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Algeria Vs Slovenia Prediction Live Score FIFA World Cup 2010

Algeria and Slovenia are struggling equally as USA and England are strongly supported to qualify in group C. Winning this match is crucial as losing team might pack up their clothes and dreams. added by: f4schennai

Pakistan Out of 2010 FIFA Football World Cup

Adil Najam Unlike the 2006 FIFA World Cup, when Pakistan was represented in each and every game of the world’s premier sporting tournament – in the shape of Pakistani manufactured footballs – Pakistan will be missing in action at the 2010 FIFA Football World Cup that starts in South Africa later this week. This year’s official match football for the World Cup – Jabulani or Jo’bulani (manufactured by Adidas and meaning ‘to celebrate’ in Zulu – will come from China, not Pakistan. Pakistani footballs, of course, have a long history of being kicked around in Football World Cup tournaments. From the iconic Telstar (which was the first designated official game ball, at the 1970 Mexico World Cup and then at the 1974 World Cup in Germany) to the even more iconic Tango (the official ball of the 1978 and 1982 World Cups in Argentina and Spain), and even at the last World Cup in 2006 in Germany, hand-stitched, high-performance from Pakistan – really from Sialkot – have been the preferred choice for Adidas, the official providers of match balls to the FIFA World Cups. No longer so, it seems. Indeed, from once commanding as much as 85% of the world’s market in footballs, Pakistani manufacturers now believe that they will supply no more than 30-40 percent of the footballs sold around this mega-event. Pakistan, of course, is not a football power at all – ranked 165th out of 202 countries in the world. But like everywhere else, football fever can get high in Pakistan too ( here and here). This year, however, we would no longer be kicked around on the FIFA World Cup soccer fields. This should be read not just as a matter of national pride, but as yet another sign of the changing global economic landscape, Pakistan’s sliding economic fortunes, and a need to focus more deeply on Pakistan’s enterprise-level economic structures than we often do. The most commonly cited reason for Pakistan’s dwindling football fortunes is the use of child labor in the football industry. Even though the practice is now far less than it used to be, there are still instances of it and the stigma has lingered. In this particular case, technology may also have a lot to do with it. The new ball is being described in technological rather than craft terms: “The newly developed ‘Grip’n’Groove’ profile provides the best players in the world with a ball allowing an exceptionally stable flight and perfect grip under all conditions. Comprising only eight, completely new, thermally bonded 3-D panels, which for the first time are spherically molded, the ball is perfectly round and even more accurate than ever before.” And, of course, Pakistan’s security situation also must have had some impact in perceptions. An good overview report of the football manufacturing industry in Pakistan was recently published in The Express Tribune: Soccer or football is the most popular sport in the world. And for many, this means great economic opportunity. At one time, Pakistan’s export city of Sialkot was catering to 85 per cent of the total world demand for high-quality hand-stitched inflatable balls. A workforce of 85,000 was employed to produce 60 million balls per year worth $210 million. In Fifa World Cup years the demand for stitched balls rises by 70 per cent. Consecutive governments however, ignored this industry and failed to plan ahead to tackle the growing competition from China, India and Japan. For a long time this vital industry also faced criticism from European countries and especially from United States with allegations of using child labour. The Sialkot Chamber of Commerce and Industry took prompt measures to curb child labour from the soccer ball industry in accordance with the Atlanta Agreement signed with the International Labour Organisation (ILO) and Unicef in February 1997. It is estimated that some 93 per cent of child labour was progressively eradicated from this vital industry and necessary steps were taken to provide social protection to children and their families. The children who were associated with this industry were provided with good schooling. The vital steps taken by the soccer manufacturers and exporter were highly praised by the then United States President Bill Clinton in the address at the ILO convention at Geneva in June 1999. The Sialkot football industry has been contributing millions of export dollars to the national kitty but in the year 2006 the industry’s share in the international market took a significant hit with the entry of new players in the market, notably China and India. Manufacturers from these countries were able to supply balls at a much cheaper rate. According to industry sources, local soccer ball manufacturers have been able to grab around 30 to 40 per cent of the total orders floated globally for the upcoming Fifa World Cup. This is a sharp decline from the 70-80 per cent bagged during the 1998 and 2002 World tournaments. The local football industry earned $164 million in export earnings in the financial year 09, as against an average of $221 million per annum earned during financial years 2005-08. Power and gas shortage are not making it any easier for the industry, and sources say that a number of business have failed to meet deadlines which has dented their reputation. Technology was also a major factor in tilting the balance against the local industry. The penetration of machine-made balls hit the Sialkot hand made stitched soccer industry. And in the present scenario of fast growing globalisation hand-stitched balls will not be able to compete with machine-made footballs. It is important that the local industry moves forward and embraces new technology to meet the needs of the international market. Industry sources also say that China has received large export orders of footballs from a number of countries ahead of the June 2010 Football World Cup. Pakistan Sports Goods Manufacturers and Exporters Association is rightly concerned over this state of affairs. According to Arif Mehmood Sheikh, a former chairman (PSGMEA) the shift of a large number of orders to China should serve as an ‘eye opener’ for every one. He said that the factors behind the diversion of export orders to China was a combination of rising cost of production and inability to meet deadlines, which in turn were caused by rising POL prices and unreliable power supply. This has made it difficult for Sialkot exporters to compete with manufacturers in China, India, Nepal and Thailand. With the government looking for new avenues to bridge the fiscal deficit and the trade deficit, it is very important that measures be taken to build upon the advantages that Pakistan holds in the global market, and not allow others to encroach upon them. The Sialkot exporters have urged the government to come up with some sort of trade related package to stop the diversion of football export orders through the Trade Development Authority, likewise enforcing suitable measures to encourage the export of hand stitched fooballs. Outdated manufacturing techniques still in use by the local industry is a major hurdle in enhancing exports. This industry for its survival is in dire need of advanced technology and early provisioning of skilled labour. The Sialkot manufacturers and exporters have realised that in the event of a change in the global trend from hand stitched balls to mechanically stitched balls they will also need to make the shift. In order to cope with the menace of machine made balls, the Small and Medium Enterprise Development Authority has at put in place the final steps for the establishing of the Sports Industries Development Centre. It is expected that this project worth Rs435 million will enable the Sialkot sports manufacturing industry to adopt modern technology, without which there is no going forward. Sad as this situation is, I intend to follow the World Cup in South Africa, as will so many other Pakistanis. Probably no where more so than in Lyari – a community whose passion for soccer is boundless.

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Pakistan Out of 2010 FIFA Football World Cup

Waka Waka

Shakira will be in 3D this weekend when the FIFA World Cup Official 2010 video is released . This will be the first time ever that millions of people will see a 3D performance video at the same time around the world. Shakira sings Waka Waka (This Time for Africa) as the Official 2010 FIFA World Cup Song. Yesterday, the official release of the 2010 FIFA World Cup video was released complimenting this song and giving viewers around the world a chance to catch the FIFA World Cup fever. The song, focusing on the host country of the region, gives the chance to see more of the country and bring together the world under one sport. The vivid colors of the area are seen in the clothes as well as video for the sport. The world is bracing for an exciting time of World Cup fever. Teams have been arriving in South America over the week with hundreds of fans already present. Bracing for one of the largest events means having the world come together and scream every time a goal is scored.

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Waka Waka

CNN Blames White People For Obama’s Slow Action On Oil Spill

The excuses keep rolling in to explain why President Obama is seemingly detached from the oil spill crisis in the Gulf of Mexico. On Wednesday, CNN.com reached a new low by blatantly playing the race card: President Obama is afraid to look angry in public because white people historically haven’t liked angry black men. This conclusion was reached by four supposed experts (all of whom were sympathetic to Obama), with no one else mentioned to provide any ounce of skepticism. Apparently CNN’s logic goes something like this: Obama grew up being afraid of offending white people, so he developed a natural aversion to public displays of emotion, which means his cool response to the oil spill right now is the final product of white bigotry. Writer John Blake got straight to the point with his headline ” Why Obama Doesn’t Dare Become the Angry Black Man .” It was all downhill from there (h/t NBer Mr. Shy): Here’s proof that President Obama has indeed ushered in a new era in race relations. Who would have ever expected some white Americans to demand that an African-American man show more rage? If you’ve followed the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster, you’ve heard the complaints that Obama isn’t showing enough emotion. But scholars say Obama’s critics ignore a lesson from American history: Many white Americans don’t like angry black men. It’s the lesson Obama absorbed from his upbringing, and from an impromptu remark he delivered last summer. Yet it’s a lesson he may now have to jettison, they say, as public outrage spreads. Notice the sleight of hand being used here: President Obama’s election advanced race relations further than even he is enlightened enough to realize, causing him to be puzzled by white Americans suddenly wanting to see emotion. And we know it has to be true because there are scholars who say so! Who are these scholars? Sadly, the answer is all too predictable. Up first was one Saladin Ambar who made an off-putting analogy to Samuel Jackson: “Folks are waiting for a Samuel Jackson ‘Snakes on the Plane’ moment from this president as in: ‘We gotta’ get this $#@!!* oil back in the $#!!* rig!’ But that’s just not who Obama is,” says Saladin Ambar, a political science professor at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. How innocuous that Ambar was simply called a political science professor. Left out of CNN’s coverage was the fact that Ambar has long been a fan of President Obama, and has used his respected position as a professor to glorify Obama’s policies in front of college students. Next came liberal activist William Jelani Cobb who agreed wholeheartedly with Ambar, but this time with a book to sell: Some of the same people crying for Obama to show more emotion would have voted against him if he had displayed anger during his presidential run, says William Jelani Cobb, author of “The Substance of Hope: Barack Obama and the Paradox of Progress.” “It would have fed deeply into a pre-existing set of narratives about the angry black man,” Cobb says. “The anger would have gotten in the way. He would have frightened off white voters who were interested in him because he seemed to be like the black guy they worked with or went to graduate school with — not a black guy who is threatening.” Cobb is one of many university professors obsessed with race whom the media keep on speed dial to help with this very subject. It came as a surprise to exactly no one that he saw racism at work yet again. As to the substance of his commentary – that President Obama could have blown it by getting emotional during the 2008 campaign – CNN was helpful enough to find yet another expert to corroborate the claim: Evoking the specter of the angry black man almost cost Obama his shot at the White House, says Paul Street, an author and political activist who worked with Obama in Chicago. Street says videos of Obama’s former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, angrily condemning America were so dangerous to Obama’s campaign because it hinted that Obama may have been an angry black man behind closed doors. “Rev. Wright almost cost him his run for the presidency because of fears of the angry black man,” says Street, author of the upcoming book “The Empire’s New Clothes: Barack Obama in the Real World of Power.” “What was Rev. Wright but the ultimate symbol of the angry black man who is going to take revenge,” Street says. That symbol is hardwired into American history and popular culture. It’s Nat Turner, the slave who inspired a bloody 19th-century uprising. It’s Malcolm X, the black militant who denounced “blue-eyed devils.” It’s the hip-hop and rap artists who populate contemporary radio. Street’s entire point was that Jeremiah Wright was toxic for all the wrong reasons. Americans weren’t afraid that Obama agreed with a hateful ideology, they were just repulsed by the thought of a black person who sounded angry. According to the article, such superficial racism showed up again in 2009: But Obama has “gone off” before and that didn’t work too well for him, says Ambar. During a news conference last summer, Obama casually said that police acted “stupidly” when they arrested Harvard professor Henry Louis “Skip” Gates in his home for disorderly conduct after a confrontation with a white police officer. Obama’s comments infuriated many white people, and even some black supporters. Obama had to have a Beer Summit to calm the public uproar. “He flashed genuine anger,” says Ambar. “At that moment, when he touched on the issue of race, he spoke frankly and passionately about what he felt and it got him into a big deal of trouble.” Once again, the message being relayed here is all too clear: if you disagreed with Obama’s handling of anything from Jeremiah Wright to Henry Gates, you’re a racist who just doesn’t like anger spouting from black people. Obama had “casually” thrown in a comment about stupidity, but somehow it was a passionate display of “genuine anger” anyway, and thus he got in trouble for being too emotional. But the most shocking observance from an expert was yet to come. The article closed with a quote from John Baick, assistant professor of history at Western New England College, who insisted that the oil spill was just a passing inconvenience in the bigger picture: “Our commander in chief has many burdens, and among them is our history and culture,” Baick says. “Compared to the weight of that, the current BP crisis and the years of environmental damage and cleanup must seem transient.” That’s right, folks. Weeks and weeks of an endless gush of oil, billions of dollars gone, human lives lost, entire species in peril, thousands of jobs hanging in the balance, and the coast of poor states like Louisiana virtually destroyed for what could be many years – all of this is some transient thing compared to Obama’s personal fear of white America. There might be some out there who think President Obama should stop worrying about who he offends and just make the tough choices a leader has to make, but CNN would have none of that. Nothing in the article suggested that maybe, just maybe, Obama supporters were making excuses to cover for an ineffective president. The entire premise was accepted and passed on to readers as plain fact. Four experts tapped to express an unprecedented amount of sympathy for our poor beleaguered president, and no one around to provide balance of any kind. That’s the Most Trusted Name in News hard at work. 

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CNN Blames White People For Obama’s Slow Action On Oil Spill

Russell Brand talks his way to Hollywood stardom

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Unlike most emerging Hollywood stars, there’s nothing Russell Brand won’t talk about. At 34, he’s practically already said and done it all. The British, brash, self-confessed former sex, heroin and crack addict, whose pranks and antics included being forced to resign as a BBC radio host after lewd phone calls, is now rising through the ranks of Hollywood movie stars in roles that show off his famous, fast-talking ways. This week he tests out his first major starring role on U.S. movie audiences in “Get Him to the Greek,” which gives top billing to his old role as music pop star Aldous Snow from the 2008 film “Forgetting Sarah Marshall.” It opens in U.S. theaters on Friday. Brand says the character, who in the film takes a naive record label intern on a hedonistic descent into the world of sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll, reminds him of his dark and wild days chronicled in his irreverent 2007 memoir “My Booky Wook.” “It’s like being able to, for a very brief stint, live out the dark fantasies of the past that were troublesome to actually live the first time,” he told Reuters in his usual tongue-in-cheek tone in a recent interview. “Get Him to the Greek” — a spin-off of sorts from “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” in which the Aldous Snow character was only one part of a broader story — co-stars Jonah Hill as the intern (Aaron Green) who struggles to take Snow from London to Los Angeles for a concert at the city’s Greek Theater. Along the way, the pair get into tricky escapades and, of course, learn what is truly important in life. DRAMATIC AND EMOTIONAL While the role of Snow takes full advantage of Brand’s comic reputation and while audiences may see him as merely an attention seeker, Brand is a classically trained actor. He said that, at least for “a little while,” he would be happy to carve out a career like Adam Sandler or Jack Black. Brand will appear opposite Oscar winner Helen Mirren in a film version of “The Tempest” and is set to remake the 1981 Dudley Moore comedy “Arthur,” about a wealthy man who refuses to grow up, also alongside Mirren. He studied at London’s Drama Center, and although he jokes about it — “you know, take your clothes off, start crying. That type of school” — he seems able to easily express the emotions needed to be an actor. In his memoir Brand was candid in detailing a troubled childhood in industrial Essex, England, as well as various sex and drug-filled adventures in the underbelly of London before landing a hosting gig at youth-oriented MTV. “I am still a very emotionally visceral, volatile man, tumultuous to the end, forever flinging out feelings. I am not at all spent,” he said. “There is still a craving, a yearning.” He has now left London for Los Angeles, and said he intends to marry his girlfriend, pop star Katy Perry, this year. That relationship has made Brand and Perry fodder for the celebrity tabloids, which he despairs. “It’s a horror to be in the tabloids,” Brand said. “I don’t mind intelligent analysis, but what can we do? We live spellbound in a cyclical bubble of senseless illusions.” In real-life, Brand often likes to quote French philosopher Michel Foucault, and he cites Richard Pryor, Gandhi, P.G. Wodehouse, Oscar Wilde and Dorothy Parker as among his heroes. He says he practices daily meditation, ashtanga yoga, a 12-step recovery program to stave off addictions and ultimately, he wants “to make all people connected through spiritual magnetism.” As for money, fame and glory, “it’s nice to have them,” he said. “But on the horizon there is something valuable to pursue, and I don’t think it’s about the acquisition of wealth.” (Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Alex Dobuzinskis)

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Russell Brand talks his way to Hollywood stardom

Erykah Badu Strips Again For Vibe Cover

Singer says ‘Window Seat’ video was controversial because ‘sexuality that’s not for male consumption’ makes people uncomfortable. By Jayson Rodriguez Erykah Badu on the July cover of Vibe Magazine Photo: Vibe Magazine Erykah Badu appears to be topless on the cover of the new issue of Vibe, and in her interview with the magazine, she continues to discuss nudity in her “Window Seat” video . In the clip, which Badu debuted on her own website back in March, the singer strips her clothes off as she nears Dallas’ Dealey Plaza as a symbolic gesture of freedom. The move, however, drew criticism for a number of reasons, including the fact that the shoot occurred near the site of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination. The singer also received backlash simply for disrobing in a video; online commentators suggested she was using sex to sell her music. Badu scoffed at that notion, though. “I look at some other videos. I’m not naming names, because I don’t want that to be mentioned. There is the thing with sexuality,” Badu told Vibe. “I’m naked for 13 seconds, and these people are naked the whole time and gyrating and saying come ‘lick on my lollipop’ and ‘suck on my cinnamon roll’ and, you know, suggesting sex. People are uncomfortable with sexuality that’s not for male consumption. Could be ’cause I did it in public too. Do you think people would have been complaining if I had on high-heel shoes?” Badu was charged with disorderly conduct over the video and later pleaded not guilty . Badu splits the June/July cover of Vibe with Nicki Minaj, whose cover shot portrays her as a sexy anime-style girl in a maid’s uniform. The pair follows Young Jeezy and Trey Songz, and Chris Brown and Drake as split-cover subjects in the magazine since it re-launched late last year. Which Vibe cover, Erykah Badu or Nicki Minaj, are you most excited to see? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos The Evolution Of: Erykah Badu Erykah Badu’s ‘Window Seat’: Shot By Shot Related Artists Erykah Badu

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Erykah Badu Strips Again For Vibe Cover

MOST ANNOYING SHOW STAFFERS

Okay, I have been a loyal listener to the Stern show since the mid 1990s. I have seen Stern’s cast of co-workers grow immensely in the last 15 years…and that is not only always a good thing. So I wanted to compile a list of the Stern staffers that annoy me the most…starting with the most annoying first: 1. SCOTT DEPACE 2. DOUG GOODSTEIN 3. JD HARMEYER 4. WILL MURRAY 5. SAL THE STOCKBROKER The only one I met personally from my list is Sal. Sal is a funny guy, but definitely not the type of guy I would like to have a conversation with. Who annoys you from the show???

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MOST ANNOYING SHOW STAFFERS

Taking off my clothes is Patriotic, says Rick’s Cabaret Girl

photo credit: George Napolitano Taking off my clothes is Patriotic, says Rick’s Cabaret Girl Rick’s Cabaret Girls Enjoying “Fleet Week” Thousands of sailors are docked in New York City for “Fleet Week,” and the midtown Rick’s Cabaret is the top spot for the guys to visit. “I love dancing for a man in uniform,” said McKenzie, a 36D-25-34 brunette beauty. “And there were a lot of the sailors in here last night,” she said.Fleet Week has begun and Rick’s Cabaret continues its tradition of always offering free admission to all military personnel in uniform. “I want to show the guys how much we appreciate what they do for us,” said Karina, a 33B-23-32 auburn haired vixen. “They do so much for our country. Taking off my clothes for them is the patriotic thing to do,” she explained. Rick’s Cabaret 50 West 33 Street NYC ricks.com

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Taking off my clothes is Patriotic, says Rick’s Cabaret Girl

Anna Paquin’s Shitty Bisexual Nipple in the Ocean of the Day

I hate bitches who swim in their shorts and t-shirts…I see it at the beach, the public pool, the waterpark, pretty much everywhere and I drives me fucking crazy no matter how ugly or gross or scared of the sun the body of the bitch is…. I understand it’s some insecurity shit that bitches with horrible bodies think make them look better than wearing an actual bikini, but the ill fitting wetness of swimming in your clothes like a fucking Muslim woman who isn’t allowed to show skin, makes she worse….Not to mention it isn’t feminine and I guess I should expect that from a closet Lesbian/openly bisexual cuz that’s step one to accepting your a fucking lesbian…who is built like a dude…and now swimming like a dude who doesn’t want to get a sunburn… I have went swimming with an uptight, sloppy bodied, lesbian once years ago….she didn’t want to wear a bathing suit, because it went against her lesbian grain….and she jumped in with shorts and a t-shirt that ended up turning see through…like Anna Paquin’s top…showing the whole group her nipples and bush…only to run off crying when I pointed out that her strategy to cover up by not wearing a bathing suit like a normal person was a backfire for her but win for all of us…. Either way, here’s her nipple, cuz ugly tit and horrible body or not, nipple is nipple… Pics via Bauer

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Anna Paquin’s Shitty Bisexual Nipple in the Ocean of the Day

Kelly Brook Ass in Some Sneaker Ad of the Day

I have a lazy pig of a wife who never really does anything that involves getting off the couch or eating prepared food. I don’t think I’ve ever seen her clean, do laundry, shower or cook…even though you’d think someone her size would love cooking and would have to clean both her clothes and herself because of the constant sweating….but laziness always overcomes…So I love seeing women in traditional gender roles, when bitches would spend the days at home cooking and cleaning and fucking the mailman out of boredom, while the husband was at the office making money while fucking the secretary, the cleaning staff, the neighbor’s wife…so this pictures of Kelly Brook get me and my needs and touch me on an emotional level, but unfortunatley are totally unbelievable, because I know any bitch that looks this good is married to a dude who has enough money to pay a staff and is just as lazy as my wife to do these menial everyday chores left for the common folk and migrant workers….it’s like this is the other end of the fucking spectrum of pig women, but at least she looks good when pretending…

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Kelly Brook Ass in Some Sneaker Ad of the Day