Friday, July 15, 2011

♫ JAMIE FOXX'S #NEW #ARTIST #SEXY★==►@shellyreneenews "MIND CONTROL"


NEW♫ JAMIE FOXX'S NEW ARTIST SEXY★==► "MIND CONTROL"

'Deathly Hallows 2' a fittingly grand farewell Satisfying end to Harry Potter series: features balanced narrative, spectacular visual effects

Image: Deathly Hallows Part 2
Warner Bros.: After eight films in 10 years and a cumulative global box-office take of more than $6.3 billion, the successful franchise comes to an obligatory — and quite satisfying — conclusion.


By Todd McCarthy
Hollywood Reporter

REVIEW:
It ends well. After eight films in 10 years and a cumulative global box-office take of more than $6.3 billion, the most successful franchise in the history of movies comes to an obligatory — and quite satisfying — conclusion in "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2."

IMAGE: Potter kids

Fully justifying the decision, once thought purely mercenary, of splitting J.K. Rowling's final book into two parts, this is an exciting and, to put it mildly, massively eventful finale that will grip and greatly please anyone who has been at all a fan of the series up to now. If ever there was a sure thing commercially, this stout farewell is it.

Photos from THR: Growing up 'Harry Potter'

It has been an extraordinary run, really, marked by careful planning as well as very good luck. When some quick shots at the end remind how incredibly young Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson were when this all started, one marvels that they've all grown up to be as physically plausible for the roles and sufficiently talented as they have. With a parade of wonderful British actors filling exceedingly vivid parts, casting has been the series' most consistently strong suit throughout; remarkably, only one major actor, Richard Harris, died over the course of the decade, and he was undisruptively replaced by Michael Gambon (though regret still lingers that Peter O'Toole wasn't cast as Dumbledore in the first place; was it thought he wouldn't survive this long?).
 
Story: Need a 'Potter' refresher? Seven films in six minutes

After Chris Columbus launched the franchise capably but with less than dazzling flair, producer David Heyman smartly chose Alfonso Cuaron and Mike Newell to stage the next two — the best of the series artistically — then settled on TV director David Yates for the long march to the end. Initially working in what seemed too straightforward and briskly efficient a manner, Yates has finally come into his own in this last installment, orchestrating a massive chessboard of events with impressive finesse and a stronger sense of dramatic composition than he has previously displayed.


Photos: See 'Potter' fans at parties, premieres

But perhaps the key player all along has been screenwriter Steve Kloves, who made what must have been a vexing decision to put a promising directorial career on hold for more than a decade to write all but one of the Potter episodes (though confessing exhaustion and the need of a break, he later expressed regret over not adapting "The Order of the Phoenix"). Tricky in that so many characters, including quite a few from the past, needed to be shuffled into the dramatic deck without sacrificing forward momentum, this final chapter suggests an even greater-than-usual attention to narrative balance and refinement. Simply put, it's clear the filmmakers felt the responsibility to do this job right, and that they have.
 

Of course, "Deathly Hallows Part 2" is all about the final confrontation between Harry and Voldemort, the ultimate showdown between good and evil, the climax the entire series has built toward from the beginning. With Voldemort wielding the coveted Elder Wand with blinding power even before the Warner Bros. logo appears onscreen, Harry, Ron and Hermione at the outset are still in the wilderness, commanded to find and destroy four remaining Horcruxes (all of which contain fractions of the Dark Lord's soul) and obliged to make a deal with disagreeable goblin Griphook (Warwick Davis) to gain access to Bellatrix Lestrange's bank vault, where one Horcrux might be hidden.
 
Story: Which Harry Potter movie is the best?

The subsequent break-in involves a wonderful charade in which Hermione disguises herself as Bellatrix (some amusing work from Helena Bonham Carter here) but also a roller-coaster ride that feels like a prototype for a theme-park attraction. This sequence also calls attention to the fact that, after an aborted effort on the previous installment, this is the first Harry Potter film to be released in 3-D. Those with a purist streak will probably wish Warners had left well enough alone and not adopted the fad purely for the extra dollars, as if it needed them. Still, apart from a few isolated effects that look phonier thanks to the extra dimension, the 3-D works pretty well for the many spectacular visual effects as well as with the greater sense of depth with which Yates stages many of his scenes here.


As Harry and his friends converge on Hogwarts — now run by Snape like a gloomy fascist camp and guarded by hovering Death Eaters — an admirably sober, melancholy mood cloaks the proceedings; Aberforth Dumbledore (Ciaran Hinds) details unsavory aspects of his family's early history and portents of what's to come reverberate as Harry and Voldemort increasingly share what's in their minds, while Harry's welcoming committee at school resembles a stalwart bunch of loyal soldiers gathered for a none-too-promising last stand. Among the many who have been recently little seen, the one who most surprisingly rises to the occasion is the largely forgotten Neville Longbottom (Matthew Lewis), whereas Harry's girlfriend Ginny (Bonnie Wright) offers entirely expected solidarity.

More from THR: 'Deathly Hallows Part 2' most anticipated film of 2011

Similarly marginalized in recent years, Maggie Smith's wonderful Minerva McGonagall reasserts herself for this last campaign, helping to create a shield around Hogwarts that will at least temporarily delay Voldemort's army, which has converged on a cliff overlooking the school. As preparations are frantically made for the final battle, time is nonetheless found for crucial narrative trips into the past, including one final and particularly revelatory dive into the pensieve to explore the early relationships among Snape, Harry's mother and Dumbledore, as well as the murders that started it all so many years before.
 
Even the final wand duel between the evenly matched Harry and Voldemort has its distinct stages that reveal final layers of information. It's also nicely leavened with slashes of humor, leading to a brief coda set 19 years later that, in the way it comes full circle and reconnects with the relative innocence with which the series started, feels just right.

More from THR: 'Potter' stars wouldn't return if franchise went on

The squabbling of "Deathly Hallows Part 1" happily a thing of the past, Ron and Hermione lend stalwart support, but the burdens of the consummation lie squarely upon Harry's shoulders and lead one to appreciate Radcliffe's accomplishment here and throughout the series; whatever quibbles and shortcomings have existed in the past, he is Harry, once and for all, and goes out on a high note. A number of departed or otherwise absented characters make brief appearances here as a means of tying things together, enabling such actors as Gary Oldman, Emma Thompson, Jim Broadbent, Timothy Spall, Miriam Margolyes, Julie Walters and others to make brief curtain calls along with their fellow great pros.

More from THR: AMC announces 'Harry Potter' 4-night premiere event

Technically, nothing has been held back. The eventual sight of Hogwarts as a crumbled ruin is striking, Eduardo Serra's cinematography outclasses what he accomplished the last time out, and some of Nick Dudman's makeup effects — especially with the goblins and a shocking glimpse of a fetal Voldemort — are sensational. Alexandre Desplat's score is arguably the best yet for the series, briefly incorporating echoes of John Williams' original themes while richly boosting the already heightened drama of this sendoff to such a tremendously successful series.

All that's missing is an official “The End” after the final image.

Copyright 2011 The Hollywood Reporter
TODAY Entertainment 

@LadyGaga's @YouTube restored after copyright issues

Lady Gaga
Lady Gaga's official YouTube channel has been restored after it was blocked over a copyright dispute.

Yesterday, [14 July] a notice on the site stated that the suspension was due to "multiple or severe violations of YouTube's copyright policy".

By Thursday evening the account was back to normal.
The Google Inc. owned YouTube channel declined to comment. Its policy is to remove accounts after three copyright violations.
 
Big in Japan: It's being reported the dispute was with a media company, after Lady Gaga's perfomance on Japanese channel Fuji TV.

She appeared on weekly show, SMAP X SMAP, to promote her new album.
Lady Gaga arriving in Sydney The singer arrives in Sydney for a one night gig, earlier this week
During her ten minute set she performed a medley of songs featuring Born This Way, You & I and The Edge of Glory.

Footage of that performance has since been removed from other websites as well as YouTube.

Lady Gaga has two YouTube accounts, the Vevo account where her music videos often debut, and "ladygagaofficial", which is the one that got suspended.

Interscope, the singer's record label and publicist, has yet to comment.

Gaga's HBO concert special Monster Ball Tour at Madison Square Garden on Thursday earned five Emmy Award nominations.
BBC radio: Newsbeat

Thursday, July 14, 2011

63rd Primetime EMMY AWARDS; the nominees are...



"Mad Men," the sharply observed drama of a changing 1960s America, captured 19 Emmy nominations Thursday morning to lead the series pack, with the melodramatic miniseries "Mildred Pierce" starring Kate Winslet grabbing a top 21 bids. "Mad Men" has a chance to repeat for a fourth consecutive year as best drama.


"Modern Family," last year's top comedy series, was the most-nominated sitcom with 17 bids, including nods for its stars, Ed O'Neill, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Eric Stonestreet, Ty Burrell, Julie Bowen and Sofia Vergara.


Other leading nominees include the Prohibition-era drama "Boardwalk Empire" with 18 nominations, "Saturday Night Live" with 16 and 13 bids each for the sex-and-swords fantasy "Game of Thrones" and the sitcom "30 Rock."
 
Video: The nominees for the Primetime Emmys are… (on this page)


"OK, keep it together," a surprised nominations co-announcer Melissa McCarthy said when she realized she was a nominee for her sitcom "Mike & Molly."


The controversial sitcom "The Kennedys," which was dropped by the History channel and given a second chance by the lesser-known ReelzChannel, received 10 nominations, including best miniseries.

Familiar faces have a chance to claim — or reclaim — Emmys, including last year's lead comedy actress winner Edie Falco of "Nurse Jackie" and Jim Parsons, best actor for a comedy for "The Big Bang Theory." Both were nominated this year.

AMC: Jon Hamm was nominated for an Emmy for best drama series
for his work as Don Draper in AMC's "Mad Men."

Jon Hamm received his fourth lead acting bid for "Mad Men," and this time the competitor who denied him the award three times before isn't in the category. Bryan Cranston and "Breaking Bad" weren't eligible for this year's awards because the series took a break between seasons.


Steve Carell earned a best comedy actor for his final season of "The Office," his last chance to win an Emmy statuette for his role as TV's most clueless boss.

FOR THE FULL LISTING OF NOMINEES, CATEGORIES, AND MAKE YOUR OWN PICKS CHECK OUT Emmy Awards: the Nominees are...

TODAY News

Not to be outdone, female Marine wants date with Justin Timberlake


By Courtney Hazlett

After Justin Timberlake nudged Mila Kunis into accepting a Marine's invitation to be his date for the Marine Corps Ball, another Marine had a similar idea: put Justin Timberlake on the spot, too.

Cpl. Kelsey De Santis, currently serving as the only female at the Martial Arts Center for Excellence at Marine Corps Base Quantico, has made a YouTube video inviting Timberlake to be her date for the Ball, taking place Nov. 12 in Washington, D.C.

After coaxing Kunis into accepting, it's hard to imagine a scenario where Timberlake could decline this offer. C'mon, J.T.!
TODAY the SCOOP
Matt Sayles / AP file
Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis at the MTV Movie Awards last month.

Women's #WorldCup: #US to play #Japan in final

The United States celebrate 
The United States celebrate Abby Wambach's (second left) crucial strike

The United States will play Japan in the Fifa Women's World Cup final on Sunday 17 July.

USA scored twice in the last 11 minutes to overcome France 3-1 in the first semi-final.

The favourites, bidding for an unprecedented third World Cup title after their wins in 1991 and 1999, were pushed all the way by Les Bleus.
Japan players celebrate winning 3-1 the semifinal match between Japan and Sweden at the Women's World Cup in Germany. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Japan beat Sweden 3-1 thanks to a double from Nahomi Kawasumi, including a spectacular 35-metre lob.
Josefine Oqvist gave Sweden the lead after pouncing on Sawa's poor back-pass before Kawasumi equalised nine minutes later.

Sawa added the second with a close-range header before Kawasumi completed the comeback with a brilliant lob.

Earlier in the day, Lauren Cheney tapped the US into a half-time lead, but Sonia Bompastor curled France deservedly level.

However, Abby Wambach's header and Alex Morgan's lob sealed the US victory.

France coach Bruno Bini, meanwhile, was left to lamented his side's missed chances, saying: "We had a lot of chances and played a very good game except the first 10 minutes.

"We were as good as we could have been. It was very physical and we stood up to this. But they have a lot of experience. They know how to play at this level and that told today (Wednesday). I thought we could get back to 2-2 but at 3-1 it's over."
BBC Sport

HIV medicines 'boost prevention'

Tenofovir AIDS drug molecule The HIV drug tenofovir


 
HIV drugs can be used to boost protection against HIV as well as treating symptoms after infection, research suggests.

Two studies in Africa add weight to previous data showing drugs used to treat HIV can reduce infection risk when taken daily.

The World Health Organization said the studies could have "enormous impact" in preventing HIV transmission.

The findings were revealed in the run-up to an AIDS conference in Rome.

"This is a major scientific breakthrough which re-confirms the essential role that antiretroviral medicine has to play in the AIDS response," said Michel Sidibé, executive director of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

"These studies could help us to reach the tipping point in the HIV epidemic."
 
Future hopes:
One trial, carried out by the University of Washington, US, followed almost 5,000 couples in Kenya and Uganda, where one person had HIV infection and the other did not.
"If you're currently trying to stay HIV negative don't give up on the condoms yet”
-Lisa Power Terrence Higgins Trust-

The uninfected person took a daily HIV medicine (tenofovir), a combination of two HIV drugs (tenofovir and emtricitabine), or a placebo pill.

There were 62% fewer HIV infections in the group on the single drug and 73% fewer HIV infections in the group that took the combination, compared with those given a dummy pill.

The other trial, conducted by the United States Centers for Disease Control, followed 1,200 HIV-negative heterosexual men and women in Botswana. They received either a once-daily combination tablet or a placebo. The HIV medication reduced the risk of getting HIV by about 63% overall.

A previous trial found the combination of two HIV drugs reduced the risk of infection in gay and bisexual men by 44%. But a similar study in women at risk of HIV infection in Kenya, Tanzania and South Africa produced disappointing results.
 
New tools:
The HIV charity, the Terrence Higgins Trust, described the latest findings as "genuinely exciting".

Head of Policy Lisa Power told the BBC: "Pre-exposure prophylaxis is not going to be available overnight but we are exploring whether it is one of a range of things that can drive down onward transmission of HIV."

But she stressed that the findings needed to be properly tested and trialled.

"If you're currently trying to stay HIV negative don't give up on the condoms yet."

The WHO and UNAIDS recommend that people make evidence-informed decisions on HIV prevention options.

They say no single method is fully protective against HIV and antiretroviral drugs for prevention need to be combined with other HIV prevention methods such as condoms.

"Effective new HIV prevention tools are urgently needed, and these studies could have enormous impact in preventing heterosexual transmission," said Dr Margaret Chan, the WHO's Director-General.

"WHO will be working with countries to use the new findings to protect more men and women from HIV infection."

Full details of the studies will be presented at the meeting in Rome.
BBC News

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

#US defeats #France in Women's #WorldCup semifinal, 3-1

The US team starters were Alex Krieger, Lauren Cheney, Abby Wambach, goalkeeper Hope Solo, Heather O Reilly, Amy Rodriguez, from top left, and from bottom left, Amy Le Peilbet, Christie Rampone, Becky Sauerbrunn, Shannon Boxx, Carli Lloyd line up for a team photo just before the semifinal match.
Yves Logghe/Associated Press
The US team starters were Alex Krieger, Lauren Cheney, Abby Wambach, goalkeeper Hope Solo, Heather O Reilly, Amy Rodriguez, from top left, and from bottom left, Amy Le Peilbet, Christie Rampone, Becky Sauerbrunn, Shannon Boxx, Carli Lloyd line up for a team photo just before the semifinal match.

France's goalkeeper Berangere Sapowicz, Laure Lepailleur, Laura Georges, Marie-Laure Delie, Sandrine Soubeyrand, Ophelie Meilleroux, from top left, and from bottom left, Sonia Bompastor, Louisa Necib, Camille Abily, Elise Bussaglia, Gaetane Thiney line up for a team photo just before the semifinal match.
Michael Sohn/Associated Press
France's goalkeeper Berangere Sapowicz, Laure Lepailleur, Laura Georges, Marie-Laure Delie, Sandrine Soubeyrand, Ophelie Meilleroux, from top left, and from bottom left, Sonia Bompastor, Louisa Necib, Camille Abily, Elise Bussaglia, Gaetane Thiney line up for a team photo just before the semifinal match.

Wambach Again! USA Advances to World Cup Final

US defeats France, will play for title on Sunday

By John Johnson, Newser Staff
(Newser) – One more win for the World Cup: The US women's soccer team beat France 3-1 today to advance to the finals on Sunday. With the game tied 1-1, Abby Wambach headed in a goal again to give USA a 2-1 lead with about 10 minutes left. Alex Morgan made it 3-1 shortly after. Laura Cheney scored the first American goal in the first half. The women will play either Japan or Sweden (on Sunday) for the championship.
United States' Abby Wambach celebrates her goal.
(AP Photo/Martin Meissner)
United States' Heather O Reilly reacts after USA went up 1-0 in the first half.
(AP Photo/Martin Meissner)
United States' Amy Le Peilbet and France's Camille Abily challenge for the ball.
(AP Photo/Yves Logghe) 
United States' Lauren Cheney, left, celebrates scoring the opening goal with Amy Rodriguez.
(AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
image
United States' Abby Wambach scores her side's second goal during the semifinal match between France and the United States at the Women's Soccer World Cup in Moenchengladbach, Germany, Wednesday, July 13, 2011. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)

Wambach broke a tense tie in the 79th minute Wednesday with a monstrous header — what else? — off of a Lauren Cheney corner kick. Cheney delivered the ball perfectly to the far post, and the 5-foot-11 forward soared over the scrum and pushed the ball past French goalkeeper Berangere Sapowicz. Wambach let out a scream and did a sliding sprint into the corner, where she was mobbed by her teammates.

It was Wambach’s third goal of the tournament and 12th of her career, tying fellow American Michelle Akers for third on the all-time World Cup scoring list.

Alex Morgan added an insurance goal in the 82nd, the first for the World Cup rookie. When the final whistle sounded, the Americans rushed onto the field. Wambach found U.S. coach Pia Sundhage and gave her a bearhug as the pro-American crowd of 25,676 serenaded the team with chants of “U-S-A! U-S-A!”

“Abby, she’s just the best,” Sundhage said. “I’m very happy to have her in our team. Great.”

Despite the loss, the World Cup was a resounding success for the French, who made their first appearance in the semifinals and qualified for next summer’s London Olympics.

The French didn’t stick around to watch the Americans celebrate — and the party is sure to be even bigger back home. A thrilling win over Brazil in the quarterfinals captivated fans back home, with Hollywood celebs, other pro athletes and folks who’d never watched a soccer game before jumping on the U.S. bandwagon. Ellen DeGeneres wished the team good luck on Twitter before the game, dozens in the Phoenix airport were glued to TVs and Super Bowl MVP Aaron Rodgers tagged one of his Tweets with “worldcupfinalherewecome.”

Though the Americans are two-time World Cup champions, they haven’t made the final since Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy and Brandi Chastain won it all in 1999. This American team will now play either Japan or Sweden in Sunday’s final in Frankfurt.
 

R. Kelly's mansion headed for foreclosure: Documents show singer hasn't made a mortgage payment since June 2010

contributed by Jeff Fusco / Getty Images

By Karin Matz

Grammy-award winning singer-songwriter R. Kelly has failed to make mortgage payments on his multimillion-dollar Chicago-area home for more than a year and now may lose the property to lenders, court documents show.

In a foreclosure action filed in June in Cook County Circuit Court, J.P. Morgan Chase Bank N.A. said that the singer, whose full name is Robert S. Kelly, had not made a monthly payment on the 11,000-square-foot home in Olympia Fields in south suburban Chicago since June 2010.

The suit said the current principal balance on the loan was more than $2.9 million, not including unpaid interest, which accrues at rate of $251 a day.

The original loan issued in 1999 was for $3.5 million, according to the lawsuit, and the monthly payments were $24,345.12.

The property has a number of liens on it, according to the lawsuit, including nearly $2 million from the Department of the Treasury.

The 44-year-old R&B star, who won three Grammy Awards in 1998 for his song "I Believe I Can Fly," is no stranger to controversy. In 2008 a jury acquitted him of child pornography charges.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.
TODAY Music 

'Bad Girls Club' star Natalie Nunn hospitalized: Reality star treated for extreme exhaustion



"Bad Girls" still need to be in good health!


"Bad Girls Club" star Natalie Nunn was rushed to the hospital Tuesday morning. Nunn collapsed in her Hollywood Hills condo before being taken to Cedars Sinai-Medical Center and receiving treatment for extreme exhaustion.




The reality star tells TMZ she's fine now. After doctors treated her for exhaustion, she was sent home. She's taking a week off from her busy schedule to rest up.


Nunn also reassured her fans on Twitter - @missnatalienunn - that despite her health scare, she's on the mend. "Dear Team Natalie Rock Stars," she wrote. "I just checked out of the hospital. Everything is going to be okay."

Copyright 2011 Us Weekly
TODAY Celebrities

US team in the Women's World Cup

The US Women's team posed for a team photo after they defeated Brazil in a penalty shootout during the Women's World Cup quarterfinal soccer match in Dresden, Germany on July 10.

The US team plays next in the semifinal match against France (today) July 13. Here's a look at the women representing the US in the Women's World Cup. All player info is from U.S. Soccer's official website.

The US Women's team posed for a team photo after they defeated Brazil in a penalty shootout during the Women's World Cup quarterfinal soccer match in Dresden, Germany on July 10. The US team plays next in the semifinal match against France on July 13. Here's a look at the women representing the US in the Women's World Cup. All player info is from U.S. Soccer's official website. Top left: Alex Krieger, Lauren Cheney, Hope Solo, Abby Wambach, Carli Lloyd, Rachel Buehler. Bottom left, Heather O Reilly, Shannon Boxx, Christie Rampone, Amy Le Peilbet and Amy Rodriguez. Compiled by Kim Lyons, Boston.com staff.Top left: Alex Krieger, Lauren Cheney, Hope Solo, Abby Wambach, Carli Lloyd, Rachel Buehler.
Bottom left, Heather O Reilly, Shannon Boxx, Christie Rampone, Amy Le Peilbet and Amy Rodriguez.
Compiled by Kim Lyons, Boston.com staff.
Boston.com
The Americans feel just fine, thank you, not tired a bit. The high they were on after that epic Brazil game? That's so yesterday.
abby_wambach.jpgThe United States' Abby Wambach scores the Americans' second goal to tie the quarterfinal match against Brazil at the Women's Soccer World Cup on Sunday in Dresden, Germany.


The U.S. women are one game away from reaching their first World Cup final since 1999 -- the last time they won soccer's biggest prize -- and the only thing on their minds now is beating France.

"Losing is not an option," Abby Wambach said Tuesday. "We want to win this thing, and France is standing in our way right now."

The Americans are the top-ranked team in the world and defending Olympic gold medalists, yet they were almost afterthoughts when the tournament began two weeks ago. Two-time defending champion Germany was considered the heavy favorite, sure to get a boost playing on home soil. Then there was Brazil, runner-up at the last three major tournaments and led by Marta, FIFA's player of the year five years running.

And the U.S.? They had to win a playoff with Italy just to get here, and they'd been uncharacteristically inconsistent with three losses in a five-month span.

But the Germans are now spectators, stunned by Japan in the quarterfinals. Brazil is gone, too, losing to the Americans in a penalty shootout in one of the most exciting games ever at the World Cup, men's or women's. And the U.S.? They're still playing, and they go into Wednesday night's semifinal with more than a touch of swagger.

"We have what it takes," Wambach said. "It's just a matter of putting it all together."
rachel_buehler.jpgThe United States' Rachel Buehler fouls Brazil's Marta during their quarterfinal match at the Women's Soccer World Cup on Sunday in Dresden, Germany.

The biggest uncertainty for the Americans isn't their fitness, it's their backline. Rachel Buehler has started all but one game the last two years, and her bruising style of defense -- she isn't called the "Buehldozer" for nothing -- has been vital. But she's suspended for the semifinal after getting a red card for taking down Marta in the box in the 65th minute Sunday.

While U.S. Coach Pia Sundhage wouldn't say who will play in Buehler's place, Becky Sauerbrunn was working with the starters during training Tuesday.

"I've been fortunate enough to play with her (with the WPS' magicJack) so we're very connected that way," said Christie Rampone, the U.S. captain and its other central defender. "Becky and I feel confident together. We'll watch some film on France today, see what little tactics they have, what little tendencies they have with their forwards, communicate with each other and we'll be fine."

They will have to be because, much like Brazil, France has creativity and flair.

Playmaker Louisa Necib, she of the silken touch and deft passes, has been likened to Zinedine Zidane, the highest compliment a French player can get. Her control of the midfield is masterful, the driving force behind France's quick, fluid offense. Les Bleues often appear seamless -- no surprise considering 10 of the 21 players are teammates at Olympique Lyonnais, which won this year's women's Champions League final.

"For us, it's very important to be patient," Sundhage said. "We need to pick up the rhythm and dictate the tempo, and we need the midfield to get more involved. I don't want to make it a stretch game. Or make it a (physical) fight."

But France has struggled against bigger, more physical teams in the past, and they don't come much stronger than the Americans.

"It's true we've had one additional day" of rest, French coach Bruno Bini said. "I think it's quite fair because the American team is in better shape."

While the Americans have their quickest turnaround of the tournament, getting just two days rest between games, France hasn't played since Saturday. But Les Bleues had an emotional doozy, too, beating England 4-3 on penalties after scoring in the 88th minute to tie it 1-1.

"It's very easy after a victory to be in shape again, especially when you've already seen yourself packing to go home," Bini said. "After that, it is very easy to get highly motivated for this match."

Unlike the Americans, who have reached the semifinals at each of the six World Cups, this is the first trip for Les Bleues. And they have never beaten the Americans, going 0-11-1 in their previous meetings. The U.S. has scored 38 goals in the 12 games to just eight for France.

Of course, Mexico had never beaten the Americans, either, and look what happened in regional qualifying.
But the "bumpy road," as Sundhage likes to call it, has made the Americans stronger, their success even sweeter. Their grit and determination is one of the reasons they've become such a huge hit back home, with Hollywood celebrities, professional athletes and folks who've never seen a soccer game before all rallying behind them.

Should the U.S. beat France, it would face either Japan or Sweden in Sunday's final, with a chance to become the first team to win three World Cup titles.

"I always think it's important for a team to go through adversity. Then you realize how much it hurts," Shannon Boxx said. "We watched some of the games day before (Brazil). You saw the faces of the teams that didn't win and you don't want to feel that way. I think that's a huge motivator right there."
nola.com

Jaycee Dugard: Memoir of captivity hits bestseller list

The front cover of Jaycee Dugard's A Stolen Life 
Jaycee Dugard's A Stolen Life was officially released on Tuesday

US kidnap victim Jaycee Dugard has described her 18 years in captivity in a memoir, which moved to the top of the Amazon bestseller list on the first day of its release.

In the book, A Stolen Life, Ms Dugard describes her loneliness and dependence on kidnappers Nancy and Phillip Garrido, who abducted her aged 11.

The book also details times when Ms Dugard, now 31, was raped by Garrido.

He is serving 431 years in prison for 14 counts of kidnap and sexual assualt.

Ms Dugard was abducted from near her home in South Lake Tahoe in 1991 as she walked to a school bus stop.

She was kept with her two daughters, now 13 and 16, in the backyard of the Garrido home in Antioch, California, in a compound of tents and sheds.
 
'Physical abuse':
In her memoir, Ms Dugard recounts the grisly benchmarks of her time in captivity on the Garrido property.

She describes her life as a prisoner in detail, including the day she was seized by her tormentors and the day she went into labour with the first of two children conceived at the compound.

"I would live in my own world," Ms Dugard says in her book.

"Physical abuse was all I knew," she adds, referring to sexual assaults by Phillip Garrido, who would take methamphetamines to prolong his ability to rape the girl.

Ms Dugard writes that Garrido tied her up and played out his sexual fantasies with her, while she was held in near-solitary confinement.

When the sexual encounters were over, Phillip Garrido would often beg for forgiveness, Ms Dugard says.
"With time I grew used to all kinds of things," she writes of her imprisonment.

A Stolen Life was listed as the top seller on the website Amazon.com on Tuesday, the first day of its release.
Diane Sawyer sitting with Jaycee Dugard 
Diane Sawyer (left) spoke to Jaycee Dugard during the kidnap victim's first television interview

Ms Dugard's first television interview, which she conducted with ABC News' news Diane Sawyer, premiered on Sunday.

Tearful and reflective, she spoke about the pain she felt giving birth to her captor's child at 14 years of age.
"She came out and then I saw her. She was beautiful. I felt like I wasn't alone anymore. I had somebody who was mine," she said.

Ms Dugard said there was "a switch" she had to turn off to survive her imprisonment.

The ABC interview was the most-watched summertime current affairs programme since 2004, the Nielsen Company reported.

Ms Dugard was freed in 2009 after police officers at the University of California at Berkeley saw Phillip Garrido on the campus with her and her children and became suspicious.

Police in California came under fire after Ms Dugard's discovery because Phillip Garrido had a previous conviction for rape, involving an abduction, and was on the sex offenders list.

He received 431 years in prison for Ms Dugard's abduction, while his wife was handed 36 years to life.

Ms Dugard has received a $20m (£12m) settlement from the state of California, which has acknowledged repeated mistakes in the monitoring of Phillip Garrido.
BBC News

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

NY judge dismisses charges against Foxy Brown

  • Inga Marchand, also known as Foxy Brown, gives a thumbs-up after leaving court in New York, Tuesday, July 12, 2011. Charges that rapper Foxy Brown violated a court order by mooning her neighbor have been dropped. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)Inga Marchand, also known as Foxy Brown, gives a thumbs-up after leaving court

NEW YORK (AP) — A judge on Tuesday dropped charges that rapper Foxy Brown violated a court order by mooning her neighbor after the woman told prosecutors she would not testify at the trial.

Assistant District Attorney Robert Isdith said he had tried to meet with the neighbor, Irene Raymond, in the weeks before the trial and didn't get anywhere. When he finally got in touch with her, she said she didn't want to pursue the case, he said.

"While the district attorney's office has no doubt the defendant committed this crime, we have no other choice but to dismiss this case," Isdith said.

Brown, whose real name is Inga Marchand, pleaded not guilty to criminal contempt and her trial was slated to begin Tuesday, following a dressing-down at her last court hearing by State Supreme Court Justice John Walsh when she appeared hours late.

The 31-year-old hip hop star was punctual this time, wearing a short silver silk dress and towering spike heels, and smiled and hugged he attorneys as the courtroom erupted when Walsh dismissed the case.

"I was falsely arrested twice, slandered and defamed," she said outside court, as she gave a thumbs-up and smiled for cameras. She described Raymond as jealous, and someone with a "borderline obsession," ''someone who wants to be you or have your life ... that I worked really hard for," she said.

The Brooklyn-based rapper was a teenager when she broke onto the rap scene as a protege of Jay-Z, but her career has foundered in recent years.

Prosecutors said Brown violated the order in July 2010 by screaming at Raymond before bending over, baring her buttocks and showing her underwear while shouting an obscenity.

Had the case gone to trial, her attorney Salvatore Strazzullo said her defense would have been not only did she not moon Raymond, but she wasn't even wearing underwear at the time, so the neighbor was not telling the truth.

Brown was issued the order of protection after pleading guilty in 2008 to menacing Raymond with her cellphone. The two had been in a fight over Brown blasting her car stereo outside their Brooklyn building in the leafy Prospect Heights neighborhood. The restraining order is in effect until 2013, her attorney said.
Strazzullo said they would be filing a civil suit in Brooklyn alleging malicious prosecution.

Brown became one of rap's more popular stars in the 1990s, but in recent years she has stayed in the headlines mainly for her legal problems and hot temper. She also has said she suffered from hearing problems.

Her debut CD, "Ill Na Na," was released in 1996. She released her platinum-selling sophomore album, "Chyna Doll," in 1999. Her third album, "Broken Silence," — released in 2001 — reached gold status.
She rapped in the hip-hop group The Firm, which also featured Nas.

Brown said outside court that she's headed directly to the recording studio now that she's free of the case, and said she's not planning to return to criminal court any time soon.
Inga Marchand, also known as Foxy Brown, laughs while talking to reporters after leaving court in New York, Tuesday, July 12, 2011. Charges that rapper Foxy Brown violated a court order by mooning her neighbor have been dropped. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) 
Foxy Brown, laughs while talking to reporters
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#OFFICIAL #New #Music #Video - @EMPRESSRAW: "IF I DIE TODAY"


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Soap Shocker? 'All My Children', 'One Life to Live' to Continue: Company Purchases Licence To Continue Shows Online

Susan Lucci

ABC announced that it had licensed the soap operas "All My Children" and "One Life to Live" to Prospect Park, a 2-year-old media and production company that plans to continue both series online by picking up where the TV shows left off."

We are privileged to continue the legacy of two of the greatest programs to air on daytime television, and are committed to delivering the storylines, characters and quality that audiences have come to love for over 40 years," Prospect Park co-founders Jeffrey Kwatinetz and Rich Frank said.

"'All My Children' and 'One Life to Live' are television icons, and we are looking forward to providing anytime, anywhere viewing to their loyal community of millions."

The statement did not detail if the current casts of the shows will participate in the online versions.Kwatinetz and Frank, a former Disney Studios executive, are the executive producers of "Royal Pains."

The soap operas are expected to be the first of a number of mainstream TV shows that will reportedly find a home on their site.In April, ABC announced it would end "All My Children" in September and "One Life to Live" in January to make room for new programming.

"All My Children" has been on the air since 1970 and "One Life to Live" since 1968.

Foxy Brown trial scheduled to begin in NYC

  • FILE - In this Aug, 22, 2007 file photo, Foxy Brown, whose birth name is Inga Marchand, enters Manhattan criminal court, in New York. Brown is due in court Tuesday July 12, 2011 on charges she violated a court order by mooning her neighbor. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano/file)FILE - In this Aug, 22, 2007 file photo, Foxy Brown, whose birth name is Inga Marchand, …

NEW YORK (AP) — Rapper Foxy Brown is due in court again — this time on charges she violated a court order by mooning her neighbor.

Brown's real name is Inga Marchand. She's pleaded not guilty to criminal contempt and her trial is scheduled to start Tuesday.

Prosecutors say Brown violated the order in July 2010 by screaming at neighbor Arlene Raymond before bending over, baring her buttocks and showing her underwear while shouting an obscenity.

The 31-year-old Brown was issued the order of protection after pleading guilty in 2008 to menacing Raymond with her cell phone.

The two had been in a dispute over Brown blasting her car stereo outside their Brooklyn building.

J.Lo's ready for iHeartRadio's star-studded launch, not for 'Idol' announcement

Siren Jennifer Lopez announces a historic two-day music festival, featuring herself, Lady Gaga, Alicia Keys and many more, to celebrate the launch of Clear Channel's new iHeartRadio.com.

By Ree Hines

Rather than revealing whether or not she’ll return to return to “American Idol” next season,  J.Lo focused on the upcoming star-studded launch event for iHeartRadio. Still, there’s an “Idol” connection. 

“I’m here to announce iHeartRadio’s launch with the new concert that they’re doing,” Lopez said. “Actually, it’s going to be me, Lady Gaga, Alicia Keys, Coldplay, Steven Tyler, Carrie Underwood, Black Eyed Peas — so many people. It’s going to be this amazing concert in Las Vegas on Sept. 23 and Sept. 24 to launch the new iHeartRadio, where you can kind of customize your own radio stations. So, it’s pretty exciting. I’m glad to be doing it.”

Lopez, Tyler and “Idol” alum Underwood won’t be the only familiar "Idol" faces. Ryan Seacrest will host the two-day event and season one winner Kelly Clarkson will also make an appearance.

But superstar concert aside, TODAY host Ann Curry pointed out that “Idol” followers are sure to wonder about the announcement Lopez didn’t make. That’s when the entertainer promised a big reveal would be on the way for the TODAY audience sometime soon.

“You know, I love working on 'American Idol,' love doing it,” Lopez assured. “I have no announcement to make as of this moment, but I promise, you guys will be the first (to know).”
TODAY News

'Jersey Shore's' Ronnie escapes jail sentence: Reality star was indicted in December for punching another man during season one

Image: Ronnie Ortiz-Magro
Dave Kotinsky  /  Getty Images Contributor
Ronnie Ortiz-Magro was seen filming on location for "Jersey Shore" on July 5 in Seaside Heights, N.J.

By Marianne Garvey
Nope. For better or worse, the streets of Seaside Heights will not be deprived of Ronnie Ortiz-Magro anytime soon.

Though his fists of fury almost cost him.

The beefed-up "Jersey Shore" star, indicted last December for clocking a guy during the show's first season, just found out he won't be going to jail over the beach beatdown.

So what did he get instead?


The reality troublemaker has been admitted into a pretrial intervention program that allows him to avoid a criminal record in the case.

The 25-year-old guido, who recently shot season four of the show in Italy and is back with the gang in Seaside shooting the fifth season, appeared today in New Jersey Superior Court in Toms River, where he learned he'd be enrolled in the program for 18 months.

Judge Stephanie Wauters also asked Ronnie if he'd be willing to do community service during that time and he said he would.

It was not immediately specified what type of service he would be doing, but we're pretty sure it won't involve GTLing.
TODAY News

Afghan president's brother, Ahmad Wali Karzai, killed

Ahmad Wali Karzai in April talking about death threats against him in the BBC documentary,
Afghanistan: The Unknown Country
The half-brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai has been assassinated in Kandahar, officials say.
Ahmad Wali Karzai, a leading power broker in the country's south, was shot dead at his home in a blow to Nato's battle against the Taliban in the area.

He was shot twice by his long-time head of security Sardar Mohammed, who was himself killed almost immediately.

The Taliban said they carried out the attack, calling it one of their top achievements in 10 years of war.
Sardar Mohammed's motives remain unclear, but the killing will raise questions about securing Afghanistan's top officials.
 
Previous assassination attempts:
Ahmad Wali Karzai's killing is the latest and most high-profile in a series of assassinations of senior politicians and security commanders across the country.
 
Analysis The last time I saw Ahmad Wali Karzai in his heavily protected compound, he said the war against the Taliban in Kandahar was being won. He wanted foreign troops to stay the course - even though his brother, the president, didn't.

The man they called Mr Kandahar was asked to solve every problem from tackling Taliban strongholds to solving the personal problem of anyone who made it to his door. President Karzai relied on him to consolidate his tribal and political sway in the restive south - he must now be deeply worried.

Nato officials had often spoken of putting Ahmad Wali Karzai "on notice" over allegations of drug deals, and corruption. He challenged everyone to prove it.

There's an old Afghan saying "whoever controls Kandahar, controls Afghanistan". Ahmad Wali Karzai was the lynchpin in so many areas, his death now leaves a dangerous vaccum.

The Afghan president said the assassination reflected the suffering of all Afghan people.

"This is the way of life for the people of Afghanistan," said Mr Karzai.

"The homes of all Afghans feel this pain. Our hope is this (violence) will come to an end and peace and happiness come to our homes and will come to rule in our country."

Critics said Ahmad Wali Karzai was a warlord mired in corruption who was openly involved in the drugs trade and had a personal militia at his disposal.

His supporters saw him as a defender of Pashtun rights. The president repeatedly defended him, denouncing accusations that his brother was involved in criminal activities.

Security was intensified in Kandahar following Tuesday morning's shooting, as the body of Ahmad Wali Karzai, who was born in 1961, was taken to a nearby hospital.

As head of the Kandahar Provincial Council, he was a staunch ally of US and allied forces in Afghanistan, says the BBC's Quentin Sommerville in Kabul, to the extent that they turned a blind eye to accusations he was involved in drug trafficking.

"Despite our worries about Ahmad Wali Karzai, he was someone the US could work with and he kept a lid on things in Kandahar," a US official told the BBC.
 
Start Quote:
[Ahmad Wali Karzai] was someone the US could work with and he kept a lid on things in Kandahar”
-US official

It is hard to overstate how important he was in the south of Afghanistan and in Nato's efforts to combat the Taliban in their stronghold there, adds our correspondent.

The Commander of the International Security Assistance Force, US General David Petraeus, condemned the assassination, and said ISAF would work with the Afghan government to bring anyone involved to justice.

"President Karzai is working to create a stronger, more secure Afghanistan, and for such a tragic event to happen to someone within his own family is unfathomable," said Gen Pertraeus.

Ahmad Wali Karzai had survived attempts on his life before, most recently in a rocket and machine gun attack in 2009 as his convoy was travelling towards Kabul.

The previous year, he was chairing a meeting in a government building when a bomb-filled fuel tanker exploded close by.

Although Mr Karzai escaped unhurt, six people were killed and 40 wounded in the blast.

He and other officials blamed Taliban militants for the bombing.

In 2003, Mr Karzai's house in Kandahar city was hit by an explosion which he said was caused accidentally when some weapons were being moved.
BBC News

Monday, July 11, 2011

The Black Eyed Peas to go on indefinite break: Fergie and Co. break the news during gig at Alton Towers

The Black Eyed Peas to go on indefinite break
Photo: PA Photos
The Black Eyed Peas are going on an indefinite break from making music together.

The group broke the news from the stage during a gig at Alton Towers in Staffordshire earlier this week - scroll down and click below for footage of the announcement.

As the band came onstage, Fergie told the crowd that the theme park show was "very special" as it's the "last time we're going to be in England for a long time".


"We want you to know that we love you and thank you for the support you've given from the beginning," the singer continued as loud boos rang out in the crowd.

She then explained that the break would be similar to their 2005 to 2009 hiatus, but allayed fears that they had split for good by concluding: "This isn't going to be the last time you'll see us."

Bandmate will.i.am also clarified that the band weren't permanently splitting on his Twitter page, Twitter.com/iamwill, tweeting: "The @Bep will take a break after the beginning...just like we did from monkey business to the e.n.d...but it doesn't mean we stop creating."

Earlier this year, Fergie revealed that will.i.am is planning to release a solo album titled 'Black Einstein', although no official release date has yet been announced.
 NME.com

Philly Saved $2 Million by Not Prosecuting Small-Time Potheads

-WAR ON DRUGS-

Hello, cities facing a budget crisis! If you would like to spend less money, might we suggest not taking small-time marijuana busts to court? Philadelphia did it last year, and the city saved $2 million. Plus, think of all the money you can make if you tax Snoballs!
 If you're caught possessing fewer than 30 grams of weed (that's, like, a whole ounce!) in Philadelphia, cops now treat the bust "as a summary offense, rather than a misdemeanor." Though the misdemeanor charge wasn't particularly harsh—maximum penalty: 30 days in jail and $500 fine—it required the city to prosecute, costing the district attorney's office money and time. It also left those busted with a criminal record.

The summary offense meanwhile, allows people to "pay $200 for a three-hour class about drug abuse, and their record is expunged," with "[n]o trial, no judge, no court-appointed defense attorneys, no prosecutor, no lab tests." Cops say that the new policy "doesn't appear to be having any noticeable impact on the city's quality of life," too.
GAWKER 

Jeezy ft. Lil Wayne - 'BALLIN' #Official #Music #Video

#MM #MusicMonday: #Song of the Day - SHOT CALLERS - by @LynkFamInc



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From stars to Skid Row: Royals end California tour

  • Britain's Prince William speaks at the Mission Serve: Hiring Our Heroes event in Culver City 
    Britain's Prince William speaks at the Mission Serve: Hiring Our Heroes event
  • Britain's Prince William and his wife Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, attend the Mission Serve: Hiring Our Heroes event in Culver City 
  • Britain's Prince William and his wife Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Britain's Prince William and wife Kate ended their southern California stay on Sunday, bearing witness to both the poverty of Skid Row and the power of Hollywood.

In their first trip to the United States since marrying in April, the royal couple chose to favor charity and business over celebrity in their three-day visit.

But the glitterati of Hollywood were never far away, as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge drew the movie stars and studio executives to help raise funds and awareness for their causes in the entertainment capital of the world.

At their final event at Sony Studios to support military families and a job fair for veterans, William said he would take ideas home to Britain, where he serves as a Royal Air Force pilot and Kate is a military wife.

"I am delighted, therefore, that our Foundation -- and in that I include Harry, my low-flying Apache, very average brother -- is a partner in today's event," William quipped to the crowd. "We have much to learn from you."

Earlier in the day and far from the media glare, the royal couple was given a private tour of Skid Row, the gritty terminus for the homeless in downtown Los Angeles and a growing population of single mothers after the economic recession.

The Duchess of Cambridge does a painting during a visit to the Inner-City Arts club in Los Angeles, California, July 10, 2011 
Kate drew a picture of a snail while the couple chatted to the children in a painting class

The tour was a late addition to the royal agenda and served as preparation for a visit to the Inner-City Arts Center for children living around Skid Row, one of the largest concentrations of homeless people in the United States.
Prince William and his wife, Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, painting pictures with a child 
The royal couple were given the opportunity to talk to children during their school visit

It was also a stark contrast to the opulent events on Saturday -- a charity polo match in coastal Santa Barbara and a black-tie dinner with Hollywood royalty.

OUTDOING HOLLYWOOD GLAMOUR:
Even with the emphasis on work and business, wherever they went William and Kate brought a royal glamour that even Hollywood couldn't emulate.

At the bright and airy arts center, Kate, dressed in a navy lace top and white pleated skirt from UK retail chain Whistles, donned a smock and painted a snail along with the kids. William, sans smock, appeared to paint something more abstract. It gave the couple an opportunity to be playful in public.

"William, do you know what you're doing? Start from the center," Kate said. He took the direction and returned to his canvas.

The day had started off on a glamorous note as the duke and duchess attended a private brunch with Hollywood notables like actress Reese Witherspoon and the CEO of Disney, Bob Iger, to garner interest in Tusk, a charity for African wildlife conservation.

They had also charmed the stars at the gala on Saturday night, where A-listers like Tom Hanks, Nicole Kidman and Barbra Streisand turned out to support the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, of which William is president. He asked the Hollywood power crowd to give opportunities to a new generation of British talent.

The California leg of the 11-day overseas visit had none of the large crowds of their Canadian tour, and most Californians had to resort to the media to get a glimpse of the royals.

But for the lucky few, like Vietnam war veteran Jose Ramos, the contact with the potential king and queen of Britain was special. He gave William his original jump wings from 1966.

"When he thanked me for being a veteran and serving in Vietnam, I offered them to him and he said he'd wear it proudly," Ramos said. "That was my original set. I don't give those out lightly for sure. I've worn them every day since I received them."

"The Palace will view Kate's first trip abroad as a success. With her husband, she is presenting a fresh face for an ancient institution" -Peter Hunt Royal correspondent-



(Writing by Mary Milliken; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)