Saturday, March 10, 2012

Elizabeth Moss is still fed up with her ex-husband Fred Armisen


Mad Man actress Elisabeth Moss has not yet satisfied in divorcing her husband Fred Armisen. In a recent interview she slams her ex but she was careful not to say too much, she did have a scathing observation of the "Saturday Night Live" cast member. "One of the greatest things I heard someone say about him is, 'He's so great at doing impersonations. But the greatest impersonation he does is that of a normal person,'" Moss told Page Six magazine. "To me, that sums it up."

"And I think that's...that's it. I've never told anyone that. And I don't want to waste any more of my life talking about it," the "Mad Men" actress added. 29 year old actress married the Saturday Night Live performer, 45, in October 2009; they separated by June of the following year, with Moss filing for divorce in September 2010. Moss, perhaps realizing her comment might come off as harsh told the reporter, "I'm probably gonna get a slap on the wrist. But I've just been such a good girl. And sometimes you just want to be a bad girl for a minute."

The actress also revealed that she and Armisen no longer communicate. Moss, who started out as a child actress, currently plays Peggy Olson on "Mad Men," which will premiere its fifth season on March 25. She had also appeared in "Get Him to the Greek," "The Practice," The West Wing" and "Girl, Interrupted."

The actress also admits that while she enjoys being single for the moment, "I obviously want a partner in life, and I want someone to grow old with." "There's also a nice time when you're young to enjoy being you," she added. "It's fun to go out at night and not know what's going to happen. I'm addicted to and obsessed with my freedom in that sense. I'm having fun!"
Elizabeth Moss and Fred Armisen


Friday, March 9, 2012

Britney Spears: a new judge to enter in the "The X-Factor" judge panel


The news that Britney Spears is reportedly in final negotiations to join "The X Factor" has set the MTV Newsroom on fire. Opinion on whether the pop star is a good fit for the reality singing competition has been sharply divided, so we decided to take on the topic the way we're sure Simon Cowell did before making Spears a reported $10 million offer: a good, old-fashioned pros andcons list. Spears' fiance, agent Jason Trawick, is negotiating the contract which could be signed as soon as next week. 

Recently, reports surfaced that the pop superstar was interested in joining the panel, but according to an insider. Spears is signed to Sony Music's RCA Records, which absorbed her original label Jive in 2011 and has exclusive music rights to "X Factor" artists.

During a conference call with reporters in February, Cowell would not confirm that talks had begun with Spears, but did hint that "there's going to be a lot of twists and turns over the next few weeks and a lot of things we're going to announce." 

To prepare for the seat alongside judges Cowell and Epic Records chairman L.A. Reid, Spears is undergoing extensive media training. Janet Jackson was also in the running as a potential judge, but reportedly bowed out citing previous commitments to tour. 

No word yet on who might take the fourth spot. Two hosts have yet to be named as well. Another high-ranking show exec recently told THR that the perfect candidate would be someone based in Los Angeles who not only has music business success and credentials, but is perhaps a parent and wants to spend time with his or her kids. Clearly, Spears fits the bill. Spears' representative could not be reached for comment. A rep for the show refused to confirm or comment. Fox had no comment.



Thursday, March 8, 2012

OH God! we are safe: The Mid-Size Asteroid Won't hit the Earth


The world would be hit like this by Asteroid 2012 Da14 
At last NASA calculates out that the near-Earth asteroid 2012 DA14 won't hit our home planet in 2013 as it speculated before. NASA researchers say. The asteroid, which astronomers estimate to be about 150 feet (45 meters) across, will give Earth an uncomfortably close shave on Feb. 15, 2013, coming nearer to our planet than the satellites we've lofted to geostationary orbit. But 2012 DA14 poses no real impact danger on that pass, according to NASA scientists.

"Its orbit about the sun can bring it no closer to the Earth's surface than 3.2 Earth radii on February 15, 2013," researchers with the Near-Earth Object Program Office, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., wrote in an update today (March 6).

One Earth radius is roughly 3,963 miles (6,378 kilometers) at the equator. So by this reckoning, the nearest 2012 DA14 can get to us next year is 12,680 miles (20,406 km). For comparison, satellites in geosynchronous orbit circle our planet at an altitude of 22,245 miles (35,800 km). Other satellites orbit much lower. The International Space Station, for example, flies at around 240 miles (386 km) above the planet. 2012 DA14 was discovered late last month by astronomers at the La Sagra Observatory in southern Spain. Its path around the sun is roughly similar to that of Earth, and it makes relatively close approaches to our planet twice per orbit.

Calculations show that the space rock came within about 1.5 million miles (2.5 million km) this past Feb. 16, or about six times the distance from Earth to the moon. Next February's much closer encounter has ignited something of a media firestorm, with various outlets publishing stories with headlines such as "Incoming! Asteroid 2012 DA14" and "Tunguska-Sized Asteroid Homing on Earth."

This latter article is referring to the 1908 "Tunguska event," in which a comet or meteoroid exploded above the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in Siberia, flattening about 500,000 acres (2,000 square km) of forest. While 2012 DA14 won't slam into us next February, humanity needs to remain vigilant against the asteroid threat, many researchers say. Huge impacts are a part of our planet's history, after all; one wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, and it's just a matter of time before another big space rock lines Earth up in its sights, astronomers say. 

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Stephanie Decker, a mom saved her children in exchange of her legs

Stephanie Decker, a 36 year-old mom from Marysville, saved her children from a collapsing house crushed down by a tornado but lost both her legs as she sheilded her children by her body.

She binded her two children together with a blanket and stood between them and falling debris. Decker has lost one leg above the knee and the other above the ankle, her husband confirmed Monday. She is now in stable condition at a Kentucky hospital, while her 8-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter survived Friday’s storm unhurt.

"I have to live for my kids," Stephanie Decker remembered telling herself as she waited, bleeding

“I told her, ‘They’re here because of you.’ I let her know that nothing else matters," husband Joe Decker said over phone from the University of Louisville Hospital. "I said, ‘You’re going to be here for your kids, and you get to see them grow up.’” Joe Decker was a teacher at Silver Creek High School in Sellersburg when the tornado hit. While his school was locked down, Decker traded text messages with his wife, urging her and the kids to retreat to the basement of their Marysville home. He revealed:


“Then she sent me a text saying the whole house was shaking, and I texted her back and asked her if everything was OK. I asked her about six or seven times and got no response. That kind of freaked me out.” He later learned that Stephanie had seen the tornado approaching across the family’s 15-acre property, and wrapped her kids in a blanket before lying on top of them. Decker continues:

“She said she felt the whole house start to go, and then she felt like it moved them about before it kind of wedged her in there, but she was able to keep the kids from moving away.” Stephanie has been scheduled for more surgery on her legs again this Thursday, a hospital spokeswoman confirmed. Good luck to her and the family – and talk about one brave mom.

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

OREO, older than the Titanic, still keeps it's worth as young among the old and young


OREo has observed its 100 year's of successful career on March 6. In 1912 on this day this chocolate flavored biscuit started its journey to be the world's favorite cookie. It makes “Milk’s favorite cookie” older than the sinking of the Titanic (by a month), women’s voting rights, and the Russian Revolution, just to name a few.

To celebrate, Oreo’s parent company, Nabisco (a division of Kraft Foods), has released a limited edition “Birthday Cake” Oreo. It features a simpler cookie design that hearkens back to the original, early 20th -century Oreo logo, as well as that iconic vanilla frosting mixed with rainbow sprinkles.

Oreos were born in a Nabisco factory in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City.  They were sold for 25 cents per pound and packaged in cookie tins. Originally designed to attract British customers, Oreos were first called “Oreo Biscuits.” In 1921, the name changed to the "Oreo Sandwich," then the “Oreo Crème Sandwich” in 1948. The mid-1970s brought the unwieldy “Oreo Chocolate Sandwich Cookie” name change. But by then the brand name had become so closely associated with any chocolate cookie sandwich with a vanilla frosting center that most people simply called them “Oreos.”

Over 490 billion Oreos have been sold in the cookie’s first 100 years, making them far and away the best-selling cookie of the 20th century and an indelible part of American culture. Many people cite the fun of the act of eating an Oreo as a big part of its appeal, with some people eating the sandwiches whole, some pulling them apart, and many dipping them in milk. According to Kraft, an estimated 50 percent of Oreo eaters pull the cookies apart, and women are more likely to do so than men.

The Oreo brand has gotten a lot of ad campaign mileage out of the many ways to eat the cookie: A long-running campaign in the 1990s featured people pulling Oreo sandwiches apart to settle disputes, in the same way you’d flip a coin. Oreo’s current marketing revolves around the Double Stuf Racing League (DSRL), wherein celebrities like the Manning brothers (Eli and Peyton), Shaquille O’Neal, and Donald Trump compete against each other in Oreo-related contests.

Arguably one of the most successful and enduring packaged food products of the modern era (and not experiencing the popularity dropoff suffered by some other formerly iconic food products, including Twinkies), the Oreo brand hasn’t been without its missteps. For one, Oreos are very similar to another chocolate cookie sandwich, the Hydrox cookie. Since Hydrox cookies were introduced in 1908, speculation abounds that Nabisco stole the Oreo idea from Hydrox manufacturer Sunshine, proceeding to dominate the chocolate cookie sandwich market until Hydrox cookies were finally discontinued in 1999.

Furthermore, the Oreo hasn’t been immune to evolving concerns over nutrition and the effect of processed foods on the American diet over its 100-year existence. The crème filling, in particular, has been a sticking point: It was originally made with lard, which was replaced with trans fats in response to public health concerns. But in 2003, Oreos came under fire for those trans fats, and the crème is now manufactured using non-hydrogenated vegetable oil.

Still, the Oreo brand has endured and expanded into several varieties sold in dozens of countries. Some of the more interesting flavors include a Green Tea Oreo (sold in Japan and China), a Banana Split Oreo (briefly available in 2008), and a Blueberry Ice Cream Oreo (sold in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand).


Monday, March 5, 2012

NASCAR gets extra pace by jet-dryer trucks in the events of full of fun


NASCAR officials has announced a dramatic change to get the car an extra pace car with flashing lights behind the last jet-dryer truck on the track in all races in all three series -- Sprint Cup, Nationwide and the Camping World Trucks Series.

The day ends with Kevin Harvick running out of fuel ("I was a lap short."), Denny Hamlin botching his victory burnout ("New surfaces are not my particular forte."), and team owner Joe Gibbs brushing off questions about a man he once employed with the Redskins (Gregg Williams, the NFL's Most Wanted). On the track, it's getting warm. A worker on pit road sprays Coca-Cola on his portion of track, helping the tires grip a little better. Down the way, a female fan hops over a barricade, pleading with Joey Logano to sign her shirt.

No one seems to care. In NASCAR, the relationship between fans and the competitors remains amazingly close, trusting and unpretentious, blowing away what you see in most other sports.

The change, which was explained to the Sprint Cup teams during the drivers' meeting Sunday morning at Phoenix International Raceway, comes after Juan Pablo Montoya's car spun into a jet-dryer truck during a caution period in the Daytona 500 Monday night.

The collision caused an enormous fireball explosion on the backstretch from the kerosene fuel tank on the jet dryer. Both vehicles were severely damaged by the fire, but both drivers escaped without serious injuries.

The drivers of the jet-dryer trucks also will wear helmets and fire suits during each race, but that is a change agreed upon by officials at race tracks that play host to NASCAR events, not a rule instituted by NASCAR.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Lindsay Lohan on 'Saturday Night Live": A comeback but not like the one in 2004


Lindsay Lohan hosted “Saturday Night Live” as a hopeful comeback last night turns to be a disheartening stumble. The appearance this time is quite unexpected than she first appeared on the show in 2004. The 25-year-old actress tried to kick-start her comeback after struggles with alcohol, the law and various parked cars. Manhattan-based plastic surgeon Leonard Grossman says her appearance shows Lohan hasn’t worn her scandal-scarred past very well.

Lohan’s dependency on cue cards became excruciatingly clear during a long soliloquy.) A visiting Jon Hamm was officially named the night’s back-up host, and the Mad Men star arguably got a bigger laugh for his brief appearance as Snooki’s baby daddy than Lohan got all night.

“The lips are overdone,” Grossman said, comparing a photo taken of Lohan last month with another from eight years ago. In the early photo, Grossman said, “her lips look more natural. . Now she looks used and abused. Grossman added that Lohan’s face “looks like a dead fish. It doesn’t look appetizing at all. “She has vertical lines of the upper lip, and that’s typical of a heavy smoker,” he said.

Lohan’s promising career spiraled into a descent of drugs and alcohol, jail time and stints in rehab. She’s currently on probation for taking a $2,500 gold necklace from a Venice, Calif., jewelry store. Lohan’s SNL appearance last night looked as awful as her plastic surgery. What- ever acting talent she once had seemed to vanish as she lackadaisically stumbled through her lines, even though she was obviously reading them off of cue cards.

Looking oddly bloated, Lohan came out for the monologue and addressed her struggles head-on. Everybody here believes in you. We wouldn’t have you back otherwise,” cast member Kristen Wiig said as she hugged Lohan, which then turned into a pat-down. When Lohan asks if she’s being searched, Wiig just says, “No, I’m a lesbian now.” “Been there, done that,” Lohan quipped, in reference to her romance with Samantha Ronson.