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Sun, Feb. 7th, 2010, 08:38 am
Full results show AIDS vaccine is only of modest help

Fresh results from the world’s first successful test of an experimental AIDS vaccine confirm that it is only marginally effective.
Yet, the findings are exciting to scientists, who think they may show how to make a better vaccine.
The results also hint that the vaccine may work better in the general population than in those at higher risk of infection, such as gay men and intravenous drug users. It was the first time an AIDS vaccine was tested mostly in heterosexuals at average risk, and doctors have long known that how a person is exposed to HIV affects the odds of becoming infected.
“This study becomes a landmark. You can put it on a map and begin to figure out where you go from here,” said Col. Jerome Kim, the U.S. Army doctor who co-led the trial.
Last month, researchers announced that a two-vaccine combination cut the risk of becoming infected with HIV by more than 31 percent in a trial of more than 16,000 volunteers in Thailand.
Full results, published online Tuesday by the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at a scientific conference in Paris, include two additional analyses that merely suggest the vaccine is beneficial, rather than providing definitive proof.
That’s mostly because so few participants became infected – only 125 people, 10 times less than in previous HIV vaccine trials, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the study’s main sponsor.
Critics had leaked one of the analyses last week, saying it showed the original results may have been a fluke. A California-based AIDS advocacy group criticized study leaders for not giving a fuller picture when they held their news conference last month.
“The bottom line is that those results are real,” even though they are not good enough to justify using this vaccine now, said Dr. Alan Bernstein, executive director of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise, an alliance of governments, AIDS scientists, the World Health Organization and funders such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
“We, for the first time, have evidence of protection, and the nitty gritty to me don’t matter a damn,” Bernstein said.
Other scientists who, like Bernstein, had no role in the trial, agreed.
“It’s a consistent story. There seems to be some effect. And I think it is an important study. It redirects the field to look at a different kind of vaccine and different kinds of immune responses” than what have been the focus in the past, said Dr. Lawrence Corey of the University of Washington. He heads the HIV Vaccine Trials Network, an international group of scientists who test vaccines.
The Thailand Ministry of Public Health conducted this trial, which used vaccines made from strains of HIV common in Thailand. They are ALVAC, made by Sanofi Pasteur, and AIDSVAX, originally developed by VaxGen Inc. and now held by the nonprofit Global Solutions for Infectious Diseases. The vaccines are not made from whole virus and cannot cause HIV infection.
The combo was tested in HIV-negative Thai men and women ages 18 to 30 at average risk of becoming infected. Half received four doses of ALVAC and two of AIDSVAX over six months; the rest received dummy shots. All were given condoms and counseling, and were followed for three years after vaccination ended.
New infections occurred in 51 of the 8,197 given vaccine and in 74 of the 8,198 who received dummy shots. That worked out to a 31 percent lower risk of infection for the vaccine group.
In a smaller analysis of just the 12,452 participants who received all six shots exactly on schedule, there were 86 infections – 36 in the vaccine group and 50 in those given dummy shots.
The vaccine appeared nearly twice as effective among those at low or moderate risk for HIV, versus people who share needles, have contact with prostitutes or engage in other risky behaviors. But those results were not statistically significant, meaning they could have occurred by chance.
“Perhaps the requirements for protection against transmission in low-risk heterosexual persons are considerably different or less stringent,” Dr. Raphael Dolin of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston wrote in an editorial published by the medical journal.
Evidence of vaccine protection emerged at six months to one year and then seemed to wane, although this trend, too, was not statistically significant.
“It would suggest the vaccine is not that potent,” although there were too few infections in either group to make solid comparisons, said Dr. Seth Berkley, president of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, which helps develop and assess potential vaccines.
The U.S. Army has long had a partnership with Thailand and its Royal Army to test vaccines and medicines to protect troops and the general population. Soaring rates of HIV infection a decade ago led the Thai government to make vaccine research a high priority. Some previous experimental AIDS vaccines have been tested in Thailand as well.

Sun, Feb. 7th, 2010, 08:35 am
Early Buzz: 'Big Love,' Pitchfork Fest, Stewart on Fox News, more headlines

Hey there! I'm feeling much perkier this morning after my first full night of sleep in several days. I hope you all have recovered from your "Lost hangovers" as well.
Speaking of Lost, keep leaving your thoughts in our discussion thread -- I'll post the top 10 comments tomorrow. Thanks to everyone for such insightful observations this week!
Your headlines:
- HBO has already renewed Big Love for a fifth season.
- Elizabeth Mitchell talks about what her words may have meant in Lost's premiere.
- Jon Stewart appeared on Bill O'Reilly's The Factor last night. Watch it and get a recap. More footage airs tonight.

- Details for the Pitchfork Music Festival have been announced.
- I loved this essay about what it was like to answer J.D. Salinger's mail.
- Russell Brand kissed Jason Segel at a Haiti benefit the other night. They look very cute together.
- A 1960 Alberto Giacometti sculpture has sold for $104.3 million, setting a record price for a work of art at auction.
- Why was the release date for Martin Scorsese's Shutter Island moved? Is it going to be bad?
- Yeasayer's new album is streaming on MySpace.
- Here's some footage from that Super Bowl ad featuring the Griswolds.
- Lots of people are coming to 30 Rock, including Jon Hamm, Jason Sudeikis , Jon Bon Jovi and Elizabeth Banks.
- PopMatters interviews Owen Pallett.
- Good news: Actor David Prowse, aka Darth Vader, is clear of cancer.
- Eddie Vedder has coveredBruce Springsteen's My City of Ruins for Haiti relief.
- Happy birthday, She-Hulk. I hope you all have something special planned for She-Hulk Week.
- R.I.P., Flintstones writer Barry E. Blitzer.
- Here's a funny list of "7 Insane Comics That Will Never Be Movies."
- In this video, people who have never seen Lost explain the show.
- Wow, it is uncomfortable to watch Big Bang Theory without a laugh track.
- And this nutty website goes with yesterday's Pop Five: Selleck Waterfall Sandwich.

Sun, Feb. 7th, 2010, 08:32 am
I'm gonna watch the Super Bowl (really). Any tips?

I've made a shocking decision, and nobody believes I'm serious, but it's true: I'm watching the Super Bowl on Sunday.

I'm pretty sure I haven't watched a Super Bowl since 1988, when the Washington Redskins won and my hometown was crazy-obsessed. . I also went to college with Peyton Manning. And I can appreciate multi-million dollar ads for junk food as much as the next lady.
But considering I've avoided Super Bowl parties for 22 years, do you have any suggestions for how I can make Sunday's game as enjoyable as possible? Aside from frothy beverages and little party hats, are there any supplies I need to buy?
I'll keep you posted on my big evening. I'm looking forward to it, though around 9 p.m. I'll be fighting a strong temptation to flip over to Big Love.

Thu, Jan. 28th, 2010, 12:59 pm
Tonight on TV: 'The Inbetweeners' blends geeks, sex and teen hijinks

On Monday I mentioned BBC America's premiere of The Inbetweeners, a British comedy that instantly became a must-see for me.
The series tosses a bunch of my favorite shows together by combining a geeky lead with raunchy humor and contemporary teen storylines.
The first episode followed strait-laced Will MacKenzie as he arrived at a new school. Tonight the channel airs more Inbetweeners as the comedy settles into its regular night. Take a look, and you'll see scenes like this one, where underage Will attempts to buy alcohol to impress his new friends:

The first season only contains six episodes, so it's not a big time commitment. Two eps of The Inbetweeners air back to back tonight, starting at 9 ET.

Tue, Jan. 26th, 2010, 04:59 pm
RachelWatch: Rachel gives the spending freeze a frosty reception

Breaking News
Rachel started us off with a bang, diving right in to President Obama’s plan to propose a three-year government spending freeze starting in 2011.
Based on her reaction, I think Rachel would have been happier if the White House had announced a plan to bring in Mr. Freeze.
OK, it’s not so much a spending freeze as an everybody-settle-down-while-I-figure-out-what-to-cut here, but that’s less soundbite-friendly. Plus I think the administration folks may be trying to do something with rhyming “spending freeze” and “middle-class squeeze,” and if they are, they should cut that out immediately.
Jared Bernstein, economic advisor to Vice President Joe Biden, jumped in with some very fast verbal dancing and maybe some jazz hands explaining that the freeze doesn’t affect a whole bunch of stuff and it’s really more cutting waste and shifting funding around and holy rampaging cats, was Rachel not having it.
The debate got lively, but the clip is worth watching for Rachel’s Face of Massive Skepticism alone.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Code Blue
…And while we’re talking political strategy, let’s move on to the news that campaign manager David Plouffe is coming back into the Obama administration fold.
Plouffe is fresh from a fire ‘em up/let’s not be idiots piece in The Washington Post, but can he really keep the Democrats from chickening so hard that they just start handing over enormous tax cuts to supermillionaires and offering to waterboard the unemployed?
Rachel welcomed Republican strategist Mark McKinnon, who has an interesting perspective on the way the media machine tends to look at political strategists, but who I am also beginning not to trust so much.
There are a couple of points during the clip where I feel like he realizes the big picture and shifts gears from genuinely chatting to trying to mess with the Democrats.
Don’t be afraid to do things, Democrats. Would holding on to a soft, luxurious stuffed animal help? I’m just asking.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

One More Thing:
Rachel noted that there seem to be a bunch more people who are really irritated with the abuse of the filibuster and the way that the minority can keep anything from getting passed ever until the only thing that happens in the Senate is weeping, compromising, and tooth-gnashing.
OK, yes, getting rid of the filibuster would allow the elected majority to rule again, but has anyone considered the tragic cost in Jimmy Stewart imitations?
Steele a Weasel
Rachel reported that the RNC has mailed out fundraising surveys that have been deliberately made to look like official Census forms, presumably in the hopes of tricking people into thinking they are legally required to fill them out.
The “Census” forms include a note from Michael Steele about how he personally authorized it – So bold! So manly! – and just a little bit of push-polling.
Ms. Information
The new G.I. Bill passed in 2008 and went into effect this summer, as long as you don’t take the “effect” part literally. The VA information hotline is so understaffed that in the last three months of last year, about 90% of calls never connected.
Interesting. Bush had threatened to veto this bill, but instead the government has accidentally avoided shelling out the money for it by keeping anyone from being able to call and find out how to use the program.
Oh, dear. I have a feeling that three-year spending freeze is going to involve a lot of time on hold.
Invest in shoulder pads and ear cozies.
And hey, remember how Governor Mark Sanford wrote all those terrible goopy overwrought love letters to his mistress and we all got embarrassed because he just cared too much?
Ready to suddenly get real nostalgic for that?
Sanford’s Lieutenant Governor, André Bauer, suggested that aid programs are akin to feeding stray animals, and indeed that people living in poverty are akin to stray animals, and that strays/people who have a food source are just going to breed, “especially ones that don’t think too much further than that.”
Bauer is of course now hiking the Backpedaling Trail and apologizing all over the place, but somehow I don’t think he gets it: A story in today’s State indicates that he is sorry “because now it’s being used as an analogy, not a metaphor.”
South Carolina, please remember to have your Lieutenant Governor spayed or neutered.
Speaking of upstanding Family Values political candidates, doesn’t “importing a haggis” sound like a euphemism for the next horrible scandalous thing someone from C Street House is going to get caught doing?
Well, they’d better do it quickly, because importing a haggis may soon be perfectly legal again.
In honor of Robert Burns Day and possible impending haggis decriminalization, Rachel turned over the end of the Ms. Information segment to special correspondent Angus McFarker.
The Only Thing Worth Dying For
Back in 2001, a team of just eleven Green Berets went into Afghanistan to help the locals topple the Taliban.
Eric Blehm, the author of The Only Thing Worth Dying For and U.S. Army Major Jason Amerine joined Rachel to talk about their are-you-kidding-me mission and the state of the war in Afghanistan today.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Tracey Ullman Gets Huffy
In spite of her extensive dramatic work on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Rachel seemed oddly shy about the fact that Tracey Ullman does a Rachel Maddow impersonation on the new season of State of the Union.
Rachel rolled a clip and Ullman’s Maddow is… acceptable.
It’s miles better than the dreadful attempt that was on SNL last year, but it’s not one of those impersonations that makes you goink out for a second because one human being has so perfectly captured another.
Ullman doesn’t quite have Rachel’s speech rhythms nailed , but evidence suggests that this may be because Ullman was spending days at a time in an isolation tank piping in full Arianna Huffington immersion.
At any rate, Ms. Ullman will have a chance to practice her Maddow – she’ll be on the show this Thursday.
Enjoy.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

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