Tag Archives: italy

Jennifer Loves Eating of the Day

I guess this is as close to pornographic as Jennifer Love Hewitt gets, you know at the bank taking out money cuz that’s the only reason dudes fuck her, I mean that good life and memories of pussy he once jerked off to when she was the fat tits in all those teen movies in the 90s, you know before she became the emotional eating Ghost Whisperer fatness you see here…and I know what you bitches are thinking…cuz I’ve been doing this a long time and I get your hatemail…and that is that she’s not as fat as she was at her fattest….but she’s still fat and fat is fat….and I’m sure some of you are into this shit…and I’m hopin it’s more about seeing her take out money and less about her sloppy body….but that’s not because I care what you like, but because I care about this bitch knowing her self-worth….so there’s no distractions that leaves her standing in front of the mirror thinking she’s still got it. Pics via Fame

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Jennifer Loves Eating of the Day

Elisabetta Canalis Ass in a Bikini of the Day

Here is George Clooney’s ass in a bikini showing the world why she is George Clooney’s ass cuz George Clooney is one of those dudes who 99% of women would leave their husbands for, even if they love their husbands more than anything in the world and were conditioned to think they couldn’t survive without their husband after years of him putting them down and killing any self confidence or worth she has….he has that affect on women, so he gets to choose the ones he likes best like a fat bitch at an all you can eat buffet, since that’s just how his life has played out for him and I guess he’s not the only one who won at life, cuz this bitch, hot ass or not, managed to work her way into getting a job as Clooney’s sidekick, which means living the good life, without having to do any work despite the fact that this Canalis bitch was a success in the Italian entertainment industry before Clooney poached her like he was Victoria’s Secret recruiting interatoonal pussy, but that doesn’t count, cuz Italy Entertainment isn’t as significant as America….and closed minded Americans just see a stupid name that looks like a TGIF pasta dish…but the good news for her a Celebrity boyfriend and hot ass is international and she’s got both…and here are some pics…. Pics via Bauer

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Elisabetta Canalis Ass in a Bikini of the Day

Janet Jackson And Family Visit Michael’s Forest Lawn Grave

Randy, Tito and Jermaine Jackson join their sister to pay their respects a year after MJ’s death. By Eric Ditzian Tito Jackson, Jermaine Jackson, Janet Jackson and Randy Jackson visit Glendale Forest Lawn Memorial Park on Friday Photo: AP As fans lined up outside Forest Lawn cemetery in Glendale, California, on the one-year anniversary of Michael Jackson’s death, his family gathered inside to pay their respects to the fallen pop star. Janet Jackson, as well as Randy, Tito and Jermaine, arrived at the cemetery around 11 a.m. PT on Friday (June 25), according to Us Weekly. Janet wore a black trench coat and black skirt as she was escorted in by her brothers. The family entered the cemetery through a back entrance and made their way to the Great Mausoleum, where Michael was laid to rest . The mausoleum’s architectural design was inspired by the Campo Santo in Italy, an elaborate cemetery constructed in the 13th century and used as a burial ground for Italian elites for hundreds of years. The building was not open to fans on the anniversary of Jackson’s death. Michael’s children, Prince, Paris and Blanket, did not accompany the other Jackson family members. According to Us, the children were last seen in Hawaii on Thursday with Michael’s mother, Katherine, who is their legal guardian. “Sorry Big Bro, for not getting ur children there on the anniversary of ur last day. I tried,” Randy wrote on his Twitter account . Katherine was on hand Friday in Gary, Indiana, Michael’s hometown, to unveil a marble memorial and hold what was described as a cell phone vigil outside his childhood home. “I am not in support of the Gary event/trip or whatever it is. I’m tired but I promise to continue this discussion first thing in the morn,” Randy tweeted. MTV will be remembering the life and music of Michael Jackson all weekend. Don’t miss the one-hour special “Michael Jackson’s Influence on Music,” airing tonight at 6:30 p.m. on MTV. Related Videos Remembering Michael Jackson – One Year Later Related Photos Michael Jackson: A Life In Photos Related Artists Michael Jackson Janet Jackson

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Janet Jackson And Family Visit Michael’s Forest Lawn Grave

London’s Embassies Show Sustainable Projects

Images by B. Alter: Norway As part of the London Festival of Architecture , twenty eight embassies are celebrating the best of their country’s architecture. Strange creations like Italy’s photo-reactive skin on its front door and Helsinki in a container are popping up in unexpected places. But we loved these moss-filled rooms created by PUSHAK, a Norwegian architecture firm consisting of 4 women. Called Moss Your City , the walls and … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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London’s Embassies Show Sustainable Projects

World Cup 2010: Apologies in advance for agony of watching England | Clive Tyldesley

The boys at ITV were upset about technical problems last week but hope England v Algeria tonight is painless for everyone Imagine completing your GCSE maths exam without too many wrong answers, then finding that someone at your school forgot to send the paper off for marking. Imagine compiling a long and detailed report for your boss, only for your computer to crash inexplicably and propel your work into the ether. It has been a bruising week at ITV. Official apologies do not really wash but whether you thought our coverage of England’s opening game was good, bad or indifferent, I can confirm it did leave us in Rustenburg in one piece. Learning that the most important 10 seconds of it never arrived on the nation’s HD sets left post-match morale among our team in South Africa at Rob Green levels. Unlike Fabio Capello, ITV’s management did not select the individual who made the costly error. But, like the England manager, we can now only do everything within our powers to come up with a better result tonight. Capello and Co’s performance against USA divided opinions like most television programmes do. Football and telly are largely matters of opinion. A dozen different informed radio and TV pundits

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World Cup 2010: Apologies in advance for agony of watching England | Clive Tyldesley

World Cup 2010: David Platt relives Italia 90 volley against Belgium

Flashback to 26 June 1990: Bologna, Italy: with penalties looming David Platt volleys England to a stunning second-round victory over Belgium David Platt, England midfielder “I started as a substitute. I can remember little snatches of the game. John Barnes having a volleyed goal harshly disallowed, Belgium hitting the woodwork twice, I can still see Enzo Scifo hitting the post with a tremendous strike from 25 yards. I was at the other end of the bench from Bobby Robson and didn’t have much contact with him. Having since been a manager I now know that the emotions he must have been going through were far more intense than mine. I came on for Steve McMahon [in the 71st minute].” John Motson, commentating on BBC1 in extra-time after 119 goalless minutes: “Gerets challenges Gascoigne. Free-kick given to England …” Platt: “It was the last minute. There was a free-kick in the centre.” Motson: “… Gascoigne shaping to take it …” Platt: “Gazza was on it. I was in the box trying to get a yard or half of space.” Motson: “… and chipped in …” Platt: “I was spinning, the ball dropped over my shoulder and I just tried to get something on it.” Motson: “… and volleyed in …” Platt: “There wasn’t a great deal of power. It was all technique.” Motson: “… and it’s there! …” Platt: “I saw it going in and fell to my knees.” Motson: “… by David Platt! …” Platt: “Everything was intuitive, the way I met and hit the ball and then dropping to my knees. Instinct just took over. I’d never ever dropped to my knees after scoring before, I don’t know why I did.” Motson: “… England have done it! In the last minute of extra-time!” Platt: “But when you score a goal like that you just go outside yourself for a bit, everything is surreal. The adrenaline surge is so great it’s as if I really was in a different place, a different world.” Motson: “… That’s the biggest smile in world football tonight – David Platt of Aston Villa.” Platt: “Don’t get me wrong, the goal wasn’t a fluke. I had an eye for getting on the end of that sort of ball and the technical ability to finish those chances off. I worked hard on practising overhead kicks and volleys in training at Aston Villa but, even so, if I had re-enacted that chance against Belgium 10 times in training the next day there’s a very good chance I wouldn’t have scored once from it. It was just one of life’s rare, perfect moments.” Motson: “He turned, volleyed and what a good finish.” Platt: “The one place where things didn’t go right was almost as soon as I left the pitch. One minute I was euphoric and the next I was being hauled off for a random drug test. It was hot and you’re so dehydrated after playing that it took 40 minutes – which passed very, very slowly – for me to produce a sample. I was in a room with a couple of Belgians who were seriously unhappy because they’d just been knocked out. I didn’t know what to say. By the time I came out the other players all had their suits on and the euphoria had passed.” Motson: “One of the most dramatic goals in the World Cup – and probably one of the best. England through to the quarter-finals of the World Cup.” Platt: “After finally getting back to the hotel and having something to eat I decided it was too late to phone my then girlfriend, now my wife, Rachel. For some reason I thought she’d be in bed and annoyed if I woke her up. In reality everyone was having a party and expecting a call from me. Nowadays my mobile phone would have been going mad with texts and voice messages but in 1990 the England squad were isolated from everything. “If I hadn’t scored that goal, I might still have ended up playing in Italy [Platt went on to play for Bari, Juventus and Sampdoria] but, realistically, I’m sure it was the catalyst. Italian clubs were looking for international names and, before that goal, I was only really known as a club player with Aston Villa. We’ve got a home in Sardinia now. The goal was a big catalyst.” World Cup 2010 Louise Taylor guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: David Platt relives Italia 90 volley against Belgium

Javier Mascherano’s agent claims he is in talks with Internazionale

• Argentina captain keen to link up with Rafael Benítez again • Mascherano has spent three years at Anfield Javier Mascherano’s agent has stated he is in talks with Internazionale over a possible move which would see the Liverpool midfielder reunited with his former manager, Rafael Benítez. Mascherano, who was heavily linked with a move to Barcelona last summer, has spent the past three years at Anfield but contract negotiations have been put on hold and one of his agents, Marco Piccioli, claims the 25-year-old may very well follow in the former manager’s footsteps. “There has already been a first contact with director Marco Branca,” Piccioli told www.Itasportpress.it. “We are evaluating the move hard and in the next few days we will have a new meeting to better establish the details of this transfer deal.” Mascherano, who has two years left on his deal at Liverpool, revealed this week he is learning Italian. And the Argentina captain at World Cup 2010 admitted this month he would relish the opportunity to link up with the Spaniard again. “Would I follow Benítez? I don’t know,” he said with a shrug. “At the moment I really know little about my future. But of course with Benítez at Liverpool I experienced three incredible years. His football is my football.” Liverpool Internazionale Transfer window World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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Javier Mascherano’s agent claims he is in talks with Internazionale

England v Algeria: glamour fixture requires an A-list crowd

Princes William and Harry are bringing the glitz Cape Town – but can Fabio Capello’s team reign supreme? Refuse gas and air, and proceed straight to the epidural – England’s next World Cup game is upon us. Finally, Fabio Capello’s two-and-a-half lions have the chance to exorcise last Saturday’s painful draw against the USA, by grinding out a nerve-shreddingly unconvincing 1-0 victory over Algeria. The setting for Friday’s crucial game is Green Point stadium, with the Cape Town match what you might call the glamour fixture in England’s first-round schedule. Which is to say, it will be attended by various people for whom one suspects other cities in South Africa are that bit too “authentic”. Spectators are to include London mayor Boris Johnson, who is on a five-day fact-finding mission for the 2012 Olympics, and the allegedly “football-mad” Princes William and Harry, who are on a joint tour of southern Africa. William is president of the Football Association – a role somehow even more pretend than Uncle Andrew’s job as UK trade ambassador – and he and his brother will stay on in Cape Town after the game to play a leading role in Saturday’s big event, which is a glitzy reception for England’s 2018 World Cup bid. Preparations for the soiree look solid at present – though obviously all could be derailed should Harry opt to go in fancy dress as PW Botha. Ultimately, though, Friday’s game offers England a chance to silence their footballing critics – an amusing number of whom seem to be German. First up was erstwhile Germany captain Michael Ballack, who reflected upon the difference between the two international sides. “We’re inspired by our history,” he explained, “whereas I sense England are intimidated by their past.” Next in line was the legendary Franz Beckenbauer. “What I saw of the English against the USA had very little to do with football,” schadenfreuded Der Kaiser, rightly judging that he had been watching not a football game, but some kind of psychological episode. Even German-born football fan Dr Henry Kissinger called the New York Times to offer his views on the World Cup – though sweetly he declined to add to England’s misery. “Brazil has played the most beautiful football,” the former US secretary of state apparently ruled, “while Italy has specialised in breaking the hearts of its opponents, and for Germany everyone attacks in a way suggestive of Erich von Falkenhayn’s huge flanking movements in world war one – and everyone defends.” Penetrating analysis there from the former comedy Nobel peace prizewinner. Perhaps ITV might consider Kissinger as a replacement pundit for the sacked Robbie Earle? The good doctor is already scheduled to attend the later rounds of the World Cup, South Africa being one of the countries to which he can travel without risking a connecting flight to the Hague. As for our own efforts to “move on” from Saturday, they have been mixed. If anything could make you yearn to be watching even the most lacklustre of England displays again, it is the manner in which Her Majesty’s press fills the gap between games. Lowlights since Saturday include Archbishop Desmond Tutu being presented with a Sun-branded vuvuzela, and the media pack besieging the home of hapless goalkeeper Robert Green’s parents, presumably waiting for them to emerge and disown him. The Greens have since appealed to the PCC for protection. What was needed, clearly, was something to Put Everything Into Perspective – and on Wednesday, Michael Dawson and Matthew Upson provided it. Escaping from what has been described predictably as England’s “gilded cage” of a team base, the two Tottenham defenders took a busload of hacks with them to visit an orphanage jointly funded by the FA and Spurs. According to Upson, “this puts everything into perspective” (that is, the orphanage does, not travelling everywhere with dozens of Boswells). So let us gird ourselves with that recalibrated perspective. After all, in a World Cup not short of early underperformers, England’s first result now demands to be reconsidered. According to the demented mathematics of the footballing optimist, favourites Spain losing to Switzerland pretty much bumps up our shabby draw with the USA into a triumph. Or something. The point is, it should be perfectly possible to await England v Algeria nursing the same level of mad hope with which you began this tournament, safe in the knowledge your despair will have its day. World Cup 2010 Prince Harry Prince William World Cup 2010 Group C England Marina Hyde guardian.co.uk

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England v Algeria: glamour fixture requires an A-list crowd

World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition? | Jonathan Wilson

The last four winners relied on marauding defenders but is a tactical change under way in South Africa? Correlation is not necessarily causation. It is intriguing that the last four World Cup winners have been the sides who have had the pair of attacking full-backs in the best form (Jorginho and Branco for Brazil in 1994, Lilian Thuram and Bixente Lizarazu for France in 1998, Cafu and Roberto Carlos for Brazil in 2002 and Gianluca Zambrotta and Fabio Grosso for Italy in 2006), but that is not sufficient to state that the side with the best attacking full-backs this time round will be equally successful. There is, to start with, a troubling circularity about the argument, for the team that wins the World Cup is liable to have the player in the best form – or at least perceived to be in the best form – in any given position. Does a team win the World Cup because it has the best full-backs, or does it have the best full-backs because it wins the World Cup? It’s hard to say, but even allowing for that caveat, the link between success and attacking full-backs seems strong – Thuram, Cafu and Grosso stood out even in excellent teams. In this tournament already, it is notable that Philipp Lahm had a fine game in Germany’s 4-0 win over Australia, that Cha Du-ri was excellent for South Korea in their 2-0 win over Greece, and that it was an overlapping Maicon who finally opened the scoring for Brazil against North Korea last night. Even Chris Lochhead, operating more as a wing-back, was the source of much of New Zealand’s attacking intent in their 1-1 draw against Slovakia. Given Glen Johnson and Ashley Cole were two of their less disappointing players against the USA, even England fans could cling to the full-back theory as a source of hope. Before making any judgment on the importance of full-backs, though, it first must be established why that correlation between attacking full-backs and success exists. This is a subject I’ve dealt with in greater detail before , but essentially it comes down to the point Jack Charlton made after the 1994 World Cup, that when a back four meets a team playing 4-4-2 or 3-5-2, the full-backs are the players who tend to have the most space in front of them, and thus the most time on the ball, and the most opportunities to make relatively risk-free runs into unexpected areas. Increasingly, though, teams are not playing 4-4-2, and so the advantage Charlton highlighted no longer exists. When a back four plays a 4-2-3-1 or a 4-3-3, the full-back no longer has space in front of him, but a winger. That complicates matters for an attacking full-back. If he is playing an attacking wide player, then he can effectively fight fire with fire – as, for instance Roberto Carlos did against David Beckham when Real Madrid beat Manchester United 3-1 at the Bernabéu in 2003, or Michael Essien against Cristiano Ronaldo in the final hour plus extra-time of the Champions League final in 2008. That, though, is a risk: Theo Walcott didn’t just score a hat-trick in Zagreb in 2008, he destroyed Croatia’s entire left side by making Danijel Pranjic, a full-back so attacking he usually plays in midfield, try to defend. So it may be safer for even an attacking full-back to sit deep and try to absorb the threat, as Ashley Cole did against Ronaldo in Euro 2004. If they are going to sit back, then it probably makes more sense for the full-back to be a naturally defensive player (Arsenal’s Lee Dixon on Newcastle’s David Ginola in a League Cup tie in January 1996, Manchester United’s Gary Neville on Arsenal’s José Antonio Reyes in October 2004) in which case the hegemony of the attacking full-back may be over. That’s not to say that the attacking full-back is outmoded, but that they are not such an advantage as they once were. If that is so, then the likes of Argentina and Holland may not be so hindered by their lack of attacking full-backs as it seemed they might be. There is always the chance in tournaments that a team reverting to a formation that seems thoroughly outdated will shock the opposition by setting them a problem they have forgotten how to solve. It worked for Greece when Otto Rehhagel reintroduced man-marking at Euro 2004, and it may be that a back four of essentially defensive players is such a novelty that opponents struggle against Diego Maradona’s Argentina. Jonás Gutiérrez, of course, is not a particularly solid option at right-back, and Nigeria frequently exploited his weak positional sense, but it could be that he is dropped for Nicolás Burdisso, who looked more convincing having come off the bench on Saturday. Holland present a less extreme case, but neither Gio van Bronckhorst, because of his age, nor Gregory van der Wiel, because of his essentially defensive outlook, are likely to be pouring forward making overlapping runs. Both play, in diluted form, a version of the “broken team” that was so prevalent in Italy in the late 1990s, in which some players have a very clear attacking role, and some a very clear defensive role, with little in between. Against Nigeria, Argentina had a very obvious back four plus Mascherano, and a front four of Angel di María, Carlos Tevez, Lionel Messi and Gonzalo Higuaín, with Juan Sebastián Verón providing some sort of link as a deep-lying playmaker. The Dutch similarly had a back four and a front four plus Nigel De Jong, with Mark van Bommel linking. That is a mode of play that places great onus on individual talent, and less on the system. Perhaps that is natural in international football, in which the lack of time available to coaches, as both Valeriy Lobanovskiy and Arrigo Sacchi made clear, makes sophisticated systematisation difficult to develop, perhaps it even plays into the hands of the advertisers whose ideal is a Ronaldo step-over rather than Rafa Benítez making compact gestures, but it does suggest that the age of the attacking full-back is, if not over, then at least being challenged. If Maradona has recognised that – or if he has listened to Carlos Bilardo telling him that – then he may just be smarter than many give him credit for (and, of course, Argentina’s lack of attacking full-backs makes it a wholly logical experiment). For if it comes down to a battle not of system – which would benefit Spain with their phalanx of gifted midfield pass-and-movers – but of individual attacking talent, then there is no side better placed than Argentina, with Holland not too far behind. It worked for Bilardo and Argentina in 1986 when, to put it slightly crudely, seven players defended and Jorge Valdano, Jorge Burruchaga and, of course, Maradona attacked. If Gabriel Heinze and Gutiérrez or Burdisso can help provide a platform, then with Angel Di María, Gonzalo Higuaín, Carlos Tevez and, of course, Messi, it might just work again. World Cup 2010 Jonathan Wilson guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition? | Jonathan Wilson

Fabrizio Miccoli turns down Birmingham move to stay at Palermo

• Italy striker commits to Serie A club • ‘I have sent back the contract because I want to stay here’ The Palermo striker Fabrizio Miccoli has turned down the chance to join Birmingham City after admitting his heart was not in the move. Miccoli, 30, today committed his future to his Serie A club as he appeared at a press conference arranged to allow him to outline his plans. “I would like to start by thanking Birmingham for the offer because to receive an offer like this, despite having just had an operation on torn cruciate knee ligaments, was unexpected,” said the forward, who narrowly missed out on Italy’s World Cup squad. “I waited before talking because I wanted to evaluate it with my family. I have made up my mind to stay. “I have decided to stay at Palermo. It was enough for me to meet Maurizio Zamparini [the Palermo chairman] and look him in the eyes to decide to stay in pink and black. Then again I am also the captain. I have sent back the contract [Birmingham offered] because I want to stay here, in this team. “I have worked a lot to get Palermo back into Europe. I want to enjoy myself in the Europa League with the pink and black jersey.” Birmingham City Transfer window Palermo guardian.co.uk

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Fabrizio Miccoli turns down Birmingham move to stay at Palermo