Saturday, July 23, 2011

Amy Winehouse found dead, aged 27


 Singer Amy Winehouse, 27, has been found dead at her home, the Press Association has reported.

Last month, the north Londoner pulled out of her European tour after she was jeered at her comeback gig in Serbia for appearing too drunk to perform.


For 90 minutes, she mumbled through parts of songs and at times left the stage - leaving her band to fill in.
The troubled singer had a long battle with drink and drugs which overshadowed her musical career in recent years.


A Metropolitan Police spokesman confirmed that a 27-year-old woman had died in Camden and that the cause of death was as yet unexplained.

London Ambulance Service had been called to the flat at 1554 BST and sent two ambulances but the woman died, it said.


Vanilla Ice denies saying @JustinBieber will be forgotten: Says he didn't make negative statements, but site says it has his remarks on tape

IMAGE: Vanilla Ice
AP file
Vanilla Ice, seen here at the 1991 American Music Awards, says he never made negative comments about Justin Bieber. But the site that reported them says there's a recording of the remarks.

Access Hollywood

There is a problem, and yo, he’s solvin’ it.

Rob Van Winkle, better known by his stage name Vanilla Ice, grabbed headlines Thursday night after The Huffington Post Canada posted a story claiming the former rapper predicted Justin Bieber’s fame would soon come to an end.

However, Van Winkle says the quotes are false.

“This is not a true quote, it’s a flat out lie,” Van Winkle told Access Hollywood in a statement on Friday. “I am friends with Justin Bieber and his family, I think he is talented and will be around for a long time.”
 
Story: Bieber taking month-long sabbatical to 'grow up'

The site claimed Van Winkle compared Bieber’s young fame to his own rapid rise to stardom and predicted the teen titan’s empire would soon crumble.

“I mean, I did ‘Ice Ice Baby’ when I was 16. So I can kind of relate a bit,” the one-hit wonder reportedly told Huffington Post Canada, referencing his famous 1990 rap. “Sold over a hundred million records. And I had a weekend that lasted about three years, and I didn’t know who I was, what’s my purpose in life.”

 
Though Bieber, 17, boasts multiple hit songs and albums, a blockbuster movie, and now, a perfume for women, the site claimed Van Winkle predicted that the young Canadian heartthrob will quickly fall on hard times.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: The Boy Who Makes The Tweens Swoon — Justin Bieber

“My prediction about Bieber is that he’s going to go through one of those weekends that lasts a few years because he’s had such success as a child act,” he reportedly told the site. “Then something else new will come along and he’ll be forgotten and he can try to put all the pieces back together, so it’s going to be entertaining to watch.”

On Friday afternoon, The Huffington Post Canada posted an update sticking by their story.
 

Story: Watch Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez crash wedding

“Vanilla Ice has taken to Twitter to deny making remarks about Bieber, but we have the audio,” the update stated. “Maybe the rapper simply forgot what he said. The interview was conducted June 1 and embargoed because his show does not start until August.”

TODAY access Hollywood 
Copyright 2011 by NBC. All rights reserved.

Miley Cyrus latest celeb invited to Marine ball: 'Terminator' star Linda Hamilton offers to accept invitation Betty White turned down

Miley Cyrus has been invited to the Marine Corps ball.
 By Gina Serpe

If there's one person we expect to step up to her patriotic dating duty, it's the girl who famously paid tribute to partying in the U.S.A.

But still...is it just us, or after all that serving and protecting they do so well, does it seem like the men and women of the Marine Corps like nothing better than to relax in front of a video camera and ask out the A-list celebrity of their choice?
 

As we wait for it to slowly surpass baseball as the nation's favorite pastime, another Marine has bravely stepped up to the plate to ask out his celeb crush. Let's just say, if Betty White was one extreme, this is the other. So, after Mila Kunis, Justin Timberlake and the Golden Girl herself, who's next up ?

Hey, Miley Cyrus, come on down!


The teen dream scored the latest invite to one of the Marine Corps balls, this time for the Nov. 12 party being held at SoCal's Camp Pendleton. She certainly got the most convenient offer of the bunch.

"An amazing tradition has just begun: Marines asking celebrities out to the Marine Corps Ball. On Nov. 12, 2011, I, PFC Hart, would like to take a date, a proud American, Miley Cyrus, out to the Marine Corps Ball in beautiful southern California. Camp Pendleton. Please, Miley Cyrus, this one's for you girl," the young Marine said in his video, before cutting to Miley's "Party in the U.S.A." track.
 
While Hart (and the rest of the nation) await Miley's answer, another star has stepped up to pick up the slack (and broken heart) left in the wake of Betty White's classy bow-out from her ball invite.

MORE: Watch Justin accept his patriotic duty



Matching Sgt. Ray Lewis' own fitnesstastic video proposal (for an Oct. 29 gala in Texas), none other than Terminator star Linda Hamilton turned the tables and volunteered herself (in a YouTube video, of course) to escort the dateless Marine.


Linda Hamilton to Marine rejected by Betty White: Take me to the ball

"Hi Ray. My name is Linda Hamilton, I don't know if you know who I am, but rumor has it that you like your actresses vintage," she said. "So I thought I would just take a shot here, try to find you.

"My eyes are puffy from crying all night long. It was just a terrible night thinking about you and this situation and then Betty called, and I talked to her for hours, and she I know she feels terrible...I just decided that I would try to reach out to you and just say, 'Look, I know that I am no Betty White, but I would be really, really thrilled if you can't find anybody else--I know that's unlikely--but if you can' t find anyone else to go to the ball with you, I could go.' "
 
Story: Betty White declines Marine's invite to ball

And Hamilton had her sales pitch all ready to go.

"Now, I'm no Betty White. I'm only half as 'mature' as she is--wink, wink--but I'm twice as funny, so I think that works out. I don't want to get pitiful, so I'm gonna go now...But please take me to the ball, please, please, Ray. Call me."

Ball's in your court, Ray. Er, ball date, to be more precise.
TODAY Celebrities

Scores killed in Norway attacks

Click to play
Adrian Pracon says he played dead to try to avoid the gunman on Utoeya
At least 85 people died when a gunman opened fire at an island youth camp in Norway, hours after a bombing in the capital Oslo killed seven, police say.

Police have charged a 32-year-old Norwegian man over both attacks.

The man dressed as a police officer was arrested on tiny Utoeya island after an hour-long shooting spree.
Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said many people were still looking for their children and had not so far been able to locate them.

He was speaking after meeting victims and relatives with Norway's King Harald, Queen Sonja and Crown Prince Haakon in the town of Sundvollen near the island.
 

"He first shot people on the island - afterward he started shooting people in the water” - Youth delegate

Mr Stoltenberg said he was "deeply touched" by the meetings. "We will do whatever we can to give them as much support as possible," he said.

Earlier he said that he was due to have been on Utoeya - "a youth paradise turned into a hell" - a few hours after the attack took place.

The suspect is reported by local media to have had links with right-wing extremists. He has been named as Anders Behring Breivik. Police searched his Oslo apartment overnight and are questioning him.

The BBC's Richard Galpin, near the island which is currently cordoned off by police, says that Norway has had problems with neo-Nazi groups in the past but the assumption was that such groups had been largely eliminated and did not pose a significant threat.

Police say they are investigating whether the attacks were the work of one man or whether others helped.
"At Utoeya, the water is still being searched for more victims," deputy police chief Roger Andresen told reporters.

"We have no more information than... what has been found on [his] own websites, which is that it goes towards the right and that it is, so to speak, Christian fundamentalist."
  
At the scene A search is going on not just on the island itself, but also in the waters around it because a lot of people tried to escape by jumping in the water and trying to swim away. Even as they did that, eyewitnesses say, the gunman opened fire on them.

The chatter now is that it took the police an hour, if not an hour and a half, to actually get to the island. Of course that gave the gunman so much time to kill so many people.

Also crucially, the police were throwing all their resources at the huge bomb attack which had just taken place in the centre of Oslo.

But still, the question will be asked: Were there not police nearer to this area who could have moved in much more quickly?

Local media report that police are investigating claims by witnesses that a second person was involved, apparently not disguised in a police uniform.

A farm supply firm has confirmed selling six tonnes of fertiliser to Mr Breivik who is reported to have run a farming company. Speculation has been rife that fertiliser could have been used in the Oslo bomb.
 
'Posed as policeman':
The number killed in the island shooting spree, which is among the world's most deadly, had been put at 10 on Friday - but soared overnight. Hundreds of young people had been attending the summer camp organised by the governing Labour Party on Utoeya island.

Eyewitnesses described how a tall, blond man dressed as a policeman opened fire indiscriminately, prompting camp attendees to jump into the water to try to escape the hail of bullets.

Some of the teenagers were shot at as they tried to swim to safety.

Armed police were deployed to the island but details of the operation to capture the suspect remain unclear. After his arrest he was charged with committing acts of terrorism.
  
Island shooting suspect
Anders Behring Breivik
  • Describes himself as a Christian and conservative on Facebook page attributed to him
  • Grew up in Oslo and attended Oslo School of Management
  • Set up farm through which he would have had access to fertiliser - which can also be used to make a bomb
Police say they discovered many more victims after searching the area around the island. They have warned the death toll may rise further as rescue teams continue to scour the waters around the island.

The gunman is reported to have been armed with a handgun, an automatic weapon and a shotgun.

"He travelled on the ferry boat from the mainland over to that little inland island posing as a police officer, saying he was there to do research in connection with the bomb blasts," NRK journalist Ole Torp told the BBC.

"He asked people to gather round and then he started shooting, so these young people fled into the bushes and woods and some even swam off the island to get to safety."

One 15-year-old eyewitness described how she saw what she thought was a police officer open fire.

"He first shot people on the island. Afterward he started shooting people in the water," youth camp delegate Elise told Associated Press.

Witness Daniel Cherubini says it was "absolute chaos" in Oslo following Friday's bombing
'Despicable violence'

Deadly shootings worldwide

  • July 2011: At least 84 killed at a summer camp on the Norwegian island of Utoeya, hours after bomb blast in capital Oslo
  • April 2007: Seung-Hui Cho, 23, kills 32 people and himself on Virginia Tech campus in the US
  • April 2002: Robert Steinhaeuser, 19, kills 16 people before killing himself in Erfurt, Germany
  • April 1999: Students Eric Harris, 18, and Dylan Klebold, 17, open fire at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado killing 13 people before taking their own lives
  • April 1996: Martin Bryant, 29, kills 35 people in the seaside resort of Port Arthur in Tasmania, Australia
  • March 1996: Thomas Hamilton, 43, kills 16 children and their teacher in a school in Dunblane, Scotland - before killing himself
The attacks sparked strong international condemnation, with US President Barack Obama expressing his condolences and offering support.

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II spoke of her shock and sadness in a letter to King Harald.

In Oslo, government officials urged people to stay at home and avoid central areas of the city.

Shards of twisted metal, rubble and glass littered the streets of central Oslo left devastated by Friday's enormous explosion.

Windows in the buildings of the government quarter were shattered and witnesses described how smoke filled the atmosphere around the blast site.

The BBC's John Sopel in Oslo says there is a heavy military presence, with checkpoints around the quarter.

Mr Stoltenberg said civil servants were among the dead in Oslo and he knew some of those killed.

There are also concerns that more victims may still be inside buildings hit by the initial massive explosion.

Map of central Oslo and Utoeya
BBC News EUROPE

Friday, July 22, 2011

#Friday Feature - KING DREAMS @iAmKingDreAms: 'There They Go Again'

NFL Lockout: Players Tweet Disapproval On Owner Vote; Impasse In Overtime

DeMaurice Smith (credit: AP Photo/Seth Wenig), Roger Goodell (credit: AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh, File)
DeMaurice Smith (credit: AP Photo/Seth Wenig), Roger Goodell (credit: AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh, File)

NEW YORK (WFAN/AP) — NFL owners chatted much of the day, polished off a couple of meals, then overwhelmingly approved a deal to end the lockout.

Only one problem: The players aren’t ready to join them at the table just yet.

So America’s most popular sport remains in labor limbo a bit longer.

The owners voted 31-0 Thursday for a decade-long deal to settle the impasse, but any giddiness among fans was quickly snuffed out. The players declined to vote on the proposal, at least right away, and a rash of Twitter messages left little doubt that plenty of work remains before there’s any blocking and tackling.

Tweeted Giants cornerback Terrell Thomas: “It’s not over people, don’t believe the hype, but we close.”

“NFL players! Stay strong! We are still fighting for past, present and future players. We will vote when they give us something to vote on!” wrote Ryan Clark of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

“The NFL is not Suge Knight … they not gonna hang us out a window and make us sign something lol,” Panthers defensive back Gerald Alexander wrote.

Added Robert Johnson of the Tennessee Titans: “Owners tried to pull a fast 1 on us making the fans believe it’s because of US the players….Not this time buddy.”

Commissioner Roger Goodell and the owners expressed hope that their vote would lead to a speedy resolution to the NFL’s first work stoppage since 1987. They called it an equitable deal that improves player safety and allows the sport to prosper even more.

“It is time to get back to football,” a weary Goodell said during an evening news conference at an Atlanta-area hotel.

The players said they won’t be rushed into a deal, even with the owners insisting that time is running out to get in a full slate of four preseason games and 16 regular-season contests.

Already, one game is sure to be lost: The league called off the Hall of Fame exhibition opener, set for Aug. 7 between Chicago and St. Louis.

“The time was just too short,” Goodell said.

The owners pored over details of the proposed settlement for some nine hours, first breaking for lunch, then sending for dinner before a vote finally was taken. Every team approved it except the Oakland Raiders, who abstained.

Afterward, no one seemed in a celebratory mood. It sounded more like relief.

“These things, by their very nature, aren’t supposed to make you necessarily happy when you walk out the door. It was a negotiation,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said. “I don’t mean to sound negative, but it isn’t exactly like Christmas has come along here.”

Instead, Jones and his fellow owners called if a fair process involving plenty of give-and-take on both sides.

It’s been long and at times has been very, very difficult,” said Jerry Richardson, owner of the Carolina Panthers. “We’re confident that the players and the teams have arrived at a good place. We think we have a fair, balanced agreement.”

But George Wilson, the player representative for the Buffalo Bills, called the owners’ vote and subsequent news conference “an attempt to break the spirits of our men and to fracture the solidarity that we’ve exemplified thus far.”

He said the deal approved by the owners included provisions the players haven’t even seen, which is why no vote was taken during a conference call Thursday night.

“Ultimately, the guys felt like this thing is being force-fed to us, that it’s being shoved down our throats,” Wilson told The Associated Press. “And the way everything transpired this evening, in a sense, was trying to add more pressure to the situation and force us to accept this deal without really being able to see all the details of what they voted on.”

Clearly, the basic outline of the proposed agreement — much of which was agreed upon a week ago — can still produce a deal acceptable to both owners and players. Maybe, given all the enmity displayed during the four-month work stoppage, it was farfetched to think everything would go smoothly at the end.

“I don’t think this deal is blown up,” Wilson said. “We can definitely work through these issues.”

The fans are tired of all the labor talk. They’re just ready for some football.

“Finally,” said Dave Gower of Knoxville, Tenn., who just happened to be staying at the hotel where the owners met. “I don’t understand why it took so long. I hope the players take it and run with it.”

Packers president Mark Murphy said no one was trying to pull a fast one on the players, or pressure them into accepting an owner-friendly framework for divvying up more than $9 billion in annual revenues. He also dismissed the idea of going back to the bargaining table.

“We put our pens down,” Murphy said. “We’ve negotiated. We’ve been negotiating in good faith with the union, we reached agreement on all the key points. They’re voting on the same thing that we ratified.”

Not so, said NFL Players Association chief DeMaurice Smith, who talked with Goodell several times by phone during the day and was informed of the owners’ vote before an official announcement went out. It didn’t take long for Smith to fire off an email to team reps denying it was a done deal.

“Issues that need to be collectively bargained remain open; other issues, such as workers’ compensation, economic issues and end of deal terms, remain unresolved. There is no agreement between the NFL and the players at this time,” Smith wrote.

Unhappy with the old collective bargaining agreement, owners exercised an opt-out clause three years ago, setting the stage for this labor dispute. The new deal does not contain an opt-out clause.

If players approve the agreement, team facilities would open Saturday, and the new league year would begin Wednesday, with full free agency and the opening of training camps.

“I can’t say we got everything we wanted to get in the deal. I’m sure (players) would say the same thing,” Giants owner John Mara said. “The best thing about it is our fans don’t have to hear about labor-management relations for another 10 years.”

He didn’t say anything about the next few days.

The old CBA expired March 11, when federally mediated negotiations fell apart, and the owners locked out the players hours later. Since then, teams have not been allowed to communicate with current NFL players; players — including those drafted in April — could not be signed; and teams did not pay for players’ health insurance.

Final issues involved how to set aside three pending court cases, including the antitrust lawsuit filed against the NFL in federal court in Minnesota by Tom Brady and nine other players. Pash, the NFL’s lead negotiator, said the owners’ understanding is that case will be dismissed.

One thing owners originally sought and won’t get, at least right away, is expanding the regular season from 16 games to 18. That won’t change before 2013, and the players must agree to a switch. Most oppose a longer season, claiming it will increase the risk of injuries and shorten careers.

“We heard the players loud and clear. They pushed back pretty hard on that issue,” said Atlanta Falcons president Rich McKay, chairman of the league’s competition committee.

Goodell also announced that owners approved a supplemental revenue-sharing system, something Smith noted in his email to team reps.

“Obviously, we have not been a part of those discussions,” he wrote.

Even after all acceptable terms are established, a deal would lead to a new CBA only if NFLPA team reps recommend re-establishing the group as a union, which must be approved by a majority vote of the 1,900 players.

In March, when talks broke down and the old CBA expired, the NFLPA said it was dissolving itself as a union and instead becoming a trade association, a move that allowed the players to sue the league under antitrust law. But only a union can sign off on a CBA.

The deal would make significant changes in offseason workout schedules, reducing team programs by five weeks and cutting organized team activities (OTAs) from 14 to 10 sessions. There will be limited on-field practice time and contact, and more days off for players.

Current players would be able to stay in the medical plan for life. They also will have an injury protection benefit of up to $1 million of a player’s salary for the year after his injury and up to $500,000 in the second year after his injury.

A total of $50 million per year will go into a joint fund for medical research, health-care programs, and charities.

If the players approve the deal, the NFL would get back to work right away:
—On Saturday, teams can stage voluntary workouts at club facilities, and players may be waived. Contracts can be re-negotiated and clubs can sign draft picks and their own free agents. Teams can also negotiate with, but not sign, free agents from other clubs and undrafted rookies.
—On Sunday, teams can sign undrafted rookies.
—On Wednesday, free agency opens in full, and all training camps will open with a 90-man roster limit; activities that day will be limited to physicals, meetings and conditioning. All clubs must be under the salary cap.

But first, the players must approve the deal. Buffalo’s Wilson said he was not aware of a players’ vote having been scheduled for Friday.

“We treat this like a football game: You have one bad play, move on to the next play. You don’t sit and harp on the negative plays,” Wilson said. “Ultimately, tomorrow’s a new day.”

Admit it: you expected to wake up on Friday to a done deal. Fire off your frustrations in the comments below…

(TM and Copyright 2011 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2011 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved).
CBS New York 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Katy Perry notches 9 MTV VMA Award nominations

  • FILE - In this April 19, 2011 file photo, singer Katy Perry arrives for the European premiere of "Arthur" at the O2 Arena in London. Perry leads the MTV Video Music Award nominations with nine, including video of the year for her song "Firework." (AP Photos/ Joel Ryan, File) FILE - In this April 19, 2011 file photo, singer Katy Perry
    NEW YORK (AP) — Katy Perry's "Firework" had enough sparks to help her claim a leading nine MTV Video Music Award nominations, including video of the year.
Perry — who hosted the network's Wednesday night special announcing the nominations — was also nominated for best female video for "Firework," and best pop video for "Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)."

Adele tied Kanye West with seven nominations. The best-selling Brit will compete with Perry for top video with "Rolling in the Deep." Others in the category include the Beastie Boys for "Make Some Noise"; rapper Tyler, the Creator for "Yonkers"; and Bruno Mars for "Grenade."

Mars was nominated for four Moonman trophies. Other multiple nominees include Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Eminem.

The VMAs will air live from Los Angeles on Aug. 28.
___
Online:
MTV.com
YAHOO News

Lindsay Lohan returning to Court for case checkup

LOS ANGELES (AP) — For the first time in more than a year, Lindsay Lohan is returning to a Los Angeles courtroom without the expectation of major drama.


The 25-year-old actress is scheduled to appear at a routine case review conference with a judge who is overseeing her probation for drunken driving and misdemeanor theft cases.

Court officials say nothing has been filed indicating Lohan has violated her probation. She has appeared in court numerous times since last July, when she was jailed and ordered into rehab for failing to attend alcohol education classes. Since then, she has been jailed again, arrested for taking a necklace without permission, sent to another rehab and served 35 days on house arrest.


If the "Mean Girls" star stays out of trouble, her probation may end this year.
YAHOO News 

R. Kelly 'laid up indefinitely' after emergency throat surgery: Doctors had to drain abcess on one of his tonsils, publicist says

Jeff Fusco  /  Getty Images Contributor

R. Kelly had an abcess on one of his tonsils, his publicist says.


Here's hoping he'll be singing again soon.

R. Kelly is resting in a Chicago hospital following emergency throat surgery, the singer's rep told the Associated Press on Wednesday.

The "I Believe I Can Fly" singer's publicist said that doctors had to drain an abcess on one of Kelly's tonsils on Tuesday. The 44-year-old star (full name: Robert Sylvester Kelly) will be "laid up indefinitely" at Chicago's Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

PHOTOS: Today's celeb news photos

The Grammy winner had recently complained of throat pain; following a throat exam, he was rushed to the hospital.

TODAY Celebrities

Copyright 2011 Us Weekly

Space shuttle Atlantis makes final landing

Space shuttle Atlantis makes its final landing
Space shuttle Atlantis has landed back on Earth, bringing to a close America's 30-year orbiter programme.
The vehicle swept into the Kennedy Space Center, its wheels touching the runway just before local sunrise.
Nasa's shuttles were instrumental in building the space station, and were used to launch the Hubble telescope.

"The space shuttle changed the way we view the world and it changed the way we view the Universe," said commander Chris Ferguson on landing.

"There's a lot of emotion today but one thing's indisputable: America's not going to stop exploring," he radioed to mission control.

Retirement of Nasa's iconic shuttle fleet was ordered by the US government, in part due to the high cost of maintaining the ships.

The decision leaves the country with no means of putting astronauts in orbit.

The US space agency's intention is to invite the private sector to provide it with space transport services, and a number of commercial ventures already have crew ships in development.

These are unlikely to be ready to fly for at least three or four years, however.

In the interim, Nasa will rely on the Russians to ferry its people to and from the International Space Station (ISS).

Despite the dark skies over Florida's Space Coast, large crowds came out to try to glimpse Atlantis as it made its historic return from orbit. Even in Texas, where mission control is sited, people mingled outside the gates of the Johnson Space Center.

The de-orbit track brought Atlantis across central Florida and the Titusville-Mims area before a hard bank to the left put the vehicle on a line to Runway 15 at Kennedy.
  
Analysis: A huge cheer went up across the Kennedy Space Centre as the space shuttle Atlantis touched down for the final time just before dawn.

Many here believe this is the end of an era and the end, for now, of America's dominance in space.

It is a bitter-sweet moment. Nasa plans to celebrate the shuttle programme's countless milestones over the next few days but on Friday thousands of workers will lose their jobs.

For now, though, this is a chance for everyone involved in the 30-year programme to reflect on what the world's first re-usable spacecraft has achieved.

Over the decades, the orbiters deployed almost 200 satellites, carried out important scientific research and built the International Space Station.

A chapter in human space exploration has now closed for good, but the space shuttles' place in history is assured.

Commander Ferguson, a veteran of two previous shuttle missions was at the controls, with his pilot Doug Hurley alongside him. Mission specialists Sandy Magnus and Rex Walheim were sitting directly behind on the flightdeck.

Their ship's rear wheels touched the ground at 0556 local time (0956 GMT; 1056 BST), and the vehicle was stationary under a minute later.

It concluded a 13-day re-supply mission to the ISS.

The return of Atlantis marked a moment of high emotion for the Space Coast - not least because it will trigger a big lay-off of contractor staff. More than 3,000 people involved in shuttle operations will lose their jobs.

The orbiter programme itself does not officially end for a month, but even then it is likely to take a couple of years to close all activities, such as the archiving of decades of shuttle engineering data.

For Atlantis, its retirement will be spent as a static display at the Kennedy visitor complex.

The Discovery and Endeavour shuttles, which made their final flights earlier this year, will go to the Air and Space Museum's Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia and the California Science Center in Los Angeles, respectively.

Nasa hopes to invest money saved from shuttle operations in a new spaceship and rocket that can take humans beyond the ISS to destinations such as the Moon, asteroids and Mars.

The conical ship, known as Orion, has already been defined and is in an advanced stage of development. The rocket, on the other hand, is still an unknown quantity.

The US Congress has told the agency what its minimum capabilities should be. However, the agency is currently struggling to put those specifications into a concept it says can be built to the timeline and budget specified by the politicians.

It promises to detail the rocket's baseline design before the summer is out.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Boyz II Men celebrate 20th anniversary with new CD



  • FILE - In this July 1, 2011 file photo, Boyz II Men, from left, Nathan Morris, Wanya Morris and Shawn Stockman perform at the 2011 Essence Music Festival in New Orleans. The group is preparing to celebrate their milestone anniversary this fall with a new album, including reworked versions of their now-classic hits. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)- In this July 1, 2011 file photo, Boyz II Men
NEW YORK (AP) — After 20 years, Boyz II Men haven't reached the end of the road in their music career. In fact, the group is preparing to celebrate their milestone anniversary this fall with a new album, including reworked versions of their classic hits.

"Nothing too extreme or dramatic, but we've added a few things here and there," says Shawn Stockman of their upcoming project.

Boyz II Men brought their Motown-Philly harmonies to the masses when they made their debut with "Cooleyhighharmony" in 1991; propelled by hits like "End of the Road" and "It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday," the Philadelphia-based group's first album sold more than 9 million copies. Their sophomore CD, "II," sold 12 million copies.

Stockman says the group — which originally included Wanya Morris, Nathan Morris and Michael McCary — had no idea how huge their achievements were.

"We were so busy just working ... we didn't think too much about how it would impact the world, which is probably a good thing, because it kept us sharp and kept us focused, even to this present day," he said. 

"Looking back, it's a great thing. It's hard to talk about it because it's something that we think it's a great milestone in our careers, but we're still hungry, and we still feel like we have so much more to contribute, musically and otherwise."


The group — which became a trio after McCary left — still records and performs regularly. Their last CD, 2009's "Love," had them performing standard love songs.

They have never replicated the sales, or the radio success, of those first two multimillion-selling albums. Still, Stockman says they haven't stopped being successful.

"It wasn't the kind of thing where we made flop albums, and someone got on drugs, and then all kind of craziness happened. The industry just changed, and tastes changed," he said. "We didn't fall off. ... Time and how things have gone in the industry and in life, it kind of preserved us to be able to have some sort of success."

The trio's upcoming album, "Twenty," will feature new songs and new renditions of some of their best-known work.

"We've always been true to our love songs, and the type of music that we do, we feel this type of music is timeless," he said. "It's our 20th anniversary, so we wanted to not only give our listeners something new, but our new listeners I guess an anthology."

Stockman hopes the group will capture a younger generation, but also a few fans they may have lost along the way.

"We hope that those people that we've touched before, we'll be able to touch again, because they haven't gone anywhere, they've just grown up," he said.
___
Online:
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Nekesa Mumbi Moody is the music editor at The Associated Press. Follow her @nekesamumbi.com (Twitter) 

Comic-Con kicks off with fans, flicks, costumes

  • FILE - In this July 23, 2010 file photo, Comic-Con attendees dressed in Star Wars costumes cross the street in downtown San Diego outside of Comic-Con International in San Diego. The 2011 Comic Con International opens Thursday, July 21, 2011. (AP Photo/Denis Poroy, file)
    - In this July 23, 2010 file photo, Comic-Con attendees dressed in Star Wars


    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Calling all superheroes, zombies, space aliens, comic-book lovers and kids of all ages: Comic-Con is here.
The pop-culture convention, which annually draws thousands of costumed fans to San Diego, begins Thursday, but the die-hards (and those with weekend-long passes) will get a peek at the colorful convention floor on Wednesday night.

Hundreds of exhibitors and more than 130,000 guests are expected to pack the San Diego Convention Center for the sold out, four-day event.

"The people who go through those doors, most of them are film fans and fans of pop culture, be it video games or movies or television shows, T-shirts or comic books, it's all part of this big cultural stew," says filmmaker Jon Favreau, who will premiere his latest flick, "Cowboys & Aliens," at Comic-Con. "These are people who normally interact with one another through the Internet ... Then when you finally open it up to meeting in person, it just concentrates that experience."

The blogosphere is already abuzz about some of the offerings at this year's Comic-Con, where Hollywood continues to command a headlining presence.

"Captain America" will play in San Diego for a full day before its nationwide opening Friday, and star Chris Evans is set to introduce the earliest screening. "Cowboys & Aliens" will hold its world premiere at Comic-Con on Saturday — a festival first. Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson are coming to the convention to talk about "The Adventures of Tin-Tin"; Sony is offering a peek at "The Amazing Spider-Man"; and the "Twilight" trio — Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattinson — will again greet their fans at the Con.

TV-wise, "True Blood," ''Game of Thrones" and "The Walking Dead" are big draws, while new shows such as "Person of Interest," ''Grimm" and "Terra Nova" will present preview footage and introduce their casts in an aim to attract viewers before their fall premieres.

New video games are also expected to score big at Comic-Con, where players can get an early look at sci-fi shooters "Halo" and "Gears of War 3" and the latest "Batman" and "Spider-Man" games.

FILE - In this July 21, 2010 file photo, signs promoting Comic-Con International are shown in San Diego. The 2011 Comic Con International opens Thursday, July 21, 2011. (AP Photo/Denis Poroy, file)

"Comic-Con is this incredible celebration of the arts, and the arts spans movies, television, video games — which are incredibly artistic now. It's toys, it's collectibles, it is straight comics and graphic novels," says documentarian Morgan Spurlock, who made a movie about Comic-Con and will introduce its companion photo book at this year's festival. "It is this cornerstone of pop culture that has so much influence now."
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AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen can be reached @APSandy (Twitter)

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

DMX Released from Arizona Prison

by Jason Lipshutz, N.Y.
Getty Images
DMX

DMX became a free man on (today) Tuesday (July 19) after serving a seven-month sentence in an Arizona prison, a rep for the rapper confirms to Billboard.com.

According to AllHipHop.com, DMX (real name: Earl Simmons) was greeted by a group of friends and family after being released early in the morning. The rapper was originally given a one-year sentence for violating his probation, the latest legal run-ins for the MC after more than 25 arrests.


"I spoke to my daughter, I just got off the phone with my wife," says DMX shortly after his release. "I'm going to go see my daughter while the sun is up then I'm going to be in the studio man."



In an interview with VIBE last month, DMX confirmed that he is working on his seventh studio album, "Redemption of the Beast," with artists like Swizz Beatz and the LOX. His last album, "Year of the Dog… Again," was released in 2006.
Billboard - the JUICE

@CharlieSheen & his ex, Tiger Woods, @LadyGaga, Marc Antony & JLo, plus MORE! -Get the scoop-

Today's Top Entertainment Stories:
Plain Dealer staff

Charlie Sheen gets a new sitcom and his ex-wife, Brooke Mueller, appears determined to try "extreme rehab" to beat methamphetamines addiction. (eonline.com and iVillage.com)

Tidbits about the record-breaking opening for "Harry Potter and the Deathly Gallows Part 2." (Los Angeles Times)

Tiger Woods' ex, Elin Nordegren, won't spend any time in bread lines. Her new beau, James Dingman, is the son of a billionaire. (Denver Post)

BTW, one of Tiger's lovers, Rachel Uchitel, has repaid most of the hush money he paid her, and is planning to sue Gloria Allred, the attorney who brokered the deal. (TMZ.com)

What's behind the Jennifer Lopez-Marc Anthony split? Months of almost-constant arguing. (People.com)

Big ol' teddy bear Shaun White channels his inner grizzly bear to fume at Justin Timberlake as part of 'Friends With Benefits' cameo. (USA Today)

Lady Gaga talks sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll with Howard Stern. (mtv.com)


Grammy-winning country supergroup Lady Antebellum reveals details of upcoming CD, "Own the Night." (The Green Room PR)

Ricky Gervais developing comedy about atheism. (avclub.com)


 News of the World whistleblower found dead. (Hollywood Reporter)



cleveland.com

Jailed rapper Ja Rule gets 28 more months: Hip-hop star/actor failed to pay more than $1 million in taxes


Image: Ja Rule
Andrew Kelly  /  Reuters file
Ja Rule, right, accompanied by his wife Aisha Atkins, arrives at the Manhattan Supreme Court to begin a two-year prison sentence for gun possession in New York on June 8.

Jailed rapper Ja Rule was sentenced in federal court in New Jersey Monday to 28 months in prison for failing to pay more than $1 million in taxes.

The 35 year-old hip-hop singer and actor, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins, is already serving a two-year jail sentence on a weapons conviction in New York. The two terms will run concurrently, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office in New Jersey.

Ja Rule previously pleaded guilty in March to three counts of failing to file tax returns. According to prosecutors, Atkins did not pay taxes from 2004 to 2008, costing the U.S. government more than $1.1 million.

"Taxpayers do not have the luxury of deciding whether to comply with laws," U.S. Judge Patty Shwartz said Monday in delivering the sentence.

Ja Rule pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a weapon last year and began his New York prison sentence in June. The charge stemmed from a July 2007 incident, when police pulled over the singer's car after a concert and discovered a semi-automatic handgun hidden away, according to authorities.

Fellow rapper Lil Wayne also was arrested after the same concert at New York's Beacon Theater when police found him smoking marijuana near a tour bus.

Ja Rule received a Grammy nomination in 2002 for the album "Pain is Love." He is expected to release "Pain is Love 2" later this summer.
TODAY Celebrities


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Atlantis Shuttle undocks from Space Station (for the last time)



Atlantis commander Chris Ferguson bids farewell to the ISS
 
The US shuttle Atlantis has undocked from the International Space Station and is bound now for a final landing at the Kennedy Space Center.

When the orbiter reaches Earth on Thursday morning, it will bring to a close Nasa's 30-year re-usable spaceplane programme.

The shuttle pushed away from the station on schedule at 0628 GMT.

"Farewell ISS, make us proud," said Atlantis commander Chris Ferguson as his ship slipped away.

The shuttle moved to a point about 200m (600ft) off the bow of the platform, which then swung about 90 degrees using thrusters on its Russian stern.

The manoeuvre enabled Atlantis to fly over the 400-tonne structure, to take photographs along its truss, or backbone, and of the ends of some of the modules.

This imagery will help engineers on the ground to understand better how the various elements that make up the ISS are coping in the harsh environment of space.

Atlantis' crew of four had presented the station crew of six with two leaving presents before climbing aboard the orbiter and closing the hatch.

One was a model of the shuttle - a reminder of the pivotal role the vehicle has played in building the station. The other was a small American flag flown on the very first space shuttle mission in 1981. This flag will be handed to the first American astronauts to reach the ISS on one of the privately operated space vehicles Nasa is now encouraging to replace the shuttle.

Shuttle view of ISS 
Imagery acquired from Atlantis will be used to assess the ISS structure
 
The moment of Atlantis' departure occurred some 400km above the Pacific Ocean, just east of Christchurch, New Zealand.

Undocking was sounded - as tradition would have it - by a bell being rung out on the station, and then speeches from Ferguson and Ron Garan, the lead Nasa resident on the outpost.

"Atlantis departing the International Space Station for the last time," Garan called out. "Thank you for your 12 docked missions to the ISS, and for capping off 37 space shuttle missions to construct this incredible orbiting research facility."

Ferguson replied: "As the ISS now enters the era of utilisation, we'll never forget the role played by the space shuttle in its creation. Like a proud parent, we anticipate great things to follow from the men and women who build, operate and live there."

Atlantis is set to touch down on Kennedy's runway at 0557 local time (0957 GMT) on Thursday.

It is carrying about 2.5 tonnes of unneeded materials and rubbish from the ISS.

Nasa's orbiter programme officially ends 30 days after wheel stop, although it will take about two years to close all activities, including the archiving of decades of engineering data.

Atlantis itself will be made safe for public display at the Kennedy visitors complex.

Shuttle retirement will leave a gap in America's astronaut-launch capability that is unlikely to be filled for at least three or four years.

In the short-term, the US will have to rely on Russian Soyuz rockets and capsules to get its men and women to and from the ISS.

Sometime mid-decade, the first of a range of commercial American launch vehicles should be ready to fly.
On Monday, Nasa signed an agreement with the Colorado-based United Launch Alliance company to assess its Atlas 5 rocket for crew operations. The review will help determine whether the Atlas is fundamentally safe enough to lift humans into orbit.
BBC News

Monday, July 18, 2011

@BigSean First Pick For MTV Jams' Fab 5: Rapper tells MTV News his Finally Famous is 'best album in the world.'

 (Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
BIG SEAN

By Rob Markman, with reporting by Sway Calloway (@)

It's going to be a hot summer. Just ask G.O.O.D. Music recording artist Big Sean, whose first album, Finally Famous, debuted at #3 on the Billboard albums chart after it dropped in June. Now Sean is setting things off as the first of MTV Jams' 2011 Fab 5.

Conceived in 2005 on MTV Jams, the Fab 5 is a collection of the most outstanding new hip-hop artists of the year who have made a visual impact on the road to releasing their debut albums. Fab 5 alumni include Juelz Santana, Tony Yayo, Paul Wall, Young Jeezy, Kid Cudi and Drake. This year MTV Jams, MTV News and Sucker Free will bring you 2011's hottest new hip-hop upstarts, and Big Sean is up first!



In the past year, Sean has emerged from being a G.O.O.D. Music understudy to one of the main stars on Kanye West's squad. With his playful flow and witty lyrics, Sean proved this year that he can make hit records when he snagged the #1 spot on Billboard's rap singles chart with "My Last" featuring Chris Brown. He also just shot the video for his next single, "Marvin & Chardonnay." The K. West and Roscoe Dash-assisted track is poised to pick up where his last hit left off.

But who is Big Sean exactly? In his own words:

"Big Sean is a Detroit player, a dreamer. Somebody who went against the grain who realized following your heart is way more important than following your head. And somebody who when I look back on life, I don't have to say, 'I wish I coulda, woulda, shoulda did anything.' "

The pint-sized MC got his moniker because of a 6'8" friend who had the same name. "His name was Sean too, so they called me Big Sean and him Little Sean, just to be funny," he said. "It's way fresher for me to be little and people have to call me big."

Since rolling with Team Kanye, things have only gotten bigger, and the fame has brought about some strange occurrences for Sean, especially on Twitter. He recalled a time when someone posted a childhood picture, lifted from his grandmother's house, on the social networking site. "I'm like, 'How the hell did you get this picture?' " he said. "The Internet is powerful; it's crazy."

Wise words indeed. Sean also reveals that if he were down to his last $10, he'd splurge on ... who else but himself? "I would spend it on the best album in the world: Finally Famous." That he is!
MTV News

Lil Wayne Says He'd Retire To Be A Better Dad: 'I'm not gonna Brett Favre y'all,' Lil Wayne tells MTV News about his retirement from rap.

 Lil Wayne
Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images

By Rob Markman, with reporting by Rahman Dukes 

Too $hort tried calling it quits but is now working on his 19th album. Jay-Z's 2003 retirement lasted about three years before he returned to rap in 2006. And now Lil Wayne is talking about hanging up the mic. Will he actually do it?

During a radio interview with Hot 97's Angie Martinez in March, the 28-year-old said he's walking away at 35. Then Weezy switched up, telling XXL that he would be "gone by 31." Now, Lil Tunechi, who dropped his Sorry 4 the Wait mixtape on Wednesday, tells MTV News that he isn't sure when exactly he will walk away from rap.

"I'm not sure; I'm not gonna Brett Favre y'all," Wayne said referring to the former Green Bay Packers quarterback who finally handed the NFL his walking papers in January after years of talking about it. "I'm not gonna draw it all the way out the whole year: 'We wondering, is Wayne gonna do this?' But the honest answer is I don't know."

Wayne — who has already recorded eight solo albums, sold more than 10 million records and won four Grammy Awards — said he wants to focus less on making hits and more on his kids. His oldest daughter, Reginae, is a budding performer herself at age 12, and Weezy wants his little girl to eventually stunt like her daddy.

"I'm so settled in my life right now," he told us. "I have my kids; they're wonderful. My daughter has her career ahead of her now. I have to focus on that, and I have to put the same focus that I put in my career. ... I want to become a better father, I want to become a better man to my woman, and those things take time. and time takes away from this. So the honest answer to that [retirement] question is, I don't know. Maybe so."

Weezy's ninth solo album, Tha Carter IV is one of the year's most-anticipated LPs and is set to be released on August 29. Will it be his last? Fans have to wait and see.

Do you think Lil Wayne should call it quits? Tell us in the comments.
MTV News