Tag Archives: Australia

Sophie Turner Fat Ass in a Bikini for Twitter of the Day

With all the legal threats I get from the paparazzi agencies for linking to their pics that they have horrible management of….even though there are 1000 sites posting their pics they have horrible management of….cuz like the porn industry and music industry…they’ve had a hard time adapting to bloggers writing about things they find on the internet that they find funny, pathetic or hot titty in a bikini….not to mention adapting to social media where the celebs and models are posting pics of themselves in bikinis and looking hot….making the paparazzi virtually a useless, evil entity that Bieber has every right killing… I should hire this Sophie Turner, straight from Australia, moved to LA to become a famous model, but instead ended up like Joanna Krupa, pre-Reality TV, you know low level and forced to go back and finish her Law Degree…but at least she’s got a camera phone and a twitter account….am I right? Cuz I like her in a bikini, but not enough to want her to be famous enough for the evil paparazzi to follow her around…it will feed her ego…while this sense of failure and giving up is a better look….inadequacy always leads to good things…

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Sophie Turner Fat Ass in a Bikini for Twitter of the Day

Elsewhere In The World: 220-Pound Cheeseburger Unveiled In Australia

220-Pound Cheeseburger Unveiled In Australia Got a hangover from all that bottle poppin’ on New Year’s Eve? A restaurant in Australia recently unveiled this 220 pound cheeseburger that is said to be the cure all. via CBS News An Australian man cooked up a 220lb cheeseburger that contained fried eggs, steak, bacon, a whole chicken and some veggies. Anthony Mason reports. Would you take a bite out of this monstrous mound of meat if helped you shake off the headache from the night before? And better yet….how would you caption this ? Photo Credit: CBS News

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Elsewhere In The World: 220-Pound Cheeseburger Unveiled In Australia

Tom Hooper Is Ready To Defend All Those ‘Les Miserables’ Close-Ups & Reveal Who’s The Bigger Musical Geek: Jackman or Hathway

Now that   Les Misérables is expected to surpass its opening-day box-office expectations by  $5 million-10 million, director Tom Hooper could pretend that adapting the beloved musical for the big screen was a walk in the park, but he’d be lying. On Thursday,  Hooper spoke to Movieline from his Sydney, Australia hotel room and likened the challenge of directing the film to the massive tanker he was watching navigate Sydney Harbor.  “It was an extraordinary dance between musical structure and filmic structure,” Hooper explained in a revealing interview about the making of Les Miz . The Oscar-winning filmmaker, who’s expected to snare his second Best Director nomination on Jan. 10,  talked at length about his reasons for making the movie and the challenges of pacing and editing a film that is essentially sung through from beginning to end. He also  addressed criticism that he relied too heavily on close-ups in the film, divulged Eddie Redmayne’s technique for attaining such exquisite sadness in his performance of “Empty Chairs at Empty Tables” and answered the burning question of the day: whether Anne Hathaway or Hugh Jackman is a bigger musical geek. Movieline: When I saw Les Misérables in New York, I was surprised by the audience’s passionate reaction to the movie. After certain scenes and songs, they were applauding and cheering as if they were actually seeing a live performance. Tom Hooper: It’s quite extraordinary. I’ve never sat in any cinema or any premiere, or any screening of one of my films and seen a response like this. It’s like you’re at some kind of happening, some kind of out-of-body experience rather than a movie. I was at the Tokyo premiere with the Crown Prince of Japan on Monday. It was quite a formal screening and the audience went kind of crazy. The Japanese broke into a standing ovation at the end, and  I was told that for people to stand in the presence of the Crown Prince without him having gotten to his feet first was a total break of protocol. Since you had the foresight to make this movie, what do you think is causing audiences to react so effusively? Actually, I want to ask you:  What about the movie connected with you? I’m very interested. Oddly enough, I’m not a big fan of movie musicals, but I liked that Les Misérables wasn’t afraid to wear its heart on its sleeve, especially in a year when Lincoln and Zero Dark Thirty, which I also admire, are these relatively cool procedurals. I also thought that your decision to have the actors sing on camera paid off. There are some honest, raw performances in Les Miz   and, as a result, the movie ends up being quite a cathartic experience.  Yes, I think that’s the word. I always get asked, “Why did you do this film?” The very first time I saw the musical, the ending was what made me want to do the movie. There’s that moment where the hero of the story, Jean Valjean ( Jackman ), has just passed away and you hear the distant sound of “Do you hear the people singing?” — like an angelic chorus. I had a bodily physical reaction and was crying. I remember thinking what, why am I reacting this way? I was crying about my dad. My dad is alive and well and — but I couldn’t help thinking about the fact that this moment is going to come with my father. A few years ago, he went through cancer. He recovered, but when he was facing it, he told me, “Tom, I want to master the art of dying well.” And I said, “Dad, what on earth do you mean by that?” He said, “When I pass away, I want to do it in a way that’s as compassionate to my family as possible and that limits the pain they suffer. These words came to me when I was thinking about the end of this film. I thought, what’s extraordinary about Les Misérables is that it looks death square in the eye and says that if you navigate that moment with love, it’s possible to achieve a kind of peace. Valjean finds peace through his love of Cosette. He has loved this girl furiously since he met her and been a parent to her. Not only that, he’s rescued the man who’s going to marry her. He’s passed the duty of loving her on to someone else so he can leave this world knowing that she’s cared for and protected. And in the moment of his death, he’s able to tell his story. He’s able to say that this is the story of a man who turned from hating to love through Cosette. It’s like the line from “Finale”: “To love another person is to see the face of God.” It basically says that the only way to navigate our mortality, which we all face, is through love. And I think there’s something incredibly true about that message. But I think the thing that makes Les Misérables special is that it offers so many different ways in emotionally for people. It holds up a mirror to either your own suffering or the suffering of someone close to you, and it manages to process that suffering, leaving you feeling better about it by the end of the film. I’ll agree with you there. Over the past year and a half, I’ve lost a couple of friends and some people who played crucial roles in my life. So, “Empty Chairs at Empty Tables” was pretty devastating to me, but I didn’t come out of the theater feeling depressed. I felt like I’d let something go. So much of filmmaking today is avoidance basically. It’s distraction, avoidance, irresponsible fantasy. Les Misérables is somehow not that. It manages to go to the tough places. It’s escapism with a moral compass, and I’m not quite sure people are aware how difficult it was to actually get the film to do what it does. There are some scenes in Les Misérables that aren’t in the stage musical. Can you tell me about what went into your decision to make these changes? There are actually a lot of changes to the screenplay that have gone largely unnoticed. I was working with Claude-Michel Schönberg, Alain Boublil, and Herbert Kretzmer, who were the original creative team on the musical and when the changes are done in a voice that’s so identical to the way it was originally written, they’re hard to detect unless you know Les Misérables really well. Basically, we disassembled and reassembled the musical in order to improve the storytelling. One small example takes place in the factory when the fight breaks out with Fantine (Hathaway). In the musical, there is no reason why Valjean is distracted from dealing with the disruption. He simply says to the foreman, “You sort it out.” The first time I saw the musical, I had the idea: what if the thing that distracted Valjean from focusing on Fantine was the arrival of Javert as the town’s new police inspector? In that moment, he sees this specter from his past and the world falls away. He sees nothing else but that. That led to the scene in the movie where Valjean sees Javert in the factor window. By adding this moment, it better establishes the guilt that Valjean has over the death of Fantine. You upped the emotional impact of Valjean’s relationship to Fantine. Yes, and it sets up this theme about how the ghosts of the past keep coming back to haunt you. You can never be free of them. And it sets up the whole dilemma where Valjean says, “Shall I finally free myself from this past by just admitting who I really am and facing the music?” But that modification required a new piece of music to be composed that went in the middle of the factory scene that, famously, never had had anything in the middle of it. So then, we had the challenge of creating a new melody that marked the drama of that encounter between Valjean and Javert and, yet, didn’t completely fuck up the unity of the factory music. How do you accomplish that? You’ve got to pre-decide on the length of the melody that you need to express this thought, and melodic construction is not that flexible. So Claude-Michel says we can use this bit of melody and Alain works its out and gives you, say, 16 lines.  But then you realize that 16 lines is too long and that we’re being repetitive. So, you go back to Claude-Michel and say, “Can you make the melody a bit shorter?” He says it either has to be 16 lines or, say, four lines to work melodically in that context. I don’t have the freedom to make it, say, 10 lines. So, we would say okay, Claude-Michel would play the piano onto his iPhone and email the recording to us so that we had a guide. And then Alain and Herbie would say what we needed to say in four lines. It was unlike anything I’ve ever done or will do because there’s this constant dance between how quickly melody exhausts itself and the amount of words you need to make the point. And I imagine that’s just the beginning of the process. That’s before you get to the edit process. Again, I’ve never done anything like it. The film is now under two-and-a-half hours, but in September it was running around two hours and 42 minutes. So, you spend a few days in the cutting room and let’s say you take five minutes out of the running time. You can’t just press play and watch your film because it doesn’t play. And the reason it doesn’t play is, wherever you changed the length, the music and the orchestration don’t work anymore. So, in order to see how you feel about the edits you’ve made, the composers have got to recompose all the bits where the lengths changed, and then the orchestrators have got to orchestrate it. We had programmers who basically programmed the music using sample sounds so that we didn’t have to spend money on orchestras. They rebuilt the programmed orchestra and then the music editors fit it to the picture. And then maybe about a week later, I could watch it and see the impact of my changes. It was an extraordinary dance between musical structure and filmic structure. Imagine what it does to pacing. With The King’s Speech , I could vary the pace of almost any scene by taking a second out here or a few frames there. In a musical, once the songs start, you can’t change the pace at all. So it was fascinating to learn how to control pace when you don’t have control of the timeline. You learn that there are points where you can actually take a little chunk out of the music, but in order to do that, I literally had to get to the point where I could read music again and read the score in order to work out what secret cuts I could take. So, you’re leaving me with the impression that making Les Misérables was like solving a Rubik’s Cube because the music and the story were so interwoven that you couldn’t just change one aspect of the movie without affecting a large swath of it. Exactly. You’re navigating whole blocks in the movie where the pace is what the music is. And, therefore, you have to use shot selection and editing to create any variations in that pace. The work involved in getting the movie to run under two-and-a-half hours was incredibly complicated. Not only does the stage musical run longer, we added material. So this movie was like an oil tanker. You’ve come in for some criticism in terms of the number of close-ups you use in the movie. What’s your response to that? I find that discussion interesting. I always give myself options. I didn’t assume that the tight close-up was the best way to do a song. So in “I Dreamed A Dream”, there was a close-up of Anne that we used but there were two other cameras shooting from other perspectives. The tight close-ups won out in the cutting room because, over and over again, the emotional intimacy was far more intense than when you go loose. In fact, in the case of “I Dreamed A Dream,” for a long time we were using a mid-shot of her at the beginning of the scene followed by a very slow track and maybe in the last quarter of the scene it was a medium close-up. And then Eddie Redmayne , who’s been a friend of mine since I worked with him on Elizabeth I , said to me: “Why aren’t you using that close-up that you’re using in that teaser trailer?” He was talking about the way you see all the muscles in Anne’s neck work as she sings and the raw power of that, and I thought, God, that’s interesting . So, it was actually Eddie’s suggestion to re-examine that scene, and the moment we put that close-up in, the film played in a completely different way. The level of emotion went up about a hundred percent. So the process of moving toward these close-ups was a process of discovery. Given the challenges that you faced, is there a scene that you’re particularly proud of? If I’m honest, it’s the final scene in the movie, because, on paper, the idea of the barricade covered in the ghosts of the fallen could be really corny and awful beyond relief. Instead, it creates this incredible emotion in people who see it. It’s something that I’m definitely proud of because, like The King’s Speech , I always knew that it was all about the end. And with Les Miz , I always knew it was about the way we go from the grief of Valjean’s death to the hope of the fallen. But it could have felt ridiculous, and the fact that we avoid the many pitfalls that existed in that scene is definitely one thing I’m at peace about. I’m also incredibly proud of what Eddie does with “Empty Chairs at Empty Tables.’ Anne is evidently miraculous during “I Dreamed A Dream,” but I do think that there’s a balance in the movie that’s corrected by how brilliant Eddie is at that point. It’s a powerful performance. Do you know how he connected to his grief in that scene? It’s palpable. He wouldn’t tell me. It’s funny with actors sometimes. One feels that it’s wrong to pry. But he did have a rather unusual idea: Because the song deals with the devastation of the loss of his friends, he suggested that he sing it three times in a row without the camera cutting. That way, the devastation he’d reached at the end of the first singing would become the beginning of the second and so on. He kept pushing himself further and further into the pit of despair. Okay, so you’ve done the Oscar jockeying, and you won. As we get into the thick of awards season, are you approaching your second time any differently? As I sit here right now with the film – it’s opening in Japan today, it’s previewing in Korea and Australia, it’s opening in America on Christmas day — I’m incredibly occupied. It’s about getting through the next few days. But ask me again when I get through this bit. Given what you went through for Les Miz , would you do another movie musical and if so, what would it be? God, I would be open to it. It’s just that this is a very special case. This is arguably the world’s most popular musical and that musical version had never been made into a film until now. There aren’t that many really great musicals that haven’t been made into films. Have you decided what’s next for you? I literally have no idea. I did such crazy hours on this film for the last year and a half. I literally worked every hour I could stay awake and, therefore, I haven’t been able to read any material or any scripts. So, it’s a completely open thing at the moment. Okay, last question: who’s the bigger musical geek, Anne Hathaway or Hugh Jackman? Well, without a doubt, Anne is the bigger Les Misérables geek. It wasn’t just that her mother was in the American tour of Les Miz , she was the understudy for Fantine. So these high points of drama marked Anne’s early life. I remember her saying that, for instance, there would be a phone call telling her that her mother was going to go on as Fantine in Washington and could Anne get there from New York in time to see her mother play the role? So there was this idea that Fantine wasn’t her Mom’s right. It was this scarce gift that occasionally she was given to play, and, for Anne the role defined a certain electricity and audacity. Hugh is different because he’s actually starred in musicals on Broadway and on London’s West End. He’s a bona-fide musical star in his own right, where a lot of Anne’s singing has been in the privacy of her own home or at the Oscars, but not something like [ Les Misérables ]. It’s not something I can say, but Hugh feels that in a way he’s been a force in revolutionizing the way you do a movie musical. And that’s something I know he finds very exciting because I think he’s a real student of the genre and has seen it from so many different sides. [ Deadline ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. Read More on Les Miz:  Early Reaction: Oscar Race Heats Up As NYC Screening Of ‘ Les   … INTERVIEW: Samantha Barks On ‘ Les Miserables ,’ Eponine….  

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Tom Hooper Is Ready To Defend All Those ‘Les Miserables’ Close-Ups & Reveal Who’s The Bigger Musical Geek: Jackman or Hathway

Kate’s hospital pranked

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Kate’s hospital pranked

We Need To Talk About John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John’s New Christmas Video (With Lyrics)

Hark! Christmas came early today, and in the form of a song delivered from on high by former Grease buddies and rockin’ Xmas angels John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John . In the video for the first holiday jam from their new joint album This Christmas , Travolta and O N-J hug and line-dance and drink hot cocoa while crying during It’s A Wonderful Life , which is an actual line in the song and OH MY GOD I can’t look away so just watch it now. (I took the liberty of transcribing the lyrics below. You’re welcome.) “I Think You Might Like It,” the only original tune on the duo’s new yuletide album, was penned by songwriter/Newton-John producer John Farrar , who wrote the chart-topping Grease duet “You’re The One That I Want,” along with the underappreciated power-pining ballad “Hopelessly Devoted To You” and Newton-John’s Xanadu jam “Magic.” In other words, Farrar is a proven musical maestro and it’s only a matter of time before “I Think You Might Like It” cheeses its way into your stone-cold hearts. Promoting the album on Ellen , Travolta revealed another tidbit about his personal relationship with Christmas: He really loves hot cocoa. “It represents winter wonderlands, it represents Christmas,” he said, which explains why he COLLECTS HOT COCOA POWDER FROM DIFFERENT COUNTRIES . “I’ve collected various types of cocoa from around the world,” he said, offering up a sniff of Brazilian cocoa powder to demonstrate the “hint of cinnamon and pepper” that differentiates it from cocoa from Germany, Australia and so on. (Travolta will donate his artist proceeds to the Jett Travolta Foundation, named after his late son, while Newton-John’s portion will go to her own Olivia Newton-John Cancer & Wellness Centre , so I’ll allow him this not strange at all hot cocoa fixation.) Now, the video. Prepare yourself for three glorious minutes of, in order: – John Travolta flying his airplane home to Newton-John, because he’s a pilot – John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John toe-tapping in unison with their thumbs in their belt loops – A John Travolta soul patch. A JOHN TRAVOLTA SOUL PATCH! – Olivia Newton-John “driving” with “Christmas presents” propped oh-so-naturally in the passenger seat – More line-dancing – THIS: – John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John singin’ about “makin’ love all night” and cryin’ while his actual IRL wife Kelly Preston walks into what looks like the lobby of an Alamo Rent-a-Car with a baby on her hip and whoa , DEEP THOUGHT: Is this song really about polygamy? Is the “it” in question that she might like his “special” holiday package, WINK WINK?? Discuss . – Troops coming home from deployment for the holidays, because of course – More line-dancing – The saddest happy pity hug of all time Everybody now! Sing along all month-long! Your friends and family and everyone within earshot will love you for it, trust me. **Some lyrics are incomplete because I couldn’t make them out through JT & ON-J’s cheer-tastic warbling. So help a sister out in the comments. “I Think You Might Like It” Here comes my hometown So good to get my wheels down I’m comin’ home toni-i-i-ight Here comes that magical smell of Christmas Eve There’s nothin’ you can do-oo But wearing your heart on your sleeve My mind is go-in’ A little crazy knowin’ You’re comin’ home toni-i-i-ight I can’t help smilin’ to strangers on my street I’m singing to myself, tripping over my own feet I’m comin’ ho-ome CHORUS: I’ve got a little plan for you, I think you might like it Let’s do the little dance we do, I think you might like it The we’re gonna hide away, makin’ love all night We can cry tomorrow watching It’s a Wonderful Life ( Line-dancing interlude ) Ooooo-ooo-oooh, I think you might like it Oh baby I kinda like So many gonna (unintelligible) You’re comin’ home toni-i-i-ight Your mama sings sweetly, “Do You Hear What I Hear?” But in a little while she’ll be swinging from a chandelier No stopping Aunt Louise Ticklin’ the ivories I’m comin’ home toni-i-i-ight Whole town’s gonna be there It will be a squeeze You’d better put your sleigh in a holdin’ pattern, Santa please I’m comin’ ho-ome CHORUS: I’ve got a little plan for you, I think you might like it Let’s do the little dance we do, I think you might like it Then we’re gonna hide away, makin’ love all night We can cry tomorrow watching It’s A Wonderful Life I’ve got a little plan for you ( I like it ) Let’s do the little dance we do ( I like it ) Then we’re gonna hide away, making love all night Unison: And we can cry tomorrow watching It’s a Wonderful Life Let’s do the little dance we do I think you mi-ight like it (Spoken): I like it MERRY CHRISTMAS, WORLD! Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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We Need To Talk About John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John’s New Christmas Video (With Lyrics)

Liam McIntyre and Erin Hasan Engaged

“Liam had one of the characters from Cinderella come to my door,” Hasan tells Australia#39;s TV Week. “They took me to a room and I got a makeover. They had custom-made me a dress based on my three favorite Disney princesses.” When Spartacus: Vengeance star Liam McIntyre wanted to propose to Erin Hasan, he used the magical backdrop of Disney World in Florida to make it a dream engagement for his girlfriend of two years. Hasan was then treated to a private dinner where McIntyre showed up dresse

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Liam McIntyre and Erin Hasan Engaged

Bar Refaeli Topless Twitter Photo: Not Ugly!

We hate the break the bad news, but a Bar Refaeli sex tape does not actually exist. Fortunately, the model herself is here to soften that blow… but posing in a g-string for all to see! Bar did not include any caption along with this image, but really. Come on now. Are any words necessary?!? The SUPER model is not one to be shy about her body, often posing with very little on in calendars and/or magazines. Have you seen the Bar Refaeli nude Maxim photos, for example? You really should.

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Bar Refaeli Topless Twitter Photo: Not Ugly!

Kate Middleton: PREGNANT!!!

Kate Middleton is pregnant. For reals. The royal family confirmed the news today! Prince William and his wife are expecting their first child, according to the palace: “Their Royal Highnesses The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are very pleased to announce that The Duchess of Cambridge is expecting a baby .” “The Queen, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Prince of Wales, The Duchess of Cornwall and Prince Harry and members of both families are delighted with the news.” “As the pregnancy is in its very early stages, Her Royal Highness is expected to stay in hospital for several days and will require a period of rest thereafter.” The Duchess was admitted to King Edward VII Hospital with hyperemesis gravidarum, an acute morning sickness which requires supplementary hydration and nutrients. The pregnancy announcement comes after months of speculation. About 18 months, to be exact. Ever since they married in April 2011, the rumors have flown. The palace, which rarely comments on gossip, took the unusual step of saying, more than once, “We would be the ones to make the announcement, not Hollywood.” Tabloids began snapping close-ups of Kate Middleton ‘s stomach for any sign of a baby bump, and had a field day when she declined peanuts and champagne. Her old friend Jessica Hay took it upon herself to declare Kate Middleton pregnant this month, telling both Life & Style and Australia’s New Idea that it was a done deal. Who knows if she really knew or just guessed correctly. Everything from Kate’s new hairstyle to her recent clothing choices (above) have been critiqued of late, leading many to believe she really was pregnant this time. While remaining intensely private people, the couple never required much prodding when it came to the subject of family and wanting to start one before long. “It is quite strange reading about it, but I try not to let it bother me,” Prince William said in an interview with ABC News in May. “I’m just very keen to have a family.” “Both Catherine and I are looking forward to having a family in the future.” Due to a dramatic change in the rules of succession, the royal couple’s first-born will be the heir to the throne , regardless of the baby’s gender, for the first time. Royal babies have typically been born within one year of marriage; Princess Diana gave birth to Prince William just 11 months after her wedding. Going back one more generation, Queen Elizabeth II gave birth to Prince Charles, William’s father, six days before her first wedding anniversary. Assuming Kate is past 12 weeks, she should be due in early summer 2013, shortly after her two-year anniversary. Congratulations to the Duke and Duchess! [Photo: WENN.com]

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Kate Middleton: PREGNANT!!!

Elsewhere In The World: Parents Watch In Horror As 12-Year-Old Boy Is Eaten By Crocodile!!!

Adults on the scene tried to help but it was too late…SMH. According to The Daily Mail … A 12-year-old boy was grabbed by a crocodile which swam off with the child in its mouth today in the second fatal attack within two weeks in Australia’s tropical Northern Territory. Although teams of police and rangers will continue the hunt for the youngster on Sunday they privately fear that the boy is well beyond help. ‘Inital reports suggest adults within the group tried to save the boy by spearing the animal, but the crocodile dragged the child out to deeper water,’ said police Superintendent Michael White. He said officers from an Aboriginal police station were remaining at the scene until dusk and would resume the search for the boy at first light on Sunday. Mr White said the tragedy once again highlighted the dangers of swimming in waterways in northern Australia. Today’s attack was a chilling reminder of the day earlier in November when the seven-year-old girl was snatched by a saltwater crocodile 210 miles east of Darwin, the Northern Territory’s capital. Police searching the waterhole shot dead a 10ft crocodile and an examination of the reptile revealed what were believed to be remains of the child in its stomach. Saltwater crocodiles, which can grow up to 25ft and weigh more than a ton, are plentiful in the Northern Territory and signs have been erected near waterways warning visitors to stay away from the water and river banks. Crocodiles are protected in the Northern Territory and their numbers have increased steadily, resulting in a number of attacks on people, One man writing to the Northern Territory News today said: ‘This has got to stop – there are too many crocs. ‘Of course we need to use common sense when in the bush, but please let’s have a sensible policy on the crocodile population.’ Is it the crocs fault or should folks not go for a dip in infested waters?? Images via tumblr

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Elsewhere In The World: Parents Watch In Horror As 12-Year-Old Boy Is Eaten By Crocodile!!!

Ryan Murphy honors Alan Alda and Norman Lear – Hollywood.TV

http://www.youtube.com/v/DKFjSXgXSZA?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

Hollywood.TV is your source for all the latest celebrity news, gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Ryan Murphy paid tribute to television legends Norman Lear and Alan Alda at the International Emmy Awards in New York. The winners spanned six countries, Argentina, Brazil and Britain each won two awards, Australia,France and Germany took home one apiece. Murphy closed the show by presenting the 40th Anniversary Special Founders Award to Lear and Alda. The Academy chose to honor a producer and performer who had groundbreaking shows on TV in 1972 when the International Emmys started. Hollywood.TV is the global leader in capturing celebrity breaking news as it happens. Launched in 2008, we capture all the latest news, exclusive celebrity interviews, star videos and hot celebrity gossip from around the world every minute of everyday. HTV is on the streets 24/7, at all the industry events and invited by the stars to cover their every move in Hollywood, New York and Miami. Hollywood.TV is currently the third most viewed reporter channel on www.youtube.com YouTube with almost 400 million views, and our footage is seen worldwide! Tune in daily for all the latest Hollywood news on www.hollywood.tv and http like us on Facebook!

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Ryan Murphy honors Alan Alda and Norman Lear – Hollywood.TV