Tuesday, June 28, 2011

NEW CELEBS


EMMA ROBERTS







MISS LADY


FUNNY PICTURE



CHINES MODEL AND FREAK


PRETTY WOMAN




















KIM YURI PICTURE





Monday, June 27, 2011

CASH-STARVED PERFORMERS HIT VEGAS STREETS FOR TIPS


LAS VEGAS – The Las Vegas Strip is teeming with Spidermen, Elmos and Elvis Presleys of all waistlines.
Nevada's woeful economy has inspired dozens of jobless and under-employed men and women to dress up like celebrities, movie characters and cartoon heroes in pursuit of a buck. In the past year, fat and fit Elvises, as well as would-be Homer Simpsons, Mad Hatters, and Batmen, have set up shop on bustling sidewalks across this city of vice and excess, offering tourists the chance to pose for a snapshot with someone who kind of looks famous.
The gratuity-driven performances have created tension between Las Vegas' mighty gambling industry and free-speech advocates who defend the constitutional rights of adults in spandex pants, rainbow wigs and foam muscles.
Casino titans, and government officials who understand where their tax revenue comes from, have eyed the street performers with alarm and, at times, called in police intervention. The Venetian on the Las Vegas Strip allegedly detained a man dressed like Zorro last year after he posed for a tourist's camera on a public sidewalk bordering the hotel-casino. More recently, the city council relaxed its restrictions on street performers because of legal threats.
"Sometimes the mentality is what's good for the casinos is what's good for Las Vegas, and there is a tendency to forget we are in the United States," said Allen Lichtenstein, general counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union in Nevada. "The Constitution protects expressive activity."
Lichtenstein is representing Zorro, legally known as Jason Perez-Morciglio, in a lawsuit against the Venetian. The lawsuit contends Perez-Morciglio was walking in his Zorro garb across Las Vegas Boulevard last year when a passer-by asked for a picture with him and to hold his sword.
Venetian security guards allegedly responded by detaining the Zorro lookalike and having him arrested for trespassing. The Venetian's legal team claims the Zorro was trying to sell knives without a vendor license.
Sidewalk performers are not unique to Las Vegas. Creative and enterprising panhandlers are as common as hot-dog stands in urban centers across the nation.
What makes the ubiquitous players along the Las Vegas Strip noteworthy is how swiftly their numbers have grown. In a city where celebrity impersonators have long enjoyed headliner status, sidewalk showmen were mostly unheard of before Nevada's epic economic fall. The Silver State has led the nation in unemployment for months and, for some, street performance is a final attempt to fend off financial disaster.
"It helps pay the bills, and it lets them go home with a memory they love," said Luis Reyes, an underemployed electrician who poses with tourists in downtown Las Vegas as KISS frontman Gene Simmons.
Reyes, 48, began his sidewalk tribute to Simmons in November after, to his surprise and frustration, his move from San Francisco to Las Vegas put him no closer to full-time employment. His homemade costume includes a studded codpiece, high-heel boots designed to look like angry dragons and a pair of leather black wings. He hopes to parlay his street hustle into a paid gig as a celebrity impersonator.
Police spokesman Bill Cassell said the performers began mushrooming on Las Vegas streets last year. They gained national attention last month after a man dressed as Batman became involved in a street tussle with a tourist near the Monte Carlo casino on the Las Vegas Strip. No one pressed charges, Cassell said, but the video of the fight circulated on social networking sites.
Pavement performers appear encouraged by a series of court rulings nationwide affirming their right to dress like SpongeBob SquarePants in public.
Most recently, a federal district court in 2009 determined that Seattle's restrictions on street performers were unconstitutional. The case revolved around a balloon artist who opposed the city's efforts to require all buskers to obtain permits.
The courtroom wrangling is shaping public policy.
Las Vegas for years limited what street performers could do along its bustling Fremont Street, a pedestrian mall downtown bathed in LED-lights and lined with geriatric casinos.
That policy was relaxed in February after a series of court rulings determined city officials could not black-list certain people from public land. The city didn't entirely back down. Under City Hall's new rules, costumed characters on Fremont Street must still keep away from doors, ATMs, crosswalks and outdoor cafes.
Mayor Oscar Goodman opposed changing the ban, claiming the street performers could attract other unwanted peddlers, specifically the men and women who pass out sexually explicit leaflets on the Las Vegas Strip advertising escort services.
"I'm not mad, I'm angry," Goodman said at the time. "I don't like it."
On Fremont Street on a recent weekend night, visitors did not seem to share Goodman's concerns.
They gleefully lined up to pose for pictures with a parade of celebrity and character impersonators. There was a Wolverine from X-Men lore, a twirling Michael Jackson and at least two Captain Jack Sparrows from Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean franchise. The costumes ranged from the cheap polyester garments found at discount Halloween shops to elaborate homemade concoctions emboldened with handfuls of satin, lace and red fur, depending on the character.
"He sang to me," Leticia Holmes, a 57-year-old Utah mother, boasted after posing with a crooning man dressed as Prince. Holmes also posed alongside a Rod Stewart doppelganger, noting: "My sister-in-law is going to be jealous."
The merriment of the crowds can belie the desperation of the costumed performers who need to make rent. The impersonators cannot demand money for their services, but must strictly rely on tips.
A man who gave only his stage name as G.B. Entertainer is a 55-year-old Rick James impersonator who moved to Las Vegas 11 years ago with dreams of starring in a celebrity impersonation show. Entertainer claimed he began hustling on Fremont Street last year after nearly all his paid gigs disappeared.
Impersonation jobs are increasingly limited. "American Superstars," one of the longest-running shows in Las Vegas, closed at the Stratosphere casino in March.
As James, Entertainer said he earns $75 in tips on his best days. When it's slow, he might make $14. He poses in a red sequined suit and zebra-printed boots six nights a week.
"You're the baddest brother on the planet," a passing fan told Entertainer on a recent night.
But the man didn't give Entertainer a tip. Few people do.
"I'm tired of it really, because I belong on stage," Entertainer said as he collected a few $1 tips. "It's fun sometimes, but mostly it's degrading. It's embarrassing."
source
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110627/ap_on_en_ot/us_vegas_street_performers

INTERNATIONAL COURT ISSUES ARREST WARRANT FOR GADAFFI


THE HAGUE (Reuters) – The International  Criminal Court issued arrest warrants Monday for Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam and the country's spy chief, Abdullah al-Senussi, on charges of crimes against humanity.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo had in May asked the court to issue arrest warrants for the "pre-determined" killing of protesters in Libya following after the U.N. Security Council referred the issue to the court.

Gaddafi has "absolute, ultimate and unquestioned control" over Libya's state apparatus and its security forces, presiding judge Sanji Mmasenono Monageng said in reading out the ruling.

She added that both Gaddafi and Saif al-Islam "conceived and orchestrated a plan to deter and quell by all means the civilian demonstrations" against the regime and that al-Senussi used his position of command to have attacks carried out.

Gaddafi, who has run his oil-producing Arab North African country since a military coup in 1969, is under pressure to relinquish power from rebels who rose up against his rule and from a NATO bombing campaign.

But more than three months into the NATO campaign, fissures are showing within the Western alliance and it is feared that the ICC warrant could also trigger greater violence in Libya as Gaddafi tries to cling to power.

In its ruling, the ICC said there was "reasonable grounds" to believe that Gaddafi, his son and al-Senussi committed crimes within the jurisdiction of the court and that a warrant for their arrest should be issued.

This was the second warrant of arrest issued by the ICC against a sitting head of state -- following two slapped on Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir in 2009 and 2010 for crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide in Darfur.

Securing arrests, however, has proven difficult for the ICC. It has no police force and relies on member states to enforce arrest orders. The civil war in Libya is likely to complicate attempts to enforce the court's latest warrants.

In arguing for warrants, Moreno-Ocampo said Gaddafi drew up a plan to quell protests through the use of "extreme and lethal violence" and that all three men implemented a state policy of "widespread and systematic attacks" on civilians.

Gaddafi's government denies targeting Libyan civilians, accusing NATO of doing so.

"Crimes continue today in Libya. To stop the crimes and protect civilians in Libya, Gaddafi must be arrested," Moreno-Ocampo said in a statement Sunday ahead of the ruling.
SOURCE
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110627/ts_afp/libyaconflict_20110627094721

Sunday, June 26, 2011

SELENA GOMEZ PIC

selena gomez

selena gomez

selena gomez

selena gomez

selena gomez

selena gomez

selena gomez

selena gomez

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

NEWS UPDATE FIERCE TORNADOES COUGHT ON TAPE IN MIDWEST

NEWS UPDATE TORNADOES COUGHT ON TAPE MIDWES

Friday, June 17, 2011

DEATH COUNT OF SEPT.11 ATTACK INCREASES


NEW YORK – Death count of sept.11 attack increases A man who died last year of lung disease was added Friday to the official list of victims of the Sept. 11 attacks.
New York City's medical examiner ruled that 63-year-old Jerry Borg, of Manhattan, who died in December, was killed by complications caused by a lung condition he got from inhaling dust from the collapse of the World Trade Center.
Borg suffered from pulmonary sarcoidosis, a disease in which inflamed cells can make someone's lungs stiff and interfere with normal breathing.
The death brings the official count of World Trade Center attack victims to 2,753.
The ruling is a rarity. Thousands of people have blamed health problems on trade center dust, but Borg is only the third victim to be added to the medical examiner's list of Sept. 11 victims.
All three of those people, including Borg, were working downtown on the day of the attacks and became caught in the dense cloud of pulverized concrete and glass that billowed over lower Manhattan when the twin towers fell.
Felicia Dunn Jones, a 42-year-old civil rights lawyer, fell ill immediately after the attacks, was diagnosed with sarcoidosis and was dead within five months. Her death wasn't ruled as officially caused by the terrorist attacks until 2007.
Leon Heyward, 45, died in 2008 of lymphoma, an illness that hasn't been conclusively linked to trade center dust, but Chief Medical Examiner Charles Hirsch ruled in early 2009 that his cancer was complicated by sarcoidosis.
All victims of the terrorist attacks have been classified as homicide victims.
A spokeswoman for the medical examiner's office, Ellen Borakove, declined to release additional information about the circumstances of Borg's illness or personal biography, citing privacy rules.
Congress late last year created a $2.78 billion fund to compensate people who might have been sickened by exposure to trade center dust and ash, and set aside $1.5 billion to fund health programs for rescue and cleanup workers.
Medical studies have found elevated asthma rates among people who were caught in the dust cloud or spent extended periods in the trade center ruins. Fire Department medical experts have documented diminished lung power among an unusual number of firefighters who were at the site.
Hard evidence linking other ailments like cancer to the dust, however, has been elusive or inconclusive, leading Hirsch to resist immense political pressure add more people to the death count.
He famously declined to add a retired police detective, James Zadroga, to the list after concluding that the lawman's fatal lung condition was caused by prescription drug abuse, not by trade center particles trapped in his lungs.
That decision remains controversial, and the sponsors of the health bill that passed in December named it after Zadroga.
http://news.yahoo.com/video/us-15749625/potential-terror-threat-at-pentagon-25646182

MARIAH CARRY NEW PERFUM CREEPY OR CUTE



Here is the new ad for Mariah Carey's new trio of fragrances, Lollipop Splash the Remix. Our first reaction when first viewing the image on People.com was to laugh (Mimi is unintentionally hilarious!), then to cringe (why must Mimi, who is 42 years old, continually present herself as an aging tween with a butterfly fetish?!).

Sigh.

We snicker but it's worth noting that the new mother of twins and collector of all things Hello Kitty has a successful perfume line. Her latest scents -- a trilogy inspired by Carey's playful personality -- are Never Forget You ("gourmet jelly beans and golden peony"), Vision of Love ("French macaroon and purple jasmine") and Inseparable ("raspberry, mango, jasmine and orange flowers").

Carey's ads are authentic to her sexy-and-sweet personal brand, but given her string of bizarre behavior (the latest: flaunting her naked baby bump on the cover of Life & Style, then painting a butterfly on it), the image of the Grammy-winning diva licking a lollipop, all Lolita-like, makes us embarrassed for her. And the color scheme, clearly yanked from the design of a 1993-era Lisa Frank Trapper Keeper, has got to go. It just seems so ... immature!

Isn't Mariah too old for this act?

WOMAN SAYS SHE'S TOO EDUCATED TO BE KICKED OF NEWS YORK TRAIN

Loud cell-phone talkers strike again!
A woman traveling on New York's Metro North train line was recorded by a fellow passenger telling train employees that she is too "well-educated" to be told to quiet down and not use profanity in her cell-phone conversation.
"Do you know what schools I've been to? How well-educated I am?" she asks the train employee, who is seen explaining to another employee that she asked the passenger to stop using the "F-bomb."
"I'm sorry do you think I'm a little hoodlum?" she asks, then demands her money back and dares the conductor to stop the train.
The person who originally uploaded the video to Youtube (who has since removed it) said in the description that the woman "was talking too loud on the train when the conductor politely asked her to keep it down and stop using profanity or to take it to the vestibule." After the altercation, the conductor came on the loudspeaker and reminded people to keep conversations quiet, "especially those people who went to Harvard or Yale or are from Westport."
Last month, a woman was escorted from a quiet car in an Amtrak train by police after she chatted loudly on her cell phone for most of the 16-hour journey, and then became angry when passengers asked her to stop.


THE IDENTITY OF VOUNCOUVER'S FAMOUSE KISSING COUPLE IS REVEALED


In the age of Facebook and Twitter, it was only a matter of time before the world learned the identities of the kissing couple from that now-iconic photo of the Vancouver riots.
About 24 hours after photos of the smooch was passed on through emails, IMs and blog posts, the Toronto Star and the CBC are reporting that the boyfriend and girlfriend in the photograph are Aussie bartender Scott Jones and Canadian college student Alex Thomas, who was injured just before the picture was taken.
The papers report that Jones and Thomas have been dating since Jones arrived in Vancouver on a "working holiday." They attended Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final, which the hometown Canucks lost 4-0 to the Boston Bruins, and then somehow found themselves between the angry rioters and charging riot police later that night in downtown Vancouver.
The famous aftermath, as captured by Getty Images photographer Rich Lam:

So how were Jones and Thomas ultimately identified as the unlikely "make love, not war" couple of Vancouver's embarrassing night of injury and destruction?
It probably won't surprise you to learn that Facebook was involved.
Though Scott's sister Hannah first identified her brother to an Australian news network, things really started taking off when  Brett Jones, Scott's father, posted the following update on his Facebook profile on Friday morning from the family's home in Perth, Australia.
(Note the funny response from Scott's brother, Ryan.)

Brett Jones now says the couple is being besieged by media requests from outlets around the world. All, of course, are interested in knowing the circumstances that found the couple smooching as cars were burned and windows were smashed around them.
But despite some of our initial assumptions, the kiss seen 'round the world wasn't the product of a riot-fueled, uncontrollable passion. Brett Jones instead notes that Thomas was injured and his son was coming to her aid. An alternate angle taken from above shows other bystanders later attempting to help Thomas and Jones.
Combine that different angle with Brett Jones' story and it certainly dispels the rumors that the couple had intentionally staged the photo.
"They were between the riot police and the rioters, and the riot police were actually charging forward, and Alex got knocked by a [police] shield and fell to the ground," Brett Jones told CBC News. "[Scott] was comforting her and gave her a kiss to say, 'It's going to be OK,' and the photographer just took the shot at that moment."
Jones' mother Marie said she immediately knew it was her son in the picture because "he doesn't have a lot of clothes with him and he always puts on the same thing."
So where do they go from here? The good news is that Jones escaped the incident unhurt and Thomas only suffered a bruised leg. The bad news is that Jones is scheduled to leave Canada soon and head home for Australia after a trip to California. The Jones family says that Thomas plans to visit California with their son but that the couple's future after that is uncertain.
source
http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/blog/puck_daddy/post/The-identity-of-Vancouver-8217-s-famous-kissing?urn=nhl-wp7436

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

SELENA GOMEZ TELL ME SOMETHING MUSIC VIDEO

SELENA GOMEZ AND SCENE A YEAR WITHOUTH RAIN

SELENA OMEZ & THE SCANE WHO SAYS

VIDEO SELENA GOMEZ THE SCANE AND NATURALLY

Friday, June 10, 2011

BIOGRAPHY RICHARD SCARRY




Biography Richard McClure Scarry (June 5, 1919 – April 30, 1994) was a popular American children's author and illustrator who published over 300 books with total sales of over 100 million units worldwide.[1]
Scarry was born in Boston, Massachusetts, where his parents ran a shop. The Scarry family enjoyed a comfortable life even during the time of the Great Depression. Following high school graduation, Scarry enrolled in a business college but soon dropped out, finding it not to his liking. He then studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where he remained until being drafted into the U.S. Army during World War II.
Following the war, Scarry worked for the art departments of various magazines before making a career breakthrough in 1949 with Little Golden Books.
Contents
[hide]
•             1 Busytown
•             2 Personal life and family
•             3 Bibliography
•             4 Stories made to video
•             5 References
•             6 External links
[edit] Busytown
Scarry's most famous series of books was about Busytown. Scarry's characters were almost always anthropomorphic animals. His books were popular with children throughout the world. Over 100 million copies of his books were sold, and they have been translated into 30 languages.[2]
While his books are largely populated by common animal species such as cats, rabbits, domestic pigs, and mice, he proved to be quite adept at giving human characteristics to a seemingly endless number of creatures. Beavers, raccoons, hippopotamuses, rhinoceroses, owls, bears, goats, elephants, foxes, gorillas, crocodiles, dogs, wolves, anteaters, hyenas, baboons, chickens, worms, and insects were just some of the other animals to be featured in Scarry's works. Many of his later illustrations feature characters in traditional Swiss clothing and show architecturally correct drawings of half-timber houses. Examinations of drawings featuring mechanical devices, such as the rigging on a sailboat, also show that they were drawn with accuracy.
In the 1980s and 1990s, many of his Best Ever series of books were converted into popular animated videos, which are available on DVD and VHS. Some of these animated films include Richard Scarry's Best Silly Stories and Songs Videos Ever and The Busiest Firefighters Ever. The Busytown books were also adapted into an animated series, The Busy World of Richard Scarry, which ran on Showtime from 1993 to 1996 and later reran in the late 1990s on Nickelodeon and Noggin. A further animated series, Busytown Mysteries was commissioned by CBC Television from the Cookie Jar Group in 2007, and airs on the Kids' CBC Block morning program. Busytown was also featured at the Carnegie Science Center from June 13 through September 8, 2002 in an interactive exhibit entitled "Richard Scarry's Busytown."[3]
Titles reprinted since the death of Mr. Scarry in 1994 were significantly condensed from their original versions. For example, in "Best Word Book Ever" whole sections have been deleted: the section on painting was removed, as was the section on music making. "Buildings" section removed — originally depicted were a church, a cathedral, and a French Foreign Legion fortress. "Out West" section removed entirely. Other parts of the book were edited to show more women in the workplace and fewer cultural stereotypes. Examples in Best Word Book Ever — Grocery section: old version, grocer is a male bear — new version, grocer is a female bear. Boats and Ships section: old version showed an Native American in a canoe — new version, a mouse in a pink sweater. "Work Machines" section — male bulldozer operator became a female bulldozer operator with the addition of pink flowers on sleeves. In the "When You Grow Up" section, a milkman becomes a female taxi driver. A Cowboy was replaced by a female gardener and a female scientist; a commuter-train conductor was replaced by a reporter and a female photographer; a soldier was replaced by a female judge and a small female cat.[citation needed]
[edit] Personal life and family
Scarry's wife, Patricia Murphy, was a writer of children's textbooks who met Richard during collaboration when he was a textbook illustrator. She is credited with writing many of the stories in his subsequent children's books, such as Good Night, Little Bear, The Bunny Book, and The Fishing Cat.
In 1972 the Scarrys bought a chalet in Gstaad, Switzerland. Here he founded his studio where he spent most of the day (from about 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.) writing and illustrating his books. His studio contained a single desk, lamp and chair. His wife was told not to bother him except for his hour break for lunch.
Scarry died of a heart attack in Gstaad at age 74 in 1994.[1]
Scarry's papers and drawings are in the collection of the University of Connecticut archives.
His son, Richard Scarry, Jr., is also an illustrator, sometimes working under the nickname Huck Scarry, sometimes working in his father's style as Richard Scarry. Huck is the nickname of Huckle Cat, one of the most commonly recurring Busytown characters. Scarry Jr. lives in Vienna, Austria; socialites Olympia and Fiona Scarry are his daughters.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

SWIFT JUSTICE IN MURDER THAT STIRRED ANGER IN CHINA



One month after a traffic fatality touched off widespread protests in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia, a court has sentenced a coal truck driver to death for running over and killing an ethnic Mongolian herder. The rapid trial and sentencing showed the speed with which Chinese authorities have moved to tamp down unrest in the region.

On Wednesday the Intermediate People's Court of Xilin Gol league found driver Li Lindong guilty of murder immediately after a six-hour trial, Chinese state press reported. The court ruled that Li had intentionally run over and dragged Mergen, who like some ethnic Mongolians goes by a single name. Mergen was part of a group of herders who had blocked coal trucks to protest the damaged they caused to traditional herding lands. A fellow defendant who had been in the cab of the truck with Li was sentenced to life in prison, and two other men were given three-year sentences for interfering with the police investigation.

Mergen's May 10 killing touched off a series of protests in the frontier region, where decades of immigration by China's Han majority have raised complaints about the exploitation of natural resources and the decline of the traditional culture of ethnic Mongols, who now comprise 20% of Inner Mongolia's population. Mergen's killing was followed five days later by the death of another Mongolian, Yan Wenlong, who was crushed by a forklift during a protest at a coal mine. Chinese authorities responded swiftly to the protests, dispatching thousands of armed police, blocking Mongolian students from leaving campuses and restricting discussion of the events on Chinese websites.

In recent years China has seen deadly race riots in other border regions with large minority populations including Tibet in 2008 and Xinjiang in 2009. But the Inner Mongolia protests were particularly unsettling for the government. While there is a small movement of Mongolians who would like Inner Mongolia to split from China and form an independent state or join with the nation of Mongolia to the north, the region has been largely free of the sort of unrest seen in China's western frontier regions. As with the Tibet and Xinjiang riots, the Chinese government placed the blame on outsiders. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu accused "overseas groups" of seizing on the deaths to "cause trouble." She said the government would deal with the cases according to the law and address the broader grievances raised. Last week an official with the Ministry of Environmental Protection told a press conference that China would restrict projects in environmentally sensitive parts of Inner Mongolia.

Read more: http://globalspin.blogs.time.com/2011/06/09/swift-justice-in-murder-that-stirred-anger-in-china/#ixzz1OqNVP2Nh

VIDEO AND PICTURE SELENA GOMEZ IN BIKINI

selena gomez
selena gomez

selena gomez
Selena Marie Gomez (born July 22, 1992)[1] is an American actress, singer, and entrepreneur, best known for portraying Alex Russo in the Emmy Award-winning Disney Channel television series Wizards of Waverly Place. She subsequently ventured into feature films and has starred in the television movies Another Cinderella Story, Wizards of Waverly Place: The Movie, and Princess Protection Program. She made her starring theatrical film debut in Ramona and Beezus.


Her career has expanded into the music industry; Gomez is the lead singer and founder of the pop band Selena Gomez & the Scene, which has released two RIAA Gold certified studio albums, Kiss & Tell and A Year Without Rain.[2] As of April 2011, The band has sold 1,354,000 albums in the United States.[3] Gomez has also contributed to the soundtracks of Tinker Bell, Another Cinderella Story and Wizards of Waverly Place after signing a record deal with Hollywood Records. In 2008, Selena Gomez was designated a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador
Birth name     Selena Marie Gomez
Born     July 22, 1992 (age 18)
Grand Prairie, Texas, U.S.
Genres     Pop rock, dance-pop, electropop
Occupations     Actress, singer-songwriter, musician, fashion designer
Instruments     Vocals, Piano, Guitar, Drums
Years active     2002–present
Labels     Hollywood
Associated acts     Selena Gomez & the Scene Forever the Sickest Kids
Website     selenagomez.com
SOURCE

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selena_Gomez