was graded down because of a knee injury he suffered late in the season that kept him from working out at the combine. But Mickens led the nation in interceptions last year and was named all-Big East all four years at college. He could be the team's fourth cornerback next season.

Friday, April 24, 2009

writer who created pern

WHEN Selina Scott returned to live in Yorkshire, she was eyed a little suspiciously by the locals as possibly yet another tiresome "comer-in" who would play at country living, and probably weekends only.
It wasn't long, though, before they saw – initially by the state of her hands, she says – that she was serious about rearing angora goats and tending and improving her 200 acres at Coxwold in the Hambleton Hills. She soon became involved in campaigning to preserve ancient woodland and signed up for the Countryside Stewardship scheme.

The former news reporter, Breakfast TV presenter and chat show star describes her neighbours in North Yorkshire as "lovely, old-fashioned, welcoming and good people, who are open about their lives". Their neighbourliness has certainly come to her rescue many times.

When her car brakes failed and she ended up in a ditch, the cavalry turned up to dig her out.

When her father died unexpectedly last Christmas, she says that without being asked her neighbours quietly moved in and looked after the farm. Her admiration for farmers is genuine.

"I take my hat off to them, old and young. They're so wise and hard-working and know how to survive all the problems that the weather and the land throw at them."

Scott was born in Scarborough and grew up near Guisborough, but later lived in Scotland before becoming a metropolitan media type and travelling the world for her work, which at one point included a talk show in the US. When she decided to become a farmer, in her early 50s and disillusioned with TV's growing fixation with youth and celebrity, she was fairly certain she was closing a door on that world for good.

Her return to the land was prompted by the adoption of a little herd of angora goats, which she billeted with a friend until she found the perfect property in North Yorkshire.

A couple of years into her new project, and thanks to a short but gratifying Channel 4 rant about the dumbing down of TV news, telly's treatment of women and the exploitativeness of reality shows, suddenly she was in demand again, with offers to appear in programmes that were, in her own words, "mostly rubbish and easy to refuse".

She and a scruffy rescue dog called Chump did win a dog training series The Underdog Show (don't get Selina going about animal welfare, or animals in general, for they are her greatest weakness), and she made reports for countryside programmes. The income certainly helped with the running costs up there in Coxwold, where the gorgeous angora goats were also starting to pay their way thanks to the production of mohair socks from their silky ringlets.

Six years after returning to the countryside, the socks from the 26 angoras are selling well, there's a new pond on the go at the farm, and Selina Scott seems highly content with her life in the country, although she admits the going can be tough.

She was the natural choice to front In Search of England's Green and Pleasant Land, a BBC documentary about the hardships of country life and the difficulty of making a living in the midst of a credit crunch. But while Selina and the crew were travelling about the county from interview to interview, gathering footage of breathtaking hills and dales as they went, the film turned into a very different creature.

Scott asks her interviewees about the adversities of life beyond the glow of street lamps, and in the case of retired police motorcycle officer Sue Woodcock, who lives in a farmhouse high above Grassington, the daily round includes fetching water from a well and scratching a living from the wool shorn off the backs of her elderly sheep. But while Sue – who writes a regular Dales Diary for the Yorkshire Post – talks about how cold it is, the camera is gazing over incomparable stretches of bleak but beautiful hills. As an observer you can't stop yourself calculating how much sacrifice you might be prepared to make for a view so bewitching.

Selina explores the Dales village of Buckden and nearby hamlet of Hubberholme, where the Falshaw family have been farming cattle for generations. At times the business has struggled and diversification had to be explored – in their case the conversion of one old building into a bunk barn and another into holiday cottages.

Gordon Falshaw describes how his family has kept the business going "with hard work in all weathers" and is delighted to report that the farm has just had its best year ever, thanks to the sterling/euro exchange rate. Lambs that sold for only £27 a year ago are fetching up to £65.

Scott visits the Michelin-starred pub and restaurant The Star at Harome, where chef Andrew Pern and his wife Jacquie employ 100 (some working at their other venture, The Pheasant) and pride themselves on using local suppliers of locally-grown food, giving work to locals and enjoying the support of the local community, whom Andrew describes as much less fickle than town and city-dwellers.

Back in Coxwold, Selina Scott's particular piece of heaven, she says life is changing and not necessarily for the better, with the loss of local facilities.

"We no longer have our village shop and Post Office, as the couple who ran it for 30 years retired and the house and business have been on the market for 18 months without a single offer. The high value of the property – £600,000 – would mean a mortgage that couldn't be serviced by income from a small village shop, and few people would take on the
seven-days-a-week commitment these days."

The honeypots of the Dales clog up with cars at the weekends, and tourism and National Park managers scratch their heads over how to promote this vital economic sector while keeping as much of the countryside as unspoilt as possible.

Trees are a particular bugbear for Selina Scott: "The lopping down of trees or branches for no apparent reason is something thing that gets me going. In my opinion the chainsaw is responsible for more damage than nuclear weapons. I have a little 800-year-old oak tree, and would never chop it because its branches were a bit untidy.

"The dying of Malton as a market town is a crying shame (she is a member of the Charles Dickens (Malton) Society, which promotes the writer's connections with the town, the setting for A Christmas Carol)... and it's appalling the way every little bit of available space in Kirkbymoorside has been built up. So much has been wrecked by modern housing.

"If you go to the Cotswolds, the character of the villages has been preserved so well that you could eat them. Up here, the North York Moors planners have only just got around to banning plastic windows. And when it comes to listing buildings, they don't patrol the inside of them properly, paying attention to all the period details that should be retained."

It seems that Selina Scott uses her fame to good cause, promoting her beloved Yorkshire and protesting loudly when she perceives it to be ill-treated. She does her best to look after her little corner of it and isn't afraid to air her views. Despite her apparent coolness and serenity she can be magnificently fierce.

Her other piece of heaven is a farmhouse she visits for holidays in the Serra de Tramuntana of Mallorca. Her decades-long and rather colourful relationship with the Balearic island is the subject of her soon-to-be-published first book, A Long Walk In The High Hills. Yet another venture that will help her to live her own rural idyll, between two very different kinds of heaven.
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