Tag Archives: clouds

Oprah Winfrey Is God, Confirms Heavenly OWN Promo

When Joel McHale visited Conan Wednesday night, he joked that Oprah Winfrey had the power to raise the dead. And after watching the Oprah Winfrey Network’s first promo — in which the she-deity herself announces her new cable channel from the clouds while looking down on lowly mortals — Movieline is almost convinced that she can perform the same miracles as God himself.

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Oprah Winfrey Is God, Confirms Heavenly OWN Promo

BREAKING NEWS: BP Announces Oil Spilling Into Gulf Has Been Stopped By The Cap..

! http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2010/07/15/2010-07-15_bp_announces_no_m… http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/16/us/16spill.html/ BP Says That Oil Flow Has Stopped as Cap Is Tested NEW ORLEANS — Oil stopped gushing into the Gulf of Mexico for the first time in nearly three months, as BP began testing the cap atop its stricken well, a critical step toward sealing the well permanently. This Land: From an Oyster in the Gulf, a Domino Effect (July 16, 2010) Times Topic: Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill (2010) Reuters “I am very excited that there’s no oil in the Gulf of Mexico,” Kent Wells, a senior vice president for BP, said about the flow during a teleconference on Thursday, “but we just started the test and I don’t want to create a false sense of excitement.” Oil stopped flowing at 2:25 p.m. local time, Mr. Wells said, when engineers closed the choke line, the final seal of the well. Engineers and scientists will now examine the results of the tests every six hours to determine the pressure levels. The view one mile beneath the gulf on BP’s continuous live video feed was conspicuously calm, devoid of the clouds of crude oil that had been billowing since the disaster first occurred in April. Despite the long-anticipated moment, officials involved in the spill effort, including President Obama, were quick to downplay the development as a temporary measure. “I think it is a positive sign, we’re still in the testing phase and I’ll have more to say about it tomorrow,” President Obama said in response to a shouted question at the conclusion of a news conference devoted entirely to the passage of the financial regulatory bill. “We’re encouraged by this development, but this isn’t over,” Thad W. Allen, the retired Coast Guard admiral who is overseeing the federal response to the spill, said in a statement on Thursday. “It remains likely that we will return to the containment process using this new stacking cap connected to the risers to attempt to collect up to 80,000 barrels of oil per day until the relief well is completed.” Earlier on Thursday, the national incident commander, Thad W. Allen, said that closing the well off using the containment cap would only be an interim measure, and that the company must still complete the relief wells it is working on in order to seal the well for good. The test commenced after two days of delays while BP fixed a leak in the equipment that engineers discovered on Wednesday night. Engineers replaced equipment on the tight-sealing cap that has been placed at the top of well, 5,000 feet under water, said Kent Wells, a senior vice president of the company. The equipment, part of a choke line that was the last valve to be closed before the pressure test could begin. BP said that its three-ram capping stack was closed, “effectively shutting in the well and all sub-sea containment systems.” Live feeds of video images from the undersea well clearly showed that the release of oil had had been completely halted. Mr. Allen, clarified the role of the cap in his news conference on Thursday morning, saying that this mechanism was never meant to be the ultimate solution to closing the well. Mr. Allen called it a “precursor” to containment, making it possible for the gushing crude to be captured through four different systems that together can keep up with the estimated rate of flow, which the government now puts at 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day. If all goes well, it may also be used to seal the well completely for brief periods. “I don’t want to reverse the priorities here, because the priority was to contain and stop the flow of oil,” he said, “but the design of the cap itself, if we can withstand the pressures and the well bore stays intact, presents the opportunity to shut the well in, which will give us the ability to abandon the site in a hurricane, so it’s a two-for if we can do it.” The test involves closing all the valves on the new cap, which was installed earlier in the week, to increase pressure in the well so that BP can assess its condition over the length of the well bore, which extends 13,000 feet below the seabed. Mr. Allen likened the process to putting a thumb over the end of a running garden hose. If the pressure does not rise as a result, that means there is a leak somewhere. In the case of the well, if the resulting pressure is high, that means the well bore is intact, he said. “We have been slowly using mechanisms to close off the hose,” Mr. Allen said. With those mechanisms all but closed off by Thursday morning, BP prepared to start watching the pressure readings. If all goes well and the pressure remains high, the test will continue for 48 hours. But even then, the oil will not be completely stopped, Mr. Allen said, as BP evaluates the test results with seismic readings beneath the sea. added by: keithponder

Doutzen Kroes and DJ Sunnery James: Expecting!

Victoria’s Secret beauty Doutzen Kroes is expecting her first child, a rep for the model confirms! The baby’s father is her fianc

‘Predators’: Buffet Dining, By Kurt Loder

Adrien Brody’s on the menu. Adrien Brody and Alice Braga in “Predators” Photo: 20th Century Fox The strapping beastie of the “Predator” franchise remains pretty much the same after 23 years — dread of lock, moist of mandible. It’s the humans in his life who seem to have devolved. In the first film, his chief antagonist was played by that pre-gubernatorial muscle-mountain, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Now, in “Predators,” the crafty alien faces off against the willowy Adrien Brody — not an opponent to strike dread in the heart (or whatever) of any self-respecting behemoth, you’d think. “Predators” is a B movie that knows its job, and does it. Which means, among other things, that making sense is not on its to-do list. The picture opens with a group of people falling from the sky into a jungle. What are they doing here? None of them knows. One minute each of them was sleeping, the next they were plummeting through the clouds. That’s that. Where are they? The group’s lone woman, Isabelle (Alice Braga), looks around suspiciously. “I’ve never seen this jungle,” she says. “And I’ve seen most.” Isabelle hails from Guatemala, where she no doubt saw quite a bit of jungle, but has lately been employed as a sniper by the Israeli Defense Force, whose missions are not often thought to be jungle-related. But whatever. The movie germinated from an unproduced 1994 script by pulp fan Robert Rodriguez (one of the producers here), which was more recently refined by Alex Litvak and Michael Finch. Faced with the challenge of revitalizing a creature that has already been the subject of four previous films (if you count two trans-franchise dalliances with the slobbery Alien), they and director Nimr

Real Housewives of Orange County: The Sands of Time

Well, the bleakest season of Orange County yet continues apace, with divorce and bad parenting and vain attempts to redeem a questioned character. Could we be nearing the end of this great sunshiney reality experiment? The winter has settled like a forlorn and threadbare blanket on the fire-blasted hills of Southern California, a great howling moan coming from the stucco mansions and the bleached swimming pools and the lazy boutiques dotting the car-filled avenues.

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Real Housewives of Orange County: The Sands of Time

Kenna Says First Day Of Kilimanjaro Climb Is ‘A Bit Harder Than I Expected’

Singer says Santigold is Summit on the Summit’s flashiest hiker, Jessica Biel the most determined. By Gil Kaufman Kenna at Summit on Mount Kilimanjaro Photo: Summit on the Summit If you’re shivering wherever you are, just be glad you’re not doing it while trekking up the highest mountain in Africa.

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Kenna Says First Day Of Kilimanjaro Climb Is ‘A Bit Harder Than I Expected’