NOAA has issued a press release about the recent record sea ice extent in Antarctica. If you've a good memory, this should be nothing particularly shocking or new. It's most likely due to a combination of two factors, both related to warming, not cooling temperatures. One is the massive melting of land ice on Antarctica that reduces the salinity of the surrounding ocean water and therefore makes it easier to freeze. The second is shifting wind patterns that push ice out to sea, smearing it out like cream cheese on a bagel.
While this is being heavily promoted by the deniersphere, it is interesting that they are not using the "nail in the coffin of AGW" language that one might expect. WUWT for example just reprints the NASA press release, while the Daily Mail choses a rather eye-catching title but does a fair job reporting the complexity of the story without any quotes from deniers, mention of models or even the faux pause!
Joe Romm at ThinkProgress has a great piece on it, pointing out up front that the "land ice is close to or at a point of no return for irreversible collapse," and that "the rate of loss of that ice has reached record levels, tripling in the last five years alone."