Tag Archives: past

Rihanna Says Boyfriend Matt Kemp Keeps Her ‘Sane’

Pop star dishes about her current relationship and her past year in Elle magazine. By Mawuse Ziegbe Rihanna Photo: Michael Tran/ FilmMagic From the dramatic fashion statements to the sharp-edged radio hits Rihanna has evolved over the past year from pop princess to rock star. While last year her personal life was the source of much chronicled drama, the singer recently revealed that these days it’s her romance with boyfriend and L.A. Dodgers player Matt Kemp that keeps her grounded. “I have a boyfriend. I’m so happy. I feel really comfortable, and it’s so easy,” Rihanna gushes in the latest issue of Elle magazine. “I have such a chaotic life, but at the end of the day, that is just my peace. It keeps me sane, really, talking to him and talking to my family.” Rihanna has spent most of the past year reinventing herself as a boundary-pushing artist; abandoning her sunny pop jams and good-girl charm in favor of gritty hits and a highly stylized image. Earlier this week, “Love the Way You Lie,” her collaboration with Eminem that laments the torturous cycle of an abusive relationship, leaked to the Internet. And in the interview with Elle, the singer opened up about her emotional state over a year ago when she sustained the now infamously brutal attack at the hands of former boyfriend Chris Brown. “A year ago, I was very confused,” the star revealed to Elle. “Because he was my best friend. All of a sudden, one night changed our whole lives — not only our friendship, but our lives. I wanted to wake up one day and just not have that pain anymore. I wanted to be with him again or get over him — it was either-or. I just didn’t want to feel the pain, the confusion.” The superstar talked about the moody, black-and-white album art of Rated R, which she released in the wake of her “life-changing” experience with Brown. “I wanted pictures that represented strength and fearlessness but still femininity — a strong woman who can be vulnerable. Every woman is made up of vulnerability and strength; no matter what race you are, no matter what you’ve been through in your life.” After lighting up red carpets with her daring fashion choices, inspiring legions of girls to lop off their locks to match her evolving pixie cut, Rih Rih is known as much for her style as her sound. When it comes to designers, the star said she favors labels with an equally intrepid approach to fashion. “I respect designers who aren’t afraid to go outside of the box,” she said. “I went to a Jean Paul Gaultier show, and I saw girls who are thicker than me, beautiful and voluptuous and different ethnicities. That made me so excited. I thought, ‘OK, I can work that, for sure.’ ” What is your favorite of Rihanna’s recent looks? Let us know in the comments. Related Artists Rihanna

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Rihanna Says Boyfriend Matt Kemp Keeps Her ‘Sane’

Fred Ordway and the Rocket Team, 1 of 3 – SpacePod 2010.06.09

Frederick I. Ordway III sat down with us at the 2010 International Space Development Conference to talk about his book, “The Rocket Team”. Fred was highly passionate about the past and after asking only 1 question he was able to tell the story of The Rocket Team. The entire interview is 20 minutes long and has been cut in to 3 parts. This is the first of the thee part series. added by: bhigginbotham

Seven American Soldiers Killed in Afghanistan

Monday was the deadliest day so far in 2010 for U.S. troops in Afghanistan. According to the Los Angeles Times, five American soldiers died in a bombing in the east and two in the country’s southern region.

BP Knew: Years of Internal Probes Warned That Neglect Could Lead to Accidents

By Abrahm Lustgarten and Ryan Knutson, ProPublica A series of internal investigations over the past decade warned senior BP managers that the company repeatedly disregarded safety and environmental rules and risked a serious accident if it did not change its ways. Related Entries June 7, 2010 The Christian Fascists Are Growing Stronger June 7, 2010 A Warning From Noam Chomsky on the Threat of Elites

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BP Knew: Years of Internal Probes Warned That Neglect Could Lead to Accidents

Surprise! Real Housewives’ "Prostitution Whore" Has a Sex Tape

Really, it was only a matter of time. While The Real Housewives of New Jersey’s resident paranoid Manzo avenger Danielle Staub has spent the past two seasons trying to convince…

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Surprise! Real Housewives’ "Prostitution Whore" Has a Sex Tape

Kendra: Sex Tape Is "Embarrassing"

Kendra Wilkinson-Baskett is owning up to—and breaking down over—her past indiscretions. In her first interview since her sex tape surfaced, the E! reality star sits down with…

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Kendra: Sex Tape Is "Embarrassing"

Arctic Ice At Low Point Compared To Recent Geologic History

Less ice covers the Arctic today than at any time in recent geologic history. That's the conclusion of an international group of researchers, who have compiled the first comprehensive history of Arctic ice. For decades, scientists have strived to collect sediment cores from the difficult-to-access Arctic Ocean floor, to discover what the Arctic was like in the past. Their most recent goal: to bring a long-term perspective to the ice loss we see today. Now, in an upcoming issue of Quarternary Science Reviews, a team led by Ohio State University has re-examined the data from past and ongoing studies – nearly 300 in all – and combined them to form a big-picture view of the pole's climate history stretching back millions of years. “The ice loss that we see today – the ice loss that started in the early 20th Century and sped up during the last 30 years – appears to be unmatched over at least the last few thousand years,” said Leonid Polyak, a research scientist at Byrd Polar Research Center at Ohio State University. Polyak is lead author of the paper and a preceding report that he and his coauthors prepared for the U.S. Climate Change Science Program. Satellites can provide detailed measures of how much ice is covering the pole right now, but sediment cores are like fossils of the ocean's history, he explained. “Sediment cores are essentially a record of sediments that settled at the sea floor, layer by layer, and they record the conditions of the ocean system during the time they settled. When we look carefully at various chemical and biological components of the sediment, and how the sediment is distributed – then, with certain skills and luck, we can reconstruct the conditions at the time the sediment was deposited.” For example, scientists can search for a biochemical marker that is tied to certain species of algae that live only in ice. If that marker is present in the sediment, then that location was likely covered in ice at the time. Scientists call such markers “proxies” for the thing they actually want to measure – in this case, the geographic extent of the ice in the past. While knowing the loss of surface area of the ice is important, Polyak says that this work can't yet reveal an even more important fact: how the total volume of ice – thickness as well as surface area – has changed over time. “Underneath the surface, the ice can be thick or thin. The newest satellite techniques and field observations allow us to see that the volume of ice is shrinking much faster than its area today. The picture is very troubling. We are losing ice very fast,” he said. “Maybe sometime down the road we'll develop proxies for the ice thickness. Right now, just looking at ice extent is very difficult.” To review and combine the data from hundreds of studies, he and his cohorts had to combine information on many different proxies as well as modern observations. They searched for patterns in the proxy data that fit together like pieces of a puzzle. Their conclusion: the current extent of Arctic ice is at its lowest point for at least the last few thousand years. As scientists pull more sediment cores from the Arctic, Polyak and his collaborators want to understand more details of the past ice extent and to push this knowledge further back in time. During the summer of 2011, they hope to draw cores from beneath the Chukchi Sea, just north of the Bering Strait between Alaska and Siberia. The currents emanating from the northern Pacific Ocean bring heat that may play an important role in melting the ice across the Arctic, so Polyak expects that the history of this location will prove very important. continued added by: JanforGore

Downtown Cairo to Go Car-Free… Eventually

These kinds of scenes could become a thing of the past in downtown Cairo. Photo by Daveness_98 via Flickr. When it comes to crazy drivers, traffic congestion, and all the air and noise pollution that come along with massive amounts of cars jammed into one place, Istanbul, I’ve heard, has nothing on Cairo . But the Egyptian capital is apparently moving to remake its enti… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Downtown Cairo to Go Car-Free… Eventually

The Gawker Guide to Summer TV [Guides]

Summer’s here! Are you fretting that there’s nothing on television? Well, stop living in the past! We don’t live in a school-year-dictated world anymore. Here are some shows you should consider watching to help pass the hot months, safely indoors. More

Jeremy Piven — The Right to Bare Chest

Filed under: Jeremy Piven , Paparazzi Photo , Hot Bodies ” Entourage ” star Jeremy Piven ushered in the unofficial start of summer by roasting his hairless, pumped chest in Malibu this past weekend. Smooth. Read more

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Jeremy Piven — The Right to Bare Chest