Wednesday 28 April 2010

Snoopy sold for$175 million


Snoopy, Charlie Brown and the rest of the 'Peanuts' gang have been sold for $175 million.

E.W. Scripps Co. confirmed it will sell the unit that owns the licensing rights to "Peanuts" to Joe Boxer owner Iconix Brand Group Inc.

The sale of United Media Licensing also means Iconix has a new partnership with the family of the late "Peanuts" creator, Charles Schulz. They'll receive 20 per cent ownership in the unit that owns "Peanuts" and pay that percentage of the sale price.

United Media Licensing represents other character brands such as Dilbert and Fancy Nancy, but the bulk of its licensing business comes from "Peanuts." The unit's licensed merchandise has annual sales of more than $2 billion.

Scripps first brought the strip to market in 1950. By the time Schulz retired in 1999, Peanuts was in more than 2,600 papers. Schulz died in February 2000.

Scripps said the cash deal will close by the end of the second quarter.

The newspaper publisher and TV station owner announced in February it was exploring a sale.

Iconix, formerly known as Candie's, owns and licenses brands such as Joe Boxer, London Fog, Starter and Mudd. The company, based in New York, licenses its brands to retailesr, wholesalers and suppliers.

Scripps will still own United Media's syndication operations, so it will continue to syndicate comic strips and editorial features.

"The Peanuts characters have been our entertaining co-workers and the Schulz family has been our trusted partner for nearly 60 years. But this is the right move for all involved as we go our separate ways in recognition of changing times and new strategies," said Scripps CEO Rich Boehne.

Neil Cole, Iconix CEO, said the purchase moves the company away from being one focused solely on fashion into new realms that include theme parks, media and financial institutions.

"Peanuts now has the best of both worlds," said Schulz's son, Craig Schulz. "Family ownership and the vision and resources of Iconix to perpetuate what my father created throughout the next century with all the goodwill his lovable characters bring." (www.telegraph.co.uk)

Tuesday 27 April 2010

Olivia Munn Gets Naked for PETA Circus Protest



Furthering PETA's bold tradition of racy, message-sending ads, a very nude Olivia Munn is imploring people to "boycott the circus."

"When you look at something like the circus, everyone's laughing and there's color and music and everything seems so great," Munn tells PETA. "But when you go right behind that door and the elephants are in these crates all day long and then they're getting shocked and beat just so they can get up and dance around on a ball... it was just so sickening. I was brought to tears." (www.popeater.com)

Police seize computers from Gizmodo editor

The Gizmodo-iPhone saga continues.

Gizmodo, the technology blog that recently published details about Apple's next-generation iPhone after paying $5,000 to get its hands on the device, posted documents today showing that police raided one of its editor's homes.

A search warrant posted by Gizmodo says police on Friday seized computers, cameras, hard drives, business cards and computer servers from the home of Jason Chen, the site's editor who last week published details about Apple's unreleased smartphone.

The warrant, issued by a judge in California's San Mateo County, says police were able to raid Chen's home because they had reason to believe his computers were used to commit a felony. The warrant makes specific reference to the unreleased iPhone 4 and gives police the authority to look for e-mails and other documentation related to the gadget.

Gawker Media, which owns Gizmodo, published a statement saying the raid was unlawful because of journalistic protections. Chen works from home, so his house should be protected as newsrooms are, the statement says.

In an account posted on Gizmodo, Chen says he returned home from dinner to find police searching his house.

Chen, who apparently has not been arrested or charged with a crime, says his door was kicked down as part of the search.

For background, you can find Gizmodo's account of how the blog acquired the unreleased iPhone here. (cnn.com)

Lady Gaga In Esquire: Shows Butt, Gets Racy (PHOTOS)


Lady Gaga's old friend Brendan Sullivan wrote a piece about her early days for Esquire's 'Women We Love' issue. He says she knew from the beginning where she was headed:

Back in the summer of 2007, there was a night when she popped out of a cake and sang "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" for my then boss, the owner of Beauty Bar Manhattan. It was fitting, somehow -- the Marilyn reference. I'll quote something she said to me one day around that time as directly as I can: "No one in the world knows who I am, but they are going to want to know who I am. My first time ever on TV I want to be on a huge show where I play one song. I'm going to come out onstage in my underwear and show the world that here I am and I don't give a ffffuck what anyone thinks of me."



There are also some never-before-seen photos, including those below of Gaga "trying to figure out the difference between showing 'ass' and showing 'cheek,'" and mounting a woman from behind. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com)

Sunday 25 April 2010

'The Losers' Movie Review


On paper, Sylvain White’s ensemble thriller The Losers doesn’t display much promise. Its budget (around $25 million) is miniscule by action-movie standards; its cast, apart from female lead Zoe Saldana, is unexceptional; and its plot, about a group of disgraced Special Forces operatives who seek revenge against the shady arms dealer (Jason Patric) who had them framed, is hardly original. And yet The Losers makes for a surprisingly entertaining ride, an apt prelude to the summer blockbuster season. Call it The B-Team.

Though based on a graphic novel (what Hollywood movie today isn’t?), The Losers boasts no superheroes, just a quintet of mercenaries with complementary skills and catchy names like Cougar and Pooch. Presumed dead after being double-crossed during a black ops mission in the Bolivian jungle, they languish in a third-world limbo until a mysterious woman named Aisha (Saldana) approaches their leader, Clay (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), with an enticing opportunity.

The Losers establishes a lively pace from the outset, and with the exception of one appallingly disjointed planning scene, director White adroitly handles the challenges of a plus-size cast. Save for a few extraneous twists that mar the film’s second half, screenwriters James Vanderbilt and Peter Berg maintain a straightforward storyline, keeping the tone determinedly light (always best when dealing with the constraints of a PG-13 rating) but never too cartoonish -- at least not by comic book-movie standards.

Morgan, who previously underwhelmed in Zack Snyder’s doomed Watchmen adaptation, isn’t the ideal choice to headline the film’s male cast, and he appears hopelessly overmatched by Saldana. This wouldn’t be so much of a problem if The Losers didn’t try to sell us on a hastily-hatched romantic subplot between the two, which serves only to provide us with a few scantily-clad glimpses of the sultry Avatar star. Needless to say, there are worse sins a filmmaker can commit.

The only aspect of The Losers that truly vexed me was the performance of one of its castmembers. I doubt that Joe Johnston, director of the upcoming Captain America adaptation, caught a screening of the this film before he chose to award Chris Evans the coveted starring role in the big-budget comic-book flick. Because if he had, I’m certain he’d have chosen differently. Evans’ clownish wiseass routine is instantly and perpetually grating. Even when delivering the most innocuous of line readings, he radiates a natural douchiness that no Super Serum can fix. (http://www.hollywood.com)

Friday 23 April 2010

Obama to Wall Street: Do not Fight Financial Reform

President Obama also directed attention to an ongoing and enormously sensitive issue for Americans - multi-million dollar salaries, bonuses and other compensation paid to industry executives.

Comparing the U.S. economy to a house on shifting sands, President Barack Obama has appealed to the U.S. financial industry to support reforms he describes as vital to avoiding another economic collapse. The president spoke in New York.

Aiming his appeal directly at the financial industry and skeptics within it, and at Republican critics in Congress, the president warned of the danger of a repeat of economic collapse.

Calling the financial crisis the outcome of a failure of responsibility from Wall Street to Washington, he said the time has come to seize the moment to make fundamental changes in the rules of the financial road.

"It is essential that we learn the lessons of this crisis, so we do not doom ourselves to repeat it," said the president. "And make no mistake, that is exactly what will happen if we allow this moment to pass. That is an outcome that is unacceptable to me and it is unacceptable to you, the American people."

With many, but not all, of the most prominent executives of Wall Street firms present, the president outlined key aspects of legislation the Senate will debate in coming days.

These include steps to impose new oversight and controls on hedge funds and complex financial instruments known as derivatives, and protections for consumers of financial products.

Of particular importance would be a system to ensure that troubled financial companies could be dismantled in an orderly way without posing the kind of systemic risk they did in 2008.

Calling the Senate bill and one the House of Representatives approved last year a significant improvement over flawed rules now in place, he said changes would be advantageous for the industry and the country.

The president took aim at the tens of millions of dollars and hundreds of financial industry lobbyists who have descended on Capitol Hill in recent weeks attempting to urge lawmakers to oppose the legislation.

"I am sure that some of these lobbyists work for you and they are doing what they are being paid to do. But I am here today, specifically when I speak to the titans of industry here, because I want to urge you to join us, instead of fighting us in this effort," he said.

President Obama also directed attention to an ongoing and enormously sensitive issue for Americans - multi-million dollar salaries, bonuses and other compensation paid to industry executives.

"Some of the salaries and bonuses we have seen created perverse incentives to take reckless risks that contributed to the crisis. It is what helped lead to a relentless focus on a company's next quarter, to the detriment of its next year or decade," he said.

Critics say the Senate measure would amount to an authorization for continuing government bailouts of the financial industry.

On Capitol Hill, minority Republicans have softened opposition to Senate legislation, but negotiations continue on provisions. Democrats hope for a vote by next week. (voanews)

Noureen DeWulf Is A Hot Indian-American-Muslim


Actress Noureen DeWulf showed up to the L.A. premiere of "The Back-Up Plan" looking voluptuous and exotic in a strapless white dress.

Noureen recently appeared in Matthew Mcconaughey's film "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past" and the Lifetime miniseries "Maneater." She also appeared in "Entourage" and Jeremy Piven's movie "The Goods."

She was born in New York City to traditional Indian Muslim Parents and grew up in Georgia before going to school in Boston and then relocating to Los Angeles.

That makes Noureen an Indian-Muslim-American-southerner-now-west-coast-lover.

She most recently starred in "The Taqwacores," about a Pakastani-American engineering student who falls in with a tightly-knit group of punk-rocker Muslims.(http://www.starpulse.com)

Wednesday 21 April 2010

iPad BAN Hits Israel: Tablet Blocked Over Wi-Fi Concerns


Israel has banned imports of Apple Inc.'s hottest new product, the iPad, citing concerns the powerful gadget's wireless signals could disrupt other devices.

Customs officials said Thursday they have already confiscated about 10 of the lightweight tablet computers since Israel announced the new regulations this week. The ban prevents anyone - even tourists - from bringing iPads into Israel until officials certify that they comply with local transmitter standards.

The U.S. Federal Communications Commission allows devices with Wi-Fi capability to broadcast at higher power levels than are allowed in Europe and Israel - meaning that the iPad's stronger signal could throw off others' wireless connections, Schubert said.

"If you operate equipment in a frequency band which is different from the others that operate on that frequency band, then there will be interference," said Nati Schubert, a senior deputy director for the Communications Ministry. "We don't care where people buy their equipment. ... But without regulation, you would have chaos."

Some Israelis successfully got the popular devices into Israel before the ban.

Amnon, a software developer who legally brought an iPad into Israel but asked that his last name be withheld to avoid potential government repercussions, said he and other high-tech businessmen need the iPad to develop new applications for the device.

"There are several hundred people in Israel who make their livelihood developing apps ... and there are going to be companies that suffer, because they can't deliver the services they're supposed to be delivering," he said.


The iPad combines the features of a notebook computer with the touch-pad functions of the iPod. It went on sale in the U.S. on April 3. Apple this week delayed its international launch until May 10, citing heavy sales in the U.S.

Israeli officials said the ban has nothing to do with trade and is simply a precaution to assure that the iPad doesn't affect wireless devices already in use in Israel.

Although Israeli standards are similar to those in many European nations, Israel is the only country so far to officially ban imports.

Schubert said he expects the problem to be resolved as Apple moves closer to the international release.

In the meantime, confiscated iPads will be held by customs - for a daily storage fee - until their owners depart the country or ship the gadgets back to the U.S. at their own expense.

Apple's chief distributor in Israel, iDigital, declined to comment on the Communications Ministry's decision, and messages left at Apple's headquarters in California were not immediately returned.

source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com

About Earth Day


Earth Day is celebrated in 190 countries by one billion people.
Earth Day Canada is also celebrating its 20th anniversary this year and more than six million Canadians are expected to participate.

Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson and Harvard University grad Denis Hayes spearheaded Earth Day on April 22, 1970, uniting 20 million Americans. It was the largest, organized civic demonstration U.S. history.

Earth Day was planned over seven months, on a budget of $124,000. Nelson insisted the day be based on grassroots movements across the country and rejected a top-down, national approach

The first Earth Day led to the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of the Clean Air, Clean Water and Endangered Species act in the U.S.

In 1990, on the 20th anniversary of Earth Day, founder Gaylord Nelson had this to say: “I don’t want to have to come limping back here twenty years from now on the 40th anniversary of Earth Day ..... and have the embarrassing responsibility of telling your sons and daughters that you didn’t do your duty — that you didn’t become the conservation generation that we hoped for.”

source:www.nelsonearthday.net
photo : www.dohosurf.org/

'Twilight's' Carlisle Cullen Is The Richest Fictional Character


Forbes recently released its 2010 edition of "Fictional 15," which ranks fiction's wealthiest characters. Topping the list is Carlisle Cullen, the patriarch from the "Twilight" novels and films.

Cullen, age 370, is worth $34.1 billion, mostly due to his adopted daughter Alice, who picks stocks based on her ability to see the future.

Other wealthy characters and their estimated net worth:

Scrooge McDuck ($33.5 billion)
Richie Rich ($11.5 billion)
Tony Stark ($8.8 billion)
Jed Clampett ($7.2 billion)
Adrian Veidt ($7 billion)
Bruce Wayne ($6.5 billion)
The Tooth Fairy ($3.9 billion)
Thurston Thomas Howell III ($3 billion)
Sir Topham Hatt ($2 billion)

What is a misogynist?


The word Misogynist was uttered on tonight’s episode of Glee. I was able to catch the first part of Glee as it followed right after American Idol. Will Schuester (Matthew James Morrison) mentioned the word while telling his boys about being sexist. He also gave a definition of the term misogynist.

So what is a misogynist? It is from the word misogyny, meaning hatred (or contempt) of women or girls.

http://dailypostal.com

Elin Nordegren is Ready To Divorce With Tiger Wood


Tiger Woods‘ wife Elin Nordegren is ready to end her five-and-a-half year marriage to the philandering sportsman.

Sources say the former Swedish model can’t forgive the golfer for cheating on her with a string of different women.

“Elin and Tiger have been talking daily now,” an insider told FOX News‘ Pop Tarts column.

“But it is mostly divorce talk.

“Elin is just staying as strong as she possibly can.”

Sources recently revealed that Elin has been talking to pals about divorcing Tiger.

“Divorce is something she’s talking about,” a source said earlier this month.

“No one knows if she’s going to go through with it. No one is sure if she knows if she’s going to go through with it.”

Elin was recently visited by a divorce attorney at the house she’s currently renting in Orlando.

According to reports, the legal eagle spent several hours with Nordegren at the property.

“She’s switched lawyers,” a source said. “Her new lawyer is from out of town.”

source: http://www.showbizspy.com/

Robert Downey Jr. could be the Wizard in “Wizard of Oz”


Robert Downey Jr. is one of our favorite actors. Not only does he come across as so poised in the media, but he is just a great actor overall. With the big release of “Iron Man 2″ coming up soon, you can bet that he is going to be Hollywood’s hottest commodity in the coming months. While he is already eyeing a “Sherlock Holmes” sequel, his next role looks like it might be a part out of an old classic story.

Production Weekly posted to their twitter account earlier today the following tweet:

“Sam Mendes is the front runner to direct “Oz The Great And Powerful” by Mitchell Kapner, with Robert Downey, Jr. circling to play the Wizard”

We’re not quite sure how he is going to find time to do this, but we think he could be a great wizard.

source: http://www.hollywoodnews.com
photo:http://jaded4good.files.wordpress.com

Tuesday 20 April 2010

Fraud case upstages Goldman earnings

Goldman Sachs on Tuesday failed to stem the fallout from US civil fraud charges levied against it, as bumper first-quarter results were overshadowed by investors' concerns over the case's implications for Wall Street's premier investment bank.

Goldman's woes were compounded by news that UK regulators had launched their own probe, calls by some European politicians for governments to stop working with the bank, and the emergence of fresh details on the security at the centre of the case.

Despite announcing better-than-expected first-quarter earnings of $3.5bn, Goldman saw its shares fall more than 2 per cent.

On Friday, the Securities and Exchange Commission accused Goldman and one of its vice-presidents of hiding from investors that the hedge fund Paulson & Co had influenced the composition of a mortgage- backed security it wanted to bet against.

Goldman executives on Tuesday forcefully denied the allegations and said for the first time that Fabrice Tourre, the employee who was charged by the SEC, had told one investor that Paulson was "short", betting that the security would fail.

The SEC has accused Goldman of misleading investors by saying the fund wanted to buy into the deal.

"We would never intentionally mislead anyone, certainly not our clients or a counterparty," Greg Palm, Goldman's general counsel, said.

"Our employee believes he indicated Paulson was on the short side."

Mr Palm said the sharp losses incurred by the collateralised debt obligation, a mortgage-backed security, were due to the collapse of the US housing market, rather than the product's composition.

However, a table included by Goldman in its September response to the SEC shows that the CDO incurred writedowns in less than a month compared with an average of 1.7 months for similar deals.

Goldman insiders say this was due to the timing of the CDO, just before the end of the US housing bubble in April 2007. But the data could boost the SEC case.

Goldman on Tuesday left the door open to a settlement, a common occurrence in US regulatory cases, but surprised analysts when it said it had lost more than $100m on the CDO, three days after stating its net loss was $75m. David Viniar, the finance chief, said Goldman had found other losses.

The UK's Financial Services Authority on Tuesday launched a formal probe into Goldman's London unit.

source: cnn.com

3G Ipad Goes On Sale April 30


The 3G version of the iPad, which connects to the Internet over AT&T's wireless network, will go on sale in the U.S. on April 30, Apple announced Tuesday.

The suggested retail price is $629 for 16GB, $729 for 32GB and $829 for 64GB.

The Wi-Fi + 3G model is priced higher than the Wi-Fi-only model released in the U.S. on April 3 because its 3G capability will allow users to surf the Web without a Wi-Fi connection.

Customers who have not pre-ordered a 3G iPad will have to wait until 5 p.m. on April 30 to get their hands on the new model.

“Apple retail stores will offer a free Personal Setup service to every customer who buys an iPad at the store,” according to the company's press release.

All versions of the iPad will go on sale at the end of May in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Switzerland and the UK, Apple said.

source: cnn.com

Obama Likely to be Main Issue in Midterm Elections


Political experts say 2010 could be a difficult year for President Barack Obama and his Democratic Party allies in Congress. Most analysts predict that Republicans will make gains in this year's midterm congressional elections. And they say the president's popularity and his health care reform plan will be major issues in the campaign.

At the recent monthly meeting of the Red Rock Democratic Club on the outskirts of Las Vegas, local party members expressed concerns about President Obama's declining popularity and its possible impact on the November elections.

"Popularity is down. It is down throughout the country and it is down here in Nevada," said Democrat John Punticello.

Others, like Tracy Lawrence, see good news for Democrats in the wake of the successful battle in Congress for health care reform. "Although the health care reform isn't everything we wanted, it is a step. And I think his popularity is going to start to bounce back, I do, because he finally got it through. And I don't think a lot of people thought he could at this point," he said.

Local liberal talk show host Sir Cooper is trying to stir Democrats out of the doldrums on his radio show. He is urging Democrats to get tougher as the election draws near. "They are not as forceful as I would like them to be. See, when the Republicans want something, they go after it. They don't care if they have to run over their mother, their sister or the little kid to get to it. They will go from Point A to Point B to accomplish their goal," he said.

It was a different scene across town a few days later as Republicans gathered at a country-western bar to listen to conservative talk show host Roger Hedgecock.

Among those who came was Republican Sharron Angle. She hopes to win a U.S. Senate seat in Nevada and intends to make President Obama the key issue. "Everything that Mr. Obama has done since he got into the presidency has really been detrimental for small businesses, for the working man, for anyone in America who wants their constitutional government back," he said.

Angle is one of several Republicans hoping to win a June primary to challenge Senator Harry Reid in November. Reid is the Senate Democratic leader who played a key role in passing President Obama's health care reform law.

Reid is trailing in public opinion polls in Nevada. But he said little about his race at a recent Democratic dinner in Las Vegas. "There isn't a day that goes by that I don't realize that I am not there for any reason other than I have a contract with the people of the state of Nevada. And I have chosen to try to renew that contract and I will need your help to do that," he said.

Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto, a Democrat, is also running for re-election this year. She says voters will be looking to candidates from both parties for help in coping with a weak economy. "You know, we have a high unemployment rate; we have the highest foreclosure rate. Those are issues that are serious for everyone and they want answers. They want people who are going to come out and talk to them about how they are going to address those issues, how they are going to create jobs," he said.

Surveys in Nevada show Reid trailing several possible Republican challengers. But Cortez-Masto and other Democrats say they would never count Harry Reid out this early in the race, noting he has won several tough election battles in the past.

source: voanews.com

Monday 19 April 2010

Gizmodo names Apple coder who lost "iPhone 4G"


It was all due to beer, a simple human mistake, and a $5,000 payment

Gizmodo has revealed that the person who lost the purported next generation iPhone, images of which created a buzz on the Web Monday, is a 27-year-old Apple software engineer named Gray Powell who probably will never again be as famous, or notorious, as he is right now.

On Thursday night, March 18, Powell was enjoying apparently more than one imported beer at Gourmet Haus Staudt, a beer garden in Redwood City, Calif. Gizmodo's account: "He was happy. The place was great. The beer was excellent. 'I underestimated how good German beer is,' he typed into the next-generation iPhone he was testing on the field, cleverly disguised as an iPhone 3GS. It was his last Facebook update from the secret iPhone. It was the last time he ever saw the iPhone, right before he abandoned it on bar stool, leaving to go home."

Oddly, the Engadget website had a similar overall story on Wednesday 17 April (the bar was in San Jose, Calif. and the mystery device was found on the floor), and a grainy photo.
Someone eventually picked up the "iPhone 4G" in the beer garden, and apparently eventually contacted Gizmodo, which paid $5,000 to get the device, as confirmed by Nick Denton, head of Gawker Media, which owns the Gizmodo blog. Earlier on Monday April 19, Denton had tweeted "Does Gizmodo pay for exclusives? Too right!"

The person who eventually picked up the iPhone told Gizmodo that someone else had asked him if the phone, lying unattended on the bar stool was his. It wasn't, nor did it belong to anyone else. The phone finder said that at first the handset looked just like a standard iPhone 3GS. Among the applications was the iPhone Facebook app, where the finder also found Powell's Facebook page.

That detail sheds a new light on the transaction between Gizmodo and the finder of Powell's phone. It was only the next morning that the finder realized the handset was different. He never contacted Powell, but contacted Gizmodo instead and eventually negotiated a $5,000 pay day for someone else's property.

Gizmodo on Monday posted pictures and a video of the new phone, which seems to have a glass-like ceramic casing. A reader alerted DaringFireball's John Gruber to a 2006 Apple patent for ceramic enclosures for mobile devices. The non-metallic casing is essentially transparent to radio signals.

According to the most recent Gizmodo blog post, Powell graduated from North Carolina State University in 2006, and Gizmodo considers him a "talented amateur photographer" based on Powell's Flickr photostream, which includes several pictures of beer.

Around 6 pm Eastern Time Monday April 19, Denton tweeted again: "iPhone update. We think we've identified the sorry Apple engineer who left the next-gen phone at the bar. Calling in a min."

The story includes the brief transcript of the civil exchange between Gizmodo's John Herrman and Powell. "We have a device, and we think that maybe you misplaced it at a bar, and we would like to give it back," Herrman says, revealing Gizmodo's intentions for the phone for the first time. Gruber had said on his blog that his sources indicated that Apple considered the phone "stolen" not "lost."

Powell replied: "Yeah, I forwarded your email [asking him if it was his iPhone], someone should be contacting you."

The Gizmodo post was written by Jesus Diaz who condescendingly concludes: "He [Powell] sounded tired and broken. But at least, he's alive. And apparently, he may still be working at Apple. As it should be, because it's just [an expletive] iPhone. It can happen to everyone, Gray Powell, Phil Schiller, you, me, and even Steve Jobs. Unlike Apple's legendary impenetrable security, breached by the power of German beer and one single human mistake."

And, of course, $5,000.

source: http://www.networkworld.com/
photo : www.computerworld.com

Footage released of erupting Icelandic volcano



(source:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Pazzn44zDs)

Kim Kadarshian a twit, say cat lovers


TV celebrity Kim Kardashian says she would never do anything to harm an animal, after she was slammed online for posting a photo of herself on Twitter carrying a cat by the scruff of its neck.

The American socialite, who stars in the reality TV show Keeping Up with the Kardashians, posted a photo from a Sydney photo shoot yesterday with the caption "good kitty cat".

The photo, viewed more than 153,000 times, was slammed by some of her online fans and animal rights group PETA.

"Love you but couldn't you have held the cat a better way... :/," said Strawbery182.

"I hope she only held that cat like that for a second. Because that can seriously harm the poor kitty. Don't get me wrong. I love kim but I would never do that to the poor kitten," CPID commented.

PETA Australia spokesman Jason Baker said Kardashian "isn't the only person who mistakenly thinks that because a mother cat picks up her kittens by the scruff of the neck that a supportive hand under the rump isn't needed".

"But I'll bet plenty of fans have let her know - nicely, we hope!" he added.

The RSPCA said it would be happy to advice Kardashian on "proper animal handling techniques".

"While it's not cool to scruff a cat, ideally Kim should be supporting the cat's body weight," a spokeswoman for the animal charity said.

"Kim nor the cat looked comfortable and the RSPCA would be happy to advice her on proper animal handling techniques."

Kardashian, who is rumoured to be dating Real Madrid footballer Cristiano Ronaldo, was quick to respond to the criticism, saying in an online blog that the cat was "not harmed in any way".

"I have been getting negative comments regarding the way I was holding the kitty, but rest assured, the owner and vet were on set and showed me how to pick him up," she wrote.

"I love animals and would never do anything to harm any animals."

Kardashian, 29, is in Australia to launch a new Optus mobile phone. The mobile phone carrier is also a sponsor of RSPCA through its employee volunteer program.

An Optus spokeswoman said the photo shoot was not organised by Optus and it had nothing further to add to Kardashian's reply.

Source: smh.com.au

Friday 16 April 2010

RACHEL WEISZ BEGGED DIRECTOR FOR MASTURBATION SCENE IN FILM!


RACHEL Weisz has a dirty mind!

The British actress has revealed how she “begged” Alejandro Amenabar — the director her of her 2009 movie Agora — to let her film a masturbation scene for the film — but he refused.

Weisz plays real-life fourth-century Egyptian philosopher Hypatia of Alexandria in the Spanish historical drama.

“There’s a style of acting that can come with period films where everybody just freezes up,” Rachel told Britain’s Sunday Times newspaper.

“But they were drinking and f**king and doing maths or whatever else they were doing. They were just people.

“I actually told Alejandro they should shoot a scene where she was looking at the stars and masturbating.

“I suggested a PG version, where her hand just went out of frame, and you’re watching her come, looking at the stars.

“He wouldn’t go for it. I begged him. I wanted to know about that stuff. What’s up? What’s her sexuality? Where’s her deviancy?”

Weisz — who has three-year-old son Henry with director fiancee Darren Aronofsky — recently insisted she leads an “ordinary life”.

Of course,” she said, “it’s not ordinary to get dressed in frocks to walk down red carpets and travel all over the world and stay in five-star hotels.

“I’m not working in a factory. But I drop Henry off at school, I pick him up. I try my hardest to keep everyone together.

“I am interested in playing extra-ordinary women, but I have an ordinary life.” Rachel Weisz.
(http://www.showbizspy.com)

Obama Depends NASA Program


President Obama defended his newly-announced recommendations for NASA, addressing the grievances of some in the space industry that the plan -- which cancels some projects announced during the Bush administration -- would compromise the United States' leadership in space exploration.

After announcing earlier in the week that it would be cancelling George W. Bush's Constellation space program, which was geared towards manned missions to the Moon and eventually Mars, the Obama administration was met with unusual resistence from notable astronauts including Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon.

One of the most contentious parts of the new program is the scaled-down version of the Ares I and V launch vehicles and the Orion crew capsule -- technology proposed under the Constellation program that would be used to tranport astronauts to low-Earth orbit and the Moon. Without NASA-owned capsules, American astronauts will be forced to use commercial space transportation, a concept abhored by some in the space industry.

Obama pinpointed those concerns in his speech in front of 200 NASA employees, astronauts, and members of Congress. "I recognize that some have said it is unfeasible or unwise to work with the private sector in this way. I disagree." He added that the investment in private companies would spur economic growth. "By buying the services of space transportation -- rather than the vehicles themselves -- we can continue to ensure rigorous safety standards are met. But we will also accelerate the pace of innovations as companies -- from young startups to established leaders -- compete to design and build and launch new means of carrying people and materials out of our atmosphere."

Obama defended the reasons for cancelling the Ares and Orion programs, referring to the recommendations of a "panel of respected non-partisan experts charged with looking at these issues closely" who concluded that "the old strategy ... was not fulfilling its promise in many ways."

The panel he referred to is the 10-person Review of U.S. Human Space Flight Plans Committee, also known as the Augustine Committee because it was chaired by former Lockheed Martin president Norman Augustine. In a study published last year, the commission concluded that "the U.S. human spaceflight program appears to be on an unsustainable trajectory" and that "it is perpetuating the perilous practice of pursuing goals that do not match allocated resources."

Citing the pace of development for the Ares I and V programs and the Orion capsule, and their ability to transport astronauts and equipment to the International Space Station (ISS), the commission wrote, "The original 2005 schedule showed Ares I and Orion available to support the ISS in 2012, two years after scheduled Shuttle retirement. The current schedule now shows that date as 2015."

To compensate for that lag, Obama's plan proposes building a new heavy-lift rocket that would be completed sooner than Ares and Orion would have been. In addition, the plan increases NASA's budget by $6 billion over 5 years. And, as Obama said today, it will add more than 2,500 jobs in Florida's Kennedy Space Center area.

"This is the next chapter that we can write together here at NASA," Obama said. "We will partner with industry. We will invest in cutting-edge research and technology. We will set far-reaching milestones and provide the resources to reach those milestones. And step by step, we will push the boundaries not only of where we can go but what we can do."President Obama defended his newly-announced recommendations for NASA, addressing the grievances of some in the space industry that the plan -- which cancels some projects announced during the Bush administration -- would compromise the United States' leadership in space exploration.

After announcing earlier in the week that it would be cancelling George W. Bush's Constellation space program, which was geared towards manned missions to the Moon and eventually Mars, the Obama administration was met with unusual resistence from notable astronauts including Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon.

One of the most contentious parts of the new program is the scaled-down version of the Ares I and V launch vehicles and the Orion crew capsule -- technology proposed under the Constellation program that would be used to tranport astronauts to low-Earth orbit and the Moon. Without NASA-owned capsules, American astronauts will be forced to use commercial space transportation, a concept abhored by some in the space industry.

Obama pinpointed those concerns in his speech in front of 200 NASA employees, astronauts, and members of Congress. "I recognize that some have said it is unfeasible or unwise to work with the private sector in this way. I disagree." He added that the investment in private companies would spur economic growth. "By buying the services of space transportation -- rather than the vehicles themselves -- we can continue to ensure rigorous safety standards are met. But we will also accelerate the pace of innovations as companies -- from young startups to established leaders -- compete to design and build and launch new means of carrying people and materials out of our atmosphere."

Obama defended the reasons for cancelling the Ares and Orion programs, referring to the recommendations of a "panel of respected non-partisan experts charged with looking at these issues closely" who concluded that "the old strategy ... was not fulfilling its promise in many ways."

The panel he referred to is the 10-person Review of U.S. Human Space Flight Plans Committee, also known as the Augustine Committee because it was chaired by former Lockheed Martin president Norman Augustine. In a study published last year, the commission concluded that "the U.S. human spaceflight program appears to be on an unsustainable trajectory" and that "it is perpetuating the perilous practice of pursuing goals that do not match allocated resources."

Citing the pace of development for the Ares I and V programs and the Orion capsule, and their ability to transport astronauts and equipment to the International Space Station (ISS), the commission wrote, "The original 2005 schedule showed Ares I and Orion available to support the ISS in 2012, two years after scheduled Shuttle retirement. The current schedule now shows that date as 2015."

To compensate for that lag, Obama's plan proposes building a new heavy-lift rocket that would be completed sooner than Ares and Orion would have been. In addition, the plan increases NASA's budget by $6 billion over 5 years. And, as Obama said today, it will add more than 2,500 jobs in Florida's Kennedy Space Center area.

"This is the next chapter that we can write together here at NASA," Obama said. "We will partner with industry. We will invest in cutting-edge research and technology. We will set far-reaching milestones and provide the resources to reach those milestones. And step by step, we will push the boundaries not only of where we can go but what we can do."
(http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com)