<![CDATA[Gawker: top ten]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: top ten]]> http://gawker.com/tag/topten http://gawker.com/tag/topten <![CDATA[Video: Tonys Host Neil Patrick Harris Does Letterman's Obligatory 'Top 10' Tonys List]]> In case you need reminding: Teh Geigh Awardz The 2009 Antoinette Perry Awards, AKA, THE TONYS! [sparklehands] are tomorrow. We'll be covering them more throughout the weekend, but first up: your yearly Letterman Top Ten Tonys List.

Other than a wink-wink reference to Jeremy Piven's sushi fiasco and a reference to Harris being openly gay, the jokes run slightly stale, and a little dry. Thankfully, Harris is charming and modest enough to not work them harder than he needs to. Also, he clearly read them beforehand:

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Truth be told, this is actually a solid demonstration as to why Harris is going to make a solid Tonys host. He's done his fair share of theater, he's a fan and an advocate for the art, he's modest, charming, funny, and yes, openly gay, which circumvents the entire awkwardness of CBS trying to capture an audience outside of the nation's theater dorks by playing the Tonys as "straight" as possible. Each year's Tony awards is an attempt to pull a national audience into theater, and on both sides (both the American Theater Wing and CBS), this was probably a no-brainer: CBS loves him because of his 'How I Met Your Mother' following. Theater people love him. And he's got the chops to carry yet another industry's ridiculously self-congratulatory, reach-around-y awards ceremony. This should be a decent show.

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<![CDATA[Top Ten Moments of Obama's Inauguration]]> Would you like a day's worth of American Promise and Democracy summed up in ten brief internet videos? Yes you can click and watch the top ten moments of the Inauguration!

First and foremost: the speech, which is the point of the endeavor. There was and is too much hype surrounding the entire occasion to watch the speech with anything approaching a clear eye. But this was a nice bit.

Second: Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts confuses President Obama by flubbing the Oath of Office! The "misreading the Constitution" jokes have been made, by commenters. Thankfully Obama had already been our secret president for like four minutes, so it didn't matter. That little look he gives Roberts is awesome.

Third: Civil rights legend Joseph Lowery's awesome end to his benediction, with the rhyming! So great.

Hah, we love this woman. She is so excited about a black president, but then she's even more excited to be on the jumbotron! This is basically the best day of her life.

Not only did we get rid of Dick Cheney, forever, but he hurt his back, and so he was being wheeled around all day, hah. He looked like either The Big Lebowski or Ironside, except when he put the fedora on, and then he looked a bit like a Nazi who just peeked a bit at the Ark of the Covenant.

These fucking kids are so fucking cute. Look at them!

Aretha's Hat deserves to go straight to the Smithsonian, do not pass go, etc. It is an American Treasure, just like the lady it adorns.

President George H. W. Bush's hat was not as awesome, obviously, but we still like it, along with his kicky turtleneck and scarf.

Oh, and here was the worst part of the inaugural party, doughy hate-walrus Rick Warren babbling about God and "hay-seuss," the Mexican Jesus.

And then George W. Bush got to the chopper, and flew away, to Dallas, the worst city on Earth besides Houston, where be belongs.

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<![CDATA[The Top Ten Feuds of 2008]]> Nothing says Christmas like two people screaming at each other. Gawker video guru Richard Blakeley compiled and ranked the ten very best of this contentious year.



10. Thomas Friedman vs. Greenwash Guerillas

9. The View vs. Keith Olbermann

8. Bill O'Reilly vs. Gawker

7. Jesse Jackson vs. Barack Obama

6. Katie Couric vs. Sarah Palin

5. Anonymous vs. Scientology

4. David Letterman vs. John McCain

3. Hipsters vs. Hipsters

2. Hillary Clinton vs. Barack Obama

1. Soulja Boy vs. Ice-T

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<![CDATA[The Top Ten Scapegoats For America's Depression]]> Who's to blame for this mess? That's what the American people want to know, right? Nobody wants to hear about intricate economic factors that combined in unforeseen ways to predicate an economic collapse. We want scapegoats! The media, politicians, and plain old dumb people on the street who don't know what the hell they're talking about have all picked out their favorite villains in this national crisis. We take a look at the top ten, after the jump:

Dick Fuld: The CEO who destroyed Lehman Bros. What a dick, ha. He was a famously Type-A personality and hard charger till his firm crumbled to dust, thanks largely to his leadership. Then some angry employee knocked Fuld out at the company gym. Even mild-mannered Anderson Cooper blames Fuld in this video clip. You gotta admit, he looks worse than almost anyone right now.


Henry Paulson: Oh, Treasury Secretary Paulson. You picked a time to take your job. Every bad think in America is your fault! Your habit of walking around and looking grave failed to save the US economy. If Paulson could turn this whole thing around before he leaves office, he'd be a hero. But he can't, so he'll be a goat of historic proportions.


Alan Greenspan: Just this week the Times ran a devastating takedown of Greenspan's legacy. He was the Fed chairman for more than a decade, but got out just in time to miss this whole crisis. But in retrospect, Greenspan was obviously not the genius everyone thought. "The financial system as a whole has become more resilient," he remarked in 2004. Dude that was so wrong.


Christopher Cox: American hero John McCain thinks that SEC chairman Cox let the ship sink on his watch! According to McCain (watch the clip for a taste), Cox "betrayed the public" trust by doing nothing while short sellers and their devious brethren undermined the US economy.


Neel Kashkari: The 35-year-old former Goldman Sachs banker hasn't even started leading the government bailout plan, and already everyone is convinced he'll fail! They say he's too young, too inexperienced, too conflicted, and too bald. We'll overlook all that (at least until he has a couple weeks on the job), but the fact that he proudly declared himself "a free market Republican" is a wee bit scary.


George W. Bush: Sure, Bush is the natural guy to blame for all this. Why didn't he read the lessons of history from 1992, or 1976, or 1932, or one of many other years? But then you remember: he can't read. As much as we would all like to blame him, Bush is far too stupid to be responsible for something as complicated as this. Sigh.


Herbert and Marion Sandler: These two billionaires ran Golden West Financial, which did fabulously well in the mortgage business until, you know, all its mortgages blew up. By that time the company had been bought by Wachovia, which had to eat some major losses. Bill O'Reilly thinks they may be economic villains! Saturday Night Live made fun of them! They're pretty good stand-ins for all greedy mortgage lenders.


Alan Schwartz: He was the CEO who oversaw the collapse of Bear Stearns, the first big Wall Street firm to go down. He set this whole thing off! Here's a video of him on CNBC just days before BS failed, talking about how everything was okay. Some people think he lied about his firm's health.


Jim Cramer: The shouty CNBC financial "expert" used to be a big bull on the market. Buy stocks all the time, people! Then the market collapsed. Then he had to apologize and go on TV to tell everybody to pull their cash out of the market. Forget the losses! Abandon ship! He's pretty bad at money advice, ironically.


The Financial Media: Who allowed Cramer to stand up and give all his ruinous advice? Why didn't CNBC tell us this shit was coming? Why didn't the most prestigious financial papers in the country do some digging and tell us that all the people mentioned above were crooks who would eventually drain trillions from our coffers through incompetence or corruption? The answer, of course, is that the financial media gets caught up in the madness just like everyone else, and ends up telling us whatever we want to hear. Which is why you can't forget the final scapegoat in all this, who tends to go unnamed:


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<![CDATA[The Top Ten Design Elements Of The Chevy Volt]]> Yesterday's reveal of the production Chevy Volt got us thinking we should take a closer look at the design features, both inside and out, that make GM's plug-in hybrid unique. We've picked out five exterior and an equal number of interior design elements we feel are most important, and taken a little deeper look at each. Without further ado, hit the jump for our top ten key design elements that make the Volt so...eclectically electric.


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<![CDATA[The Ten Best Craigslist Cash-Waver Remixes]]> The Craigslist Cash-Waver is a certified internet star. When we posted the original photos from his Craigslist personal ad (showing him with a fan of $20 bills to impress the girls), and then his angry voicemail demanding that we take them down or else, little did we know how big he would become. His photos spawned an entire genre of visual remixes, which elevated the cash-waving theme to fantastic new heights. Some of the reaction was stupid, and some was even racist. But some was pure, hilarious magic. After the jump, a photo gallery of the ten most inspired Cash-Waving Craigslist Player Photoshop jobs—a testament to the scary power of smart, mean, bored people on the internet. We fear you all.




[Pics via Something Awful, Fark, and Flickr.]

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<![CDATA[ Slate film critic Dana Stevens is temporarily...]]> Slate film critic Dana Stevens is temporarily off my shit list for correctly noting that "The Host" was one of the best 10 movies of 2007—I'd forgotten that! And it so was! Bonus: Remember how great Anthony Lane's review was? (And also Dana is A-OK for giving an honorable mention to the DVD release of "Idiocracy." Temporarily!) [Slate]

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