Balado, Kinross Jarvis Cocker once famously made headlines by wiggling his bum in front of Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, and on Sunday night he courted tabloid infamy again by pretending to wipe his posterior with the last edition of News of the World at T in the Park. “That’s all this is good for,” he sneered during Pulp’s triumphant set. So trusted is its promise of a party of epic proportions, the UK’s second biggest music festival has become a rite of passage for young Scots and a ritual for older ones that sells out long before the lineup is announced. A threatened deluge for the most part held off – at least until the final day – and sunshine occasionally split the clouds. This was a vintage year for T in the Park. The lineup boasted such an embarrassment of headliners that Beyoncé had to play second fiddle to Coldplay on Saturday night. Queen B – at her second and final UK festival appearance this summer – offered a more compact, hour-long version of her glorious Glastonbury set, and arguably bettered it. From the high-impact opener of Crazy in Love to a breathless Destiny’s Child medley, she was a class apart. Her undeniable star quality rubbed off on a sea of girls perched on friends’ shoulders during Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It), their left hands twisting in the air as the sun eased over the hills behind them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there were lulls in a bill diluted by the necessity to try and offer something for everyone. Friendly Fires’ full-throttle indie raving felt like natural festival fare; less so lightweight turns from popsters Ke$ha and the Saturdays. As ever there were a smattering of heritage acts who brought some reliable fun. The party-starting mood of Tom Jones on Friday was captured by the simultaneously hilarious and mortifying sight of a chubby bloke doing a striptease in the mud to You Can Leave Your Hat On. Debbie Harry did an admirable job of stoking the atmosphere as the heavens opened during Blondie’s Sunday afternoon greatest-hits set. After Pulp’s memorable return to the stage in Scotland, it was left to Foo Fighters at the last to battle the worsening elements, and win, before the festival rounded off with a fireworks and lone-bagpiper finale. Rating: 4/5 T in the Park Pop and rock Pulp Jarvis Cocker Beyoncé Tom Jones Blondie Foo Fighters News of the World guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Balado, Kinross Jarvis Cocker once famously made headlines by wiggling his bum in front of Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, and on Sunday night he courted tabloid infamy again by pretending to wipe his posterior with the last edition of News of the World at T in the Park. “That’s all this is good for,” he sneered during Pulp’s triumphant set. So trusted is its promise of a party of epic proportions, the UK’s second biggest music festival has become a rite of passage for young Scots and a ritual for older ones that sells out long before the lineup is announced. A threatened deluge for the most part held off – at least until the final day – and sunshine occasionally split the clouds. This was a vintage year for T in the Park. The lineup boasted such an embarrassment of headliners that Beyoncé had to play second fiddle to Coldplay on Saturday night. Queen B – at her second and final UK festival appearance this summer – offered a more compact, hour-long version of her glorious Glastonbury set, and arguably bettered it. From the high-impact opener of Crazy in Love to a breathless Destiny’s Child medley, she was a class apart. Her undeniable star quality rubbed off on a sea of girls perched on friends’ shoulders during Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It), their left hands twisting in the air as the sun eased over the hills behind them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there were lulls in a bill diluted by the necessity to try and offer something for everyone. Friendly Fires’ full-throttle indie raving felt like natural festival fare; less so lightweight turns from popsters Ke$ha and the Saturdays. As ever there were a smattering of heritage acts who brought some reliable fun. The party-starting mood of Tom Jones on Friday was captured by the simultaneously hilarious and mortifying sight of a chubby bloke doing a striptease in the mud to You Can Leave Your Hat On. Debbie Harry did an admirable job of stoking the atmosphere as the heavens opened during Blondie’s Sunday afternoon greatest-hits set. After Pulp’s memorable return to the stage in Scotland, it was left to Foo Fighters at the last to battle the worsening elements, and win, before the festival rounded off with a fireworks and lone-bagpiper finale. Rating: 4/5 T in the Park Pop and rock Pulp Jarvis Cocker Beyoncé Tom Jones Blondie Foo Fighters News of the World guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Balado, Kinross Jarvis Cocker once famously made headlines by wiggling his bum in front of Michael Jackson at the Brit awards, and on Sunday night he courted tabloid infamy again by pretending to wipe his posterior with the last edition of News of the World at T in the Park. “That’s all this is good for,” he sneered during Pulp’s triumphant set. So trusted is its promise of a party of epic proportions, the UK’s second biggest music festival has become a rite of passage for young Scots and a ritual for older ones that sells out long before the lineup is announced. A threatened deluge for the most part held off – at least until the final day – and sunshine occasionally split the clouds. This was a vintage year for T in the Park. The lineup boasted such an embarrassment of headliners that Beyoncé had to play second fiddle to Coldplay on Saturday night. Queen B – at her second and final UK festival appearance this summer – offered a more compact, hour-long version of her glorious Glastonbury set, and arguably bettered it. From the high-impact opener of Crazy in Love to a breathless Destiny’s Child medley, she was a class apart. Her undeniable star quality rubbed off on a sea of girls perched on friends’ shoulders during Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It), their left hands twisting in the air as the sun eased over the hills behind them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there were lulls in a bill diluted by the necessity to try and offer something for everyone. Friendly Fires’ full-throttle indie raving felt like natural festival fare; less so lightweight turns from popsters Ke$ha and the Saturdays. As ever there were a smattering of heritage acts who brought some reliable fun. The party-starting mood of Tom Jones on Friday was captured by the simultaneously hilarious and mortifying sight of a chubby bloke doing a striptease in the mud to You Can Leave Your Hat On. Debbie Harry did an admirable job of stoking the atmosphere as the heavens opened during Blondie’s Sunday afternoon greatest-hits set. After Pulp’s memorable return to the stage in Scotland, it was left to Foo Fighters at the last to battle the worsening elements, and win, before the festival rounded off with a fireworks and lone-bagpiper finale. Rating: 4/5 T in the Park Pop and rock Pulp Jarvis Cocker Beyoncé Tom Jones Blondie Foo Fighters News of the World guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Date of Birth : 16 February 1983 (28 years old) Place of Birth : Lancashire, England Dated : Josh Hubbard, Albert Hammond Agyness Deyn is a British model who has evolved into a true icon in the fashion industry. She models for the world’s leading designers such as Anna Sui and Burberry Prosum. Agyness Deyn’s real name is Laura Hollins but she changed it to easier embrace her new rock style. At the age of 16 Agyness Deyn moved to London to work at a fast food restaurant but ended up at an agency where she, according to the rumour, refused to leave before they gave her a contract, which she obviously got. Agyness Deyn Photo’s :
Continue reading …Date of Birth : 10 October 1989 (21 years old) Place of Birth : Downey, California, USA Aimee Teegarden modelled for campaigns including Old Navy, Tommy Hilfiger, Alltel, and the national print campaign for Hollister. She has made several television appearances including Cold Case, Ned´s Declassified School Survival Guide and Disney Channel´s Hannah Montana. Most recently she starred in the new Beverly Hills 90210 as Rhonda. Aimee Teegarden was also a spokesperson for the fall 2008 campaign for YMI jeans. Aimee Teegarden Photo’s :
Continue reading …• Italian 10-year bond yields hit 5.4% • Euro drops on fears of another bailout • Eurozone finance ministers meet over crisis Fears that Italy will be forced to seek a bailout sent Italian government bonds falling on Monday, as Europe’s most senior finance ministers gathered to discuss the ongoing eurozone debt crisis . The euro also dropped sharply, as City traders and analysts warned that Italy could be close to becoming the fourth member of the eurozone to require financial help. The concern was shared in Europe’s stock markets, where shares also lost ground. The yield, or interest rate, on an Italian 10-year government bond jumped to 5.4%, closer to the 7% level which is generally seen as unsustainable. “What will really concentrate the mind of the finance ministers will be the recent upward trend in Italian government bond yields,” said Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income research at Evolution Securities. “What would keep me awake at night if I was a European finance minister is that we are only about 2% away from a potential disaster scenario.” European Council president Herman Van Rompuy was scheduled to meet ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet, EU commission president José Manuel Barroso, EU commissioner Olli Rehn and Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs the group of eurozone finance ministers, at 11am BST to discuss the crisis. Clouds have been gathering over Italy since Friday, when shares in several Italian banks fell sharply over concerns that they would fail the next round of EU stress tests . Economists have warned that the eurozone lacks the firepower to fund a bailout of Italy. German newspaper Die Welt reported on Monday that the European Central Bank is considering doubling its existing stabilisation mechanism to €1.5 trillion. “We are seeing contagion spreading to Italy. The bailout facility as it stands would be nowhere near big enough to deal with Italy,” Adam Cole, head of global currency strategy at Royal Bank of Canada Europe, told Bloomberg. The Italian blue-chip index, the FTSE MIB index, fell by 1.35%, while the Spanish Ibex lost 1.7%. Traders in London said the eurozone crisis was dominating attention again, with the FTSE 100 falling 13 points to 5976. “The risk is that we may well have already seen the best of the stock market strength for the moment,” said Yusuf Heusen, senior sales trader at IG Index. The euro lost more than a cent against the dollar, trading around $1.411. The cost of insuring the debts of Europe’s weaker members also rose on Monday. The Italian five-year credit default swap rose by 32 basis points to 281bp, which means it would cost €281,000 a year to insure €10m of Italian debt. According to the Financial Times , EU leaders are now preparing for Greece to default on some of its debts – abandoning hopes that private creditors might roll over their borrowings. Gavan Nolan, director of credit research at Markit, said this had driven up the cost of insuring Greek, Portuguese, Spanish and Irish government bonds. European debt crisis European banks Italy Europe Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Deputy prime minister meets family of Milly Dowler, whose lawyer has called on Rebekah Brooks to quit her position The deputy prime minister Nick Clegg has intervened in the row over News Corporation’s bid to take over BSkyB to make a direct appeal to Rupert Murdoch to “do the decent thing” and drop the deal. He said Murdoch should look at the public revulsion towards allegations about phone hacking, payments to police and an “industrial scale” cover-up at News International and reconsider his bid. It came after the deputy prime minister met the family of murdered teenager Milly Dowler, whose phone was allegedly hacked by the News of the World. The Dowler family’s lawyer, Mark Lewis, also called on Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News International, to “do the honourable thing” and quit. Clegg told the BBC: “On the BSkyB bid, Rupert Murdoch is now in town in London seeking to sort things out. I would simply say to him, look how people feel about this. Look at how the country has reacted with revulsion to the revelations. “So do the decent and sensible thing and reconsider: think again about your bid for BSkyB. “Listening to Bob, Sally and Gemma Dowler, it reminds you that it is innocent families like them who have paid a very heavy price for truly grotesque journalistic practices, which are simply beneath contempt. We owe it to the Dowlers and other innocent victims of hacking to get these inquiries right, to make sure they are really strong, [so] they can get to the bottom of what happened and make sure it never happens again.” The dramatic intervention came as the government scrambled to solve the conundrum of how to delay or even veto the media magnate’s bid to gain 100% of BSkyB without facing legal action. Jeremy Hunt, the culture secretary, on Monday wrote to the media regulator Ofcom asking it to examine the recent revelations to see if they have any bearing on whether the Murdochs are “fit and proper” people to hold large broadcasting licences in the UK. Labour is threatening a Commons vote on Wednesday on the issue, which would not be legally binding but would make it almost impossible for the government not to act. Several senior Lib Dems have indicated that they could back such a vote if it is not too partisan. Clegg was speaking after a 50-minute meeting with the Dowler family to discuss their views on how the two inquiries the government is instigating should be carried out. The mother, father and sister of Milly Dowler – whose phone was allegedly hacked by investigators working for the News of the World in the days after she went missing – pushed Clegg to hold broad inquiries, not just restricted to the practices at the News of the World or the allegations of press payments to the Metropolitan police, but to other forces as well. Speaking from the steps of the cabinet office, the Dowler family’s lawyer Mark Lewis said his clients “take the view that Rebekah Brooks should do the honourable thing”. “They don’t see why she should stay in the job. They see this as something that went right to the top. She was editor of the News of the World at the time that Milly was taken in 2002. She should take editorial responsibility.” The former Scotland Yard deputy assistant commissioner Brian Paddick, who was also hacked and also attended the meeting, said Surrey police should have told the Dowler family that they may have been targeted. He told the press conference: “Apparently Surrey police knew at the time that the phone was being hacked into. Why they didn’t tell the family at all … is a matter for Surrey police to answer. What it does show is that this relationship between the police and the press is not restricted to the Metropolitan police.” Rupert Murdoch Nick Clegg Phone hacking BSkyB News International Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers News of the World Rebekah Brooks Milly Dowler Press freedom Liberal Democrats Brian Paddick Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Date of Birth : 16 April 1973 (38 years old) Place of Birth : Dakar, Senegal Dated : Rozonda Chilli, Gina Wild Akon is a hip hop and R&B singer-songwriter, rapper, and record producer.He is the first artist to ever accomplish the feat of holding both the number one and two spots simultaneously on the Billboard Hot 100 charts twice. He claims to have five children with three different women. Akon Photo’s :
Continue reading …Date of Birth : 25 April 1940 (71 years old) Place of Birth : New York, USA Dated : Jill Clayburgh, Beverly D’Angelo Claim to fame: Al Pacino is one of our times most successful actors. He started his career as a stand-up comedian. While Pacino has never married, he has three children. The first, Julie Marie, (b. 1989) is his daughter with acting coach Jan Tarrant. He also has twins, Anton James and Olivia Rose (b. January 25, 2001), with ex-girlfriend Beverly D’Angelo, whom he dated from 1997 until 2001. Friends with actor Colin Farrell. Loves the opera and Shakespeare. Al Pacino Photo’s :
Continue reading …Date of Birth : 6 May 1947 (64 years old) Place of Birth : Dunedin, New Zealand Alan Dale had roles in plenty of famous tv-shows, such as The O.C., Lost, 24 and Navy: NCIS. Before his acting career he used to work as a milkman. Alan Dale has two children. You may remember him from the film Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Alan Dale Photo’s :
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