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‘The Other Guys’: The Reviews Are In!

Check out what critics have to say before you head out to the theater this weekend. By Eric Ditzian and Jeremy Kaplan Will Ferrell, Steve Coogan and Mark Wahlberg in “The Other Guys” Photo: Sony Pictures Leonardo DiCaprio’s fevered dreams have dominated the multiplex for three straight weeks. Now it looks like the “Inception” supremacy is coming to an end, with Leo’s reveries soon to be overtaken by Will Ferrell’s wackiness. The curly-haired comedian stars in “The Other Guys,” an action-comedy that marks his fourth big screen collaboration with writer/director Adam McKay, following “Anchorman,” “Talladega Nights” and “Step Brothers.” Co-starring Mark Wahlberg as Ferrell’s reluctant NYPD partner and fellow desk-jockey, “Other Guys” could easily outdo the $30 million “Step Brothers” took in back in 2008. Helping in that quest are the flick’s strong critical reviews. Before you head to the cinema this weekend, check out what the critics have to say. The Story “This latest gambit stars Ferrell as Det. Allen Gamble, a NYPD forensic accountant, and Mark Wahlberg as his rogue cop partner, a reluctant and raging Terry Hoitz. These flat-footed flatfoots get lots of razzing from the other boys in blue, but in typical don’t-count-Ferrell’s-underachievers-out fashion, they just might derail a $32-billion stock market rip-off if they can follow the paper trail and stop bickering long enough to figure it out.” — Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times The Cast “Mr. Ferrell’s Allen is a genuinely sweet guy as well as a crazed one: As evidence, his time-out for a surreal folk ballad, along with his mad reminiscence about being a pimp in college. (Jon Brion did the music, which includes the lullaby ‘Pimps Don’t Cry.’) Mr. Wahlberg provides counterpoint to his co-star’s nuances by declaiming his lines at the top of his voice: here again, the results can be hilarious when they aren’t silly. Michael Keaton is a police captain who moonlights at Bed Bath & Beyond. Steve Coogan, a reliably funny actor, isn’t funny as a bad guy scheming to defraud the city. He seems to think he’s in a drama.” — Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal The Jokes ” ‘The Other Guys’ gets you chuckling at the little details of Allen’s stick-up-the-butt patheticness, like the way he hums while typing, or argues with Terry about how a school of tuna could whip a lion, or blasts Little River Band CDs in his sad, dinky red Prius. (Terry: ‘I feel like we’re literally driving around in a vagina.’) A few of the jokes are sly, many are quite obvious, but what knits the laughs together is the nearly confessional conviction with which Ferrell delivers them. He’s not playing just another geek idiot — as, say, Rob Schneider does. He digs into some elemental side of himself, a side that craves order and niceness and civility, that shrinks from danger and violence.” — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly The Buddy Cop Genre “Adam McKay and co-writer Chris Henchy (‘Land of the Lost’) have overloaded the narrative, stretching it 20 minutes beyond its practical use and mistaking bigger and more explosive with funnier. From ‘Freebie and the Bean’ to ‘Running Scared’ to the ‘Lethal Weapon’ franchise, the challenge with cop-centric action comedies has remained essentially the same: How to balance straightforward adrenaline-rush material with bits you’d never find in a real cop film? This one begins buckling under its own weight around the midpoint; on the other hand, I’m already looking forward to catching certain asides and riffs again on cable.” — Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune The Final Word ” ‘The Other Guys’ is that rare thing, a goofball summer buddy comedy that actually delivers. The movie is a return to form for Will Ferrell, who finally reins in the idiot frenzy he’s so often deployed in the past (most recently in last year’s dismal ‘Land of the Lost’) and — an added blessing — shows no skin, either. It’s also a breakthrough for Mark Wahlberg, who dipped a toe into the comedy waters of ‘Date Night,’ but here makes a sizeable splash. Wahlberg isn’t an all-out clown in the Ferrell style, but his careful restraint in this picture — his comic simmering and his lag-timed reactions — is just as funny in a different way.’ — Kurt Loder, MTV News Check out everything we’ve got on “The Other Guys.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘The Other Guys’ Clips MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Other Guys’

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‘The Other Guys’: The Reviews Are In!

Why ‘Breaking Dawn, Part 2’ Is Set For Fall 2012, Not Summer

Summit, film analysts refute rumors that release date was based on ‘Eclipse’ box-office performance. By Eric Ditzian Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattinson in “Eclipse” Photo: Summit Last month, as “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” got off to a stellar (if not record-breaking) start at the box office, MTV News squashed the widely held assumption that the second part of “Breaking Dawn” would definitely arrive in the summer of 2012. As Summit Entertainment exec Richie Fay told us, the studio was exploring multiple dates in mid- to late 2012, not just possible openings that would fall when school’s out of session. Now, Summit has officially announced that “Breaking Dawn, Part 2” will open November 2012 , and with that, another assumption seems to be taking hold among fans and on the Web: After “Eclipse” failed to wildly out-gross “New Moon” at the box office, Summit got spooked about a summer release date and fled to more familiar autumn territory. But based on our conversations with Summit and box-office analysts, that’s simply not the case. First off, it’s important to note that despite all this talk about a weaker-than-expected performance for “Eclipse,” its $289 million haul will eventually surpass the $297 million that “New Moon” pulled in last fall, according to Box Office Mojo . When you consider that sequels like “Shrek Forever After” and “Sex and the City 2” underperformed in the crowded summer-movie season, Summit has to be extremely pleased with the box-office business of “Eclipse.” So if it’s not a fear of summer that persuaded Summit to deliver both “Breaking Dawn” films in the fall, then what was it? A careful examination of the 2012 summer calendar. “The lesson is that it’s all about positioning a film at a time when it will face as little direct competition as possible,” explained Phil Contrino, editor of BoxOffice.com . “Summit was wise to stay away from summer 2012, because it’s shaping up to be a record-breaking season.” “The Avengers,” “Madagascar 3” and “Men in Black 3” are all set to drop that May, followed by “Star Trek 2” in June, and then new installments of “Spider-Man” (which already occupies the Fourth of July slot held this year by “Eclipse”), “Ice Age” and “Batman.” “Why compete with an amazing slate like that if you don’t have to?” Contrino added. “I’m sure ‘Breaking Dawn, Part 2’ would still open very well during a summer that crowded, but its audience would be devoured very quickly.” The point, then, is not that summer is a poor time to release a “Twilight” film but that fall simply presents less competition, which is not to say that there will be no box-office battle in autumn. “Breaking Dawn, Part 1” is set to open against “Happy Feet 2” on November 18, 2011, while the second in the two-part finale will compete with “Monsters Inc. 2” on November 16, 2012. But when you consider the more jam-packed summer season and the fact that an entire year will have passed between “Twilight” flicks — as opposed to the eight months between “New Moon” and “Eclipse” — the fall 2012 release date makes perfect sense. “There’s a mood and spirit to these movies that make them play really well in the fall. They’re darker, they’re more emotional than standard summer fare, and thematically, fall is a great fit,” said John Singh, a box-office analyst for Flixster . “It also allows the audience to build even greater anticipation — rather than seeing the follow-up just a few months later. This gives them a full year to anticipate the final film in a series that has generated hugely positive response from its fanbase.” How do you feel about the two “Breaking Dawn” films opening a year apart? Let us know in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos ‘Twilight’ Stars Talk ‘Breaking Dawn’

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Why ‘Breaking Dawn, Part 2’ Is Set For Fall 2012, Not Summer

Sandra Bullock Tops Forbes List Of Top-Earning Actresses

Reese Witherspoon, Kristen Stewart and Jennifer Aniston also on the list. By Gil Kaufman Sandra Bullock Photo: Jeff Kravitz/ FilmMagic It’s been a rough personal year for Sandra Bullock in the wake of her breakup with husband Jesse James. But according to Forbes magazine, in the midst of her difficult times offscreen, the actress managed to rack up a huge financial payday and rise to the top as the highest-paid actress in Hollywood. Besting such rivals as Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoon and Cameron Diaz, Bullock earned that distinction thanks to a pair of huge hits: “The Proposal,” which grossed $320 million; and “The Blind Side,” which racked up $310 million and helped her earn an Academy Award. While Bullock wisely agreed to take a pay cut from her usual fee to star in “Blind Side,” she got it back and then some in back-end pay, earning $56 million on both films between June 2009 and June 2010, according to Forbes. The magazine calculated its figures based on conversations with agents, managers, producers and lawyers. Next on the list was perennial girl-next-door Witherspoon, who banked $32 million despite not having a big-screen opening since “Four Christmases” bowed during the 2008 holiday season. But she made the #2 spot thanks to her upfront pay for two upcoming movies, “How Do You Know?” and the adaptation of “Water for Elephants,” co-starring “Twilight” hunk Robert Pattinson. She also earned cash for her role as an “ambassador” for Avon. Diaz tied Witherspoon at #2, also with $32 million, which she earned on the Tom Cruise film “Knight & Day” and her sizable income from the “Shrek” franchise, which has earned $2.8 billion to date. Aniston was at #4 with $27 million, which she earned from her appearance in the box-office disappointment “Love Happens,” as well as her upcoming roles in “The Switch” and the Adam Sandler-assisted “Just Go With It.” She also still gets residual checks from “Friends” and has her own perfume line and a lucrative deal with Smartwater. “Sex and the City” star Sarah Jessica Parker was at #5 with $25 million, rolling up cash from the movie franchise and profits from the series’ syndication rights, as well as her strong-selling perfume line and a deal to design clothes for Halston. The rest of the list: Julia Roberts ($20 million), Angelina Jolie ($20 million), Drew Barrymore ($15 million), Meryl Streep ($13 million) and “Twilight” star Kristen Stewart ($12 million). Related Photos The Evolution Of: Sandra Bullock The Evolution Of: Jennifer Aniston

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Sandra Bullock Tops Forbes List Of Top-Earning Actresses

The Story Of Cosmetics

Toxic products in our bathrooms. added by: treewolf39

Large China oil spill threatens sea life, water

China's largest reported oil spill emptied beaches along the Yellow Sea as its size doubled Wednesday, while cleanup efforts included straw mats and frazzled workers with little more than rubber gloves. An official warned the spill posed a “severe threat” to sea life and water quality as China's latest environmental crisis spread off the shores of Dalian, once named China's most livable city. One cleanup worker has drowned, his body coated in crude. “I've been to a few bays today and discovered they were almost entirely covered with dark oil,” said Zhong Yu with environmental group Greenpeace China, who spent the day on a boat inspecting the spill. “The oil is half-solid and half liquid and is as sticky as asphalt,” she told The Associated Press by telephone. The oil had spread over 165 square miles (430 square kilometers) of water five days since a pipeline at the busy northeastern port exploded, hurting oil shipments from part of China's strategic oil reserves to the rest of the country. Shipments remained reduced Wednesday. State media has said no more oil is leaking into the sea, but the total amount of oil spilled is not yet clear. Greenpeace China released photos Wednesday of inky beaches and of straw mats about 2 square meters (21 square feet) in size scattered on the sea, meant to absorb the oil. Fishing in the waters around Dalian has been banned through the end of August, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported. “The oil spill will pose a severe threat to marine animals, and water quality, and the sea birds,” Huang Yong, deputy bureau chief for the city's Maritime Safety Administration, told Dragon TV. At least one person died during cleanup efforts. A 25-year-old firefighter, Zhang Liang, drowned Tuesday when a wave threw him from a vessel, Xinhua reported. Officials, oil company workers and volunteers were turning out by the hundreds to clean blackened beaches. “We don't have proper oil cleanup materials, so our workers are wearing rubber gloves and using chopsticks,” an official with the Jinshitan Golden Beach Administration Committee told the Beijing Youth Daily newspaper, in apparent exasperation. “This kind of inefficiency means the oil will keep coming to shore. … This stretch of oil is really difficult to clean up in the short term.” But 40 oil-skimming boats and about 800 fishing boats were also deployed to clean up the spill, and Xinhua said more than 15 kilometers (9 miles) of oil barriers had been set up to keep the slick from spreading. China Central Television earlier reported an estimate of 1,500 tons of oil has spilled. That would amount roughly to 400,000 gallons (1,500,000 liters) — as compared with 94 million to 184 million gallons in the BP oil spill off the U.S. coast. China's State Oceanic Administration released the latest size of the contaminated area in a statement Tuesday. The cause of the explosion that started the spill was still not clear. The pipeline is owned by China National Petroleum Corp., Asia's biggest oil and gas producer by volume. Friday's images of 100-foot-high (30-meter-high) flames at China's second largest port for crude oil imports drew the immediate attention of President Hu Jintao and other top leaders. Now the challenge is cleaning up the greasy plume. “Our priority is to collect the spilled oil within five days to reduce the possibility of contaminating international waters,” Dalian's vice mayor, Dai Yulin, told Xinhua on Tuesday. But an official with the State Oceanic Administration has warned the spill will be difficult to clean up even in twice that amount of time. Some locals said the area's economy was already hurting. “Let's wait and see how well they deal with the oil until Sept. 1, if the oil can't be cleaned up by then, the seafood products will all be ruined,” an unnamed fisherman told Dragon TV. “No one will buy them in the market because of the smell of the oil.” added by: JanforGore

Top 25 Online Casual Encounter, Booty Call, and Hook-Up Sites

Seriously, who goes online today to find their “soul mates” or the “love of their lives”? OK, so some still do just that. A lot of people who check out dating sites, however, do so with only one thing in mind: To score.

Are Selena Gomez And Joey King The Real-Life Ramona And Beezus?

‘I’m not really comfortable in my skin as much as Beezus is,’ Gomez tells MTV News. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Perri Nemiroff Selena Gomez Photo: MTV News When “Ramona and Beezus” opens Friday, moviegoers might be wondering how much Selena Gomez and Joey King are like their onscreen personalities. And, as it turns out, there’s a bit of Ramona and Beezus in both of them. “I’m not really comfortable in my skin as much as Beezus is, but I do try to do my best in school,” Gomez told MTV News about her character in the film, which also stars “Sex and the City” alumni Bridget Moynahan and John Corbett . “I have a huge imagination, like Ramona, [and] a big personality, but there’s some similarities and some differences between me and Ramona as well,” 10-year-old King added. Gomez has said that King became like a real-life sister to her during filming. “Even when they stopped, when they would say ‘cut,’ we would still just be as loud and talking. We all got along really well,” Gomez said about how “inseparable” she’s become with King . “Pretty much, we talk all the time. She’s like my sister, and I never had a sibling, so she’s as close as I’ve got.” So does that make Gomez the real-life Beezus to King’s Ramona, based on the characters from the beloved Beverly Cleary books? “She’s still the Ramona,” Gomez said. “I go to her for advice, if anything.” “We both have different traits from each character,” King said. “She’s like Ramona in some ways and same for me.” Are you excited to see “Ramona and Beezus” this weekend? Tell us in the comments!

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Are Selena Gomez And Joey King The Real-Life Ramona And Beezus?

Refudiate This: Sarah Palin Decries Ground Zero Mosque, Compares Self to Shakespeare

Sarah Palin has weighed in over a planned mosque near New York’s Ground Zero – an idea she took to her Twitter page to encourage Muslims to refudiate. Yes, you read that right. Refudiate. “Ground Zero Mosque supporters: doesn’t it stab you in the heart, as it does ours throughout the heartland? Peaceful Muslims, pls refudiate,” she Tweeted. No word if she refudiates the engagement of Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston , but last week, she coined the term regarding NAACP allegations of racist elements within the Tea Party movement, saying “[The Obamas] could refudiate” them. After much mockery, she then Tweeted this: “‘Refudiate,’ ‘misunderestimate,’ ‘wee-wee’d up.’ English is a living language. Shakespeare liked to coin new words too. Got to celebrate it!” Yes. However jokingly, Sarah Palin has compared herself to Shakespeare. Perhaps more amazing than her non-word choice was the message of the Tweet, seen by some as a cynical effort to stoke ugly anti-Muslim sentiment. The building’s planners, the American Society for Muslim Advancement and the Cordoba Initiative, say it’s modeled on religious and community centers. The 13-story, $100 million building will include an arts center, gym and a swimming pool, as well as a mosque, two blocks away from Ground Zero. CBS and NBC nixed an ad opposing it from the National Republican Trust PAC that melded footage of the 9/11 attacks with sounds of Muslim prayer. A recent poll showed a majority of New Yorkers oppose the plan. However, an aide in Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s City Hall hit back at Sarah , Tweeting: “@SarahPalinUSA mind your business.” “@SarahPalinUSA whose hearts? Racist hearts?” Zing! The aide, Andrea Batista Schlesinger, deleted both tweets after posting them, with Bloomberg’s staff stating she was expressing her opinion alone. She later explained: “Deleted post bc I regretted curt response. But fact is, I believe this city belongs to everyone – and no one more than another” “Unlike @SarahPalinUSA, I was born here grew up here. Was showing off to a visitor today. Look at how beautiful and diverse my city is. I felt pain of 9/11, the trauma.” “I got through it by believing in my city. Not through fear and hate.” Bloomberg has defended the plan, arguing that blocking it would impinge on religious freedom, and has denounced calls to look into its funding.

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Refudiate This: Sarah Palin Decries Ground Zero Mosque, Compares Self to Shakespeare

AP Shills for NAACP Against Wishes of Black Citizens in North Carolina

The Associated Press on Monday published a news item that would more correctly be called a shameless press release on behalf of the NAACP. Writer Allen G. Breed followed the liberal group to Raleigh for a recent show of kabuki theatre. The cause? Getting the Wake County school system to continue the antiquated method of forcibly busing students to far-flung neighborhoods in pursuit of racial integration. Never mind that the minority-heavy county brought sweeping changes to the school board by giving Republicans control last year – on the very platform of ending integration. And never mind that the majority of African-Americans living there are either opposed or indifferent to school integration. The NAACP knows what is best for them. Breed predictably began with the headline ” Fear of ‘Resegregation’ Fuels Unrest in NC .” What followed was a history lesson obviously designed to drum up more fear: In the annals of desegregation, Raleigh is barely a footnote. Integration came relatively peacefully to the North Carolina capital. There was no “stand in the schoolhouse door,” no need of National Guard escorts or even a federal court order. Nearly 50 years passed – mostly uneventfully, at least until a new school board majority was elected last year on a platform supporting community schools. The result has been turmoil. When a mainstream media news item uses a delicate word like “turmoil,” you can usually take that as a sign of some unhinged liberal getting arrested. In this case, that’s exactly what happened : four activists, including the NAACP state leader, disrupted a school board meeting in front of media cameras, sat in the chairs belonging to the school officials, and waited to be pulled away by police. This apparently made them heroes in the eyes of Breed, who contacted at least one of them for a quote: “We’re not going to sit idly by while they turn the clock back on the blood, sweat and tears and wipe their feet on the sacrifices of so many that have enabled us to get to the place we are today,” says the Rev. William J. Barber II, head of the state NAACP chapter and one of the four protesters arrested for trespassing at the June 15 board meeting. If Barber is so worried about those trying to turn back the clock, his outrage is aimed in the wrong direction. The new school board was elected to do that very thing by voters in the county, many of them minorities, tired of the pointless practice of integration. Raleigh’s local News and Observer provides information from 2009 that got conveniently ignored by the AP: Winning candidates in Tuesday’s Wake County school board elections achieved their victories by tapping into widespread resentment about the schools and offering up the rallying cry “neighborhood schools.” So these proponents of localized education were swept into power by a population ready and willing to “turn back the clock” on school integration. But wait, it gets worse: Interviews with candidates and supporters showed that other factors in the near-sweep by opponents of current school board policies included:   Lackluster support for current board diversity policies by Democrats and even opposition by a significant percentage of African-Americans, as reflected in a private poll taken by a Democratic operative last month. A core of discontent not only with board policies on diversity but also with year-round schools and what opponents called an arrogant and distant board and administration. Indeed, that internal poll conducted by a Democrat campaign operative in September 2009 found that some 46 percent of black voters opposed forced busing, 14 percent had no opinion, and only 39 percent approved. In other words, the NAACP is staging protests and spouting about civil rights against the very wishes of nearly half the African-Americans in Wake County.  The AP did eventually get around to admitting that some folks wanted to repeal integration… only to reprimand them for being ignorant: With 140,000 students in 160 schools, Wake County was the largest of about 70 districts across the nation using socio-economic status to maintain diversity. The system was considered a model for those looking for a way around race-based assignment scheme rejected by the courts. “It (the Wake County system) really was a beacon, a flag around which more and more people were rallying as they saw the positive effects of this,” says sociologist Gerald Grant, a professor emeritus at Syracuse University and author of the book “Hope and Despair in the American City: Why There are No Bad Schools in Raleigh.” But some parents grew tired of sending their children off on long bus rides. Others said the policy may have brought whites and blacks together, but it wasn’t really helping blacks educationally. And there are those who say people forgot how bad the bad old days were. “For folks who were there and lived through it, there’s a real sense of a collective forgetting, a collective amnesia,” says James Leloudis, a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who was in high school when the county system integrated. “There is a kind of tragic disremembering.” Part of the story is that Wake County is increasingly populated by people who did not grow up here and do not feel the tug or burden of that history. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, about half of Wake County’s residents were born outside North Carolina. So let’s break this down. First, courts kept striking down racially-driven school district schemes, but the geniuses in Wake County circumvented this by calling their scheme economically-driven, and this trick was heralded by liberal community organizers nationwide. Yet despite the apparent brilliance of this scheme, voters were unable to appreciate their good fortunes. Kids didn’t like being stuck on a bus for an hour, parents didn’t like PTA meetings on the other side of the city, and minority children were still not matching white peers on performance. The whole scheme was wasting money, time, fuel, and resources, all for very little gain. And then outsiders moved to Raleigh with their silly ideas of attending the school nearest home. Impressionable young black families, who don’t harbor resentment from the 1950s, are being convinced that forced busing is a stupid idea. Middle age NAACP activists are the true voice of the black community and know what is best for these naïve young blacks. This is what the Associated Press calls an informative news report about a complex issue. But it wasn’t done yet! No article on race would be complete without a random shot at tea parties: A columnist for The News & Observer in Raleigh recently called Margiotta and Tedesco “a couple of carpetbagging Northerners.” And Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker referred to the board majority as “people who are not from the area, who don’t share our values,” and announced the formation of a group to ensure that any new student assignment plan doesn’t violate the state constitutional guarantee of a sound education. The NAACP’s Barber admits busing supporters were caught napping last fall. But with five seats – including Margiotta’s – up for grabs next year, they are determined to keep up the heat to counter what “the anti-diversity, right-wing, tea party-sympathizing, resegregationist caucus is doing in Wake County.” That’s right, folks. If you think it’s pointless to make a black student sit on a bus for an hour to attend a school miles away from friends and family, you’re a right-wing bigot. The AP did not quote one single black voter who disagreed with the NAACP. It didn’t cite any polling data on how local minorities felt, and it didn’t share any facts on how ineffective the scheme has been. How kind of the AP to care so much about the plight of poor minorities in North Carolina. Perhaps when the news wire gets done propping up liberal activist groups, it can return to reporting on actual news from that state – like say, perhaps, the ongoing investigation against former governor Mike Easley, which the AP has all but ignored in recent months. Since the local affairs of North Carolina are of so much interest to readers nationwide, it would only make sense to report on all of them. Or do nationwide readers only need to hear about the NAACP’s grasp at relevance?

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AP Shills for NAACP Against Wishes of Black Citizens in North Carolina

Alan Shadrake picture

British author Alan Shadrake speaks during the launch of his book “Once a Jolly Hangman” in Singapore July 17, 2010. Singapore police have arrested Shadrake on charges of criminal defamation and contempt of court, a day after he launched a book on death penalty in the city-state. The arrest was made pursuant to a report that was lodged by the government#39;s Media Development Authority on Friday, the Singapore police said in a statement. Photo taken on July 17, 2010. British writer Alan Shadrak

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Alan Shadrake picture