Tag Archives: material

Hatched! Lady GaGa Performs "Born This Way" at the Grammy Awards

Egged on to up the ante for each of her live performances, Lady GaGa took things to a new extreme at the Grammy Awards. She showed up on the red carpet inside a shell , and proceeded to belt out a rendition of her latest single, “Born This Way.” Is this song just a copy of a Madonna classic? That’s up to listeners to decide. But one thing is certain: The Material Girl never hatched herself on stage in order to kick off a performance. Watch GaGa do just that below and then grade her Grammy gig: What do you think? Lady Gaga – Born This Way (Grammy Awards)

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Hatched! Lady GaGa Performs "Born This Way" at the Grammy Awards

It Exists! The Trailer for Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life Finally Premieres Online

Unless you were one of the chosen people Fox Searchlight invited to their lot two weeks ago for a special “screening” of the trailer for Terrence Malick’s Tree of Life — or, you know, unless you spotted it pirated on YouTube; or in the theater when you saw Black Swan — this is the first time you’re seeing anything resembling moving images from the much-delayed film. Try not to hyperventilate, folks! Let’s hold hands and take a look together.

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It Exists! The Trailer for Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life Finally Premieres Online

REVIEW: John Cameron Mitchell’s Rabbit Hole Is Sensitive But Not Bloodless

Perhaps the only thing harder than making a movie about young parents riven by grief after losing a child is sitting through one. And for that reason alone, Rabbit Hole won’t make for a particularly cheery night out. But director John Cameron Mitchell — adapting David Lindsay-Abaire’s play — has a surprisingly deft touch with this admittedly downbeat material; he builds dramatic intensity in subtle layers, rather than slapping it on with a trowel. Rabbit Hole is so unassuming, in fact — it’s filled with delicately calibrated performances and nuanced moments of connection and disaffection — that the cumulative effect is a bit underwhelming. But you can’t fault Mitchell’s instincts; he’s adamant about understating this material rather than sending it over the top, and that makes all the difference.

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REVIEW: John Cameron Mitchell’s Rabbit Hole Is Sensitive But Not Bloodless

Researchers at MIT develop a way to funnel solar energy

Using carbon nanotubes (hollow tubes of carbon atoms), MIT chemical engineers have found a way to concentrate solar energy 100 times more than a regular photovoltaic cell. Such nanotubes could form antennas that capture and focus light energy, potentially allowing much smaller and more powerful solar arrays. “Instead of having your whole roof be a photovoltaic cell, you could have little spots that were tiny photovoltaic cells, with antennas that would drive photons into them,” says Michael Strano, the Charles and Hilda Roddey Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering and leader of the research team. Strano and his students describe their new carbon nanotube antenna, or “solar funnel,” in the Sept. 12 online edition of the journal Nature Materials. Lead authors of the paper are postdoctoral associate Jae-Hee Han and graduate student Geraldine Paulus. Their new antennas might also be useful for any other application that requires light to be concentrated, such as night-vision goggles or telescopes. Solar panels generate electricity by converting photons (packets of light energy) into an electric current. Strano's nanotube antenna boosts the number of photons that can be captured and transforms the light into energy that can be funneled into a solar cell. The antenna consists of a fibrous rope about 10 micrometers (millionths of a meter) long and four micrometers thick, containing about 30 million carbon nanotubes. Strano's team built, for the first time, a fiber made of two layers of nanotubes with different electrical properties — specifically, different bandgaps. In any material, electrons can exist at different energy levels. When a photon strikes the surface, it excites an electron to a higher energy level, which is specific to the material. The interaction between the energized electron and the hole it leaves behind is called an exciton, and the difference in energy levels between the hole and the electron is known as the bandgap. The inner layer of the antenna contains nanotubes with a small bandgap, and nanotubes in the outer layer have a higher bandgap. That's important because excitons like to flow from high to low energy. In this case, that means the excitons in the outer layer flow to the inner layer, where they can exist in a lower (but still excited) energy state. Therefore, when light energy strikes the material, all of the excitons flow to the center of the fiber, where they are concentrated. Strano and his team have not yet built a photovoltaic device using the antenna, but they plan to. In such a device, the antenna would concentrate photons before the photovoltaic cell converts them to an electrical current. This could be done by constructing the antenna around a core of semiconducting material. …. While the cost of carbon nanotubes was once prohibitive, it has been coming down in recent years as chemical companies build up their manufacturing capacity. “At some point in the near future, carbon nanotubes will likely be sold for pennies per pound, as polymers are sold,” says Strano. “With this cost, the addition to a solar cell might be negligible compared to the fabrication and raw material cost of the cell itself, just as coatings and polymer components are small parts of the cost of a photovoltaic cell.” Strano's team is now working on ways to minimize the energy lost as excitons flow through the fiber, and on ways to generate more than one exciton per photon. The nanotube bundles described in the Nature Materials paper lose about 13 percent of the energy they absorb, but the team is working on new antennas that would lose only 1 percent. added by: JanforGore

The Incredible Hypnotist Richard Barker Street Hypnosis in Orlando,Fl

Richard Barker the incredible hypnotist goes to Lake Eola in Orlando Florida where he hypnotizes people in the street. The street hypnotist comes across a homeless man in a wheel chair who is paralyzed and gets him to stand up, it is amazing. Random passers buy are dropped into a trance like a sack of potatoes added by: motomaxx

Wikileaks Lawyer Says Pentagon Given Access to Unpublished Secret Documents – Newsweek

A U.S. lawyer representing the whistleblowing web site Wikileaks says U.S. government officials have been given codes and passwords granting them online access to official U.S. government documents that Wikileaks so far has not published. Timothy Matusheski, a lawyer from Hattiesburg, Miss., who says he represents whistleblowers and has been in touch with both Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and at least one government official involved in investigations of Wikileaks, said Wikileaks had set up a “secure channel” through which authorized users could access the unpublished material. He said credentials for using this Web site had been forwarded to representatives of the U.S. government whom he did not identify. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Matusheski said U.S. officials had even been given access to an online mechanism where they would be able to redact what they consider potentially sensitive information. Matusheski says he himself has only been given a portion of the codes needed to access the unpublished material. So, he says, the U.S. government now has wider and more complete access to the material than he did. added by: toyotabedzrock

Madonna Accused of ‘Material Girl’ Theft

Filed under: Madonna , Celebrity Justice A clothing company is taking legal action against Madonna , claiming the material girl has ripped off the “Material Girl” trademark. L.A. Triumph, Inc . claims in a new lawsuit it’s been marketing “Material Girl” clothing since 1997, selling millions of… Read more

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Madonna Accused of ‘Material Girl’ Theft

Happy Birthday, Madonna!

Madonna Louise Ciccone, better known by just her first name, is one of the most successful recording artists in music history. She needs no introduction from us. It’s hard to believe that the star’s debut album came out 1983, setting the stage for her immense popularity and pushing of boundaries across the music spectrum. She helped popularize MTV and transform pop with hits like “Like a Virgin,” “Papa Don’t Preach,” “Like a Prayer,” “Vogue,” Hung Up,” “4 Minutes” and many others. Commercially and critically acclaimed, Madonna’s diverse musical offerings have won respect and millions of fans over the years, not to mention much controversy. Madonna turns 52 today. Give it up for the Material Girl! More recently, her music was immortalized on Fox’s Glee , and her relationships with Alex Rodriguez and Jesus Luz have kept her in the celebrity gossip spotlight. She’s also a mother to Lourdes, Rocco, David and Mercy. Here’s hoping she keeps on rocking for years to come. Click to enlarge the gallery of Madonna pictures we’ve put together below and wish her a happy birthday!

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Happy Birthday, Madonna!

Krauthammer: Classified Leaks in Bush and Nixon Years Got You a Pulitzer Prize, With a Dem President You’re Condemned

Charles Krauthammer on Friday made a truly wonderful observation about how differently the media handle leaks of classified information depending on whether there’s a Democrat or a Republican in the White House. As the discussion on PBS’s “Inside Washington” moved to the Wikileaks affair, the Washington Post’s Colby King said, “I don’t see it as such a difficult issue at all for the Pentagon. It’s, you know, it’s our material, it’s not [Wikileaks’].” This led Krauthammer to ask, “How come in the Bush years and the Nixon years, when you leaked stuff that’s our material, classified material, you end up with a Pulitzer Prize, and now if you have a Democratic administration, you end up being condemned from left and right?” He continued, “I’m not sure I understand” (video follows with transcript and commentary): GORDON PETERSON, HOST: Let me touch on something in terms of we talked about last week, and that’s the Wikileaks issue. The Pentagon now wants to get its hands on all of these papers. What are the odds of that? We don’t know if this guy will give them up, I mean he’s publishing them everywhere. JOSH GERSTEIN, POLITICO: Right, well and there this fascinating bid  by Wikileaks, I think a pretty interesting play by them. They’ve actually gone to the Pentagon and said, “Well, yeah, we would love to discuss with you what’s exactly sensitive in here. Why don’t you come to the table and talk about it?” I think the Pentagon is saying they have not really been asked that, but that is what Wikileaks is saying, which would put the Pentagon in a very awkward position because they, you know, there’s talk of prosecuting these folks. They do not want to be sitting at the same table with them going through page by page… PETERSON: Well, Admiral Mullen says they’re putting lives at risk. COLBY KING, WASHINGTON POST: I don’t see it as such a difficult issue at all for the Pentagon. It’s, you know, it’s our material, it’s not yours. We’re not going to negotiate with… GERSTEIN: Well, but their materials may be in your newsroom as well. KING: That’s okay. GERSTEIN: Should they come over and pick those up? KING: They can ask us for it. We won’t give it to them, but they have every right to demand it. CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER, SYNDICATED COLUMNIST: But if it’s such a simple issue… KING: But you don’t negotiate it. KRAUTHAMMER: If it’s such a simple issue, how come in the Bush years and the Nixon years, when you leaked stuff that’s our material, classified material, you end up with a Pulitzer Prize, and now if you have a Democratic administration, you end up being condemned from left and right? I’m not sure I understand. I’m not sure I do either. After all, just how many Pulitzers were passed out to so-called journalists during the Bush and Nixon years for leaking classified information? And how many went to members of the Washington Post? Yet there’s the Post’s King for the second week in a row taking a position that he likely didn’t take in the previous decade or under Nixon, and probably wouldn’t if McCain was in the White House. As such, why the double standard?

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Krauthammer: Classified Leaks in Bush and Nixon Years Got You a Pulitzer Prize, With a Dem President You’re Condemned

Stephenie Meyer Is Too ‘Burned Out On Vampires’ For ‘Midnight Sun’

‘I want to wait until I’m excited about the material again,’ author says of ‘Twilight’ companion novel. By Kara Warner Stephenie Meyer Photo: Getty Images Ever since part of it leaked online, “Twilight” fans have been frothing at the mouth for more information about Stephenie Meyer’s “Midnight Sun,” the unfinished “Twilight” companion book told from Edward’s perspective. At a mini press junket she held for a group of lucky Twilight fansites picked by Meyer at random out of a hat — TwilightSeriesTheories.com , TwilightSource.com , Twifans.com and Letters to Twilight — she answered fans’ burning questions about the elusive book. Meyer jumped right into talk about “Sun,” admitting to her eager audience that she has not made any more progress on the novel because, shockingly, she is “really burned out on vampires,” and doesn’t want that to affect her writing in a negative way. “I want to wait until I’m excited about the material again, and I’m excited about Edward, and that it’s something that’s motivating,” she said. “Right now, it feels like homework. And when things feel like homework they go very, very slowly for me. So it’s still not a ‘It’s not gonna happen!’ I want to do it when I can do it right.” Meyer admitted that part of her reluctance to finish the book is that she is getting pressured about by all sorts of people, including random musicians. “I was at the Fray concert, and I was hanging out with the guys backstage,” she shared. “They’re really cool, and I was talking to [frontman] Isaac [Slade] about it. He was like, ‘I really want you to do that!’ And I was like, ‘Oh my gosh! Come on!’ You know, I can’t get away from it anywhere.” Meyer acknowledged her stubbornness, and added that a little reverse psychology might be the better way to go with her. That argument makes sense, since she did write an entire “Twilight” spin-off novella, “The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner,” when all she was asked to do was pen a short story. Meyer said Slade gave her some motivation. “I have this great thing he signed for me; it says, ‘To Stephenie, Don’t work on that stupid book! Nobody wants it anyway!’ That really is the right direction to go with me,” Meyer said. “Because I’m like. ‘Huh! Maybe I should do it! I’ll show you!’ Psychology!” Knowing how her audience will probably react to even her most evasive statements, statements, Meyer added cheekily, “Anyway, that’s ‘Midnight Sun’! So, that should disappoint everyone!” Are you still clamoring for “Midnight Sun,” or are you willing to give Stephenie a break? Share your opinions and demands below. We’ll be live at the L.A. premiere of “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” on Thursday, June 24. Tune in to Movies.MTV.com at 9:30 ET (8:30 Central) for our red-carpet webcast, and watch us chat with Robert, Kristen, Taylor and all your favorite stars. And don’t forget to submit your burning ‘Eclipse’ questions ! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” and “Breaking Dawn.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com .

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Stephenie Meyer Is Too ‘Burned Out On Vampires’ For ‘Midnight Sun’