Tag Archives: earth

The girl who must eat every 15 minutes to stay alive

In fact, the 21-year-old from Austin, Texas, must eat every 15 minutes to stay healthy. Miss Velasquez has a rare condition which prevents her from gaining weight even though she eats up to 60 small meals a day. Despite consuming between 5,000 and 8,000 calories daily, the communications student, has never tipped over 4st 3lbs. “I weigh myself regularly and if I gain even one pound I get really excited,” said 5ft 2 ins Miss Velasquez, who wears size triple zero clothes. “I eat every 15-20 minutes to keep my energy levels up. “I eat small portions of crisps, sweets, chocolate, pizza, chicken, cake, doughnuts, ice cream, noodles and pop tarts all day long, so I get pretty upset when people accuse me of being anorexic.” She was born four weeks prematurely weighing just 2lb 10oz. Doctors found there was minimal amniotic fluid protecting her in the womb. “They told us they had no idea how she could have survived,” said Miss Velasquez's mother Rita, 45, a church secretary. Doctors speculated Lizzie might have the genetic disorder De Barsy syndrome but soon ruled it out as it became clear she did not have learning difficulties. “They kept on trying to figure out what was wrong with her but we treated her like any other child,” said Mrs Velasquez, who charted her daughter's health in dozens of notebooks. She was taken to see genetic experts but they still could not diagnose her. Miss Velasquez's case has fascinated doctors all over the world and she is part of a genetic study run by Professor Abhimanyu Garg, MD, at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Professor Garg and his team now believe Lizzie may have a form of Neonatal Progeroid Syndrome (NPS) which causes accelerated ageing, fat loss from the face and body, and tissue degeneration. People with PRS often have triangular and prematurely aged faces with a pointy nose. He said: “I am aware of a small number of people that have similar conditions to Lizzie but each case is slightly different. “We cannot predict what will happen to Lizzie in the future as the medical community are yet to document older people with NPS. “However Lizzie is lucky to have healthy teeth, organs and bones so the outlook is good. We will continue to study her case and learn from her.” Miss Velasquez has helped to write a book about her incredible experiences. It is due to be released in September. added by: cclark_productions

What Obama and BP Are Hiding From the General Public – Oil Volcano Unstoppable

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/05/05/learning/oilslickLN/oilslickLN-bl… Oil Volcano Pressure Too Strong For Containment It has been estimated by experts that the pressure which blows the oil into the Gulf waters is estimated to be between 20,000 and 70,000 PSI (pounds per square inch). Impossible to control. What US Scientists Are Forbidden To Tell The Public About The Gulf What you are about to read, is what the scientists in the United States are not allowed to tell you in great fear of the Obama administration. They are under the threat of severe repercussions to the max.. Scientists confirming these findings cannot be named due to the above, but what they believe, they want to be known by all. Take a U. S. map, lay it flat and measure inland just the minimum 50 miles of total destruction all around the Gulf of Mexico as to what you will read below. The carnage to the United States is so staggering, it will take your breathe away. Should what the scientists who are trying to warn everyone about be even close to being true… all of Florida will be completely destroyed as will everyone and everything on it. You decide!! Everyone has the right to read what I have just written in this article, as well as to what is written below by the scientists who the Obama administration and BP are trying to shut up. Please share with as many as you can. –Dr. James P. Wickstrom SUMMARY OF WHAT IS HAPPENING The estimated super high pressure release of oil from under the earth's crust is between 80,000 to 100,000 barrels per day. The flow of oil and toxic gases is bringing up with it… rocks and sand which causes the flow to create a sandblasting effect on the remaining well head device currently somewhat restricting the flow, as well as the drilled hole itself. As the well head becomes worn it enlarges the passageway allowing an ever-increasing flow. Even if some device could be placed onto the existing wellhead, it would not be able to shut off the flow, because what remains of the existing wellhead would not be able to contain the pressure. The well head piping is originally about 2 inches thick. It is now likely to be less than 1 inch thick, and thinning by each passing moment. The oil has now reached the Gulf Stream and is entering the Oceanic current which is at least four times stronger than the current in the Gulf, which will carry it throughout the world within 18 months. The oil along with the gasses, including benzene and many other toxins, is deleting the oxygen in the water. This is killing all life in the ocean. Along with the oil along the shores, there will be many dead fish, etc. that will have to be gathered and disposed of. SUMMARY OF EXPECTATIONS At some point the drilled hole in the earth will enlarge itself beneath the wellhead to weaken the area the wellhead rests upon. The intense pressure will then push the wellhead off the hole allowing a direct unrestricted flow of oil, etc. The hole will continue to increase in size allowing more and more oil to rise into the Gulf. After several billion barrels of oil have been released, the pressure within the massive cavity five miles beneath the ocean floor will begin to normalize. This will allow the water, under the intense pressure at 1 mile deep, to be forced into the hole and the cavity where the oil was. The temperature at that depth is near 400 degrees, possibly more. The water will be vaporized and turned into steam, creating an enormous amount of force, lifting the Gulf floor. It is difficult to know how much water will go down to the core and therefore, its not possible to fully calculate the rise of the floor. The tsunami wave this will create will be anywhere from 20 to 80 feet high, possibly more. Then the floor will fall into the now vacant chamber. This is how nature will seal the hole. Depending on the height of the tsunami, the ocean debris, oil, and existing structures that will be washed away on shore and inland, will leave the area from 50 to 200 miles inland devoid of life. Even if the debris is cleaned up, the contaminants that will be in the ground and water supply will prohibit re-population of these areas for an unknown number of years. (End of scientists information release.) From Tom Buyea FL News Service added by: jubal

Paul McCartney, Pearl Jam, Stevie Wonder Shine At Hard Rock Festival In London

Corinne Bailey Rae, Elvis Costello, Ben Harper also appear at three-day event. By Matt Elias Paul McCartney performs at Hard Rock Calling 2010 Photo: Andy Paradise This past weekend was one of the warmest on record in London, and the hottest ticket in town was the Hard Rock Calling festival in Hyde Park. The three-day festival boasted headliners Pearl Jam , Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney , with a mix of rock and pop acts rounding out the bill, including Ben Harper and Relentless7, the Gaslight Anthem, Jamiroquai, Corinne Bailey Rae and Elvis Costello. It was the headliners who stole the show each night, and on Friday Pearl Jam had the honor of closing out the first night’s festivities. Eddie Vedder hit the stage prior to PJ’s set, joining Harper and his band for a rousing rendition of Queen and David Bowie’s “Under Pressure.” By 8 p.m. the estimated 55,000 in attendance packed the grounds when Pearl Jam kicked off their two-hour set with “Given to Fly.” The energy was massive from the get-go, with fists pumping and women sitting atop shoulders throughout the crowd (a few hedonistic ones popped their tops off for the JumboTron). After tearing through the first few songs, Vedder addressed the crowd, which stretched all the way back to the entrance. Swigging from a bottle of wine, he said, “It feels incredibly good to be here. Somehow over the years we’ve been given the license to make as much f—in’ noise as possible.” But concerned for the crushing crowd, he asked all 55,000 to take three steps backwards. The energy continued with “Once” and “World Wide Suicide” until Pearl Jam slowed things down with a crowd sing-along, “Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town.” But they picked up the pace just a few songs later with “Even Flow” as fans sang the chorus even louder than the stage’s massive speakers. Guitarist Mike McCready wowed fans by playing his guitar solo behind his head. PJ then upped the ante, treating fans to a new song called “Of the Earth.” Vedder noted that it had never been recorded and that if things went well it would end up on the next album. He then joked that it was like auditioning for “American Idol.” Judging by the crowd’s approval, the upbeat song was a success. The band capped off the night with “Better Man,” an emotional rendition of “Just Breathe” and an encore of “Go” and “Alive,” the last of which was the loudest sing-along of the night. Saturday, though just as crowded as Friday, was a much mellower day, with Corinne Bailey Rae’s sultry sounds and Jamiroquai’s funky tunes leading into Stevie Wonder’s headlining set. Jam’s frontman Jay Kay (wearing what could be described as an offensive Native American headdress) called Stevie “the Master.” He urged fans to give Wonder a proper English welcome, and they did when the legend finally hit the stage. Not known for being punctual, Wonder only kept fans waiting 15 minutes for his scheduled set. Hyde Park enforces a 10:15 p.m. curfew, so Stevie was just barely able to squeeze in his two-hour set. But he squeezed in a lot, playing songs that spanned his massive 50-year catalogue. Wonder hit the stage with a gleaming white keytar and got the crowd involved instantly with the first of many call and responses. The enthusiasm was mutual, as Stevie got down on the ground and jammed on his keytar while he was on his back. By the second song, “Master Blaster,” he had the crowd dancing. Amy Winehouse was spotted on the side of the stage during Wonder’s set, sparking rumors that she would join him onstage. That never happened, but his two hours, a mix of comedic and poignant moments, were full enough without any guest appearances. At one point Stevie freestyled, “We love you, Michael Jackson. We’ll see you when you get to heaven,” and later he covered MJ’s “Human Nature,” a touching moment one year after the King of Pop’s death. The set closed out with rousing renditions of “Sir Duke”, a Temptations cover of “My Girl” that lead right into “Isn’t She Lovely”, “My Cherie Amour” and “Superstition”. From one legend to the next, Sunday saw the headlining set of Sir Paul McCartney. Backstage was abuzz in celebrity activity, as the Jonas Brothers, Kings of Leon, Kate Beckinsale and Gwyneth Paltrow were all on hand for Macca’s set. Sir Paul hit the stage promptly at 7:30 p.m., dressed in black from head to toe. It was a brave wardrobe choice as temperatures hit 90 degrees that day. After the first couple of tunes, McCartney addressed the crowd. He declared, “Good evening, Hyde Park. Gotta feelin’ we’re gonna have a rockin’ good time tonight!” Then he took a moment to soak it all in before launching into the Beatles classic “All My Loving,” an instant sing-along. McCartney was a delight, sharing jovial banter with the crowd between songs. For most of the tunes, which, you guessed it, spanned his entire catalogue, Paul took time to explain their origins. It was almost like an episode of VH1 “Storytellers” and felt like an intimate club show, despite the 50,000 in attendance. McCartney recalled seeing Jimi Hendrix cover “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” just days after its release. He discussed songs he’d written for his late wife, Linda, and fellow Beatle John Lennon. After every song, he gave a heartfelt “Thank you” and a bow, as if each was his last. Of all those songs, it’s hard to single out moments, but highlights came toward the end of the set with a slew of classics: “Let It Be,” “Live and Let Die” (with a huge fireworks display) and “Hey Jude,” delivered with boisterous “na na na nas” from the crowd. McCartney returned with two encores that pushed the show well into three amazing hours, far exceeding the 10:15 curfew (but that’s something you can get away with when you’ve been knighted). Songs included “Get Back,” “Helter Skelter” and “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” capping off a great weekend of headlining performances as well as the end of Sir Paul’s worldwide tour. Moments after McCartney exited the stage, an ecstatic Joe and Nick Jonas shared their highlights of the show. Nick told MTV News, “My favorite song? Obviously ‘Hey Jude’ comes first always.” The brothers agreed that “Blackbird” was a second favorite, and Nick admitted to recording it on his phone. Joe added, ” ‘Got to Get You Into My Life’ is pretty incredible.” Related Photos Pearl Jam, Paul McCartney And More Come Out For ‘Hard Rock Calling 2010’ Related Artists Pearl Jam Paul McCartney Stevie Wonder

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Paul McCartney, Pearl Jam, Stevie Wonder Shine At Hard Rock Festival In London

We Spend $1 Billion/year Fighting each Al Qaeda Member in Afghanistan

Think Progress does the math on Panetta’s admission that there are just 100 al Qaeda members in Afghanistan, and discovers we’ve got 1,000 American troops in Afghanistan for each al Qaeda member. The U.S. has committed nearly 100,000 troops to the mission in Afghanistan. ABC This Week host Jake Tapper asked CIA Director Leon Panetta how big is the al Qaeda threat that the soldiers are combating: The 100,000 U.S. forces that have been tasked to dismantle the 100 or so al Qaeda members — a ratio of 1000:1 — is complicated by the fact that we are also engaged in operations going after the Taliban leadership. Now let me add to their math. Even Afghan war fans admit that it costs $1 million a year–on top of things like salary–to support a US service member in Afghanistan. Michael O’Hanlon, a defense analyst at the Brookings Institution, says one useful way to break down these huge numbers is to look at how much it costs to send just one soldier to war. “We are at a point where it’s unbelievably costing us close to a million dollars, in additional costs — above and beyond salaries and the equipment that’s already in the inventory — per soldier or Marine per year,” he says. Fighting in Afghanistan means fighting in one of the most remote regions on Earth, and that plays a large role in the seemingly astronomical figure. Dov Zakheim, a former chief financial officer for the Defense Department, says the $1 million price tag includes getting the soldier to Afghanistan, getting his equipment to Afghanistan, and moving the soldier around once in the country. So 1,000 US troops per al Qaeda member, at a cost of $1 million each. That’s $1 billion a year we spend for each al Qaeda member to fight our war in Afghanistan. This sort of adds a new twist to that old Einstein quip about the definition of insanity being doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Because we’re doing the same thing over and over again–at a cost of $1 billion a year per nominal opponent–and expecting anything other than bankruptcy. http://emptywheel.firedoglake.com/2010/06/27/we-spend-1-billionyear-on-each-al-q… added by: Stoneyroad

Glenn Beck’s Hilarious Sex Scandal Mock Interview With Al and Tipper Gore

The guys at the Glenn Beck Radio show had some fun at Al and Tipper Gore’s expense Thursday creating a mock interview where the host questioned the separated couple about the former Vice President’s antics with a masseuse in a Portland hotel room back in 2006. The role of the Global Warmingist in Chief was marvelously played by Pat Gray with Stu Burguiere doing an adequate Tipper. The interview began with Beck asking the Nobel Laureate what happened in the hotel Lucia that fateful evening. Al/Pat deliciously responded, “The global warming just became overwhelming as I was receiving massage” (video follows with more highlights and commentary): When Tipper/Stu was introduced, Al/Pat asked, “Do you remember the time when I read you poetry? When I said, ‘I was a child and she was a child in this kingdom by the sea. But we loved with a love that was more than love, I and my Annabel Lee.'” Tipper/Stu responded, “That really brings back memories.” Yes, Al reading Edgar Allan Poe poems to Tipper. Somehow you imagine them being more “The Raven” than “Annabel Lee,” but I digress. Later the couple renewed their claim that “Love Story” was indeed about them despite the convenient truth that Tipper didn’t die of cancer. But the highlight had to be Tipper/Stu’s marvelous haiku, “Get your hands off me. Why do you touch my buttocks? Mother Earth cries rape.” Now THAT’S poetry. Nice job, guys! 

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Glenn Beck’s Hilarious Sex Scandal Mock Interview With Al and Tipper Gore

Ryan Leslie Croons, Raps And Romances New York

Singer/songwriter delivers passionate set at Bowery Ballroom. By Jayson Rodriguez Ryan Leslie Photo: Andy Sheppard/ Getty Images NEW YORK — Ryan Leslie declared his independence in a big way Tuesday night, when the singer/songwriter performed to a packed house at Manhattan’s Bowery Ballroom on the first of a two-night residency. Leslie recently parted ways with his label, Universal Motown, after releasing his self-titled debut and last year’s Transition. But as he sets out on his own, this performance proved a worthy showcase for the talented star’s range of skill, as a singer, producer and composer. “This here is about one of my favorite holidays,” he said, moving behind the keyboard to deliver a pleasing talk-box-aided vocal homage to Zapp and Roger’s “I Want to Be Your Man” before segueing into “Valentine.” “I don’t have to say that you’re beautiful,” Leslie sang in a falsetto tone. “You’ve got plenty of other guys to say those words for you/ And I don’t got to say that you run the show/ All it takes is a word, I lose control for you. “I know you’re not my girlfriend, but/ I swear that I love you,” he sang, opening up on the chorus. Decked out in dark shades, black leather gloves and a matching vest with a denim shirt underneath, Leslie was anything but the R&B lothario. His set was more aggressive and impassioned than in the past, and he opened up the show with a rap to a rock-leaning production. But Leslie, who led a five-piece band with three background singers, still knows that his crooning is why the people came. “Addiction” and “Diamond Girl” were among the more rousing numbers of the night. The synthesized chords to “Addiction” pounded throughout the venue. “You’ve got fashion and style/ I’m loving your smile and/ the way you get down,” he sang. “I can’t see no one else/ It’s you by yourself/ in spite of the crowd.” In addition to songs from both of his albums, Leslie played a few unreleased gems and a cover of Stevie Wonder’s “You and I.” “Here we are, on Earth together/ It’s you and I,” he sang, using hushed tones for the Motown classic. “God had made us fall in love, it’s true/ I’ve really found someone like you.” What do you think Ryan Leslie’s next career move should be? Let us know in the comments. Related Artists Ryan Leslie

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Ryan Leslie Croons, Raps And Romances New York

Morality Over Monsanto: Part 2: Are you ready to take action?

In covering the environmental abuses of Monsanto one who is cognizant of the special relationship we have with the Earth cannot help but be repulsed by them. There is not one redeeming quality about them. They are arrogant, heartless, greedy, manipulative power brokers that use people, governments, organizations, consumers, and anyone else who gets in their way of domination. It is a domination of the global seed and pesticide market that is now bringing our Earth to a biodiversity and pollution crisis and a climate change precipice. They have destroyed and defiled the environment with impunity, contaminated natural seeds with unstable toxic bacteria seeds, deforested our planet to make corn for gas tanks and GM soy that brings poverty and disease to places such as Paraguay, Argentina, Mexico, India, etc., (where farmers have been committing suicides in massive numbers due to economic ruin brought on by BT cotton.) They toxified our water with PCBS, Dioxin, and Round Up, strong armed organic farmers, deceived consumers through collusion with the FDA to keep our food with GMO ingredients unlabelled, intimidated scientists who sought answers and who disseminated the answers when they found about just what their GMOs are made of and their effects, and then claim to be part of the “sustainable agriculture” movement that is looking to feed the world. It is one of the greatest and most sinister hoaxes perpetrated upon the world. In the more than one hundred years they have been in business, Monsanto has not made one product that has benefitted the Earth. From saccharin, to aspartame, to Agent Orange, to PCBs, to genetically modified organisms, there has been one and only one motive: profit at any cost. And where we stand now that cost is the biodiversity of our planet and control of the very seeds and water that give us life. It is a control we cannot give up as it would then mean the loss not only of food sovereignty but our very freedom as human beings. But even in the midst of all of this there are some bright spots. A federal court in California upheld a ban on the planting of their GM alfalfa seeds due to its being deregulated by APHIS without a proper EIS, and the planting of BT brinjal in India was denied by their environmental minister. There have been other bright spots as well from Ireland, to Poland, to even Haiti, where a seed shipment sent by Monsanto was protested with a symbolic burning of their seeds taking place just this month. Farmers all over the globe have seen the empty promises, high costs, environmental effects and deceptions of Monsanto and GMOs and are now reacting. Even farmers in our own country are speaking out against their tactics and calling for a return to sustainable agriculture in response to a Department of Justice investigation of Monsanto and seed monopolies and their business practices. And yesterday, the USSC in a ruling being spun by Monsanto, while reversing the Federal court ban on GM alfalfa did uphold it could not be planted until deregulation and a full EIS was completed, and also acknowledged that farmers have the right to challenge “gene flow” (transgenic contamination) from GM crops to their organic crops if they can show harm. That is truly precedent setting. So the question is, will this set a precedent for review of their other “seeds” such as BT corn, GM soy, BT cotton, sugarbeets, canola, etc.? We can only hope. Hopeful signs that more are waking up to the deceptions and doing the necessary research to become aware of what they are eating and modifying their habits to be more healthy. The one organization that is helping tremendously in that is the Institute for Responsible Technology headed by Jeffrey Smith, a world renowned GMO activist. They have just put together a Non GMO website that gives you top information on how to avoid GMOs and eat more healthy thus perpetuating the 5% of American consumers it will take to get to a tipping point of awareness to begin turning the tide against Monsanto and all other companies using GMOs as a profit motive while compromising our food safety in the process. This is the one true way we can all be activists: through the wallet. http://www.responsibletechnology.org Of course, I have no illusions about the clout they carry as well regarding the DOJ investigation nor the court cases coming up involving Monsanto's link to PCB poisoning. A recent trial regarding PCB contamination of Anniston Alabama and the ensuing deaths and disease from it wound up in Monsanto's favor with those sickened left with little justice for their suffering. The major clout Monsanto carries with Washington DC even now under the Obama administration and the Vilsack USDA and their company's known methods of bribery leaves one wary of such attempts to hold them accountable for their many crimes against humanity and their agricultural and environmental terrorism. After all, it was the FDA under the auspices of the last four administrations that gave them free reign over our environment and health by determining that their organisms were the same (principle of substantial equivalence) as all other food in order for them to circumvent labeling, when as we now see that is far from the truth. It was the USSC that gave them the patent to life itself thus opening the door to Intellectual Property Rights that now challenge indigenous peoples and the natural breeding of seeds for climate change tolerance which they can now purchase in biopiracy scams. In simple terms, our planet has been sold to the highest bidder in determining what we will plant, and what we will eat without our consent. That is not only undemocratic, that is immoral and criminal. However, as with any crisis we are now in regarding our planet we have one hope: ourselves. Our consciences, our morals, our reasoning, our logic, our love for our families, our love for the Earth, our sense of justice, and yes, even our spirituality that tells us in line with the scientific facts as presented to us that we in large numbers have the ability to take back our food, our planet, and our futures. So even in the face of what Monsanto has been able to accomplish I remain hopeful of the global food movement having major victories in the coming year. But we must remain focused, cohesive, determined, and yes, even angry. We must remain so for the following: For the farmers of India and their families, especially the widows of those whose lives were cut short by BT cotton. For the American farmers whose farms and livelihoods are under threat from Monsanto's strong arm tactics in their desire to control all seed. For the deforested lands of South America stripped to create a monoculture that has left many poor farmers poorer and sicker in the wake of greed over sustainability, and exacerbated a climate crisis no cap and trade scheme can heal. For the soil of our Earth, its skin, that cries out for help to us as it is eroded, stripped, abused, and toxified for profit. For our water, polluted, toxic, acidic, filled with pesticides and run off as the cost of industrial agriculture. For our children, who deserve a cleaner, safer, more natural world to live in. Let this next year be the year to truly hold Monsanto as an example of all of those things to be the first step in our moral imperative to save this planet and in turn the human species and all others we have so cavalierly dismissed in our desire to be masters of the universe. More to come. added by: JanforGore

United Kingdom Launches Projects to Study Ocean Acidification

Image: NOAA Ocean Explorer, Flickr The Evil Twin of Global Warming Ocean acidification naturally results from elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere. The oceans absorb CO2, which becomes carbonic acid as it dissolves into the sea water. Ocean acidification picked up the moniker

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United Kingdom Launches Projects to Study Ocean Acidification

Real Housewives of New York Reunion: Death Is Only the Beginning [Recaps]

Last night we finally saw all of the New York ghouls put back in their coffins and lowered into the earth, where they will hopefully stay for years and years and years. Well, until next season at least. More

Boyle and Daldry, London’s Olympic double act

Filmmakers known for feelgood movies including Slumdog Millionaire and Billy Elliot put in charge of 2012 events Both are known for uplifting feelgood movies where the virtuous child gets what they deserve despite all the obstacles – whether it’s a chai wallah from the slums or a miner’s son who just wants to dance. So there was little surprise, but much cheer, when Danny Boyle and Stephen Daldry were today put in charge of London’s 2012 Olympic opening ceremony. Daldry, who directed Billy Elliot , will take overall creative charge of opening and closing ceremonies for both the Olympics and Paralympics while Boyle will be artistic director of the main Olympic opener. Boyle, an Oscar-winner for Slumdog Millionaire , called it “a fantastic responsibility.” He said: “When they offered me the job they said do you want to think about it overnight and I said ‘No, I want to do it and I’ll make tea if you want me to.’ “Just think about the games, where the four corners of the world come together and, yes, it’s very easy to be cynical about that, because there’s so much conflict in the world. But actually, it’s incredibly inspiring and you hope to capture some of that sense and also present a welcome, an open arms.” The budget for all four ceremonies is £40m, compared to the £70m China spent on its opening ceremony in 2008. “It’s a lot of money,” said Boyle. “It’s never enough money but it’s a lot of money and I hope we’ll spend it well.” Boyle said he would be thinking laterally. “We’ve got to acknowledge that it’s not going to be like Beijing where there was this overwhelming, intimidating scale. It will be more modest than that but our job is to make sure that, within our means, it is spectacular and that it delivers a thrilling welcome to the opening of the games.” Boyle was flanked by Daldry and Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London organising committee. All three insisted the economic climate would not affect the scale and ambition of the ceremony. “It is a welcome, a welcome to the athletes and a welcome to the world and the nature of that welcome needs to be as generous as we can be, both in spirit as well as cash,” said Daldry. Coe said the ceremonies budget had not been cut. “When we were bidding, we were bidding in probably the high water mark of the world economy but we were still doing so in a sustainable, responsible way. We haven’t suddenly reduced the scope of what we’re doing.” Boyle and Daldry will already have ideas, but they were revealing little yesterday. But Boyle – a local resident, having lived most of his adult life in Mile End – said possible themes were the joy of sport and pride in London. Also on his mind was that “in 2012 every single person in the stadium will probably have a camera phone, they’ll be filming their own versions of the ceremony”. Coe called the pair “the best of the best”, London mayor Boris Johnson hailed “a brilliant team” and Olympics secretary Jeremy Hunt predicted the events would “make Britain proud”. Others agreed. Paul Roseby, artistic director of the National Youth Theatre called them “an inspirational team”. He added: “It couldn’t be better. Let’s not forget it really is the greatest show on Earth and yes, comparisons will be made with China, but I think we have the opportunity now to surprise the world.” “Danny Boyle is a technician as well as an artist. Remember it’s a live ceremony but it’s also a film that will be seen on TV all over the world – it’s a big blockbuster movie, so you need someone like Danny.” Daldry said he had been looking back on previous Olympic ceremonies but would not reveal his favourites. It will be a surprise if pigeons are used, as they were in London’s last Olympic year – 1948. There have, though, been many memorable Olympic moments: the – at the time, astonishing – rocketman with jetpacks at Los Angeles in 1984 perhaps, or Kylie Minogue performing Dancing Queen at Sydney in 2000 . Best, perhaps, to not dwell too long on the 1936 opening ceremony in Berlin. The full creative team was unveiled at 3 Mills film studios, where 2012 production and rehearsals will take place. Daldry will be executive producer, creative, with three other executive producers. Mark Fisher, who has designed every Rolling Stones concert since 1989, will be in charge of design; Hamish Hamilton, an experienced director of live TV events, will be in charge of broadcast; and Catherine Ugwu, whose live events have included the Manchester commonwealth games closing ceremony and the Millennium Dome opening, will be executive producer, production. Before throwing himself full time into the Olympics, Boyle will finish editing his latest film, 127 Hours – which stars James Franco in the true story of mountaineer Aron Ralston who amputated his own arm when it became trapped under a boulder. This autumn, Boyle will make his debut at the National Theatre, directing a new version of Frankenstein. Until then he will work on the Olympics part-time. Olympic games 2012 Danny Boyle Stephen Daldry Sebastian Coe Olympics 2008 Mark Brown guardian.co.uk

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Boyle and Daldry, London’s Olympic double act