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Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday: A Cheat Sheet

Young Money mic-ripper’s hotly anticipated major-label debut is finally available for the Barbie army. By Mawuse Ziegbe Nicki Minaj Photo: WireImage Zealous shoppers may plan to shut down malls on Black Friday, but Nicki Minaj’s buzzed-about debut, Pink Friday, is expected to shut down the hip-hop game. The Young Money empress’ major-label effort is one of the most hotly anticipated debuts in recent rap history due to a perfect storm of blue-chip co-signs, jaw-dropping features, a high-profile femcee scuffle and Minaj’s status as one of the most unique characters in music. Within the span of a few short but super-packed years, Minaj rose from a sassy chick from Queens cluttering street mixtapes and viral videos with her “Ether”-worthy lyricism to a bewigged tour de force to be reckoned with. Her razor-sharp bars on “The Come Up” DVD series and the landmark Beam Me Up Scotty mixtape demonstrated her undeniable mic skills, but it was her alignment with both Atlanta sensation Gucci Mane and Young Money boss Lil Wayne that positioned her as a potential game-changer. “Wayne is my sensei. That’s what I call him. He calls me his ninja. ‘Ninja Nicki,’ ” Minaj told MTV News in 2009. It wasn’t long before she was getting the stamp of approval from another superstar Carter. The Jay-Z nod led to a collabo with crooner Robin Thicke, and soon she was playing dress-up with Mariah Carey in the “Up Out My Face” video and stealing the scene on posse cuts like Ludacris’ “My Chick Bad” . The femcee spent the better part of 2010 establishing herself as the collabo queen, adding an extra dose of kink to Usher’s “Lil’ Freak,” shaking up the remix of Diddy-Dirty Money’s “Hello Good Morning” and swinging around Trey Songz’s steamy “Bottoms Up” video . Rick Ross enthused that the raptress’ contribution to Kanye West’s “Monster” proved that “she’s one of the greatest.” But she didn’t neglect to further the Minaj movement with her hotly anticipated solo debut track “Massive Attack.” Minaj also didn’t shy away from the avant garde in her first visual either, cruising down a desert road in a pink Lamborghini with sheared siren Amber Rose in tow and writhing in a jungle with emerald-green locks to the synthy clicks of the Sean Garrett-assisted joint. “I kinda always like to do things in an unexpected fashion,” Minaj told MTV News on set. “I didn’t want to shoot the typical new-artist vision.” “Attack” set the precedent for Minaj’s staunchly atypical videos, like the #1 hit follow-up “Your Love,” in which the MC battles for the heart of her samurai lover in a stylized forest filled with billowing curtains. Like the Annie Lennox-sampling “Your Love,” Minaj’s joint “Check It Out” resurrected another pop jam, the Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star,” and introduced fans to multiple futuristic copies of the MC and her Black Eyed Peas collaborator will.i.am. Although she was always seemingly game to hop on a feature, Minaj put the creation of her debut first, even dropping out of Rihanna’s Last Girl on Earth Tour in April to focus on the effort. Months before she pulled out of the trek, Minaj told MTV News that she didn’t want to throw together a slap-dash album with establishing her star power as a female rapper. “With the album, just like with my mixtape, I never like to rush it,” she said in February . “With the album, I think it’s more important that people get accustomed to seeing a female rapper again. Before I drop an album, people need to come out and see. People don’t even know what a female rapper does. We’re so not used to seeing it. It’s nonexistent in categories. We don’t get nominated. I need to work [the people] up to accepting a female rapper again and accepting my style and all of that — then the album will come.” And just as she wanted it, Minaj nabbed the accolades before releasing her debut. Even before the album hit shelves — or had a title — she racked up awards for her stacks of hit collabos, including an MTV Video Music Award nod for Best New Artist and an MTV News Hottest Breakthrough MC nomination and a BET Award . By early August, the lyricist maintained that “the album is progressing miraculously.” “It’s been very exciting to finally just make music that I love and not really having to incorporate myself on someone else’s record,” Minaj said . “I’ve been having a really great time.” Despite the major hype surrounding her forthcoming release, the pink-haired diva did admit to once being afraid to “put out an album for fear of failure.” However, an outright flop would be especially surprising in light of the chart-topping success of many of Minaj’s solo joints and the instant buzz that cropped up around Friday cuts like the Eminem team-up “Roman’s Revenge.” Minaj’s outsize fame is not the result of just her music. Her zany-yet-seductive persona and membership in the hitmaking Young Money camp are also factors in her ability to corral a hard-core Barbie army. There’s also the sometimes-flirtatious relationship with and short-lived e-marriage to Toronto heartthrob Drake , which has captivated fans. She’s carved out a signature fashion sense that swings from vampy to streetwise to loopy. And unlike most of her peers, she has skyrocketed to hip-hop fame as a woman; a journey that has its own unique set of challenges. Since the summer, Brooklyn lyricist Lil’ Kim has been accusing Minaj of jacking her style and refusing to lace the “Crush on You” spitter with the appropriate amount of props. The back-and-forth between the two has played out in interviews and on wax, with Minaj, who has still never directly addressed Kim by name, getting increasingly aggressive and suggesting that certain lyrics on “Revenge” could be aimed at the Queen Bee. Despite the drama, fans have been amped for the debut LP from the first female rapper to make MTV News’ Hottest MCs list . Fans will also get a chance to delve deeper into the star’s personal life in the forthcoming documentary “Nicki Minaj: My Time Now,” which follows the lyricist as she records her album and grapples with her newfound fame, which premieres Sunday, November 28, at 10 p.m. ET/PT, just days after Pink Friday finally lands in stores. What are you expecting from Pink Friday ? Let us know in the comments! Open the floodgates! It’s Mega-Release Week, with Kanye West, Nicki Minaj, Jay-Z, Ne-Yo, Ke$ha, My Chemical Romance and Lloyd Banks all dropping new albums. Stick with MTV News for everything you need to know about the brand-new music. Don’t miss the documentary “Nicki Minaj: My Time Now,” premiering Sunday, November 28, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Videos ‘RapFix Live’ With Nicki Minaj Related Photos Nicki Minaj’s Wildest Looks

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Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday: A Cheat Sheet

Would You Travel One-Way to Mars?

Image: Jeff Barton and Three Rivers Foundation for the Arts & Sciences This week two scientists, Dirk Schulze-Makuch and Paul Davies, suggested in the Journal of Cosmology that it is time for humans to start colonizing Mars. Humanity needs some intrepid explorers to “boldly go” on a one-way mission to the red planet in order to ensure the conservation of our species in the event of the catastrophic devastation of our blue planet. The risks would be high, and the likelihood of return to Mother Earth would b… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Would You Travel One-Way to Mars?

Stewart Brand and Erich Pica Debate Nuclear Power

With the Republicans in control of the House and cap and trade dead for now, it’s likely that over the next few years there will be renewed focus on the revitalization of nuclear power as an answer to our energy and climate problems. The Huffington Post recently held a debate on the merits of nuclear power with Friends of the Earth US Executive Director Erich Pica and Stewart Brand, co-founder of the Global Business Network … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Stewart Brand and Erich Pica Debate Nuclear Power

Review of Four Decades of Scientific Literature Concludes Lower Atmosphere is Warming

The troposphere, the lower part of the atmosphere closest to the Earth, is warming and this warming is broadly consistent with both theoretical expectations and climate models, according to a new scientific study that reviews the history of understanding of temperature changes and their causes in this key atmospheric layer. Scientists at NOAA, the NOAA-funded Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites (CICS), the United Kingdom Met Office, and the University of Reading in the United Kingdom contributed to the paper, “Tropospheric Temperature Trends: History of an Ongoing Controversy,” a review of four decades of data and scientific papers to be published today by Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews – Climate Change, a peer-reviewed journal. The paper documents how, since the development of the very first climate models in the early 1960s, the troposphere has been projected to warm along with the Earth’s surface because of the increasing amounts of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. This expectation has not significantly changed even with major advances in climate models and is in accord with our basic physical understanding of atmospheric processes. In the 1990s, observations did not show the troposphere, particularly in the tropics, to be warming, even though surface temperatures were rapidly warming. This lack of tropospheric warming was used by some to question both the reality of the surface warming trend and the reliability of climate models as tools. This new paper extensively reviews the relevant scientific analyses — 195 cited papers, model results and atmospheric data sets — and finds that there is no longer evidence for a fundamental discrepancy and that the troposphere is warming. “Looking at observed changes in tropospheric temperature and climate model expectations over time, the current evidence indicates that no fundamental discrepancy exists, after accounting for uncertainties in both the models and observations,” said Peter Thorne, a senior scientist with CICS in Asheville, N.C., and a senior researcher at North Carolina State University. CICS is a consortium jointly led by the University of Maryland and North Carolina State University. cont. added by: JanforGore

Anti- Bullying Week: Boys tease girl for having Star Wars bottle

“November 15-19 is Anti-Bullying Week at the schools. Like so many others, I have been reading with dismay about the recent victims of bullying, and I ache inside for the pain these young people have experienced. I have often thought of bullying as a problem that faces children older than mine, but a recent conversation with my first grader has given me pause. Maybe it starts right here, right now with our little ones. At summer's end, Katie and I went to Target to pick out her backpack, lunchbox and water bottle for the new school year. After great deliberation, she chose a Star Wars water bottle to match her Star Wars backpack. Katie loves Star Wars, and she was very excited about her new items. For the first few months of school, she proudly filled her water bottle herself and helped me pack her lunch each morning. But a week ago, as we were packing her lunch…” Those boys must've been sith sympathizers. added by: Agent_Alpha

First Planet Found Beyond Our Galaxy

A New Planet — from Beyond the Galaxy Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2032054,00.html#ixzz15hGdcBa9 By Michael D. Lemonick Thursday, Nov. 18, 2010 Picture: This artist's impression shows HIP 13044 b, an exoplanet orbiting a star that entered our galaxy, the Milky Way, from another galaxy. AFP / Getty Images Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2032054,00.html#ixzz15hH2S4xq Billions of years before the Sun was born, the Milky Way galaxy flicked out its gravitational tongue and slurped down a tiny neighboring galaxy that had ventured too close. The evidence for that ancient act of cosmic cannibalism is the still-digesting remains of the meal: a handful of relatively nearby stars known as the Helmi Stream, whose weird orbits — above and below the plain of the galaxy — are a tipoff to their weird origin. Now one of those stars has a second claim to fame. HIP 13044, as it's unglamorously known, has a planet whirling around it — the first planet ever found from outside the Milky Way. Aside from its extra-galactic origin, the planet itself, found with a medium-size telescope at the European Southern Observatory in Chile, and described in a new paper in Science, isn't especially remarkable. It's a bit bigger than Jupiter and orbits its parent star in about 16 days — a “year” so short it would once have been considered impossible for so giant a planet, until multiple discoveries of many similar worlds proved such a revolution rate to be pretty common. (See pictures of the labor of space exploration.) It's the star itself that makes the discovery of a planet surprising, for a couple of reasons. For one thing, its age — perhaps 7 or 8 billion years — means that while HIP 13044 was once much like the Sun, it's gone through a dramatic change of life. As it burned through its supply of hydrogen, the star would have swelled to become a so-called red giant, tens, or even hundreds of times its original size. When that happens to our Sun billions of years from now, Earth will probably be destroyed. Indeed, there's some circumstantial evidence that HIP 13044 may have gulped down a few planets itself, says the paper's lead author Johny Setiawan, of Germany's Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, in Heidelberg. “The star is a fast rotator,” he says, “and theory predicts that if a star swallows a planet its rotation rate should increase.” But the new planet, called HIP 13044b, survived the cataclysm. That's probably because the Jupiter-size world originally occupied a Jupiter-like orbit, much farther from its star than Earth is from the Sun. It spiraled in to its present orbit only after HIP 13044 shrank back to a more dignified size — another common stage of life for stars, which return to their original dimensions when they start burning the helium in their core. A tiny handful of planets have been seen orbiting stars that are currently red giants, but this is the first to be found in the next chapter of a star's life. (See pictures of Russia's cosmonaut training center.) The other thing that makes the star unusual is its composition. The Sun is mostly hydrogen and helium, but it also has significant traces of heavier elements like oxygen, carbon and iron, a quality astronomers call “metallicity” despite the non–metallic nature of some of those elements. “In the Milky Way,” says Setiawan, “the more metals a star has, the more likely it is to have planets.” The reason for that is simple: both stars and planets coalesce out of the same vast pool of dust and gas. The higher the metallicity, the bigger the supply of building material and the likelier that some will be left over to form planets. Dwarf galaxies like the one in which HIP 13044 was born, however — and like the two dozen or so that still orbit the Milky Way — have stars that are notably metal-poor. It was unclear until now whether that meant they'd also be planet-poor. The fact that Setiawan and his colleague Rainer Klement, also of the Max Planck Institute, found one so easily suggests this isn't the case. “Either they were incredibly lucky,” says Eric Ford, a planet-searcher at the University of Florida, “or planets aren't uncommon around stars like these.” Whatever the answer, HIP 13044b is clearly a very different world from any we've seen before, one that — without the aid of celestial metals — formed in a very different way. And that in turn suggests that the field of planetary science, which seemed so tidy and settled as recently as the 1990s, is still full of surprises. added by: EthicalVegan

Linkin Park — Wailin’ In Jerusalem

Filed under: Linkin Park Linkin Park went off-the-wall on sacred ground recently — stopping by one of the holiest places on Earth to pay their respects … the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. As for the yarmulkes, most of the guys aren’t part of the Tribe … but it’s considered… Read more

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Linkin Park — Wailin’ In Jerusalem

First potentially habitable planet found outside our solar system: NASA

A team of “planet hunters” has announced the discovery of the first planet with the potential to harbour life outside our solar system. Researchers from the University of California Santa Cruz and the Carnegie Institution of Washington said Wednesday the planet has three times the mass of Earth and orbits its star at a distance that places it smack in the middle of the star's “habitable zone” — the vital zone where liquid water could exist on the planet's surface. If confirmed, it would be the most Earth-like exoplanet yet discovered and the first strong case for a potentially habitable one, NASA and the U.S.-based National Science Foundation said in a statement. Both organizations sponsored the research. “Our findings offer a very compelling case for a potentially habitable planet,” said Steven Vogt, professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UC Santa Cruz who, with Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution, led the Lick-Carnegie Exoplanet Survey. “The fact that we were able to detect this planet so quickly and so nearby tells us that planets like this must be really common.” http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/world/First+potentially+habitable+planet+fou… added by: unimatrix0

Chess Came from Outer Space

The most hotly contested leadership vote of the season will take place next week in the small Siberian city of Khanty-Mansiysk. Delegates from more than 100 countries will choose between two Russian candidates after a lengthy campaign filled with acrimony and allegations of corruption. The prize at stake is the top position in world chess – president of the World Chess Federation (Fide) – and the contest is being fought between former chess grandmaster Anatoly Karpov, and the current president, the eccentric Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, a millionaire and the leader of Kalmykia, an oil-rich Buddhist region on the Caspian coast. Mr Ilyumzhinov is no normal politician. He counts among his friends the American actor Chuck Norris and the late Saddam Hussein, has made chess lessons mandatory for all schoolchildren during his two decades in power in Kalmykia, and has built the largest Buddhist temple in Europe. Oh, and he also believes that chess was brought to Earth by aliens, and that if not enough people take up the game, the aliens might destroy our planet. Author of an autobiography with chapter headings that include “Without me the people are incomplete” and “It only takes two weeks to have a man killed”, Mr Ilyumzhinov has combined his political job with running Fide since 1995. Mr Ilyumzhinov met with The Independent in Moscow to put forward his platform for the Fide elections, and to share his views on life. First, though, he wanted to talk about his latest grand plan. Perturbed by protests over the “Ground Zero Mosque”, he has written to New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, offering $10m (

LCV Launches ‘Flat Earth TV’ Featuring Sarah Palin

image via flickr With the rise of Delaware Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell, it’s become clear that every Republican candidate for the “World’s Greatest Deliberating Body” is a global warming denier. The League of Conservation Voters is rightly concerned, and they’ve launched an online campaign to poke fun at the candidate and educate voters on the candidates’ positions. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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LCV Launches ‘Flat Earth TV’ Featuring Sarah Palin