Friday, 30 April 2010

People's most beautiful: Julia Roberts

Julia Roberts has topped People magazine’s World’s Most Beautiful list, joined by fellow superstars Daniel Craig and teen singing sensation Justin Bieber.
The Pretty Woman star, who has claimed the title three times before, is still winning over fans and making men swoon at age 42.
It is the twelfth time Roberts has made the top 100.
She joins 99 other celebrities on the list, including Diane Kruger, Channing Tatum, Zoe Saldana, Scarlett Johansson, Jake Gyllenhaal, Jennifer Aniston, Bradley Cooper, Katy Perry, Amanda Seyfried, Jennifer Lopez, Jessica Szohr and Robert Pattinson.

Monday, 26 April 2010

Jennifer Lopez Is The Back Up Plan

Jennifer Lopez wasn't the first choice of most weekend moviegoers.
The star's The Back-Up Plan grossed a not-great, but not-unexpected $12.3 million, per box-office estimates, and settled for second behind the sturdy How to Train Your Dragon ($15 million).
Elsewhere, The Losers looked lost, while Jennifer Aniston left—and joined—the Top 10. More results:
• The Back-Up Plan is Lopez's first major release in five years. The reputedly $35 million romantic comedy opened more like this year's When in Rome than her 2005 hit, Monster-in-Law.
• How to Train Your Dragon was projected as last weekend's surprise winner. But final numbers gave the gold medal to Kick-Ass. This time out, the race isn't close, and its No. 1 finish isn't a shock. The 3D fantasy returns to the top spot for the first time in four weeks.
• After what was considered a so-so start, Dragon is the second-highest-grossing movie of the year to date, with $178 million domestically.
• Kick-Ass ($9.5 million) fell four spots, to fifth place. Still, the un-superhero comedy performed well mid-week, and upped its domestic total a budget-besting $34.9 million.
• After a fourth-place debut, the $25 million, comic-spawned The Losers ($9.6 million) better be hoping it's got some Kick-Ass spunk.
• Aniston's and Gerard Butler's The Bounty Hunter ($1.6 million) fell from the weekend Top 10, but with $62.8 million overall, moved into the yearly Top 10.
• Disney's nature movie Oceans was, pound for pound, the Top 10's biggest movie, grossing $6 million from 1,206 theaters.
Here's a rundown of the weekend's top-grossing films Friday-Sunday, per estimates compiled by Exhibitor Relations.......
Leave Your Sleep (2CD)The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Vintage)Need You NowAmazon Kindle Black Leather Cover w/ strap (Fits 6" Display, Latest Generation Kindle) Soldier of LoveCrazyOnDigital Amazon Kindle 2 Black Leather e-Book Reader Carrying Case Cover (fits 6" display latest generation kindle 2) with anti-scratch screen protector for kindle 2The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's NestEmotion & CommotionHigh Quality Silicone Skin Case Set: Blue Pink Black White for Amazon Kindle 2 with complement Crazyondigital WristbandThe Twilight Saga: New Moon (Two-Disc Special Edition)Women Food and God: An Unexpected Path to Almost EverythingHDMI (2 meter) 6 foot cable HQ 1080P 1.3bSherlock Holmes

Sunday, 25 April 2010

Kristin Cavallari: Charitable Liquid Bikini Babe pose

Showing off her glam figure, Kristin Cavallari was the center of attention at the Aria Resort & Casino at CityCenter in Las Vegas, Nevada on Saturday.
The "Hills" hottie donned a sexy black bikini with a sheer black top as she posed for pictures at the Liquid Pool Lounge - where she happened to be the weekend host.
The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner: An Eclipse Novella (Twilight Saga)

Saturday, 24 April 2010

Women: Sideways Scissoring of Sex Position


Try this position if you're looking for a sweet, romantic experience.

This position works well if you’re yearning for intimacy and eye-contact. Or if you’re feeling a little tired. It’s basically the missionary turned on its side.
How to do it:
You lie facing each other and you put on leg on his hip to aid penetration. Penetration won’t be as deep and movement will be limited.
Why it’s good:
• Because you won’t really be able to do the old piston pumping action, you will be forced to come up with new ways of moving – rocking, rubbing, grinding… It might be just what you need when you have trouble getting to your happy place during intercourse.
• You can gaze into each others’ eyes and kiss and cup each others’ faces and talk and kiss and kiss and kiss. And kiss some more.

• If you want variation you can roll on your back and. BAM – missionary. Or you can roll him over and. BAM.....

Forces Rick Fox On A 115 Mile Road Trip To Court of Eliza Dushku


Actress Eliza Dushku and her boyfriend Rick Fox115 miles - driving from L.A. to a courtroom in the Mojave Desert to support Eliza's big brother, actor Nathaniel Dushku, who was busted in the desert city of Barstow, CA back in January, after cops say dude was speeding down the highway at more than 100 MPH.

Why would Rick Fox get in his car and follow Eliza Dushku's orders across the Mojave desert, you ask? Oh, we've got a few ideas:




Study on Cellphone Health Effects Launched For People


LONDON, Apr 23 : The biggest study to date into the effects of mobile-phone usage on long-term health was launched on Thursday, aiming to track at least a quarter of a million of people in five European countries for up to 30 years.

The Cohort Study on Mobile Communications differs from previous attempts to examine links between cellphone use and diseases such as cancer and neurological disorders in that it will follow users' behaviour in real time.

Most other large-scale studies have centred around asking people already suffering from cancer or other diseases about their previous mobile-phone use. They have also been shorter, since cellphones have only been widely used for about a decade.

"One of the limitations of research to date is that when you ask people about their mobile phone use say five years ago there's a lot of error," said Jack Rowley, director of research and sustainability at industry body the GSM Association.

About 5 billion mobile phones are in use worldwide. To date, groups such as the World Health Organisation, the American Cancer Society and the National Institutes of Health have found no evidence that cellphone use harms health.

"Research to date has necessarily mainly focused on use in the short term, less than 10 years," principal investigator Professor Paul Elliott of the School of Public Health at London's Imperial College told a news conference.

"The COSMOS study will be looking at long-term use, 10, 20 or 30 years. And with long-term monitoring there will be time for diseases to develop," he said. The COSMOS study forms part of the Mobile Telecommunications and Health Research Programme `MTHR, a UK body funded by a variety of government and industry sources and run by independent experts, mostly university academics.

Professor Lawrie Challis from MTHR said: "Many cancers take 10, 15 years for the symptoms to appear. So we've got to address the question: Could there be something out there that we need to look at?"
The GSMA's Rowley estimated that more than $100 million had been spent so far around the world on research into health risks from mobile phone usage.

Global spending on wireless equipment and services provided by companies such as Nokia, Ericsson and Huawei surpassed $1 trillion for the first time in 2009, according to technology research firm iSuppli.

The COSMOS study is recruiting participants aged 18-69 in Britain, Finland, the Netherlands, Sweden and Denmark through mobile carriers. It will use data from volunteers' phone bills and health records as well as questionnaires.

Rowley, while welcoming the planned study, said organisers might have trouble finding enough volunteers, citing a previous attempt to carry out a similar study on a smaller scale in Germany in 2004, which foundered on privacy concerns.

In Britain, COSMOS is inviting 2.4 million mobile phone users to take part, through the country's four top carriers: Vodafone, O2, T-Mobile and Orange. It hopes 90,000-100,000 will agree.

By late Thursday afternoon, 232 had signed up.

The study will examine all health developments and look for links to neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's as well as cancer.

It will also take account of how users carry their phone - for example in a trouser or chest pocket or in a bag - and whether they use hand-free kits.

A spokesman for Britain's Health Protection Agency, an independent public body, said the study had the potential to give very reliable results.

"The Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at Imperial College is one of the best research centres in the world for this type of study," he said.

COSMOS will announce its findings as it progresses.

Friday, 16 April 2010

MAY MAGAZINE FASHION



34 FASHIONMAGAZINE
40 LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
42 CONTRIBUTORS
44 LETTERS FROM OUR READERS

FASHIONFILE
53 IN MEMORIAM The fashion world mourns the loss of Alexander McQueen.
58 NEWS Matthew Williamson for Bulgari, new blood at Thierry Mugler, Project Runway goes Wii, the Olsens’ new jewellery collection, and more.
62 Q&A New York designer Prabal Gurung on why sexy, smart women of all ages are clamouring to wear his fine frocks.
64 AGE From the 20s to the 50s, four fashionable women divulge the secrets to their personal style.
72 SHOPPING Are Canadian designers who jump on the collaboration train selling out—or simply selling more?
78 THE LIST Sugary pastel timepieces; trends for every age, from shorts suits at 20 to tribal at 60; and how to update your wardrobe for spring.

BEAUTY

94 MOST WANTED The anti-fragrance, hair products designed for your cut, Joe Fresh Beauty’s cheerfully cheap spring nail colours, and more.
80 HEADSHOT Beauty director Adriana Ermter’s backstage pass to the best runway look for spring.
98 TEST DRIVE In an attempt to fit into a beloved Chloé dress again, Roberta Bedford undergoes the latest fat-zapping treatment.
100 AGE  Eight fashion insiders craft a letter to their past or future selves, sharing how they live a beautiful life.
112 SPAS  We’ve searched the globe for the best destinations to visit when you need to relax and recharge.
120 SKIN CARE  Janine Falcon discovers serums are like underwear; they should be layered on before anything else.
124 DEFINED  In an excerpt from her new memoir, author Jen Lancaster’s internal monologue takes us beyond the comfort zone.
130 EXTRA  Laura Keogh marvels at nail lacquer’s shades of influence.

CULTURE
137 INTERVIEW Comedian Sarah Silverman’s scandalous new tome.
138 INDEX Broken Social Scene is on the scene again, chic new Canadian hotels, The National Ballet of Canada gets its groove back, and more.
142 ESSAY When the lights go down on a glamorous auntie, learning to drive at 40, and giving into the grey—ruminations from ladies of a certain age.

FASHION&FEATURES
162 THE WEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING Photographed by Gabor Jurina.
176 CINDY CRAWFORD Photographed by Alix Malka.
178 A TWISTED TALE Photographed by Gabor Jurina.

FASHIONSHOPS
185 SHOES From a new start-up to a historic landmark, six canadian stores and their stories.
190 NOTES The coolest shops and labels to watch from coast to coast.
199 FOCUS Our cross-Canada guide to getting prepped for summer with nails, waxing and faux-tans.
216 BUY IT Where to find everything in this issue.
218 MY STYLE Designer Rachel Roy on her fashion weakness and age-appropriate dressing.


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