Thursday, March 31, 2011

President Obama to Welcome Israeli President Shimon Peres to the White House

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The President will welcome Israeli President Shimon Peres to the White House for a working lunch on April 5, 2011.  The President looks forward to discussing with President Peres the full range of issues of common concern, including U.S.-Israeli security cooperation, recent developments across the Middle East, and the pursuit of peace between Israel and its neighbors.  The President last received President Peres at the White House in May 2009.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/03/31/president-obama-welcome-israeli-president-shimon-peres-white-house

Nichole Robinson Monet Mazur Rozonda Thomas Rachel Weisz Miranda Kerr

Remarks by the President at a DNC Event

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

Studio Museum in Harlem
New York, New York

8:51 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody. 

AUDIENCE:  Hello!

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, New York.  (Applause.)  Hello, Harlem.  (Applause.)  It is good to be here tonight.  Hey, you, how did you get up there so high?  (Laughter.) 

I’ve got some acknowledgements I need to make.  Everybody here is important, but there are a few people I want to mention.

First of all, we are in the district of somebody who helped us to deliver on a historic legislative session over the last couple of years and has been a leader here for a very long time -- he doesn’t like to remember how long it’s been -- but Congressman Charlie Rangel is in the house.  (Applause.)

We’ve got your outstanding attorney general.  Eric Schneiderman is here.  (Applause.)  The former mayor of New York City, David Dinkins, is in the house.  (Applause.)  Several of Harlem’s outstanding leaders -- a great friend, one of my earliest supporters here in New York City, Senator Bill Perkins is in the house.  (Applause.)  Assemblyman Keith Wright is here. (Applause.)  Councilwoman Inez Dickens is here.  (Applause.) 

And finally, I just want to say how thankful I am for our Democratic National Committee Chairman.  I think some people obviously have seen Tim Kaine on television, and know that he was a governor of the great Commonwealth of Virginia.  What some of you may not know is Tim was the first person, the first elected official outside of the state of Illinois to endorse my candidacy for President.  (Applause.)

He made that announcement as governor of Virginia in Richmond, former seat of the Confederacy.  And this is back in February of 2007 when most people could not pronounce my name.  (Laughter.)  And there was not a big political upside to endorsing me at that point.  But he decided to do it because he thought it was the right thing to do and because we share a set of values about why to get into public service and who we were fighting for and the kind of America we were fighting for.

And I say all this because there have been some rumors swirling around that Tim might decide to plunge back into electoral politics.  And if he does I want even people up here to be paying attention and to be rooting for him, because he is not just a leader for Virginia, he is a leader for America.  And I'm very thankful to him.  Thank you, Tim.  (Applause.) 

Now, we meet here tonight, after as challenging a two years as America has gone through in our lifetimes.  And when we started this journey three or four years ago we understood that America was at a turning point.  We understood that the wheels of history were churning and that the old ways of doing business couldn't help us to get to where America needed to be.  It couldn't make us more competitive.  It couldn't make us more energy independent.  It couldn’t ensure that our kids were learning and able not only to go to college but also advance in careers.

We knew that how we approached international policy, trying to stand on our own without thinking about how we could mobilize the international community as a force multiplier, that that was not going to work given the incredible number of challenges that we faced.  And most of all, I guess we understood that unless we changed our politics, unless we changed how we did business, that the same problems that we had been talking about decade after decade would perpetuate themselves; that we had to undergo a transformation in how we thought about citizenship and how we thought about each other, and that we had to get beyond some of the old divisions that were holding us back as a people.

And so what our campaign tried to do was to resuscitate that notion that there’s something fundamental that binds us together, despite all our differences.  You look out on the room today, we’ve got people from every possible walk of life.  And that's part of what makes New York City such an incredible place.  (Applause.)  And so what we wanted to do was adapt to the times, adapt to the 21st century, but also remind ourselves that there are some old-fashioned, timeworn values; that whether your forebears landed at Ellis Island or they came here on a slave ship or they crossed the Rio Grande, or however they got here, they typically had a commitment to hard work and a commitment to community and a commitment to family and a willingness to dream big dreams, and a patriotism that was not rooted in ethnicity but was rooted in a creed and a set of ideals and a belief that in America anything was possible.  That's what brought us together as a campaign.  (Applause.) 

And what we then tried to do is to translate in concrete terms what would that mean in terms of policy.  It would mean that we were educating our kids not just to be outstanding workers and outstanding entrepreneurs, but also outstanding citizens.  It meant that we had to make sure that we had an energy policy that not only protected the planet but also ensured our long-term security because it ratcheted down our dependence on foreign oil.  It meant that we finally had, in a nation as wealthy as ours, a health care system that was rational and smart and did not leave millions of people uninsured or at risk of bankruptcy just because a family member got sick.  (Applause.) 

We had to make sure that the ideals of equality and justice had real meaning, and that we didn’t just stand pat on the progress that we had made during my lifetime, but in fact we kept on making progress so that 50 years from now people would look back and they’d say, this is a more just and a more equal place for everybody.  (Applause.)  It’s exciting, isn’t it?  (Laughter.) 

So here’s the deal, people.  We haven’t finished our task.  We’ve still got some work to do.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Fired up!

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Ready to go!

THE PRESIDENT:  There have been times where we had to make some really tough decisions, really unpopular decisions, digging ourselves out of this incredible economic hole that we were in. We had to stabilize the financial system.  That wasn’t always popular.  We had to save the U.S. auto industry, and everybody said that wasn’t going to work.  And I just want to report that GM just announced it’s hiring every single one of the workers that they laid off before we took office.  (Applause.)

But when you look back on the track record of accomplishments over the last two years, I think you can go down that list of commitments we made to each other -- not just commitments I made, but commitment we made to each other about the kind of country we want to be -- and I think we’ve got some things that we can be proud of. 

We passed health care reform, and it is going to make life better for millions of Americans.  (Applause.)  We pulled this economy out of the ditch, and just in this last year alone, over a million and a half jobs have been created, and we’re going to keep on creating more.  We made sure that we finally got rid of that archaic policy, “don’t ask, don’t tell,” because we wanted to make sure that every American who wants to serve, can serve.  (Applause.)

We raised fuel-efficiency standards on cars and invested in record amounts in clean energy, because we want to make sure that wind energy and solar panels and all of the incredible promise of a new energy future starts right here in the United States of America.

So we can go down the list domestically, and then we can talk internationally.  Obviously that's been on a lot of our minds lately.  And we are grateful to our men and women in uniform who have implemented so many difficult policies under such incredibly difficult conditions.  (Applause.)  And whether it’s helping the people of Haiti or it’s helping the people of Japan, whether it is being on the right side of history in the Middle East and North Africa or making sure that innocents who are seeking their freedom aren't slaughtered by tyranny -- (applause) -- what we've been able to do is to once again form the kind of American leadership that brings people together, as opposed to drives them apart, and that renews old alliances and creates new coalitions.

So we've gotten a lot of stuff done.  But right now what’s on my mind is what hasn’t gotten done yet.  We're going to have to fix a broken immigration system, and that is not yet complete. (Applause.)  We've got to make sure that even as we're securing our borders we also recognize that we are a nation of immigrants and that we want everybody to be able to partake in the American Dream.  (Applause.) 

We've got to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.  I mean, New York looks pretty good, but we've got a lot of work to do on bridges and sewer systems, but also on the new infrastructure of a new age, making sure that we've got the best broadband systems and the best wireless systems and the smart grids and the high-speed rails that will help move people and goods and services and information all throughout this great country of ours.

We still have a lot of work to do on energy.  You know, tomorrow I'm going to give an energy speech.  The last time gas prices were this high was in 2008 when I was running.  And you remember what was going on right back then.  The other side kept on talking about “drill, baby, drill.”  That was the slogan. 

What we were talking about was breaking the pattern of being shocked at high prices and then, as prices go down, being lulled into a trance, but instead let’s actually have a plan.  (Applause.)  Let’s, yes, increase domestic oil production, but let’s also invest in solar and wind and geothermal and biofuels and let’s make our buildings more efficient and our cars more efficient.  Not all of that work is done yet, but I’m not finished yet.  (Applause.)  We’ve got more work to do.

We’re going to have to work to get our deficit under control.  I inherited a big debt and a big deficit.  And regardless of how we assign fault, all of us are responsible to work together to try to make sure that we can actually in good conscience be able to tell our children and our grandchildren we didn’t leave a mountain of debt to them. 

And that’s going to require some hard choices and it’s going to require us not just telling the American people what they want to hear but telling them what they need to hear.  And I think the American people are ready for that, but it’s not going to be easy.  And if we’re serious about winning the future, then all of us are going to have to recognize that we’ve got to have a government that lives within its means, that's investing in the things that we have to invest in to win the future, which means that we’re going to cut out some things that we don't need -- even if they're nice to have.

So if you go down this list and you say, not bad for two years work -- the one thing that I want everybody here to understand is that I am as hopeful, if not more hopeful, now than I was when I was running.  (Applause.)

You know, I did a bunch of network interviews today to talk about what we’re doing in Libya and why what happens in the Middle East is so important to us, and why those images coming from Tahrir Square in Egypt speak directly to who we are as a people, and that ultimately our long-term security will be because a new generation of leadership in that region recognizes we aspire for them to have opportunity and to be successful. 

And Diane Sawyer I think it was, she started listing out, well, let’s see, two wars that you’ve dealt with, a couple of earthquakes, nuclear situation in Japan, H1N1 virus, worst recession since the Great Depression.  “No wonder you look old,” she said.  (Laughter.) 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  You look great!  (Laughter.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  No, she actually did not say, “No wonder you look old.”  (Laughter.)  But I do appreciate you saying that I look great.  (Laughter.)  I need encouragement, too, once in a while.  (Laughter.)

But no, what she said was, well, you know what, how do you kind of -- when you get up in the morning, how do you stay focused and motivated?  Don't you just want to pull the covers over your head sometimes? 

And what I said was that after two and a half years in this job -- or close to two and a half years, the thing that continually keeps me going is my complete confidence in the American people. 

There's a lot of talk about how divided America is, and how frustrated and angry and, in some cases people make arguments that especially the next generation, somehow they’re apathetic or they’re not involved.  I don't see that.  I mean, what I see are people who every day are doing the right thing by their families, by their communities.  They’re getting up, they’re going to work, or they’re out there pounding the pavement looking for work.  They’re managing budgets under incredible strain, but they’re doing so with grace and good humor. 

I see people who day in and day out are making sure that we got some -- do we have somebody here to just -- we don’t need -- we’ve got -- somebody is always following me around, so they’ll be fine.  It’s just -- next time you guys come, make sure to eat or drink ahead of time. 

But what I see in the American people is just a core goodness and a core decency that expresses itself in so many different ways each and every day.  But that spirit, it’s got to be expressed not just in the workplace, not just on the Little League field or in church or a synagogue or a mosque.  It also has to be expressed in our politics.

And so the biggest thing that we haven’t gotten done and the thing that I’m going to ask all of you to be part of over the next couple of years -- we still have a big job to do in transforming our politics; to make sure that we can have robust debate and real policy differences, but we never forget that what binds us together is always stronger than what drives us apart -- (applause) -- and that for all the differences in race and region and ethnicity and background, we are all Americans and we believe in a set of fundamental principles, truths that we hold self-evident.  That is going to be as much of the unfinished business that we focus on over the next couple years as anything that we do.  And having friends like you who are here and ready to commit to that vision, that, too, makes me extraordinarily confident. 

So thank you so much, everybody.  I love you.  (Applause.)  Let’s go to work.  Yes, we can.

AUDIENCE:  Yes, we can!

THE PRESIDENT:  Yes, we can.  God bless you.  (Applause.)

END
9:12 P.M. EDT 

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/03/29/remarks-president-dnc-event

Jordana Brewster Laetitia Casta Claudette Ortiz Julia Stiles Marisa Miller

Outhouse: Straw, Stick and Bricks ? review

(Babel)

Outhouse are one of a growing number of young UK jazz outfits bending the music their own way ? in this case away from lyricism toward a more rugged sound (founding member Dave Smith is one of the UK's most impressive young drummers). Outhouse worked with African drummers on their last album, but this time go for a more metallic bite through Icelandic guest guitarist Hilmar Jensson, a regular member of fierce New York avant-funk band AlasNoAxis. Episodes here resemble Led Bib's chordal anthems bumping over potholed-road drumming, but much of the session is a broodingly quiet textural exploration like a kind of 21st-century film noir soundtrack. Shadowy dialogues between the tenor saxes (Robin Fincker and Tom Challenger) are interrupted by slurred guitar chords, probing sax multiphonics or dignified clarinet figures over shivery electronic noises. Sonar-like high guitar notes curl around Johnny Brierley's acoustic bass, and free-sax wriggles evolve into catchy hooks. If you like Bill Frisell, Tim Berne with Marc Ducret, Polar Bear or Led Bib, you'll go for Outhouse's thematic audacity, energy and knack for surprises.

Rating: 4/5


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/mar/31/outhouse-straw-sticks-bricks-review

Poppy Montgomery Evangeline Lilly Lisa Marie Keira Knightley Monica Keena

James Franco: Helping Students in the Nation's Capital

Looking a bit tuckered out after a long flight, James Franco was spotted arriving in Washington, D.C. on Thursday afternoon (March 31).

The ?127 Hours? stud quickly threw on his shades at the sight of the paparazzi en route to offer up D.C. residents with ?An Evening with James Franco? - which is an "event which will include food and discussion while being held at the Hotel Monaco and benefiting free student programming at 826DC."

As his career shows no signs of slowing down, it was recently announced that Franco will be working with Mila Kunis in an upcoming film called, ?Oz the Great and Powerful.?

Of working with the ?Black Swan? actress, Franco told MTV News, "I?ve done two small things with her. I?ve done something for Funny Or Die, a spoof of 'The Hills' TV show, and then we did a little scene in 'Date Night.' She?s great, I love working with her."

Franco also recently sat down with David Letterman and shared his thoughts about being accused of getting stoned before hosting this year?s Academy Awards.

James denied smoking pot, but justified his mellow demeanor by telling, "I love her, but ... I think the Tasmanian Devil would look stoned standing next to Anne Hathaway. I haven't watched it back. Maybe I had low energy. I honestly played those lines as well as I could."



Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/james-franco/james-franco-helping-students-nations-capital-493342

Missi Pyle Jessica Alba Kylie Bax Diora Baird Laura Prepon

Fake pirated Walk and Text Android app embarrasses pirates and steals sensitive data

walk and talk pirate SMS
Symantec is reporting that they have detected a malicious Android app doing the rounds on file-sharing sites in the US and Asia. The fake application impersonates a pirated version of an app called Walk and Text, which lets you overlay a keyboard on a live feed from your phone's camera to avoid crashing into things while walking and texting, and is currently available in the Android Market for less than $2.

When the fake app is launched it throws up a simulated dialog showing the Walk and Text app being 'cracked,' but actually what it's doing is collecting your private information including your IMEI, phone number, username, and scanning your address book. The virus then attempts to send that information back to a remote server, but also sends out an SMS to everyone in your address book with the text shown above and a warning that the application isn't licensed with links to buy the real thing:

Trojan warning

Symantec has dubbed the malicious application as the Android.Walkinwat Trojan and categorised it with a 'Very Low' risk level 1. While we can agree with the developer's sentiment, we can't condone their actions; but if you get hit by this Trojan and a nasty invasion of privacy, you've only got one person to blame.

Fake pirated Walk and Text Android app embarrasses pirates and steals sensitive data originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 04:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jennifer Aniston Amy Cobb Deanna Russo Cheryl Burke Olivia Wilde

Royal wedding revelation rocks Snoop Dogg's world

The hip-hop star will be disappointed to learn his new single has not been chosen for Will and Kate's nuptials in April

Finally, sad news for those artistes who were hoping to provide the musical entertainment at the forthcoming royal wedding. For weeks, the competition has been hotting up. Operatic man-band Blake ? featuring William's Old University Friend Jules ? have hopefully put out a wedding-themed single called All Of Me, while Snoop Dogg has furthered his case by casting lookalikes of Princes William and Harry in the video for single Wet.

Without wishing to make the Windsors seem overly stuffy, LiS wasn't certain that associating the heir to the throne with a song about vaginal mucus was the best way of securing the gig, and so it has proved. In the latest of its piping-hot royal wedding exclusives, Hello! has gobsmacked the nation with the revelation that the music at Westminster Abbey will be provided by the Choir Of Westminster Abbey, clearly shocking news to anyone who thought the royal couple would chose to go down the aisle to the theme from Steptoe And Son and the Exploited's Fuck the Mods. LiS looks at Snoop's crestfallen face and says: there's always the buffet afterwards! Perhaps Her Majesty would like to hear your song about vaginal mucus there?


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/lostinshowbiz/2011/mar/24/royal-wedding-snoop-dogg

Angela Marcello Paz Vega Rebecca Mader Eva Green Lauren Conrad

Fantastic Fargo and Great Grand Forks!

North Dakota.jpg
What a great day. Started with bang in Fargo at Babb's Coffee shop, then a quick drive to Grand Forks for a talk with a very engaged group of prospective entrepreneurs at the Ina Mae center; topped off by a truly wonderful town hall in downtown Grand Forks at the Coffee Company. Sarah and her crew were wonderful - completely rearranging every piece of furniture in the room to accommodate a big crowd - even more people showed up than had RSVP'd. A serious group of power users. Two gents had driven 2.5 hours from Canada! We even borrowed chairs from the fitness club and the women's hair salon next door! One of the many great advantages of hosting these in smaller towns and special thanks to the 94.7FM DJs who knew the proprietors and helped us with the chairs - fortunately they were Pandora fans :)

We also just ran way over on our RSVPs for Omaha on Thursday, so we've moving the event to the Durham Museum (801 South 10th Street).

Gotta get some sleep for the long drive to Sioux Falls tomorrow.

This is fun!

Tim (Founder)

Source: http://blog.pandora.com/pandora/archives/2010/11/fantastic-fargo.html

Taryn Manning Nikki Cox Carla Gugino Ana Hickmann Mischa Barton

Skyfire Web browser for iOS goes multiligual, adds related sites feature

Skyfire, the popular Flash-video-playing Web browser for iOS and Android, has released a new version for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch users. The update includes a handful of important changes, including seven new localizations: French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, and Spanish.

There's also an improved support process for when you need to submit feedback or bug reports to Skyfire's team of developers. User agent switching has been enhanced as well, allowing you to choose among desktop, iPad, and iPhone views of the websites you browse. Skyfire has added a 'related sites' feature, bringing a nice discovery element to the app, too.

You can find the new version of Skyfire in the App Store -- existing users can simply check for updates, of course.

Skyfire Web browser for iOS goes multiligual, adds related sites feature originally appeared on Download Squad on Tue, 29 Mar 2011 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Stacy Keibler Rihanna America Ferrera Haylie Duff Talisa Soto

Tim Westergren on CNBC

Source: http://blog.pandora.com/pandora/archives/2010/09/tim-on-cnbc-1.html

Katie Cassidy Estella Warren Cinthia Moura Monica Potter Brittany Snow

Israel's answer to Jordan is a real snake charmer

Orit Fox inadvertently killed a snake when it bit her silicone-enlarged breasts . . . Or did she?

Of course, the famous of Britain and America busying themselves #prayingforjapan has a knock-on effect. You could tell it was a slow week for celebrity news from the fact that OK! magazine felt impelled to run a feature on King John dying of dysentery in Norfolk in 1216: rather winningly, it linked this to King Alexander of Greece's death in 1920 (bitten by a poisonous monkey while walking his dog) and the massacre of the Nepalese royal family in 2001 as evidence of a mysterious "Royal Curse".

Happily, the transatlantic celebrity drought enables Lost in Showbiz to look further afield for its kicks. Its eye alights on Israel, home to Orit Fox, or, as certain people keep referring to her, "Israel's answer to Jordan", which makes her sound like a stage in an ever-deepening Middle East crisis.

In fact, like Katie Price, Fox is a woman of indeterminate occupation, best known as the owner of Israel's largest breasts: "I decided to enlarge them in the army. My obsession is my breasts." She shot to something approaching international fame this week when it was widely reported that she managed to inadvertently kill a boa constrictor she was posing with for a photoshoot. The snake bit her chest and contracted silicone poisoning.

LiS couldn't help viewing this as the laying down of a surgically enhanced gauntlet: it made the ongoing activities of Price look a little wan by comparison. Come on, Katie! Up your game! While you're sitting there posting pictures of that Argentinian bloke and telling us what you are having for lunch on Twitter, your Israeli counterpart has actually killed a boa constrictor with her bosoms! Perhaps you could consider smothering a tortoise to death with yours. Put a Red Nose on and say you're doing it for Comic Relief!

Alas, just as LiS was considering a move into celebrity management, it learned that the story about the death of the boa constrictor was a hoax: the media had picked it up without noticing that it emanated from a website called Oh No They Didn't. Words cannot begin to express its disappointment: suffice to say it will watch Comic Relief haunted by the image of what might have been.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/lostinshowbiz/2011/mar/17/orit-fox-versus-boa-constrictor

Sara Spraker Alexis Bledel Kim Kardashian China Chow Alecia Elliott

LauncherPro for Android adds Gmail widget and new home screen transitions

LauncherPro 0.8.4 for Android Gmail widgetLauncherPro, one of the most popular third-party launchers for Android, has just received an update, taking it to version 0.8.4. This update brings two new features, and lots of fixes.

First off, users of the paid LauncherPro Plus have gotten a new LauncherPro widget, this time for Gmail. This widget matches the style of all the other LauncherPro widgets (for Contacts, Calendar, Twitter, and Facebook) that are only available if you've bought the app.

The new Gmail widget lets you quickly glance at your Inbox, and tap on any received email to view it. The viewing action will happen using a LauncherPro-specific viewer, because Google apparently doesn't allow external apps to trigger viewing a specific email conversation thread. Replies, however, will happen inside your phone's Gmail app, since that event can be directly accessed from third-party applications. Since one Gmail widget only displays one Gmail account's emails, if you have more accounts, you can set up a different widget for each account.

Also for LauncherPro Plus buyers, the Facebook login procedure (for using the Facebook widget) has been changed, hopefully eliminating all problems people with low-res displays have had. A change in the Twitter implementation for the Twitter widget should also fix issues people have seen with status updates.

Continue reading LauncherPro for Android adds Gmail widget and new home screen transitions

LauncherPro for Android adds Gmail widget and new home screen transitions originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 28 Mar 2011 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cat Power January Jones Christina DaRe Malin Akerman Melissa Joan Hart

Courtney Love's Tory conversion is not to be sniffed at

Just what the Conservative party needs ? Courtney Love appears to have given her seal of approval to David Cameron

It takes a great deal to make Lost in Showbiz feel sorry for David Cameron, but news of the Conservative party's latest celebrity supporter has caused what it can only describe as a twinge of sympathy. This week, Courtney Love announced her conversion to Cameroon status by means of a typically blunt tweet: "TORY NOW". It would appear Love was introduced to the Conservatives via her current amorata, Henry Alsopp, the brother of Location Location Location's Kirsty Allsopp ? a relationship that, in and of itself, blows LiS's mind to tiny pieces. But Love's support for the Conservatives may yet bring with it a ray of hope for the beleaguered PM. This week it was claimed that Love attempted to get a journalist to snort her late husband Kurt Cobain's ashes: "She actually said she would offer his ashes first to me to snort, then she would like them," he alleged. Does LiS espy an initiative for the government to stop local councils ramping up funeral charges in the wake of cuts?


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/lostinshowbiz/2011/mar/17/courtney-love-becomes-a-conservative

Paige Butcher Amanda Peet Xenia Seeberg The Avatars of Second Life Daniella Alonso

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Beyonc� drops father as manager

R&B singer ends long-term management arrangement with father Mathew Knowles

Beyonc� has split with her long-time manager ? who just happens to be her father. In a mutual decision, the singer announced that she and Mathew Knowles have severed their management relationship, giving him more time to focus on his gospel label. "Business is business and family is family," her father said. "It should come as no surprise that at 29 years old, almost 30, she wants to have more control of her business."

"He is my father for life and I love my dad dearly," Beyonc� said. "I grew up watching both he and my mother manage and own their own businesses ... and I will continue to follow in their footsteps." Though Beyonc� has not announced a new manager, it is speculated that she will join husband Jay-Z's Roc Nation roster. She is a "very, very smart businesswoman", Knowles told the Associated Press.

Beyonc�'s father has overseen her career since she first auditioned for gigs as a teenager. While the singer's mother, Tina, was her stylist, Mathew managed his daughter through her solo years, as a member of R&B group Destiny's Child, and during the past decade. Until recently, Knowles also managed the solo careers of Beyonc�'s former bandmates, Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams. He is still understood to represent Beyonc�'s sister, Solange.

Mathew insisted this was just a business decision, and unrelated to the recent Knowles family drama. Mathew and Tina Knowles divorced in 2009, after 29 years of marriage; Mathew was alleged to have had an affair, and a baby, while still married to his wife.

"We mutually agreed to part ways in terms of me managing Beyonc�, as my focus is in the investment of Music World Entertainment's growing gospel and inspirational music division," Knowles told Us Weekly, referring to his record label. "Because of the success of these artists, my focus has to be on gospel now."

Mathew Knowles remains manager for Destiny's Child, who split up in 2006. But the group could still reunite, he told Us Weekly, "one day". "Beyonc�, I feel, is the number one artist in the world right now," he added. "That's a great feeling, as a father and manager."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/mar/30/beyonce-drops-father-manager

Eva Mendes Sarah Polley Aisha Tyler K. D. Aubert Sara Spraker

Internet Entrepreneur Bypasses High-Tech for Low-Priced With FreePhone2Phone



The numbers that fill Warner Johnson's head shake him from sleep most nights.

There are phone numbers and area codes and long-distance calling rates to far-flung places like India, Slovenia and Hong Kong. Phantom phone calls to Mexico or Martinique ring in his dreams.

"I just can't help it," Johnson said. "It's my passion."

Johnson, 48, is a Harlem-based Internet entrepreneur whose model relies less on high-tech gadgetry and more on old-school simplicity and ingenuity.


His most recent creation is FreePhone2Phone, a telephone service that offers free 10-minute phone calls to any city in the United States and to more than 50 countries around the world on the condition that the user listens to a short advertisement.

Here's how it works: You dial a local access number that you can locate at FreePhone2Phone.com, you listen to a couple 10- or 12-second advertisements and then you dial the number you'd like to call.

At a time when unlimited cell phone calling plans can easily eclipse the $125 mark, and smartphones and the latest tablets require costly data plans for optimized use, FreePhone2Phone is somewhat of a technological throwback.

Its use and appeal hearkens back to the days when a few quarters and a phone book were all you needed to reach out and touch someone. And with the cost of gas prices, airline tickets and perishable goods rising for any number of reasons, millions of Americans concerned with everyday expenses can save anywhere from 10 cents to a $1 a minute off their long-distance charges.

At a time when unlimited cell phone calling plans can easily eclipse the $125 mark, and smartphones and the latest tablets require costly data plans for optimized use, FreePhone2Phone is somewhat of a technological throwback. Its use and appeal harkens back to the days when a few quarters and a phonebook were all you needed to reach out and touch someone. And with the cost of gas prices, airline tickets and perishable goods rising for any number of reasons, millions of Americans concerned with everyday expenses can save anywhere from 10 cents to a $1 a minute off their long-distance charges.

Johnson said the target audience for his service is broader than those with family or friends abroad, and includes anyone who wants to save money in these tough economic times.

"Imagine you could save money at the gas pump by simply watching a few advertisements. Who wouldn't do that?" he asked. "This is no different."

While the service is free, there are a few catches. Most overseas calls are limited to landline numbers. Each call is limited to 10 minutes, and if you try to call the same number a second time in the same day, the call is limited to five minutes.

But the number of free calls you can make in a single day is unrestricted.

Since the launch of FreePhone2Phone seven months ago, Johnson said users have made "millions" of calls and saved "hundreds of thousands of dollars." (He admits to using the service himself at least three to four times a day to call business partners in Latin America.)

His story is the stuff of pure Americana: boy with humble, middle-class roots follows his dreams, takes a few risks and finds himself along the way.

And that journey has led Johnson to where he is today -- a man on a mission. That singular mission has been to spread the word about FreePhone2Phone. Think an African-American Billy Mays, Tony Little or Ron Popeil in a pair of perfectly pressed slacks and a sport coat.

He tells the delivery guys schlepping packages up and down his block in Harlem about it. He tells the Indian and Greek waiters at his favorite restaurants. And he can't take a bag of peanuts from a flight attendant or tip a skycap without at least a mention of FreePhone2Phone.

"In the middle of the night, I'll check the iPad to see how many people on the West Coast are making calls to Asia or Europe," Johnson admitted. "India is really big. Mexico is huge, and people are calling Europe like crazy."

FreePhone2Phone is just the latest venture for Johnson, who spent much of the mid-1980s and early '90s working on Wall Street as an investment banker with Payne Webber. He is also the creator of the Website fabsearch.com, which aggregates travel articles from luxury fashion and travel magazines to help people plan where to eat, stay and play while on vacation.

His entrepreneurial impulses were nurtured at an early age, when he said his schoolteacher mother, keen to her son's motivations, offered some sage advice.

"Don't become a doctor," he recalled her saying. "You care too much about money to be a doctor."

So began his journey from a middle-class black neighborhood in Raleigh, N.C., where he was bused to integrated schools, to summer classes at the prestigious Phillips Academy, the elite prep school in Andover, Mass., and then to the Ivy halls of Brown University, where he studied history.

While at Brown, a friend introduced him to a program designed to give minority students access to Wall Street. Johnson said he took to that world naturally and, after graduating from Brown with a degree in history, went on to work as an investment banker. But after years of the stress and grind of working in finance, he felt stymied.

"I realized that working on Wall Street just wasn't for me," Johnson said. "I was following the book and I could imagine my life with success, but I just said, 'Why do it if my heart's not into it?' "

He recalled wanting to experience life beyond the tacky wood-paneled offices that he so often found himself in, where he consulted for many deep-pocketed businessmen with even deeper financial troubles.

"I looked at Ted Turner and he was a rock star to me," Johnson said. "Guys like that go out there and risk it." So he quit his job and moved to France.

"I learned French and partied my butt off," he said, with a bit of boyish mischief in his voice. "I decided to eat pizza and be an entrepreneur."

After living in France for a year and a half, Johnson decided to move back to the States, first to New York City's West Village neighborhood and then to Harlem. It was 1993 and Harlem had yet to gentrify.

"Police helicopters were still flying outside of my window," he recalled.

But he said moving to Harlem, the "mecca of black America," fueled his social and entrepreneurial juices. He was awed by the architecture and cultural richness of the place.

"It has made me so proud to be a black American. And you realize the strength, the commitment, the dignity and the patience of my people," he said. "But it also energized me to go out there and do things. I felt Harlem provided an open canvas for me to be able to pursue my dreams, and I knew that I wouldn't be judged one way or the other."

There were ups and down along the way, Johnson said. Companies he founded have both flourished and floundered. But the last few years with fabsearch.com have been profitable and full of successes, he said.

And word of FreePhone2Phone has been spreading quickly, he said, mostly by word of mouth. (Surely, much of it his own.) There are plans to extend the service to more countries and investors, and advertisers have been extremely supportive, given the tough lending and investing environment, he said.

Meanwhile, Johnson remains his company's best pitchman.

"Your grandmother doesn't know how to use Skype or Google Voice," he said. "But this is simple -- easy as using a prepaid calling card."

And he allowed that he is consumed by the need to spread the word about what he believes his product can offer money-conscious callers.

"This is my passion and joy," Johnson said. "I can barely go to sleep without telling people about this service."

 

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Source: http://www.bvblackspin.com/2011/03/25/internet-entrepreneur-bypasses-high-tech-for-low-priced-with-fre/

Rachel Bilson Karen Carreno Bijou Phillips Marika Dominczyk Dita Von Teese

Cee Lo Green ? review

Manchester Academy

It's more than a decade since Thomas Callaway, aka Cee Lo Green, left Atlanta crew Goodie Mob, but he's true to the hip-hop tradition of being late on stage. More than half an hour after his expected arrival, slow handclaps are in the house, but Cee Lo isn't. Suddenly, he walks on with arms in the air, victorious before he's played a note. In fact, such is the love and empathy for the overweight misfit kid turned supersized superstar that when he informs the crowd, "We're going to play some music tonight," people cheer so wildly you'd think they had come expecting a spot of haberdashery.

His charm has also worked on his musicians, kicking off The Lady Killer tour with a sultry all-lady band whose outfits seem to have been sprayed on. The man himself has eschewed his usual outlandish suits in favour of a T-shirt reading "John, Paul, George and Ringo", which seems something of a mission statement as the big rapper-turned-soul man mixes in guitar pop, Jimi Hendrix solos and 1960s-style psychedelic lighting. Even aged hip-hop cliches such as "Throw ya hands in the air" sound relatively sprightly in his zodiac of sound.

However, it gradually becomes apparent that a heavy cold has reduced the man mountain's usual Everest of a holler to a mere Ben Nevis, which is more apparent on the eerie, stripped-down Bodies than the Motowny party stompers Bright Lights, Bigger City and Satisfied. During Gone Daddy Gone ? the 1983 Violent Femmes song he first covered as half of Gnarls Barkley ? he sounds ready to expire.

More demanding Lady Killer songs such as It's OK and Old Fashioned are missing ? perhaps victim to the lurgy, but the trooper isn't going to leave his two best-loved party stonkers.

Gnarl's 2006 smash Crazy creeps in in total darkness over a new bass drum intro, and there are cries of recognition as he starts singing, even minus the high notes. There's a truly outstanding moment as this year's deceptively joyous kiss-off hit Fuck You is greeted by the extraordinary sight of the crowd raising a middle finger towards the stage ? in the direction of the song's errant ex, not the much-loved rapper.

Alas, just over an hour in, after only one chorus of an encore of Lou Reed's Perfect Day, that pesky bug proves a party pooper.

Rating: 3/5


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/mar/28/cee-lo-green-review

Jennifer Scholle Tatiana Zavialova Tila Tequila Tamie Sheffield Kelly Monaco

How to make Rebecca Black sound halfway listenable

Software program PaulStretch lets you slow down songs, transforming a hideously banal tune into something that sounds like a collaboration between Kate Bush and Mogwai

These days, two things seem to happen when rotten pieces of music achieve a certain level of notoriety. (Yes, I am about to mention Rebecca Black again, but bear with me.) First there's the outpouring of untrammelled fury over the fact that someone has dared to create something that seems to be culturally worthless. Then someone takes the track and timestretches it.

The notion of sitting at home making Rebecca Black's Friday last five times longer would seem, on the face of it, to be an act of self-flagellation. Uploading it for others to listen, surely an act of barbarism. But, as you'll hear, it's a beautiful thing. A shimmering, slow-shifting soundscape that transforms the hideously banal lyrics into a series of elongated vowels and hissing consonants. The music itself ? which is, at normal speed, a GSCE-type exercise in how two notes in a scale can fit reasonably well with a repeated sequence of four chords ? becomes complex, even fascinating. Passing a magnifying glass over something stultifyingly predictable can reveal minuscule, beautiful shifts in harmony and timbre that its creators would, it's safe to say, never have come up with in a month of Fridays.

This isn't new, of course. Back in August someone realised that Justin Bieber's U Smile actually contained some hidden beauty ? you just had to play it 800% slower. The software that's used to produce all these pieces is called PaulStretch, created by programmer Paul Nasca. In fact, it's not a strict timestretch; it's enhanced by a clever process of randomisation, where each tiny chunk of the music ? a hundred milliseconds or so ? is "smeared", digitally rebuilt and then placed back in sequence. While tens of thousands of people have sat back and enjoyed these ambient symphonies, from the well-known (Jurassic Park) to the more recently uploaded (Emmerdale) the credit really has to go to Nasca for producing a piece of software that effortlessly emulates ambient work that artists on the 4AD label 25 years ago would have spent weeks crafting. All we have to do now is, literally, click a button.

That took me two minutes; a Mike Sammes paint commercial transformed into something akin to Le Myst�re Des Voix Bulgares. It sounds lovely, but ... I don't feel as if I've created something. Because it required no effort.

There'll always be debate surrounding whether merely digitally processing other people's work is artistically sound. A lot of attention was given in the autumn to Daniel Lopatin, aka Oneohtrix Point Never, when he produced a loop of two bars of Chris de Burgh's Lady in Red ? probably the two least offensive bars of the whole song ? and was hailed as something approaching a genius. Surely that's easy, right? Well, I've just spent five minutes sticking a drum loop behind a section of Starship's We Built This City to show just how simple the process can be.

Unfortunately it's a bit rubbish. There's clearly a skill in making bad music sound good ? but at the moment I'd say Paul Nasca deserves the most praise. And I've not even heard any music he's made. Bizarre.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2011/mar/30/rebecca-black-paulstretch

Dania Ramirez Lucy Liu LeAnn Rimes Adrianne Curry Jennifer Gimenez