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Trending news, culture, and entertainment from Hearst producers around the country.

Olive Garden trying to get diners back after sales drop

Olive Garden restaurant in Pearland Texas

(Kim Christensen / Houston Chronicle)

Italian restaurant chain Olive Garden says, “When you’re here, you’re family,” but in recent years, it’s been more like a dysfunctional family, struggling with dipping sales and a mixed reputation, the Chicago Tribune reported.

The restaurant’s parent company, Darden (also the owner of Red Lobster), acknowledged that they let Olive Garden get into a rut, but that they’re expecting a comeback, according to the Tribune. With Olive Garden making up nearly half of the company’s sales, they need it.

“To improve sales, Olive Garden will remodel restaurants and revamp the menu, adding lower-priced dishes,” the Tribune said. “Its long-running ads with actors portraying perky families will get replaced, with an as-yet undisclosed new campaign.”

Consumerist is cautiously hesitant, expecting perhaps more cheap gimmicks to come with the revamp of Olive Garden.

“One strategy will be to get rid of those ads with families that are just over the goshdarn moon to be lucky enough to eat at Olive Garden,” the blog said. “No word on what kind of campaign will replace it, but let’s hope it’s not a couple of sassy galpals gabbing about love, loss, unlimited soup, salad and breadsticks, either.”

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Steven Tyler’s horrible national anthem

WATCH Steven Tyler butcher sing the “Star Spangled Banner” at Sunday’s AFC Championship Game.

While not quite a Roseanne Barr-sized screw up, I’m not sure the screeching was really necessary.

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Joe Paterno’s health reportedly worsens

A child sex scandal brought down Joe Paterno's reign as Penn State's coach. (AP file)



By Genaro C. Armas, Associated Press

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Joe Paterno’s doctors say the former Penn State coach’s condition has become “serious” after he experienced complications from lung cancer in recent days.

The winningest major college football coach of all time, Paterno was diagnosed shortly after Penn State’s Board of Trustees ousted him Nov. 9 in the aftermath of the child sex abuse charges against former assistant Jerry Sandusky. Paterno’s been getting treatment since, and his health problems were worsened when he broke his pelvis — an injury that first cropped up when he was accidentally hit in preseason practice last year.

“Over the last few days Joe Paterno has experienced further health complications,” family spokesman Dan McGinn said in a brief statement Saturday to The Associated Press. “His doctors have now characterized his status as serious.

“His family will have no comment on the situation and asks that their privacy be respected during this difficult time,” he said.

The 85-year-old Paterno has been in the hospital since Jan. 13 for observation for what his family had called minor complications from his cancer treatments. Not long before that, he conducted his only interview since losing his job, with The Washington Post. Paterno was described as frail then and wearing a wig. The second half of the two-day interview was conducted by his bedside.

The final days of Paterno’s Penn State career were easily the toughest in his 61 years with the university and 46 seasons as head football coach.

Sandusky, a longtime defensive coordinator who was on Paterno’s staff in two national title seasons, was arrested Nov. 5 and ultimately charged with sexually abusing a total of 10 boys over 15 years. His arrest sparked outrage not just locally but across the nation and there were widespread calls for Paterno to quit.

Paterno announced late on Nov. 9 that he would retire at the end of the season but just hours later he received a call from board vice chairman John Surma, telling him he had been terminated as coach. By that point, a crowd of students and media were outside the Paterno home. When news spread that Paterno had been dumped, there was rioting in State College.

Police on Saturday night had barricaded off the block where Paterno lives, and a police car was stationed about 50 yards from his home. A light was on in the living room but there was no activity inside. No one was outside, other than reporters and photographers stationed there.

Trustees said this week they pushed Paterno out in part because he failed a moral responsibility to report an allegation made in 2002 against Sandusky to authorities outside the university. They also felt he had challenged their authority and that, as a practical matter, with all the media in town and attention to the Sandusky case, he could no longer run the team.

Paterno testified before the grand jury investigating Sandusky that he had relayed to his bosses an accusation that came from graduate assistant Mike McQueary, who said he saw Sandusky abusing a boy in the showers of the Penn State football building.

Paterno told the Post that he didn’t know how to handle the charge, but a day after McQueary visited him, Paterno spoke to the athletic director and the administrator with oversight over the campus police.

Wick Sollers, Paterno’s lawyer, called the board’s comments this week self-serving and unsupported by the facts. Paterno fully reported what he knew to the people responsible for campus investigations, Sollers said.

“He did what he thought was right with the information he had at the time,” Sollers said.

Sandusky says he is innocent and is out on bail, awaiting trial.

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Bloomberg, breweries bet big on NFC championship

You see this hand? This hand is ready to literally slap the entire city of San Francisco if you beat my team this weekend.

When the Giants and 49ers square off this Sunday, there will be more than a trip to the Super Bowl on the line.

Earlier this week, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee put a little wager on the outcome of the NFC Championship game.

If the Giants lose, Bloomberg will rename 49th Street “49ers Street.” If the Giants win, Lee will decorate one of the city’s famous cable cars in NYG red and blue.

Bloomberg even threw in some smack talk for good measure:

Just like Hakeem Nicks ran right past the Packers’ secondary, the Giants are going to breeze by the 49ers on their way to the Super Bowl. After Sunday, Niners fans will be left with a taste as sour as their famous bread and the Giants will have their sights set on another trophy.

In case you thought the stakes couldn’t be any higher, imagine sitting down at your favorite New York bar only to discover the entire place has been filled with San Francisco jerseys and the cool, refreshing beer has been replaced with… Cool, refreshing beer from the other side of the country.

If the 49ers win, Brooklyn Brewery will be taken over by San Francisco’s Anchor Brewery. The bartenders will don 49ers jerseys and all the taps will pour Anchor beers.

For humanity’s sake, let’s root for the blue and red this weekend.


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Cook: Cruise ship captain ordered food amid emergency

The captain of the Costa Concordia ordered dinner for himself and a woman after the ship struck rocks off Italy’s coast, a cook from the ship told a Filipino television station, CNN is reporting:

In an interview with GMA Network, cook Rogelio Barista said Capt. Francesco Schettino ordered dinner less than an hour after the accident.

“We wondered what was going on. … At that time, we really felt something was wrong. … The stuff in the kitchen was falling off shelves and we realized how grave the situation was,” Barista told GMA.

Schettino ordered dinner around 10:30 p.m. Friday, Barista said. Authorities say the ship struck the rocks at 9:41 p.m.

Meanwhile, the Associated Press is reporting the cruise ship grounded off Tuscany shifted again on its rocky perch today, forcing the suspension of diving search operations for the 21 people still missing and raising concerns about the stability of the ship’s resting place.

However, crews began combing the area above the waterline in the evening after officials determined the ship had stabilized enough, and they will evaluate the situation Saturday morning to see if the diving operation can resume, said Coast Guard spokesman Cmdr. Cosimo Nicastro.

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Worst performances of the National Anthem

Nobody likes an excruciating National Anthem to start our ball games. Even the high-profile Super Bowl performers can screw it up. Remember Christina Aguilera last year in Dallas?

An Indiana legislator tried to put the kibosh on the fancier performances. The kind of thing Prince Joseph may have told Mozart had “simply too many notes.” She pushed for a state law requiring any performance of “The Star-Spangled Banner” in any public place performed in its entirety and without embellishment.

But it didn’t get out of committee in Indianapolis. So we’re stuck with the ridiculous self expression, forgotten words and just plain tragedy.

This year the pressure is on Burleson, Texas, singer Kelly Clarkson to get it right at the Super Bowl in Indianapolis.

So what’s your favorite worst rendition of the U.S. National Anthem?

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BYU mascot too offensive for Utah high school

(E. Joe Deering/Houston Chronicle)

A Utah high school is changing its mascot because the local school board finds it derogatory.

Corner Canyon High School won’t be the Cougars.

In slang, of course, a “cougar” can mean an older woman seeking romance with a younger man, with a connotation of promiscuity.

The high school in Draper won’t open until 2013 but students voted recently on a school name and mascot and colors. Cougars got the most votes. After all, it’s the Brigham Young mascot.

But the school board, as school boards like to do, got nervous:

Some parents and patrons emailed and called board members, saying they were uncomfortable with the idea that their daughters on the drill team and as cheer-leading squad would be called Cougars — a slang reference for mature women who attract younger men.

Other parents and students said they did not want to share a mascot with BYU …

Ultimately, the board chose to be unique, (district spokeswoman Jennifer) Toomer-Cook said, and chose a mascot that would be the only one of its kind it the state. There are three high schools in the state with cougars as mascots, including Kearns High.

So what mascot  going to get the boot next?

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Man arrested for possessing a buttock of Saddam

Statues of Iraqi military leaders wait for destruction at a government-owned art studio in Baghdad, Monday, May 19, 2003. (AP Photo/Ali Haider)

Iraqi boys play on top of a statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad, Iraq Monday April 28, 2003. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

A man in England has been arrested for possessing part of a statue of Saddam Hussein — one half of his buttocks, more accurately “a buttock” — which is a violation of the 2003 Iraq Sanctions Order prohibiting the importation of “Iraqi cultural property,” British authorities claim in a story by the Guardian.

The man was apparently working for former elite forces soldier, Nigel “Spud” Ely of the SAS, who said he saved the piece from being melted into scrap metal after he saw the statue being toppled by U.S. Marines in Baghdad in 2003.

The man who was arrested had been trying to find a buyer for the war relic, authorities told the Guardian:

As well as expressing shock at the arrest, Ely described the Iraqi authorities’ claim to be rightful owners of the bronze as “like the Elgin Marbles with attitude”.

The London-born veteran, who lives in Herefordshire, recovered the memento of Saddam’s downfall while working alongside a TV crew in April 2003 and unsuccessfully tried to auction it off in aid of injured troops last year.

… The ex-soldier asked: “How can it be classed as cultural property when it was put up by the biggest tyrant since Attila the Hun?”

Ely believes the value of the metal in the buttock is the real issue for Iraq officials: £250,000.

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