Thursday 22 September 2011

movies

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Tuesday 26 July 2011

Mila Kunis Hires Butt Double for 'Friends With Benefits'


Apparently Mila Kunis had an issue showing off her butt in her upcoming movie with Justin Timberlake, Friends With Benefits.  But unfortunately for her, the script called for nudity. So how was she allowed to sign on for a movie without agreeing to flash her butt?Well it's quite simply, actually - she hired a butt double for those up-close booty shots!


Kunis was on Ryan Seacrest's radio show and admitted that although she's not showing off her own body, that doesn't mean she's won't be giving viewers an above-the-belt peep show.  Mila explained to Ryan, "I showed side boob and I figured I can't just give away everything all at once ... I gotta let it all out in little pieces here and there."  I guess it's an idea I can get behind...don't want to give up the goods too early.  And even though she wasn't baring all of herself in the film, that doesn't mean she didn't have a hand in picking out who the lucky butt double would be.  The actress, along with the director and make-up artist held a casting call to select the right candidate for the job -- a Butt Audition if you will.  Bottom line...they got to see Alot of ass.  Well now I have to go see this movie to see who the lucky winner is.

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Saturday 23 July 2011

Amy Winehouse found dead


London, July 23: British singer Amy Winehouse, whose hit single Rehab became the anthem for troubled celebrity culture, has been found dead at her home in north London.
Police confirmed finding a 27-year-old woman’s body at a home in Camden Square, north London, after being called by ambulance services around 3pm. The cause of death was not immediately known.
London Ambulance Services said Winehouse died before the two ambulance crews it sent arrived at the scene. A spokesperson for the singer could not immediately confirm she had died.
Winehouse was born on September 14, 1983, to Jewish taxi driver Mitch Winehouse and his pharmacist wife Janis, but the family had a history of jazz musicians. Soul singer Tyler James discovered her at the age of 16 and in 2003, her debut album Frank was released to general acclaim.

Winehouse shot to fame with the October 2006 release of her second album Back to Black, whose blend of jazz, soul, rock and classic pop was a global hit. It won five Grammys and made the singer — with her black beehive hairdo and old-fashioned sailor tattoos — one of music’s most recognisable stars.
The album’s hit single Rehab contained the line: “They tried to make me go to rehab. I said ‘No, no, no’.”
“I didn’t go out looking to be famous,” Winehouse said at the time. “I’m just a musician.”
But in the end, the music was overshadowed by fame, and by the diva’s demons. Tabloids lapped up the erratic stage appearances, drunken fights, and the stints in hospitals and rehab clinics. Her performances became shambling, stumbling train wrecks, watched around the world on the Internet.
Winehouse’s health often appeared fragile. In June 2008 and again in April 2010, she was taken to hospital and treated for injuries after fainting and falling at home.
Her father said she had developed the lung disease emphysema from smoking cigarettes and crack, but her spokeswoman later said Winehouse only had “early signs of what could lead to emphysema”.
She left the hospital to perform at Nelson Mandela’s 90th birthday concert in Hyde Park in June 2008, and at the Glastonbury festival the next day, where she received a rousing reception but scuffled with a member of the crowd. Then it was back to a London clinic for treatment, continuing the cycle of music, excess and recuperation that marked her career.
Winehouse grew up in the north London suburbs and was set on a showbiz career from an early age. When she was 10, she and a friend formed a rap group, Sweet ’’ Sour — Winehouse was Sour — that she later described as “the little white Jewish Salt ’’ Pepa”.
She attended the Sylvia Young Theatre School, a factory for British music and acting moppets, later went to the Brit School, a performing arts academy, and was originally signed to Pop Idol Svengali Simon Fuller’s 19 Management.
Music critic John Aizlewood attributed her trans-Atlantic success to a fantastic voice and a genuinely original sound.

“A lot of British bands fail in America because they give America something Americans do better — that’s why most British hip-hop has failed,” he said. “But they won’t have come across anything quite like Amy Winehouse.”
Winehouse’s rise was helped by her distinctive look — black beehive of hair, thickly lined cat eyes, girly tattoos — and her tart tongue.
She was famously blunt in her assessment of her peers, once describing Dido’s sound as “background music — the background to death” and saying of pop princess Kylie Minogue: “She’s not an artist... she’s a pony.”
The songs on Back to Black detailed break-ups and breakdowns with a similar frankness. Lyrically, as in life, Winehouse wore her heart on her sleeve.
“I listen to a lot of ’60s music, but society is different now,” she said in 2007. “I’m a young woman and I’m going to write about what I know.”
Even then, Winehouse’s performances were sometimes shambolic, and she admitted she was “a terrible drunk”. Increasingly, her personal life began to overshadow her career. She acknowledged struggling with eating disorders and told a newspaper she had been diagnosed as manic depressive but refused to take medication.
Although she was often reported to be working on new material, fans got tired of waiting for the much-promised follow-up to Back to Black.
Occasional bits of recording saw the light of day. Her rendition of The Zutons’ Valerie was a highlight of producer Mark Ronson’s 2007 album Version, and she recorded the pop classic It’s My Party for the 2010 Quincy Jones album Q: Soul Bossa Nostra.
She was investigated for smoking crack cocaine in 2008 and fined for assault in 2010. In May 2007, she married music industry hanger-on Blake Fielder-Civil, but he went to jail for assault six months later. They divorced in 2009.

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Friday 22 July 2011

Senate to vote on GOP debt measure; Obama pushes compromise plan



The Senate is set to vote Friday on the "cut, cap and balance" deficit reduction plan backed by tea party conservatives but dismissed by President Barack Obama.


This plan, which calls for cutting the nation's debt by about $3.7 trillion over the next 10 years, was passed by the Republican-led House of Representatives on Tuesday.
"Cut, cap and balance" is widely acknowledged to have virtually no chance of clearing the Senate or overcoming a promised presidential veto. Voting on it, however, allows Republicans to demonstrate their preference for steps favored by many in the tea party movement.
The plan includes the requirement that Congress pass a balanced budget amendment to the U.S. Constitution before agreeing to extend the federal debt ceiling.


The vote will happen some time Friday, said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said.
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Obama was continuing Thursday to pursue a different plan that White House Press Secretary Jay Carney called the most "significant deficit reduction package possible."
The president and Vice President Joe Biden met for almost two hours Thursday with Democratic leaders from the House and Senate as sources indicated the negotiations were focusing on a deal to cut $3 trillion in federal deficits over the next 10 years that would be accompanied by a debt ceiling increase.


According to the congressional aides who spoke on condition of not being identified, the possible deal remains in limbo over a disagreement on whether to extend Bush-era tax cuts for families earning more than $250,000 a year. Nothing has been agreed to yet, they noted.
The possible deal would include spending cuts expected to total $1 trillion or more agreed to in earlier negotiations led by Biden, the sources said. It also would reform entitlement programs by changing the eligibility age for Medicare over time, and using a more restrictive inflation index for Social Security benefits, according to the sources.


On taxes, it would permanently extend the Bush tax cuts for families earning less than $250,000 while allowing the cuts to expire at the end of 2012 for those with income above that, the aides said. At the same time, the deal would include a commitment to reform the tax code next year, which is expected to lower all tax rates and eliminate loopholes and subsidies, the sources said.
However, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, wants the deal to make all of the Bush tax cuts permanent while keeping the commitment to tax reform, the sources said. Republicans oppose any tax hikes, and their resistance has been a major obstacle to any deal in the negotiations so far.
Some sources said the deal would work in two stages, with spending cuts and a debt ceiling increase occurring right away while entitlement reforms and tax reforms would occur later.
Earlier, Carney denied a report by the New York Times that Obama and Boehner were close to reaching a deal.
"There is no deal. We are not close to a deal," Carney told reporters. "There is no progress to report."


A spokesman for Boehner's office echoed Carney, denying any reportable progress. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Virginia, told reporters he was "unaware of any deal that has been struck."
Other signs pointed to possible movement in the talks. Carney signaled to reporters earlier in the week that Obama may now be willing to sign a short-term debt limit extension if Democratic and Republican leaders are close to agreement on a broader deficit reduction deal that includes both tax hikes and spending reforms.


Obama previously indicated he would veto any short-term extension.
Boehner huddled with some Republican freshmen after meeting with Obama on Wednesday night, and is set to hold meeting with the entire House GOP caucus Friday. He told reporters Thursday that while some House Republicans wouldn't compromise, he didn't believe they "would be anywhere close to the majority."


The highly contentious negotiations -- reflecting the core ideological beliefs of both parties -- have now become a race against the clock. If Congress fails to raise the $14.3 trillion limit by August 2, Americans could face rising interest rates, a declining dollar and increasingly jittery financial markets, among other problems.
The seriousness of the overall situation was
 reinforced last week when a major credit-rating agency, Standard and Poor's, said it was placing the U.S. sovereign rating on "CreditWatch with negative implications." Another major agency -- Moody's Investors Services -- said it would put America's bond rating on review for a possible downgrade.


"Even if Washington did raise the debt ceiling after just a few harrowing days following a default ... we envisage that the economy could fall quickly back into recession," Standard and Poor's said in a report Thursday
Lawmakers are also continuing discussions focused on the $3.7 trillion debt reduction blueprint put forward by the "Gang of Six," a group of three Democratic and three Republican senators.
Under the group's proposal, $500 billion in budget savings would be immediately imposed, with marginal income tax rates reduced and the controversial alternative minimum tax ultimately abolished.


The plan would create three tax brackets with rates from 8% to 12%, 14% to 22%, and 23% to 29% -- part of a new structure designed to generate an additional $1 trillion in revenue. It would require cost changes to Medicare's growth rate formula as well as $80 billion in Pentagon cuts.
Obama has praised the plan, calling it "broadly consistent" with his approach to debt reduction because it mixes tax changes, entitlement reforms and spending reductions.
Congressional leaders, however, have warned that there is most likely not enough time to translate the Gang of Six plan into legislation, tie it to a debt ceiling hike and pass it by August 2. In addition, the proposal has been hit with a barrage of criticism from both the right and the left.
Conservatives have complained about some of the plan's tax changes, while liberals have warned it would cut entitlement benefits too deeply.

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Woman accused of cutting off husband's penis



A Southern California woman accused of cutting off her husband's penis and throwing it into a garbage disposal was scheduled to be arraigned Friday on torture and aggravated mayhem charges in an Orange County court.

Catherine Kieu Becker, 48, who is also known as Que Anh Tran, is also facing special allegations, or sentencing enhancements, for great bodily injury and personal use of a deadly weapon, specifically a knife, according to the felony complaint.
If convicted on all counts, she faces a maximum sentence of life without the possibility of parole, prosecutors said.
Becker, of Garden Grove, California, is being held without bond, said Farrah Emami, spokeswoman for the Orange County District Attorney's office.

An initial police investigation alleged Becker put a drug or poison in her 60-year-old husband's dinner Monday evening to make him sleepy.
Prosecutors have said they are waiting on toxicology reports about the alleged drugging.
Becker told authorities he "deserved it" when they arrived at the scene after she called 911, the police report said. Becker and her husband are going through a divorce.
On the night of July 11, Becker and her husband argued about friends staying at their Garden Grove residence, prosecutors said in a press release.

Becker served her husband dinner, and after feeling tired at about 9 p.m., he went to bed, authorities said.
Becker allegedly tied her husband's legs and arms to the four corners of the bed with nylon rope, according to the district attorney's office. As he woke, she pulled down his pants, grabbed his penis and severed it with a knife, prosecutors said.

Becker then took the penis to the kitchen, threw it into the garbage disposal, and turned it on, "mutilating the organ," the prosecutors' statement said.

The husband underwent emergency surgery at UC Irvine Medical Center, authorities said.
On Thursday, Emami said prosecutors weren't commenting on the husband's condition out of respect for his privacy.

The Orange County case has been widely compared to the 1993 attack against John Wayne Bobbitt by his then-wife, Lorena, who cut off his penis with an 8-inch carving knife while he slept.
Lorena Bobbitt then drove away, tossing the penis out her car window. The penis was eventually found and surgically reattached.

Lorena Bobbitt was later found innocent by reason of insanity. During her testimony, she tearfully described her life at the hands of her abusive husband.

In a separate trial, Bobbitt was acquitted of sexually assaulting his wife. After successful surgery to reattach his penis, Bobbitt made appearances on "The Howard Stern Show." He also made a number of adult films.

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Sunday 17 July 2011

Mumbai blast-accidental hero&photos



Nitin Sagar was at his New Delhi office, tweeting about needing a girl to fondly run her fingers through his hair, when he saw the posts about three deadly blasts many miles away in Mumbai.
He noticed many people were tweeting offers to help victims and knew that in no time, they would go viral.
"Someone in Bombay please create a Google Doc with numbers/addresses of people willing to help," he posted on Twitter, using the old name for Mumbai.
He thought aggregate information could help a person bleeding on the street or a relative desperately searching for a loved one.
Before he left the office, Sagar created a Google docs spreadsheet. He inserted five names and phone numbers. That was about 8 p.m., an hour after the attacks.
"Have compiled numbers and areas where help is available from the time," he tweeted. "Add and share please."
By the time Sagar reached home a half hour later, the site had compounded to hundreds of names of people who wanted to donate blood, provide shelter, help transport people or help in any way they could.
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"You have no idea how fast it grew," he said. "I still don't know why I did it. It was all happening so fast."
With a few swift clicks of the mouse, Sagar, a 26-year-old Indian techie, had become an accidental hero of the Mumbai tragedy.
The spreadsheet was viewed by thousands. Tweeted by even more. And used by people who finally found an avenue to help.
Mumbai architecture student Pranali Patel inserted her phone number and said she was willing to donate O+ blood.
"I was looking for a way to help but I thought I would just be adding to the chaos," she said.
Then her sister told her about the spreadsheet. With memories of the 2008 terrorist siege on Mumbai still painfully raw in her mind, Patel thought the least she could do would be to donate blood.
"I forwarded the link to a lot of my friends and they added their names to the list," she said.
In the same vein, Anirubh Sharma, a tech worker in Bangalore, saw the spreadsheet link on Twitter. A friend's relative was killed at the luxury Taj Mahal Palace and Tower hotel when it came under attack in 2008. Sharma thought he should step up and offered an airline coupon for a free ticket to anyone who needed to travel in or out of Mumbai.


In the middle of the madness, he received a call from a man who wanted to take him up on the offer.
"It's easy to make noise," he said. "But instead of just ranting on Facebook and Twitter, why not do something good?"
Sagar said thousands of people accessed the spreadsheet. He does not know exactly what came of it all but he didn't think there had been such a centrally organized online disaster effort before in India.
He took the site down Thursday once emergency needs dissipated. But the last 24 hours have shaped his future goals.
Sagar, who works at a digital mapping firm, said he plans to keep working on establishing such databases. If and when the need arises again, maybe there will already be a relief database in place.
"So I've the go ahead to build a disaster relief management system from bosses. You have inputs?" he tweeted Thursday.

In the meantime, he said he wanted to try and shed the good Samaritan label.
"Let's face it, I was not there on the ground," he said. "I did not lift a single dead person or an injured person. All I did was make a few clicks. It was convenient. There was no effort at all."
He was not liking the hero worship. And as he does most everything else, he posted it on Twitter.

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Casey Anthony leaves jail



Casey Anthony walked free from a Florida jail early Sunday morning, three years and one day after she was first arrested for her role in the disappearance and, eventually, death of her 2-year-old daughter.
Anthony walked out of the front door of the Orange County Jail at 12:09 a.m. with her lawyer by her side and two Special Response Team officers with green vests.
Sheriff's deputies had two contingency plans laid out, but in the end opted to go with a public release.
"We have made every effort to not provide any special treatment for her," said Allen Moore, the spokesman for the Orange County Corrections Department in a statement. "She has been treated like every other inmate in her custody class."
Anthony had not received threats against her at the jail, but "this release had an unusual amount of security. So therefore, in that sense, it would not be a normal release," Moore said.
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With $537.68 from her inmate account handed to her, Anthony offered a quick thanks to a Special Response Team sergeant.
She then walked out of the jail building doors and into a dark-colored sport utility vehicle.
Her hair was pulled up in a tight bun and she had on a bright pink V-neck T-shirt, blue jeans and sneakers. She did not show any emotion.
Given the threats against her life by those furious at the not-guilty verdict, Anthony's lawyers have not said where she will go next.
News helicopters that tracked the SUV showed it head to downtown Orlando and into the parking garage of her lawyer Cheney Mason's office.
Throngs of television camera crews and a crowd of about 1,000 people were at hand outside the jail to witness the release.
Most of those who waved placards in the jail parking lot were there to voice their opposition to Anthony's release, but they did so peacefully.
Police, some on horseback, kept a wary eye.
As Anthony left, some demonstrators shouted and jeered. Some screamed, "Killer!"
The Orlando woman's release comes 12 days after a jury acquitted her on murder and child neglect charges. That verdict brought an abrupt end to a six-week trial that drew intense media hype for its elements of family drama and mystery over what happened to young Caylee Anthony.
While Anthony was cleared on the more serious charges, the jury of seven women and five men did convict her on four counts of misleading law enforcement agents who were investigating Caylee's whereabouts.
Orange County Superior Court Chief Judge Belvin Perry Jr. gave Anthony credit for time served in determining the release date.
She was initially taken into custody on July 16, 2008, and had been jailed -- with some brief exceptions, having been freed on bail on multiple occasions -- for most of the past three years.
Her toddler girl's skeletal remains were eventually found in a wooded field not far from the home of Casey Anthony's parents in December 2008, seven months after she was last seen.
Prosecutors tried, unsuccessfully, to convince jurors that the mother used chloroform to render her daughter unconscious and then duct-taped her mouth and nose to suffocate her. Her defense lawyers, meanwhile, painted Caylee's death as an accident, claiming that she'd drowned accidentally at the family pool and that Casey and her father George Anthony both covered it up.
The questions about how Caylee died, and who was responsible, remain open. But a more immediate issue is what happens next to the girl's mother, who attracted intense anger, revulsion and even sympathy from a public that she will once again be a part of.
While there have been cash donations to her jailhouse account, the more widespread sentiment is against Casey Anthony, with many believing she got away with killing her daughter.
This fury has led to speculation that the polarizing subject of the "I Hate Casey Anthony" Facebook page -- and the source of ire for its more than 40,000 fans -- might change her name and appearance, and move someplace far away.
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"If her attorneys are doing the right thing and are doing their jobs, they're going to have to explain to her that there is real hatred out there for her, that there have been death threats, that she cannot just walk amongst the population," HLN legal contributor Sunny Hostin said. "That is not just going to happen."




Florida corrections officials, and Anthony's lawyers, have offered few details. That's in part likely due to the intense emotions Anthony's release has generated.
"I know it's bad God Forgive me but i hope someone wipes that smirk off her face. With a mack truck," one poster on the "I Hate Casey Anthony" Facebook page wrote.
Visiting the Orlando site where Caylee's remains were found, Rebecca Stone said she believed her mother "put her here" -- even if the jury did not reach the same conclusion.
When asked about what's next for Casey Anthony, the Flowery Branch, Georgia, mother of two told CNN, "I don't think she will be alive for long."
An Oklahoma woman said she has already faced the kind of ire Anthony may face when she's no longer behind the protective walls of the Orange County Jail.
Sammy Blackwell told CNN affiliate KOTV that a woman who mistook her for Anthony on July 8 rammed her car twice, flipping it over.
"She said that I was trying to hurt babies, I was killing babies and she was going to stop it before it happened again," Blackwell told the station.
As it happens, Blackwell has a daughter named Caylee too, but that's the end of the similarities. She says she really doesn't even look that much like Anthony and worries for women who do.
Orange County Sheriff Jerry Demings said Tuesday that investigators are assessing threats to Anthony's safety. While he said the department was not aware of any credible threats to her life, it's a concern that was clearly on his mind.
"Nobody has a right to take the law in their own hands," he said. "Casey Anthony had her day in court and the jury made a decision. I would hope people would step back and would not go out and commit another crime."
It's also a concern for her attorneys.
"Myself and other members of the team are concerned for her safety, very much so," one of her attorneys, Dorothy Sims, told HLN.
What Anthony will do now is unclear.
"If I knew at this point, I'm sure you can appreciate that I wouldn't tell you," Sims said. "I don't believe that that has been resolved. My hope for her would be that she would be left alone and her privacy would be respected."
Hostin said on CNN that she's heard reports that Anthony will go into hiding, live under an assumed name or get plastic surgery.
"But I think we are going to hear her story, because people have offered her a million dollars already for her story," she said.
Anthony also still has legal issues to deal with.
Her criminal team is appealing her convictions for misleading police, and she is being sued in two separate actions in civil court. One is filed by a woman with the same name Anthony gave to investigators as the name of her daughter's fictitious nanny. The other involves a search group that wants Anthony to repay expenses they incurred looking for Caylee.
Anthony may be offered money for book and movie deals, but one offer won't be on the table.
Playboy founder Hugh Hefner told CNN's Piers Morgan that the magazine won't be offering Anthony a pictorial.
"I wouldn't reward someone like that for what has happened," Hefner said.
Defense attorney Mason, who once said he thought of Anthony as a granddaughter, said he doesn't know what life holds in store for his client, but has hopes.



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