Tag Archives: earth

Ke$ha Has ‘Learned A Lot’ From Rihanna On Tour

‘Tik Tok’ singer is ‘petrified’ of Last Girl on Earth Tour’s Madison Square Garden stop Thursday night. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Christina Garibaldi Ke$ha Photo: MTV News Rihanna is bringing her Last Girl on Earth Tour to Madison Square Garden on Thursday night (August 12), and that means opening act Ke$ha is feeling particularly nervous. Why? Well, it’s Madison Square Garden! “I’m actually a little petrified, to be honest. It’s a landmark in my career, and it’s just an epic venue. … I’m just really excited, and I’m gonna try to kill it!” she told MTV News. “It definitely means a lot for me to be playing there, especially with Rihanna, ’cause she’s so incredible. It makes me feel like I’m finally arriving here!” The girls kicked off the tour earlier this summer, and the “Tik Tok” singer said she and Rihanna have had some fun times on the road together. “It’s amazing! She’s just a badass,” she said. “I saw her yesterday, and she spanked me — always keeping me on my toes. She’s the sickest.” With all that time together, have the girls discussed working together? “I would love to. I mean, it’s kind of been tossed around,” she said. “There’s not really much time that we’ve spent writing and stuff on this tour, because it’s been so crazy, but it’s definitely an idea I’m not opposed to.” Ke$ha said she’s learning tons from Rihanna on tour. “I don’t know what she would be learning from me, aside from how to look like a maniac, but I definitely learned a lot from her,” she said. “I’ve only been performing pop music for under a year, so I’m relatively new to the arena thing. It’s terrifying, so I really do, every night, watch her, and she’s so graceful and so sweet and so badass.” Her best advice? “She just always has such a good attitude. You just have to own it!” Have you checked out the Last Girl on Earth Tour? What did you think? Share your reviews in the comments! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Ke$ha Related Artists Ke$ha Rihanna

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Ke$ha Has ‘Learned A Lot’ From Rihanna On Tour

Meteor shower August 2010

A meteor streaks past stars in the night sky over Leeberg hill in Grossmugl, some 30 km north of Vienna, August 12, 2010. The Perseid meteor shower is sparked every August when the Earth passes through a stream of space debris left by Comet Swift-Tuttle. This picture was taken using a long exposure. The Perseid Meteor Shower is expected to be spectacular this year, peaking between midnight and dawn on August 12-13th, but visible now when the sky is clear. In fact, an estimated 1 inch (2.5cm) di

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Meteor shower August 2010

Liberal Think Tank Destroys Myth Bush Tax Cuts Favored Rich

For approaching ten years, America’s media have depicted the tax cuts implemented by former President George W. Bush as almost exclusively favoring the rich. This dishonest characterization has picked up steam recently as these tax cuts are about to expire, and the tax-loving press have campaigned for their departure as if a plague on the society. For his part, President Obama is advocating the expiration of tax cuts only to couples making over $250,000 a year and individuals making more than $200,000. With this in mind, the Tax Policy Center, a division of the liberal Brookings Institution, published a report on July 29 that included Treasury Department estimates of tax revenue losses that would accompany an extension of Bush’s cuts. Inside the accompanying PDF was evidence the Left and their media minions have been misrepresenting the beneficiaries of these cuts for a very long time: As this is likely very difficult to read, there are three crucial components to this report: This shows that the total ten-year cost of extending the Bush tax cuts is estimated by Treasury to be $3.675 trillion. Next, Treasury estimated the ten-year revenue gain of not extending these cuts to couples making over $250,000 and individuals making more than $200,000: This shows that by following Obama’s recommendations, Treasury is estimated to receive $679 billion extra in the ten years after 2010. Finally, Treasury estimated the ten-year cost of extending the Bush tax cuts except to Obama’s description of high-wage earners: So, let’s put all the pieces together. According to Treasury, the total ten-year cost of completely extending the Bush tax cuts is $3.675 trillion. The ten-year cost exclusively associated with extending tax cuts to folks Obama, the Democrats, and the media consider rich is $679 billion. This means that almost $3 trillion of the cost associated with the Bush tax cuts over the next ten years, or 82 percent, is not for benefits to the so-called rich. As such, despite what the Left and their media minions have been claiming, 82 percent of the Bush tax cuts benefited the poor, middle-class, and upper-middle class in this country. And, despite the preceding appearing at a conservative website, this data was originally published by a division of a liberal think tank.  As the media love quoting reports from the Brookings Institution, I’m sure we’ll see this information splashed all over a TV set near you in the coming days…but I wouldn’t hold my breath!

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Liberal Think Tank Destroys Myth Bush Tax Cuts Favored Rich

Top Five Conservative (Fairly) New Films On DVD

If you’re not interested in having Will Ferrell lecture you on the evils of capitalism this coming weekend and would instead prefer to cozy up at home before the warm glow of plasma with a cold one in one hand a Redbox receipt in the other, here are five fairly new-to-DVD flicks that won’t leave you feeling sucker punched.   1.   The Road:  Director John Hillcoat’s adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize winner was unforgivably snubbed for Oscar consideration last year, as was leading man Viggo Mortensen for his heart-wrenching work as a widowed father leading his adolescent son across a dangerous, barren  post-apocalyptic America. Muted, heartbreaking, and yet hopeful, this is a story about a father teaching his son about what it takes to survive at any cost other than losing your humanity. Perfectly acted, beautifully directed and paced in such a way that casts an hypnotic spell, “The Road” is part Christian allegory, part zombie movie, and boasts an unforgettable cameo by Robert Duvall. 2.  From Paris With Love :  Pierre Morel, the director of “Taken,” returns to familiar ground with yet another satisfying action-thriller unafraid to portray Islamic terrorists as Islamic terrorists. In his best gonzo, wild-eyed, crazy guy performance yet, John Travolta plays an unpredictable but competent spy with an unapologetic love for America and a fresh partner, James Reece (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), an ambitious aide to the U.S. Ambassador in Paris. While nowhere near as well-crafted or morally satisfying and righteous as “Taken,” you’re still in for a fast-paced time, a couple of unexpected plot twists, and plenty of action. —– 3.  Dear John :  Based on Nicholas Sparks’ bestseller, director Lasse Hallstrom plays it surprisingly straight in order to effectively tell a wartime romance that’s every bit as earnest, sincere, and refreshingly irony free as what you might catch on Turner Classic Movies. Just before the 9/11 atrocity, John Tyree (Channing Tatum) is on leave from the Army when he meets Savannah (a very good Amanda Seyfried). They quickly fall in love and pledge to begin a life together as soon as John’s military obligation comes to an end. After the towers fall, John chooses to do his duty and re-enlist, a decision that will have greater consequences than either could have ever imagined. You will be amazed at the respect given to morality our military and our country in this sleeper, the first studio film since the War on Terror began to do so. A real gem and an ending poignant enough to stay with you for a while. —–   4.  Book of Eli :  Denzel Washington badassing his way across a post-apocalyptic desert littered with cannibals and marauders? Sold. But as with all great B-flicks a simple yet universal theme drives the plot even more than the action, and in this case that theme is the importance and power of a Christian faith still alive and real in a world where little else is. Never once does this satisfying actioner ever flinch away from, apologize for, or attempt to co-opt what Eli’s book, the last Bible on Earth, means. In a moment of uncharacteristic artistic maturity and restraint, the filmmakers leave that completely up to you. —– 5.  Brooklyn’s Finest :  Told with the muscle and grit we’ve come to expect from director Antoine Fuqua (”Training Day”), Brooklyn’s Finest are three borough cops, each on the precipice of life-changing decisions. A superb Richard Gere plays the beat cop, too old for his uniform but unwilling to do anything beyond the bare minimum in order to survive until retirement, which is just a few days away. Ethan Hawke is torn between his Catholic faith and doing that one dirty thing that will forever solve all his crushing financial problems. Don Cheadle is the undercover narc, too close to those he’s supposed to bust and getting more confused about his loyalties by the day. As expected, the three storylines all culminate in an explosive climax where redemption and justice are meted out in equal parts. Crossposted at Big Hollywood  

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Top Five Conservative (Fairly) New Films On DVD

Tracking the Extinctions and Adaptations Around Us

Image credit: Wikimedia Commons The last great extinction occurred sixty five million years ago. You can visit the exact point on earth where it started, on the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico. The Chicxulub crater , more than 110 miles in diameter, was formed by the enormous impact of a meteor the size of San Francisco hitting the earth. Life on earth changed radically from that moment of impact…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Tracking the Extinctions and Adaptations Around Us

The Real Housewives of New Jersey Head to Italy, Remain Ridiculous

MAKE IT STOP!

Patricia Neal, Oscar-Winning Actress, Dies At 84

Star of ‘Hud’ and ‘The Fountainhead’ famously recovered from a semi-paralyzing stroke in 1965. By Eric Ditzian Patricia Neal in 1952 Photo: Gene Kornman/ Getty Images Oscar-winning Patricia Neal died on Sunday at the age of 84, The New York Times reports. In 1964, Neal won a Best Actress Oscar for her turn as the resilient housekeeper Alma opposite Paul Newman in “Hud.” A year after her Academy Awards triumph, though, the actress suffered three strokes that left her in a three-week coma. Afterwards she was semi-paralyzed and without the ability to speak, though she eventually learned to walk and talk again. Despite an impaired memory, the actress returned to the big screen for 1968’s “The Subject Was Roses,” playing a vindictive mother. She again secured an Oscar nomination, but this time lost out to dual winners Katharine Hepburn and Barbra Streisand. Neal got her start at the age of 21 opposite Ronald Reagan in the 1949 comedy “John Loves Mary.” She went on to star in films like “A Face in the Crowd” (1950), “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (1951) and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1961). One of her most prominent roles came in 1949, when she nabbed the coveted lead role in “The Fountainhead,” an adaptation of the Ayn Rand novel. The role also lead to a love affair between Neal and co-star Gary Cooper, a relationship that lasted for three years but ended when Cooper declined to leave his wife and family. Neal became pregnant during the affair and had an abortion, as she revealed in a 1988 memoir. “If I had only one thing to do over in my life,” she wrote, according to the Times, “I would have that baby.” Neal was married for 30 years to “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” author Roald Dahl, with whom she had five children. They divorced in 1983. Though the Times does not give a cause of death, People reports that Neal had lung cancer. She died at her home in Edgartown, Massachusetts.

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Patricia Neal, Oscar-Winning Actress, Dies At 84

Wyclef Jean to Run for President of Haiti

Known as much for his humanitarian efforts as his musical career, Wyclef Jean has announced his plans to run for the Haitian presidency. Said the social activist, confirming the news to Time magazine and referencing January’s natural disaster in the region: “If not for the earthquake, I probably would have waited another 10 years before doing this… If I can’t take five years out to serve my country as President, then everything I’ve been singing about, like equal rights, doesn’t mean anything.” Wycleff, who was born in Haiti and moved to Brooklyn when he was nine, added: “I want to be part of a different kind of celebrity, one that thinks not just about charity but policy.” In 2005, Jean established the Y

GM to Boost Volt PHEV Production Capacity by 50% in 2012

Photo: GM From 30,000 to 45,000 Units Thanks to strong interest by the public, GM has decided to boost production of the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid by 50% in 2012. This means that instead of making 30,000, they’ll make 45,000 at the Detroit-Hamtramck plant. The company is probably hoping that it can improve the economics of the Volt by reaching economies of scale faster than initially planned, and it no doubt feels Nissan breathing down its neck with its cheaper LEAF el… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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GM to Boost Volt PHEV Production Capacity by 50% in 2012

How Can Technology Reduce Global Shipping’s Fuel Consumption?

Car transport ship, photo: Rennett Stowe via flickr. If we’re going to start this great transition off of oil we really need to start thinking hard about how we’re going to move ourselves and our goods around the globe . Part of that is thinking conceptually about it–how to change our habits and usage patterns for long-distance travel. The other part is h… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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How Can Technology Reduce Global Shipping’s Fuel Consumption?