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5 Reasons Why Black People Don’t Care About Kwanzaa [ORIGINAL]

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2011 marks the 45th anniversary of Kwanzaa , but do Black people actually care to celebrate it? Dr. Maulana Karenga created this holiday for African Americans and Pan Africans all over the world to celebrate family, community and culture. On paper, Kwanzaa is a chance for Black people to connect and uplift each other post Christmas, but are we actually practicing? Why Does Kwanzaa Remain Such A Conundrum? It’s not uncommon to hear a “Happy Kwanzaa” along with “Merry Christmas” and “Happy Hanukkah” holiday greetings in ones effort to be politically correct and inclusive. But it’s becoming increasingly difficult to find Black people who truly celebrate the seven principles of Kwanzaa. Black people just don’t care about Kwanzaa the way they should. Here are five reasons why Kwanzaa isn’t as celebrated as it used to be, along with suggestions on how to make it better. Too Hard To Remember The seven principles of Kwanzaa are mentioned first in Swahili, a language most Black people are comfortable with. All of the principles are uplifting and positive, but the quality of the message is literally being lost in translation. Suggestion: Focus on the English versions of the principles to simplify them and make them more memorable. Blame It On The Economy During the seven day celebration of Kwanzaa, gifts are to be exchanged on each day. Everyone would love to receive a gift a day, but who’s really trying to buy more gifts after Christmas? Even if you buy inexpensive gifts for your family members and exclude your friends, seven for each can add up quickly. Budgets are tighter than ever thanks to the recession, and it’s just not economically feasible to purchase more gifts for Kwanzaa, when many are tapped out from buying Christmas gifts. Even though Kwanzaa gifts can be homemade, people simply may not have the time to give to make the gifts. Suggestion: Eliminate the gift giving element of Kwanzaa and focus on the principles. Santa’s Winning Kwanzaa is distinctly different and separate from Christmas, but since it begins immediately afterwards, Kwanzaa is at a huge disadvantage. Even though Kwanzaa has been around for over four decades, celebrating the birth of Christ is still a priority for many Black people, who don’t seem to have the bandwidth to give Kwanzaa the energy or attention it deserves. Suggestion: Move Kwanzaa out of December. Over It Since the Christmas season begins after Thanksgiving, December is all about Christmas and the recovery. And of course New Year’s Eve and day get a lot of attention, too. Instead of trying to get people to celebrate Kwanzaa while we’re in holiday mode, maybe it would make more sense to include it another month focused on celebrating Black History. Suggestion: Move Kwanzaa to February and make it a part of Black History Month. Disconnected The best way to make a day feel like a holiday, is to get the day off. But since it’s not likely that employers will give all Black people time off to celebrate Kwanzaa. If there was a day dedicated to recognizing the seven principles, maybe we would give Kwanzaa more attention Suggestion: Collectively take a day off to celebrate Kwanzaa.

5 Reasons Why Black People Don’t Care About Kwanzaa [ORIGINAL]

Anthony Weiner Turned on by Men, Yearned for Threesome, Ex-Online Mistress Claims

Traci Nobles REALLY wants a publisher to purchase her proposal for a memoir about her interactions with Anthony Weiner. Nobles, a woman who met the disgraced politician on the Internet and is doing all she can to profit from that experience , supposedly gave an excerpt to Radar Online of one of the conversations she shared with Weiner via Twitter. Is Anthony Weiner smiling here at the thought of a threesome with another dude? Probably not. Nobles says Weiner asked her about “3 ways” with him and “another guy” and, when pressed on whether he’s turned on by men, responded : “Well it depends on the guy, but generally yes.” Of course, there’s no proof that this exchange actually took place. It’s just the word of a woman who carried on a Web-based affair with a married man and is now hoping to write a book about it… versus the word of a popular congressman who ended his career in humiliating fashion because he just had to send photos of his body to random females he had never met. Good luck choosing sides, readers! [Photo: WENN.com]

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Anthony Weiner Turned on by Men, Yearned for Threesome, Ex-Online Mistress Claims

Anyway (Justin Bieber Video) with lyrics

A Video I Made for Justin Bieber using the song “Anyway” by Martina McBride. Lyrics: You can spend your whole life buildin’ Somethin’ from nothin’ One storm can come and blow it all away Build it anyway You can chase a dream That seems so out of reach And you know it might not ever come your way Dream it anyway [chorus] God is great, but sometimes life ain’t good When I pray it doesn’t always turn out like I think it should But I do it anyway I do it anyway This worlds gone crazy and it’s hard to believe That tomorrow will be better than today Believe it anyway You can love someone with all your heart For all the right reasons An in a moment they can choose to walk away love ‘em anyway [repeat chorus] You can pour your soul out singing a song u believe in but tomorrow they will forget you ever sang Sing it anyway! Yeah I sing, I dream, I love anyway! http://www.youtube.com/v/OYB8tjYaGEk?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Read the original post: Anyway (Justin Bieber Video) with lyrics

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Anyway (Justin Bieber Video) with lyrics

Margin Midnight Mara Marlene: Louis’s 10 Favorite Films of 2011

I realize I may have given away some of these choices with my utterly correct listing of the year’s ten best performances , but no matter! 2011′s finest cinema, specifically the top three choices on my list, gifted us with bleak, but comprehensive glimpses into personal isolation. I love when a movie is resolutely grim — reminds me of home. Here are my top ten films of 2011. 10. Win Win Director Thomas McCarthy’s understated, thoughtful look at a suburban wrestling coach’s (Paul Giamatti) dubious business dealings dredges up your pity and empathy at different moments, but it mostly acquaints you with one of the best teenage performances of the past few years in newcomer and real-life wrestling prodigy Alex Shaffer. It helps that his character is well-written too. As McCarthy explained to us about the emotional lives of teenagers, “They’re struggling with all kinds of things — who they are, what they are, what they want to be. That, for many of those kids, is a very private and scary struggle. A lot of times how that manifests itself is a very deadpan approach to the world: ‘I’m not going to let you see what I’m feeling until I’m ready to really show that.’” When Shaffer is ready to show, it’s a poignant sight. 9. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo I knew I was in for a treat the minute I heard Trent Reznor and Karen O’s cover of “Immigrant Song,” but David Fincher’s Dragon Tattoo so improves upon the original Swedish film trilogy thanks to two fantastic assets: blisteringly chilly cinematography and the commanding work of Rooney Mara as well-pierced heroine Lisbeth Salander. It may drag in parts, but Mara’s conviction merits a 160-minute runtime. 8. Weekend Tom Cullen and Chris New play the most insightful lovers of the year in Andrew Haigh’s low-key story of one lonely gay man’s short affair with a candid, self-possessed artist. The movie is especially incisive in its depiction of two men who relate both romantically and — in an empathetic way — fraternally. There’s not a pretentious or cloying moment in this wholly believable story. 7. Midnight in Paris Whimsy: I’m usually not a fan! But Midnight in Paris ‘s droll journey back to the heyday of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Salvador Dali makes a wonderful protagonist out of Owen Wilson, a gorgeous backdrop for Marion Cotillard’s all-consuming charisma, and a weirdly perfect scene for the film’s moral. You either go with this movie’s kooky historical lark or you don’t, but every actor in that post-midnight time portal is just so fun. My favorite: Kathy Bates as a staunchly supportive Gertrude Stein. 6. Young Adult Forget the hype about “unlikable” heroine Mavis Gary, the grizzled authoress Charlize Theron plays in the new Jason Reitman/Diablo Cody joint Young Adult — She’s an imperturbable, amazingly deluded woman-child whose self-assured mania is more engrossing and “likable” than most characters you’ll encounter this year. I’d like to offer a new tagline for this cranky, suburban comedy: Assholes are Awesome .

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Margin Midnight Mara Marlene: Louis’s 10 Favorite Films of 2011

REVIEW: Gorgeous War Horse Hits Sweet Spot Between Cornball and Classic

Steven Spielberg’s War Horse is masterly, accomplished, stirring, a real bang-up, show-off job — and watching it, I kept wishing it had been made by someone else, someone younger who hasn’t already proved dozens of times, beyond the point of redundancy, how much he cares about what he puts on the screen. Because Spielberg does care, and not just about the movies he makes himself. His forebears are with him every step of the way: With War Horse he tries on many masks, including those of David Lean, John Ford, Stanley Kubrick and David O. Selznick, just because he’s Steven Spielberg and he can. He wants to be everyone and everything at once: At times it’s way too much, but at others it’s a relief. In an Oscar-grabby end-of-year movie landscape littered with itsy-bitsy fuzzy-wuzzy literary adaptations and colorless apologias for lady monsters (I’m looking at you, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and Iron Lady ), why shouldn’t there be room for an old-school road-show picture with crazy-ass classical-filmmaking values? There’s something to be said for just sitting back and delivering yourself into the hands of a guy who creates a dissolve in which a piece of bumpy knitting transforms itself into a rock-strewn, hardscrabble landscape. Who else today would dare? Maybe it’s that unapologetic cornpone aesthetic, even more than all that virtuoso filmmaking, that makes War Horse so engaging. From the moment you see the foal Joey, having only recently squeezed forth from his mother’s womb, finding his matchstick legs on sturdy English soil, you’re either in the game or you’re not. Later, when Joey’s a bit older, he’s bought by an impoverished farmer, Ted Narracott (Peter Mullan), to spite his arrogant landlord (David Thewlis), who also had been eyeing the horse at auction. The purchase is immediately problematic: Joey isn’t a workhorse, which is what Ted and his family, including wife Rose (a half-winsome, half-grave Emily Watson) and teenage son Albert (Jeremy Irvine), need in order to save their failing farm. But Albert has already fallen in love with Joey, who was born and raised on a neighboring property — Albert had long been wooing the horse, discerning in him not just beauty but sterling character. Albert is right, of course: Joey not only helps save the farm, but when war — the Great one — breaks out, he’s sold out from under poor Albert and goes on to endure numerous hardships and touch the lives of everyone who’s lucky enough to stroke his noble, glossy, star-splashed head. Those include a noble but ill-fated English cavalry officer, Captain Nicholls (Tom Hiddleston), a French farmer and his fragile but feisty granddaughter (Niels Arestrup and Celine Buckens), and two nameless soldiers, one English and one German, who momentarily — I kid you not — forget their nation’s differences and reach across the bleak stretches of No Man’s Land to perform the ultimate act of kindness. Will Joey ever make it back to Albert, with whom he clearly longs to be? You can probably guess. But it’s important not to judge the bones of the story until you see what Spielberg does with it. (The script was adapted, by Lee Hall and Richard Curtis, from Michael Morpurgo’s slim, direct 1982 young adult novel. That material has also, of course, been turned into an acclaimed play, with puppets substituting for real horses; Spielberg was inspired to make the film after seeing the play.) This is the kind of excess you can get away with only when you’re Steven Spielberg, and maybe not even then. The filmmaker has surrounded himself with his usual posse, an all-star lineup of crackerjack craftspeople: Janusz Kaminski shoots the craggily gorgeous Devon countryside as if he were looking at it through God’s eyes. At one point he lights Joey in his stable — the character is played by 14 different horses — as if he were the Blessed Virgin on a holy card, a nimbus of gold emanating from his visage. John Williams, who has written some of the most superb scores in modern film but who, like every other superstar composer, is also sometimes guilty of phoning them in, is on top of his game here: The combat footage is heralded by lots of meaty brass and strings, but the most beautiful sections are the more pastoral ones, where the composer channels another Williams (or, rather a Vaughan Williams), Ralph: You can hear traces of the trilling sweetness and delicacy of “The Lark Ascending,” one of the most beautiful and most quintessentially English pieces of music ever composed. For the actors, War Horse is something of a round robin, the action passing from one character to another and only sometimes weaving back again. Spielberg is often too sentimental a director, and there are moments in War Horse that come close to being spongey-soft. But somehow the actors here save Spielberg from his worst impulses: Hiddleston plays that cavalry officer with the kind of slow-burning dignity that’s more archetypal than stereotypical; with his scrubbed-clean skin and carefully pomaded hair, he seems to know what England he’s fighting for, and he dresses the part until the end. Irvine, making his film debut, shows a suitable naïvete tempered by good instincts — he avoids mawkishness, perhaps only narrowly, but it’s a performance that always has mud on its shoes. And Arestrup packs a great deal of unfiltered feeling into the small role of the French grandfather. The bags beneath his eyes are packed with sorrow and happiness and everything in between. In War Horse Spielberg indulges his most melodramatic impulses, and sometimes they lead him astray: He’s a little cheap, for example, in the way he uses animal endangerment and suffering as a pulse point — a sequence in which the camera fixates on Joey’s stumbling leg as he painstakingly pulls an artillery cart that’s far too heavy for him is typical Spielbergian overkill. But melodrama isn’t a dirty word, and Lord knows there are few contemporary directors who know how to do it well, if at all. This movie is also, of course, an extended wartime metaphor, one that’s aware of the costs to both sides: Spielberg shows young, callow German and English soldiers alike, all unaware of what’s about to befall them. And when Spielberg goes big — as he does in the picture’s integral cavalry charge sequence — he does it right, capturing the essence of wartime chaos with clear images and clean cutting. (It’s almost as tense and meticulous a battle sequence as the one the young Branagh gave us in Henry V .) I saw War Horse at a critics’ screening and noted plenty of snickering around me, at the picture’s sometimes too-naked emotion, at its “Look at me, I’m Steven Spielberg!” panoramic landscapes, at the beatific lighting of the equine central character. The downer, of course, is that we already know Spielberg knows how to pull off all of these things well, perhaps better than anyone — now that Lean and Ford and everyone else is dead, it’s as if he feels he has no one to top but himself, and that’s a sad place for a filmmaker to be. But for all its borrowing from old Hollywood, I don’t think War Horse is particularly nostalgic. The word I’d use is wistful . It’s the largest, most lavish handful of wistfulness money can buy, and sometimes it’s too much. Yet it’s nice to know that even Steven Spielberg can still wish for something. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . 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REVIEW: Gorgeous War Horse Hits Sweet Spot Between Cornball and Classic

Steve Jobs To Receive Posthumous Grammy

iTunes creator will be honored with a special tribute at February awards show. By Henna Kathiya Steve Jobs Photo: Getty Images While Steve Jobs didn’t belt out soulful songs or create lyrical poetry like the artists typically honored each year by the Recording Academy, his singular contribution to the music industry has earned him a special tribute at the 2012 Grammy Awards . It was announced on Wednesday that the Apple co-founder will receive a posthumous Grammy in February. His innovative approach to downloading music through iTunes revolutionized music in an era where music piracy and illegal downloading was rampant. Jobs died in October after losing a seven-year battle with pancreatic cancer. Remember Steve Jobs’ many innovations by flipping through this photo gallery. The 56-year-old visionary will be remembered as having helped “create products and technology that transformed the way we consume music, TV, movies, and books,” according to a statement from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. The award will also recognize “Jobs’ innovations such as the iPod and its counterpart, the online iTunes store, which revolutionized the industry and how music was distributed and purchased.” Not only is Jobs getting a Grammy but a bronze statue was recently erected in his honor in Budapest, Hungary. The statue was commissioned by Hungarian software company Graphisoft, which has had a close relationship with Apple since the 1980s, according to Reuters . News of Jobs’ death created waves throughout the world with the likes of President Obama and Nicki Minaj remembering the tech giant. The Apple co-founder is not the only one receiving a posthumous Grammy; trailblazer Gil Scott-Heron will also be honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award come February 12. Related Photos The Steve Jobs Legacy

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Steve Jobs To Receive Posthumous Grammy

‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’: The Reviews Are In!

As Tom Cruise returns as superspy Ethan Hunt, critics roundly praise eye-popping action sequences and strong supporting cast. By Eric Ditzian Tom Cruise in “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol” Photo: Paramount Pictures Anyone wondering if the “Mission: Impossible” franchise still has life in it after more than five years away from the cinema should do a simple critical comparison. “Mission: Impossible III,” which kicked off 2006’s summer movie season, notched a 70 percent approval rating, according to the Rotten Tomatoes review aggregator. “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol,” by contrast, is currently hovering at 93 percent freshness as it goes into wide release on Wednesday (December 21), following a limited, IMAX-only debut. Tom Cruise, after the recent stumble of “Knight and Day,” is back as an action hero at the age of 49; his IMF superspy Ethan Hunt has possibly never looked better, according to some critics. Reviewers have gone on to praise the film’s eye-popping action sequences and the entertaining supporting cast. Read on for a deep dive into the “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol” reviews. The Story “IMF has been disbanded by presidential order after being blamed for a terrorist bombing that destroys the Kremlin. So, do Ethan Hunt and the remaining members of his now-rogue spy team sit around worrying about their 401(k)s? Possibly they would in real life, but not in ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol,’ a largely successful attempt to reboot the moribund franchise that turns out to be probably the most entertaining installment since Brian De Palma’s series opener from 15 years ago.” — Lou Lumenick, New York Post The Dubai Skyscraper Scene “This is a sequence so ingeniously conceived and shot that even the audience doesn’t want to look down — a sequence so death-defying that it gets you laughing at your own susceptibility (especially if, like me, you happen to have a fear of heights). Shimmying up and down and around the building’s surface, with the ground looking as if it must be a mile below, Cruise becomes a fearless human bug (think Spider-Man without the superpowers). Then, just as we’re sure that our hearts couldn’t dig any deeper into our throats, one of his gloves begins to short out and lose adhesive power.” — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly The Supporting Cast “Simon Pegg, returning from his ‘M:I’ debut in the last film, provides a hugely welcome dose of lightness and comic relief as Benji, a meek British computer nerd who in this installment has finally managed to score a gig in the field. Paula Patton and Jeremy Renner, as new additions to Ethan’s team, hit their marks with professionalism and physical competence, with Renner in particular proving that he’s ready to assume the central role in the ‘M:I’ franchise if and when Mr. Cruise finally hangs up his carabineers.” — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post The Dissenters ” ‘Ghost Protocol’ is a less a film than a vanity license plate writ large — a throwback to when all an action film needed was a bogus concept, chase scenes and a roman numeral in a title. … Its collection of stock elements — nuclear strikes, beautiful women, exotic locales, fast cars, megalomaniac bad guy — could have been ordered from a ‘when superpowers stalked the earth’ clearance sale catalog. Twenty-five years ago it would have starred Roger Moore.” — Duane Dudek, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel The Final Word “Should you see ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’? By all means, and in the big, big, biggest theater you can find. Don’t watch it on TV, and for God’s sake, don’t download it to your phone. I recommend the LG IMAX Theater in Sydney, Australia, which is eight stories high, but your local multiplex will do. Be prepared, afterward, to feel as if the outside world is just a little bit too small.” — Dan Kois, Slate Check out everything we’ve got on “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’ Related Photos ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’ Premiere Heats Up Dubai

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‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’: The Reviews Are In!

D.C. Authorities Impersonate A Fake Record Company And Confiscate Guns, Drugs And Millions Of Dollars

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Looks like police are getting a little smarter than criminals these days. There was A huge drug bust that took place in Washington ,D.C …ATF agents acted as undercover officers and “music industry insiders” during the year-long sting. Police created the “Manic Enterprisess” studio in Northeast Washington, for fictional rap artist Richie Valdez in November of 2010. Agents then told the underground world and black market that they were seeking to purchase weapons and drugs. In a years times agents confiscated 161 firearms (including a rocket launcher), 29 assault weapons, 80 pounds of methamphetamine, 21 pounds of cocaine, 1.25 gallons of PCP, 24 pounds of marijuana, heroin and Ecstasy. Source www.mzshyneka.com

D.C. Authorities Impersonate A Fake Record Company And Confiscate Guns, Drugs And Millions Of Dollars

Josie Goldberg topless

Celebrity chubby chaser’s just hit the jackpot with these topless shots of Josie Goldberg in Miami Continue reading

Irina Shayk’s Amazing Lingerie Hotness

I’ve had a lot of shots of Irina Shayk up on the site over the last year or so, but I think this might be the first time I’ve got pictures of her in her sexy lingerie. I can’t believe it took me this long. The woman is absolutely gorgeous, even with the Christiano Ronaldo stink all over her, so getting her half naked is awesome. I would like to dip myself in oil and chase this hottie around for a few hours.