Peter Austin Noto pannoto@optonline.net |
6-1-2016 7:48 PM |
June 1 2016
I could not have written a book with such Ups an Downs
Stay strong
♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥
Stay strong
Go Go Go Peter Austin Noto
DO D HEAD
"Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a battle you know nothing about."
|
DECT 6.0 now on the IMDb message board |
6-2-2016 11:37 AM |
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3428515/board/reply/216271567
June 24, 1990 Peter Austin Noto Is On Location Filming The Fisher King Portraying A Homeless Man With Robin Williams an Jeff Bridges Currently Peter Austin Noto is dealing with Jeff Bridges to come on board an produce The Peter Austin Noto Show / AKA Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer Everything goes in a circle
Most scenes in The Fisher King were filmed in New York City an the scenes Peter Austin Noto was in was Filmed in Grand Central Station at 3 am in the morning - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html
Jeff Bridges https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1736761133212524
For More Information Please Visit PeterAustinNoto.Com @ http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/ Thank You....
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between there is Peter Austin Noto
|
DECT 6.0 now on the IMDb message board |
6-2-2016 11:37 AM |
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3428515/board/reply/216271567
June 24, 1990 Peter Austin Noto Is On Location Filming The Fisher King Portraying A Homeless Man With Robin Williams an Jeff Bridges Currently Peter Austin Noto is dealing with Jeff Bridges to come on board an produce The Peter Austin Noto Show / AKA Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer Everything goes in a circle
Most scenes in The Fisher King were filmed in New York City an the scenes Peter Austin Noto was in was Filmed in Grand Central Station at 3 am in the morning - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html
Jeff Bridges https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1736761133212524
For More Information Please Visit PeterAustinNoto.Com @ http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/ Thank You....
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between there is Peter Austin Noto
|
DECT 6.0 on fb ... guiding light |
6-3-2016 11:35 AM |
https://www.facebook.com/peter.a.noto/media_set?set=a.10207740184037167.1073742319.1070315502&type=3
When the Soap Operas ruled the world an are now gone like the dinosaurs
In New York there were 7 Soap Operas. the only one Peter Austin Noto
Did not work on was Loving
But on June 1, 1990 Peter Works On The Guiding Light As A Thief
In total Peter Austin Noto worked on 10 shows of The Guiding Light
Rare footage of Peter Austin Noto on The Guiding Light https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j8FbTJCoe4
1990-2009
Guiding Light (TV Series) Competition Judge / Photographer / Thief / ... - Episode #1.15584 (2009) ... Photographer - Episode #1.15583 (2009) ... Photographer - Episode #1.14693 (2005) ... Competition Judge - Episode #1.14692 (2005) ... Competition Judge - Episode #1.14690 (2005) ... Competition Judge - Episode #1.14685 (2005) ... Competition Judge - Episode #1.3067 (1998) ... Sheriff Don Malone - Episode #1.12642 (1997) ... Doctor - Episode dated 30 December 1990 (1990) ... Thief - Episode dated 1 August 1990 (1990) ... Thief
Home - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html News - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/news.html Peter - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter.html Multimedia - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/photos-new.html Links - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/links.html
Contact: 516-569-5160 Email: pannoto@optonline.net Website Contacts http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/links.html http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/contact.html
Saturday Night Live 97 Episodes Over 20 Years An Counting http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html The Peter Austin Noto Show 89 Episodes Over 4 Years An Counting http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-austin-noto-show.html Now Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5366356/combined
For More Information Please Visit PeterAustinNoto.Com @ http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/ Thank You....
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between there is Peter Austin Noto |
NIGHTBIRD RIP Muhammad Ali |
6-4-2016 6:48 PM |
RIP Muhammad Ali https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvU9uFq871Q Maybe the best 2 fighters to ever live Muhammad Ali Vs. Joe Frazier Follow The Peter Austin Noto Show On The Internet http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-...
Follow The Peter Austin Noto Show On You Tube http://www.youtube.com/user/PeterAust...
Follow The Peter Austin Noto Show On Facebook 1 https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAust...
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Follow The Peter Austin Noto Show On The IMDb Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer 1 https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/ Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer 2 https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-and-Jennifer-318872574941054/?ref=aymt_homepage_panel SAG-AFTRA PRODUCTIONS |
Acorn I LIKE THIS |
6-5-2016 11:04 AM |
ali frazier march 8 1971
March 8, 1971 http://espn.go.com/classic/s/silver_ali_frazier.html
It was advertised simply as "THE FIGHT." No other words were necessary. The stupendous Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier showdown of March 8, 1971 was perhaps the most anticipated event in all of sports history.
It was a match between two great undefeated heavyweight champions that by itself would have been enough to capture the attention of millions of fans. But it was the added dimensions of politics, religion, race, and ego Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali were both undefeated when they met March 8, 1971. whipped to a frenzy by the most charismatic and controversial athlete of the 20th Century that would capture the attention of hundreds of millions of people throughout the world, most of whom had never even seen a professional boxing match.
It was an event that transcended sport.
Boxing, in its naked violently simplistic mano á mano way, was the perfect metaphor. To the masses Frazier and Ali had come to represent more than themselves.
It all began innocently enough. Ali, fighting under his given name of Cassius Clay, had won the Olympic light heavyweight title in 1960 and the heavyweight championship of the world at the age of 22 by defeating the seemingly invincible brute Sonny Liston in 1964. Spouting poetry and predicting the round in which his opponents would fall, the brash youngster was colorful, engaging, quick witted, and a master showman.
The self-proclaimed "Greatest" was a boxing phenomenon. He had incredibly fast hands and cat-like reflexes. His handsome face was rarely hit. Clay personified his motto to "float like a butterfly and sting like a bee." The boxing world, indeed the sports world, had never seen anything like him.
But everything changed the day after he won the title. He announced to the world he was a member of the Black Muslims, a hitherto little known black separatist movement that practiced the religion of Islam, espoused self help for the Negro race, and preached that the white man was the devil.
The new champion said that he would no longer be known by his slave name Cassius Clay. “ I don't have to be what you want me to be. I'm free to be who I want. ” — Muhammad Ali He would now be known as Cassius X. He spoke to the assembled reporters but his words were aimed at the white establishment when he stated that "I don't have to be what you want me to be. I am free to be who I want."
Three weeks later the leader of the sect, Elijah Mohammed, conferred upon Cassius X his new Muslim name -- Muhammad Ali.
Ali, backed by the Black Muslims, was announcing to the world that he was breaking free of the role that had traditionally been assigned to Black heavyweight champions.
Yet, in many ways, Ali never really stopped being Cassius Clay. He could still be funny and creative when promoting his fights just as he was before he won the title. Then again, when preaching Black Muslim dogma, he could be humorless and truculent even to the point of taunting and cruelly punishing black opponents (Floyd Patterson and Ernie Terrell) who refused to call him by his Muslim name. Boxing's established old guard felt betrayed and angry and hoped that he would soon be dethroned. No such luck. Ali was just too good a fighter. From 1965 to 1967 he defended his title nine times. No challenger ever came close to defeating him. He was proud of his defensive skill, often boasting that no one would ever know if he could take a punch because he did not intend to ever have to prove that he could.
Muhammad Ali, boxer and public figure, had his detractors and his supporters but whatever criticism and controversy he had encountered in the past was nothing compared to what was to come. He was about to be thrust onto a stage much larger than a boxing ring. The turbulent, crazy decade of the 1960s was about to shift into high gear.
In 1967, with the United States fighting a war in Vietnam, Muhammad Ali, the heavyweight champion of the world, refused to step forward and accept induction into the Army. Ali, stating that he was a Muslim minister, claimed conscientious objector status on the grounds that his religion forbade him to participate in a war. It should be understood that there were already hundreds of thousands of Americans doing service in the jungles and rice paddies of Vietnam. Almost 30,000 had already been killed. Ali was denounced as a draft dodger. Several congressmen took the opportunity to vilify him and questioned his patriotism and motives.
ESPN Classic events SportsCentury: Muhammad Ali
Boxing commissions throughout the country were quick to strip him of his title and suspend his license to box.
Two months later, on June 20, 1967, Ali was convicted of draft evasion and sentenced to five years in prison.
While Ali was free on bail, pending the appeals process, his lawyers tried to restore his boxing license. It was to no avail; Ali was a pariah.
But not to everyone.
The controversial war in Vietnam had created an active anti-war movement comprised mostly of college students. Ali, running low on funds, accepted invitations to speak on college campuses. The defrocked champion may have been barley literate but he certainly was not verbally challenged. His lively lectures were well received. He spoke about his views on race, religious philosophy, and the war. Since the boxing establishment had already started the process of crowning a new heavyweight champion Ali always ended his speeches by asking the audience to tell him who the real heavyweight champion was. He was obviously pleased to hear the familiar chant of "Ali, Ali." The counter culture had a new hero.
The country was split between those supporting our efforts in Vietnam and those opposed to the war. Hawks, doves, hard hats, flower children, black power, Woodstock, Kent State and the silent majority were bywords for the most divisive American decade since the American Civil War some 100 years earlier.
This was also a time of activism and militancy for many black Americans involved in the civil rights movement, especially after the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy in 1968.
While all this was going on the boxing promoters were conducting a series of tournaments to find a successor to Muhammad Ali.
Rising to the top of the heavyweight heap like some unstoppable force of nature was a human wrecking ball named Joe Frazier. He was one of 13 children born dirt-poor on a farm in rural South Carolina. He had come to Philadelphia as a married 16-year-old and was working in a kosher slaughterhouse when he first took up boxing. As an amateur Joe won three Golden Gloves titles and, in 1964, the Olympic heavyweight championship. Over the next five years, using his feared left hook like a meat cleaver, he knocked out 23 of 26 opponents.
Frazier was vilified by Ali and many members of the media. In many ways he was the exact opposite of Ali both in style and personality. Frazier was a pure puncher. He constantly pressured opponents, hands always in motion, head down, moving ever forward out of a low crouch and throwing his destructive left hook out of a bob and weave. He never stopped throwing punches until his opponent dropped.
It was a style that was meant to vex a stand-up boxer like Ali.
Frazier was a decent, hardworking, law abiding, church going family man, who was too busy trying to support his growing family to get involved in any causes.
The anti-Ali crowd had found their man, although Joe did not care to be looked upon as a symbol of anything other than who he was.
So impressive was Frazier in victory that many fans thought he had a good chance to defeat Ali on the best day the ex-champion ever saw. Ali instinctively sensed that this was the perfect opponent for him physically and psychologically. And even though he now had been out of the ring over three years he was as confident of victory as was Frazier.
Ali never lost an opportunity to demean and belittle Frazier's ability and insist that he and not some pretender was the real heavyweight champion. Of course it was meant to hype the gate for a possible fight. But try as he might Ali was never able to ruffle Joe's feathers. Smokin' Joe was a cool customer who was happiest and most comfortable beating up opponents. He would silence this braggart in the ring. The stage was being set for an epic confrontation.
It was now the summer of 1970. Ali had not fought in almost 3½ years. Even if he was allowed to come back how much had the layoff affected his magnificent skills?
The world was about to find out.
Through a quirky set of circumstances, helped by a changing political climate and a friendly black state senator, Ali was granted a boxing license in Atlanta, Georgia, of all places. Not wanting to go in against Frazier without some tune-up fights, Ali chose to meet the No. 1 contender, Jerry Quarry, on October 26, 1970 in the 6,000-seat municipal auditorium.
What irony! A controversial black activist and war resister meeting a white opponent in Atlanta, Georgia. It was the biggest night Atlanta had seen since the opening of "Gone With The Wind" some 30 years earlier.
The 28-year-old Ali dominated Quarry for the three rounds the fight lasted until a bad cut over Quarry's left eye forced a stoppage. Although an impressive victory it was too short a fight to evaluate Ali's true condition.
Ali's situation was steadily improving. A New York State Judge ruled that his boxing license had been revoked unfairly and ordered it reinstated. This opened the way for another tune-up fight in New York against top-rated contender Oscar Bonavena.
On December 7th, 1970 in New York's Madison Square Garden, Muhammad Ali knocked out the awkward and very strong Argentinean in the 15th and final round for his 30th straight victory. Up until the spectacular knockout it had been a tough and grueling fight. Boxing people saw that Ali's legs had slowed down and he did not move with the same fluid speed and accuracy that he had before his long layoff. But he did win, was still undefeated, and had three months to prepare for his showdown with Joe Frazier.
The countdown had begun.
The Fight
The match was set for March 8, 1971 at Madison Square Garden. Each man was guaranteed $2.5 million dollars, the largest single payday for any entertainer or athlete at the time. Tickets to the Garden would be made available to the general public by mail on a first come first served basis. Prices in the arena ranged from $20 for a balcony seat to $150 for ringside. Hundreds of other locations throughout the U.S. and Canada would screen the fight via closed circuit television to fans paying $5 to $15.
Interest in the event was incredible. Radio, television, and the print media were filled with stories discussing the upcoming fight. Tension and anticipation were building by the hour. Few athletic events, be it World Series, Super Bowl or World Cup, had come even close to generating the type of excitement and attention that this prizefight was getting.
Fifty countries had purchased rights to the telecast. Frank Sinatra photographed the fight for Life Magazine. The fight was broadcast from ringside in 12 different languages. When the final tallies were added up it was estimated that 300 million people around the globe had watched the fight. It was the largest audience ever for a television broadcast up to that time. More people had tuned into the fight than had watched the moon landing two years before. In the end the fight grossed between 18 and 20 million dollars word wide of which less than $1,500,000 came from television money outside the United States and Canada. But the United States and Canada provided only 1,500,000 viewers.
Although oddsmakers made Frazier a slight 6 to 5 favorite Ali's supporters were not perturbed. Their belief in him was total. It went beyond his skill as a boxer. To them he was more than just a boxer-he was a symbol. He could not lose. Ali agreed and predicted that Frazier "will fall in six."
Ali had an 8½-inch advantage in reach, 4-inches in height (6'3" to 5'11") and weighed 215 lbs. to Joe's 205½.
The night of the fight was electric. As the fighters made their way towards the ring hearts pounded and pulses raced. Everyone was on their feet. The Garden, filled to capacity with 20,455 spectators, was brimming with celebrities. But not everyone of note was able to get choice seating. Hubert Humphrey, the ex-vice president of the United States, was sitting in the mezzanine! Frank Sinatra had one of the best seats in the house. He was hired by Life Magazine (although he would gladly have paid them for the privilege) to photograph the fight from the ring apron. The overflow of stars who couldn't get into the Garden, like Bing Crosby, were to be found at Radio City Music Hall whose 6,500 seats had sold out three weeks earlier. Virtually every other closed circuit television location was also filled to capacity.
While both fighters waited for the introductions Ali, gliding around the ring, twice brushed Frazier's shoulder as he moved past him. The crowd reacted with a roar. Frazier glared at Ali contemptuously.
Then the house lights dimmed. The tension was almost unbearable. The fans were still on their feet when the bell rang. The fight was on!
Joe came out bobbing and weaving, edging in towards Ali, trying to get under his jab and land the hook to his body or head. Ali was using his footwork to keep Joe at a distance. But most of his jabs were missing the target as Frazier's head moved quickly to avoid them. Ali seemed surprised by Frazier's speed.
By the third round Ali had come off his toes and was fighting uncharacteristically flatfooted perhaps to save energy. Frazier was setting an incredible pace. He seemed almost maniacal, throwing more punches in one round than most heavyweights throw in an entire fight. But Ali was picking his spots and landing hard counter punches and powerful jabs.
The sixth round came and went and with it Ali's predicted knockout. Frazier laughed derisively at him at the end of the round.
The fight was being fought with a brutal intensity rarely seen in any prizefight. Each man was fighting as if he had a point to prove. This was a genuine grudge match and it was being fought like one.
Ali could not keep up the torrid pace. He was allowing Frazier to pin him against the ropes, something he would never have done in previous fights. It appeared that Ali could no longer move with the old speed and lightness of foot. Even so, as the bell rang for the start of the 11th round, it was still anybody's fight.
Joe Frazier lands one of his trademark left hooks. Suddenly, with a minute to go in the round, Frazier caught Ali with a tremendous left hook to the jaw that caused his knees to sag. He tried to fool Frazier into thinking he was just playing possum but he was genuinely hurt. He barley made it to the end of the round. The pace slowed a bit in the next two rounds as both men seemed to be conserving what energy they had left for the homestretch. In the 14th round Ali, drawing on some mysterious inner resource, staged a miraculous comeback and pounded Frazier with some of his best punches of the fight.
Now entering the final round both men were exhausted but still punching.
And then it happened.
Frazier lashed out with another of his countless left hooks only this one landed flush on Ali's exposed jaw. He went down hard, flat on his back, legs in the air. Incredibly Ali bounced up at the count of three and made it to the final bell.
If anyone still had any doubts as to who deserved to win the fight it was settled with that one left hook that dropped Ali for only the third time in his career.
The unanimous decision went to Frazier. He deserved it. But Ali too deserved the accolades due him for a tremendous effort. No one would ever again question his ability to take a punch.
The fight ranks as one of boxing's all-time classics.
EPILOGUE: On June 27, 1971, by a vote of 8-0 (Justice Thurgood Marshall abstaining) the United States Supreme Court cleared Muhammad Ali of the charge that he refused induction into the Armed Forces.
Michael Silver is a boxing historian, media consultant, and journalist whose articles on boxing have appeared in numerous publications including Ring Magazine, Boxing Monthly and the New York Times.
ali frazier march 8 1971 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPZfT8NjQt8
|
Acorn I LIKE THIS |
6-5-2016 11:04 AM |
ali frazier march 8 1971
March 8, 1971 http://espn.go.com/classic/s/silver_ali_frazier.html
It was advertised simply as "THE FIGHT." No other words were necessary. The stupendous Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier showdown of March 8, 1971 was perhaps the most anticipated event in all of sports history.
It was a match between two great undefeated heavyweight champions that by itself would have been enough to capture the attention of millions of fans. But it was the added dimensions of politics, religion, race, and ego Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali were both undefeated when they met March 8, 1971. whipped to a frenzy by the most charismatic and controversial athlete of the 20th Century that would capture the attention of hundreds of millions of people throughout the world, most of whom had never even seen a professional boxing match.
It was an event that transcended sport.
Boxing, in its naked violently simplistic mano á mano way, was the perfect metaphor. To the masses Frazier and Ali had come to represent more than themselves.
It all began innocently enough. Ali, fighting under his given name of Cassius Clay, had won the Olympic light heavyweight title in 1960 and the heavyweight championship of the world at the age of 22 by defeating the seemingly invincible brute Sonny Liston in 1964. Spouting poetry and predicting the round in which his opponents would fall, the brash youngster was colorful, engaging, quick witted, and a master showman.
The self-proclaimed "Greatest" was a boxing phenomenon. He had incredibly fast hands and cat-like reflexes. His handsome face was rarely hit. Clay personified his motto to "float like a butterfly and sting like a bee." The boxing world, indeed the sports world, had never seen anything like him.
But everything changed the day after he won the title. He announced to the world he was a member of the Black Muslims, a hitherto little known black separatist movement that practiced the religion of Islam, espoused self help for the Negro race, and preached that the white man was the devil.
The new champion said that he would no longer be known by his slave name Cassius Clay. “ I don't have to be what you want me to be. I'm free to be who I want. ” — Muhammad Ali He would now be known as Cassius X. He spoke to the assembled reporters but his words were aimed at the white establishment when he stated that "I don't have to be what you want me to be. I am free to be who I want."
Three weeks later the leader of the sect, Elijah Mohammed, conferred upon Cassius X his new Muslim name -- Muhammad Ali.
Ali, backed by the Black Muslims, was announcing to the world that he was breaking free of the role that had traditionally been assigned to Black heavyweight champions.
Yet, in many ways, Ali never really stopped being Cassius Clay. He could still be funny and creative when promoting his fights just as he was before he won the title. Then again, when preaching Black Muslim dogma, he could be humorless and truculent even to the point of taunting and cruelly punishing black opponents (Floyd Patterson and Ernie Terrell) who refused to call him by his Muslim name. Boxing's established old guard felt betrayed and angry and hoped that he would soon be dethroned. No such luck. Ali was just too good a fighter. From 1965 to 1967 he defended his title nine times. No challenger ever came close to defeating him. He was proud of his defensive skill, often boasting that no one would ever know if he could take a punch because he did not intend to ever have to prove that he could.
Muhammad Ali, boxer and public figure, had his detractors and his supporters but whatever criticism and controversy he had encountered in the past was nothing compared to what was to come. He was about to be thrust onto a stage much larger than a boxing ring. The turbulent, crazy decade of the 1960s was about to shift into high gear.
In 1967, with the United States fighting a war in Vietnam, Muhammad Ali, the heavyweight champion of the world, refused to step forward and accept induction into the Army. Ali, stating that he was a Muslim minister, claimed conscientious objector status on the grounds that his religion forbade him to participate in a war. It should be understood that there were already hundreds of thousands of Americans doing service in the jungles and rice paddies of Vietnam. Almost 30,000 had already been killed. Ali was denounced as a draft dodger. Several congressmen took the opportunity to vilify him and questioned his patriotism and motives.
ESPN Classic events SportsCentury: Muhammad Ali
Boxing commissions throughout the country were quick to strip him of his title and suspend his license to box.
Two months later, on June 20, 1967, Ali was convicted of draft evasion and sentenced to five years in prison.
While Ali was free on bail, pending the appeals process, his lawyers tried to restore his boxing license. It was to no avail; Ali was a pariah.
But not to everyone.
The controversial war in Vietnam had created an active anti-war movement comprised mostly of college students. Ali, running low on funds, accepted invitations to speak on college campuses. The defrocked champion may have been barley literate but he certainly was not verbally challenged. His lively lectures were well received. He spoke about his views on race, religious philosophy, and the war. Since the boxing establishment had already started the process of crowning a new heavyweight champion Ali always ended his speeches by asking the audience to tell him who the real heavyweight champion was. He was obviously pleased to hear the familiar chant of "Ali, Ali." The counter culture had a new hero.
The country was split between those supporting our efforts in Vietnam and those opposed to the war. Hawks, doves, hard hats, flower children, black power, Woodstock, Kent State and the silent majority were bywords for the most divisive American decade since the American Civil War some 100 years earlier.
This was also a time of activism and militancy for many black Americans involved in the civil rights movement, especially after the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy in 1968.
While all this was going on the boxing promoters were conducting a series of tournaments to find a successor to Muhammad Ali.
Rising to the top of the heavyweight heap like some unstoppable force of nature was a human wrecking ball named Joe Frazier. He was one of 13 children born dirt-poor on a farm in rural South Carolina. He had come to Philadelphia as a married 16-year-old and was working in a kosher slaughterhouse when he first took up boxing. As an amateur Joe won three Golden Gloves titles and, in 1964, the Olympic heavyweight championship. Over the next five years, using his feared left hook like a meat cleaver, he knocked out 23 of 26 opponents.
Frazier was vilified by Ali and many members of the media. In many ways he was the exact opposite of Ali both in style and personality. Frazier was a pure puncher. He constantly pressured opponents, hands always in motion, head down, moving ever forward out of a low crouch and throwing his destructive left hook out of a bob and weave. He never stopped throwing punches until his opponent dropped.
It was a style that was meant to vex a stand-up boxer like Ali.
Frazier was a decent, hardworking, law abiding, church going family man, who was too busy trying to support his growing family to get involved in any causes.
The anti-Ali crowd had found their man, although Joe did not care to be looked upon as a symbol of anything other than who he was.
So impressive was Frazier in victory that many fans thought he had a good chance to defeat Ali on the best day the ex-champion ever saw. Ali instinctively sensed that this was the perfect opponent for him physically and psychologically. And even though he now had been out of the ring over three years he was as confident of victory as was Frazier.
Ali never lost an opportunity to demean and belittle Frazier's ability and insist that he and not some pretender was the real heavyweight champion. Of course it was meant to hype the gate for a possible fight. But try as he might Ali was never able to ruffle Joe's feathers. Smokin' Joe was a cool customer who was happiest and most comfortable beating up opponents. He would silence this braggart in the ring. The stage was being set for an epic confrontation.
It was now the summer of 1970. Ali had not fought in almost 3½ years. Even if he was allowed to come back how much had the layoff affected his magnificent skills?
The world was about to find out.
Through a quirky set of circumstances, helped by a changing political climate and a friendly black state senator, Ali was granted a boxing license in Atlanta, Georgia, of all places. Not wanting to go in against Frazier without some tune-up fights, Ali chose to meet the No. 1 contender, Jerry Quarry, on October 26, 1970 in the 6,000-seat municipal auditorium.
What irony! A controversial black activist and war resister meeting a white opponent in Atlanta, Georgia. It was the biggest night Atlanta had seen since the opening of "Gone With The Wind" some 30 years earlier.
The 28-year-old Ali dominated Quarry for the three rounds the fight lasted until a bad cut over Quarry's left eye forced a stoppage. Although an impressive victory it was too short a fight to evaluate Ali's true condition.
Ali's situation was steadily improving. A New York State Judge ruled that his boxing license had been revoked unfairly and ordered it reinstated. This opened the way for another tune-up fight in New York against top-rated contender Oscar Bonavena.
On December 7th, 1970 in New York's Madison Square Garden, Muhammad Ali knocked out the awkward and very strong Argentinean in the 15th and final round for his 30th straight victory. Up until the spectacular knockout it had been a tough and grueling fight. Boxing people saw that Ali's legs had slowed down and he did not move with the same fluid speed and accuracy that he had before his long layoff. But he did win, was still undefeated, and had three months to prepare for his showdown with Joe Frazier.
The countdown had begun.
The Fight
The match was set for March 8, 1971 at Madison Square Garden. Each man was guaranteed $2.5 million dollars, the largest single payday for any entertainer or athlete at the time. Tickets to the Garden would be made available to the general public by mail on a first come first served basis. Prices in the arena ranged from $20 for a balcony seat to $150 for ringside. Hundreds of other locations throughout the U.S. and Canada would screen the fight via closed circuit television to fans paying $5 to $15.
Interest in the event was incredible. Radio, television, and the print media were filled with stories discussing the upcoming fight. Tension and anticipation were building by the hour. Few athletic events, be it World Series, Super Bowl or World Cup, had come even close to generating the type of excitement and attention that this prizefight was getting.
Fifty countries had purchased rights to the telecast. Frank Sinatra photographed the fight for Life Magazine. The fight was broadcast from ringside in 12 different languages. When the final tallies were added up it was estimated that 300 million people around the globe had watched the fight. It was the largest audience ever for a television broadcast up to that time. More people had tuned into the fight than had watched the moon landing two years before. In the end the fight grossed between 18 and 20 million dollars word wide of which less than $1,500,000 came from television money outside the United States and Canada. But the United States and Canada provided only 1,500,000 viewers.
Although oddsmakers made Frazier a slight 6 to 5 favorite Ali's supporters were not perturbed. Their belief in him was total. It went beyond his skill as a boxer. To them he was more than just a boxer-he was a symbol. He could not lose. Ali agreed and predicted that Frazier "will fall in six."
Ali had an 8½-inch advantage in reach, 4-inches in height (6'3" to 5'11") and weighed 215 lbs. to Joe's 205½.
The night of the fight was electric. As the fighters made their way towards the ring hearts pounded and pulses raced. Everyone was on their feet. The Garden, filled to capacity with 20,455 spectators, was brimming with celebrities. But not everyone of note was able to get choice seating. Hubert Humphrey, the ex-vice president of the United States, was sitting in the mezzanine! Frank Sinatra had one of the best seats in the house. He was hired by Life Magazine (although he would gladly have paid them for the privilege) to photograph the fight from the ring apron. The overflow of stars who couldn't get into the Garden, like Bing Crosby, were to be found at Radio City Music Hall whose 6,500 seats had sold out three weeks earlier. Virtually every other closed circuit television location was also filled to capacity.
While both fighters waited for the introductions Ali, gliding around the ring, twice brushed Frazier's shoulder as he moved past him. The crowd reacted with a roar. Frazier glared at Ali contemptuously.
Then the house lights dimmed. The tension was almost unbearable. The fans were still on their feet when the bell rang. The fight was on!
Joe came out bobbing and weaving, edging in towards Ali, trying to get under his jab and land the hook to his body or head. Ali was using his footwork to keep Joe at a distance. But most of his jabs were missing the target as Frazier's head moved quickly to avoid them. Ali seemed surprised by Frazier's speed.
By the third round Ali had come off his toes and was fighting uncharacteristically flatfooted perhaps to save energy. Frazier was setting an incredible pace. He seemed almost maniacal, throwing more punches in one round than most heavyweights throw in an entire fight. But Ali was picking his spots and landing hard counter punches and powerful jabs.
The sixth round came and went and with it Ali's predicted knockout. Frazier laughed derisively at him at the end of the round.
The fight was being fought with a brutal intensity rarely seen in any prizefight. Each man was fighting as if he had a point to prove. This was a genuine grudge match and it was being fought like one.
Ali could not keep up the torrid pace. He was allowing Frazier to pin him against the ropes, something he would never have done in previous fights. It appeared that Ali could no longer move with the old speed and lightness of foot. Even so, as the bell rang for the start of the 11th round, it was still anybody's fight.
Joe Frazier lands one of his trademark left hooks. Suddenly, with a minute to go in the round, Frazier caught Ali with a tremendous left hook to the jaw that caused his knees to sag. He tried to fool Frazier into thinking he was just playing possum but he was genuinely hurt. He barley made it to the end of the round. The pace slowed a bit in the next two rounds as both men seemed to be conserving what energy they had left for the homestretch. In the 14th round Ali, drawing on some mysterious inner resource, staged a miraculous comeback and pounded Frazier with some of his best punches of the fight.
Now entering the final round both men were exhausted but still punching.
And then it happened.
Frazier lashed out with another of his countless left hooks only this one landed flush on Ali's exposed jaw. He went down hard, flat on his back, legs in the air. Incredibly Ali bounced up at the count of three and made it to the final bell.
If anyone still had any doubts as to who deserved to win the fight it was settled with that one left hook that dropped Ali for only the third time in his career.
The unanimous decision went to Frazier. He deserved it. But Ali too deserved the accolades due him for a tremendous effort. No one would ever again question his ability to take a punch.
The fight ranks as one of boxing's all-time classics.
EPILOGUE: On June 27, 1971, by a vote of 8-0 (Justice Thurgood Marshall abstaining) the United States Supreme Court cleared Muhammad Ali of the charge that he refused induction into the Armed Forces.
Michael Silver is a boxing historian, media consultant, and journalist whose articles on boxing have appeared in numerous publications including Ring Magazine, Boxing Monthly and the New York Times.
ali frazier march 8 1971 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPZfT8NjQt8
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Acorn I LIKE THIS |
6-6-2016 07:18 AM |
June 6 1945 - June 6 1948
hydrate
Girl |
Acorn I LIKE THIS |
6-6-2016 07:18 AM |
June 6 1945 - June 6 1948
hydrate
Girl |
Strider tpanshow@gmail.com |
6-7-2016 12:21 PM |
Lorna and The Chefs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHG53KfoyFo On The Peter Austin Noto Show As beautiful as a video that ever was The Peter Austin Noto Show On The Internet: http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-austin-noto-show.html
The Peter Austin Noto Show On You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ShpWevnP2SUmO2UIO433w
The Peter Austin Noto Show On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/timeline
Peter Austin Noto http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html
The Peter Austin Noto Show On The IMD http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5701612/combined Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-and-Jennifer-318872574941054/ https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/ You Can Be Part Of Magic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3sqBblAudY You can be a part of The Peter Austin Noto Show An Its New Sister Show Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-and-Jennifer-318872574941054/ https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/
With a Donation of $2000 or more you will be part of a established winning Show Producer credit, be on the set while taping Free intreraction with star guests Guaranteed an much more. The Larger The Donation equals Larger Perks
An Your Dreams Can Come True as a TV executive: Please contact to start tpanshow@gmail.com or pannoto@optonline.net Thank you
A SAG-AFTRA PRODUCTION |
mack a more good luck |
6-8-2016 12:31 PM |
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Slazenger Chinked tpanshow@gmail.com |
6-9-2016 12:57 PM |
Slazenger Chinked in his confutation took a wrong turn rolling home an he’s on the side of the Grand Central Parkway in New York Now ......... He has been gone since before Christmas 2015 Fighting ISIS then rolling his way to safety across Europe an then mounts floating in N. Atlantic “Salty” as he now refers to himself is just a bald head, who smokes a cigar with no arms an legs an wears a bow tie an is a emocon He has been one of the main GAG writers for The Peter Austin Noto Show NOW Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer He transmitted on his CB Radio that he hopes to finally be home in a few days My name is Slazenger Chinked The creator of all things The Peter Austin Noto Show An NOW Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer http://i5.ifrm.com/3429/97 Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-and-Jennifer-318872574941054/ https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/ The Peter Austin Noto Show On The Internet: http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-austin-noto-show.html The Peter Austin Noto Show On You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ShpWevnP2SUmO2UIO433w The Peter Austin Noto Show On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/timeline Peter Austin Noto http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html The Peter Austin Noto Show On The IMD http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5701612/combined A SAG-AFTRA PRODUCTION |
CRACKER good luck |
6-10-2016 1:07 PM |
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Ellen Grade pannoto@optonline.net |
6-11-2016 4:17 PM |
REMIX ... Born To Be In Love With You https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Z28rRrWsZM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SC-rbsR1p-w http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBKQ79Vurg With Peter Austin Noto ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You can be a part of The Peter Austin Noto Show An Its New Sister Show Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-and-Jennifer-318872574941054/ https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/ With a Donation of $2000 or more you will be part of a established winning Show Producer credit, be on the set while taping Free intreraction with star guests Guaranteed an much more. The Larger The Donation equals Larger Perks An Your Dreams Can Come True as a TV executive: Please contact to start tpanshow@gmail.com or pannoto@optonline.net Thank you
The Peter Austin Noto Show On The Internet: http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-austin-noto-show.html
The Peter Austin Noto Show On You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ShpWevnP2SUmO2UIO433w
The Peter Austin Noto Show On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/timeline
Peter Austin Noto http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html
The Peter Austin Noto Show On The IMD http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5701612/combined
A SAG-AFTRA PRODUCTION Hi Peter,
This is a long shot, but do you by chance still have a copy of the audio cassette you did that hilarious video to in '86 that you posted? I'm currently working with Peter Lemongello (and he's a good friend too), and was considering remaking that arrangement of the tune (and id need it to learn it to produce it). I showed him your vid and he was shocked someone had a copy of that version at one point, as it was unreleased. He tried to look for the tape and could not find it. So, im takin a chance here seeing if you may still have a copy of the cassette with the tune on it. Any help appreciated. And BTW - your hilarious! Love what ive seen of you here on youtube.
Best, Jimmy Michaels ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MORE PHOTOS...HOW ODD ........................LOL http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/EZ-PhotoAlbum/FunNowThen/NowAndThen-000800.html For More Information Please Visit PeterAustinNoto.Com @ http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/ Thank You....
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between there is Peter Austin Noto |
Slazenger Chinked tpanshow@gmail.com |
6-12-2016 1:20 PM |
its me.......I'm now rolling on shoulder of road an my walk E talkie tells me it is the Grand Central Parkway in NY heading to Long Island an home https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8HEO7ySLpo Rolling on shoulder of road is dangerous ...bits an pieces all over road .. car parts .. animal parts ..an God knows what else........................................ cars driving buy 60 ..70 miles an hour ..they run over my head ..think squeezing a tomato...an I thought ..ISIS an EUROPE was bad........... Then floating an frozen in N. Atlantic..how did I get chosen for this ....where's my cigar ...plus my head from rolling on this c**p ....OUCH..errrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr I’m rolling at a slow pace ..the transistor radio estimates I'm 10 to 15 miles away from home .. but I'm moving very slowly (slowly I turn)......this may be the hardest part of this It could take me days ...I need .......... a hospital ....................I love the big guy ......don’t get me wrong ......but holy smokes BATMAN........................An once home ........................ I’ll be right back to work .......normally I’m the brains .. behind the process .. so I'm sure he misses me .......I just miss my chair an cigar .......................................................................... Most of the time I'm in an out of consciousness............. ..........an when there's traffic .. the exhaust from the cars .....people throwing things at me head .. my bow tie is filthy......along with my head Ahh .. a jobs a job ..I guess ................he'll probably pay me in chicken an pond cake and as of now that is fine with me...I'm tired now .... so I role onto a grassy knoll (like the Secruter film ..JFK) .................an put leaves over my head.....................OK I'm in position now ...OH look .........here come the dogs ....................aY ...Vey .............Slazenger Chinked.... My name is Slazenger Chinked The creator of all things The Peter Austin Noto Show An NOW Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer http://i5.ifrm.com/3429/97 Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-an…/ https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/
The Peter Austin Noto Show On The Internet: http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-austin-noto-show.html
The Peter Austin Noto Show On You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ShpWevnP2SUmO2UIO433w
The Peter Austin Noto Show On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/timeline
Peter Austin Noto http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html
The Peter Austin Noto Show On The IMD http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5701612/combined
A SAG-AFTRA
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Sinbad The purest form of acting that ever was |
6-13-2016 12:57 PM |
The purest form of acting that ever was ........ outside of Pete an Dave of course .................. an when will The Peter Austin Noto Show / Cyber / Dezi an Lucy go live again You can find out here - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/
The In-Laws From Hell Part 1 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zg0kRnGJ6k ------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 2 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NF_SK0WNYwM --------------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 3 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8h_o7nm-Iao ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 4 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QAf1xWhpsM0 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 5 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5svRjp8Vrs -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 6 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPEHFGdPEW4 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 7 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1feJHeGxHo ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The In-Laws From Hell Part 8 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SMpbxRwn6Mo ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The In-Laws From Hell Part 9 Starring Peter Austin Noto an Judy Vianest https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTOlx40viVc チェックしました THE PETER AUSTIN NOTO SHOW https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow?ref=aymt_homepage_panel
Home - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html News - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/news.html Peter - http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter.html Multimedia- http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/photos-new.html Links- http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/links.html
BONUS VIDEO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5vCtonQuIk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70ZtwdoQpuY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5co3siokCI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVihotUFPdI BONUS VIDEO
For More Information Please Visit PeterAustinNoto.Com @ http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/ Thank You....
Come In With The Milk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vumeBHJxTE Come In With The Milk
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between there is Peter Austin Noto ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ ▒▒▒▒▓▒▒▓▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▒▓▓▒▓▓▓▓ ▒▒▒▒▓▒▒▓▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▒▓▓▒▓▓▓▓ ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ ▒▓▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▒▓▒▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▒▓ ▒▒▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▒▒▓▓▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▓ ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ |
Ellen Grade pannoto@optonline.net |
6-14-2016 4:10 PM |
June 14 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhVN6DwQemY Cast (Episode Cast) (in credits order)
Peter Austin Noto ... Host
Jennifer Nuccitelli ... Co Host
Scott Churchson ... Finger contortionist
April Brucker ... Puppeteer Hashim Locario ... Love Doctor Miljana Monic ... Fashion model
Directed by Peter Austin Noto (series director) Writing credits (in alphabetical order) Peter Austin Noto creator
Produced by Peter Austin Noto .... executive producer Camera and Electrical Department Ellen Wolff .... camera operator Other crew Rakesh Shah .... production assistant
Writing credits (in alphabetical order) Ellen Grade developer Peter Austin Noto creator
With Cast: Peter Austin Noto - Scott Churchson - Ellen Wolff April Brucker - Rakesh Shah - Hashim Trends Locario Jennifer Lynn Nuccitelli - Miljana Mo Cyber Entertainment with Peter and Jennifer https://www.facebook.com/Cyber-Entertainment-with-Peter-an…/ https://www.facebook.com/cewpaj/ The Peter Austin Noto Show On The Internet: http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/peter-austin-noto-show.html The Peter Austin Noto Show On You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ShpWevnP2SUmO2UIO433w The Peter Austin Noto Show On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePeterAustinNotoShow/timeline Peter Austin Noto http://www.peteraustinnoto.com/index.html The Peter Austin Noto Show On The IMD http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5701612/combined A SAG-AFTRA PRODUCTION |
CRACKER GOOD LUCK |
6-15-2016 4:20 PM |
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v kell come inside me p! |
6-16-2016 11:18 AM |
- come inside me p!
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super girl now 38 |
6-17-2016 11:10 AM |
fwt . . xoxxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxoxxoxox
soon . .xxoxoxoxxoxoxoxooxoxoxxoxoxoxo |
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