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Earth Day 2010 Activities for Kids

Earth Day 2010 Activities for Kids: The Earth Day 2010 will be celebrated around the world on the 22nd of April. Surely, kids will learn more about recycling and how to protect the Mother Earth. It is also a perfect day to educate them about the environment. Are you looking for some Earth Day Activities for Kids Ideas? Well, let Daily World Buzz give you a few that you can possibly adopt: Teach them the right way of recycling : Separating trash from Biodegradable to Non-Biodegradable can be very toxic to some adults, but kids would definitely love it. The feeling of contributing something by separating trash in their designated areas can be very fulfilling for the youngsters Tree Planting Day: You can also invite some kids or the students to participate in a Tree Planting event. Starting in your own school or subdivision is a good start! Make an Environmental Crossword Puzzle :  Make a simple puzzle where terms related to the Earth Day Celebration are stated. Let the kids think and act through this game. So that’s it! If you have more ideas that you would like to add, just post a comment in this article. Earth Day 2010 Activities for Kids is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

‘Breaking Dawn’ in 3D – Yay Or Nay?

With all the buzz about upcoming releases possibly releasing as 3-D, MTV thought it was wise to get a list going of those said films, one of which is The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn . Here’s the bit about Breaking Dawn from the article. You can check out the rest HERE . During MTV News’ 3-D Week, we’ve suggested films that deserve a conversion into three dimensions (“The Matrix,” “Predator”) and certain scenes we never want to see in 3-D (the birthing scene in “Breaking Dawn,” Leo DiCaprio’s death in “Titanic”). We’ve also previewed the next three years in 3-D releases: animated flicks like “Cars 2,” comic book adaptations like “Green Lantern,” genre works like “Sucker Punch” and more. Now we turn our attention to films we’re not exactly sure will get the 3-D treatment but we have a pretty strong feeling will. From the “Twilight” franchise to big-budget action productions to live-action/animation hybrids, here are the movies we think might well be in 3-D when they hit theaters in the future. “Breaking Dawn”: In February, The Hollywood Reporter announced that Summit Entertainment was exploring the possibility of making the final film — or films, as has also been rumored — in the “Twilight” series into 3-D movies. That possibility has split both the “Twilight” community and the franchise’s cast. Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson seem to find the idea a little nutty, while Ashley Greene is keeping an open mind. {via MTV }

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‘Breaking Dawn’ in 3D – Yay Or Nay?

Wider Version of ‘Eclipse’ Poster

Because we know you want the Eclipse poster in ALL versions available 😉 Click for UHQ! {via Loving Rob }

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Wider Version of ‘Eclipse’ Poster

A RPattz Chocolate Egg For Your Easter

I’ll give kudos to the creator of this Robert Pattinson chocolate egg for attempting to replicate him, but it looks NOTHING like him. Nice try though! Replicating Rob is just too hard 😉 FANS of Twilight star Robert Pattinson always knew he was tasty – but this Easter treat proves it. Food artist Prudence Staite used 18kg (39lbs) of pure chocolate to mould a giant Easter egg of the vampire hunk, 23. A pal of Pru’s said yesterday: “She always knew hordes of female fans wanted to bite him – and now they can!” {via Daily Star }

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A RPattz Chocolate Egg For Your Easter

Kidman and Jackman’s Newest Project

Australia may have bombed, but Rupert Murdoch isn’t going to hold it against Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman. The Aussie movie stars have become the godparents of Rupert Murdoch’s two youngest daughters in an elaborate baptismal ceremony that also featured Ivanka Trump, for some reason. Says the Guardian : “The ceremony took place beside the River Jordan at what is traditionally believed to be the baptism site of Jesus Christ.” No pressure, girls! [ Guardian ]

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Kidman and Jackman’s Newest Project

Is 2010 the Year of the C-Word?

Kick-Ass doesn’t get released for another two weeks, but it seems like you can’t go two clicks of your mouse without stumbling onto another article about its intense language and ultraviolence; even the New York Times hopped on the bandwagon. Today’s installment comes from across the pond, though, in jolly ol’ England. A Guardian writer with the unfortunate name of David Cox laments the fact that 13-year-old star Chloe Moretz casually uses the heretofore verboten c-word during Kick-Ass . Says Cox: “A sorry milestone has been passed. The c-word has become acceptable parlance for children in mainstream movies. We’ll be the poorer for it.” And while it’s hard to argue with logic that level-headed, Moretz’s c-bomb is just one of the many examples thus far in 2010 that prove the final language taboo is on its way to being broken. Could this be the year of the C… ?

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Is 2010 the Year of the C-Word?

Scoring Sunday’s Nuptials: You Can Ring My Bell [Altarcations]

People get married. The New York Times ‘ Weddings & Celebrations section curates their joy. And then our resident expert Phylis Nefler scores them based on a secret list of criteria we keep in a vault. It’s Altarcations! Jesus, I leave you people alone for just a few short weeks — as for what I was doing, let’s just say that my plastic surgeon doesn’t want me doing any activities where balls fly at my nose — and all hell breaks loose. Seriously, what is going on over there at the New York Times ? Pull your shit together, people ! Actually though, I am completely pro this sort of incompetent kimono-lift, if only because it reassures me, however slightly, that my glorious mental image of the Weddings and Celebrations operation isn’t too far off. (I envision, just so you know, a room of ladies peering skeptically over their bifocals at announcement submissions, occasionally pausing to consult worn leather bound address books — “I could have sworn Swoosie Remington was from Darien and not New Canaan,” they sniff — while Bob Woletz sits in his office lighting copies of Town & Country on fire.) And I want there to be a default environment of distrust and disdain, if only so I can better imagine the editorial notes accompanying sentences like “her father works for Wacoal America, the intimate-apparel company .” I mean basically it just all comes down to this: At any rate, this week’s Geena Davis memorial ” very nice” award goes to Kristen Olson and Joseph Lyons ; I can just imagine the curt nods of approval this announcement elicited. The wedding, between the Texan daughter-of-a-woman-named-“Linwood” and the strapping Columbia-graduate commodities salesman, took place at “the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center,” where the bride was given away by her father, “one of the first analysts to call attention to the financial practices of Enron.” The pair met four years ago when one of Lyons’ coworkers let him know that she was “traditional” and that he “had to call her.” Contrast this with the wanton audacity of Juliette Levy , who noticed the strapping stranger David Millman on a flight from Dallas to Newark. While she did not get to sit next to him, she played it patiently: After the flight, while waiting at the luggage carousel, Mr. Millman asked her about cab fares into New York. “It was a nonquestion, but it started the conversation,” she said. She had a town car waiting and offered him a ride. “Mercifully, our bags took forever to come,” he said. Such a non-traditional power-woman move! (She’s keeping her name.) And man, not only does she have the waiting towncar but she also was looking fine enough to want to spit game like that? Clearly I’ve been doing travel all wrong: these sweatpants and sleeping pills may not be the thing. And then there’s Alicia Lowery and Eric Rosenbaum , who brought their cumulative three failed marriages along with them to their first date, which was a ballroom dancing class . WHAT. No. Why? I’m trying to think of a worst first date and I dunno, maybe a nice matinee of Antichrist? Anyway, she was so nervous she was late, and now her wedding announcement in the New York Times includes this romantic bit of prose: He, although annoyed, was still there. “Showing up late is narcissistic,” Dr. Rosenbaum said. “It’s a red flag.” Oof. It’s okay though: she passed “what he called the vetting process,” survived their second date (a pool party in Larchmont, which sounds only marginally better than my Antichrist idea) and converted to Judaism. Gosh, I wonder what he makes her do when she’s late for dinner? There’s some kind of segue here involving domestic violence and Hiram Monserrate that I’m having trouble putting my finger on, but at any rate: the announcements this week have a peculiar connection to the shitshow that is New York politics. Jennifer Mastin and Brian Giglio , at first, seem like a particularly stand-up pair: she has a PR job and a father who retired as a fire chief in Virginia and Montana, while he earned a Fordham MBA and an NYPD dad. But we soon learn that below the calm surface lurks something more nefarious: The couple met in 2007 when both were working for the presidential campaign of former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani. Ms. Mastin was the deputy press secretary and director of operations, and Mr. Giglio was Mr. Giuliani’s personal aide. Shuddering. I kind of want to find Mr. Giglio and just tell him, over and over: it’s not your fault. It’s not your fault. The same should probably be said to Risa Heller and Ryan Toohey , who between them have held following positions: communications director for Chuck Schumer (the bride); campaign manager for Eliot Spitzer (the groom); and communications director for Governor David A. Paterson (also the bride.) It’s not your fault, either. This week’s face-off: Brian Distelberg and Ryan McAuliffe “The couple, both 26, met at Harvard, from which they both graduated, Mr. Distelberg summa cum laude”: +9 The wedding took place at the Harvard Faculty Club: +1 Mr. Distelberg “is a doctoral candidate in United States history at Yale, from which he also received a master’s degree in history”: +4 Mr. McAuliffe is a second-year law student at NYU: +1 One set of parents are “proprietors of the Newfane Country Store” in Vermont and the other are school teachers. Aw!: +1 TOTAL: 16 Arundathi Jayatilleke and Michael Gelfand The pair met deep within the stairwells of Yale’s Harkness Tower as they auditioned to become part of the “Guild of Carillonneurs, who play the 54 bells in the tower”: +2 “Both were studying for bachelor’s and master’s degrees in molecular biology and biochemistry”: +10 Jayatilleke went to medical school at Duke, while Gelfand is completing medical school at Cornell and has a doctorate from Rockefeller University: +4 Re: the belltower, the article includes the phrase “pummeled the foot pedals” and describes the bride playing a carillon version of Stairway to Heaven that “builds to an explosion of hard, fast rock”: +1 Their first kiss was borne out of a mis-sent Instant Message to a friend named Ming: +1 TOTAL: 18 Oh, to have a rock and not to roll…

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Scoring Sunday’s Nuptials: You Can Ring My Bell [Altarcations]

‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds: Our Parents’ Hits Can’t Save Paige Miles

Miley Cyrus and the top 11’s take on Billboard hits make Jim bitter. By Jim Cantiello Miley Cyrus performs on “American Idol” on Wednesday Photo: Michael Becker / FOX “American Idol” in 60 Seconds has fast become an MTV News institution, but it goes by so fast that it’s not always easy to catch every golden nugget. So, here we present to you Jim Cantiello’s bite-size recap of this week’s “Idol” high jinks. This week’s “American Idol” was a lot like watching an episode of “Cops,” in that you needed to separate from the reality of the situation in order to fully enjoy its absurd pop-culture trashiness. (Unlike “Cops,” nobody was half naked and handcuffed; although it’s likely Kara has imagined such a scenario with Casey James.) First of all, we had mentor Miley Cyrus , who decided to give advice to the contestants pantless. (But don’t worry, she wore two crucifixes to balance out her bare bottom half.) All kidding aside, Miley turned out to be a perfectly respectable “Idol” guest. She warmly disapproved of contestants who fumbled lyrics (Andrew Garcia), urged front-runners to push themselves harder (Crystal Bowersox) and came up with a silly excuse to hug the cute boy (Tim Urban). And then there were the performances. … Oh, the performances. The week’s wide-open theme was Billboard #1 hits (shhhh, don’t tell anyone that Miley has never had a #1 song on the Hot 100 Chart). But almost all of the contestants picked songs that were popular when their parents were twenty-somethings. Aerosmith, Phil Collins, Linda Ronstadt, Percy Sledge, Marvin Gaye … wait, is this “The Big Chill” soundtrack? Ironically, 17-going-on-70-year-old Katie Stevens was the one contestant who picked a contemporary song (Fergie’s ode to blankets). The only performance worthy of any real praise was season-nine MVP Crystal Bowersox’s “Me and Bobby McGee.” Let’s just hope she starts bringing new things to the stage each week, other than plush carpets. Other moments of note: Siobhan had silly hair, Didi made funny faces, Michael Lynche is still a cheeseball, Lee Dewyze can do a Box Tops song without anyone acknowledging the recent passing of Alex Chilton , Casey James does a killer Huey Lewis impression and Tim Urban slid across the stage like he was stealing third base. On Wednesday night’s results show, the contestants slowly learned who made it into the top 10, and thus, the formally beloved, now dreaded American Idols Live summer tour. But first, there were two special musical guest performances to “enjoy!” Miley Cyrus tore into her current hit, “Not the Climb,” like a wolf rips into the carcass of a caribou. (One could argue it was about as pleasant to the listener, too!) Then Joe Jonas and Demi Lovato sang a song about pebbles with such a palpable intensity, I expected the Disney Sonny and Cher to rip off their purity rings and go at it live on television. During the results reveal, we learned that Siobhan’s friends are even weirder than she is (Stage blood! Shaving protests!), Didi Benami has difficulty standing upright while lip-synching (she totally fell during the group number), and Crystal Bowersox is such a beloved TV star, she’s able to mouth the words “holy s—” on prime-time television without the FCC threatening any fines. In the bottom three: Tim Urban and Paige Miles, not so shocking since Paige croaked one of the worst “Idol” vocals ever Tuesday night. More surprising was Katie Stevens’ inclusion on the chopping block, mostly because it meant Andrew Garcia was not in the bottom three, and as Simon would say, that guy “sucks … the life out of a song.” In the end, Paige was the one who had to sing for her life, but Simon murdered that idea when he told her she had a better chance of conceiving Clay Aiken’s second baby than performing well enough to justify using the judges’ save on her. Check out the latest (especially bitter) “American Idol” in 60 Seconds recap, embedded in this article. Let us know your take on this week’s “Idol” episodes by leaving a comment below. And if you want more of my “Idol” and pop culture ramblings, follow me on Twitter @jambajim ! Related Videos ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances Related Artists Miley Cyrus Joe Jonas

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‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds: Our Parents’ Hits Can’t Save Paige Miles

Sarah Palin’s extravagant rock star demands cause further infighting among Teabaggers.

Palin’s contract, according to Shreeve, who had a look at it, called for her to be paid $100,000 for the event. It also included $18,000 for private jet travel for her and her entourage. Shreeve told me Palin’s contract — standard among political stars who make the speaking-circuit rounds — specified what type of private jet she requested for the trip to Nashville. “It was like, she had to have this or that size plane,” Shreeve recalls. “It was like when a rock star comes to town, the contract was that detailed.”

The Story of Bottled Water

The Story of Bottled Water, released on March 22, 2010 (World Water Day) employs the Story of Stuff style to tell the story of manufactured demand—how you get Americans to buy more than half a billion bottles of water every week when it already flows from the tap. Over five minutes, the film explores the bottled water industrys attacks on tap water and its use of seductive, environmental-themed advertising to cover up the mountains of plastic waste it produces. The film concludes with a call to take back the tap, not only by making a personal commitment to avoid bottled water, but by supporting investments in clean, available tap water for all. Our production partners on the bottled water film include five leading sustainability groups: Corporate Accountability International, Environmental Working Group, Food & Water Watch, Pacific Institute, and Polaris Institute. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Se12y9hSOM0&feature=player_embedded# added by: pjacobs51