A new independent film depicts young, “baby-faced” teens and pre-teens roaming the streets of Harlem, guns in tow, while leaving a bloody trail of bodies in their wake. According to the NY Daily News , shoot-outs, drugs and sex are front-and-center in “Toddlers” — made in Harlem using local kids reportedly as young as 12-years old.
(AP) Fire tore through a house in Stamford early Sunday, killing five people, making it among the worst Christmases in the city’s history, the mayor said. Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released. “It is a terrible, terrible day for the city of Stamford,” Mayor Michael Pavia told reporters at a news briefing at the scene of the fire. “There probably has not been a worse Christmas day in the city of Stamford.” Acting Fire Chief Antonio Conte said attempts by firefighters to rescue the house’s occupants were pushed back by intense flames and heat. He said fire officials do not yet know the cause of the blaze and will not likely get clues for a few days until fire marshals can enter the house “and figure out what happened.” Conte said he did not know the conditions of the two survivors. “We had our hands full from the moment we arrived on the scene,” he said. A neighbor, Sam Cingari Jr., said he was awakened by the sound of screaming and that the house was entirely engulfed by flames. “We heard this screaming at 5 in the morning,” he said. “The whole house was ablaze and I mean ablaze.” Cingari says he does not know his neighbors, who he said bought the house last year and were renovating it. Power also was out in the neighborhood, he said. The neighborhood in Stamford, a city of 117,000 residents about 25 miles northeast of New York City, juts into Long Island Sound.

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Tragic: Five Killed in Christmas Morning House Fire in Stamford, Conn.
It is Thanksgiving Eve. From my 2008 piece from this time of year , contemplating the traditions and parts of life that don’t change, in an era when we seem to witness everything changing: When I was a child, Christmas was by far my favorite holiday, for all kinds of reasons — the presents, the tree, almost every house in the neighborhood suddenly strung with lights. Now, seeing the holiday season from the other side of the parenting coin, Thanksgiving seems like Christmas stripped down to the latter’s most essential and enjoyable parts — good food, a quick prayer, and family too long unseen around a table — and missing the parts of our overly commercialized Christmas that I can easily do without: the challenge of finding the right gift, the crush of shoppers, strings of lights emerging from the closet in a Gordian knot, and one too many choruses of “Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer.” Keep reading this post . . .
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Thanksgiving Reminds Us That Not Everything Changes
As you and your little ones head out to scour the neighborhood for treats this evening, snap a photo or two and email them to mjessup@theblaze . I’ll put together a fun Blaze slideshow to show off the best Halloween costumes. Oh, and the best costume may or may not get a prize… When sending your pictures, be sure to include you name and state — May the best man, woman or child win!

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Send us your Halloween pics!
One Connecticut family planning for an upcoming Halloween block party got a surprising trick for their treat from the U.S. Postal Service this week. After the Sickle family dropped invites in their neighbors’ mailboxes, the mailman delivered the proverbial flaming bag of dog poo — a bill from the USPS for postage. Little did the Sickles know that it’s against postal code regulations to leave notes in residential mailboxes unless they have paid postage. Eighty invites at 44 cents a pop means the Sickles were out $35.20 for Halloween party invites they hand-delivered themselves. Consumerist can understand the need for such regulations, but wonders if this penalty was really necessary: The regulation is probably meant to curtail marketers from spamming people’s mailboxes, but come on, it’s a freakin’ Halloween block party thrown by the neighborhood. With the USPS hanging on for its life, is this really the best use of their time? “It’s very un-neighborly,” one neighbor complained to WFSB . “We do it all the time for sending thank you notes, kid’s birthday parties, anything,” said another. That must’ve been before Uncle Sam’s mail carrier was about to be put out of business .
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U.S. Postal Service puts a damper on family’s Halloween party
Linda McCartney would have turned 70 today . Paul McCartney wrote “Maybe I’m Amazed” for her, so here you go. I just turned 50. So, perhaps this might be a nice musical break. I feel good. I walked yesterday for a couple of hours. Cleared my head and saw parts of the neighborhood I hadn’t seen before. I’m going to try to make that a habit. I used to walk just about every day. Blogging replaced some of that time. I’ve been getting some of it back lately, spending less time online. Anyway, thanks for the readership and friendship. More later today: RELATED : At TigerHawk, ” Happy birthday, Scott! ”

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Maybe I’m Amazed — At Turning 50…
AP – It’s a polite faceoff of spies vs. diplomats, as the Obama administration debates how aggressively to pursue Libya’s vast weapons stores, including tons of caustic mustard agent and thousands of anti-aircraft rockets that experts fear could fall into the hands of terrorists or Libyan loyalists.

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AP sources: White House wants NATO to hunt for WMD
(AP)