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Gag Reel of the Day: Want to watch 15 minutes of bloopers from…

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Gag Reel of the Day: Want to watch 15 minutes of bloopers from season two of Parks and Recreation ? Sure you do. (sNSFW, Louis CK.) [ vulture .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 01/04/2011 19:22 Number of articles : 2

Gag Reel of the Day: Want to watch 15 minutes of bloopers from…

Random Pics Gallery: Phaedra Parks, Paula Patton, Ne-Yo, And More!

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Random Pics Gallery: Phaedra Parks, Paula Patton, Ne-Yo, And More!

Phaedra Parks Of “Real Housewives Of Atlanta” Writing Etiquette Book

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Phaedra Parks, of “The Real Housewives of Atlanta” fame, is penning her first book and pitching three new reality shows. Phaedra describes the book as “a modern day twist on etiquette.” She told RadarOnline, “It’s about being a southern belle and all the accoutrements that go with it. It’s a modern day twist on etiquette and being a lady. And it’s alright for women to embrace their ladylike side. It’s high time that women start enjoying being ladies again. People have moved away from that.” “I want to give my tips. So many people over the years have asked me about how to have it all without losing yourself.” Phaedra is also pitching three new “empowering” reality TV shows. “I’m more into the uplifting programs. The first show is a docudrama and will take a group of women and empower them. The second show is more of a documentary that deals with serious issues of dating. And the third show is more fun and lighthearted focusing on alternative lifestyles.” “I’m all about girl-power.” NeNe, Kim & Phaedra Still Fighting At “Real Housewives” Reunion [VIDEO] Kandi Answers How Celebrities Cope With Bullying [VIDEO]

Phaedra Parks Of “Real Housewives Of Atlanta” Writing Etiquette Book

Phaedra Parks Of “Real Housewives Of Atlanta” Writing Etiquette Book

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Phaedra Parks, of “The Real Housewives of Atlanta” fame, is penning her first book and pitching three new reality shows. Phaedra describes the book as “a modern day twist on etiquette.” She told RadarOnline, “It’s about being a southern belle and all the accoutrements that go with it. It’s a modern day twist on etiquette and being a lady. And it’s alright for women to embrace their ladylike side. It’s high time that women start enjoying being ladies again. People have moved away from that.” “I want to give my tips. So many people over the years have asked me about how to have it all without losing yourself.” Phaedra is also pitching three new “empowering” reality TV shows. “I’m more into the uplifting programs. The first show is a docudrama and will take a group of women and empower them. The second show is more of a documentary that deals with serious issues of dating. And the third show is more fun and lighthearted focusing on alternative lifestyles.” “I’m all about girl-power.” NeNe, Kim & Phaedra Still Fighting At “Real Housewives” Reunion [VIDEO] Kandi Answers How Celebrities Cope With Bullying [VIDEO]

Phaedra Parks Of “Real Housewives Of Atlanta” Writing Etiquette Book

25 Reasons We Love Blaxploitation Films

Was there a better decade for black films than the 1970’s, when the Blaxploitation era was in full effect? Though it was a controversial era for African-Americans, Blaxploitation cinema was a creatively rich period that broke down racial barriers for many black actors and filmmakers. Names like Richard Roundtree, Pam Grier, and Melvin Van Peebles became household names and showed an empowered side to African-American lives. Though the NAACP would strongly oppose the images depicted in many Blaxploitation films, if it wasn’t for them, the idea of a black superhero might not have ever existed. WHY WE LOVE THEM… 1. The films showed Hollywood the power of the Black dollar at the box office and paved the way for a generation of black filmmakers and films with all black casts. 2. Classic slang words and phrases like, “Mack”, “cold blooded”, and “solid”. 3. The Man was always white. 4. The best soundtracks. 5. “Across 110th Street” by Bobby Womack 6. “Super Fly” by Curtis Mayfield 7. Unapologetic use of white ethnic slurs like the word “honky” 8. Athletes turned actors, and good ones, e.g. Jim Brown, Fred Williamson, Bernie Casey 9. Gordon Parks, director of Shaft and the sequels, Shaft’s Big Score and Shaft In Africa 10. Films set in black cities like Oakland (Hit Man); Detroit (Detroit 9000); Houston (Sugar Hill) Head to HelloBeautiful.com for reasons 11-25

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25 Reasons We Love Blaxploitation Films

Victoria Justice’s Teen Tongue for the Pervs of the Day

I don’t know if watching a teenage girl catching snowflakes in her mouth and fantasizing about it being your orgasm is illegal, but I do know that it is pornography to you perverts who know more about these teen starlets than their 14 year old target markets. I see old dudes in the parks, by the skating rinks, at the ski hill, in starbucks, spending their days lookin for 15 and 16 year old girls to go home to masturbate to, and it’s weird. The only reason I know who this Victoria Justice bitch is, is from some dirty old dude down the hall who only watches the Disny Channel and who always asks me where he can find bikini pics of her…. Seriously, this teenage girl obsession is totally fucking weird. Don’t people remember banging their girlfriend at 16 and having the single worse sex of your life? I know I do. I also know I like my pussy to be wise beyond its years and able to tell me stories of when and where it learnt how to throw up on command and shit….but maybe I’m the weird for wanting a girl who knows how to fuck. I feel like these pictures may just be perpetuating the problem…Oh well…I’m not here to save people…

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Victoria Justice’s Teen Tongue for the Pervs of the Day

Kanye West And Jay-Z Are ‘So Appalled’ On New Track

‘Ye also drafts Swizz Beatz, RZA, Pusha T and Cyhi Da Prynce for latest G.O.O.D. Friday track. By Mawuse Ziegbe Kanye West Photo: Gabriela Maj/ Getty Images Another Friday, another Kanye West -helmed all-star collabo. The hip-hop superstar’s latest weekly offering, “So Appalled,” continues his trend of packing a varied cast of big-name stars onto a single record. This week, ‘Ye recruited G.O.O.D. Music signee Pusha T, fellow MC/producer Swizz Beatz and rap luminary Jay-Z for repeat guest spots. Wu-Tang Clan ringleader RZA follows in the footsteps of Wu member Raekwon by dropping a G.O.O.D. Friday verse and newcomer Cyhi Da Prynce makes an appearance. ‘Ye tweeted Friday evening (September 24) that, unlike his recent free track “Lord Lord Lord,” which surfaced Saturday morning , G.O.O.D. Friday followers could expect a new song to kick off the weekend. “Good Friday actually coming on time this week!” he wrote . “We do this for our culture!” “So Appalled” also differs from the soulful instrumentation and introspective lyricism of “Lord” on several fronts. Accompanied by gruesome artwork of a nude woman splayed on a white surface with blood streaming from her mouth, the song has a testy, restless vibe with midtempo rhythms and ominous shuddering strings. Swizzy sets the track’s tone with ad-libs such as “one hand in the air, if you don’t really care” as West follows with bars like “We above the law, we don’t give a f— ’bout y’all/ I got dogs that’ll chew a f—ing hole through the wall.” Jay takes jabs at ankle-biting MCs, launching his verse with, “How should I begin this?/ I’m just so offended/ How am I even mentioned by these f—in’ beginners?/ I’m so appalled/ I might buy the mall/ Just to show n—as how much more I have in store.” Hov spends most of his bars deconstructing the hate that surrounds outsize fame but poses the question, “Would you rather be underpaid or overrated?” Push is up next with his own views on reaching the top, spitting, “Success is what you make it/ Take it how it come/ A half a mill in 20s like a billion where I’m from.” Cyhi holds his own among an intimidating roster of established MCs with lines like “If god had an iPod, I’d be on his playlist” and “Thou shalt not hate, kid/ My movement is like the civil rights, I’m Ralph David/ Abernathy, so call my lady Rosa Parks/ I am nothing like them n—as, baby those are marks.” RZA comes right in as Cyhi steps back, nearly clipping the end of his verse with bellows of “f—in’ ridiculous” riding out the track with rhymes like “Cars for the Mrs. and furs for the mistress/ You know that sh– is f—in’ ridiculous.” How do you like Kanye West’s “So Appalled”? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Kanye West Jay-Z Swizz Beatz

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Kanye West And Jay-Z Are ‘So Appalled’ On New Track

Thousands of Trees Killed by New York Tornadoes

# The New York Times September 17, 2010 Thousands of Trees Killed by New York Tornadoes By N. R. KLEINFIELD and ELISSA GOOTMAN As National Weather Service officials declared Friday that two tornadoes had indeed swept into New York City on Thursday, some tree-lined streets in Brooklyn and Queens looked – at least from the air – like Lego masterpieces that angry children had done their best to sweep aside. Some were more than a century old but still sturdy and doing their jobs. Many others were young and willowy, just getting going. Some of them were inscrutable; no one truly knew them or how they got there. But others felt like old friends. They were wonderful for their blissful shade, to climb, to simply stare at and admire. They were the most visible evidence of the fleeting but brutal storm that barged through New York City on Thursday evening: the ravaged trees. There was a beloved scarlet oak that had stood forever in a farm family’s cemetery in Queens. There was a Callery pear that parrots preferred on a street in Brooklyn. Trees that had stories to them that were now prematurely finished. The tragedy of the storm, which meteorologists said Friday included two tornadoes, was Aline Levakis, 30, from Mechanicsburg, Pa., the sole person to die, when a tree, as it happened, hit her car on the Grand Central Parkway in Queens. Buildings and houses were severely damaged, thousands of customers lost electricity and many commuters were inconvenienced. But destroyed were thousands of trees — trees torn out of sidewalks, others flung 30 or 40 feet through the air, still others shorn of branches, cracked in two. On Friday, as the city plowed ahead in the painstaking process of cleaning up the wreckage and repairing damage, it was still too early to tabulate a reliable tree death count. The city has over 100 species and more than five million trees, some as old as 250. Clearly the loss was great. Adrian Benepe, the city’s parks commissioner, estimated that as many as 2,000 of the 650,000 street trees had been killed or else so crippled that they would have to be cut down. Mr. Benepe said hundreds of the two million trees in the parks were killed or damaged beyond hope. Hundreds more lost limbs. Storms periodically batter the city’s trees. A freak storm in August of last year toppled about 500 trees in Central Park. The storm on Thursday left Manhattan and the Bronx virtually unscathed but was merciless in the other boroughs. “It’s hard to compare to previous storms,” Mr. Benepe said, “but given the brevity of the storm, the extent of the damage seems unparalleled.” As workers began carving up the trees and trucking them away, they found decimated oaks, Norway maples, catalpas, and more and more. Mr. Benepe said the older, larger trees, like the maples, oaks and London planes that were planted along city streets, suffered worst. They have a lot of leaf surface that catches the wind, and they are inflexible. Many Callery pears, with their showy white blossoms, also went. Although smaller, they are weak-wooded. The storm wiped out a dozen or so willow trees lining Willow Lake and Meadow Lake in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens. Some of them fell into the lakes. On the blocks around Juniper Valley Park in Middle Village, Queens, hundreds of elderly elms, oaks and maples succumbed. Youngsters — 7 to 10 years old — were yanked out like matchsticks and whipped through the area. Robert Holden, president of the Juniper Park Civic Association, walked around the bruised neighborhood on Friday snapping pictures of fallen timber. One majestic tree, regarded as the neighborhood’s treasure, was an immense scarlet oak in the Pullis Farm Cemetery, an early American farm family burial ground. It was believed to be more than 110 years old. It was a beauty, just about perfectly symmetrical. “When you touched the tree, you felt like you were touching a part of the 19th century,” Mr. Holden said. The storm tore it down, ending its long life in a blink. “This hit me the hardest,” Mr. Holden said. “Some people said can we pick it up and put it back? But you can’t.” In All Faiths Cemetery in Middle Village stood another cherished tree, a towering live oak thought to be 180 years old. It was about 90 feet tall. After the storm, all that remained was the bottom 12 feet. “It was a cool-looking tree,” said Daniel C. Austin Jr., the cemetery’s vice president. “It had these beautiful arms. Every time we drove by it, we used to talk about it.” Grief was palpable in Forest Hills Gardens, a private nest of Tudor and Georgian homes in Queens that is one of the city’s greenest neighborhoods, home to hundreds of trees. It was only recently that the residents’ association planted 70 more — maples, oaks and London planes. These newcomers, so much life left in them, bore the brunt of the storm. Edward and Vera Ward, who live just outside the enclave, stroll through the neighborhood every day, drawn by the serenity and welcoming shade of the tall trees. On Friday, Mr. Ward, 58, was snapping pictures of men sawing a supine tree into bits. “It’s like a part of me is gone,” he said, and his eyes welled up. An elderly man was mourning a maple tree that he had planted outside his house on Dartmouth Street when he was a teenager. It grew as he grew. It was one more that the storm took. In Park Slope, Brooklyn, a Callery pear tree stands across the street from the house of Nick Lerman, 27, a Brooklyn College student. Almost two-thirds of its canopy had been ripped off. “I’m looking at maybe 37 percent of a tree,” Mr. Lerman said. “Now it kind of looks like a bald guy with half a tonsure.” He said parrots shuttled back and forth from the tree to the one across from it. He said he hoped that the tree would live, that the parrots would still have it. Reuben Slater had his own tree-loss story. He is 13 and lives in Park Slope. When he walks to school, he passes a massive ash tree with a trunk that gives way to branches that form a V. When he was younger, he thought of it as the tree of life. The storm carved off half the V. The tree is expected to survive, but to no longer resemble its old self. That saddens Reuben. He sees a tree “with a broken arm.” He snatched a small branch off the ground. He said he would keep it in his room. “I’m going to name it Pablo,” he said. “I’ve always loved that name.” Fernanda Santos and Rebecca White contributed reporting. http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/09/18/nyregion/TREES/TREES-articleInlin… added by: EthicalVegan

New Community Garden Rules Offer Weaker Protection Than 2002 Agreement: NY State Lead Attorney

photo: Matthew McDermott To hear NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe describe it, either on WNYC or in the New York Post , the proposed rules governing the City’s hundreds of community gardens are a definite step up from the 2002 … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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New Community Garden Rules Offer Weaker Protection Than 2002 Agreement: NY State Lead Attorney

Lindsay Lohan’s Lawyer Says Fingernail ‘Could Barely Be Seen By The Naked Eye’

Lohan’s ‘penalty is far harsher than what others would have received under similar circumstances,’ Shawn Chapman Holley says in a statement. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Gil Kaufman Lindsay Lohan in court on Tuesday Photo: Dave McNew/ Getty Images After Lindsay Lohan was sentenced to 90 days in jail to be followed by 90 days in rehab for violating her probation, the actress’ lawyer is speaking out. “Ms. Lohan and I are extremely disappointed in the sentence handed down by Judge Revel,” Lohan’s attorney, Shawn Chapman Holley, told MTV News in a statement Thursday (July 8). “We believe that the penalty is far harsher than what others would have received under similar circumstances. “The reality is that Ms. Lohan, like most defendants, had to balance work commitments with court requirements,” the statement continues. “To be punished so severely for doing so, particularly in light of the fact that she substantially complied with each of her probationary conditions, is harsh and unfair. Ms. Lohan is prepared to serve her jail time and to comply with the court’s orders.” Holley also defended her client’s decision to come to court with the message “f— u” stenciled on her middle finger . “With respect to Ms. Lohan’s nails, the fact is, the words could barely be seen by the naked eye,” she explained. “That a courtroom camera, purportedly there to accurately chronicle the proceedings, would use a telephoto lens to zoom in as it did to Ms. Lohan’s fingernail is a commentary on the entire issue.” Lohan also responded to the controversy surrounding her nail art in a Twitter post Wednesday. “Didn’t we do our nails as a joke with our friend DC?” she tweeted. “It had nothing to do w/court. It’s an airbrush design from a stencil xx.” Do you believe that Lohan’s punishment was unfair? Tell us in the comments! Related Photos Lindsay Lohan Goes To Court The Highs And Lows Of Lindsay Lohan Related Artists Lindsay Lohan

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Lindsay Lohan’s Lawyer Says Fingernail ‘Could Barely Be Seen By The Naked Eye’