Tag Archives: face

Sammi Giancola, Jersey Shore Getting Sued (Again)

The fist-pumping Jersey Shore cast members are under fire again for putting said fists where they don’t belong. Two South Florida attorneys are filing assault charges – not against one of the dudes, but against Sammi “Sweetheart” Giancola. No wonder MTV is replacing the cast. The 22-year-old star reportedly got into a fight while at Club Dream on South Beach on May 8. Kristin DeMinco was the woman on the receiving end. DeMinco’s attorneys say she was assaulted and punched twice in the face by Giancola while in the club. “She saw me talking to him,” Deminco said. “Asked why I was talking to her boyfriend. She was jealous I guess that I was talking to him. I was like, you can calm down … we are just talking.” She cleans up nice, but Sammi’s got a temper! Look, you don’t want to even be accused of hitting on Ronnie Magro . “I wasn’t trying to hit on him,” she maintains. “She exchanged bad words at me. I exchanged some bad words back. She hit me twice in the face.” Then the Guidos/ettes who gained reality TV fame in Seaside Heights, N.J., supposedly took part in another fight, getting ’em kicked out of the club. They lawsuit is the latest in what has become a trend of Jersey Shore cast members getting into physical altercations for increased television ratings. Just last week, a New Jersey judge agreed to hear a lawsuit claiming Jersey Shore producers encouraged cast members to provoke fights for publicity. Detestable and possibly criminal? Sure. But entertaining stuff. Season Two premieres July 29! Let the fights and Jersey Shore quotes commence!

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Sammi Giancola, Jersey Shore Getting Sued (Again)

Woman Claims She Was Assaulted By Sammi ‘Sweetheart’ Giancola

Sammi Sweetheart isn’t such a sweetheart, according to Kristen DeMinco. DeMinco alleges she was assaulted at Club Dream in South Beach by the Jersey Shore star. She goes on to say that she was punched in the face by Giancola because she was talking to Ronnie. There is no more information at this time.

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Woman Claims She Was Assaulted By Sammi ‘Sweetheart’ Giancola

Kate Winslet On Plastic Surgery

Actress Kate Winslet wants to make something clear: That plastic surgery is not for her. The 34-year-old star said she finds the process scary and would never want to alter any part of her face. Finally! A Hollywood actress who has some good sense. We’re happy to hear Kate will never go under the knife. She’s pretty much perfect the way she is.

Miley Cyrus cant be tamed video

The video for “Can#39;t Be Tamed” is below, with some screengrabs below that. Miley Cyrus, 17, plays a caged bird. She has said “The video isn#39;t about being s-exy or about who can wear less clothes. It#39;s about explaining the song and living the lyrics.” Singer/actress Miley Cyrus‘ new music video for her single Can’t Be Tamed may throw the teen’s s-exy new look in your face but she swears it’s about more than that. “I wanted it to be something different for a female artist,” the teen

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Miley Cyrus cant be tamed video

Obama Disses Jay Leno

At about 35 seconds, President Obama unloads on Leno to his face. [ Ed. note : It's a very special kind of burn to have the POTUS make fun of you to your face in public. You're a lucky man, Jay Leno.] Watch

Cat Banned

Never underestimate the patience of a cat. She knows she's not allowed inside, but she'll put her face as close to inside as possible. View

Chimps’ emotional response to death caught on film

(Multiple videos, images, and captions seen at link) In the final hour, they huddled around, studied her face and shook her gently as if to revive her. And when the others had drifted away, one stayed behind to hold her hand. As death scenes go, it has all the poignancy of human loss, but this was no everyday tragedy. The last breath was drawn before scientists' cameras and represents one of the most extraordinary displays of chimpanzee behaviour ever recorded. Video footage of the death of Pansy, who at fifty-something was the oldest chimpanzee in the UK, was released by scientists today. The film captures for the first time the complex reactions of our nearest evolutionary cousins to the death of a group member. Studying the apes' behaviour could tell us as much about ourselves as the attachments and responses to death that chimpanzees exhibit within their groups and families, scientists believe. It could also challenge procedures for dealing with terminally ill animals in captivity. “Some of these behaviours have never been seen before in chimpanzees. It leads us to ask questions about the evolutionary origins of our own response to death and dying in a member of our own group or family,” said Jim Anderson, an expert in the social behaviour of non-human primates at Stirling University in Scotland, who recorded the footage. “Many of our greatest philosophical questions concern death and dying and how we perceive it and deal with it.” Pansy, a female who died of old age at Blair Drummond Safari Park at the end of 2008, was one of four chimpanzees being filmed by Anderson's group. When she became ill, vets paid regular visits to give treatment, while her companions – her daughter, a male and another female – looked on from a distance. When Pansy lay down in a nest that one of the other apes had made, the rest gathered around her and began grooming and caressing her. Shortly before she died, all three crouched down and inspected her face very closely. They then began to shake her gently. “It is difficult to avoid thinking that they were checking for signs of life,” said Anderson. “After a time, it seemed that the chimpanzees arrived at a collective decision that she had gone. Two left immediately, but one, the other adult female, stayed and held her hand,” said Anderson. “That evening, her daughter came back and stayed with her mother all night long. She was trying to sleep, but was clearly very disturbed. All three of them were.” Chimpanzees are rare, even among nonhuman primates, in displaying self-awarness and empathy to other individuals. An animal may only respond to death in an apparently emotional way once these abilities have evolved, Anderson said. The chimps' behaviour contrasts starkly with accounts of chimps being killed during encounters with other animals in the wild. Typically, groups react to violent deaths by going into a mass frenzy. Anderson, whose research is published in the journal Current Biology, described the behaviour of chimps at Blair Drummond after a death as “serene”. The footage has led him to call into question the wisdom of removing terminally ill animals from their enclosures shortly before they die. “At least in some cases, it might be better for all concerned to allow the animal to die in the comfort of familiar surroundings,” he said. Other extraordinary footage of chimps dealing with death is reported in a second paper in the same journal (see below – some readers may find the video upsetting). Dora Biro, a researcher at Oxford University, witnessed the deaths of five chimpanzees, including two infants, in a community living in the forests of Bossou in Guinea. The mothers of the two infants, which were killed by a respiratory disease, carried their dead offspring for weeks and months. During that time the two infant corpses became mummified, but the mothers continued to groom the bodies and carried them to their day and night nests as though there were alive. Over time, the mothers began to allow others in the group to handle the corpses and went longer periods without them. “Chimpanzees are humans' closest evolutionary relatives, and they have already been shown to resemble us in many of their cognitive functions. They empathise with others, have a sense of fairness, and can cooperate to achieve goals,” said Biro. “How they perceive death is a fascinating question and little data exist so far concerning chimpanzees' responses to the passing of familiar or related individuals either in captivity or in the wild.” She added: “Our observations confirm the existence of an extremely powerful bond between mothers and their offspring which can persist, remarkably, even after the death of the infant, and they further call for efforts to elucidate the extent to which chimpanzees understand and are affected by the death of a close relative or group-mate. “This would both have implications for our understanding of the evolutionary origins of human perceptions of death and provide insights into the way chimpanzees interpret the world around them.” added by: animalia_libero

natas fair 2010 time

NATAS Travel fair 2010, visit Singapore Expo, Halls 4 5, from 26th – 28th February 2010 between 10am – 10pm. Club Med NATAS Fair 2010 Promotion Anytime is the right time to go on a Club Med holiday with your partner, your family or your friends! Whether you are looking for a late deal to get away from it all, or planning ahead to secure your favourite destination, our selection of holiday offers and package deals allows you to choose the one that best suits your travel needs. NATAS SilkAir H

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natas fair 2010 time

Christina Applegate Flashes Engagement Ring

Check out that rock! Christina Applegate managed to shield her face from paps when she arrived at LAX Saturday night, but she couldn’t hide her stunning engagement…

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Christina Applegate Flashes Engagement Ring

World’s 1st Full Face Transplant In Spain Is Hailed As A Significant Advance By Transplant Experts.

According to United States media reports, there were 30 doctors completed the world’s first full-face transplant last month at Barcelona’s Vall d’Hebron Hospital. It is the most difficult total face transplant ever from world’s eleven (11)face transplants that had been made. It was been done for a patient from spain who is a farmer tha unable to breathe or eat on his own. His was injured and totally affected his face from an accident that he shoots himself in the face way back five years ago. As per report in AP on Friday, during operation and face transplant, doctors lifted his entire face which includes jaw, nose, cheekbones, muscles, teeth and eyelids, and placed it masklike onto the man. Upon completion of operation, the patient has a new face from hairline down. However, an scar which looks like a wrinkle runs across his neck. Anyway, thats only the scar he had after the full-face transplant. which looks like a wrinkle. Read More World’s 1st Full Face Transplant In Spain Is Hailed As A Significant Advance By Transplant Experts. is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading